Ribadu’s demotion
irreversible – Osayande
By AMOS DUNIA AND OLUWOLE AKINBOYEWA, Abuja
Friday, August 15, 2008
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Mallam
Nuhu Ribadu
Photo: Sun News Publishing |
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The Police Service Commission on Thursday put a seal on the
demotion exercise it carried out last week on 140 senior police
officers, including former Chairman of the Economic and Financial
Crimes Commission (EFCC), Mallam Nuhu Ribadu, who was demoted
from Assistant Inspector General of police to Deputy Commissioner
of Police, saying they were beneficiaries of an illegal exercise.
Chairman of the Police Service Commission, Mr. Parry Osayande,
who appeared before the Senate Committee on Police Affairs
with members of the Commission, said that the law does not
follow the path of sentiment or morality, adding that based
on the provisions of the Police Service Act and the Constitution,
neither the Inspector General of Police nor the President
is in any particular time empowered to promote officers of
the police force.
Mr. Osayande further said that even if the promotions were
directed or effected by the President, the Police Service
Commission under his Chairmanship would have reversed it since
they were carried out illegally, stressing that the commission
is desirous to uphold the rule of law and to sanitize the
system, adding that a situation whereby an officer is made
to jump over two thousand of his seniors to earn promotion
owing to favour should not be encouraged.
According to him: “Promotion is based on merit and seniority.
Can we subsume the over three hundred thousand policemen for
the interest of just 140 that got illegal promotion? The answer
is no. A situation whereby some junior officers jumped over
2,000 of their senior to get promotion should not be encouraged
or allowed.”
The Chairman of the PSC stressed that based on the law that
set up the Commission, it is not subject to the authority,
dictate or control of any other body or office, stressing
that in that wise, the former Inspector General of Police,
Mr. Sunday Ehindaro, was not in a position to carry out what
he did not have since the law does not in any way recognize
him as a member of the Commission neither was he ever given
the power to act on behalf of the PSC.
Also speaking, the Secretary to the PSC and Permanent Secretary
of Ministry of Police Affairs, Mallam Garba Buwai, said that
in the absence of the Police Service Commission in place,
he wrote to the former Inspector General of Police, Mr. Ehindaro,
drawing his attention to the illegality he embarked upon by
way of promotion, but was ignored by the former police chief
who claimed that the promotion was based on a memo he forwarded
to the president but which he could present before the Commission
when asked for a copy.
Mallam Buwai also said that the former Inspector General
of Police also carried out illegal retirement of ten thousand
police officers in the name of rationalization saying that
the Commission has also commenced the process of recalling
the sack officers after going through some procedures adding
that only the Police Service Commission is mandated and responsible
for the promotion, demotion and retirement of police officers.
In his own statement before the senate Committee, Deputy inspector
General of Police Mr. Ogbonnanya Onovo who stood in for the
Inspector General of Police, said that since he enlisted into
the Police force over 30 years ago, every officer knows when
he is due for promotion just as every officer equally knows
his seniors.
Mr. Onovo noted that the promotions carried out by the former
IGP brought about indiscipline, bad blood just as it demoralized
some senior officers whose juniors were elevated above them
saying that the role of the Police Service Commission is very
well defined thus the Commission did the right thing by correcting
a grave mistake of the past.
In his own comment, a member of the Senate Committee Senator
tank Ayuba, a retired Brigadier-General of the Nigeria Army
commended the PSC for what it described as “bold action”
saying that it would have been dangerous to allow such a promotion
to hold as it has the potential of affecting the structure
of the Police force
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