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Names Of Possible Replacement For IGP Adamu

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Senior Lawyers Knock Buhari Over Extension Of IGP Adamu’s Tenure

The Inspector-General of Police, Mohammed Abubakar Adamu, is set to retire today, February 1, 2021, after attaining 35 years in service.

Adamu, who enlisted on February 2, 1986, was appointed as acting IGP on January 15, 2019, following the retirement of the former Police boss, IGP Ibrahim Idris.

This news platform reports that Adanu who is the 20th indigenous Inspector General of Police will turn 60 on September 17.

The practice in the past was that the Deputy Inspector Generals of Police, DIGs, are retired along with the IGP and a successor is chosen from among the ranks of Assistant Inspector Generals of Police, AIG.

However, President Muhammadu Buhari and the presidency have silent over the fate of Adamu and his would-be successor.

Names of likely successors among the most senior police officers are already been bandied as to who will become the new police boss as chosen by the President.

Naija News takes a look at the contenders to become the next Inspector-General of Police

DANMALLAM MOHAMMED

Currently the DIG in Charge of Training, Mohammed was born on 18th December 1963 and hails from Yar’Adua Local Government Area of Katsina State.

He was enlisted into the Nigeria Police as a Cadet Assistant Superintendent of Police on 3rd March 1990 and graduated in November 1991.

In the course of his career, DIG Danmallam Mohammed has held strategic positions and was a former Aide de Camp (ADC Police) to then President of Nigeria; Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, C-in-C from 1999 to 2010.

He was also a Board member of the Economic and Financial Crime Commission (EFCC) before his nomination for National Defence College Course 24 in 2015. He is a fellow of the National Defence College, Nigeria. • Mohammed has attended many courses, conferences, and seminars within and outside the Country and has attended the National Defence College.

However, a minus for the man is his state of origin. He comes from the same state as the President and with the hue and cries in the country about the lopsidedness of appointment since 2015 especially with many alluding to the fact that 97 percent of service chiefs which is inclusive of the IGP are from a section of the country.

President Buhari may decide to bypass him, this is also coming on the heels of the new trend in the Villa where recent appointments have assumed a more geographical spread in the spirit of federal character.

Also, he has less than two (2)years to serve in the Nigeria Police since he is due for retirement on December, 2023 after attaining the mandatory age of 60 years.

This negates the New Police Act as Amended which mandates that an IGP must serve for a period not less than 4 years in office.

USMAN ALKALI BABA

Usman Alkali was born on 1st March in the year 1963, in Geidam, Yobe state and has had meritorious years in the force where he has served in various capacities. Until his promotion as DIG Force CID , he was the Force Secretary at the Force Headquarters, Abuja.

He holds a Masters in Public Administration (MPA) Degree from the University of Maiduguri, Borno State 1997 and a BA (ED) Political Science from Bayero University, Kano State. Professional Courses/Workshop Institution

Alkali was a member of Course 22/2014 2014, National Defence College (NDC)

However what will work against him is the fact that he will be retiring from the Police Force in a year’s time, March 2023 to be precise. He is from the North like the current IGP.

MOSES AMBAKINA JITOBOH

Among the top contenders for who succeeds IG Adamu, AIG Moses Jitoboh is seen as the favourite to step into his shoes.

According to police watchers, he has age, number of years left in the force, geo-political zone, and more important qualification as his strong points.

Born on June 1, 1970, and from Bayelsa state, he got enlisted into the Police Force on October 6, 1994, and is not due for retirement until 2029. This puts him in good stead among others considering the new police act which mandates that only an officer with at least four years of active service could be appointed as IGP.

It is instructive to note that out of the 23 of the 24 AIGs due for retirement between January 2021 and 2023 either based on enlistment or age, Jitoboh remains the youngest and has more than eight years left in the service. Besides being younger in age and year of enlistment, he is among the top 3 most Senior AIGs on the officers’ list of the Nigeria Police Force.

Section 7 of the Nigeria Police Act 2020 has positioned him as the most qualified officer to become the next IGP. This is also considering his performances since joining the Police.

Police records also show that none of the six DIGs representing the six geo-political zones are eligible to be appointed as IGP after Adamu exits based on the new police Act.

Apart From DIG Aminchi Baraya and Ibrahim Lamorde, all from the North – East who are due to retire alongside IGP Adamu from the North Central in February 2021, the rest have less than two years to exit the force.

Jitoboh to his advantage is in acting capacity as a DIG. This is informative because there is this penchant for serving IGPs to retire along with their DIGs, who are usually either their course mates or outright seniors in the force.

Jibotoh who once served as Commissioner of Police (CP), Adamawa and until his current posting, was AIG in charge of Border Patrol comes to mind here as an excellent performer in handling affairs of the Police Force. This informed the reason the police authority gave for his recent position and posting as acting DIG in charge of Research and Development in the Force Headquarters.

It is also on record that the South-South geo-political zone of the country deserves to occupy the exalted position this time around.

Officers who have worked closely with him describe him as a very disciplined, intelligent, and detribalised officer. They also added that appointing him to the position would provide the much-needed answers to most of the internal security problems in the country.

GARBA BABA UMAR

Garba Baba was among the officers promoted to the rank of Assistant Inspector General of Police last month (December 2020) and is the officer in charge of the International Police (INTERPOL) in the Nigeria Police Force.

Described as a very ambitious officer, he has led several special and discreet investigation and extradition teams as the INTERPOL Boss for Nigeria.

However, what might act as a stumbling block is his lack of the prerequisite qualification like attending the officers’ course at the Nigeria Institute for Policy and Strategic Studies (NIPPS) and also the mandatory officers’ course at the Defence College, two mandatory certificates that must be gotten by any aspiring Inspector General of Police.

DASUKI GALANDANCHI

AIG Dasuki Galadanchi from Kano State. He was promoted to AIG last week.

Galadanchi was Commissioner of Police/Executive Secretary of the Police Multi-Purpose Cooperative Society, Lagos, and presently acting AIG Force CID Annex, Lagos.

With his promotion, he has four more years in service. He is favoured by the powerful lobby groups from the North.

HABU AHMADU

AIG Habu Ahmadu is a former CP, IG’s Monitoring Unit, Commissioner of Police Intelligence, Force Headquarters and the commissioner of Police, Bauchi State Command and presently he is in charge of Kano State Poloice Command.



Ige Olugbenga is a fine-grained journalist. He loves the smell of a good lead and has a penchant for finding out something nobody else knows.