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#EndSARS: Kaduna Govt Recieves Judicial Panel Report

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#EndSARS: Kaduna Govt Recieves Judicial Panel Report

The Kaduna State Government has received the report of the Judicial Commission of Inquiry into Acts of Police Brutality in the state.

Naija News reports that the Deputy Governor, Dr Hadiza Balarabe, received the report from the chairman of the panel, Justice David Wyom, on behalf of Governor Nasir El-Rufai.

Speaking at the event, Balarabe commended the panel for their hard work, service, and dedication to the progress of the state.

She stated that the state government will study the report and its recommendations and issue a White Paper in due course in response to the report.

She said, “It is my pleasure to receive the report of the Judicial Commission of Inquiry into acts of brutality by Police personnel in Kaduna State. When we inaugurated this Commission on 19th October 2020, it was done in response to serious concerns about police accountability expressed across the country.

“You will recall that the Federal Government and the state governments endorsed the demand for reforms to policing. Therefore, the 36 state governors agreed under the auspices of the National Economic Council to establish judicial commissions of inquiry into acts of police brutality in every state.

“The Kaduna State Government complied with this agreement and appointed this Commission to help in establishing accountability for unlawful conduct by police personnel and to create a platform for victims and their families to receive redress for their pain and loss.

“As I receive this report, I wish to register the gratitude of the Kaduna State Government, to Hon. Justice David Shiri Wyom and the seven other members of this Commission of Inquiry for their service.

“The government will study the report and its recommendations and issue a White Paper.

The deputy governor also called for a decentralized police system that will operate with the highest regard for the law and rights and dignity of citizens.

She added: “Apart from the work of the Commission of Inquiry, the country needs to resolve the constitutional arrangement for policing, especially its funding, its governance, its training and professionalism and the welfare of its personnel.

“Every state government is aware of the prevailing anomaly in policing: the deployment in all the states of police officers controlled by the Federal Government but whose operations are funded by state governments. As recommended by the APC Committee of The Federalism chaired by our Governor, Malam Nasir El-Rufai, it is time to devolve policing powers and institute the necessary safeguards for lawful conduct and the protection of human rights.

“The crisis of policing remains a national emergency. It is in the interest of everyone that our country builds an efficient police force, large enough to be effective, sufficiently decentralized to understand the terrain and build local support, properly trained, equipped and resourced for the job and operating with the highest regard for the law and rights and dignity of citizens.”



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.