The Police Service Commission (PSC) has promised that police officers found wanting during the 2019 General Elections would be prosecuted.
The Commission will also officially write to the acting Inspector-General of Police on the status of police offenders during the elections with a view to ensuring that they are prosecuted.
The Commission on Thursday, May 6th, 2021, held a virtual meeting with some non-governmental human rights organizations to review the challenges of election policing during the 2019 general elections and to proffer ways and means to have a substantial improvement during the forthcoming 2023 general elections.
According to a statement by the Head, Press and Public Relations of PSC, Ikechukwu Ani, the NGOs that participated in the meeting were the CLEEN Foundation, represented by its Executive Director, Dr. Benson Olugbo, and the Situation Room, represented by Agianpe Ashanga and Akwu Ogbuadu of Policy and Advocacy Centre, PLAAC.
Speaking at the Virtual Meeting, the Chairman of the Commission’s Fact Finding Team on Election Policing in the 2019 General Elections and Honourable Commissioner in the Commission, Justice Clara Bata Ogunbiyi, a retired Justice of the Supreme Court, said the Commission was poised to give the nation a much more improved election policing during the 2023 General Elections.
Justice Ogunbiyi said there was need to look into the pitfalls of the 2019 election policing in order to devise strategies for an improvement during the next General Elections.
She said the Commission would also be asking the acting Inspector General of Police to conclude investigations on the cases of Nigerians who undermined the electoral process during the 2019 General Elections and hand over the files to the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, the body backed by law to prosecute election offenders.
She noted that the Commission would play its required part in ensuring that the Police men on election duties during the 2023 General elections commit themselves to the rules of engagement.
Barristet Rommy Mom, Honourable Commissioner in the Commission, representing the Non Governmental Human Rights Organisations and Babatunde Dada, Deputy Director and legal Adviser to the Commission were the other members of the fact finding panel at the meeting.
Barrister Mom expressed delight that the Commission and the Human Rights Bodies are coming together to forge a common front in the interest of a better Nigeria. He noted that the Commission will sustain this initiative and will ensure that it positively affects election policing during the 2023 General Elections.