The
Nigerian Police Force yesterday took a giant step towards curtailing
the activities of kidnappers and other robbery gangs with the
acquisition of drones (unmanned aerial vehicles) systems for tracking
and surveillance of criminals up to a radius of 5 kilometers if
necessary.
The acquisition of the drones as well as automated finger
print verification systems, together with modern interrogation rooms
in compliance with the criminal justice act 2015, are meant to
complement the ‘Police Tracking System’ already put in place by
the Inspector General of Police. Making the disclosure at the
commissioning of the new Police Forensic Laboratory and Digital
Resource Center at Force headquarters, Deputy Inspector General of
Police in charge FCID, DIG Kakwe Christopher Katso noted that the
equipment which form the latest state of the art investigative
platforms, will make it difficult for terrorists, kidnappers and
armed robbers to easily pass through checkpoints and other security
points either on the highway, airport or borders.
Katso said,
suspects can now be stopped, their fingerprints taken and sent to the
control room, and within seconds, the details analyzed and
transferred back to the checkpoint or police points for immediate
action.
The DIG said the modern interrogation rooms’ which is a
requirement of the current criminal justice act 2015, will prevent a
situation where suspects make allegation that they were tortured to
give information or whereby after confessing voluntarily to crimes,
they get to Court and deny, claiming their action emanated from
duress.
Regarding the drones, Katso said when police respond to
distress calls, the aerial surveillance vehicle (UAV, is activated to
cover the location through the mobile camera. The mobile camera gives
the officers aerial view of the location, the activities of the
hoodlums; which enables the police to know where and how to strike.
“Added to this is the construction of a Digital Resource Center
with access to over 5million books and materials on policing across
the world including INTERPOL for police officers to key into modern
policing” he said. Speaking at the commissioning, Inspector General
of Police, Solomon Arase admitted that the Nigerian Police Force has
over the years grappled with weak Forensic Capacity saying it has
been a major factor in the forces’ ability to manage complex
criminal situations.
He noted however that this challenge will now be
a thing of the past, with the completion of the ultra-modern Nigeria
Police Forensic Laboratory and Digital Resource Center in Abuja.
Emphasizing that the platform is designed to bridge ‘this capacity’
gap in the force in relation to forensic assets of the force, the IGP
said, “The asset being commissioned today is a scientific
investigation tool of police departments all over the world.
It is
also a personal identity management system that the Nigeria Police
force ought to have had long before now”. “With this system, the
Nigeria police is not only set to comply with the provisions of the
administration of criminal justice act 2015 to capture and remit to
the office of the Attorney General, all biometrics of suspected
persons arrested by the police but also put the police in a position
to key into the presidential directive that all data capturing
agencies should harmonize and integrate personal identities captured
by such agencies on or before the end of 2016” Arase said.
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