Friday, December 06, 2024 -The Inspector General of Police (IGP), Kayode Egbetokun, on Thursday, Dec. 6, said the criminal justice system in Nigeria is weak, sick and needs a complete overhaul. \The IGP, however, urged Nigerians to stop blaming the police.
Speaking at the 2024 Annual Lecture/Award Ceremony, organised by the
Crime Reporters Association of Nigeria (CRAN), Egbetokun said: “Police is not
the only pillar or stakeholder in the criminal justice system in this country.
We have challenges, we accept, but we will try our best to make sure we have a
better system.
“All of us must come together to help perfect criminal justice or
justice system administration in Nigeria. If this system is working well; it is
going to affect you, it is going to us.”
The IGP was represented at the event by the Force Public Relations Officer
(FPRO), ACP, Muyiwa Adejobi.
Also speaking, the Chairman of the Independent Corrupt Practices
Commission (ICPC), Dr Musa Adamu Aliyu, SAN, said that corruption remains one
of the most persistent challenges affecting all sectors and institutions of the
Nigerian society, undermining policy-decision making.
Aliyu said: “Corruption remains one of the most persistent challenges
affecting all sectors and institutions of the Nigerian society, undermines
policy-decision making, resource mobilisation and utilisation, policy execution
and service delivery.
“Our experience at the ICPC in partnership with key stakeholders, has
shown that tackling corruption effectively, across sectors and institutions,
requires a proactive, multi-faceted approach. This approach should focus not
only on enforcement but also on prevention, deterrence, and systems
reform.”
According to Aliyu, the Justice System Administration faces
institutional, funding, infrastructural, human resources, and socio-cultural
challenges.
He added: “The widespread corruption within the justice system,
including bribery, influence peddling and attitudinal challenges are more
fundamental and daunting. I dare say that the justice sector remains a focal
point of concern, particularly regarding bribery involving stakeholders in the
justice sector, and despite limited public contact, judicial officials exhibit
relatively high bribery prevalence, hence the need for targeted anti-corruption
measures in this sector.”
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