Tuesday, June 23, 2026 - The Inspector-General of Police (IGP), Olatunji Disu, has barred serving officers and men of the Nigeria Police Force from engaging in unauthorised social media activities, including creating videos, live streaming, posting skits, and monetising content on platforms such as TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, YouTube, and other similar platforms while identifying themselves as police officers.
In a circular dated June 22 and signed by his Principal
Staff Officer, the police boss warned that any officer found violating the
directive must face severe disciplinary measures, including immediate
suspension from duties, forfeiture of salary, demotion, dismissal from the
Force, and possible criminal prosecution.
The IGP expressed concern over the growing and most
disturbing trend of police personnel creating social media content without
official approval.
According to the circular, officers have been
"producing and posting videos of themselves in police uniform on TikTok,
Instagram, Facebook and other platforms for entertainment, personal promotion,
and financial gain, operating social media accounts under their real names or
pseudonyms in ways capable of bringing the Nigeria Police Force into disrepute,
publicly commenting on official police operations, disciplinary matters,
internal affairs and national security issues without authorization aspiring to
become full-time social media content creators while still serving in the Force
and making statements and sharing opinions on sensitive issues that
undermine public confidence in the Nigeria Police Force.'
The circular reminded officers that their conduct is already
governed by several laws that prohibit officers from making unauthorised public
statements, granting interviews without approval, posting content in police
uniform for non-official purposes, or engaging in online activities capable of
embarrassing or compromising the Force.
The IGP directed that, with immediate effect, all serving
officers and men are prohibited from "Creating, publishing or sharing
videos, photographs, skits, live streams or any other content in police uniform
or within police premises without express written approval from the
Inspector-General of Police or his designated representative, operating
personal or anonymous social media accounts for content creation,
entertainment, brand promotion or commercial purposes where such activities
reference or exploit their status as police officers, publicly commenting on
police investigations, postings, transfers, promotions, disciplinary
proceedings or any official police matter. accepting sponsorships, endorsement
deals, monetisation arrangements or commercial partnerships arising from
content that leverages their identity as police personnel and posting or
disclosing classified, restricted or sensitive information relating to police
operations, deployments, personnel or strategies. Making statements on
political matters, government policies or public controversies in a manner
linked to their identity as police officers."
The IGP warned that senior officers would be held personally
responsible for violations committed by officers under their command.
The circular further ordered Commissioners of Police to
formally communicate the directive to every officer in their commands and
submit evidence of dissemination, including attendance registers and
acknowledgement forms, to the Force Secretary within 30 days.

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