Security strategies put in
place by the Lagos State Government has yielded fruits with the reduction in
the spate of crime in the State, Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu disclosed on
Tuesday.
The governor made the
disclosure after the State’s final Security Council meeting in the year. After
the meeting held behind closed doors in Alausa, Sanwo-Olu led members of the
Council to brief the State House reporters about security actions to be taken
by the Government in the coming New Year.
Sanwo-Olu said incessant
kidnapping was part of the security challenges facing the State when he took
over the leadership in May 2019. He noted that strategies deployed by the
Government to confront the scourge had significantly brought down kidnapping
and led to positive reviews of the crime in the final quarter of the outgoing
year.
He said: “Today is our last
Security Council meeting in the year and there have been positive reviews we
have achieved based on the results from the measures we put in place to contain
security challenges we inherited. There are lots of new security strategies we
are embarking on next year.
“As the Chief Security
Officer of the State, I can confirm that activities of Security Council has
made Lagos safer than it was when we took over. We will continue to make the
State secure for all law-abiding residents and visitors.”
Commissioner of Police,
Hakeem Odumosu, corroborated the governor’s submission as he reviewed security
operations in the outgoing year. He said security operatives had weakened the
capacity of kidnappers in the State, adding that the Council remained vigilant
to consolidate on the progress achieved.
He said: “The kidnapping
issue has gone down drastically; those coming to Lagos for businesses should
know that they are safe. But, we remain vigilant. We believe it is still the
collective effort of everyone to ensure kidnapping becomes a thing of the past
in Lagos.”
Odumosu also disclosed that
implementation of the State Government’s amnesty offered repentant secret
cultists would start in the New Year, noting that the amnesty would be complemented
with an integration programme for the pardoned cultists.
Besides, Odumosu said the
Council would be initiating new policy to curtail the activities of commercial
motorcycles, known as Okada, on the highways. This plan, the Lagos Police Boss
said, will be rolled out within the first four weeks in 2020.
“We are introducing a
policy to contain the menace of Okada riders and tricycles, and this policy
will be fully implemented. We will be unveiling the plan in a few weeks and it
will be sustainable. The plan will not be without a human-face, but we expect
all the commercial motorcycle operators to comply with the policy,” Odumosu
said.
There will be more punitive
actions to be taken against those engaging in one-way driving, the Commissioner
of Police warned, adding that driving against the traffic is now being
considered as a major security issue in Lagos.
The Police Commissioner
said: “While we roll out more security plans to keep everyone safe, we urge
members of the public to be security conscious. We have reviewed the progress
and setbacks we recorded in the outgoing year, but we will be deploying more
strategies next year to ensure improved performance in our security operations
across the State.”
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