At least 2 Nigerian policemen are killed every week – Report

Nigerian police Photo Credit: BBC

An average of two policemen have been killed in violent attacks every week in the last six years across Nigeria, a recent report said.

This is according to the report emanating from a study conducted by a Lagos-based  independent firm and  published   by Premium Times, a foremost Nigerian investigative online newspaper.

The report said 497 officers and men have been killed in the last six year (75 months) .

The Humanitarian Times‘ breakdown of the number of policemen said to be killed while discharging their duty in the last 75 months (or 300 weeks) indicate that at least two officers were killed every week.

SBMorgan, a Lagos-based intelligence platform, collated a data on the number of policemen that lost their lives between January 7, 2015 and March 22, 2021, realised the 497 figure.

The Humanitarian Times did a  subdivision of 497 by 75 months and by 4 weeks realised that 2.5 police officers and men die each week in violent attacks between 2015 and now.

The report said due to the vulnerability of the Nigeria security system, a total of 1,175 civilians have also been killed in violent attacks within the period that has been reviewed.

PREMIUM TIMES, published that the copy of the report sent to them from SBMorgan “the  497 police officers and men were killed in 554 incidents across the country during the period.”

“The group, which based its data on reported incidents, said its findings were corroborated by at least two different media sources across the six geopolitical zones in the country,” PREMIUM TIMES reported.

The figures arguably underscored the extension of the mind boggling cases of insecurity in Nigeria in recent years.

Zonal analysis

SBMorgen said, of all the six geopolitical zones in the country, the South-south region tops the chart with 163 incidents that sent 174 policemen to their early graves during the years under review.

It said 51 policemen were killed in Delta State alone within the period, making the state the highest among the six states in the region.

The North-central zone trailed the South-south zone having recorded 85 deaths of police officers out of the 88 reported attack incidents in the zone.

In the geopolitical zone, Benue recorded the highest number with the killing of 22 police officers during the 16 reported incidents during the period under review. The state witnessed herders-farmers clashes during most of the 75 months.

It is followed closely by Kogi which recorded the deaths of 19 police personnel in 49 violent attacks.

Kwara State, the report said, recorded two deaths out of the three cases reported in the state.

As fairly ‘safe’ as the South-west seems, the region recorded 112 incidents, which led to the demise of 72 members of Nigerian police.

In the region, Lagos topped the chart with 47 attacks and 21 reported cases of death.

Ondo State recorded 11 deaths of police officers out of the 16 attack incidents. Ekiti recorded the least.

The report said the North-west and South-east respectively accounted for 59 and 58 deaths of police personnel in 64 and 82 incidents in the geopolitical zones.

The North-east region surprisingly recorded 45 attack incidents and 49 death cases. The zone, comprising Borno, Bauchi, Gombe, Yobe, Adamawa and Taraba, is one of the volatile regions in the country.

Borno, Yobe and Adamawa States have been the epicentre of the insurgency in the region.

State by state basis

On a state by state basis, the gathered data by SBMorgen, showed that Kebbi was the safest state for police officers while Zamfara, Delta, Edo, Kogi, Yobe, Benue, Borno, Adamawa, Rivers, Abia, Plateau and Cross Rivers are states “where more than one police officer was killed per attack.”

There were more reported killings of police officers across the six geopolitical zones between 2018-2020 than in 2015-2017.

Between January 1, 2021 to March 22, 2021, the report said 48 police officers were killed across the zones.

The South-eastern part of Nigeria accounted for 16 of those deaths while the South-south accounted for 20. They both accounted for more than 60 per cent of the total figure.

 Commenting on the report, a data expert with SBMorgen, Joachim MacEbong, told PREMIUM TIMES that the firm arrived at the figures “after compiling reports from at least two newspapers over the years”.

CREDIT: SBMorgan/Premium Times

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