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Creation of State Police to Gulp About N1 Trillion; First Recruits Scheduled For 2027-2028 – Report

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By Yusuf Danjuma Yunusa

The Steering Committee on the Establishment of State Police, set up by the inspector general of police, Olatunji Disu, has recommended a four-phase architecture transition.

The recommendation, among others, is contained in the steering committee’s report seen on Friday.

The committee, led by Olu Ogunsakin, the director-general of the National Institute of Police Studies, was inaugurated by Mr Disu on March 4.

The eight-man team was tasked with creating an operational framework for state police within one month.

The committee is also to oversee the implementation of state-level policing to complement the federal force to address rising national security concerns.

It is also expected to propose frameworks for recruitment, training, and resource generation to strengthen internal security.

Outlining the four-phase architecture implementation roadmap, the committee explained that phase one (months 1-12) was for legal procedures, including constitution amendment and the enactment of the State Police Act.

The second phase (months 13-24) will be for transfer. In phase three (months 25 to 42), operations commence as state police take over local policing, and the federal police service pulls back to a national mandate. Phase four (months 43-60) is for consolidation as FPS is fully reorganised.

The committee also noted that constitutional and legal architecture must precede everything.

According to the report, phase one requires constitutional amendments to sections 213 and 215 of the 1999 constitution, the enactment of a State Police Act by the National Assembly, and the passage of the State Police Laws in all 36 states and the FCT.

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“It also requires the establishment of State Police Service Commissions and Ombudsman offices in every state,” the committee explained.

The committee also recommended building institutions from scratch in all 36 states and recruiting and training new state police officers.

“Each state will be required to establish, from the ground up, a fully functional State Police service, including a service commission, an ombudsman office, community policing forums at the local government level, ICT infrastructure, custody suites and forensic linkages.

“The National Police Standard Board (NPSB) must also be constituted, staffed, and made operational with inspection capacity across six zonal offices,” said the report.

The committee recommended an establishment cost of N589 billion to N813 billion, phased over five years, “precisely because it cannot be absorbed in a shorter period”.

The committee further said that each state police service must recruit and train an entirely new cadre of officers in parallel with receiving FPS transfers. It, however, explained that the first cohort of state police recruits would only be enrolled in phase two (months 13 to 24), and their deployment would not begin until phase three (months 25 to 42).

“A mandatory 40-hour CPD programme for all officers must be embedded. This training pipeline alone spans over three years,” the report said.

The report also stressed the importance of a National Police Intelligence Portal, a national criminal records system, an upgrade to the Automated Fingerprint Identification System, and full ICT integration across all 36 state police services and the FPS.

It is estimated that the cost for national ICT systems alone was N65 billion to N95 billion, adding that full integration across all services would only be completed in phase four (months 43 to 60).

The committee further said that protection of officer rights must be guaranteed, as no officer must be involuntarily dismissed, and that accrued pension and welfare rights must be fully protected.

The report added that the 60-month (four-phase) transition was the minimum operationally credible timeframe for restructuring the country’s policing architecture.

It said it would give enough time to move 273,648 officers, build 37 new police services, amend the constitution, and pass legislation at the federal and state levels.

It will also create time for the construction of ICT and physical infrastructure, embed an oversight architecture, and protect officers’ welfare while maintaining uninterrupted public security.

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Hon. Abubakar Kabir Bichi launches 4th postgraduate scholarship program, sponsors 122 students

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Hon. Abubakar Kabir Bichi the member representing Bichi Federal Constituency and Chairman House Committee on Appropriation has launched the fourth edition of his postgraduate scholarship support programme, approving scholarships worth N25,853,128.50 for 122 students from the constituency.

The programme was officially launched on Sunday during the fourth edition of his flagship Postgraduate Support Programme held at  Zibsah event Centre off FCE (T) Bichi Old Campus Road.

The scholarship initiative, which targets postgraduate students pursuing Master’s and PhD degrees in institutions across Nigeria, forms part of the lawmaker’s sustained investment in education and human capital development.

Speaking during the inauguration, Bichi said the programme was designed to support students in achieving their academic aspirations and contribute to the development of Bichi Federal Constituency through education.

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He disclosed that 122 postgraduate students were selected as beneficiaries under the fourth edition of the programme, with a total N25,853,128.50 approved for their sponsorship.

The lawmaker also announced that 21 postgraduate students were awarded scholarships for studies in Malaysia as the first batch. About 80 percent of the beneficiaries have graduated, while a second batch, larger than the first, is expected to depart in September.

According to him, he constructed more than 700 classrooms across the 12 wards of the local government area to address infrastructural deficits in primary and secondary schools.

Bichi added that he is currently sponsoring the salaries of 500 temporary teachers, earning N60,000 monthly, as part of efforts to strengthen the quality of education and address teacher shortages in public schools.

The lawmaker’s educational intervention also included  scholarships for more than 500 students enrolled in schools under the Kano State Science and Technical School Board, covering tuition fees, learning materials, accommodation needs and other essential expenses.

Bichi’s scholarship programme extends to students from Bichi studying in universities, colleges of education and other tertiary institutions across Nigeria.

He further revealed that an E-Library currently under construction in Bichi will provide students with access to digital learning resources and modern research facilities.

He noted that his development agenda also covers infrastructure, healthcare and youth empowerment projects aimed at improving living standards and creating opportunities for residents of the constituency.

 

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Sarkin Yakin Kano, Ambassador Ahmad Umar Loses Mother at 78

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Ambassador Ahmad Umar, OON, the Sarkin Yakin Kano (War Commander of Kano Emirate) and Hakimin Gundumar Mariri (District Head of Mariri), has lost his mother at the age of 78.

Family sources confirmed that the matriarch passed away on Tuesday, prompting an outpouring of condolences from family members, associates, traditional leaders, and well-wishers.

In a statement shared with close associates, the family announced the passing

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“Inna lillahi wa inna ilayhi raji’un” — “Indeed, we belong to Allah, and indeed, to Him we shall return.”

 

According to the announcement, the funeral prayer (Salatul Janazah) is scheduled to take place at 4:00 p.m. at Kofar Kudu, the main entrance of the Palace of the Emir of Kano, where relatives, friends, and sympathizers are expected to gather to pay their final respects.

Ambassador Ahmad Umar  is a respected diplomat and traditional titleholder who serve as Sarkin Yakin Kanoand the District Head of Mariri (Hakimin Gundumar Mariri). He is also a recipient of the national honour of Officer of the Order of the Niger (OON).

 

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BUK, European Space Agency Equip Journalists with Satellite Tools for Climate Reporting

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The participants during the workshop

Anas Yushau Yusuf

Journalists and media practitioners have been equipped with practical skills in the use of Earth Observation technologies to improve climate change and environmental reporting during a capacity-building workshop organised by Bayero University Kano (BUK) in collaboration with the European Space Agency (ESA) and Future Earth.

The one-day workshop, titled “Achieving Transformative Flood Risk Management in Informal African Cities Using Demystified Earth Observation,” was held at Bayero University Kano. It brought together journalists from various media organisations to explore how satellite imagery, geospatial data and Earth Observation platforms can support evidence-based reporting on environmental and climate-related issues.

In his welcome address, the Project Lead, Prof. Aliyu Salisu Barau, said the training was designed to empower journalists with practical tools that would improve the quality, accuracy and credibility of environmental reporting.

“As the climate change crisis continues to unfold across our societies, the public depends on accurate, timely and evidence-based reporting,” he said.

According to him, participants would gain hands-on experience with Earth Observation platforms that can help journalists verify environmental claims, strengthen investigative reporting and communicate complex climate issues more effectively.

Prof. Barau noted that environmental challenges such as flooding, drought, land degradation and rapid urbanisation require reporting that is supported by scientific evidence rather than assumptions.

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The Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Research and Development) of Bayero University Kano, Prof. Amina Mustapha, described climate change as one of the most pressing development challenges confronting Northern Nigeria and the wider Sahel region.

She urged journalists to pay greater attention to environmental stories that directly affect communities, including desertification, the shrinking Lake Chad, food insecurity, climate-induced displacement and the implementation of initiatives such as the Great Green Wall.

Prof. Mustapha stressed that the media has a critical role in informing the public, influencing policy discussions and promoting accountability through accurate and well-researched environmental reporting.

Delivering her remarks virtually, Freya Muir, Research Coordinator at the European Space Agency and Future Earth, highlighted the importance of Earth Observation data in supporting climate monitoring, disaster preparedness and sustainable environmental management.

She explained that satellite-generated data provides reliable information that can help governments, researchers, humanitarian organisations and journalists better understand environmental changes and communicate risks before disasters occur.

The workshop featured technical sessions on the fundamentals of Earth Observation, accessing satellite data for evidence-based reporting, visual storytelling using geospatial information, investigative environmental journalism, and the application of Earth Observation tools for early warning communication and climate risk reporting.

Participants also took part in a hands-on practical session where they were introduced to digital Earth Observation platforms and guided through the process of accessing and interpreting satellite data for story development.

The training forms part of an ongoing collaborative project aimed at strengthening flood risk management in informal African cities by making Earth Observation technologies more accessible to researchers, policymakers and the media.

For many participants, the workshop demonstrated that modern journalism increasingly requires the ability to interpret scientific data alongside traditional reporting methods. By combining satellite imagery with field reporting, journalists can produce more accurate, compelling and impactful stories that contribute to public awareness and informed decision-making on climate and environmental issues.

The workshop ends with a renewed call for stronger collaboration between scientists, academic institutions and the media to ensure environmental reporting is rooted in credible evidence and serves the public interest.

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