In a bid to beef
up security challenges in Cross River, the State House of Assembly yesterday
passed Kidnapping Prohibition and Waterfront Regulations Bill.
The Bill is
aimed at providing punishment for kidnappers who are involved in the business
and asking for ransom in return.
Calling for the
Bill to be passed, member representing Obudu state constituency Stephen Akumaye
(PDP), informed the House that the state, which had experienced peace was
hunted with activities of kidnapping which he said must be addressed.
Akumaye said:
“This Bill is a straight forward Bill. Kidnapping of any individual is an offence
that requires adequate punishment.
“I want us to
carefully examine this bill and give it a speedy passage in order to roll out
punishable measures for kidnappers.”
While presenting
a Bill on Waterways and how it would generate revenue to the state, the Deputy
Speaker Joseph Bassey said that the bill was to establish the Cross River State
Waterfront Infrastructure Management Agency.
Bassey who
represents Calabar South II (PDP) and also sponsor of the Bill said that the
Bill when passed would help in the regulation of illegal activities such as
crime on our waterways.
He stressed:
“The importance of this Bill is to provide an agency that will manage all water
activities in the state.
“The Bill will
also prevent hoodlums from coming through the water to commit crime because our
waterways seem to be the easiest route for criminals.
“This Bill will
also generate revenue for the government especially from sand excavators and
other marine operators.’’
Supporting the
move for the Bills, the House members maintained that both Bills would protect
lives and property of the citizenry, as it would also address waterfront
challenges.
Responding, the
Speaker, John Gaul-Lebo, asked that Committee on Transport and Marine Services
handled the Bill on waterfront and report back to the assembly in a week.
While he
commended the kidnapping Bill to the committee on security, he asked that they
report back to the House in two weeks.
Meanwhile, the
Inspector General of Police (IGP), Solomon Arase, has assured that security
operatives would not allow rampaging criminal gangs like kidnappers and cult
groups to overwhelm Rivers State.
Rivers State
Governor, Nyesom Wike, has said any property seized from kidnappers would be
converted to accommodation for security agents, just as the government would
pay N5 million to family of any policeman killed in course of fighting
kidnappers, cultists and armed robbers in the state.
Arase during a
courtesy visit to the governor at the Government House, Port Harcourt yesterday
observed that political conflicts that preceded the last general election had
plunged the state into situation of anomy that was detrimental to development.
And to proactively tackle this, he had to deploy a new Commissioner of Police,
Chris Ezike, to rebuild the operational strategy of the command to combat the
prevalent menace of kidnapping and cultism.
“We will never
allow a group of hoodlums, of hooligans, or cultists, armed robbers and
kidnappers to overwhelm the state. It has never happened anywhere in the
history of police and we will not allow it to happen in Rivers State,” he said.
He explained
that within the past one month, Ezike had been able to reignite the insurmountable
fighting spirit of the Nigeria Police. He stated that there was no way the
police can allow criminal gangs or cult groups to overwhelm the state because
this has never happened in the history of any law enforcement agency.
“We are going to
work assiduously to ensure that this state does not degenerate to further
chaos. I have spoken to the Commissioner of Police that maybe we should be able
to find a way to encourage people in possession of illegal fire arms to
surrender them. We have done it before during the amnesty programme without any
criminal implication, and I think we can do it again. We know the reasons why
there was this accumulation of arms here and there. We are not going to blame
them for it, but we can also encourage them that we cannot continue like this,”
said Arase.
The IGP stated
that the people of Rivers State need good governance, which can only be
actualised in an atmosphere of peace, which the police is constitutionally
empowered to provide.
Governor Wike
stated that prior to now, the menace of kidnapping and cultism had been the
order of the day in the state. But due to the proactive measures put in place
by the new commissioner of police who have come up with idea to partner with
his other security agencies like SSS, Navy and the army, there has been a
reduction incident of kidnapping, for instance.
The governor
explained that security had been topmost priority of his administration,
because it was prerequisite for attracting investments into the state and in
cognisance of the fact that no investors wanted to do business on a hostile
environment where government could not protect their interest.
Credit: Guardian
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