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Nigeria's new police chief vows crackdown on corruption

Nigeria's acting inspector general Alhaji Muhammad Abubakar admits that Nigerian police have committed extrajudicial killings and run criminal rackets. That will change, he says.

By Scott Baldauf , Staff writer

Nigeria’s police are an exceedingly rotten lot, according to their own boss, Nigeria’s Acting Inspector-General of Police Alhaji Muhammad Abubakar.

In a meeting with senior police officials, Mr. Abubakar – placed in his job last month by President Goodluck Jonathan last month – warned commanders that they would be held personally responsible for any corruption or indiscipline that occurs by their subordinates from here onward.

Abubakar’s crackdown – if it is real – comes at a crucial time for Nigeria. Two separate armed insurgencies, a radical Islamist terror group called Boko Haram in the north, and a collection of Niger Delta militant groups in the southeast threaten the government’s ability to rule. Growing citizen discontent, underlined by December’s fuel-price strikes in Lagos and other cities, show that patience with a dysfunctional and corrupt government is running thin.

Like a soap opera character of an abusive husband trying to rescue his marriage, the Nigerian government has admitted it has a problem. The next step is to prove that it is ready to make some very real changes.

It will take more than a few words to convince ordinary Nigerians.

In a 2010 public opinion survey conducted by Transparency International, 73 percent of Nigerian respondents said that official corruption had increased in the previous three years.

According to Human Rights Watch, previous efforts at cleaning up the Nigerian police force have failed, largely because public complaint mechanisms and internal police controls have been underfunded, poorly led, and weak.

Corruption is a problem throughout Nigerian society, of course, but corruption among police is the problem that affects the most people. Businessmen are often forced to pay bribes in order to get a truckful of their products through a police checkpoint to the markets. Ordinary citizens face harassment over petty accusations. Victims of crimes often have to bribe police to launch an investigation on their behalf.

Such petty corruption occurs in varying degrees throughout the African continent, where post-colonial rulers have adopted many of the powers and habits of their previous strong-armed European colonial rulers. But in Nigeria, police corruption has become something of an art form.

Many Nigerian politicians promise to tackle corruption. Many of these are either corrupted along the way, or otherwise frustrated by the well-entrenched bureaucrats and ruling elites who benefit from the corrupt system.

Abubakar insists that his campaign will be different.

Many Nigerians will be watching closely to see whether the current campaign by President Jonathan and Abubakar will live up to their words.

An editorial in The Moment, a London-based newspaper on Nigerian affairs, views the crackdown with appreciative skepticism.