• Police expand Interpol anti-crime network
There are concerns in the
nation’s security circles over the incessant leakage of official secrets to the
public.
The Guardian’s inquiry revealed that
official documents in the country are categorized into restricted, confidential
and top secrets, in order to ensure information is controlled within the
classified space.
But
recent events indicate that classified government memos are being leaked,
exposing the country to espionage and unhindered access to political, economic,
military and other forms of information about Nigeria by foreign competitors.
Section
(1) sub (2) of the Official Secret Act says that “A public officer who fails to
comply with any instructions given to him on behalf of the government as to the
safeguarding of any classified matter which by virtue of his office is obtained
by him or under his control is guilty of an offence.”
It
was learnt that recently, many government communication documents are not
classified, even if their exposure can lead to the compromise of national
security.
Ostensibly
worried about the nonchalance by civil servants, an internal memo was
circulated by the Assistant Director (Media) in the Office of the Head of Civil
Service of the Federation (HoCSF) Mohammed Manga in 2015 to all Ministries,
Departments and Agencies (MDAs) directing all civil servants to avoid sanctions
by ensuring that classified documents were handled with utmost confidentiality.
The
circular read in part: “Some officers are in the habit of using classified
government documents, including those of the Federal Executive Council (FEC)
for purposes outside of what is required, even though the classified documents,
as the name implies, were graded as restricted, confidential, secret or top
secret and contain information not meant for public consumption. Exposing such
information to the public might have an adverse effect on national security.”
These
lapses also show the low level of awareness of civil servants about national
security and the need for capacity building in the public sector to increase
operational efficiency.
Reacting
to the issue, a retired intelligence officer now a practicing security expert,
Samson Ogochin said the civil servants had set aside the categorization by the
government. “They just distribute documents without minding how they are
delineated. That is the level of confidentiality at which the document should
be handled. That is probably the problem, because if you don’t categorize it,
it would be treated as an ordinary document,” he said.
Kabir
Adamu, chief executive Officer of Beacon Security said: “Depending on the
clearance you have, there are limits to which document you can access. That,
for me, is the beginning of the awareness by civil servants. There appears to
be a failure of such a policy to safeguard such documents, despite the presence
of the relevant departments like counter-intelligence in the Department of
State Services (DSS) to ensure that government documents are appropriately
protected,” he said.
For
Muyiwa Adegbegba, government documents, even confidential ones, are not being
handled well. “One understands that development and innovations have made it
easy to obtain information without going through the formal procedure. Still,
more needs to be done. You find vital government documents used in wrapping
akara (beans cake) with all the information still intact.
“So
the absence of a functional government policy on appropriate sanctions for
erring officers or the non-implementation of the policy is the reason for the
exposure,” Adegbegba said.
On
how it affects the nation, Adamu stated that besides the embarrassment it
causes government, economic espionage is another consequence.
“Right
now the biggest type of espionage that is being perpetrated is economic
espionage. You cannot leave yourself open while competing in the larger space,
like the competition between the economies of South Africa and Nigeria.”
Some
stakeholders suggested making a legislation or reviewing the public service
rules to spell out stiffer sanctions on errant staff.
Meanwhile,
as part of efforts to secure the nation against transnational crimes, the
Nigeria Police Force has expanded the Interpol I-24/7 global communication
system to link other security and law enforcement agencies in the country.
The
I-24/7 communication system network, developed by the International Criminal
Police Organization (ICPO), otherwise called INTERPOL, connects the 190-member
countries of the organization worldwide. It enables authorized users to share
sensitive and urgent police information with their counterparts around the
globe, 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, with the ability to search and
cross-check data in seconds.
The
Inspector General of Police (IGP) Ibrahim Idris launched the newly refurbished
National Centre Bureau (NCB) at the Force Headquarters in Abuja yesterday,
where the expansion and extension of the I-24/7 network system to other law
enforcement agencies, ministries and departments in Nigeria, was enhanced.
Idris
said the timing of the initiative was apt, “considering that adequate synergy
and collaboration is required now more than ever to check the menace of
criminalities within the country and transnational organized crimes.”
Facilitated
by INTERPOL Systems Consultants, Chukwu Udensi-led Sheik and Bishops Company,
the expansion to agencies like the Nigeria Immigration Services (NIS) at the
borders, will facilitate direct access to databases on suspected criminals or
wanted persons, stolen and lost travel documents, stolen vehicles, fingerprints
and DNA profiles.
The IGP said it was one of the pivotal instruments designed to actualize his vision of securing the nation and ensuring the safety of lives and property of Nigerians.
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