By Laraba MUREY
The presidential candidate of the Social Democratic Party, SDP, in the 2023 election, Prince Adewole Adebayo, has called for improved funding for the police as they are critical to nation-building.
Adebayo made the call at a two-day symposium on “The Nigeria Police Force and the Peace Process in Africa,” organised in collaboration with the Nigerian Institute of International Affairs, NIIA.
According to him, the Nigeria Police Force is a direct reflection of the country’s development, history and future, urging the nation to invest boldly in policing if it truly desires peace at home and credibility abroad.
“Nigeria Police is like a shadow following Nigeria,” Adebayo said, “if there is any aspect of policing you are not satisfied with, it is simply a reflection of our life at a particular time.
“To have a better police, we must have a better society, because the police is a reflection of what the society is.”
Tracing the roots of the force to Lagos in 1861, Adebayo noted that the Nigeria Police was international in outlook from inception, having been created to secure trade routes and protect global commercial interests along the coast.
According to him, decades of military rule and poor democratic prioritisation weakened investment in policing, even though the police remain the “guardian of democracy.”
He stressed that effective policing is impossible without peace, good laws, strong community relations and serious capacity building.
“Good policing costs money,” Adebayo said. “You cannot praise the police in speeches and budget poorly for them. Forensics, helicopters, investigations — these things cost billions.
“If you want the police of your dreams, send your best and most courageous children to the force.”
Earlier, NIIA Director-General, Prof. Osaghae, delivered a sweeping historical account of Nigeria’s global peacekeeping footprint, describing the Nigerian Police Force as one of the most experienced peacekeeping institutions in the world.
“The only police force that comes close to Nigeria in peacekeeping operations is India,” he said. “It is not only when we sleep well in Nigeria that we remember the police, but when Liberia, Senegal or Kosovo sleep well too.”
Osagie praised the Inspector General Kayode Egbetokun for expanding Nigeria’s international policing presence and announced plans for an International Centre for Peacekeeping in partnership with the Police Force.
He acknowledged existing domestic challenges but insisted that the police have undergone remarkable transformation over the past two decades in skills, training and professionalism.
In his keynote address, IGP Egbetokun highlighted Nigeria’s enduring commitment to multilateral peacekeeping, noting that over 12,000 Nigerian police officers have served across multiple continents under the UN, AU and regional missions.
“The true impact of peacekeeping is not always captured in reports,” Egbetokun said. “It is seen when schools reopen, markets return and public trust is restored.”
He outlined the evolving challenges facing modern peace operations, including terrorism, transnational crime, cyber threats and resource constraints, but described them as “imperatives for reform, innovation and partnership.”
According to the police chief, Nigeria’s future peacekeeping strategy will focus on specialised capabilities, institutional modernisation, regional integration, research collaboration with institutions like the NIIA, and sustained police reform at home.


