…Says herdsmen issue requires national solution
Governor Ifeanyi Okowa of Delta State has disclosed that six special courts have been dedicated for abduction cases in the state for speedy trial of kidnappers.
Okowa made the disclosure when the Assistant Inspector General of Police (AIG), Zone 5, Adamu Abubakar, paid him a familiarization visit in Asaba.
“We are aware that all over the country today, the issue of kidnapping is becoming a challenge; there is no doubt that in this state, we are tackling the challenge”, he said.
“A lot of kidnappers have been arrested and I have been informed that six special courts have been created by the Chief Judge to try kidnappers who have been arrested,” he further said, adding that “such was done to ensure a speedy trial because we have a robust law to deal with issues that concern kidnapping and those who assists them.”
On the issue of herdsmen menace, Okowa observed that it was a national challenge that requires national solution, noting that the police was doing a lot in checking criminal activities in the state.
While assuring that his administration would continue to support the police and other security agencies in the state, Okowa reiterated that “for effective check on criminal activities, it is important for the government to have a good relationship with the Police which we are doing.”
He also used the occasion to state that his administration was on the verge to proffer lasting solution to the Ogbe-Ijaw/Aladja communal crisis that has lasted for years.
The AIG, who was accompanied by top police officers, told the governor that he was on a familiarization tour of the state, observing that Governor Okowa’s reputation of assisting the police to carry out their functions was legendary. He, however, appealed for structures to be erected for the police at the buffer zone in the Aladja/Ogbe-Ijaw communities to ensure that the area is secured.