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JUST IN: Senate passes bill to create state police

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Senate passes bill to create state police

The Senate has passed the constitutional amendment bill seeking the establishment of state police services across the country.

The development marks a major step in Nigeria’s long-running efforts to decentralise policing and strengthen internal security.

The legislation, titled “A Bill for an Act to Alter the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999, to Provide for the Establishment of State Police and Related Matters (Sixth Alteration) Bill, 2026 (SB. 1055),” was approved after consideration by the Committee of the Whole.

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The bill provides a legal framework for a dual policing system, allowing states to establish and operate their own police services alongside a federal police structure.

Under the proposed arrangement, the current Nigeria Police Force framework would be replaced by a Federal Police Service operating alongside State Police Services across the federation.

The Senate’s approval on Wednesday followed deliberations on the general principles of the bill before it scaled the required legislative stages and was passed.

The legislation was transmitted to the National Assembly by President Bola Tinubu as part of efforts to reform Nigeria’s security architecture and address growing security challenges across the country.

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In a letter dated June 15 and read during plenary by Senate President Godswill Akpabio, the President said the proposed amendment seeks to establish a constitutional basis for state policing and enhance security management at the sub-national level.

According to the proposal, the new framework is intended to strengthen community-based policing, improve intelligence gathering and enable more effective responses to local security threats.

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