10,000 new recruits for deployment Feb 2025 – Police
The Nigeria Police Force has said the 10,000 newly recruited constables and specialists who are currently undergoing training will be deployed in February 2025.
It said the recruits would be deployed in their states of origin in line with the Federal Government’s community policing initiative.
Following a recruitment exercise, the Police Service Commission in June released a list of 10,000 successful applicants for employment.
However, the police, under the leadership of the Inspector General of Police, Kayode Egbetokun, rejected the list, alleging corruption and demanding a fresh recruitment process, a demand that the PSC rejected, maintaining that the process was free and fair.
After weeks of stand-off, the police finally accepted the list in July and announced that the 10,000 recruits would be sent for training.
Speaking in an interview with our correspondent on Tuesday, the Force spokesperson, Muyiwa Adejobi, said the recruits’ training was being conducted in 16 police training institutions across the country.
He added that the training commenced on August 10, 2024, for the General Duty cadre, adding that the exercise would last for six months.
Adejobi said the specialist cadre training will commence on 28 September 2024.
He said, “The training is currently being conducted in 16 police training institutions spread across the federation. The training commenced on 10 August 2024 for the General Duty cadre and would last for six months. The specialist cadre will commence training on September 28, 2024.
“This implies that come February 2025, all the successfully trained recruits (both General Duty and Specialist) will be absorbed into mainstream policing and deployed to their various states of origin in line with the community policing scheme of the Federal Government.”
Adejobi also said the ongoing training for the newly recruited constables is guided and conducted through the implementation of a new and robust Training Plan and Curriculum.
He added, “The training plan and curriculum provide for three learning phases – the Basic Training Course, Intermediate Training Course and the Practical Police Duty Course.
“These phases will emphasise the rudiments, fundamentals, core principles and concepts of contemporary policing, suitable for a dynamic society such as our dear country, Nigeria.
“The courses being taught encompass core areas, such as practical beat duty policing, police professional studies, including suspects’ handling and detention, criminal law, emotional intelligence, distress and complaints handling, police ethics and code of conduct, public relations and community policing, fundamental human rights, gender education, firearms handling and shooting range practice, unarmed combat, use of English and French languages, ICT, forensics, general liberal and field studies, amongst others.
“Recruits will also be exposed to relevant areas of law as it relates to policing. These include knowledge of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999; Nigeria Police Act, 2020; Administration of Criminal Justice Act, 2015; Evidence Act, 2011 (as amended); Cybercrime Prevention Act, 2015; Electoral Act 2022, etc.”