• About
  • Advertise
  • Careers
  • Contact
Saturday, March 14, 2026
  • Login
No Result
View All Result
NEWSLETTER
Reporters At Large
  • Home
  • News
    • World
    • For The Record
    • Metro
    • Opinion
    • Press Releases
  • Business
    • Auto Trend
  • Politics
  • Tourism
  • Lifestyle
    • People & Events
    • Health
  • RAL TV
    • Video
    • Video News
  • More
    • Advertisement
    • Privacy
    • Disclaimer
    • Contact Us
  • Home
  • News
    • World
    • For The Record
    • Metro
    • Opinion
    • Press Releases
  • Business
    • Auto Trend
  • Politics
  • Tourism
  • Lifestyle
    • People & Events
    • Health
  • RAL TV
    • Video
    • Video News
  • More
    • Advertisement
    • Privacy
    • Disclaimer
    • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
Reporters At Large
No Result
View All Result
Home News Opinion

R.O.A.D Is Not A Coincidence: A Reform Mandate Before IGP Rilwan Olatunji Adio Disu

by ReportersAtLarge
February 26, 2026
in Opinion
Reading Time: 3 mins read
0
Olatunji Disu IGP

Olatunji Disu

Share on WhatsappShare on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on Linkedin

Sometimes symbolism demands responsibility. The new Inspector-General of Police (IGP) bears the name Rilwan Olatunji Adio Disu.

R.O.A.D.

At a time when the Nigeria Police Force is burdened by structural tension, morale anxiety, and public distrust, the metaphor writes itself. Nigeria does not simply need continuity in policing. It needs a new road.

But symbolism is useless unless converted into structure.

If ROAD is to mean anything beyond coincidence, it must define reform architecture:

  • R – Reprofessionalisation
  • O – Organisational Equity
  • A – Accountability
  • D – Discipline with Dignity

And the most urgent of these is Organisational Equity.

RelatedPosts

Mark Carney’s Indo-Pacific Mission: Repositioning Canada For A New Global Economic Era

Why I’m Dragging Ondo State Attorney-General Kayode Ajulo To Court – Wale Ojo-Lanre

The Tinubu Enigma: Power, Strategy And The Nigerian State

Reprofessionalisation: Beyond Uniform, Toward Competence

The Nigeria Police Force faces increasingly sophisticated threats — cybercrime, insurgency networks, financial crime, cross-border criminal syndicates. Yet investigative depth, forensic capacity, and intelligence infrastructure remain inconsistent.

Reprofessionalisation is not cosmetic training. It requires:

Modern investigative tools; continuous retraining pipelines; Digital policing integration; Depoliticised operational decisions; Policing in the 21st century cannot function on 20th-century frameworks.

Public trust is not restored by rhetoric. It is restored by competence. But competence alone will not repair internal fractures.

Organisational Equity: The Quiet Friction Within

Within the Force, promotion structure remains a delicate subject.

Entry pathways differ significantly. Cadet ASP entrants begin at a comparatively senior rank. Inspector-cadre entrants climb from a different base. Over time, accelerated promotions tied to high-profile appointments — particularly in media-facing or strategic offices — have generated sustained conversation about parity. This is not about personal attack. It is about systemic clarity.

When officers perceive that visibility can override seniority without transparent criteria, morale weakens. When accelerated advancement appears discretionary rather than codified, resentment accumulates. Resentment in a disciplined institution is corrosive.

The Police Service Commission and Federal Government must confront this directly. Not quietly. Not defensively. Transparently.

Questions that demand structural answers:

Are promotion criteria clearly published and consistently applied?

Are accelerated promotions tied to codified benchmarks?

Is seniority meaningfully protected?

Is merit objectively measurable?

The Force cannot afford internal suspicion.

An officer who feels structurally disadvantaged will struggle to operate with institutional confidence.

Organisational equity is not sentimental. It is strategic.

Accountability: Internal Justice Before External Justice

Public perception of the Nigeria Police Force remains fragile. Allegations of selective enforcement, internal compromise, and uneven discipline continue to surface.

Accountability must be consistent and visible.

Internal disciplinary systems must be insulated from hierarchy interference. External complaint channels must be credible and accessible.

Without accountability, professionalism becomes performance.

Without transparency, discipline becomes fear.

If the ROAD is to endure, accountability must be institutionalised — not episodic.

Discipline with Dignity: Reform the Spine

The Nigeria Police Force remains one of the most exposed public institutions in the country. Officers confront violent threats, public hostility, and welfare constraints.

Yet discipline cannot be divorced from dignity.

Housing deficits, insurance gaps, psychological strain, and inconsistent welfare support weaken morale. Reform without welfare is incomplete.

A disciplined Force that feels abandoned internally will project insecurity externally.

Dignity stabilises discipline.

The Hard Question: Can the Structure Be Rebalanced?

IGP Disu now carries more than the authority of office. He carries the burden of internal expectation.

The Force needs clarity.

If accelerated promotions exist, codify them transparently.

If entry disparities create tension, harmonise long-term progression pathways.

If seniority matters, protect it visibly.

Silence breeds speculation.

Speculation breeds division.

Division weakens command.

This is not about undoing history. It is about stabilising the future.

Nigeria’s security challenges demand a unified Force. Insurgency, kidnapping networks, economic crimes – these threats do not pause for internal friction.

A divided structure cannot deliver cohesive security.

The ROAD Forward

  • R – Reprofessionalise operations.
  • O – Rebalance organisational fairness.
  • A – Reinforce accountability.
  • D – Restore discipline with dignity.

This is not symbolic reform. It is structural recalibration.

IGP Rilwan Olatunji Adio Disu has an opportunity rare in public leadership — to transform coincidence into mandate.

His initials form ROAD.

Nigeria’s policing system requires one.

The question is whether the metaphor will remain poetic — or become policy.

History will not judge this tenure by ceremonial parades or press briefings.

It will judge it by structural courage.

And structural courage begins from within.

*Ogundipe, Public Affairs Analyst, former President Nigeria and Africa Union of Journalists writes from Abuja.

Tags: Inspector-General of Police (IGP)Nigeria Police ForceRilwan Olatunji Adio Disu
SendShareTweetShare
ReportersAtLarge

ReportersAtLarge

Reporters At Large is the world’s fastest-growing online news platform and public service broadcaster. We’re impartial and independent, and every day we create distinctive, world-class programmes and content which inform, educate and entertain millions of people in Nigeria and around the world.

More

Prime Minister Mark Carney meeting Indo-Pacific leaders for trade and security alliances
Opinion

Mark Carney’s Indo-Pacific Mission: Repositioning Canada For A New Global Economic Era

by ReportersAtLarge
March 11, 2026
0

In the evolving landscape of global diplomacy and economic competition, nations that succeed are those that actively shape the international...

Read moreDetails
Kayode Ajulo with Wale Ojo-Lanre
Opinion

Why I’m Dragging Ondo State Attorney-General Kayode Ajulo To Court – Wale Ojo-Lanre

by ReportersAtLarge
March 9, 2026
0

Orlando Owoh must have had people like Kayode Ajulo in mind when he sang that line. Yes, the same Kayode...

Read moreDetails
President Bola Tinubu Certificate saga
Opinion

The Tinubu Enigma: Power, Strategy And The Nigerian State

by ReportersAtLarge
March 8, 2026
0

Few figures in Nigeria’s Fourth Republic evoke as much fascination, admiration, suspicion and debate as President Bola Ahmed Tinubu. To...

Read moreDetails
Load More

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recommended

Prof Uche Ikonne

SAD! One Month To 2023 Elecrions, Abia PDP Guber Candidate, Prof Ikonne Dies Of Multiple Cardiac Arrests

3 years ago
Olayinka Agboola

REVEALED! Why UCH Denied Gov Makinde, Others Access To Parrot Xtra Magazine Boss, Olayinka Agboola

5 years ago

Popular News

  • Did Sean Dampte burn a £900,000 Lamborghini for a music video?

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Gospel Music Legend Toun Soetan Passes On

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Iran’s New Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei Defies Trump, Vows To Keep Strait of Hormuz Closed

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Strait Of Hormuz: Impact Of Iran Closing The Global Oil Corridor

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • How Nigeria’s Hard-Won Sporting Reform Risks Being Undermined By Political Patronage

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Connect with us

ADVERTISEMENT

About Us

Reporters At Large is the world’s fastest-growing online news platform and public service broadcaster. We’re impartial and independent, and every day we create distinctive, world-class programmes and content which inform, educate and entertain millions of people in Nigeria and around the world.

With a high level of professionalism, fairness, objectivity, accuracy and speed, we publish Breaking News Nigeria Today Headlines and International news on Politics, Tourism and Travel, Entertainment, Sports, Business Lifestyle and Sports.

Category

  • Auto Trend
  • Breaking Bones
  • Business
  • Columns
  • Entertainment
  • Featured
  • For The Record
  • Health
  • Innovation
  • Lifestyle
  • Metro
  • News
  • Opinion
  • People & Events
  • Politics
  • Press Releases
  • Science & Technology
  • Sponsored
  • Sport
  • Tourism & Culture
  • Video
  • Video News
  • WorldNews

Recent Posts

  • Did Sean Dampte burn a £900,000 Lamborghini for a music video? March 14, 2026
  • Gospel Music Legend Toun Soetan Passes On March 13, 2026
  • Iran’s New Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei Defies Trump, Vows To Keep Strait of Hormuz Closed March 12, 2026
  • Strait Of Hormuz: Impact Of Iran Closing The Global Oil Corridor March 12, 2026
  • How Nigeria’s Hard-Won Sporting Reform Risks Being Undermined By Political Patronage March 12, 2026
February 2026
SMTWTFS
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
« Jan   Mar »
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Tourism
  • Lifestyle
  • RAL TV
  • More

© 2016-2024 RAL - Guided by professionalism

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • World
    • For The Record
    • Metro
    • Opinion
    • Press Releases
  • Business
    • Auto Trend
  • Politics
  • Tourism
  • Lifestyle
    • People & Events
    • Health
  • RAL TV
    • Video
    • Video News
  • More
    • Advertisement
    • Privacy
    • Disclaimer
    • Contact Us

© 2016-2024 RAL - Guided by professionalism

Verified by MonsterInsights