Significant progress has been made towards establishing state police, with a constitutional amendment expected soon, following months of consultations among the Executive, the National Assembly and security authorities, says Femi Gbajabiamila.
The chief of staff to the president disclosed this on Thursday while briefing State House correspondents after a consultative meeting on state police convened by the presidency, held at the State House, Abuja.
“We started deliberations in the last three or four months on how to go about the establishment of state police as directed by Mr President.
“Establishing state police is not something that you do with the snap of the fingers. There is a lot involved in terms of constitution and legalities, and thank God we have now gained a lot of traction. Hopefully, the amendment will come shortly, and the details of the amendment will come after that,” Mr Gbajabiamila added.
Mr Gbajabiamila disclosed that deliberations on the proposed state police framework began several months ago, following a directive by President Bola Tinubu, and noted that the process has gained considerable traction.
“Right now, what we are looking at is the constitutional amendment itself, and then the enabling law would follow thereafter. That is what we have been deliberating on in the last couple of hours,” Mr Gbajabiamila told the journalists.
The chief of staff highlighted broad national support for the initiative, emphasising that the debate is no longer about whether state police should be established but about creating the appropriate legal and institutional framework for its operation.
According to him, Mr Tinubu, who has consistently advocated for state police as part of efforts to strengthen Nigeria’s security architecture, would receive a comprehensive report on the meeting’s outcome.
The meeting is part of a series of consultations convened by the Tinubu government to develop a workable framework for establishing state police, an initiative aimed at strengthening internal security, improving local intelligence gathering, and enhancing the capacity of sub-national governments to address emerging security challenges across the country.
The president has maintained in the last few months that state police is a necessary response to Nigeria’s evolving security challenges, advocating that a decentralised policing structure would strengthen grassroots security, enhance intelligence gathering and improve the protection of lives and property across the country.
The meeting was attended by the deputy president of the Senate, Jibrin Barau, the deputy speaker of the House of Representatives, Benjamin Kalu and the inspector general of police, Tunji Disu, according to a statement on Thursday by presidential spokesman Bayo Onanuga.



