After documenting and auditing the state’s forests, the government of Edo said that it will begin the recruitment of forest police.
Crusoe Osagie, Special Adviser, Media Project to Governor Godwin Obaseki, made this announcement on Monday, August 1.
Osagie claims that the recruiting is a component of a renewed attempt to improve security throughout the state.
According to Osagie, the state government is improving the security architecture and implementing numerous actions to maintain security in the state. These include bush sweeping, registering motorbikes and markets, signing anti-grazing laws, and registering inhabitants, among other things.
The statement;
“The responsibility of any government in any society is to guarantee the security and safety of the people. No government can call itself a government if it cannot protect and secure the lives of the people that it oversees.
“That is why for us in Edo, given what is going on in the country today, we have decided that security is now our number one priority. In the area of our forests, we have completed documentation and audit of all our forests in Edo State, particularly in Edo South.
“We have done a flyover of all our forests and as we speak, we have set up a new forestry commission. Our forestry laws that have not been updated in more than 50 years now have been updated. And part of the provisions of the law is that we will now re-energise the institution of forest guards.
“We are currently in discussion with the Federal Ministry of Environment and some other stakeholders to begin the recruitment of the first set of the new forest police as we will call them to support the activities of all the other security agencies.
“In terms of squatters in markets, we are going to enforce the local government laws which stipulate that it is only the local government that is entitled to register markets and shut down illegal markets.
“Any place where trading is currently taking place today and such a place has not been registered will be immediately shut down.”