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Buhari’s CSO counters ADC’s order, asks DSS to continue presidential protection


President Muhammadu Buhari’s Chief Security Officer, Abdulrahman Mani, has revoked the order by the Aide-De-Camp to the President, Lt.-Col. Lawal Abubakar, directing operatives of the Department of State Services to stop giving Buhari close body protection.

Buhari’s ADC had on Wednesday last week issued a memo removing the DSS officials from 10 beats they were in charge.

Abubakar claimed that the decision to strip them of the beats was part of efforts to enhance general security within the villa.

He directed personnel of the Armed Forces and the Nigeria Police to take over the DSS officials’ duties of providing “close/immediate protection” for the President with immediate effect.

But in a June 26, 2015, memo by the CSO, Mani directed the DSS officials to disregard the ADC’s order, as duties being performed by the DSS personnel in the Presidential villa were backed by relevant statutes and gazetted instruments.

The memo, which copied the National Security Adviser; the Chief of Defence Staff and the Director-General of DSS, cited Section 2(I )(ii) of Instrument No.SSS 1 of May 23, 1999 made pursuant to Section 6 of the National Security Agencies Decree of 1986, which has been re-enacted as Section 6 of NSA Act CAP N74 LFN 2004.

He said the law empowered personnel of the DSS to provide protective security for designated principal government functionaries.

The functionaries, he said, included but not limited to the President and Vice President as well as members of their immediate families.

He said the law also mandates the DSS to provide protective security for sensitive installations such as the Presidential Villa and visiting foreign dignitaries.

The CSO said it was for that reason that personnel of the DSS near the President were carefully selected and properly trained and that background checks were constantly carried out on them to confirm their suitability and loyalty.

The CSO’s memo read, “In fact, the issues raised in the aforementioned (ADC’s) circular tend to suggest that the author may have ventured into a not-too-familiar terrain.

“The extant practice, the world over, is that VIP protection, which is a specialised field, is usually handled by the Secret Service, under whatever nomenclature.

“They usually constitute the inner core security ring around every principal. The Police and the military by training and mandate are often required to provide secondary and tertiary security cordons around venues and routes.

“However, all other security agencies, including the army, the police and others, also have their roles to play. It is on this note that heads of all security agencies currently in the Presidential Villa and their subordinates are enjoined to key into the existing command and control structure. They are to work in harmony with each other in full and strict compliance with the demands of their statutorily prescribed responsibilities.

“Meanwhile, joint training programmes and other incentives will be worked out in the days ahead to ensure that all security personnel at the Presidential Villa are properly educated to understand their statutory roles and responsibilities.

“This is with a view to avoiding obvious grandstanding, overzealousness, limited knowledge or outright display of ignorance in future.”

Mani asked all the unit and departmental heads to bring the content of his memo to the attention of all personnel for compliance.

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