– By Okechukwu Nwanguma
On July 21, 2025, Nigeria witnessed a rare but profound event in the history of its security services: retired police officers taking to the streets to demand justice for years of pension neglect, poor welfare, and systemic abandonment.
Described as the “mother of all peaceful protests,” the action represents not just a cry for economic survival but a resounding indictment of leadership failure across successive governments.
In response, the Nigerian Police Force issued a carefully crafted press statement. It sought to portray the protest as legitimate, yet tinged with political manipulation. It acknowledged the validity of the retirees’ grievances, yet subtly discredited the protest’s organisers as misinformed or misled. This contradictory posture—of empathy laced with institutional defensiveness—epitomises the trust deficit that has long plagued police-citizen and police-government relations.
The protest is not just about pensions. It is about dignity, betrayal, and the corrosive effects of Nigeria’s broken social contract, especially with those who once risked their lives to secure it. For decades, police officers have served under crushing conditions: inadequate housing, insufficient medical care, irregular salaries, and, upon retirement, pensions that can barely sustain life. The Contributory Pension Scheme (CPS), under which police are grouped with other federal employees, has been widely criticised as unsuitable for the peculiar nature of policing, which involves early retirement, high risk, and low pay.
The official claim that the Force is “pursuing alternative solutions” like using internally generated revenue to supplement pensions, while commendable in theory, raises serious questions. Why now? Why only in response to public pressure? What about transparency, legal guarantees, and sustainability?
The reality is that the Nigerian Police Force, and by extension the government, has consistently failed its own. Officers who served through conflict, terrorism, and systemic corruption are now being forced to protest publicly in their old age, many limping, sick, and financially broken. It is both a moral failure and a security risk. A demoralised police force—whether serving or retired—cannot guarantee the safety of any society.
The statement from the Inspector-General of Police also hinted at the future: that the CPS will yield better outcomes as it matures. But this ignores the urgent suffering of today’s retirees, whose lives cannot wait for actuarial improvements in five or ten years. Promises without timelines, action, or legal reform amount to empty platitudes.
Perhaps most revealing was the stark contrast between the IGP’s closed-door meeting with a handpicked group of retirees and the open-air defiance by hundreds of protesting officers who rejected what they called “photo-ops and tokenism.” Their message was clear: We are not fooled.
For those watching closely, July 21 marked more than just a protest. It marked a reckoning. The uniformed men and women who once silently endured indignity are now finding their voice—and their voice is loud, righteous, and impossible to suppress.
If the Police Force wishes to truly set the record straight, it must go beyond press releases and meetings. It must embrace transparency, push for legislative amendments, and above all, restore dignity through action, ot rhetoric.
Until then, the chant outside Force Headquarters will echo louder than any carefully worded communique: Justice for Retired Police Officers. Now.



