HomeBreaking News*Reform vs Sabotage: Who Leaked the Tiger Base Inspection?* 

*Reform vs Sabotage: Who Leaked the Tiger Base Inspection?* 

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By Okechukwu Nwanguma
There is a compelling reason to believe that the Inspector-General of Police, Olatunji Rilwan Disu, did not authorise a symbolic or cosmetic inspection when he deployed Deputy Inspector-General Margaret Ochalla to Imo State.

The stated objective – to enforce professionalism, ensure compliance with the rule of law, and safeguard the rights of detainees – aligns with ongoing reform signals from the Force leadership. If anything, the timing of the visit – coming on the heels of serious allegations raised by the Rule of Law and Accountability Advocacy Centre (RULAAC) – suggests an intention to confront, not conceal, the truth.
But if that is the case, then something clearly went wrong.
Credible reports indicate that operatives of the Anti-Kidnapping Unit, widely known as Tiger Base, may have received advance notice of the DIG’s “unscheduled” visit. What followed was a hurried clearing of detention cells – effectively removing individuals allegedly held under inhuman conditions. If accurate, this was not just an administrative adjustment; it was a calculated act of evasion. It raises a far more serious issue than the original allegations: the possibility that elements within the system are actively sabotaging oversight efforts.
This is the paradox confronting police reform in Nigeria. Leadership may signal commitment to accountability, but entrenched networks within operational units often possess both the incentive and the means to resist scrutiny. When inspections can be anticipated and stage-managed, they cease to be tools of accountability and become exercises in deception.
The key question, therefore, is no longer limited to what is happening inside Tiger Base. It is now equally about who leaked the inspection – and why.
A leak of this nature is not a trivial breach. It undermines command authority, compromises the integrity of internal oversight, and enables the destruction or concealment of evidence. It effectively warns those who may have something to hide, giving them time to sanitise records, relocate detainees, and construct defensible narratives. In any serious institution, such a breach would trigger an immediate and thorough internal investigation.
If the Nigeria Police Force is serious about reform, this is a moment that demands decisive action. The Inspector-General must order a targeted probe into the source of the leak that preceded the DIG’s visit. This should not be treated as routine indiscipline, but as a potential act of obstruction – one that may involve officers within or connected to the command structure.
At the same time, the underlying allegations cannot be overshadowed. The reported shooting of detainees, the questionable official narratives, allegations of extortion, and the possible collusion with local vigilante actors all require independent and transparent investigation. Accountability cannot stop at identifying who tipped off Tiger Base; it must extend to uncovering what they were trying to hide.
What is at stake is larger than a single unit or incident. It is the credibility of the Nigeria Police Force’s reform agenda. If internal oversight can be compromised from within, then public assurances of accountability will ring hollow.
The Inspector-General now has an opportunity to send a clear message: that reform is not just policy rhetoric, but an institutional commitment backed by consequences. Identifying and sanctioning those responsible for the leak would be a critical first step. Ensuring that Tiger Base – and similar units – are subjected to truly independent scrutiny would be the next step.
Anything less risks reinforcing a dangerous perception: that even when the leadership seeks the truth, the system is designed to hide it.  #Securitynewsalert.com

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