HomeFeaturesTinubu Orders Suspension Of New FAAN Cashless Policy

Tinubu Orders Suspension Of New FAAN Cashless Policy

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President Bola Tinubu has ordered immediate suspension of the controversial cashless policy introduced by the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria, FAAN.

This is coming barely four days after its rollout triggered massive gridlock at major airports nationwide.

The Eastern Updates reports that the policy, launched on March 1, mandated digital payments via ‘Go Cashless’ cards or POS systems for airport access gates, parking and lounges.

It sparked severe traffic jams at key facilities such as Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Lagos, and Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja, resulting in long queues, stranded motorists and numerous missed flights.

Minister of Aviation and Aerospace, Festus Keyamo, announced the suspension of the policy while briefing State House Correspondents on the outcome of the Federal Executive Council, FEC, meeting presided over by President Tinubu.

According to the minister, Tinubu asked the aviation ministry and the leadership of FAAN to halt implementation, pending a review.

The President equally ordered them to “go back to the drawing board” and develop a more people‑friendly alternative that balances revenue transparency goals with passenger convenience.

Nigeria’s newly confirmed Inspector-General of Police Tunji Disu moved within hours of taking formal office on Wednesday to establish the institutional machinery for state policing, inaugurating an eight-member implementation committee and outlining a policing philosophy built on accountability, human rights, and decentralisation, signals that the administration regards the new police chief’s appointment as an opportunity to advance one of its most contested security reform commitments.

Professor Olu Ogunsakin, the pioneer Director-General of the National Institute of Police Studies in Kano, was named to chair the committee. Its terms of reference include proposing an operational framework for the establishment and coordination of state police structures, reviewing issues relating to training, recruitment, resource allocation, and oversight mechanisms, and drafting guidelines for how state-level forces would interact with the federal command. Disu described the committee’s task as responding directly to a demand that had grown more urgent across successive administrations.

“It is my greatest privilege to formally inaugurate this committee on state policing. The task before this committee is both significant and timely, as it speaks directly to the demand to strengthen Nigeria’s internal security and ensure that policing remains responsive to the realities of our communities,” he said.

The inauguration was Disu’s first formal engagement with the senior hierarchy of the Nigeria Police Force since the Nigeria Police Council unanimously ratified his appointment on Tuesday. The council meeting, attended by governors from Kwara, Ogun, Lagos, Ondo, Enugu, and Plateau states alongside the ministers of police affairs, the FCT, and the interior, cleared the constitutional path to his swearing-in by President Bola Tinubu at the Presidential Villa, a ceremony expected to take place during the Federal Executive Council meeting on Wednesday.

The committee’s work will unfold against a legal and political landscape that has been shifting since the Nigerian constitution was amended in 2024 to permit the establishment of state-level police forces. Calls for state police had intensified across at least a decade of worsening security conditions in which a centralised federal police model was seen by many governors as structurally incapable of responding with sufficient speed, local knowledge, or manpower to threats that were geographically diverse and operationally distinct, from kidnapping networks active in the North-West to herders-farmers violence in the North-Central, Boko Haram and ISWAP operations in the North-East, and communal and cultism-related violence in the South. President Tinubu had on multiple occasions told European Union and US representatives that his administration would implement state police as a cornerstone of its security sector reform. Thirty-six states and the FCT have already submitted compliance reports on the establishment of their state police structures to the federal government.

Read Also: Nigeria’s Police Council Endorses Disu As New Chief

Disu addressed the top hierarchy on the principles that would define his tenure before turning to the structural announcements. Leadership, he said, was “not about position but responsibility.” Professionalism and accountability were not slogans, he said, but standards that would shape conduct and operations in every command. He emphasised human rights as a foundational rather than peripheral concern: every Nigerian, regardless of status, background, or the nature of the offence for which they were stopped, detained, or arrested, was entitled to dignity, fairness, and justice. Authority, he added, was strongest when exercised with restraint, a formulation whose implicit critique of policing practice in Nigeria was not difficult to read.

On internal oversight, Disu announced that the Public Complaint Unit and the X-Squad, the two principal mechanisms through which members of the public and the force itself are supposed to hold police officers to account, would be empowered to operate with genuine independence. Both units have historically struggled to function as effective accountability instruments, with the X-Squad in particular carrying a legacy of being used selectively against officers who fell out of favour with senior leadership rather than as a systematic disciplinary mechanism. Directing them to operate independently signals an intent to convert them into functional tools, though the institutional dynamics that have historically limited their effectiveness have not changed overnight.

On decentralisation, Disu said the state police model would allow state governments and local authorities to respond directly to security challenges specific to their jurisdictions, improving intelligence gathering and response times and building the community relationships that federal policing at scale had struggled to sustain. He was careful to reassure officers that the federal police’s constitutional role as the primary national law enforcement institution remained intact.

 

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