Death Penalty For Kidnappers In Edo As Oshiomole Signs Kidnapping Prohibition Law

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Edo State Governor Adams Oshiomhole, yesterday, signed the state Kidnapping Prohibition Law as amended, which prescribes the death penalty for kidnappers.

Oshiomole, while signing the law, said government would do everything within its powers to ensure the safety of lives and property in the state.

“I have just signed into law a bill amending the Kidnapping Provision Law 2009 as amended by the state House of Assembly, which now prescribes death penalty for anyone who is involved in any form of kidnapping,” he said.

“We have had enough laws in our statute books that provide for various degrees of punishment for various offences. I think the real challenge is about law enforcement and dealing with the problem of impunity. Laws will be worthless if we do not have the capacity to apprehend, interrogate, persecute and interrogate criminals and invoke the full weight of the law.

“I am convinced that within the three arms of government of the legislative, the Judiciary and the Executive, we have a responsibility to make laws and enforce those laws in a way that would send clear signals to those involved in acts of criminality whether they are kidnappers, armed robbers, rapists that the security agencies now much more determined than ever before to ensure that this state becomes too hot for criminals to operate,” the governor said.

Oshiomhole, who noted that the overwhelming majority of the criminals were migrant criminals from neighbouring states and faraway to perpetuate crime, said everything was being done to ensure that the security agencies put a security machinery in place to fight the menace.

He therefore assured the people of the state on government’s commitment to ending the menace.

“I want to assure the good people of Edo State that government is concerned about the state of kidnapping. We share the pain, the agony and trauma which victims of kidnap are all subjected to, but I assure our people that everything is being done to keep these criminals in check.

“Having signed into law the death penalty, let me assure the good people of Edo State that as reluctant as one wants to be in matters of life and death. I am convinced that the overriding public interest dictates that we invoke the maximum penalty available in our law on those involved in the act of kidnapping. Anyone sentenced and convicted, I would sign the death warrant.”

Oshiomole dismissed the argument of those that said kidnapping was a result of unemployment, saying “no one should try to trivialise very complex issues.”

“We need coordinated efforts to deal with the problem of crime in Nigeria,” restating that the Governor does not have the power to deal with any security officer who might have misbehaved or through whose negligence the people might have been exposed to any criminal act.

“At best, we are able to provide resources and equipment as we have tried to do within our limited resources in spite of the fact that the language, the letter and the spirit of the constitution is clear that security matters are federal issues which is why the federal government continues to have monopoly of the police and of all the armed forces and the state security services. None of these comes under the control of the state government,” he said.

“I am convinced as a matter of fact that the Federal Government is doing its best to arm and equip the police and the other security agencies. There are no quick-fix solutions to the issue of crime. Criminals are not in limited number that you exterminate and go and sleep,” he added.

He however assured the people of the state that government was doing everything to purge the state of criminals.