The acting Inspector-General of Police, 
Ibrahim Idris, says his predecessor, Solomon Arase,  went away with 24 
police vehicles while the seven Deputy Inspectors-General of Police, who
 retired alongside him, also carted away between seven and eight cars 
each.
Idris stated that he had written Arase 
to return the cars, which included two official bullet-proof BMW 7 
series cars, adding that the retired police chief and his DIGs had yet 
to return the vehicles.
The IG, who said this during an 
interview with journalists on Sunday in Abuja, explained that a special 
investigation team was already looking at the records of police vehicle 
purchases in the last three years as well as how they were distributed.
Arase, however, denied the allegations of his successor, saying he didn’t go away with any police vehicle.
The former IG, who spoke to our 
correspondent on the telephone on Sunday, denied taking away 24 police 
cars, describing the allegations as a malicious propaganda.
Arase advised Idris to squarely face security issues confronting the country rather than engaging in “media propaganda.”
He said, “What am I going to do with 24 
cars? Do I want to open a car shop? This is a malicious accusation. 
There are ways of verifying issues rather than engaging in media 
propaganda.”
But Idris, explaining the steps he had 
taken, said, “If you look through the windows of my former office and 
from the report from my (Force) transport officer, you would see cars 
but a week to the day I would resume, all these cars disappeared.
“So, what I am telling you is that I 
have signed a directive to my SIP (I have a special investigation panel,
 I set it up). It is going to investigate all the vehicle purchases, 
contributions to the police and the distribution of those vehicles in 
the last three years; we are going to look into that.
“When I took over, there was no vehicle,
 even the vehicle I would use. I discovered the last IG went away with 
24 vehicles; the DIGs, some of them eight, some of them seven. The IG’s 
vehicles included two BMW 7 series, one armoured; and he left me with an
 old car.
“The last time I followed the President 
with it, he was asking me, ‘what are you doing with this old car’ 
because if you see the headlight, the thing has changed colour, which 
means they parked it and rains and everything had fallen on it, but the 
new ones that were bought, he (Arase) went with all of them; they are 
part of the 24.
“I wrote back to him and said, we have a
 policy that says when a policeman retires, if you are an IG, AIG, a CP,
 you are entitled to some vehicles; please, the extra, return it. Four 
vehicles are enough for an average human being, but what will you even 
do with four vehicles; but he took 24 vehicles, including two BMW cars.
“I wrote to him (Arase), I wrote to the DIGs.”
Idris disclosed that the Police 
Management Team would probe the last promotion in the Force following 
complaints by many police personnel that their juniors were promoted 
over them.
He explained that the probe was to 
address the discrepancies and complaints by aggrieved police personnel, 
who were allegedly short-changed during the exercise.
Idris stated that the probe panel would 
be set up to verify if the promotion was in line with the police service
 commission policy and regulations.
The IG explained that his focus was to run a democratic police organisation, which would be responsive and accountable.
He added that he had directed some audit
 firms to audit all police investments to make them more transparent and
 ensure that the rank and file, who were also shareholders, had more say
 in the police companies.
On strategies to curb the increasing 
wave of kidnapping and other crimes, Idris said he would strengthen, 
retrain and equip the Special Anti-Robbery Squad to be more responsive 
and responsible.
He said he recently removed some Area Commanders in Rivers and Kogi states when he learnt that they had been compromised.
 (c)Punch
 
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