THIS DAWN — President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has announced a comprehensive series of security reforms aimed at addressing escalating insecurity across Nigeria, including a state of emergency on security.
The measures, declared between November 23 and November 26, 2025, encompass mass recruitment, redeployment of personnel, and institutional adjustments designed to strengthen national security.
The reforms follow a surge in kidnappings, bandit attacks, and violent incidents across multiple states.
This prompted the President to take decisive action to safeguard citizens and restore confidence in law enforcement agencies.
Key measures announced by Tinubu:
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The President ordered the withdrawal of all police officers assigned to VIP protection duties, directing their redeployment to core policing responsibilities in frontline and community security roles.
This move aims to address manpower gaps in areas most affected by crime. -
An initial recruitment of 30,000 additional police officers was approved to expand the operational capacity of the Nigerian Police Force.
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Tinubu declared a nationwide security emergency, further authorizing the recruitment of 20,000 additional police officers, bringing the total new intake under the current drive to 50,000 personnel.
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New recruits will be trained using alternative facilities, including repurposed NYSC camps and other military training centers, to accelerate preparedness and deployment.
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Officers withdrawn from VIP details are to undergo crash retraining before being posted to security-challenged zones, ensuring frontline coverage in vulnerable areas.
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DSS and Specialized Security Units: The Department of State Services has been directed to deploy trained forest guards and recruit additional personnel to pursue bandits and criminal elements operating in remote and forested regions, targeting traditional hiding spots for criminal activity.
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Operational Focus: The reforms prioritize community policing, rapid response, and protection of civilians, particularly in areas that have experienced repeated attacks and kidnappings. (See table below)
Officials emphasize that the measures, including the state of emergency, mark the most significant overhaul of Nigeria’s security architecture in recent years.
The initiatives aim to enhance the readiness of law enforcement agencies, improve operational coverage, and rebuild public trust.
Presidential aides stress that Nigeria possesses the human and material resources to combat insecurity effectively, but prior misallocation of personnel and inadequate deployment have hindered progress.
The current reforms, combining mass recruitment with strategic redeployment, seek to optimize available resources and create a visible security presence nationwide.
The government has pledged to monitor implementation closely, ensuring that recruits are deployed efficiently and that frontline security in high-risk areas is significantly strengthened.
Key Observations
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The largest single expansion of the police service in recent memory — 50,000 new officers — is now underway under the security emergency declaration.
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The redeployment from VIP protection to frontline and community policing marks a strategic shift, intended to redirect manpower where most needed.
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The use of NYSC camps and temporary training depots reflects urgency in building capacity quickly, even as formal training infrastructure is upgraded.
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Expanded DSS and forest‑guard deployment signals recognition that insecurity in remote, forested, and rural zones must be addressed through non-standard policing and specialized units.
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The call for legal reforms to allow state-level policing suggests a long-term institutional shift — not just a temporary manpower boost.
The table below captures the breadth and scale of the government’s security overhaul encapsulated by the state of emergency under the Tinubu administration.
It combines manpower expansion, redeployment, training reforms, and structural changes in Nigeria’s security framework.














