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Nigeria's Inspector-General of Police, Olatunji Disu, has said no to fully tinted vehicles on the country's roads.
The Inspector-General of Police (I-G), Mr Olatunji Disu, said the Nigeria Police Force would not fully accept tinted vehicles on Nigerian roads and would, at a later date, begin enforcement against them. Disu said this on Tuesday in Abuja during a courtesy visit by a delegation from the Nigerian Bar Association led by its President, Mr Afam Osigwe, SAN.
According to him, looking at the way vehicles are tinted in this country, one will be amazed, as people now tint the windscreen and the rear screen of their vehicles. He said the development would not be accepted in Nigeria, because it exposes police officers and other security agencies on the road to danger. According to him, the lives of security officers on the roads are being put in danger because they cannot see the occupants of such vehicles as they approach.
So, it is not acceptable for you to fully tint your glasses because the only two reasons vehicles were permitted to be tinted according to the law are for security and medical reasons. Even at that, you do not have a right to tint your vehicle so dark that it cannot be seen around. For vehicles that are brought in tinted, you will notice that the front glasses were not always tinted, only the back.
In Nigeria, people will tint their vehicles and put a hole by the side of the driver's seat for him to see, implying that it is disadvantageous to tint those glasses. People have been kidnapped, even in their vehicles, and they will pass through checkpoints.
Disu said the habit of officers on duty video recording could demoralise them, given the current security situation in the country. I want to plead that this is not the time to demoralise police officers, the country is going through some security situations, and officers are going through that as well. Police officers are eating, you are going to video them. Police officers have rights as well, and we are ready to enforce our rights. When we say end to impunity, we have started working towards it.
Whenever you report our officers, we take it up, and a lot of them have been dismissed, and some of them have been punished.
Earlier, the NBA boss said the visit was to congratulate the I-G on his appointment, identify areas of collaboration and areas that could be improved upon by the Nigeria Police Force. He said the NBA was, in principle, not opposed to granting tinted glass permits to the police, but opposed to turning tinted glass approval into a money-making venture. According to him, we had to go to court because the requirement that one tinted glass approval be renewable was not clear. We don’t think it should be renewable. We think that if you have processed it once, it should not be a money-generating thing and that a private company should not collect money for it.
There is a need for us to protect our society and to ensure that the type of tinted glass that is permissible on the vehicle is such that you can see the occupant, which is what the law states.
Key Facts
- 27 vehicles used by 'one chance' operators were recovered, and 26 of them were tinted vehicles.
- The police are moving towards enforcing a ban on fully tinted vehicles.
- The Nigeria Police Force will start enforcing against tinted vehicles at a later date.
- The Inspector-General of Police, Olatunji Disu, said the development would not be accepted in Nigeria because it exposes police officers and other security agencies on the road to danger.
- The lives of security officers on the roads are being put in danger because they cannot see the occupants of such vehicles as they approach.