By John Ikani
The Nigerian Senate on Tuesday passed a resolution to demand the creation of special correctional centres for high-profile criminals.
The passage of the resolution comes days after gunmen attacked the Medium Security Custodial Centre in Jos, Plateau State on Sunday, November 28.
The attack left nine inmates and one security operative dead, and 252 escaping the facility.
Debating on the need for creation of special correctional centres for high-profile criminals, Senator Amos Bulus Kilawangs (Gombe South – APC) said the attack, alongside attacks on other centres, was a proof that criminals are not scared to free their comrades in custody.
He therefore moved a motion to have special correctional facilities created for ‘condemned and high-profile’ criminals with strategies that make them impossible to break into.
According to him, the locations of the facilities in populated areas make them easy targets for informants and gunmen to operate efficiently.
“There is a need for us as a nation to create special centres where these high-profile criminals will be isolated.
“We’ll have about three security levels. In other words, you keep them in an isolated place,” he said.
Senator Ayo Akinyelure (Ondo Central – APC) seconded the motion and it was passed unanimously by lawmakers present when it was put to a voice vote by the Deputy Speaker, Ovie Omo-Agege, who presided over Tuesday’s plenary.
The attack on the centre in Jos continues a trend of attacks on correctional centres across Nigeria.
Large-scale prison breaks have happened in Edo last year, and Imo, Oyo, and Kogi this year, leading to the escape of thousands of inmates, many of them awaiting trial.
The Minister of Interior, Rauf Aregbesola, said earlier this month that 3,906 inmates who have escaped from centres across Nigeria since last year are still at large.