Nigeria
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Key Information |
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Nigeria is not a participant to the Montreux Document |
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Sector Size (2019) 1,850 PSCs (1,110 licensed, 840 unlicensed)
828,502 PSC Personnel
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Can PSC personnel carry firearms? No
*Section 17 of the Private Guards Companies Act of 1986
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International Code of Conduct
Association (ICoCA)
ICoCA Member State: No
ICoCA Company Members: 2
ICoCA CSO Members: 6
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Voluntary Principles on Security and Human Rights Voluntary Principles State Member: No
Voluntary Principles Company Members: 1
Voluntary Principles NGO Members: 2
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SummaryIn Nigeria, the demand for private security services in complementing the conventional security establishments has risen over the last decade. A rising tide of insecurity has been targeting government installations, private business and the public places, both within the region (Lake Chad region) and across the county (such as insurgency in the North East, kidnappings in the South and South East to bank robberies in the South West) putting a major strain on public security forces such as the Police, Army, Nigerian Security and Civil Defense Corps (NSCDC) and the Department of State Services (DSS). In response to this strain on public security forces, private security companies (PSCs) have become an important and increasingly prevalent supplement. Moreover, effective monitoring and supervision by the regulatory authority of the numerous PSCs has been reported as a challenge. Poor standards of operation and professional conducts are prevalent in the industry, where a majority of PSCs suffer from poor and inadequate capacities and professionalism, resulting in many cases in unethical and unprofessional practices, potentially amounting to abuses of human rights. Legal FrameworkThe current scope of regulation of the Nigerian legal framework – through the Private Guard Companies Act No. 23 of 1986– is limited only to Private Security Companies (PSCs). As such, it does not regulate neither individuals who are not employed by a PSC nor the activities or services of Private Military Companies (PMCs). The Nigerian Security and Civil Defense Corps is the legal authority overseeing PSCs in Nigeria, as provided for in the Nigeria Security and Civil Defense Corps (Amendment) Act below.
ChallengesThe Baseline study on Private Security Governance in Nigeria, developed in 2019 by AFRILAW in the framework of the Observatory identified the following main challenges: Regulatory and legal framework challenges
Conflicts of interest
Registration and licensing
Working conditions and welfare
Human rights violations
Members of the Private Security Governance Observatory
Baseline Study on Private Security Governance in Nigeria
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