The Federal Government’s push to strip Very Important Persons (VIPs) of taxpayer-funded police escorts is more than a policy tweak, it marks a sharp break from decades of entrenched entitlement that has left ordinary Nigerians dangerously exposed.
At the heart of the reform, announced by Hadiza Bala-Usman, Special Adviser to the President on Policy and Coordination, lies a simple but radical principle: public security is not for sale, and private privilege must no longer drain national protection.
For years, convoys of politicians and tycoons trailed by gun-wielding police have been a familiar sight on Nigerian roads. Behind the tinted glass of their SUVs, the powerful moved with a shield of state-funded protection, while ordinary citizens faced insecurity almost alone.
In many cases, anti-terror squads and mobile policemen were pulled directly from crime-ridden streets to serve elite convoys.

In a country where banditry and insurgency stretch security forces thin, the image of heavily armed officers escorting VIPs through Lagos and Abuja has become a symbol of imbalance—and a source of growing resentment.
Bala-Usman’s declaration is to reset the narrative.
By amending the Private Guard Companies Act, government intends to push VIPs into hiring licensed private firms for their personal protection, freeing the police to return to their constitutional duty of defending the people.
If implemented, the shift could boost public confidence by returning security operatives to communities, expand a regulated private security industry that employs retired senior officers, and force elites to bear the cost of privilege once funded by taxpayers.
The reform is bold, but turbulence lies ahead. Powerful figures long accustomed to free escorts are unlikely to surrender quietly. Yet the moral ground is clear: Nigeria cannot continue to guard the few while leaving the many at the mercy of insecurity.
This is more than a security reform. It is an accountability test for a nation struggling to balance privilege with public good.
