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State Security Service (Nigeria)

The State Security Service (SSS), self-styled as the Department of State Services (DSS),[1] is a security agency of Nigeria and one of three successor organisations to the National Security Organization (NSO). The agency is under the Presidency of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, and it reports its activities to the office of the NSA.

Department of State Services
Agency overview
Formed5 June 1986; 36 years ago (1986-06-05)
Preceding agency
JurisdictionNigeria
HeadquartersAso Drive, Abuja, FCT
09°04′27″N 7°30′35″E / 9.07417°N 7.50972°E / 9.07417; 7.50972
EmployeesClassified
Annual budgetClassified
Minister responsible
Agency executive
Key documents
  • National Security Agencies Act of 1986 (Decree 19)
  • Presidential Proclamation; SSS Instrument I of 1999
Websitewww.dss.gov.ng

Its main responsibilities are within the country and include counter-intelligence, internal security, counter-terrorism, and surveillance as well as investigating some other types of serious crimes against the state. It is also charged with the protection of senior government officials, particularly the President, Vice President, state governors and visiting heads of states and governments with their respective families.

It is headquartered in Abuja. According to the 1998 Presidential Proclamation, the SSS operates as a department within the Ministry of Defence and its under the control of the National Security Adviser.

Director-generals of the SSS

Director-generals of the SSS Terms of Service
Alhaji Ismaila Gwarzo June 1986 – September 1990
Chief Albert Horsfall September 1990 – October 1992
Chief Peter Nwaoduah October 1992 – June 1998
Colonel Kayode Are (Rtd) May 1999 – August 2007
Afakriya Gadzama August 2007 – September 2010
Ita Ekpeyong September 2010 – July 2015
Lawal Musa Daura July 2015 – August 2018
Matthew Seiyefa (Ag) 7 August 2018 – 14 September 2018
Yusuf Magaji Bichi 14 September 2018 – Present

Origins

Fulfilling one of the promises made in his first national address as president, Ibrahim Babangida in June 1986 issued Decree Number 19, dissolving the National Security Organization (NSO) and re-structuring Nigeria's security services into three separate entities under the Office of the Co-ordinator of National Security. The State Security Service (SSS) was made responsible for domestic intelligence, with Director General Ismaila Gwarzo and Deputy Director Lt. Col. A.K. Togun. The National Intelligence Agency (NIA) handled external intelligence and counterintelligence. The Defence Intelligence Agency (DIA) was responsible for military-related intelligence outside and inside Nigeria.[2] The first headquarters of the agency was located at 15, Awolowo road, Ikoyi in Lagos; this site currently houses the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC). The SSS headquarters was finally moved to Abuja during the regime of General Sani Abacha, the headquarters complex is informally known as the "Yellow House", it is located on the northern edge of the three-arms zone on Aso drive in Maitama, Abuja.[citation needed]

Mandate

The mission of the SSS is to protect and defend the Federal Republic of Nigeria against domestic threats, to uphold and enforce the criminal laws of Nigeria, and to provide leadership and criminal justice services to both federal and state law-enforcement organs. The SSS is also charged with the protection of the President, Vice President, Senate President, Speaker of the House of Representatives, State Governors, their immediate families, other high ranking government officials, former presidents and their spouses, certain notable candidates for the offices of President, Vice President and Governors, and visiting foreign heads of state and government. The SSS has constantly adapted to various roles necessitated by evolving security threats in Nigeria including counter-terrorism and counter-insurgent.

Successes, failures and fatalities

The SSS has been reasonably successful in performing its primary internal security responsibility. The agency in its early day was credited with the arrest of the Egyptian bomber Omar Mohammed Ali Rezaq in 1993 while he was trying to enter Nigeria through the Nigeria–Benin border. Rezaq was wanted by the United States for leading the bombing of an EgyptAir plane for the Abu Nidal group in 1985 he was subsequently rendered to the United States after an official request was received from the State Department. [3]

In October 2010, the SSS intercepted a large cache of arms and ammunition originating from Iran at the Apapa port in Lagos; this in spite of a UN arms embargo on Iran. The arms which included artillery rockets, shells and mortars were concealed in thirteen containers falsely declared as "building materials", it was alleged that Nigeria was being used as a transhipment destination while Gambia was the final destination for the arms.[4]

The agency has also been reported to have infiltrated a number of religious extremist groups in the country including the Boko Haram sect. In September 2001, six Pakistani proselyters invited by the Lagos-based Tabliq, a Muslim NGO were arrested in Benue State on suspicion of immigration violations and they were subsequently deported on 18 November. According to wikileaks, Mr. Kayode Are, the "SSS Director General expressed concern regarding the funding for the organization, which came through wire transfers from sources in Pakistan, India and Malaysia".[5] Also according to WikiLeaks, in 2009 another itinerant preacher was arrested in Taraba state and was also deported.[6]

The SSS has also recorded some successes in combating kidnapping in Nigeria with the arrest of some kidnappers and the rescue of their victims. In October 2011, the agency rescued the Parish Priest of St Bernard's Catholic Church Eguaholo in Orhionmwon local government area of Edo state, Rev. Fr Sylvester Chukwura, from his kidnapper's hideout. The kidnappers were baited with the ransom sum and were subsequently ambushed by SSS operatives. In the same time frame, the SSS also arrested another kidnapper in Edo state known as Binebi Sibete, who was described as a notorious kidnapper and killer. Binebi was wanted amongst other things for killing an SSS operative in 2010 and also burning down the state government patrol boat at Gelegele.[7]

The SSS has been criticised for allowing Umar Farouk Abdul Mutallab, the "underpants bomber", to board Northwest airlines flight from Lagos despite his father having previously warned security officials of his sons radical views on America.[8] In its defence, the SSS said it was not informed by Mr. Mutallab's father of his sons alleged radical beliefs, the agency said that Mr. Mutallab's father had actually spoken with officials at the United States Embassy in Abuja and also sought the help of a past Nigerian National Security Adviser. The SSS held that the American authorities did not share the information that Mr. Mutallab senior had given them and the former National Security Adviser had also not contacted the agency hence their inability to act on information they did not possess.

The agency was also criticized heavily in the wake of 26 August 2011 United Nations House bombing in Abuja. The Boko Haram sect which has ties to Al-Qaeda Organization in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) claimed responsibility for the car bomb attack that left 24 people dead;[9] the sect had been fighting Boko Haram insurgency that started as a result of their leader being killed by policemen after he had been arrested. The Nigerian public grew even more critical of the agency after newspapers ran stories in which they claimed that the agency had received intelligence about the bombing beforehand from the Americans. This news item later turned out to be false when it was revealed that it was the SSS who had actually received credible intelligence from sources within Boko Haram about an impending attack in Abuja. The intelligence pointed out key government buildings and ministries as targets, the agency subsequently raised the alert level in Abuja and also advised diplomatic missions and international organizations in the city to take adequate security precautions for their staff and premises. The final UN report on the incident indicted the UN resident Security adviser in Abuja and his deputy, they were accused of negligence considering the fact that they had been given "adequate intelligence on a possible suicide attack", yet they failed to implement suitable safeguards. Both men were subsequently relieved of their positions.[10]

In early November 2011, the Nigerian press ran stories alleging that the United States government had issued a travel advisory on Nigeria.[11] The travel advisory according to the papers included the threat of bomb attacks at major hotels in Abuja frequented by expatriates. The story immediately generated panic among the populace and accusations of incompetence made against the security agencies, the SSS inclusive. The story also alleged that the American ambassador had given a statement explaining that the US had given the warning directly because the Nigerian security agencies had failed to act on previous intelligence shared with them. In the end, the situation was only brought under control when the National Security Adviser, Gen. Owoye Andrew Azazi demanded evidence that the Americans had indeed given such a warning or that the American Ambassador had actually said what had been attributed to him in the press.[12] The story turned out to be false, the threat to hotels was actually an intelligence analysis of possible threats made by the SSS some months earlier which was circulated in government circles. The SSS had failed to manage information in a timely and proper fashion which had led to the public losing confidence in the organisation.

The agency has lost a number of operatives in the line of duty, while fatalities are not generally publicised some cases do get a mention in the media. During Nigeria's 50th anniversary celebrations in Abuja on 1 October 2010, a car bomb killed an Assistant Director of the agency and Mr Tahir Zakari Biu an Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) operative while they were trying to remove abandoned vehicles from a roadside a few kilometres from the venue of the celebrations.[13][14] The Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND) claimed responsibility for the attack. The SSS was able to trace the registration of the car used in the attack and subsequently arrested suspects in Lagos, the mastermind of the operation Mr. Henry Okah was arrested by the South African authorities and put on trial in South Africa on terrorism charges. On 13 April 2007 a Security Protection Officer (SPO) working in the close protection detail of Mr. Onyema Ugochukwu, the People's Democratic Party (PDP) 2007 governorship candidate for Abia state was shot in an assassination attempt on his principal. The bodyguard was shot in the head and in his hand. In 2013, a botched security operation in Nasarawa state in the middle belt region of the country to arrest the leader of the Ombatse cult group who many claim possesses super natural powers used in the maiming of other ethnic groups especially the Fulanis, left scores of security personnel dead including not less than six men of the SSS allegedly killed using occultic powers[15]

In February 2013, the SSS broke up a terrorist cell led by Iranian handlers that was gathering intelligence for future attacks on American and Israeli targets in the country.[16]

Controversy

Although the notorious NSO was dissolved, the new security establishment in 1990 continued to act arbitrarily and with impunity.[citation needed] The government proscribed radical interest groups like NANS and the Academic Staff Union of Universities, the central body of all university professors and lecturers. Several innocent citizens were subjected to physical assault without government reparations. Human rights remained substantially circumscribed. Decree Number 2 remained in place, and numerous citizens had been incarcerated under it, although the allowable period of detention without charge was reduced from six months to six weeks in January 1990. With the aid of this and other decrees that restricted freedom, usually promulgated retrospectively, such radical and outspoken critics of the government as Gani Fawehinmi, Tai Solarin, and Balarabe Musa were regularly detained. Despite having annulled Decree Number 4, the government had several brushes with media organizations. In 1988 Newswatch was proscribed for six months, and journalists, academics, and civil rights activists continued to be harassed by state security agents.

Government security forces frequently harass, arrested, and detain editors and reporters from journals critical of the regime. On 4 November 1997 Aoetokunbo Fakeye, defense correspondent for The News, was arrested. On 8 November, Jenkins Alumona, editor of The News, was arrested by SSS agents at a Lagos television station. On 9 November, Onome Osifo-Whiskey, managing editor of Tell magazine, was arrested by SSS agents in Lagos while driving to church with his children. On 29 October, Osifo-Whiskey had warned that the magazine had received a written death threat, which listed the names of 27 staff members. On 16 November, SSS agents arrested Babafemi Ojudu, editor of the News/Tempo. Rafiu Salau, an administration editor for the News/Tempo, was also arrested in mid-November. Former chairman of the editorial board of the daily The Guardian and a visiting professor of journalism at a US university, Olatunji Dare, was detained overnight and his passport seized upon his arrival from the United States on 2 June 1997. He was told to report to the DSS to retrieve his passport. After being interrogated on 17 June by SSS officials about his activities abroad, his passport was then returned.

The SSS has also been accused of repressing the political activities of opposition groups. Public meetings are arbitrarily canceled or prevented, including cultural events, academic conferences, and human rights meetings. On 25 September 1997, police and SSS agents broke up a Human Rights Africa (HRA) seminar for students in Jos, arrested HARA director Tunji Abayomi and 4 others, and briefly detained some 70 students. Abayomi and the others were held for 10 days and then released on bail. A 1 May 1998 workshop on conflict management in Port Harcourt was canceled when the SSS warned local coordinators that such a meeting could not be held on Workers Day, a local holiday. Similar workshops elsewhere proceeded unimpeded despite the holiday.

In an exclusive report on September 29, 2020, Peoples Gazette reported lengthy details exposing nepotism and favouritism in the recruitment of personnel of the State Security Service led by Bichi, the report became known as the "SSS recruitment scandal". The report cited many sources, including serving personnel of the agency, who gave figures of how the agency neglected the official procedures for recruitment to favour individuals from the local government area of the director-general and the Northern region of Nigeria against the Southern region.[17][18]

Leaders across the Southern and Middle Belt regions of Nigeria criticised the process and threatened to sue the State Security Service and the director-general for it.[19][20]

Weapons and equipment

As of 2010, the standard issue assault rifles used by SSS Combat Operatives/Security Protection Officers (S.P.O) are the IMI Tavor Tar-21 assault rifle produced by Israeli Military Industries and the FN P90 personal protection weapon, FN F2000 assault rifle, both manufactured by FN Herstal;[21] these rifles replace the Uzi as the primary assault weapon of the SSS. Operatives also use various side arms and pistols from a number of manufacturers including Beretta, Glock, and Browning.

The agency has also deployed van mounted backscatter X-ray screeners from Basix Technologies for detecting Improvised Explosive Devices (IED) due to an upsurge in bombing incidents arising from a Boko Haram insurgency in the north east of Nigeria. In this counter terrorism role, the agency also uses mobile IED jammers for VIP protection in public spaces like stadiums and in a mobile configuration for use in convoys.

Due to the disproportionately large GSM mobile phone subscriber base in Nigeria and the use of cellphones as the principal means of communication by kidnappers and terrorists, the agency has had to develop telephone call intercept capability. IMSI number catchers and signal direction finders have been deployed for intercepting and tracking GSM and satellite phone communications.

The agency maintains a fleet of armoured limousines and SUVs that are used to ferry the President, Vice president and visiting dignitaries. Other vehicles mainly SUVs produced by Ford Motor Company, Toyota and Lexus are also used by the agency.[citation needed]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Fact-Check: How Nigeria's secret police, SSS, is violating the law and illegally parading itself as DSS - Premium Times Nigeria". 26 August 2016.
  2. ^ Nowa Omoigui. "Nigeria: The Palace Coup of August 27, 1985 Part II". Urhobo Historical Society. Retrieved 22 June 2011.
  3. ^ Derek, KJF, blackmax. "Torture, Rendition, and other Abuses against Captives in US Custody". historycommons.org. Retrieved 14 December 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)[dead link]
  4. ^ Vanguard Newspapers. "Arms Seizure – Iran Behind Shipment – Security Agents". allafrica.com. Archived from the original on 14 December 2011. Retrieved 14 December 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  5. ^ United States Embassy, Abuja. . wikileaks.org. Archived from the original on 31 October 2011. Retrieved 14 December 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  6. ^ United States Embassy, Abuja. . wikileaks.org. Archived from the original on 10 June 2013. Retrieved 14 December 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  7. ^ Osagie Otabor. "SSS rescues kidnapped Catholic Priest". thenationonlineng.net. Archived from the original on 14 December 2011. Retrieved 14 December 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  8. ^ www.africansinamericanewswatch.com. . africansinamericanewswatch.com. Archived from the original on 9 September 2011. Retrieved 14 December 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  9. ^ www.allafrica.com. "UN House Bombing – Boko Haram Claims Responsibility". Vanguard Newspapers. Archived from the original on 14 December 2011. Retrieved 14 December 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  10. ^ Kingsley Omonobi; Daniel Idonor; Ikechukwu Nnochiri. . vanguardngr.com. Archived from the original on 17 December 2011. Retrieved 14 December 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  11. ^ Seyi Gesinde; James Bwala. . tribune.com.ng. Archived from the original on 7 November 2011. Retrieved 14 December 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  12. ^ "NSA Azazi Dismisses US Terror Warning Over Abuja Luxury Hotels". nigerianewsdaily.com. Archived from the original on 14 December 2011. Retrieved 14 December 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  13. ^ . panapress.com. Archived from the original on 16 June 2022. Retrieved 14 December 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  14. ^ Mahmud Jega. "CP Zakari Biu – Down, Up and Down Again". daily Trust Newspapers. Retrieved 20 January 2012.
  15. ^ "The Profile Of Theodore Ahamefule Orji". myinfobell.com. Archived from the original on 14 December 2011. Retrieved 14 December 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  16. ^ "Nigeria busts terror cell plotting attack on Israelis". The Times of Israel. AP. 20 February 2013. Retrieved 24 November 2019.
  17. ^ Hillary Essien;Idris Ibrahim (29 September 2020). "EXCLUSIVE: SSS DG Bichi conducts secret, uneven recruitment; North: 535; South: 93". Peoples Gazette.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  18. ^ "DSS Director-General, Bichi, Conducts Secret, Uneven Recruitment Into Agency With North Getting 535 Slots, South 93". Sahara Reporters. 29 September 2020.
  19. ^ "Southern, Middle Belt Leaders Tackle Buhari over Lopsided Recruitment By DSS". This Day. 30 September 202.
  20. ^ "Lopsided recruitment: Southern, Middle Belt leaders blast DSS D-G". Vanguard Newspaper. 30 September 2020.
  21. ^ Beegeagle's Blog. . beegeagle.wordpress.com. Archived from the original on 4 February 2012. Retrieved 14 December 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  • Some material for this article was derived from the Nigeria Country Report on Human Rights Practices for 1997, U.S. Department of State Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor, 30 January 1998.

External links

  • Official site State Security Service (Nigeria)
  • RSF/Reporters Without Borders Summary on State Security Service (SSS)
  • Nigeria: NIA: 20 Years of Service
  • Nigeria: The National Intelligence Agency (NIA) At Twenty - A Tribute

state, security, service, nigeria, state, security, service, self, styled, department, state, services, security, agency, nigeria, three, successor, organisations, national, security, organization, agency, under, presidency, federal, republic, nigeria, reports. The State Security Service SSS self styled as the Department of State Services DSS 1 is a security agency of Nigeria and one of three successor organisations to the National Security Organization NSO The agency is under the Presidency of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and it reports its activities to the office of the NSA Department of State ServicesAgency overviewFormed5 June 1986 36 years ago 1986 06 05 Preceding agencyNational Security OrganizationJurisdictionNigeriaHeadquartersAso Drive Abuja FCT09 04 27 N 7 30 35 E 9 07417 N 7 50972 E 9 07417 7 50972EmployeesClassifiedAnnual budgetClassifiedMinister responsibleBabagana Monguno National Security AdviserAgency executiveYusuf Magaji Bichi Director GeneralKey documentsNational Security Agencies Act of 1986 Decree 19 Presidential Proclamation SSS Instrument I of 1999Websitewww wbr dss wbr gov wbr ngIts main responsibilities are within the country and include counter intelligence internal security counter terrorism and surveillance as well as investigating some other types of serious crimes against the state It is also charged with the protection of senior government officials particularly the President Vice President state governors and visiting heads of states and governments with their respective families It is headquartered in Abuja According to the 1998 Presidential Proclamation the SSS operates as a department within the Ministry of Defence and its under the control of the National Security Adviser Contents 1 Director generals of the SSS 2 Origins 3 Mandate 4 Successes failures and fatalities 5 Controversy 6 Weapons and equipment 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksDirector generals of the SSS EditDirector generals of the SSS Terms of ServiceAlhaji Ismaila Gwarzo June 1986 September 1990Chief Albert Horsfall September 1990 October 1992Chief Peter Nwaoduah October 1992 June 1998Colonel Kayode Are Rtd May 1999 August 2007Afakriya Gadzama August 2007 September 2010Ita Ekpeyong September 2010 July 2015Lawal Musa Daura July 2015 August 2018Matthew Seiyefa Ag 7 August 2018 14 September 2018Yusuf Magaji Bichi 14 September 2018 PresentOrigins EditFulfilling one of the promises made in his first national address as president Ibrahim Babangida in June 1986 issued Decree Number 19 dissolving the National Security Organization NSO and re structuring Nigeria s security services into three separate entities under the Office of the Co ordinator of National Security The State Security Service SSS was made responsible for domestic intelligence with Director General Ismaila Gwarzo and Deputy Director Lt Col A K Togun The National Intelligence Agency NIA handled external intelligence and counterintelligence The Defence Intelligence Agency DIA was responsible for military related intelligence outside and inside Nigeria 2 The first headquarters of the agency was located at 15 Awolowo road Ikoyi in Lagos this site currently houses the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission EFCC The SSS headquarters was finally moved to Abuja during the regime of General Sani Abacha the headquarters complex is informally known as the Yellow House it is located on the northern edge of the three arms zone on Aso drive in Maitama Abuja citation needed Mandate EditThe mission of the SSS is to protect and defend the Federal Republic of Nigeria against domestic threats to uphold and enforce the criminal laws of Nigeria and to provide leadership and criminal justice services to both federal and state law enforcement organs The SSS is also charged with the protection of the President Vice President Senate President Speaker of the House of Representatives State Governors their immediate families other high ranking government officials former presidents and their spouses certain notable candidates for the offices of President Vice President and Governors and visiting foreign heads of state and government The SSS has constantly adapted to various roles necessitated by evolving security threats in Nigeria including counter terrorism and counter insurgent Successes failures and fatalities EditThe SSS has been reasonably successful in performing its primary internal security responsibility The agency in its early day was credited with the arrest of the Egyptian bomber Omar Mohammed Ali Rezaq in 1993 while he was trying to enter Nigeria through the Nigeria Benin border Rezaq was wanted by the United States for leading the bombing of an EgyptAir plane for the Abu Nidal group in 1985 he was subsequently rendered to the United States after an official request was received from the State Department 3 In October 2010 the SSS intercepted a large cache of arms and ammunition originating from Iran at the Apapa port in Lagos this in spite of a UN arms embargo on Iran The arms which included artillery rockets shells and mortars were concealed in thirteen containers falsely declared as building materials it was alleged that Nigeria was being used as a transhipment destination while Gambia was the final destination for the arms 4 The agency has also been reported to have infiltrated a number of religious extremist groups in the country including the Boko Haram sect In September 2001 six Pakistani proselyters invited by the Lagos based Tabliq a Muslim NGO were arrested in Benue State on suspicion of immigration violations and they were subsequently deported on 18 November According to wikileaks Mr Kayode Are the SSS Director General expressed concern regarding the funding for the organization which came through wire transfers from sources in Pakistan India and Malaysia 5 Also according to WikiLeaks in 2009 another itinerant preacher was arrested in Taraba state and was also deported 6 The SSS has also recorded some successes in combating kidnapping in Nigeria with the arrest of some kidnappers and the rescue of their victims In October 2011 the agency rescued the Parish Priest of St Bernard s Catholic Church Eguaholo in Orhionmwon local government area of Edo state Rev Fr Sylvester Chukwura from his kidnapper s hideout The kidnappers were baited with the ransom sum and were subsequently ambushed by SSS operatives In the same time frame the SSS also arrested another kidnapper in Edo state known as Binebi Sibete who was described as a notorious kidnapper and killer Binebi was wanted amongst other things for killing an SSS operative in 2010 and also burning down the state government patrol boat at Gelegele 7 The SSS has been criticised for allowing Umar Farouk Abdul Mutallab the underpants bomber to board Northwest airlines flight from Lagos despite his father having previously warned security officials of his sons radical views on America 8 In its defence the SSS said it was not informed by Mr Mutallab s father of his sons alleged radical beliefs the agency said that Mr Mutallab s father had actually spoken with officials at the United States Embassy in Abuja and also sought the help of a past Nigerian National Security Adviser The SSS held that the American authorities did not share the information that Mr Mutallab senior had given them and the former National Security Adviser had also not contacted the agency hence their inability to act on information they did not possess The agency was also criticized heavily in the wake of 26 August 2011 United Nations House bombing in Abuja The Boko Haram sect which has ties to Al Qaeda Organization in the Islamic Maghreb AQIM claimed responsibility for the car bomb attack that left 24 people dead 9 the sect had been fighting Boko Haram insurgency that started as a result of their leader being killed by policemen after he had been arrested The Nigerian public grew even more critical of the agency after newspapers ran stories in which they claimed that the agency had received intelligence about the bombing beforehand from the Americans This news item later turned out to be false when it was revealed that it was the SSS who had actually received credible intelligence from sources within Boko Haram about an impending attack in Abuja The intelligence pointed out key government buildings and ministries as targets the agency subsequently raised the alert level in Abuja and also advised diplomatic missions and international organizations in the city to take adequate security precautions for their staff and premises The final UN report on the incident indicted the UN resident Security adviser in Abuja and his deputy they were accused of negligence considering the fact that they had been given adequate intelligence on a possible suicide attack yet they failed to implement suitable safeguards Both men were subsequently relieved of their positions 10 In early November 2011 the Nigerian press ran stories alleging that the United States government had issued a travel advisory on Nigeria 11 The travel advisory according to the papers included the threat of bomb attacks at major hotels in Abuja frequented by expatriates The story immediately generated panic among the populace and accusations of incompetence made against the security agencies the SSS inclusive The story also alleged that the American ambassador had given a statement explaining that the US had given the warning directly because the Nigerian security agencies had failed to act on previous intelligence shared with them In the end the situation was only brought under control when the National Security Adviser Gen Owoye Andrew Azazi demanded evidence that the Americans had indeed given such a warning or that the American Ambassador had actually said what had been attributed to him in the press 12 The story turned out to be false the threat to hotels was actually an intelligence analysis of possible threats made by the SSS some months earlier which was circulated in government circles The SSS had failed to manage information in a timely and proper fashion which had led to the public losing confidence in the organisation The agency has lost a number of operatives in the line of duty while fatalities are not generally publicised some cases do get a mention in the media During Nigeria s 50th anniversary celebrations in Abuja on 1 October 2010 a car bomb killed an Assistant Director of the agency and Mr Tahir Zakari Biu an Economic and Financial Crimes Commission EFCC operative while they were trying to remove abandoned vehicles from a roadside a few kilometres from the venue of the celebrations 13 14 The Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta MEND claimed responsibility for the attack The SSS was able to trace the registration of the car used in the attack and subsequently arrested suspects in Lagos the mastermind of the operation Mr Henry Okah was arrested by the South African authorities and put on trial in South Africa on terrorism charges On 13 April 2007 a Security Protection Officer SPO working in the close protection detail of Mr Onyema Ugochukwu the People s Democratic Party PDP 2007 governorship candidate for Abia state was shot in an assassination attempt on his principal The bodyguard was shot in the head and in his hand In 2013 a botched security operation in Nasarawa state in the middle belt region of the country to arrest the leader of the Ombatse cult group who many claim possesses super natural powers used in the maiming of other ethnic groups especially the Fulanis left scores of security personnel dead including not less than six men of the SSS allegedly killed using occultic powers 15 In February 2013 the SSS broke up a terrorist cell led by Iranian handlers that was gathering intelligence for future attacks on American and Israeli targets in the country 16 Controversy EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources State Security Service Nigeria news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Although the notorious NSO was dissolved the new security establishment in 1990 continued to act arbitrarily and with impunity citation needed The government proscribed radical interest groups like NANS and the Academic Staff Union of Universities the central body of all university professors and lecturers Several innocent citizens were subjected to physical assault without government reparations Human rights remained substantially circumscribed Decree Number 2 remained in place and numerous citizens had been incarcerated under it although the allowable period of detention without charge was reduced from six months to six weeks in January 1990 With the aid of this and other decrees that restricted freedom usually promulgated retrospectively such radical and outspoken critics of the government as Gani Fawehinmi Tai Solarin and Balarabe Musa were regularly detained Despite having annulled Decree Number 4 the government had several brushes with media organizations In 1988 Newswatch was proscribed for six months and journalists academics and civil rights activists continued to be harassed by state security agents Government security forces frequently harass arrested and detain editors and reporters from journals critical of the regime On 4 November 1997 Aoetokunbo Fakeye defense correspondent for The News was arrested On 8 November Jenkins Alumona editor of The News was arrested by SSS agents at a Lagos television station On 9 November Onome Osifo Whiskey managing editor of Tell magazine was arrested by SSS agents in Lagos while driving to church with his children On 29 October Osifo Whiskey had warned that the magazine had received a written death threat which listed the names of 27 staff members On 16 November SSS agents arrested Babafemi Ojudu editor of the News Tempo Rafiu Salau an administration editor for the News Tempo was also arrested in mid November Former chairman of the editorial board of the daily The Guardian and a visiting professor of journalism at a US university Olatunji Dare was detained overnight and his passport seized upon his arrival from the United States on 2 June 1997 He was told to report to the DSS to retrieve his passport After being interrogated on 17 June by SSS officials about his activities abroad his passport was then returned The SSS has also been accused of repressing the political activities of opposition groups Public meetings are arbitrarily canceled or prevented including cultural events academic conferences and human rights meetings On 25 September 1997 police and SSS agents broke up a Human Rights Africa HRA seminar for students in Jos arrested HARA director Tunji Abayomi and 4 others and briefly detained some 70 students Abayomi and the others were held for 10 days and then released on bail A 1 May 1998 workshop on conflict management in Port Harcourt was canceled when the SSS warned local coordinators that such a meeting could not be held on Workers Day a local holiday Similar workshops elsewhere proceeded unimpeded despite the holiday In an exclusive report on September 29 2020 Peoples Gazette reported lengthy details exposing nepotism and favouritism in the recruitment of personnel of the State Security Service led by Bichi the report became known as the SSS recruitment scandal The report cited many sources including serving personnel of the agency who gave figures of how the agency neglected the official procedures for recruitment to favour individuals from the local government area of the director general and the Northern region of Nigeria against the Southern region 17 18 Leaders across the Southern and Middle Belt regions of Nigeria criticised the process and threatened to sue the State Security Service and the director general for it 19 20 Weapons and equipment EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message As of 2010 the standard issue assault rifles used by SSS Combat Operatives Security Protection Officers S P O are the IMI Tavor Tar 21 assault rifle produced by Israeli Military Industries and the FN P90 personal protection weapon FN F2000 assault rifle both manufactured by FN Herstal 21 these rifles replace the Uzi as the primary assault weapon of the SSS Operatives also use various side arms and pistols from a number of manufacturers including Beretta Glock and Browning The agency has also deployed van mounted backscatter X ray screeners from Basix Technologies for detecting Improvised Explosive Devices IED due to an upsurge in bombing incidents arising from a Boko Haram insurgency in the north east of Nigeria In this counter terrorism role the agency also uses mobile IED jammers for VIP protection in public spaces like stadiums and in a mobile configuration for use in convoys Due to the disproportionately large GSM mobile phone subscriber base in Nigeria and the use of cellphones as the principal means of communication by kidnappers and terrorists the agency has had to develop telephone call intercept capability IMSI number catchers and signal direction finders have been deployed for intercepting and tracking GSM and satellite phone communications The agency maintains a fleet of armoured limousines and SUVs that are used to ferry the President Vice president and visiting dignitaries Other vehicles mainly SUVs produced by Ford Motor Company Toyota and Lexus are also used by the agency citation needed See also EditNational Intelligence Agency NIA Responsible for Foreign intelligence and counterintelligence operations Defence Intelligence Agency DIA Responsible for military intelligence National Security Organization NSO Precursor of the State Security Service and the National Intelligence AgencyReferences Edit Fact Check How Nigeria s secret police SSS is violating the law and illegally parading itself as DSS Premium Times Nigeria 26 August 2016 Nowa Omoigui Nigeria The Palace Coup of August 27 1985 Part II Urhobo Historical Society Retrieved 22 June 2011 Derek KJF blackmax Torture Rendition and other Abuses against Captives in US Custody historycommons org Retrieved 14 December 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link dead link Vanguard Newspapers Arms Seizure Iran Behind Shipment Security Agents allafrica com Archived from the original on 14 December 2011 Retrieved 14 December 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link United States Embassy Abuja Nigeria cable 01ABUJA3238 NIGERIA SSS DG ARE ON AL QAIDA wikileaks org Archived from the original on 31 October 2011 Retrieved 14 December 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link United States Embassy Abuja Nigeria cable 10ABUJA197 Nigerian Security Chief Briefs Foreign Partners on Mutual wikileaks org Archived from the original on 10 June 2013 Retrieved 14 December 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Osagie Otabor SSS rescues kidnapped Catholic Priest thenationonlineng net Archived from the original on 14 December 2011 Retrieved 14 December 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link www africansinamericanewswatch com Nigerian Terrorist Attempt to Bomb US Airline Critical Family and National Questions africansinamericanewswatch com Archived from the original on 9 September 2011 Retrieved 14 December 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link www allafrica com UN House Bombing Boko Haram Claims Responsibility Vanguard Newspapers Archived from the original on 14 December 2011 Retrieved 14 December 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Kingsley Omonobi Daniel Idonor Ikechukwu Nnochiri Boko Haram to mark nation s independence with bombings vanguardngr com Archived from the original on 17 December 2011 Retrieved 14 December 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Seyi Gesinde James Bwala US warns of fresh bomb blast in Abuja Asks officials to stay away from luxury hotels As UN condemns terrorist attacks killings in Nigeria Pope calls for end to violence tribune com ng Archived from the original on 7 November 2011 Retrieved 14 December 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link NSA Azazi Dismisses US Terror Warning Over Abuja Luxury Hotels nigerianewsdaily com Archived from the original on 14 December 2011 Retrieved 14 December 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Nigeria media filled with stories on security breaches at Nigeria 50 panapress com Archived from the original on 16 June 2022 Retrieved 14 December 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Mahmud Jega CP Zakari Biu Down Up and Down Again daily Trust Newspapers Retrieved 20 January 2012 The Profile Of Theodore Ahamefule Orji myinfobell com Archived from the original on 14 December 2011 Retrieved 14 December 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Nigeria busts terror cell plotting attack on Israelis The Times of Israel AP 20 February 2013 Retrieved 24 November 2019 Hillary Essien Idris Ibrahim 29 September 2020 EXCLUSIVE SSS DG Bichi conducts secret uneven recruitment North 535 South 93 Peoples Gazette a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link DSS Director General Bichi Conducts Secret Uneven Recruitment Into Agency With North Getting 535 Slots South 93 Sahara Reporters 29 September 2020 Southern Middle Belt Leaders Tackle Buhari over Lopsided Recruitment By DSS This Day 30 September 202 Lopsided recruitment Southern Middle Belt leaders blast DSS D G Vanguard Newspaper 30 September 2020 Beegeagle s Blog NIGERIA STATE SECURITY SERVICE IN PICTURES beegeagle wordpress com Archived from the original on 4 February 2012 Retrieved 14 December 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Some material for this article was derived from the Nigeria Country Report on Human Rights Practices for 1997 U S Department of State Bureau of Democracy Human Rights and Labor 30 January 1998 External links EditOfficial site State Security Service Nigeria RSF Reporters Without Borders Summary on State Security Service SSS Nigeria NIA 20 Years of Service Nigeria The National Intelligence Agency NIA At Twenty A Tribute Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title State Security Service Nigeria amp oldid 1127262033, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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