Security

Unmarried female police are not allowed to get pregnant ―Court

THE Federal High Court sitting in Abuja, on Monday, declined to invalidate Regulation 127 of the Nigeria Police Force, which forbids unmarried police officers from getting pregnant.

 

The Regulation provides that “an unmarried woman police officer, who becomes pregnant, shall be discharged from the Force and shall not be re-enlisted except with the approval of the Inspector General of Police”.

 

The Nigerian Bar Association, NBA, had approached the court to query the legality of the provision which it argued was not only in conflict with the 1999 Constitution, as amended, but equally subjects unmarried female police officers to discrimination.

 

Citing the case of Omolola Olajide, a female police officer that was sacked in Ekiti State on January 26, 2021, for being pregnant while unmarried, the legal body, maintained that such discriminatory Regulation has also rendered many female officers childless for fear of being sacked.

 

“The male police officers and married female police officers in the Nigeria Police Force are not subjected to similar discrimination, sanction, opprobrium and indignity”, the NBA noted.

 

“There are many unmarried female police officers in the NPF who, because of this discriminatory practice, cannot have or be allowed to have children because of fear of dismissal from the Police Force.

 

“Married female police officers are allowed to be pregnant and have children while still serving in the Police Force; they also enjoy maternity benefits”, the legal body further argued.

 

Cited as Defendants in the suit were the Attorney General of the Federation, the Police Service Commission, and the Nigeria Police Force.

 

Though the other Defendants did not respond to the suit, the AGF, in a counter-affidavit he filed before the court, sought its dismissal.

 

He contended that the Regulation the NBA complained about was in order as it was made pursuant to an extant law.

 

The AGF asked the Plaintiffs to approach the National Assembly for an amendment if it was not comfortable with the provision.

 

“Fundamental human rights, as guaranteed under the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (as amended), are not absolute.

 

“The Nigeria Police Act and Regulations are special creations of law. The Nigeria Police Act and Regulations provide the framework for the Police Force in maintaining peace, combating crime, protecting liberties, life and property, and other related matters.

 

“Lawful discrimination permits an action undertaken based on the irreversible needs of a person or the society at large. The work of law enforcement and policing is one that demands emotional stability and physical agility.

 

“Effective law enforcement requires the performance of essential functions which are strongly contingent upon a high level of physical fitness. Environmental conditions of policing and law enforcement can create potential conflicts between police duties and pregnancy,” the AGF argued.

 

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