A HEARTFELT APPEAL TO THE INSPECTOR-GENERAL OF POLICE, POLICE MANAGEMENT TEAM, WOMEN LEADERS, AND ALL STAKEHOLDERS,
A HEARTFELT APPEAL TO THE INSPECTOR-GENERAL OF POLICE, POLICE MANAGEMENT TEAM, WOMEN LEADERS, AND ALL STAKEHOLDERS
We, the affected female police officers of the Nigeria Police Force, respectfully and emotionally appeal for the reconsideration and suspension of the recent transfers that separate married women officers from their husbands and children.
Our Tears Are Real
Behind every female officer wearing the uniform is a wife, a mother, and a caregiver. While we proudly serve our nation, we also carry the sacred responsibility of raising children and sustaining the homes we have painstakingly built.
Many of us wake up every morning looking into the innocent eyes of our children—some barely months,others three or five years old—and wonder who will care for them when we are transferred hundreds of kilometres away.
Many of us cry silently at night, not because we are unwilling to serve, but because we are terrified of what may become of our homes and children in our absence.
Our Husbands Have Sacrificed Too
Before we were permitted to marry, our husbands underwent investigations, screenings, and approval processes by the Nigeria Police Force. They sacrificed their time, resources, and dignity because they loved us and believed in our careers.
Many have stood firmly behind us through difficult postings, trainings, and operational duties.
Today, we ask: should these same husbands now be punished with unprepared separation from their wives despite their sacrifices and commitment?
Put Yourselves in Their Shoes
We humbly appeal to our senior male officers:
Please imagine your own wife being posted hundreds of kilometres away for months or years which will be the faith of some of us with no influence.
Imagine your children asking daily, "Daddy, when is Mummy coming home?"
Imagine missing birthdays, school activities, illnesses, and precious moments in your children's lives.
Imagine the emotional burden of raising young children alone while your spouse is far away.
This is the painful reality many police families are now facing.
We respectfully ask our leaders to view this issue not merely as an administrative exercise, but as a human and family matter.
The Children Are the Silent Victims
Our greatest fear is not the distance.
Our greatest fear is losing our children emotionally, morally, and socially.
Children who grow up without adequate parental care may become vulnerable to:
Criminal influences.
Drug abuse.
Cultism.
Sexual exploitation.
Poor academic performance.
Emotional trauma.
As mothers, these fears haunt us daily.
No promotion, no posting, and no career advancement can erase the pain of watching our children suffer due to prolonged separation.
We Call on Women in Leadership
We respectfully call upon all women in positions of authority:
Female Ministers.
Female Legislators.
Female Commissioners.
Female Senior Police Officers.
Wives of Political and Traditional Leaders.
Women Advocacy Groups.
As mothers and wives yourselves, we ask that you hear our cries and lend your voices to our cause.
You understand the pain of being separated from your children.
You understand the burden of balancing career and family.
You understand what it means to nurture a home while pursuing professional excellence.
Today, we need your intervention.
We Are Not Rejecting Service
Let it be clearly understood that we are not refusing deployment, promotion, or service to our nation.
We remain loyal, disciplined, and dedicated officers of the Nigeria Police Force.
Our appeal is simply that family considerations be taken into account, especially for married female officers with young children.
We ask that postings be made, where operationally feasible, closer to our husbands and families.
Our Humble Plea to the Inspector-General of Police
Sir, we respectfully appeal to your fatherly compassion and sense of justice.
We know that leadership sometimes requires difficult decisions.
However, we sincerely believe that this matter deserves reconsideration in the interest of:
Family stability.
Child welfare.
Mental health of officers.
Improved productivity.
Stronger police families.
We plead that this transfer exercise be reviewed and suspended while appropriate family-friendly alternatives are considered.
Our Final Cry
We are mothers.
We are wives.
We are police officers.
We have faithfully served our country.
Today, we ask our country to hear us.
Please do not separate us from the homes we have diligently built.
Please do not leave our children without the daily care of their mothers.
Please do not allow years of sacrifice and family commitment to be undone.
We ask for understanding.
We ask for compassion.
We ask for justice.
Above all, we ask that our voices, our tears, and the future of our children be considered before this decision is implemented.
May God guide our leaders to make a decision that protects both the Nigeria Police Force and the Nigerian family.
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