IGP Disu Orders Heightened Surveillance Across States Over Middle East Tensions

Olatunji Disu, has been positioned as Nigeria’s 23rd Inspector‑General of Police

As global tensions ripple outward from the Middle East, IGP Disu heightened surveillance Middle East tensions directive has triggered a nationwide security recalibration.

Acting Inspector-General of Police Tunji Disu has instructed commissioners across all 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory to intensify surveillance, deepen intelligence gathering and reinforce police visibility around sensitive locations.

The order follows escalating military exchanges abroad and warnings that foreign ideological or sectarian narratives must not be allowed to destabilise Nigeria’s internal equilibrium.


A warning against imported conflict

In a statement issued by the Force Public Relations Officer, Benjamin Hundeyin, the police emphasised that Nigeria will not become a theatre for external geopolitical rivalries.

“Nigeria will not serve as a theatre for foreign conflicts,” the statement declared.

The directive places particular emphasis on the north-west, north-east and north-central regions, while also mandating increased presence around worship centres, public spaces and critical infrastructure nationwide.

Commissioners have been directed to strengthen collaboration with traditional and religious leaders to pre-empt potential tension triggers.

Preventive posture, not panic response

Disu framed the move as precautionary rather than reactive, assuring citizens that the country’s internal security architecture remains firmly under control.

The police leadership underscored that surveillance upgrades are part of anticipatory policing — aimed at neutralising risks before they mature into flashpoints.

Public reassurance formed a central component of the messaging, with authorities urging calm, vigilance and timely reporting of suspicious activity.

Why external wars echo locally

In moments of global upheaval, domestic security agencies face a dual challenge: preventing ideological contagion while avoiding over-securitisation that fuels anxiety.

Nigeria’s diverse religious and ethnic composition makes it particularly sensitive to imported narratives that may attempt to frame foreign events in domestic sectarian terms.

Security analysts note that social media amplification can accelerate such narratives within hours, creating pockets of tension far removed from the original conflict zone.

The current directive therefore reflects an understanding that information flows can become security variables.

Stability must be engineered early

The systemic risk is not missile impact — it is narrative spillover.

If foreign conflicts are reframed locally through religious or ideological lenses, they can distort communal trust and strain already fragile security balances.

By activating heightened surveillance early, police authorities aim to compress the reaction window and reduce the probability of spontaneous mobilisation.

The effectiveness of the directive will depend on disciplined execution at state command levels and sustained engagement with community gatekeepers.

Calm vigilance or reactive policing

Nigeria now faces a familiar governance test: can preventive security measures maintain calm without escalating public fear?

If intelligence coordination remains disciplined and communication transparent, the directive may pass largely unnoticed — which, in security terms, would signal success.

However, any miscalculation, heavy-handed enforcement or information vacuum could amplify the very anxieties the move seeks to prevent.

For now, the message from police headquarters is clear: vigilance rises before volatility does.

This is IDNN. Independent. Digital. Uncompromising.

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