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Law Sacking Unmarried Pregnant Policewomen Expunged – AIG

The Nigerian Police Force, NPF, has expunged from its laws, regulations mandating the dismissal of unmarried police women who got pregnant while in active service.
Assistant Inspector-General of Police, AIG Aishatu Baju, diclosed this yesterday in an interview on Channels Television’s The Morning Brief programme.
Baju, who is the most senior female police officer in Nigeria, said laws discriminating against women in the Nigeria Police Force had been deleted.
When reminded of the case of Omolola Olajide, an unmarried police corporal in Ekiti State, who was dismissed in 2021, for being pregnant, the AIG said unmarried policewomen were no longer dismissed for getting pregnant in active service.
She said: “That Section 127 and any section of the Police Act and Regulation that has gender discrimination have been expunged, looking at the Police Act of 2020 and the police reform that is currently going on.
“The Inspector General of Police, last year, launched the Nigeria Police Gender Policy just to make sure there is complete eradication of any form of gender discrimination.
“I can tell you that the Nigeria Police has come of age, and the IGP is intentional about inclusivity and making sure that the Nigeria Police is an equal opportunity institution.”
On whether the police no longer kick out unmarried female police officers who get pregnant, the AIG said, “Yes.”
Olajide’s dismissal in 2021 sparked outrage, with the Nigerian Bar Association, NBA, approaching a Federal High Court in Abuja to challenge the legality of Section 127 of the police regulations.
The court dismissed the suit in February 2022 for lacking merit, ruling that such officers were aware of the regulation before their admission into the force.
Unfazed, the NBA approached a Court of Appeal in Lagos to challenge the judgment of the lower court.
In May 2024, the appellate court voided the regulations 126 and 127 of the Nigeria Police Act, which allowed the dismissal of unmarried policewomen who become pregnant in service.