Africa
Learning from Tragedy: Strengthening Safety Protocols in NSCDC Training Exercises -By Psychologist John Egbeazien Oshodi
The Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps remains an essential pillar in the nation’s effort to secure schools and protect the next generation. The courage, dedication, and sacrifice of its officers deserve respect and public support. Yet true professionalism is strengthened not only by bravery, but by reflection. The reality of this tragedy reminds us that even noble missions must constantly refine their methods to match the value of the lives entrusted to them. By learning openly and improving safety standards, the NSCDC can transform this painful moment into lasting progress, honoring the fallen officer not only with words, but with safer operations that protect both those who serve and those they are sworn to defend.
The recent loss of a female officer of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps during a training simulation in Abuja has touched the conscience of the nation. She was participating in an exercise connected to the Safe Schools Initiative, preparing to protect school children from danger. In serving that mission, she made the ultimate sacrifice.
At moments like this, national conversations must be guided not by blame, but by learning. Tragedies within training environments are among the most difficult for any institution because they occur during preparation meant to prevent harm. Yet history shows that many of the world’s safest organizations became stronger precisely because they examined painful moments with honesty and professionalism.
This is one such moment.
The leadership and management of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps deserve acknowledgment for taking proactive steps to secure Nigeria’s educational spaces. The establishment of specialized units, including the Female Strike Force under the Safe Schools Initiative, reflects a forward thinking response to genuine security concerns affecting schools across the country.
Protecting children is not a reactive responsibility. It demands preparation, coordination, and visible readiness. Training exercises are therefore not optional demonstrations; they are essential components of responsible security planning. They signal to communities that agencies are thinking ahead, building capacity, and strengthening systems before crises occur rather than responding only after tragedy has struck.
In this respect, the intention behind the exercise remains both necessary and commendable.
Understanding the Operational Reality
Publicly circulating footage and reports suggest that the officer may have been positioned on the ground as part of the demonstration when a moving vehicle approached without the driver having full visibility.
If confirmed through official review, this points toward a challenge familiar to safety professionals worldwide: visibility limitations during dynamic operations.
Heavy vehicles have unavoidable blind spots. When a participant is low to the ground, even attentive drivers may lose visual contact. In such situations, safety depends less on individual awareness and more on layered procedural safeguards.
This distinction is important. Modern safety practice focuses not on assigning fault, but on strengthening systems so ordinary human limitations do not become fatal risks.
When Training Must Be Safer Than Reality
A core principle of professional training is that simulations must operate under stricter safety conditions than real world deployments.
Training environments introduce movement, stress, and realism, but they must also introduce additional control. Reduced speed, guided movement, and constant hazard monitoring are not signs of caution alone; they are signs of institutional maturity.
The lesson emerging from this tragedy is therefore not criticism of effort, but refinement of execution.
Turning Reflection Into Improvement
Every professional institution grows stronger by learning from experience. In modern training environments, safety is not an afterthought but a structured part of every exercise. Practical improvements that can strengthen operational safety include assigning a designated safety officer with clear authority to pause or stop activities immediately whenever a potential hazard is observed.
Vehicle movement during simulations should require external ground guides whenever personnel are nearby, ensuring drivers maintain continuous visual confirmation of a clear path. Maintaining walking pace speeds during demonstrations provides essential reaction time and reinforces operational control. Clearly marked safety boundaries separating moving equipment from participants and observers further reduce preventable risk.
Most importantly, no vehicle or operational movement should resume until every participating officer and observer has been visually identified and confirmed to be clear of the vehicle’s path. A deliberate pause for accountability is not delay; it is disciplined professionalism. Such measures strengthen confidence among officers, families, and the public alike.
Leadership Through Learning
Institutions earn lasting respect not because incidents never occur, but because leaders respond with openness and improvement. A transparent review followed by strengthened protocols would demonstrate the NSCDC’s commitment to continuous professional development.
Nigeria’s security agencies carry enormous responsibility under difficult conditions. Supporting them includes encouraging the kind of reflection that prevents future loss.
Honoring Service Through Progress
The officer who lost her life was preparing to protect children she may never have met. The most meaningful tribute to her service is ensuring that future training environments provide the highest level of protection for those who serve.
Safety and strength are not opposites. They grow together.
If this moment leads to improved standards across training exercises nationwide, her sacrifice will help safeguard both officers and civilians for years to come.
Nigeria mourns with her family.
Nigeria stands with its security personnel.
And Nigeria moves forward by learning together.
The Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps remains an essential pillar in the nation’s effort to secure schools and protect the next generation. The courage, dedication, and sacrifice of its officers deserve respect and public support. Yet true professionalism is strengthened not only by bravery, but by reflection. The reality of this tragedy reminds us that even noble missions must constantly refine their methods to match the value of the lives entrusted to them. By learning openly and improving safety standards, the NSCDC can transform this painful moment into lasting progress, honoring the fallen officer not only with words, but with safer operations that protect both those who serve and those they are sworn to defend.
About the Author
Prof. John Egbeazien Oshodi is an American psychologist, an expert in policing and corrections, and an educator with expertise in forensic, legal, clinical, and cross-cultural psychology, including public ethical policy. A native of Uromi, Edo State, Nigeria, and son of a 37-year veteran of the Nigeria Police Force, he has long worked at the intersection of psychology, justice, and governance. In 2011, he helped introduce advanced forensic psychology to Nigeria through the National Universities Commission and Nasarawa State University, where he served as Associate Professor of Psychology.
He teaches in the Doctorate in Clinical and School Psychology at Nova Southeastern University; the Doctorate Clinical Psychology, BS Psychology, and BS Tempo Criminal Justice programs at Walden University; serves as a visiting virtual professor in the Department of Psychology at Nasarawa State University; and lectures virtually in Management and Leadership Studies at Weldios University and ISCOM University. He is also the President and Chief Psychologist at the Oshodi Foundation, Center for Psychological and Forensic Services, United States.
Prof. Oshodi is a Black Republican in the United States but belongs to no political party in Nigeria—his work is guided solely by justice, good governance, democracy, and Africa’s development. He is the founder of Psychoafricalysis (Psychoafricalytic Psychology), a culturally grounded framework that integrates African sociocultural realities, historical awareness, and future-oriented identity. He has authored more than 700 articles, multiple books, and numerous peer-reviewed works on Africentric psychology, higher education reform, forensic and correctional psychology, African democracy, and decolonized models of clinical and community engagement.