The establishment of the Bureau is part of the interim recommendation earlier made by the Truth, Justice and Peace Commission, TJPC, in its Inception Report earlier submitted to Governor Chukwuma Soludo, on the 17th of February 2023.

 

A release signed by the commissioner for Information, Chief Paul Nwosu said that the job of the Bureau is to trace cases of missing persons and coming up with the needed database to support Police investigations and eventual prosecution of suspects by the Ministry of Justice.

 

Recall that on the 23rd of June 2022, Governor Soludo in pursuant to the Commission of Inquiry Law of Anambra State, inaugurated the Truth, Justice and Peace Commission which has Professor Chidi Anselm Odinkalu as the chairman, Ambassador Bianca Odumegwu Ojukwu as the secretary and Professor Sylvia Chike Ifemeje as one of its commissioners.

 

The Commission’s Inception Report also recommended a whole-of-government strategy that locates atrocity violence within a public health framework, professionalization and effective coordination of vigilante services in the state, institutionalizing deliverables for the Ministry of Security and Homeland Affairs, establishing an Anambra Integrated Civic Surveillance System, ANICSS, and establishing an Anambra State Safety and Environmental Commission, ASSEC.

 

TJPC’s initial terms of reference are, to identify the remote and immediate causes of the agitations, restiveness, violence and armed struggle in the Southeast since 1999, to document victims cum circumstances of death, brutality and incarceration as well as identify stakeholders and groups who have played critical roles in agitations and conflicts, their roles, capabilities and demands.

 

The Commission is expected to address any other issue or issues that may be useful to unravelling the extent of the crisis and charting the roadmap for the future, and make recommendations for sustainable peace and security in Anambra State and Southeast by extension.