Mr Egbetokun said the purpose of the CRU was to create a conducive platform of interaction between the police and the public, particularly on the unprofessional conduct of the officers.
The unit will afford members of the public an opportunity to make complaints and seek redress as individuals and groups against police misconduct and human rights abuses.
Mr Egbetokun, who commended the command for complying with his directive, pointed out that the directive was from Section 131 of the Police Act of 2020, which gave power to the IGP to establish such unit in all states.
He noted that the CRU was not established to witch-hunt any police officer but to promote accountability in the police.
“It is going to enhance police-community collaboration and build confidence with members of the public,” he said.
He appealed to the public to supply the police with information, stressing that the police would also show transparency so as to get cooperation from the public.
Mr Egbetokun advised the public to desist from reporting police misconduct on social media.
“Officers who are going to man the CRU are going to be carefully selected, they are going to be officers with impeccable integrity.
“They will be trained and be given regular training, including opportunity for overseas training.
“If the police is able to deliver on their constitutional mandate, we will all benefit from it,” he said.
The Commissioner of Police in Lagos state, Idowu Owohunwa, said that the command had taken the lead to establish the state CRU as a framework for promoting police-citizens’ accountability.
“Their rights will be fully asserted if their dignity is also violated or false and malicious information passed against them by misguided members of the public in the line of their official engagements.
“The establishment of the centre is, from all intents and purposes, a fulfillment of statutory provisions that are intended to enhance police accountability and engender professional police service delivery, rather than witch–hunt or unduly malign our dutiful officers,” he said.
Mr Owohunwa said the unit had applications for e-crime reporting, which enabled citizens to report crimes from the comfort of their homes or offices without necessarily coming physically to the police stations.
He said the internal security space, in recent times, had been laced with threats of cultism, armed robbery, kidnapping, murder and sexual and gender-based violence.
“We are also constantly confronted with the challenge of dissecting and dealing with the thin line between the civil and criminal dynamics of land disputes, which are also prevalent in the state.
“Also of routine concern is the traffic gridlock and the attendant occasional traffic robberies, which are compounded by ongoing road projects across the state, including, in particular, the Lagos-Ibadan highway.
“Hardly does a day pass by without the ever-vigilant operatives of the command recovering weapons and illicit drugs of various descriptions at stop and search points, raids of black spots, and other operational engagements.
“We need more support toward optimally advancing the attainment of our policing mandate to Lagos residents,” he said.
The commissioner said that the crime profile of the state was further accentuated by the prevalence of illegal firearms proliferation and illicit drug abuse and trafficking.
He said that in addressing the prevalence of sexual and gender-based violence in the state, the command was working in partnership with the Office of the wife of the Lagos state governor to establish a purpose-built centre for the command’s gender unit.