Tag: INSECURITY

  • Governors reject emergency rule

    The Nigeria Governors Forum (NGF) on Monday in Abuja called on the Federal Government to ignore the ongoing agitation for the declaration of state of emergency in some parts of the country.

    The forum made the call in a statement signed by its Chairman, Governor Rotimi Amaechi of Rivers and made available to journalists in Abuja.

    The statement said the request for a state of emergency was being made by people, who do not have the interest of the country at heart, adding that such people were bent on plunging the country into deeper crisis.

    “The Federal Government should not allow itself to be distracted from our collective goal of curbing the insurgency in some parts of our country once and for all.

    “We have no other country to call home and it is important that we understand the danger and futility of destroying our land in the pursuit of a selfish agenda,” the News Agency of Nigeria quoted the forum as saying in a statement.

    It appealed to aggrieved individuals and groups in the country to appreciate the fact that violence could never be a solution to any problem.

    The statement said that it was gratifying that government at all levels were working hard to get to the root of the killings in Borno, Nasarawa, Benue and Adamawa States.

    This, it said, would ensure that such violent killings were nipped in the bud.

     

  • Jonathan, security chiefs meet again on insecurity

    Jonathan, security chiefs meet again on insecurity

    Towards tackling the security challenges in the country, President Goodluck Jonathan met with the National Security Adviser (NSA), Col. Sambo Dasuki (rtd) and other security chiefs for about one hour at the Presidential Villa, Abuja, on Monday morning.

    The Director-General of the State Security Service (SSS), Mr. Ita Ekpeyong and the Inspector- General of Police, Mohammad Abuabakar were also at the meeting.

    The President had last Friday met with the security chiefs after cutting short his trip to South Africa and Namibia due to fresh security challenges in Nasarawa, Benue, Plateau, Borno and Yobe States.

    In the fresh crises, many security personnel and civilians were killed in the affected states.

    Although, the security chiefs did not speak with State House correspondents on the closed-door meeting yesterday, it was leant that the meeting has to do with the current security situation in the country.

     

  • Insecurity: U.S., EU renew support for  Nigeria

    Insecurity: U.S., EU renew support for Nigeria

    OVERWHELMED by security challenges, the Federal Government is seeking help from the United States to secure the nation’s porous borders.

    Interior Minister Abba Moro and Inspector-General of Police (IGP) Mohammed Dikko Abubakar held talks yesterday with United States security experts in Abuja on how to police Nigeria’s vast and porous borders from infiltration of militants, especially Boko Haram sect members.

    The experts are in the country to offer proposals for the installation of comprehensive border control equipment at the nation’s borders.

    The parley came on a day the European Union (EU) renewed it pledge to stay by the Federal Government until the terrorism battle is won.

    Abubakar solicited the continued assistance of the international community in the fight against insurgency and other criminalities.

    Moro confirmed the partnership between Nigeria and the US when he hosted in his office, the US Ambassador to Nigeria, Terence McCauley, who was represented by the US Deputy Assistant Secretary on Counter Terrorism, Anne Witkowsky, who led a delegation of the security experts.

    According to Moro, President Goodluck Jonathan has restated the Federal Government’s unwavering resolve to acquire equipment to effectively monitor the borders.

    The minister noted that Nigeria would spend whatever was necessary financially and use every available resource to prevent evil-minded elements from doing violence to any part of the country.

    He told the experts that Nigeria would be glad to partner with any friendly country with workable solutions to surmount its security challenges.

    Moro noted that traditional border patrols and physical checks have become obsolete and no longer workable in tracking down terrorists, who are equally seeking better ways to advance their nefarious activities.

    He said: “Just like USA demonstrates some level of leadership in the world, Nigerian today is looked up to by most African countries for leadership. Any issue that is meant to undermine democracy and strength of Nigeria affects African countries. We welcome this step as a step in the right direction that will not only reduce the act of terrorism in the country but it will eliminate completely any act of terrorism.

    “Government strongly believes that if dialogue can bring the much needed peace, then we should go for it. We are in the process. USA and Nigeria have setup several committees which recommendations are being implemented.

    Witkowsky said that US has initiated the security system and it is being introduced to Nigeria and some African countries, such as Ghana, Chad, Niger and Burkina-Faso.

    She stressed that the advanced technology would greatly enhance the ability of the nation’s immigration officials to apprehend illegal migrants at the border areas before they enter the country to cause any mayhem.

    Her words: “We are interested in working with Nigeria to secure the country. When the country is more secured, we will also feel secured and Nigeria should know that there are several options available in tackling terrorism.

    “We have been going to several countries, helping to install the finger biometric equal to that of the United States of America (USA).

    “We have figure prints of possible over 10 million travellers at the same time in a system. We are expanding in Nigeria, Chad, Burkina Faso and we are doing a major upgrade in Ghana. We are possessing about 10 thousand finger prints per week in West Africa.”

    When reporters sought to know what the US stood to gain in the partnership, Moro responded that the assistance was at no cost to the country but an extension of a hand of fellowship from a caring ally.

    Other members of the delegation are: Mr. Dwight Brown, Miss Theresa Keens, Mr. David Svendsen, Mary Johnson, Thaddaeus Hoyt and Diana Kohn, who are programmes personnel at the US Embassy.

    The European Union also renewed its continued support to the Federal Government “until terrorism is defeated”. Ambassador and Head of Delegation of the EU to Nigeria and the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) Dr David MacRae, dropped the hint at a media luncheon hosted by the commission in Abuja.

    MacRae, however, said that terrorism should be tackled within the ambit of the rule of law.

    He commended the government for its recent initiatives in addressing the issue.

    He said: “We welcome recent steps taken by government in recent weeks towards addressing insecurity in parts of the north, including the creation of two committees with the mandate to take a holistic look on radicalisation and factors that fuel it.

    “The EU is convinced that a comprehensive approach based on security, good governance, development and improvement of social conditions is key to fighting terrorism and radicalization.”

    The EU envoy condemned the killing in Baga, Borno, adding that measures should be put in place by the government to protect the lives and property of citizens.

    He stated that those responsible for the action should be brought to justice accordingly.

    “EU welcomes the decision of the Nigerian authorities to launch a full scale investigation into the Baga incident and is looking forward to thorough inquiry and bringing to justice anyone who may be responsible for any unlawful killings and conduct,” he added.

    MacRae also reiterated that the EU had agreed to finance the African-led International Support Mission to Mali (AFISMA) till the end of June.

    “By July, AFISMA will become a UN Peacekeeping Force and as far as elections are concerned there is a roadmap which the government is expected to adhere to towards constitutional reform,” he said.

  • Insecurity: FG to erect wall along Chad border

    Insecurity: FG to erect wall along Chad border

    The Federal Government may be forced into erecting a fence along the country’s border with Chad if the current level of insecurity in the Northeast persists, The Nation has learnt.

    The fence is to be erected along the corridors considered “easily accessible” to foreigners who come in to cause mayhem.

    A source from the Presidency who does not want his name in print said government is considering the border fence option as a way of curbing the infiltration of the country’s borders by “unwanted and troublesome foreign elements.”

    According to the source, the planned fence is exploratory and meant to curb the international dimensions of the criminality in area.

    The source said government has been considering the issue for some time and has now been necessitated by the recent massacre in Baga, Borno State, which pitched soldiers from Nigeria, Niger and Chad against terrorists who have turned the area into a base to attack civilians across northern Nigeria.

    The source said:”The truth is the security situation along the border with Chad has worsened considerably and we might need to take some radical measures to restore normalcy to the area and protect our people from these foreign criminals.”

    It was gathered that intelligence reports from North-East have shown that Nigerians along the borders with Niger and Chad are exposed to frequent attacks from criminals from these countries, who are in the habit of rustling livestock of Nigerian farmers, stealing their farm produce and attacking the women.

    The raid, which dates back to the Chadian civil war in the 80s, has since snowballed into terrorism, as foreign militants and arms dealers are now believed to be using these routes to foment trouble in Nigeria. It is widely believed that the Al-Queda in the Maghreb use this route to enter the country and perhaps aid Boko Haram in its operations.

    Two weeks ago, a military operation in Baga was reported to have led to the death of at least 185 civilians and the destruction of the entire community. However, the Nigerian Army has denied that casualty figure. According to it, only 37 persons died in the clash, including six civilians, one soldier and 30 members of the Boko Haram sect.

    The commander of the JTF in the area, Brig Gen Austin Edokpaye, had told reporters last week that the force was surprised by the array of sophisticated and heavy weapons deployed by the terrorists, including rocket-propelled grenades. He said the military action had led to the arrest of several Boko Haram members and the capture of heavy weapons.

    It is believed that with the huge number of civilian casualties, which some independent bodies have said are much higher than what the military released, the federal government may be looking beyond military options to secure the area. These include the deployment of surveillance equipment and erecting a wall across portions of the border.

    “We are studying the example of the United States along its southern border with Mexico, which has been demarcated by fence and walls to stop the flow of guns, drugs and unwanted persons from crossing the border. The situation in the area (North East) is unsus-tainable and we cannot continue to expose our people to these dangerous elements. Everything is on the table. We are willing to do anything to secure the lives and property of our citizens.”

    At the height of the smuggling of drugs and arms across the border from Mexico to the United States, the US had built what it called “border fence, rotted fence or border wall” between the two countries to reduce the nefarious activities and aid border control.

  • Insecurity: Yobe suspends local government elections

    THE Yobe State Independent Electoral Commission (YBSIEC) has postponed the local government election, earlier slated for June this year. Chairman of the electoral body, Mohammed Abdu Jauro, who announced the postponement during a stakeholders’ meeting with members of political parties, security and the media, attributed the postponement to the worsening security situation in the state, adding that the elections will be held at a later date when the security situation might have improved. The chairman disclosed that the present curfew imposed across the state does not provide an enabling environment for an election to be conducted. Some members of political parties in attendance also welcome the shift in the election date. Ahmed Dawayo, State chairman of Congress for Progressive Change ( CPC) noted that the shift in the election was anticipated, adding that “no political party will embark on any meaningful campaign in the face of this insecurity”. The state police commissioner, Sanusi Rufai, who was present at the meeting, called on the people to give security agents useful information that will assist them in flushing out criminals from the state.

  • Insecurity: Tsav flays Ringim for fleeing abroad

    Insecurity: Tsav flays Ringim for fleeing abroad

    A Former Commissioner of Police in Lagos State, Mr. Abubakar Tsav, has criticised the former Inspector General of Police, Mr. Hafiz Ringim, for taking up asylum in the United Kingdom because of current insecurity in Nigeria.

    Tsav told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Wednesday in Makurdi that Ringim’s claims that he had gone to the UK to escape acts of terrorism by the Islamic sect, Boko Haram, in the northern parts of the country was faulty.

    He said the former police boss was merely hiding under the cover of insecurity to stay abroad.

    The former commissioner argued that other former police chiefs, including M.D. Yusuf, Ibrahim Coomassie and Gambo Jimeta were all residing safely in Nigeria.

    Tsav accused the former police boss of staying abroad “to hide from his numerous misdeeds while in office.”

    “With every sense of humility, I want to sound it loud and clear that the former IGP Mr. Ringim might be running away for some unforeseen circumstances which he knows best.

    “Let no one be deceived that it is the activities of these Islamic menace that has made him to run but rather, a subtle manner of escaping unpleasant consequence which is best known to him.”

    Tsav urged the former police boss to return to Nigeria to join hands with other security experts to combat insecurity in the country.

     

  • Jonathan must tackle corruption, insecurity, says Ribadu

    Former Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and Presidential candidate of the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) Mallam Nuhu Ribadu has said unless things are done properly, Nigerians may lose the country to another civil war.

    Ribadu, who spoke on a Liberty Radio programme, Guest of the Week, monitored in Kaduna, said with the way things are going, care must be taken not to lose the country.

    He accused his successor, Mrs Farida Waziri and former Delta State Governor James Ibori of destroying the Commission and truncating all efforts to fight corruption in the country.

    He described the state pardon granted to former Bayelsa State Governor Deprieye Alamieyeseigha and former Managing Director of Bank of the North, Shettima Bulama as a tragic development and unfair to the fight against corruption.

    He said: “The way things are going, if something is not done soon, Nigerians will lose Nigeria to a civil war. The management of the country today is in a worst form which is gradually pushing us towards failure.

    “Nigeria is one of the unsafe places to live in the world today, poverty is at its highest level, a terrible division that is crippling our society, intolerance and lack of trust and respect for one another which government cannot run away from and if we are not careful, we will lose Nigeria.

    “This government has failed to address the challenges and problems we are confronted with, it failed to address insecurity; it has failed to protect Nigerians, especially the vulnerable.

    “We can save it by coming together and forgetting about sentiments, about differences and work towards unity and saving the resources of this country because it is only way that we can achieve peace.

    “Jonathan was wrong to have said he will not grant amnesty to Boko Haram members.

    He should not fail to protect people and when people are saying we are tried, we are down; even if it means to dialogue and have a solution, he should opt for such.

    “You cannot say they are faceless because faceless people do not do things like this, faceless people cannot be responsible and daily you see them on Facebook, faceless people cannot be in your custody, ghosts cannot be people who are in the communities, people who at a point wanted to dialogue.

    “People like Farida Waziri, James Ibori and a couple of others who are still alive and they took over the EFCC and brought it to its knees.

    “They literally destroyed the cases that were already in existence with the intention of wiping out the war against corruption.

    “The intention was to reverse it and take us back to where we started and they did a lot of damage to the Commission and the war against corruption.

    “But as God will have it, the EFCC survived because today, it is still doing the work probably not like it did before, but somehow it has been given the chance to bounce back again.

    “The pardon granted to Alamiesegha and Shettima is a tragic development, a very unfair action against Nigerians because corruption is our biggest problem and any step taken against the direction of reversing it is a negative development.”

  • Why insecurity ‘ll persist, by Falana

    Why insecurity ‘ll persist, by Falana

    Activist-lawyer Mr Femi Falana (SAN) yesterday blamed Nigeria’s rising insecurity on impunity in public offices.

    He said the state pardon granted former Bayelsa State Governor Diepreye Alamieyeseigha, who was convicted and jailed, does not really deserve the intense condemnation it is getting.

    To Falana, Nigerians should rather be angry that the government has been in the habit of “pardoning” corrupt persons by shielding them from trial. Nothing could be worse than that, he said.

    He cited the instance of a former governor who obtained a perpetual injunction against his trial for corruption; the government’s failure to try those named in high-profile bribery scandals when their accomplices have been jailed abroad, and the fact no one has been brought to book for corruption in the oil sector.

    But the Minister of Information, Labaran Maku, who represented President Goodluck Jonathan, blamed the judiciary, saying something in the justice system must change.

    “If it is the laws that allow people to seek perpetual injunctions against their trials, maybe we should revisit those laws,” Maku said.

    They spoke in Lagos at a launch of a book: The Nigeria of our dream, written by an Edo State Traditional Prime Minister, the Iyase of Benin Kingdom, Sam O. U. Igbe, who retired as a Commissioner of Police.

    Falana, who delivered a lecture entitled: Policing the Nigeria of our dream, said of all the former governors charged with corruption in 2007, none has been tried or jailed.

    Most of them, he said, have been on one form of appeal or the other. He said by the time they finish the appeal process up to the Supreme Court, evidence may have been weakened, or judges may have retired or transferred.

    “Those who have committed more serious offences have been pardoned,” Falana said, adding that no official of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), an organisation he said was notorious for corruption, has been prosecuted for graft.

    The consequence is that youths are disenchanted. Widespread poverty, caused by a few individuals pocketing the nation’s wealth, fuels insecurity, Falana said.

    “Our country has been ruined by a small group who appropriated the resources to themselves,” he said. He wondered why the government has not declared wanted 197 drug convicts who never saw the walls of a prison.

    Falana said the Boko Haram sect don’t deserve amnesty, adding that the situation is not comparable to the militancy in the Niger Delta.

    He also warned against increment in petroleum prices in the name of removing fuel subsidy, saying he hoped the government would not disregard the judgment of a Federal High Court, Abuja, which declared deregulation illegal.

    “If this regime will not improve the lives of Nigerians, let it stop adding to their punishment and suffering,” Falana said.

    Former Lagos State Governor and Action Congress of Nigeria National (ACN) Leader, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, represented by former Minister of State for Defence, Demola Seriki, said 100 years after amalgamation, Nigeria was still grappling with teething problems.

    Confidence in governance, he said, is at an all time low. “Unless urgent steps are taken, the labours of our heroes past shall be in vain.”

    He said aside insecurity, the government has failed in nurturing and educating the youth, while the leadership does not inspire them to greatness.

    Tinubu added that leaders owe it to their consciences and their maker to achieve a country of Nigerians’ dreams where there would be peace, prosperity, growth, equity and justice.

    “All of us must do our own part of the work that must be done beyond lamenting,” Tinubu said.

    Maku said the government welcomes criticisms, but that President Jonathan could not address in two years problems that had existed for 30 years.

    He said the judiciary needs further reform. “We are trying to look at the legal system. Why would someone be taken to court for corruption and for seven years, there is no judgment?”

    He recalled that President had suggested the creation of special courts for corruption, saying that needed to be revisited.

    On amnesty for Boko Haram, Maku said a blanket pardon for people who kill others “simply because they are different” was not ideal, even though President Jonathan had not foreclosed the dialogue option.

    “If any one of them comes out and lays his arm, then we’ll begin to talk. But what kind of country will we be to grant blanket amnesty to them? Does it mean the difference between night and day is completely forgotten?

    “We must keep the search for votes in 2015 away from Boko Haram. President Jonathan has not ruled out the option of forgiveness, but that cannot be the first condition,” Maku said.

    The 279-page book, divided into nine chapters, discusses the scramble for Africa, Nigeria’s colonisation and the evolution of its ethnic groups. It contains history of the Benin Kingdom, as well as recaps of military interventions and role of youth in nation building, among other subjects.

    Igbe said the police, if properly organsed, would “do a lot towards achieving the Nigeria of our dream.” He called for a new people-oriented Constitution, as well as administrative structures that do not discriminate against ethnic groups.

    Among guests were Lagos State Governor Babatunde Fashola (SAN), represented by Secretary to the State Government Mrs Oluranti Adegbule; and the Inspector-General of Police, Mohammed Abubakar, represented by AIG Mamman Tsafe.

    Others were the Esama of Benin Kingdom, Gabriel Igbinedion; Edo’s Deputy Governor Dr Pius Odubu who represented Governor Adams Oshiomhole, and Speaker Edo House of Assembly Hon. Uyi Igbe, who is the author’s son.

  • Gowon calls for prayers on insecurity

    Gowon calls for prayers on insecurity

    The former Head of State, Gen. Yakubu Gowon (rtd), on Monday called on Nigerians to pray for divine intervention on the lingering insecurity and other social problems plaguing the country.

    Gowon made the call while addressing students of the American University of Nigeria (AUN), Yola, Adamawa.

    The News Agency of Nigeria says Gowon also urged Christians and Muslims to face God and seek for divine intervention.

    “I am here in Yola for our programme “Nigerian Prayers.’’ It is a programme initiated following the lingering insecurity and other social problems in the country.

    “And what brought me to Yola is to organise prayer rally for the peace and stability in the North-East, the North and the country in general.’’

    Gowon expressed concern over the insecurity situation, describing it as “very sad.”

    “I don’t know if those involved in the illegal act realise what they are doing to their communities, states, the region and the country.”

    He said that Nigeria urgently needed to work for peace and efforts should be made to ensure peace and stability through respect and tolerance for one another.

     

  • Fighting insecurity:The private sector initiative

    Fighting insecurity:The private sector initiative

    As the challenges posed by insecurity, terrorism and ethno-religious conflicts in the country assume a more dangerous dimension, collaboration between government agencies and the private sector cannot be wished away.

    Even the security and defence sector, hitherto believed in some circles, to be an exclusive preserve of the government, has been identified as areas that expertise must be harnessed to get the country out of the woods.

    This formed a substantial part of discussions at a recent workshop and exhibition on state-of-the art security and defence equipment mounted by an Abuja-based security and defence services firm, Mekahog Limited.

    At the four-day exhibition, a wide range of latest state-of-the art security equipment and defence vehicles were show-cased.

    Among them were Springbuck VI and FOX Armoured Personnel Carrier (APC), riot control water cannons, city surveillance products, drug and dangerous chemicals detection products.

    Others were fire fighting and cyber crime prevention products and dog training equipment and accessories.

    The exhibition, which lasted from February 25 to 28, this year, attracted top military and police officers, government officials at both the federal and state levels, as well as members of the diplomatic corp.

    Among them were Brig-General O. Adeosun, Group Captain B. A. Sani, Commodore F. O. Oyedele and Lt. Col. E. J. Cleopas, all from the Defense Headquarters, Abuja. The Nigeria Police was represented by Mr Godwin Okezie, a Superintendent of Police.

    From the Federal Government, came the Minister of Interior, Mr Abba Moro, who commended the organisers of the exhibition, for proactively moving a step ahead to familiarise the country with new technologies that could put her in a better stead to tackle the lingering security problems.

    To fight terrorism, the Minister said the Federal Government was ready to partner private organisations.

    According to him, he came to the exhibition to demonstrate that the Federal Government was not unmindful of the fact that there is a lot the private sector could do to support it in the fight against criminality.

    He said the equipment displaced at the exhibition were proof that the facilitating firms were conversant with the global trend on security and defense equipment and services, assuring that some of the parastatals under his ministry will look for ways of collaborating with Mekahog Limited and its partners to enhance their efficiency and effectiveness

    “I am impressed by what I have seen. I have had to travel out of the country on matters concerning security equipment and I must say that what I have seen is similar to what I have been seeing in outside countries”, he said.

    Moro said some of the parastatals under his ministry, notably the Nigerian Civil Defence and Security Corps (NCDSC), the Immigration Services and Federal Fire Services, would explore ways of acquiring the Defence products to maintain internal peace and order.

    Mr Okezie, who represented the Inspector-General of Police, pointed out that the introduction of the new range of security vehicles, especially Springbuck VI and FOX APCs into the Nigerian Market will help minimise the level of casualties on both sides of the offensive during combats.

    Okezie, who is the head of APC Maintenance and Deployment in the Nigeria Police, using Springbuck VI and FOX APCs would both shield security operatives from criminals or aggressors, as well as make it unnecessary for security operatives to use live ammunitions on criminals.

    He said the introduction of such carriers in good numbers will be a remarkable improvement over the current practice of using ordinary, unprotected Hilux vans to ferry security personnel, a practice which, he says, exposes its occupants to lot of danger.

    Already, Mekahog Limited has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with DCD (Pty) Limited in South Africa to set up heavy fabrication engineering company that will assemble APCs, crowd control vehicles and troop carriers in Nigeria. The facility will also provide an ultra modern training centre for fabrication and welding activities.

    The proposed company will provide technical training for police personnel and skill acquisition for youths in the West African sub region. When fully established, the manufacturing plant, which will cost about $220,000 in the first phase, will handle complicated fabrication, welding and rolling for oil companies. The venture is expected to create over 2,000 jobs, as well as lead to foreign exchange saving.

    Mekahog Limited has also entered into an agreement with the Ministry of Police Affairs for equipment and maintenance capacity survey, in line with the current maintenance strategy of the Nigeria Police targeted at saving the Police huge sums of money. This will involve re-fabricating abandoned APCs and troop carrier.

    The military is not left out. Mekahog has also concluded plans to take over the Defense Industry Corporation of Nigeria (DICON), in order to reposition the company for the 21st century challenges. It was learnt that the major thrust of the strategy will be to retool the organisation, especially in the area of research and training. Although it will remain a partnership between the private sector and government, DICON, according to an official of Mekahog, will be strategically positioned to be profitable and offer more employment opportunities to Nigerians.

    The Executive Director of the company, Mr Obinna Ohakim, said Mekahog is ready to partner with the relevant authorities in the West African sub region, to “calibrate appropriate response to the array of defense challenges.”

    Beyond the imperative of collaboration, observes believe that the involvement of the private sector in the fight against violent crime and insecurity should be deliberately pursued. It was agreed that given the cumbersome nature of the operatives of the Nigeria Police, private security arrangements should be handy to make up where the police fall short, while not compromising the overall security strategy of the nation.

    Many private security services outfits are constrained by the required resources and logistics for good training for their personnel. But although there appears what seems to be a proliferation of private security companies, going by the multiplicity of uniformed personnel in every nook and cranny, observers say the challenge persists

    Former Imo State Governor and Chairman of the group, Ikedi Ohakim, said the war against Boko Haram and other terrorists groups in the country can be won with less casualties, adding that the government must deploy psychological warfare by using modern and safe equipment to fight terrorism.

    He lamented that the country will continue to waste the lives of her citizens by using obsolete equipment, saying that the company has the capability of producing modern military hardware that would surpass those in possession of terrorist groups.

    “Now, we have capability that is better than theirs, two times. We have equipment that will go under water, we have equipment that can capture their movement and you as a General, you will be in your office and be seeing those criminals carrying out their nefarious activities.

    “Those equipment are available. Smaller countries are purchasing them. The critical thing is that it affects our economy, people don’t want to come and invest because of terrorists.

    The company also explained that it has the capacity to turn the outdated defense equipment into money-making ventures for the government.

    To overcome the threats of terrorists, the former governor said: “The government must buy the right equipment at the right time because terrorists are always updating their warfare.”