Tag: Maritime security

  • $1b loan, $466m jets top as Buhari probes arms deals

    $1b loan, $466m jets top as Buhari probes arms deals

    Panel of generals to examine Yar’Adua, Jonathan govts contracts

    some likely contracts

    •$466.5m contract to weaponise six Puma helicopters by the Jonathan administration

    •N3b contract for the supply of six units of K-38 patrol boats to the disbanded Presidential Implementation Committee on Maritime Security (PICOMSS)

    •Theft of over 200m Euros at PICOMMS and the purchase of two private jets

    •$9.3m seized by South Africa

    •$1b loan approved by the 7th Senate for arms purchase to fight Boko Haram

    •Un-accessed N7b military budget

    •Rehabilitation of the Military Reference Hospital in Kaduna

    The panel members

    •AVM J.O.N. Ode (rtd.) – president
    •R/Adm J.A. Aikhomu (rtd.)
    •R/Adm E. Ogbor (rtd.)
    •Brig.-Gen. L. Adekagun (rtd.)
    •Brig.-Gen. M. Aminun-Kano (rtd.)
    •Brig.-Gen. N. Rimtip (rtd.)
    •Cdre T.D. Ikoli – member,
    •Air Cdre U. Mohammed (rtd.)
    •Air Cdre I. Shafi’i 
    •Col. A.A. Ariyibi
    •Gp. Capt. C.A. Oriaku (rtd.)
    •Mr. I. Magu (EFCC)
    •Brig.-Gen. Y.I. Shalangwa  – secretary

    President Muhammadu Buhari yesterday approved a 13-man committee, which will examine the procurement of arms and ammunition for the Armed Forces from 2007 to date.

    The period covers the administrations of the late President Umaru Yar’Adua and former President Goodluck Jonathan.

    But the committee of former military chiefs may face a major obstacle – arms, ammunition and military hardware are not subjected to vetting by the Bureau of Public Procurement (BPP).

    Such purchases, The Nation learnt last night, are over 350 in the last eight years. Some of them sparked crises between Service Chiefs and political authorities.

    But many retired top military officers are believed to be prepared to testify before the panel, which got no deadline for its job.

    For “security reasons”, arms purchases by the military do not go through the BPP – the office that examines government procurements to ensure cost-effectiveness and others.

    Before the President raised the panel, there had been some petitions before the Office of the National Security Adviser (NSA), the Department of State Services (DSS) and the Defence Intelligence Agency (DIA), among others, on some shady deals; in arms procurement.

    Some of the controversial issues are

    • $466.5m contract to weaponise six Puma helicopters by the Jonathan administration;
    • N3billion contract for the supply of six units of K-38 patrol boats to the disbanded Presidential Implementation Committee on Maritime Security (PICOMSS);
    • Theft of over 200m Euros by PICOMMS including the purchase of two private jets;
    • $9.3m cash seized by South Africa;
    • Whereabouts of $1billion loan approved by the 7th Senate for arms purchase to fight Boko Haram;
    • Contract scam over rehabilitation of the Military Reference Hospital in Kaduna

    The $466.5m weaponize contract was awarded to a financier of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in 2014 by the administration of ex-President Goodluck Jonathan, leading to a protest by one of the immediate past Service Chiefs.

    About two years ago, a businessman blew the lid open on N3billion contract for the supply of six units of K-38 patrol boats to the disbanded Presidential Implementation Committee on Maritime Security (PICOMSS).

    The businessman alleged that one of the officials of PICOMSS converted N620million down payment for the contract into personal use.

    Besides, PICOMSS was enmeshed in the theft of over 200m Euros.

    One of the contracts which drew national ourtrage was the seizure in South Africa of $9.3m said to have been meant for the purchase of arms.

    President Buhari  directed the National Security Adviser, Babagana Munguno to convene the investigative committee on the procurement of hardware and munitions in the Armed Forces from 2007 till date.

    According to a statement by the Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, the investigative committee’s mandate is to identify irregularities and make recommendations for streamlining the procurement process in the Armed Forces.

    To this end, the statement said that the National Security Adviser has constituted the Investigative Committee as follows: AVM J.O.N. Ode (rtd.) – president, R/Adm J.A. Aikhomu (rtd.) – member, R/Adm E. Ogbor (rtd.) – member, Brig.-Gen. L. Adekagun (rtd.) – member, Brig.-Gen. M. Aminun-Kano (rtd.)  – member, Brig.-Gen. N. Rimtip (rtd.) – member.

    Others are: Cdre T.D. Ikoli – member, Air Cdre U. Mohammed (rtd.) – member, Air Cdre I. Shafi’i – member, Col. A.A. Ariyibi – member, Gp. Capt. C.A. Oriaku (rtd.) – member,

    Mr. I. Magu (EFCC) – member and Brig.-Gen. Y.I. Shalangwa – secretary.

    The establishment of the investigative committee, the statement said, is in keeping with President Buhari’s determination to stamp out corruption and irregularities in Nigeria’s public service.

    It reads: “It comes against the background of the myriad of challenges that the Nigerian Armed Forces have faced in the course of ongoing counter-insurgency operations in the Northeast, including the apparent deficit in military platforms, with its attendant negative effects on troops’ morale.

    “The committee will specifically investigate allegations of non-adherence to correct equipment procurement procedures and the exclusion of relevant logistics branches from arms procurement under past administrations, which, very often resulted in the acquisition of sub-standard and unserviceable equipment.”

     

  • Nigeria, UK sign MoU on counter-terrorism, maritime security

    Nigeria and United Kingdom have signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) on bilateral military cooperation to tackle terrorism and maritime insecurity in the country.

    The Minister of State for Defence, Dr. Olusola Obada and her British Counterpart, Hon. Andrew Robathan, signed the pact on behalf of their countries.

    Obada said the MoU was necessary in view of increased crude oil theft from the Niger Delta which is taken abroad for marketing and refining as well as pipeline vandalism which resulted in environmental degradation.

    “We are here to sign an MoU being the third of such agreements. This particular one is in the area of counter-terrorism and maritime security.

    “We in Nigeria need all the support we can get to combat oil bunkering, illegal refineries and vandalism of pipelines as we have a lot of refineries in many parts of the Niger Delta.

    “And when they refine this crude they throw away about 30 per cent. So, you can imagine the amount of degradation that we have in the environment.

    “We need all hands on deck to combat this scourge and also tackle maritime security in the Gulf of Guinea. People come to our country to steal our crude oil and refine them abroad,” Obada said.

    The Western Europe Correspondent of the News Agency of Nigeria reports that the MoU is to ensure information and experience sharing on defence as well as security matters which are of mutual interest to both nations.

    It also includes specialised military training for personnel, and partnership in addressing regional and international security challenges.

    NAN reports that the MoU is valid for five years with an automatic extension for another five years.