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With 800 Violent Attacks, 7,000 Deaths, Tuggar Calls for Joint Action against Terror
•Senate rejects probe of past military equipment funds, spending on varsities, yacht
•UN to host peace building programme
Michael Olugbode and Sunday Aborisade in Abuja
Minister of Foreign Affairs, Ambassador Yusuf Tuggar, has called on members of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) to take collective actions in addressing the root cause of insecurity in the sub-region.
Tuggar decried the fact that in the first five months of 2024, there had been over 800 terrorist attacks, which had claimed over 7,000 lives in the West Africa subregion.
The minister was however quick to add that despite the various challenges, the sub-region has made significant progress, including the area of democracy and governance.
This was as the Senate, yesterday, rejected a prayer by the Senator representing Edo North Senatorial District, Senator Adams Oshiomhole, seeking a probe of the funds allegedly appropriated to the military in the past to fight insurgency and banditry across the country.
At the same time, the United Nations (UN) in Nigeria, yesterday, said its maiden peace-building programme tagged: “Summit of the future-new agenda for peace” was aimed at advancing measures at tackling security related issues.
However, Tuggar spoke at the opening of the 52nd Session of the Mediation and Security Council at the Ministerial level in Abuja on Wednesday, where he highlighted security and humanitarian challenges confronting the subregion.
He noted that terrorism has continued to threaten the collective well-being of the region, while violent extremists operate within and across national borders.
Tuggar, who is also the Chairman of the Council, urged countries in the subregion to come up with collective actions required for ECOWAS to overcome the myriad of challenges.
He said, “We are gathering with a deep sense of purpose and unity – driven by our commitment to securing peace and political stability across our region. As we are all aware, our region faces grave security and humanitarian challenges.
“Terrorism continues to threaten our collective well-being. Violent extremists operate within and across our national borders, compromising not just our peace and security, but also our prospects for growth and development.
“Therefore, as we commence our deliberation today, let us be mindful of the critical threats we face – and the collective actions required to overcome them.
“The statistics from the ECOWAS Early Warning and Response Network (ECOWARN) paint a sobering picture. Between January and May 2024, our region has witnessed over 7,000 deaths as a result of more than 800 terrorist incidents.
“Burkina Faso, Niger and Mali have been particularly devastated by this relentless violence. This stark reality highlights the staggering human cost of insecurity, and underscores the urgency for a coordinated and decisive action to combat this menace.
“Terrorism does not recognise borders. From the Sahel to the coastal states, no country is immune to its devastating impact. It is therefore crucial for every country within ECOWAS, including those in the Sahelian belt, to understand that the fight against terrorism is not the burden of a few but a collective responsibility.
“Therefore, we must remain united, and demonstrate unwavering commitment and resolve to safeguard the lives and futures of our citizens.
“As we join forces to find common solutions to the continuing challenge of violent extremism and foreign interference, we should also remain mindful of the broader challenge of co- operation to help tackle the underlying causes of instability in our region: climate change, migration, organised criminal activity, global terms of trade and access to financing.
“Our task today is to consider how best to meet the immediate symptoms of the condition we face – and also how to establish firmer foundations to reduce inequality and poverty and strengthen democracy.”
He challenged members of the council on providing a way forward for the region, noting that, “Our deliberation today will therefore focus on the Review Process of the ECOWAS Supplementary Protocol on Democracy and Good Governance.
“It would be recalled that in an effort to further entrench democracy, the rule of law and good governance in the region, the ECOWAS Authority of Heads of State and Government, during its Extraordinary Summit held in Accra, Ghana, in September 2021, initiated the review process.
“Furthermore, this meeting will discuss the transition processes in the region, with a view to making actionable recommendations, in order to achieve progress.
“Despite the challenges that confront our region, ECOWAS has continued to sustain its peace support operations in some Member States, including the ECOWAS Stabilisation Support Mission in Guinea- Bissau (SSMGB) and the ECOWAS Mission in The Gambia (ECOMIG), as well as the ongoing plans for the deployment of an ECOWAS Stabilisation Mission in Sierra Leone, given recent developments there.
“In this regard, we will receive a detailed briefing on the operationalisation of the ECOWAS Security Architecture, focusing on the ECOWAS Standby Force (ESF), including a progress report on the ECOWAS logistics depot in Lungi, Sierra Leone, and the outcome of the just concluded meeting of Ministers of Defence and Finance, convened to discuss financing options for the operationalisation of the ECOWAS Counter-Terrorism Force.
“ECOWAS has also been actively addressing humanitarian challenges in the region, through coordinated efforts and strategic interventions in Member States. Through these interventions, food items and other relief materials have been provided to communities most affected by natural disaster and insecurity.
“Other support includes the establishment of framework for disaster risk reduction, and collaboration with international partners to ensure a comprehensive response. Our discussion today should also focus on this important issue, with a view to evolving further strategies to address the region’s humanitarian challenges.
“Now, more than ever, it is crucial for all Member States to remain united and work together in solidarity to harness the full gamut of our resources, intelligence, and capabilities to develop comprehensive strategies that will address our security challenges and support efforts to promote our region’s economic growth, peace, and political stability.
“This includes enhancing our security architecture, strengthening regional cooperation, encouraging effective intelligence sharing, and promoting resilience within our communities. The operationalisation of the ECOWAS counter- terrorism force and the review of our Regional Action Plans are steps in the right direction, but we must act further, to ensure that these initiatives are robustly funded and effectively implemented.
“As we deliberate over the various memoranda to be presented before us today, let us be guided by the principles of solidarity and shared responsibility, and reaffirm our commitment to peace, democracy, rule of law and good governance. Let us also pledge to work tirelessly for the security and prosperity of our region, for the overall benefit of our people and the generations to come.”
President of the ECOWAS Commission, Aliou Touray, also expressed concern that the region was still being burdened with multiple interlocking threats, including existential ones, posing significant challenges to the unity of ECOWAS member states.
“As we commemorate the 49th anniversary of our collective regional integration project, our region is still confronted with multiple interlocking threats, including existential ones, posing significant challenges.
“The Sahel faces climate and man-made crises, leading to terrorism and violent extremism. The Gulf of Guinea faces illegal fishing, drug trafficking, and dumping of toxic waste; thus, affecting livelihoods.
“Governance deficits and marginalisation have strained social contracts, engendering bitter political rivalries, resource competition, organised crime and violence.
“To complicate the situation, our region has also become the arena of multipolar geostrategic and geopolitical competition, coupled with the explosion of new destructive technologies. The region is also affected by strategies of misinformation and disinformation practices that foster mistrust among stakeholders and undermine social cohesion.
“We are increasingly witnessing the continued shrinking of the political and civic space, perpetrated through exclusionary constitutional and institutional processes, breaches of our regional norms and values, including the Constitutional Convergence Criteria of the Supplementary Protocol on Democracy and Good Governance.”
Senate Rejects Probe of Spending on Varsities, Past Military Equipment, Yacht
The Senate at plenary on Wednesday, rejected a prayer by the Senator representing Edo North Senatorial District, Adams Oshiomhole, seeking a probe of the funds allegedly appropriated to the military in the past to fight insurgency and banditry across the country.
The red chamber also kicked against investigation into the purchase of yacht and establishment of universities allegedly built with funds appropriated for the military in the hometowns of some past service chiefs in order to prevent future occurrence.
The upper chamber however, okayed the motion, urging the federal government to seek the collaboration of private security outfits to end insurgency and banditry in the country.
It equally challenged the military and security agencies to employ the use of modern technology and scientific strategies to fight insurgency and other criminal activities in the country.
The Senate decisions were sequel to a motion by the Chief Whip, Senator Ali Ndume, representing the Borno South Senatorial District on the recent suicide attacks in Gwoza, which killed many people and injured several others.
Ndume’s motion was titled: “Suicide Attacks in Gwoza, Borno State: The Urgency to Stem the Tide of This Ugly Menace.”
The Borno South Senator, whose constituency was the target of the bloody attacks, in his lead debate, drew the attention of his colleagues to the incident, which occurred on Saturday, 29th June, 2024.
He said brazen suicide bombers targeted a wedding ceremony, funeral and hospital in a sporadic and coordinated attacks in the Gwoza town of Borno State, which resulted in the unfortunate deaths of about 32 innocent Nigerians so far, leaving scores of other victims wounded with varied degrees of injuries.
He also noted that one of the incidents occurred near a busy motor park in Tashan Mararaba, Gwoza town and the victims were mainly civilians returning from a wedding ceremony, where the assailant was identified to be a young lady in her early 20s.
According to him, the attacks had raised significant concerns about the security situation in the region, which has been a flashpoint of terrorist attacks over the years.
Ndume said the development called for concerted and coordinated efforts of the security agencies to address the state of insecurity in Borno State and other parts of the country, experiencing similar situations.
He stressed the need for the military to adopt scientific and technologically based warfare with the use of modern softwares and facilities to fight the menace.
Ndume, however, urged his colleagues to observe a minute silence for the deceased, and asked the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) to intensify efforts by providing relief materials to the victims of the attacks.
He equally asked the federal government to direct the security agencies in the country to deploy the use of modern technology in the fight against insurgency and to make concerted efforts in securing the hot spots inhabited by the insurgents, namely, the Lake Chad Region, Sambisa Forest; and Mandara Mountains, respectively
Ndume’s prayers were adopted and approved by the Senate.
But an additional prayer by Oshiomhole urging the Senate Committee on Army and Air Force to carry out oversight on the way the funds appropriated for the military in the past were expended, was rejected by the red chamber.
Oshiomhole alleged that some past security chiefs established universities not teaching anything about security while the Navy even bought a yacht.
The Edo North senator was of the view that banditry and insurgency would have been successfully fought if the money was spent on modern technology and scientific equipment currently being used to fight criminality across the World.
“The Senate Committee on Army and Air Force should ensure that we do not only provide more money to the armed forces, that we guide jealously what they use that money to procure.
“This is because, under the supervision and oversight of this National Assembly, previous service chiefs had spent money to build universities in their various communities.
“Those are the kind of resources that should be used to procure modern technology. And to think that money will be diverted to non-essentials. And as we speak, those institutions are not teaching anything about security. They are just another glorified university.
“I think that this House has the power to appropriate. We should focus strictly on the items that the army and the Air Force and other security agencies are going to spend the money to do. Otherwise, everybody knows we need modern technology.
“We must assist them to redirect their procurement policies to focus on the technology. Otherwise, we can decline to approve appropriation if the details are not such that those managing the system will use the money strictly in a manner that will do justice to our collective feeling about redirecting and moving more and more towards technology,” Oshiomhole said.
But Ndume, who was Chairman, Senate Committee on the Army for several years while addressing journalists after the plenary, clarified that the funds appropriated for the purpose of fighting banditry and insurgency were never diverted.
He, also, said the funds for the establishment of universities by the military were dully appropriated for by the both chambers of the National Assembly.
“It is wrong to assume that the funds for military equipment were diverted to building of universities. Funds for the establishment of those institutions were dully appropriated.
“The Senate was also of the opinion that a call for the probe of military expenditure in the past should come in form of a proper motion and not as an additional prayers,” he said.
Senator Jimoh Ibrahim, in his contribution, lamented the proliferation of arms among Nigerians and shocked his colleagues that about 277 guns were currently in the hands of some persons within the National Assembly.
“Living with insecurity is gradually becoming the only way to understand security and we cannot allow this trend to continue because of the danger that it portrays.
“I don’t want to take much of your time, but I will say clearly It cost nothing for the intelligence army to get devices in their phone to know where these notorious criminals live.
“As I’m here, I check my phone regularly and I know the number of guns that are very close to me here. This is just less than 1,000 installations. Within us now, there are over 277 guns around here.”
UN Set to Host Peace Building Programme
The United Nations (UN) in Nigeria has said its maiden peace-building programme tagged: “Summit of the future-new agenda for peace” was aimed at advancing measures at tackling security related issues.
UN Resident Humanitarian Coordinator in Nigeria, Mohamed Fall, disclosed this during national stakeholders’ consultation in Abuja to map out strategies for the upcoming summit scheduled to hold from Sept.22 to 23, 2024 in New York.
The event organised by the UN, in collaboration with the Institute for Peace and Conflict Resolution (IPCR), sought to promote the use of dialogue as tool in tackling security challenges.
Fall said although Nigeria was Africa’s most populous nation, it has role to play as regional power in shaping regional and global agenda on peace and security.
“There are a number of idioms that notes how crucial Nigeria is to the subcontinent and the world, the most notable is the following ‘when Nigeria sneezes, the whole continent fall sick,” he said.
He noted that the promotion of peace and security was central to the UN and enshrined in the organisation’s Charter to save generations from the scourge of conflict.
According to him, dialogue has become important toward supporting Nigeria capture and articulate efforts in tackling peace and security challenges.
“The new agenda for peace is a fresh look at the changing security landscape and a call to reinvigorate collective security system based on principles of trust, solidarity and universality.
“The agenda stresses importance of preventive diplomacy to tackle poverty, inequalities, climate change and closing development gaps that lead to conflict in the first place.
“This would strengthen both the regional peace architecture and the global framework for addressing contemporary threats to peace and security across Africa,” he said.