Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Mr. Femi Adesina
Source: THE PUNCH
Ahead of the December presidential
deadline for the nation’s armed forces to end the activities of the Boko
Haram sect, the Presidency has said Nigeria will not seek the help of
foreign mercenaries.
The Special Adviser to the President on
Media and Publicity, Mr. Femi Adesina, disclosed this in an interview
with our correspondent on Saturday.
He was responding to a question from our
correspondent on whether or not President Muhammadu Buhari would ask
the military to seek external help in view of recent attacks by the
sect.
Adesina, said it was uncharacteristic of the President to direct the military to seek external help in form of mercenaries.
He said Buhari’s position had always
been that the nation’s military has the capacity to end insurgency in
the country, having performed creditably well in peace-keeping missions
in many countries.
Adesina insisted that while the
President would appreciate foreign support in terms of equipment,
trainings and intelligence, he would not be favourably disposed to
mercenaries.
The presidential spokesman said, “The
position of the President has always been that he believes the military
has the capacity to fight terrorism.
“President Buhari has always made it
clear that Nigeria will appreciate support in terms of equipment,
training and intelligence. The support the President is seeking is
definitely not in terms of manpower or what you will call mercenaries.”
Meanwhile, the United States’ government
has described the President’s goals towards countering terrorism and
ending Boko Haram insurgency in the North-East as ambitious.
This was stated during a recent briefing at the Washington Foreign Press Centre in the US.
According to the US Acting Assistant
Secretary, Bureau of Political-Military Affairs, Todd Chapman, America
will continue to support Nigeria to counter Boko Haram.
Chapman said, “We have had some security
assistance programmes that have been very active. We just completed
some training through our Global Security Contingency Fund, which is a
$40m effort to help counter Boko Haram. The Obama administration
authorised the use of presidential drawdown authority to provide another
$45m in support to the countries fighting Boko Haram. And this is all
on top of an additional $50m that we had already provided to the region
to help with equipment training and logistics systems.”
He added, “President Buhari has set
ambitious goals for himself. I’ll leave it up to others to determine
whether or not those goals can be met. But we are committed to
supporting them as they counter the threat. We heard many stories while
we were there (in Nigeria) of some of the horrors that are being
perpetrated in the North-East and elsewhere in Nigeria. And clearly,
this government, the Buhari administration is committed very strongly to
doing all that they can to defeat Boko Haram.”
Speaking at the briefing, another US
official, Deputy Assistant Secretary, Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights,
and Labour, Steven Feldstein, noted that there was more to be done than
defeating the insurgents on the battlefield.
Chapman and Feldstein who visited the
country recently pointed out that the issue of human rights protection
remained critical in addressing the current crisis in the North-East.
“A lot of the rhetoric of what the
regime and what the president has said when it comes about the
importance of linking human rights protection, civilian protection, with
the fight against Boko Haram and other elements is something that we
view as essential pillars and cornerstones. And so for us to be able to
have these important conversations with our military counterparts but
also with civil society groups, with human rights activists, other
government counterparts,’’ Feldstein said.
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