spot_img
19.6 C
Munich
spot_img
Sunday, April 28, 2024

Border closure failed to stop smuggling of arms, Buhari laments

Must read

President Muhammadu Buhari on Thursday lamented the rising proliferation of illegal arms and ammunition in the country, in spite of the closure of the nation’s borders more than a year ago.

Buhari restated that the infiltration of countries within the Sahel region of Africa by fleeing bodyguards and the crisis in Libya were primarily responsible for the worrisome development.

He warned that “as far as Libya remains unstable, so will the problem remain.”

The President’s lamentation elicited reactions from many Nigerians who complained that he had not taken action against those permitting illegal immigration and inflow of arms and ammunitions instead of effectively policing the porous borders.

The President spoke when the outgoing Special Representative of the United Nations Secretary-General and Head of the United Nations Office for West Africa and the Sahel (UNOWAS), Mohammed Ibn Chambas, paid him a farewell visit in Aso Villa, Abuja.

Read Also; Magufuli, Yar’adua, Gaddafi, other 15 African leaders who died in office

The Federal Government shut the nation’s land borders in August 2019, with the aim of controlling smuggling, including light and small arms, into the country.

The border closure was however reversed through a presidential order in December last year, after several calls by interested parties.

Buhari told Chambas that the first step towards keeping the Sahel region peaceful and secure is to ensure stability in the State of Libya.

According to the President, the worsening case of arms and ammunition proliferation in the West African and the Sahel region resulted from the fall of the former Libyan strongman, Col. Muammar Gadaffi.

Buhari, according to  a statement  by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Mr. Femi Adesina, said Gadaffi held a grip on power in Libya for 42 years by recruiting armed guards from different countries, who escaped with arms when the Libyan he was killed.

He said: “They didn’t learn any other skill than to shoot and kill. So, they are a problem all over the Sahel countries today.

“We closed our land borders here for more than a year, but arms and ammunition continued to flow illegally. As far as Libya remains unstable, so will the problem remain.

“We have to cope with the problems of development, as we can’t play hop, step and jump. But, we will eventually overcome those problems.”

The President described Chambas, who spent many years in Nigeria in different capacities, from ECOWAS to UN, as “more of a Nigerian than anything else.”

Buhari had in April  2018 told the  Archbishop of Canterbury Rev. Justin Welby, that Gaddafi, who was killed  in 2011 by United States troops, was responsible for the killings in parts of Nigeria.

 

- Advertisement -spot_img

Latest article