President-elect,
Maj. Gen. Muhammadu Buhari (retd.), on Tuesday said his administration would
restore military cooperation with the United States of America.
In
an article published by the New York Times in its Tuesday edition, Buhari
promised to among other things reformed the military.
The
outgoing President Goodluck Jonathan-led administration had cancelled the
training component of its military cooperation with the US citing a lack of
sincerity on the part of the Americans for its decision.
But
Buhari said, “My administration would welcome the resumption of a military
training agreement with the United States, which was halted during the previous
administration. We must, of course, have better coordination with the military
campaigns our African allies, like Chad and NIGER, are waging in the struggle
against Boko Haram. But, in the end, the answer to this threat must come from
within Nigeria.”
Buhari
also said he would deploy additional troops in the battle foul away from
civilian areas in the south and the north central parts of the country.
In
the article, the President-elect said, in the fight to end the Boko Haram
insurgency, “We must START by deploying more troops to the front and away from
civilian areas in central and southern Nigeria where for too long they have
been used by successive governments to quell dissent.
“We
must work closer with our neighbours in coordinating our military efforts so an
offensive by ONE army does not see their country’s rid of Boko Haram only to
push it across the border onto their neighbour’s territory.”
A
MEMBER of the Buhari team, who pleaded for anonymity because he was not
authorised to speak to the media said, “Without being told, you should know
that what he is simply saying is that under his administration, the military
will revert to their constitutional role of defending the nation against
external aggression QED.”
It
was also gathered that the military would be overhauled and professionalised
while the police would be better empowered to take the leading role in internal
security.
According
to the New York Times article, which carried Buhari’s byline, the incoming
administration will aside from using the military to deal with the terrorists’
threat, it will pay greater attention to counter-terrorism initiatives.
Buhari
noted that his administration would seek to address why young people were
attracted to JOIN the sect. He identified some of the reasons to include
poverty and ignorance.
He
said, “Indeed Boko Haram – which translates in English, roughly, as “western
education is sinful” – preys on the perverted belief that the opportunities
that education brings are sinful.
“If
you are starving and young, and in search of answers as to why YOUR life is so
difficult, fundamentalism can be alluring. We know this for a fact because
former members of Boko Haram have admitted it: They offer impressionable young
people money and the promise of food, while the group’s mentors twist their
minds with fanaticism.
“So,
we must be ready to offer the parts of our country affected by this group an
alternative. Boosting education will be a direct counter-balance to Boko
Haram’s appeal.
“In
particular we must educate more young girls, ensuring they will grow up to be
empowered through learning to play their full part as citizens of NIGERIA and
pull themselves up and out of poverty. Indeed, we owe it to the schoolgirls of
Chibok to provide as best an education as possible for our fellow young
citizens.”
He
observed that Boko Haram feeds off despair, lack of hope that things can
improve. The former Head-of State also argued that by attacking a school, and kidnapping
more than 200 schoolgirls, it sought to strike at the very place where hope for
the futurewas being nurtured, and the promise of a better NIGERIA.
“It
is our intention to show Boko Haram that it will not succeed,” he said.
The
retired army general also promised that his administration would not only
defeat the sect militarily, it would ensure that it provides the very education
the sect despises to help our people help themselves.
Quoting
the late Nelson Mandela, Buhari said the sect would soon learn that “education
is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world.”
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