Friday 15 March 2013

Crime: US laments poor security response

The prison van ambushed by suspected kidnappers in Warri, Delta State, on Wednesday, killing three warders.
The prison van ambushed by suspected kidnappers in Warri, Delta State, on Wednesday, killing three warders.
ABUJA— The United States of America, USA, has expressed concern at the rate crime is spreading in Nigeria.
The American government lamented the worsening crime rate in coastal areas and the free movement of Islamic extremists between Mali and Nigeria.
The US ambassador to Nigeria,  Terence McCulley, and his  Consul-General,Mr Jeffrey Hawkins, spoke at different fora.
The US ambassador said  Islamic extremists have continued to move freely between Nigeria and northern Mali, despite the ongoing French military operation there against them.

The Consul-General on his part said his government was concerned with the growing incidence of criminal activities off Nigeria’s coast. Hawkins, who said this at the closing ceremony of the 2013 Nigeria Maritime Expo, NIMAREX 2013,  yesterday, in Lagos, said there seemed to be ineffectual security response to the growing criminal activities.
The ambassador, speaking in Abuja, said as extremists’ shootings, bombings and kidnappings of foreigners continued unstopped across northern Nigeria,  halting the violence remained a top priority of the Washington government.
He, however,  declined to answer questions about alleged US plans to operate a drone base in neighbouring Niger.
“Officials have seen reports for years” about fighters from the radical Islamic extremist network, Boko Haram, travelling to Mali to receive training there, said McCulley, speaking to journalists on a telephone conference call.
Boko Haram, the main force behind the continuing guerrilla attacks against the  Federal Government, is believed by analysts and officials to have ties to al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, which operates in Mali, and likely received training and weapons from them.

“Nigerians feel that there is a link between extremist activity in the Sahel and their internal extremist insurgency,” McCulley said. The ambassador said Nigeria needed to attack the group on multiple fronts, both militarily and by alleviating northern Nigeria’s crushing poverty and lack of opportunities for its growing, young population.
McCulley also said Nigeria needed to “respect human rights” while fighting extremists. Human rights officials have long accused the country security forces of illegally detaining people for months without charges, using torture and even summarily killing suspects.
French troops, with the help of Malian soldiers, have been fighting Islamic extremists who took over the main towns in northern Mali in the weeks after a coup toppled the nation’s government last year. Despite their efforts, it appears extremists continue to be able to simply disappear into local populations and move freely across the region, where desert borders remain loosely patrolled.

VANGUARD

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