CHALLENGES AND SOLUTIONS TO NIGERIA SECURITY SITUATION
There is no doubt that Nigeria has great potential for greatness, particularly with its large
population consisting of a dynamic workforce, a growing economy, abundant natural
resources, diverse raw materials, huge oil reserves, and intellectual reservoirs. Despite
these aspects of greatness, Nigeria continues to be a developing country struggling the
most frantically to find its feet among the nations' committees due, among other factors,
to the prevalent insurgency and insecurity that have continued to present a challenge to
its development and growth. some causes of insecurity
in Nigeria which the followings:
1.The Menace of Unemployment and Poverty:
It is a fact that unemployment causes poverty and extreme poverty leads to a crime that
gives rise to insecurity.Aliyu (1998) characterized poverty as a situation in which people
live below a defined standard of living income so that individuals and nations are
classified and identified as poor. While unemployment is defined as when people are not
engaged in meaningful work and are lacking the basic needs of life.Every year, tertiary
institutions graduated many students who have been unfortunately thrown into the labor market with
no hope for job opportunities in sight. Many become frustrated in an effort
to keep mind and body together and engage in violent and criminal acts such as lucrative
kidnapping, militancy, and armed robbery. Others have been terrorists ' victims and are
quickly radicalized. Nwagbosa(2012) believes that past governments have failed to put
in place actions that will reduce unemployment and poverty rates, which have been the
major causes of insecurity in Nigeria.
2.Elite exploitation of Ethnicity and Religious Differences:
It is worth bearing in mind that the country's diverse ethnic make-up is not itself a cause
of insecurity in Nigeria; however, political and religious leaders across the nation
sometimes use ethnic sentiments to achieve their selfish ambitions. Throughout this way,
the elites exploit people's minds to stir up mistrust and resentment among different
ethnic groups and among the country's major religions that cause Nigeria's insecurity. In
a multiethnic country like Nigeria, the relationship should be cordial, without reciprocal
distrust, fear, and a propensity to a violent confrontation between members of one ethnic
or religious group and another of that ethnicity or religious group.Adagba, et al, (2012);
Achumba, et al, (2013), similarly asserted that control of scarce resources, fuel, land,
economies, traditional and political offices resulted in mass killings and property
destruction communities in various parts of the country.Nigeria's various ethnic groups
also draw attention to neglect, racism, dominance, abuse, victimization, injustice,
marginalization, nepotism, and intolerance. This often results in ethnic violence and
religious conflicts.
3.Corruption:
Nonetheless, corruption was largely responsible for government failure and systemic
infrastructure collapse, resulting in large-scale insecurity in Nigeria. The state of
insecurity in Nigeria is unquestionably a result of government failure, traceable to
widespread corruption. Corruption is poor not because money and profits change hands
in an unequal way, and not because of participants' motives, but because it privatizes Corruption is
responsible for Nigeria's massive unemployment, it's the reason Nigerian
youth and businessmen lack electricityto run their businesses, it's the reason many
businesses fail. Unemployment6 and deprivation are the two main causes of Nigeria's
insecurity. By creating unemployment and poverty, corruption leads to instability in
Nigeria. According to Charas, (2014) Past governments, both Military and Democratic,
had attempted to focus attention on good governance, prudence, transparency,and
accountability through a variety of means, including the creation of the Murtala
Mohammed Administration Code of Conduct in 1975, the Ethical Revolution of Shehu
Shagari Civil Administration in 1979, the War Against Indiscipline and the Corruption of
General Muhammadu in 1984,General Ibrahim Babangida's mass mobilization for self
reliance, social justice and economic recovery in 1985, General Sani Abacha's Failed Banks
Tribunal in 1994, Olusegun Obasanjo's AntiCorruption Act in 2000.
4.Weak security apparatus:
Nigeria's security system is seen as very poor in both personnel and equipment. Security
officers are poorly and poorly trained and poorly remunerated. As a result,the requisite
expertise is not available to meet modern security challenges. The contribution of the
security personnel to the Nigerian project of ensuring general safety is equally of serious
concern.This weak security system can be due to a number of factors including
corruption, insufficient police,and other security agencies funding, lack of modern
equipment, poor safety personnel health,and inadequate staff.Nigeria is largely under
police jurisdiction and this partially explains the Nigerian Police Force's failure to
effectively tackle the country's crimes, corruption,and insecurity.Olorisakin (2008)
asserts that the police population ratio in Nigeria is 1:450 which falls below the United
Nations‟standard. This implies that as a country, Nigeria is grossly under-policed and
this perhaps explains the police‟inabilityto effectively tackle crimes and security
challenges.
Many of the soldiers fighting the insurgency in the northeast of the country have been
ambushed on some occasions and many have been killed by the rebels at Boko Haram as
a result of information leaked to them by those who were supposed to fight them. Again
huge sums of money made available for the acquisition of weapons were embezzled and
misappropriated or outdated equipment purchased and the offenders were not punished
appropriately. In some other situations, firearms meant to be found in the possession of
the insurgents for the Nigerian troops. The lack of cooperation between the Security
Agencies is also noted. The case of some soldiers who killed three police officers in Taraba
State and injured others, who had an official duty to apprehend a kidnapping kingpin
not long ago, and also a soldier who shot a Mopol in Maiduguri demonstrated the weak
security framework in Nigeria further.
5.Porous border:
The country's unstable frontiers, where human movements are essentially untracked,
have led to Nigeria's level of insecurity. There is an unregulated inflow of Small Arms
and Light Weapons into the country as a result of the porous borders which has enabled
militancy and crime in Nigeria.Edeko (2011)has reported that Nigeria hosts over 70% of
about 8million illegal weapons that have been used to create a security crisis.In addition,
the porous condition of both the Nigerian borders has contributedthe uncontrollable
influx of migrants, predominantly young people, from nearby countries such as the
Republic of Niger, Chad and the Republic of Benin accountable for some of the insecurity
promotingcriminal activities in Nigeria,(Adeola and Olayemi, 2012).
6.Marginalization And Inequalities In The Country:
Nigeria's current government has been strongly charged with ethnic disparity, and the
marginalization of some sections of the country in the provision of basic infrastructure,
and theses have significantly compounded Nigeria's security (Nwadialor, 2011).
Currently, key political positions were given to people from Northern extraction while
the South-East was left in the cold. That may explain the agitation for the Biafra Republic and Shi'a
strongly known as the Islamic Movement of Nigeria (IMN) and several breaches
of security this followed the agitation. Besides, it is quite clear that Nigeria's life chances
are extremely disparate.Vast majorities of the public have a sense of deprivation,
oppression, marginalization, and this has resulted in dissatisfaction and loss of hope,
particularly among the youth. Such young people are now voicing their disillusionment
with the state of affairs by any means possible, whether legal or illegal. The consequence
of this is growing uncertainty (Onuoha, 2011).
7.Bad governance and poor Leadership;
That fact remains Nigeria's fundamental cause of insecurity from the past till now. Any
government anywhere has the primary function of providing basic services such as
water, electricity, good road network, quality education,and general infrastructure.
Ironically, these basic things are not there in Nigeria and the people, in general,are
Frustrated and demoralized. Demoralization and anger logically provide a strong fertile
ground for aggression and general insecurity. The scarcity of these basic amenities in
Nigeria is embarrassingly not due to a shortage of funds but rather to corruption at the
highest level of leadership structure. A reality articulated by Hazen and Horner (2007),
of a wealthy nation with poor people in the majority.
It is therefore an enormous task to take responsibility for giving leadership direction in
such communities or societies in a multi-ethnic and religious society like Nigeria, given
the current scenario of the democratic politics in which the nation has been located. To
this end, believing that weak leadership, has added more challenges to the uncertainty
and causes of insecurity not just in the north but also in Nigeria in general, might not be
an unfounded statement According to Charas, Mbaya,and Liberty (2014), a number of
violent cultures such as thuggery, indiscipline, corruption, abduction, bombing, etc. have
come in since the arrival of third and fourth republics in 1999 and 2009 respectively,
which was just a decade ago after the previous military invasion.
THE SOLUTION TO INSECURITY IN NIGERIA
Insecurity in Nigeria poses a threat to life and property, hampers business activity,and
discourages local and foreign investors, all of which hampers and morons a country's
social and economic growth and development. Since the nation gained political
independence in 1960, we have been experiencing rising insecurity in Nigeria. Recently,
the rising insecurity has assumed a dangerous dimension that even threatens the
Nigerian state's business life.
Removing such challenges should be Nigeria's number one priority at all levels because
the nation cannot achieve any significant development despite insecurity and terrorism.
Governments need to be proactive in resolving security issues and threats by modern
methods of intelligence gathering and sharing intelligence, preparation, logistics,
encouragement,and the implementation of advanced technology to address security
challenges.
The way out in Nigeria to solve the problem of insecurity is by government pushing
growth with its policies. The creation that we are addressing here involves:
i.There is a need to establishment Community Policing within each divisional
police headquarters for effective management of insecurity.
ii.There is a need to created an economy with appropriate social, economic,and
physical infrastructure for business and industrial growth.
iii.There is a need forour security apparatus to ultimately improve the training
of security officers, sufficient training in modern security methodologies, the
provision of state-of-the-art equipment and appropriate remuneration, good
service conditions,andconvenient afterservice arrangements.
iv.The government should boost people's living standards by establishing more
centers of entrepreneurship across the nation, most notably in the North and
North East.
v.The government should create more job opportunitiesforthe youth;thiswill
make them abstain from committing all such crimes.
vi.Politicians who use thugsshould be barred from politics for life.
vii.Governments should promote good governance, openness, accountability
through the use of print and digital media, and inform the public through
conferences, seminars, and NGOs.
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