Military graft undermines Nigeria's fight against Boko Haram: Transparency Int'l |
LAGOS
(Reuters) - Military corruption is weakening Nigeria's efforts to
battle the Islamist insurgency of Boko Haram, the watchdog Transparency
International said on Thursday.
Its
report underlines the difficulty of achieving two key promises of
President Muhammadu Buhari's 2015 election campaign: tackling endemic
corruption and defeating an insurgency that has claimed over 20,000
lives and displaced millions.
"Corrupt
military officials have been able to benefit from the conflict through
the creation of fake defence contracts, the proceeds of which are often
laundered abroad in the UK, U.S. and elsewhere," the watchdog said in a
statement.
Last
year, Nigeria's vice president said around $15 billion had been stolen
from the public purse under the previous government through fraudulent
arms procurement deals.
Transparency
International said this had left the military "without vital equipment,
insufficiently trained, low in morale and under-resourced".
"This
has crippled the Nigerian military in fighting an aggressive
ideologically inspired enemy such as Boko Haram," the watchdog said,
pointing to cases of soldiers taking on the militants without ammunition
or fuel.
A defence spokesman said the allegations were false for the current crop of military officers.
"A
lot has been done to train, boost troops' morale and procure vital
equipment through due process," said Major General John Enenche, adding
that the military "will continue to get better with the right kind of
leadership that we have today".
The
military says it has recaptured much of the territory claimed by Boko
Haram since the conflict began in 2009. But the reclaimed areas are
often razed towns, or islands of relative safety and highways connecting
them to larger cities.
Much of the territory away from the roads is still dangerous, and Boko Haram attacks remain frequent.
The
report also said countries such as the United States could encourage
defence reform by withholding arms, such as the planned sale of up to a
dozen Super Tucano A-29 aircraft to help the fight against Boko Haram.
Transparency
International said Nigeria should make its defence budget and
procurement systems more transparent to ensure that contracts were not
inflated, or given to shell companies to conceal the true beneficiary.
(Reporting by Paul Carsten; and by Camillus Eboh in Abuja; Editing by Kevin Liffey)
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