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Nigerian Army generals are corrupt, sell weapons to terrorists, claims UK paper

The Nigerian Army has come under heavy criticism, as a London-based influential newspaper, The Economist, has described it as an army that is “mighty on paper” and filled “with corrupt generals and unable to protect the country from the mutating violence.” The Economist, in an extensive report on Thursday, said Nigeria had not been able to address its insecurity because military chiefs plundered much of the country’s combat resources and the rest had stretched thin with little capacity to forestall the crisis. “But many of its soldiers are ‘ghosts’ who exist only on the payroll, and much of its equipment is stolen and sold to insurgents,” the newspaper added.

“Little more than six decades ago, as Nigeria was nearing independence, even those who were soon to govern Africa’s largest country had their doubts about whether it would hold together. “British colonists had drawn a border around land that was home to more than 250 ethnic groups. Obafemi Awolowo, a politician of that era, evoked Metternich, fretting that Nigeria is not a nation. It is a mere geographical expression.

“The early years of independence seemed to prove him right. Coup followed coup. Ethnic pogroms helped spark a civil war that cost one million lives, as the south-eastern region calling itself Biafra tried to break away and was ruthlessly crushed. Military rule was the norm until 1999. “Despite this inauspicious start, Nigeria is now a powerhouse. Home to one in six sub-Saharan Africans, it is the continent’s most boisterous democracy. Its economy, the largest, generates a quarter of Africa’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

“The army is also stretched thin, having been deployed to all of Nigeria’s states,” the paper said in its upcoming October 23 issue that was published on its website today (Thursday). The paper also said Nigeria police has become demoralised due to poor training and endemic corruption.

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