2023 BUDGET: Deja vu as Nigerian govt earmarks N1.35trn to fight terrorism, banditry - TrendyNewsReporters 2023 BUDGET: Deja vu as Nigerian govt earmarks N1.35trn to fight terrorism, banditry - TrendyNewsReporters
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2023 BUDGET: Deja vu as Nigerian govt earmarks N1.35trn to fight terrorism, banditry

by ebor cletus ralph jr

On October 7 at the National Assembly, President Muhammadu Buhari unveiled his proposed N20.51 trillion budget for 2023. An oddity of the budget was the Federal Government’s record N1.35 trillion allocation for the ongoing war against Boko Haram/ISWAP terrorists, insurgency, and banditry in the nation.

Buhari said that the opulent number was necessary to carry out his frequently-repeated claims that terrorism will be eradicated by December during the budget presentation before a joint session of the National Assembly.
According to a breakdown of the amount, the Ministry of Defence and the Armed Forces received about N1.248 trillion in funding from the 2023 Appropriations Bill to fight Boko Haram, bandits, and other anti-insurgency wars.

The Nigerian Army, Nigerian Air Force and the Nigerian Navy will get N638.1b, N174.4bn and N158.7bn, respectively, with the three forces getting the largest chunk of the military budget.

Out of the Nigerian Army’s N638.1bn budget, N581bn is for payment of salaries of personnel, N24.6bn was allocated for overhead and N32.3bn for capital.

The Nigerian Air Force on the other hand, was allocated N108.3bn for personnel cost, N15.4bn for overhead and N50.6bn for capital projects, while for the Nigerian Navy, N113.7bn will go to personnel cost, N19.7bn to overhead and N25.3bn for capital.

The Defence Headquarters, Abuja, was also captured with a budget of N84.7bn, out of which N80.086bn is for personnel, N2.1bn for overhead and N2.4bn for capital.

A closer look at the breakdown also showed that the purchase of weapons and ammunition is included in the capital projects of the Nigerian Army as listed in the budget, along with the purchase of three Magnus MF 212 surveillance attack aircraft for N2.7 billion and three Bell UH 1D helicopters for N3,082,500,000.

 

The Nigerian Air Force, which is also purchasing weapons and ammunition, allocated N27,302,804,065 for “extra payment for procurement of six T-129 attack helicopters.” It also budgeted N1,257,660,000 for “balance payment for periodic depot maintenance of three L-39ZA aircraft.”

The NAF also intends to spend N346,273,056 on the overhaul of six Larzac engines used in its fleet of Alpha Jet aircraft.

The Nigerian Navy intends to spend N9,163,226,200 on the purchase of six Ocea3X32 rapid patrol boats, three fuel cleaning stations, six RHIBs, six special forces boats, and four years of integrated logistical support.

 

Buhari made it clear in his speech at the budget presentation that his administration was totally committed to ensuring the safety of people and property all around the nation.

“I assure you, insecurity, especially banditry and kidnapping, will be significantly curtailed before the end of this administration. We will redouble our efforts to ensure we leave a legacy of a peaceful, prosperous and secure nation,” he said.

Described as a “new” project in the budget, part of the allocation, according to Buhari, “is to be expended on fresh terrorism and other criminal cases filed in court by the ministry,” something many Nigerians seem not to quite agree with the President going by his administration’s reluctance to prosecute terror suspects, preferring to spend tax payers’ money to “rehabilitate and reradicalise” them.

In the last seven years that the Buhari administration has been on the saddle, the regime has fully demonstrated its willingness to prosecute terror suspects and even when they do, they end up doing so in a haphazard manner which often leaves a lot to be desired.

Minister of Justice and Attorney-General of the Federation, Abubakar Malami, has not shown the readiness of the Federal Government to carry out the prosecution of the suspects despite promises of doing so several times.

In an interview earlier in the year after the United Arab Emirates handed over a list of 400 Boko Haram Financiers , Malami had said the Buhari government was not interested in naming and shaming the suspects.

He said the Federal Government would at the appropriate time, disclose their identities through a judicial process that would entail prosecution.

What makes this new budgetary allocation to fight Boko Haram and other forms of terrorism curious is the fact that since Buhari became president in 2015, humongous amounts of money has been appropriated for the fight against insurgency but it seems the fight has not been yielding positive results apart from endless promises.

Meanwhile, the insurgents and bandits have continued to hold the country to ransom, striking at will, sending innocent Nigerians to their early graves, attacking public institutions, sacking communities and kidnapping at will.

Some roads in the country, especially in the North are no-go areas as bandits have made them their fortress.

Year in, year out, the Buhari government has continued to budget huge amounts to tackle the menace of insecurity in the country but it seems the monies are either not used for the purposes they were meant for, or they ended up in the wrong pockets.

Nigerians have been inundated with stories of military officers, especially those in the theater of war, crying out over their poor welfare packages and yet they were supposed to have been captured in the yearly budgets.

As it now stands, Nigerians have a sense of foreboding and deja vu over the N1.35trn budgeted to fight terrorism.

prelliotaglobalconcept

TV Presenter/ Content Writer

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