In
a clear term, the Nigerian Army on Wednesday declared that its soldiers
could not march force with force with the dreaded Boko Haram
insurgents.
The Chief of Accounts and Budget (army),
Maj.-Gen. Abdullahi Muraina, said this at Jaji, near Kaduna at a
training programme for the Nigerian Army Finance Corps Warrant Officers
and Senior Non-Commissioned officers.
Muraina said without adequate funding, the army would not be able to halt the current activities of Boko Haram.
He said, “Currently, budgetary
allocation for the military is inadequate to meet the contemporary
security challenges and also cater for the welfare of the Nigerian
Army.”
Muraina noted that apart from inadequate
funding,the army was enmeshed in bureaucratic bottlenecks for funding
approvals for military operations across the country, urging the Federal
Government to evolve other means of funding and supporting military
operations aside the usual budgetary allocations.
He also said there was the need for a
special operation fund to be included in the defence budget and placed
under the control of the Chief of Army Staff.
Muraina , who described Warrant Officers
and Senior Non-Commissioned Officers as the backbone of regimentation
in the Nigerian Army, said, “Apart from limitations of the envelope
system, the Nigerian Army is enmeshed in the bureaucratic bottlenecks
for funding approvals for military operations.
“This calls for a review as the
increasing speed at which the effects of conflicts appear in the
operational environment will continue to challenge commanders.
“It is our humble appeal that government
could evolve other means of funding and supporting military operations
other than the normal budgetary allocations.
“Such means include but not limited to
strategic cooperation and liason with other civil industries for the
production of uniforms and other equipment.
“A special operation fund could be included in defence budget and placed under the control of the Chief of Army Staff.
“The increasing dynamic environment
coupled with continued technogical development in the country and our
immediate neighbours have spurred the Nigerian Army to place high
premium on efficiency, proficiency and professionalism of officers and
soldiers.”
The Chief of Army Staff, Lt.Gen. Kenneth
Minimah, noted with regrets that there had been an increase in the wave
of socio-political and ethno-religious crises threatening the nation’s
security.
Minimah in a message read on his
behalf on the occasion by the GOC 1 Mechanised Division of the Nigerian
Army, Kaduna, Maj.-Gen. Kenneth Osuji, said the insecurity in the
country had assumed higher dimension which had left serious demands on
the resources of the Nigerian Army.
PUNCH
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