Buhari accused of spending Anti-BH money on political games
– President Muhammadu Buhari has been misusing aid money by a British newspaper
– The Daily Telegraph
claims the president is misusing funds set aside to combat Boko Haram to
persecute his political opponents
– Several senior PDP
officials have been arraigned by the EFCC since Buhari was elected
Hundreds of millions
of pounds of British foreign aid given to Nigeria to help combat Boko Haram
terrorists is instead being used to fund a witch-hunt against opposition
politicians, it is being claimed. Britain has committed to spending £860
million (N234 billion) in foreign aid to Nigeria to help support the country’s
efforts to crush Boko Haram terror group, which has been responsible for a
spate of outrages. But Western officials are now raising concerns that the
government of the country’s recently elected leader, President Muhammadu
Buhari, is misusing the funds to persecute political opponents. Since Mr Buhari
came to power last July, a number of prominent members of the former ruling
People’s Democratic Party (PDP) have been arrested and imprisoned without
charge.
Among those detained was the party’s official spokesperson.
Most of the arrests have been sanctioned by the government-controlled Economic
and Financial Crime Commission, which was set up to tackle corruption and
receives funding from the Department for International Development. But while
Mr Buhari’s government continues to use British aid money to target his
political opponents, it is proving less effective at tackling the Islamist-run
Boko Haram terrorist group. Much of the aid Britain provides to Nigeria is
aimed at helping the country’s security forces to become more effective at
tackling Boko Haram, which boasts of its links with Islamic State and achieved
international notoriety two years ago after kidnapping 276 schoolgirls in
northern Nigeria two years ago.
Scores of British
military personnel – including members of the special forces – are based in
Nigeria helping to train the military to tackle Boko Haram. But despite Mr
Buhari’s pledge during last year’s general election campaign that he would make
tackling Boko Haram one of his top priorities, there is growing concern among
Western officials that the Nigerian military is failing to take effective
action against the terrorists. This has resulted in Boko Haram now being
regarded as the world’s deadliest terrorist organisation, responsible for more
deaths than Isil. There are now reports that the group is trying to train
kidnapped children to act as suicide bombers.
A British Special Forces soldier instructs Nigerian army
troops
“There is no doubt the growing strength of Boko Haram is because President Buhari is far more interested in settling scores with his political opponents that concentrating his energy on defeating terrorists. “The result is that Nigeria is starting to look more and more like a police state while Boko Haram just goes from strength to strength.” Another Western diplomat added: “If Buhari was serious about fighting corruption he would be focusing all of his efforts on targeting corruption that is impeding Nigeria’s ability to focus its efforts on tackling Boko Haram.”
Accusations that
Nigeria is abusing aid money will add to the growing controversy over the UK’s
commitment to spend 0.7% GDP on the foreign aid budget. Western officials have
expressed concern about Mr Buhari’s increasingly autocratic style of government
since he came to power last year after he previously headed a brutal military
dictatorship following a coup in December 1983, which lasted until he was
overthrown by another coup in 1985. Now political opponents claim he is
returning to his old dictatorial ways, abusing British aid meant to improve
Nigeria’s ability to tackle Boko Haram to consolidate his hold on power. Apart
from the concerns over British aid, American officials are also angry that $2.1
billion (N418 trillion) of aid given to the Nigerian military to tackle Boko
Haram has not been properly accounted for.
Hundreds of girls abducted by Boko Haram remain the group’s
prisoners
Mr Buhari’s claim that he is winning the war against Boko
Haram – recently claimed the group no longer poses a serious threat – has been
undermined by recent revelations the Nigerian authorities have tried to cover
up the fact that hundreds more schoolchildren have been abducted by Boko Haram.
Human rights activists have no confirmed that around 400 women and children
were abducted last year by militants from the Nigerian town of Damasak. It is
now believed that some of these children may have been trained as suicide
bombers. U.S. counter-terrorism experts say at least 105 women and girls
trained by Boko Haram have taken part in suicide attacks since June 2014.
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