19 May 2016

»"This Is Why The US Might Not Sell Warplanes To Nigeria"

Alleged Human Rights Abuse: Block Sale of Warplanes to Nigeria, New York Times tells Obama
    The Editorial Board of New York Times, has asked President Barrack Obama of the United States of America, not to sell warplanes to Nigeria, citing human rights abuse by the

Muhammadu Buhari-led government. This opinion was expressed in the editorial of the Us-based Newspaper.

    Read editorial below:

    Fourteen months after the election of President Muhammadu Buhari in Nigeria, the Obama administration is considering selling his government twelve warplanes. It is a thorny decision as a result of President. Buhari is an improvement over his fatal predecessor, Goodluck Jonathan, and is fighting Boko Haram, the Islamist extremists United Nations agency have terrorized the region. But he has not done enough to finish corruption and answer charges that the military has committed war crimes in its fight against the cluster. Selling him the planes currently would be a mistake.

    Under Preident Buhari, Nigeria has cooperated additional with Chad and Niger to fight Boko Haram. The group, which emerged in the early 2000s, has seized land in the northeastern, predominantly Muslim section of Nigeria. Thousands of people are killed and a couple of.2 million displaced. The group’s depravity captured world attention in 2014 when it abducted 276 women from a secondary college.

    While violence is down and some territory has been recaptured, the group continues to attack remote villages and exile camps, and it is using girls and youngsters as suicide bombers. yankee military officers say that Boko Haram has begun collaborating with the Islamic State and that the teams may well be coming up with attacks on American allies in Africa.

    Yet Nigeria’s government cannot be entrusted with the versatile new warplanes, which will be used for ground attacks moreover as intelligence activity. Its security services have long engaged in extrajudicial killings, torture and rape, according to the State Department’s latest annual human rights report. Amnesty International says that during the army’s scorched-earth response to Boko Haram between 2011 and 2015, more than eight,200 civilians were dead, starved or tortured to death.

    The Obama administration was so involved regarding this record that 2 years agone it blocked Israel’s sale of yankee-made elapid snake attack helicopters to Nigeria and concluded American coaching of Nigerian troops. American officers even hesitated to share intelligence with the military, fearing it had been infiltrated by Boko Haram. That wariness has relieved and yankee officers say they area unit currently operating with some Nigerian counterparts.

    Since winning election on a reform platform,President Buhari has moved to root out graft and to research human rights abuses by the military. But the State Department aforementioned Nigerian “authorities did not investigate or penalize the bulk of cases of police or military abuse” in 2015.

    That hardly seems like Associate in Nursing endorsement for commerce the craft. Tim Rieser, a top aide to legislator Patrick Leahy, who wrote the law expulsion yankee aid to foreign military units suspect of abuses, told The Times that “we don’t accept within the Nigerians’ ability to use them during a manner that complies with the laws of war and doesn’t find yourself disproportionately harming civilians, nor in the capability of the U.S. government to monitor their use.”

    To defeat Boko Haram, which preys on citizens’ anger at the government, President. Buhari will want additional than weapons. He has to get serious about rising governance and providing jobs, roads and services in every region of Nigeria. Until then or till Congress develops ways in which to monitor the planes’ use, it should block the sale.


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