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Bandits In Trouble As US Approves $1bn Attack Helicopters, Others For Nigeria

3 years ago
1 min read

Bandits, kidnappers, and other criminals are now in trouble as United States State Department has cleared the sale of 12 AH-1Z Cobra attack helicopters to Nigeria worth nearly $1bn.

The Defense Security Cooperation Agency on Thursday announced the sale of the helicopters and related defence systems to the Nigerian military.

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Prime Business Africa gathered that the package includes $25m for human rights-related training, according to YahooNews.

The sale includes the Bell-made Cobras; 28 General Electric-made T700-401C engines; 2,000 Advanced Precision Kill Weapon Systems used to convert unguided missiles into precision-guided missiles; and night vision, targeting and navigation systems.

The case highlights the Biden administration’s attempts to balance human rights concerns in the arms sale process.

Foreign Policy had reported in July that the top Democrat and Republican on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee delayed the sale amid concerns Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari was drifting toward authoritarianism. The country is facing multiple security challenges, including terrorism.

“Nigeria requires a fundamental rethink of the framework of our overall engagement,” committee Chairman Bob Menendez, D-N.J., told Secretary of State Antony Blinken during the diplomat’s testimony before the panel last year.

Menendez also tweeted that “the Nigerian government must get serious about security” after the militant group Boko Haram kidnapped more than 300 schoolboys in December 2020.

The Nigerian government also ran afoul of the New Jersey Democrat in 2019 after arresting one of his constituents, Nigerian-American journalist Omoyele Sowore.

According to the announcement, $25m in the package will be dedicated to “institutional and technical assistance” to Nigeria’s military to continue its Air-to-Ground Integration program, which concerns targeting processes that are consistent with international humanitarian law and the laws of armed conflict.

“The proposed sale will better equip Nigeria to contribute to shared security objectives, promote regional stability and build interoperability with the U.S. and other Western partners. This sale will be a major contribution to US and Nigerian security goals.”

Meanwhile, this multipurpose newspaper reported that Northern Elders Forum had asked President Muhammadu Buhari to “resign immediately” over his failure in providing security for Nigerians.

The Northern Elders’ call on President  Buhari to resign immediately came a few hours after a Professor of Political Economy an Founder of the Centre for Values in Leadership (CVL), Pat Utomi asked Nigerians to embark on a symbolic disobedience to avert anarchy.

The Northern Elders, on Tuesday, April 12, made the demand in a statement by spokesperson, Dr Hakeem Baba-Ahmed.

They said it is disappointing that after about seven years of being in office, President Buhari still has no answers to the security challenges across the country.

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