Amidst claims by Nigerian security
agencies that they are being underfunded, We can
authoritatively report today that a total N4.62trillion has been
allocated to the federal security sector in the past five years.
How this huge sum was spent however remains unclear as there are no reliable performance reports by the security agencies.
Year after year, the security sector continues to gulp the highest chunk of the country’s expenditures.
In the 2015 budget for instance, N934billion was allocated for the security sector, the highest for the year.The figures for 2011 and 2012 were N920billion and N924billion respectively while N923billion each was thrown at the sector in 2013 and 2014.
Yet, Nigeria continues to face attacks
from the extremist Boko Haram group, whose activities have claimed over
11,000 lives in the last five years.
Kidnappings, crude oil theft, armed robbery and other sundry crimes are also widespread across the country.
The heads of the country’s security
agencies have repeatedly claimed allocations to the sector were
insufficient to equip the armed forces and make them operationally
efficient to deliver on their mandates.
Within the period under review (2011-
2015), the Office of the National Security Adviser got a capital
allocation of N240billion while the Defence Ministry got N206billion
making the capital allocations to the Office of the National Security
Adviser higher than that allocated to the entire Defence Ministry, which
includes the Army, Navy and Airforce.
In recent years, the Ministry of Defence
has refused to make its spending public, making it difficult to track
the nation’s investment on the military and allied agencies.
Anti-corruption activists believe the practice of concealing security spending is antithetical to probity and accountability.
“The absence of disclosure, backed by
law and practice effectively makes the security sector the most prone to
contract inflation and ineffective service delivery,” said Seember Nyager, executive director of Public and Private Development Centre.
“The high risk and probability of
contract inflation in itself fuels the (Boko Haram) insurgency because
no amount of resources would ever be sufficient to contain a system with
unchecked leaks.”
The Lead Partner at BudgIT, a
transparency advocacy group, Oluseun Onigbinde, added, “It is very
important to request accountability into these funds as Nigeria will
need to ensure that process of arms acquisition which is grossly hidden
does not lead to opportunity by public officials to acquire illicit
wealth.”
The infographics below presents a
detailed overview of Nigeria’s budgetary allocation to the security
sector in the past five years.
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