The outgoing British High Commissioner to Nigeria, Andrew Pocock, has
said the problem of Boko Haram insurgency in North-east Nigeria is not
something that can be resolved with the use of the army, the police or
the security agencies only.
Speaking at a farewell interactive
session with members of Kaduna chapter of the Nigeria Union of
Journalists Correspondent Chapel in Kaduna on Monday, Mr. Pocock said:
“We don’t look at the problem in the Northeast as purely a security
problem. It is not something that can be resolved with the use of the
army or the police or the security agencies only. It is not going to be
solvable.
“There has to be three different things; the first is a
properly articulated security efforts. The second is that, there has to
be a different kind of politics in the Northeast, where state and
Federal Government work together instead of against each other and where
there is a much more common and agreed agenda about what needs to be
done to correct many years of mis-governance and of poor policy in the
North-east.
“The third dimension has to be a developmental and
economic uplift agenda. Too many, particularly young people are not only
without employment in the North-east but because of the insurgency are
without any economic prospect whatsoever. No one can live without hope
and indeed if the economic and the developmental aspect of these are not
addressed, the opportunities for radicalisation are much greater. So,
those three things have to work in tandem, the security instrument,
politics and development/economic approach.”
He however stated
that with the new government of President Muhammadu Buhari, people are
looking to a chance to get out of the security situation in the
North-east, adding that, in the overall, there is greater possibility of
stability and economic success, economic recovery perhaps than they
might have been before the election.
The High Commissioner said
although the army had some successes in 2013, those efforts were not
followed up and Boko Haram came surging back in 2014 and effectively
controlled most of the North-eastern country in Borno State as well as
Adamawa and Yobe.
“20, 000 people killed in a conflict is a very serious matter,” he said.
He
said in the overall, there is greater possibility of stability and
economic success, economic recovery perhaps than they might have been
before the election.
“The British government has long been involved
in training Nigerian soldiers to fight the very difficult
anti-insurgency combat that they are faced with in the North-east,” he
said. “We have done this with some success.
There is a lot more that we
can do. What we need is high level access to the new people that
President Buhari is likely to appoint.”

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