CHAPTER ONE
1.0 INTRODUCTION
Nigeria is highly heterogeneous and
multi-religions with over two hundred ethno-linguistic groups and the Niger
Delta region is not an exception. The issue of arms proliferation has been
given wide spread international focus due to the fact that it has become source
of violence, war, conflicts and crimes.
It has equally been observed that
developing countries in the third world, particularly in Africa are the most
vulnerable. The question is why are such conflicts persisting or why do they
reoccur even after the end of such conflicts? Does it mean that the
disarmament, demobilization and reintegration process has not been able to
sufficiently address the problems that may have necessitated the occurrence of
such conflicts? What is the implication to National security? Answers to
questions of these nature would go a long way in making us to understand the
persistent instability and security implication of the Niger Delta, made
possible by SALW proliferation that has reached a crisis level, hence the topic
of this paper Arms Proliferation in the Niger Delta and its implication to
National Security.
The Niger Delta region which comprises
six (6) states namely; Akwa Ibom, Rivers, Bayelsa, Cross Rivers, Delta and Edo
is an oil rich region in Nigeria. It is characterized by the existence of wide
spread poverty, squalor and environmental degradation due to long period of
neglect and marginalization by successive regimes both civil and military.
Several efforts have been made through representations of traditional rulers,
opinion leaders and public spirited individuals on behalf of the people. These
moves have been met by successive regimes with disdain and draconian brute
force. The Small Arms and Light Weapons crisis we are witnessing currently in
the Niger Delta is as a result of such brute force, as the people had no
alternative than resort to violence. Though some disarmament, demobilization
and disintegration programmed were carried out by former President Olusegun
Obasanjo, they could not provide the needed lasting solution to the crisis due
to lack of genuine interest on the part of government. The concern of 2
this paper therefore, are causes of
Arms proliferation in the Niger Delta, it’s implication to National Security,
its effects to the nation and possible solutions.
1.1 BACKGROUND OF THE STUDY
Arms proliferation is the unauthorized
and illegal sales and use of arms. In most cases weapons proliferation refers
to weapon of mass destruction. Although small arms and light weapon are
conventional weapons in that they are not weapon of mass destruction.
The United Nations panel of government
experts on small arms defined small arms and light weapon as follows:
Small Arms
– Revolvers and self-loading pistol –
Sub machine gun – Assault rifles – Light Machine guns
Light Weapons – Heavy Machine gun –
Portable articraft guns – Portable antitank guns, recoiless rifles – Handheld
under-barrel and mounted grenade launcher
Ammunition and explosives - Cartridges
(rounds) for small arms – Shells and missiles for light weapons – Hand grenades
– Land mines and Explosives
The Niger Delta has experienced great
violence arising from arms proliferation. The current problem conflict in the
region arose in the early 1990s over tensions between foreign oil corporation
and a number of the Niger Delta‟s minority ethnic groups who feel that they are
3
being exploited, particularly the
Ogonis and the Ijaws. (Anne Look 2003). Ethnic and political unrest has
continued throughout the 1990s and persists as of 2007 despite the intervention
of President Yar‟Adua.
Ethnic and political unrest has
continued throughout the 1990s and persists as of 2014 despite the conversion
to democracy and the election of the Obasanjo government in 1999. Competition
for oil wealth has fueled violence between many ethnic groups, causing the
militarization of nearly the entire region by ethnic militia groups as well as
Nigerian military and police forces (notably the Nigerian Mobile Police).
Victims of crimes are fearful of seeking justice for crimes committed against
them because of growing "impunity from prosecution for individuals
responsible for serious human rights abuses, [which] has created a devastating
cycle of increasing conflict and violence".
Nigeria, after nearly four decades of
oil production, had by the early 1980s become almost completely dependent on
petroleum extraction economically, generating 25% of its GDPC (this has since
raised to 60% as of 2008). Despite the vast wealth created by petroleum, the
benefits have been slow to trickle down to the majority of the population, who
since the 1960s have increasingly been forced to abandon their traditional
agricultural practices. Annual production of both cash and food crops dropped
significantly in the latter decades of 20th century, cocoa production dropped
by 43% (Nigeria was the world's largest cocoa exporter in 1960), rubber dropped
by 29%, cotton by 65%, and groundnuts by 64%. We no longer had the famous
groundnut pyramids in the northern Nigeria.
In spite of the large number of
skilled, well-paid Nigerians who have been employed by the oil corporations,
the majority of Nigerians and most especially the people of the Niger Delta
states and the far north have become poorer since the 1960s. After the era of
the oil boom, the naira has been devalued several times since the 1980s up to
present day; leading to imposition of austerity measures where the Niger Delta
region has been worse hit.
The region has a steadily growing
population estimated to be over 30 million people as of 2005 census figures,
thus accounting for more than 23% of Nigeria's total population. The population
density is also among the highest in the world with 265 people per square
kilometer, according to the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC). This
population is expanding at a rapid 3% per year and the oil capital, Port
Harcourt, along with other large towns are growing quickly. Poverty and
urbanization in Nigeria are on the rise, and official corruption is considered
a fact of life. The resultant scenario is one in which there is urbanization
but no accompanying economic growth to provide jobs. This has led to a section
of the growing populace assisting in destroying the ecosystem that they require
to sustain themselves.
1.1.1 GENERAL OVERVIEW OF THE NIGER
DELTA REGION
This section provides a general
overview of the people and land of the Niger Delta Region of Nigeria. It covers
the characteristics of the people, the political and administrative
institutions and structures and the region's social, economic and natural
environment. Seen from either the national or international perspective, the
Niger Delta Region (NDR) of Nigeria is a unique region. As the world's third
largest wetland, it is characterized by significant biological diversity. It
also contains the bulk of proven oil reserves that have generated a lot of
controversies.
TOPIC: ARMS PROLIFERATION IN THE NIGER DELTA AND ITS IMPLICATION TO NIGERIAN’s NATIONAL SECURITY A CASE STUDY OF RIVERS STATE
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