ABSTRACT
The internal security challenge of
Nigeria has deteriorated over the last few years, as old security threats have
remained and taken new dimensions, while new threats have dimensions. Some of
the old threats that assumed new dimensions include small arms and light weapons
(SALW) proliferation, armed robbery, ethno-religious conflicts, militancy,
assassinations, human trafficking and kidnapping. Therefore the study examines
the challenges of the proliferation of SALW in Nigeria in view of its
implications on citizens and focuses on the illicit proliferation of SALWs and
its impact on human security. The issue of Small Arms and Light Weapons
proliferation has been given widespread international focus as it has been
observed that developing countries, particularly African countries are the most
vulnerable. Although the concept of human security has gained wave recently,
the idea is not new, the high rate of illegal procurement and use of SALWs in
Nigeria is observed in the seizure of SALWs by security and border control
officers, the frequency of deployment of these arms in conflict and crimes
scenes and the level of human casualty recorded. There is the need to ensure
stability and security of lives and properties in the country by the government
and as such it is important for the government to forestall policies that would
ensure security in the country. Citizens have to first feel secure and the
youths employed for the policies formulated by the government to balance out
appropriately.
CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
1.1
BACKGROUND OF THE STUDY
The (mis)use of small arms and light
weapons (SALW) in the West African region, particularly Nigeria, has seriously
assumed a macabre dimension. The major reason for this being the fact of the
availability of such arms; and the deadly use to which such is put. Without
mixing issues, one observes that the national security operatives enjoy the
latitude to carry and/or use arms when duty demands. More than this however is
the fact of such arms finding their ways into the possession of other citizens,
who normally are not supposed to have access to arms. Some persons within the
polity, it should be noted, acquire the possession of such by get license from
the government.
The proliferation angle of the
discourse arises from the fact that SALW enters the country from varying routes
and through several sources; thus reducing the cost of the arms and even making
it easier for persons to engage in criminalized activities. Beyond this however
is the fact that some security operatives, who are permitted to carry arms for
the purpose of protecting lives and properties, have in time past use the arms
in their possession for extra-juridical purposes. And equally of note is the
situation in which politicians, simply for the satisfaction of their egocentric
purposes of winning and/or rigging elections, purchased arms for the use of the
persons -mostly miscreants- that they employ as their security aides; and who
after elections, not only fail to return it to the politicians, but employ the
arms to satisfy their economic and self-actualization values, as well as
interpersonal values (Gurr, 2011, 25-26)
Flowing from the foregoing therefore
is the fact of the misuse of SALW has become a daunting phenomenon that affects
people of all societies. Consequently, the death toll from its usage is mostly high,
ranging at over 1000 lives lost per day to violence in which SALW is employed
and even leaving so many victims at the site of violence.
The proliferation of SALW in Nigeria
has made it increasingly difficult to trace its effect on human security. SALW
have become a common thing which individuals including the young and the old
uses. The effect of the SALW cannot be over-emphasized as its usage is very
rampant ranging from small suicidal acts to its usage for assassination and
armed robbery. Typically, any act of violence and the extreme case of conflict-
war, is perpetrated with the aid of weapons deployed by all sides in order to
subdue or annihilate the opponents. To this extent, each epoch in the
development of humanity boasts of its unique weapons of war that are germane to
the pursuit of its agenda. Recorded tales of wars in ancient Rome and Greece
are replete with various kinds of weapons used for prosecution.
Small arms are personal weapons that
can be operated by only one person. They usually include revolvers,
self-loading pistols, rifles, submachine guns and light machine guns. Light
weapons on the other hand refers to heavy machine guns, hand-held launchers,
under-barrel and mounted grenade launchers, portable launchers of antitank and
anti-aircraft missile system and mortars of less than 100mm caliber.
Approximately there are about 640 million small arms in the world and one for
every ten people in the world; guns are manufactured year in year out. Small
arms are relatively low-tech-tools of war, and due to state-driven demand,
there arewell over 600 suppliers around the world. With more than 550 million
in circulation whether newly produced, liquidated bydownsizing militaries or
circulated from conflict to conflictsmall arms are inexpensive and easily
diffused. 11
Arms smuggling to Nigeria increased in
the year 2002 following the presidential elections and in the year 2004 before
the local elections, Lagos gangs who were responsible for smuggling
contra-brand from the Accra based firm transports bribed custom officers along
the route to turn blind eye so that they could have a hitch free
transportation. However the growing crises in Nigeria in the Niger Delta region
remains a scene of recurring violence between members of different ethnic
groups competing for both political and ethnic powers, and between security and
militia groups in the region. The illegal availability of light weapons in the
Niger Delta is a particular challenge as this escalated the crisis
further.Hundreds of criminal andpolitically motivated gangs have sprung up many
with eye-catching names such as Blood Suckers, Gentlemen‟s Club and the Royal
House of Peace. Mostof these are linked to well-known politicians.
1.2 STATEMENT OF PROBLEM
Against the backdrop of purchases made
by security outfits –military and paramilitary- the level of arms in Nigeria
has increased. More than this however is the illicit dimension of the
purchases, which oftentimes are traceable to individuals, who deal illegally in
the buying and selling of arms in Nigeria (Ezeobi, 2014). Aside from the fact
of the legal purchase done by the governments, some military and paramilitary
personnel have been culpable of illicitly releasing –lease or outright sale-
their arms to persons known for criminalized activities. Contributing to this
challenge are the politicians, who in their bids to secure governmental
positions, engage the services of some unemployed youths, as their aide and/or
security guards; only for these politicians to not be able to retrieve such
arms from these youths after disengagement, who afterwards employ such weapons
as means of livelihood and thus pose as substantial threats to lives and
properties within their neighborhoods. In spite of the foregoing, it is
realized that the challenges posed by the growing spread of arms in the country
is presently, perhaps because of the lackadaisical approach of the government
in time past, seemingly losing its place on the radar of consideration. In view
of the growing insecurity within the polity however, any attempt at resolving
the widespread insecurity would start with the addressing of both the sources
and instruments of insecurity. It is against this backdrop that this study
focuses on this important issue area – the challenges of the proliferation of
small arms and light weapons in Nigeria.
TOPIC: THE CHALLENGES OF THE PROLIFERATION OF SMALL ARMS AND LIGHT WEAPONS IN NIGERIA
Chapters: 1 - 5
Delivery: Email
Delivery: Email
Number of Pages: 65
Price: 3000 NGN
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