CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
1.1
Background of the Study
Terrorism, arguably, is the biggest
threat to global peace and stability in the contemporary times. Since the dawn
of this millennium, the incidence of the terrorism has been on a steady rise
worldwide. Hitherto, terrorism was more or less a national or regional affair.
This trend, however, has since changed as been observed by Awake: Just few
years ago, terrorism seemed to be restricted to a few isolated places, such as
Northern Ireland, the Basque Country in Northern Spain, and some areas of the
Middle East. Now - especially since September 11, 2001, with the destruction of
the Twin Towers in New York - worldwide phenomenon (June, 2006). Indeed, the
worldwide manifestation of terrorism has been evident in Africa, but also in
Nigeria. With particular reference to Nigeria, the phenomenon has found
expression in the emergence of Boko Haram insurgency. Since its advent, the
sectarian insurgency has wrecked immense havoc in the country, especially by
―using explosives and firearms with gruesome, fatal‖ consequences (Awake June,
2008). The Nigerian government has adopted different counterinsurgency
strategies to curb the terrorist activities of the Boko Haram group.
Counterinsurgency (frequently referred to by the acronym COIN) is just the
opposite of insurgency. To put it differently, it involves a combination of
measures undertaken by the legitimate government of a country to curb or
suppress an insurgency taken up against it. So while insurgents for instance
try to erase or overthrow the existing political authority in order to
establish theirs, the counter-insurgent forces try to reinstate the existing
political structures as well as reduce or annihilate the usurping authority of
the insurgents.
For the past three years, developments
and operations in Nigeria have forcibly rekindled the need to rethink the best
possible ways to fight insurgencies, thus finding a strategy to address these
emerging threats. At the onset, it is important to note that similar
counterinsurgency strategies applied by the U.S. and its allies in Afghanistan
and Iraq have not yielded the desired and predicted results. Put differently,
there are even more cases of insurgencies and terrorism after the US (alongside
the United Kingdom) 2001 declaration of ‗war on terror.‘ According to Lauren
(2014), approximately 10 years after the 9/11 attacks, the United States faces
a more diverse, yet no less formidable, terrorist threat than that of 2001. In
this increasingly complex and dynamic threat environment, not only does
Pakistan-based al Qaeda possess the ability to project itself across the globe
to stage attacks against the West but so do groups based in Yemen, Somalia, and
Iraq.
The above view is instrumental and
applicable to the Nigerian situation where a similar counterinsurgency approach
was adopted by the Nigerian state against Boko Haram and there are even strong
connections between Boko Haram and al Qaeda as well as Al Shabaab of Somalia.
(Adebowale, 2013) Socioeconomic inequalities, injustice, corruption, ethnic
intolerance and religious extremism are some of the vices which have culminated
and metamorphosed into fanatical movements demanding radical change.
Insurgencies, and the terrorism that accompanies them, have become the order of
the day thus posing complex challenges threatening political and social
stability and defying military attempts to suppress or defeat them.
Worse still, these insurgencies when
wrongly countered by the State can grow into full terrorism. It needs be
emphasized that insurgency is not same as terrorism (Brock, 2012)
The high level of terrorism and
violence in Nigeria by the fundamentalist group (Boko Haram) has heightened
fears among the populace and the international community and has eaten deep
into the economy and as a matter of fact, the hostility has gone beyond
religious or political coloration.
Several meetings, summit, conferences
etc have been held in a bid to curb the menace in the country and there have
been responses of supports to that effect. There has been foreign aid in the
form of military support to curb the insurgence. In spite of this there
continue to be evolving problem as the next sub heading dwells on it.
1.2 Statement of the Problem
If the conceptual confusion arising
from the several debates with regards to counterinsurgency is anything to go
by, then the government seems to have forgotten the past while attempting to
reinvent and restructure the future. It also seem to have forgotten that there
are more insurgencies and cases of terrorism after the US declared the ‗war on
terror‘ which is often seen as the milestone of terrorism.
The lack of an integrated and
multi-dimensional approach to these new threats too often leads to confusion
and disjointed responses and acrimonious debates not only over what needs to be
done, but who- military or civilian-should do it. In the absence of an
overarching strategic and operational understanding of the problem, military
and civilian planners default to their own experiences and ideas, and, in many
cases, grasp prevailing assumptions and accord them the status of historical
truths. The Nigerian military for instance has been accused of killing and
torturing innocent civilians in a bid to defeating Boko Haram and only on October
2012, thirty (unarmed) civilians were shot dead by the Nigerian military in
pursuit of Boko Haram in the north-eastern city of Maiduguri. Three weeks
later, the Nigerian military carried out another operation in Maiduguri that
killed seventy people whose connection with Boko Haram were not established. In
this order, the notion of a "war" on terrorists or countering
insurgency has somewhat been over-exploited by the Nigerian state, thus
reducing civil liberties as well as infringing upon fundamental human rights
issues. It is thus unlikely that Boko Haram or any other international
terrorism can be brought to an end by military means.
To many, the new threats we face pose
unprecedented challenges. Transnational conflict and weapons proliferation,
religious and ethnic extremism, and mushrooming urbanization have changed the
landscape on which insurgencies are being fought.
1.3 Objectives of the Study
The main thrust of this research work
is to examine the problem of foreign aid in Nigeria: assessing their impact on
boko haram insurgency. The specific objectives of the study are to:
i. examine the long term impact of
foreign aid to Nigeria with regards to Boko Haram insurgency
ii. Examine the relationship between
poverty, education, bad governance and the emergence of Boko Haram?
iii. Examine whether the military
option is a possible solution in tackling the menace?
1.4 Research Questions
The following research questions are
formulated to guide this research work: Accordingly, this study seeks to answer
the following questions:
i. What long term impact can foreign
aid to Nigeria with regards to Boko Haram creates?
ii. Is there relationship between
poverty, education, bad governance and the emergence of Boko Haram?
iii. Is the military option the
possible solution in tackling the menace?
TOPIC: THE PROBLEM OF FOREIGN AID IN NIGERIA, ASSESSING THE IMPACT OF BOKO HARAM INSURGENCY
Chapters: 1 - 5
Delivery: Email
Delivery: Email
Number of Pages: 56
Price: 3000 NGN
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