Agency report
The National Security Adviser, Nuhu Ribadu, on Thursday, knocked policemen and soldiers stealing arms and ammunition from their formation to criminal elements.
According to him, security agents involved in the act are “worse human beings”, adding that efforts must be put in place to check those people.
Ribadu disclosed this in Abuja during the destruction of arms by the National Centre for the Control of Small Arms And Light Weapons.
He said, “We have to find a way of putting a stop to this. We must if we want to recover our country and live in peace and stability. The worst human being is a policeman or a soldier who will take arms from his own formations and sell them or hide them for the bad people to come and kill his own colleagues.”
“We must fight these people but also there are merchants of death and evil from outside the world.
“The proliferation of illicit small arms and light weapons remains a major threat to our national security, exacerbating issues such as insurgency, banditry, and other violent crimes”, he said.
The NSA also rained curses on the security personnel who facilitate the movement of weapons to terrorists, bandits, and other non-state actors.
Ribadu stated that a sizable number of illicit arms being used to commit crimes in the country originally belonged to the government.
He explained that the weapons ended up in the hands of non-state actors due to corrupt elements within the security agencies.
Ribadu said the destruction of arms was part of efforts to address the challenge of arms proliferation in Nigeria.
The NSA said by destroying unserviceable, obsolete and recovered arms, the government was demonstrating its commitment to a secure future for all Nigerians.
He said, “All illicit arms, not only unserviceable, all illicit. Any weapon that is taken is out there that is through an illegal process.
“We have laws that govern ownership of small arms. If you do not follow it, it is an illegal arm and it is supposed to be destroyed completely.”
The Director General of NCCSALW, retired DIG Johnson Kokumo (retd), said the arms destruction exercise was the third in a series since the centre was established and the first since his assumption of command.
Kokumo said the challenge posed by the proliferation of SALW was one of the major threats to peace and security in Nigeria and the West African sub-region.
He said the exercise would witness the destruction of over 2,400 illicit weapons, comprising a mix of unserviceable, decommissioned and recovered arms.
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