Tuesday, 17 May 2016

Obama Mulls Visit as US Okays Sale of 12 Attack Aircraft to Nigeria-Senator Iroegbu

United States President Barack Obama

As United States President Barack Obama tinkers with a trip to Nigeria in July, the US government has said it is poised to sell up to 12 light attack aircraft to Nigeria.
The decision on arms sales is coming less than two years after the US blocked the sale of American-made Cobra attack helicopters to Nigeria from Israel because of human rights violations in the country’s prosecution of the war against Boko Haram.
A report in the New York Times on Sunday said the sale was part of efforts to support Nigeria’s fight against the Boko Haram terror group.
But the pending sale of the Super Tucano attack warplanes — which would require congressional approval — is already coming under criticism from human rights organisations that say President Muhammadu Buhari has not done enough to stop the abuses and corruption that flourished in the military under his predecessor, Goodluck Jonathan.
According to the New York Times, “Officials at the White House, the State Department and the Pentagon have been bracing for a fight with congressional Democrats, in particular Senator Patrick J. Leahy of Vermont, over the sale of the planes.”
Senator Leahy is the sponsor of the Leahy Law passed by the US Congress barring the US government from selling American arms to countries’ militaries with a history of human rights abuses.
Last year Buhari while in the US, criticised the law, which was used to block the sale of the Cobra helicopters by the Israelis to the Nigerian government in 2014.
The proposed sale reflects the warming of the relationship between the Nigerian and American militaries, which had frayed under Jonathan.
The Pentagon often bypassed Nigeria in the fight against Boko Haram, choosing to work directly with neighbouring Cameroun, Chad and Niger.
In addition to citing corruption and sweeping human rights abuses by Nigerian soldiers, American officials were hesitant to share intelligence with the Nigerian military, saying Boko Haram had infiltrated it. That accusation prompted indignation from Nigeria.
But that was before Buhari, a former Nigerian Army major general, defeated Jonathan in an election last year.
Since coming into power, Buhari has devoted himself to rooting out graft in Africa’s largest economy.
He has fired a number of Nigerian military officers accused of corruption, and American military officials say they are now working closely with some of their counterparts in Nigeria, said the NY Times.
The Obama administration is also considering sending dozens of Special Operations advisers to the front lines of Nigeria’s fight against Boko Haram, an insurgency that has killed thousands of civilians in the country’s North-east as well as in Cameroun, Chad and Niger.
Buhari has also pledged to investigate allegations of human rights abuses and has said he would not tolerate them.
A move to sell the Super Tucano attack aircraft to Nigeria, first reported byReuters, would continue the détente between the two militaries, administration officials said.
The Super Tucano, a turboprop aircraft, is designed for light attack, counterinsurgency, close air support and reconnaissance missions. It could prove useful as the Nigerian military tries to clear Boko Haram out of the Sambisa Forest, which is believed to hold large numbers of the terrorists, as well as kidnapped girls and women.
The administration has not made a formal decision to send a notification to Congress, but a senior administration official said he expected one soon. President Obama is considering a trip to Nigeria in July.
But already aides to Senator Leahy, the sponsor of a human rights law that prohibits the State Department and Pentagon from providing military assistance to foreign militaries with poor human rights records, have expressed concern.
“We don’t have confidence in Nigeria’s ability to use them in a manner that complies with the laws of war and doesn’t end up disproportionately harming civilians, nor in the capability of the US government to monitor their use,” said Tim Rieser, a top Leahy aide.
“The United States is committed to working with Nigeria and its neighbours against Boko Haram,” said David McKeeby, a spokesman for the State Department’s Bureau of Political-Military Affairs. “The Nigerian security forces and regional forces from Cameroun, Chad and Niger have made important progress in pushing Boko Haram out of many towns and villages of northeast Nigeria and the broader Lake Chad basin region.”
General Mark A. Milley, the US Army chief of staff, is attending a meeting of top African military officials, including from Nigeria, in Arusha, Tanzania, this week. Aboard his flight on Saturday, General Milley declined to comment on whether Nigeria’s human rights record had improved enough to warrant the sale, but said one of the reasons he was attending the meeting was to learn more about the African militaries with which the Pentagon is working.
Consideration of selling the attack aircraft to Nigeria is a sharp turnabout from two years ago, when the United States blocked the sale of American-made Cobra attack helicopters to Nigeria from Israel, amid concerns about Nigeria’s protection of civilians when conducting military operations.
That infuriated the Nigerian government led by Jonathan at the time, and Nigeria’s ambassador to the United States responded sharply, accusing Washington of hampering the effort against Boko Haram.
“Let’s say we give certain kinds of equipment to the Nigerian military that is then used in a way that affects the human situation,” James F. Entwistle, the American ambassador to Nigeria, told reporters in October in explaining the decision to block the helicopter sale. “If I approve that, I’m responsible for that. We take that responsibility very seriously.”
Under Jonathan, the Nigerian military was accused by human rights groups of detaining and killing thousands of innocent civilians in sweeps of Boko Haram, a practice that Amnesty International said was continuing.
This year, the military rounded up several hundred men and boys in arrests that Amnesty, in a report it released last week, called “arbitrary, the hazardous profiling based on sex and age of the individual rather than on evidence of crime”.
The report said 149 people had died this year in detention in the military’s Giwa barracks in Maiduguri, a city that has been a staging ground for the fight against Boko Haram. Among the victims were 11 children under age 6, including four infants, Amnesty said. The prisoners most likely died of disease, starvation, dehydration or gunshot wounds, the report said.
In a news release, the Nigerian military called the report “completely baseless, unfounded and source-less with the intent of denting the image of the Nigerian Armed Forces”.
Sarah Margon, the Washington director at Human Rights Watch, disagreed.
“Indications that the US is going to sell attack aircrafts to Nigeria is raising concern, given the absence of meaningful reform within Nigeria’s security sector,” Ms. Margon said.
“The US must make clear that if the sale is to occur, critical steps, not just rhetorical commitments, on core human rights concerns must be an integral component for approving the sale.”

Culled from Thisday

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