President Muhammadu Buhari has said that it is
not easy for his administration to fight terrorism, oil theft and corruption at
the same time.
But he said in spite of the difficulties being
faced in fighting these scourge, his administration would not relent in
eliminating the vices from the nation’s body polity.
Buhari said this when the President of Togo,
Faure Gnassingbe, visited him in Abuja on Thursday.
The President, who expressed appreciation for
Gnassingbe’s visit and for his concern about regional security, said his regime
was being challenged with the Boko Haram insurgency, oil theft, illegal
fishing, oil pollution and illegal dumping of toxins in the country.
Buhari said it was not easy for his
administration, which he said, was fighting on many fronts.
According to him, the government is contending
with insurgency in the North-East and oil theft in the South-South while trying
to provide infrastructure in the country at the same time.
He said, “His (Gnassingbe’s) concern about regional
security made it imperative for him to organise a summit on maritime security
and development in November to examine a lot of issues.
“As for Nigeria, we are grateful for the sympathy
and the goodwill expressed, touching on the performance of our armed forces and
law enforcement agencies, since this administration came into being. It is not
easy trying to fight on so many fronts, the North-East, the South-South and
then try to provide infrastructure in our country.”
The President observed that the cooperation of
the regional countries comprising Cameroon, Chad, Niger and Benin Republic had
resulted in the isolation of Boko Haram and peace in the region.
He also advised African countries to pay
attention to agriculture and manufacturing to provide jobs for the jobless.
Earlier, the Togolese President had invited
Buhari to a security and piracy summit scheduled for Lome in November.
Gnassingbe said his country was organising the
summit because $7bn had been lost to piracy in the Gulf of Guinea.
The Togolese leader told Buhari that the security
summit would deal with issues of piracy, oil theft, environmental pollution,
immigration as well as human and drug trafficking.
He therefore called on African nations to
collaborate to combat the scourge and security challenges in the sub-region.
Gnassingbe commended Buhari and the Nigerian
security forces for the work they were doing to combat terrorism in West
Africa.
When asked by journalists if African countries
were not hosting too many summits, Gnassingbe disagreed, saying the summits
were not enough.
He said, “Piracy alone costs the Gulf of Guinea
$7bn a year, that is what we lose for not combating it and we also know that
without cooperation you cannot combat piracy, but the first stage is to come
together and talk.
“If all the African countries are on the same
page, it would be easy to tackle the security challenges, so we have to keep
holding summits, because individual countries cannot combat piracy effectively
without cooperation.
“If you try to fight them in Togo, they go to the
next country, then you don’t have the mechanism to go into the other countries.
So, summits are necessary, they are not even sufficient.”
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