Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed
The Federal Government
has described as ‘’sadly out of tune with reality’’ the published letter from
US Congressman Tom Marino to Secretary of State John Kerry, asking the US to
withhold security assistance to Nigeria on the strength of some purported
infraction by the Buhari Administration.
The member of the United States Congress
had written a letter to Secretary of State, John Kerry, asking the US
government to withhold security assistance to Nigeria until President Muhammadu
Buhari demonstrates a “commitment to inclusive government and the most basic
tenets of democracy: freedom to assemble and freedom of speech”.
He had also asked the
State Department to refrain from selling warplanes and other military equipment
to Nigeria until Buhari establishes a track record of working towards
inclusion.
In a two-page letter
dated September 1, 2016 and addressed to Kerry, a copy of which was exclusively
obtained by THISDAY, Marino, a Republican from Pennsylvania, who assumed office
on January 3, 2011, said there were a number of warning signs emerging in the
Buhari administration that signal “the man who once led Nigeria as a military
dictator might be sliding towards former autocratic tendencies”.
The Congressman, who
is a member of the Committees on the Judiciary, Homeland Security and Foreign
Affairs, and the Chairman, Sub-committee on Regulatory Reform, Commercial and
Antitrust Law, said Nigerian government must “hold accountable those members of
the Nigerian Police Force and the Nigerian Military complicit in extra-judicial
killings and war crimes”.
In the six-paragraph letter
to Kerry, Marino also expressed concern over Nigeria’s anti-corruption war,
saying “of additional concern is President Buhari’s selective anti-corruption
drive, which has focused almost exclusively on members of the opposition party,
over-looking corruption amongst some of Buhari’s closest advisors. Politicizing
his anti-corruption efforts has only reinforced hostility among southerners”.
However, reacting to
the US Congressman’s letter on Sunday, the Minister of Information and Culture,
Alhaji Lai Mohammed, said Congressman Marino was poorly informed about the
issues he commented on, wondering why he did not take the pains to get first-hand
information from the US Embassy in Nigeria or any other credible source before
engaging in what what the Minister described as a ‘propaganda of his own
imagination’.
The Minister said by
asking the US to refrain from selling warplanes and other military equipment to
Nigeria based on a faulty premise, the Congressman has demonstrated a poor
understanding of global security issues.
According to him, ‘’Insecurity anywhere is insecurity everywhere. Had Congressman Marino understood this, he would not have made the kind of call he made concerning the US security assistance to Nigeria. The Boko Haram insurgency that Nigeria has decisively dealt with under President Muhammadu Buhari is not just a Nigerian problem but a regional and international crisis.’’
According to him, ‘’Insecurity anywhere is insecurity everywhere. Had Congressman Marino understood this, he would not have made the kind of call he made concerning the US security assistance to Nigeria. The Boko Haram insurgency that Nigeria has decisively dealt with under President Muhammadu Buhari is not just a Nigerian problem but a regional and international crisis.’’
Mohammed said
Congressman Marino definitely did not have Nigeria in mind when he wrote that
the US should withhold security assistance to Nigeria until President Buhari
‘demonstrates a commitment to inclusive government and the most basic tenets of
democracy: freedom to assemble and freedom of speech.
”An Administration
that operates purely on the basis of respect for the rule of law and a strict
adherence to constitutional order is not one to deny the citizens of their
constitutionally guaranteed rights. This Administration therefore does not need
the goading of Congressman Marino or anyone for that matter to do what is
right’’, the Minister further stated.