The Guardian (Nigeria)

You don’t need foreign help to solve insecurity, S’korea advises Nigeria

- From Collins Olayinka, Abuja

NIGERIA has been advised to tackle its security challenges internally, as they were ‘ mere family affairs.’ The Ambassador of South Korea to Nigeria, Kim YoungChae, who gave the advice in Abuja, held that the insecurity facing the most populous nation was akin to a family disagreeme­nt that does not require the interventi­on of the internatio­nal community, but regional cooperatio­n.

His words: “Security is a very sensitive issue. I know everyone is concerned about the insecurity in Nigeria but it is Nigeria’s internal issue. It should be discussed among Nigerians. If another country engages Nigeria, that is another issue entirely and that would be considered an internatio­nal issue. To solve the problem, Nigeria needs internatio­nal cooperatio­n mainly with its neighbouri­ng countries to enhance its internal security. Nigeria must cooperate with Chad, Niger and other neighbouri­ng countries to ensure cooperatio­n.

The envoy, who stressed the need for the military to be profession­alised, described the Army as the centre that holds the society together. He went on: “In South Korea, we have a very strong defence which is rated number six in the world. The military is very dedicated and there is little or no corruption in the system. The military is the centre that holds the country together. If the military is corrupt, there is a high possibilit­y that the whole country will be corrupt. Discipline and dedication are key in building a stable and efficient military.” The diplomat said both nations were at the verge of sealing a defence and intelligen­ce- sharing pact. He explained that the Asian country had establishe­d the office of a defence attaché in its embassy to strengthen cooperatio­n between the two nations.

Young- Chae further revealed: “To have defence informatio­n sharing, both Nigeria and South Korea need to sign some documents. Defence authoritie­s of both countries need to sign the documents which our Defence Attaché is presently working on. We are going to invite Nigeria’s Minister of Defence to South Korea to concretise this cooperatio­n.

“South Korea embassy in Nigeria now has a defence attaché, who has been building relationsh­ips in the country. This is the first time South Korea is establishi­ng a defence attaché in a long time in Nigeria. We are making contacts with the Nigerian Army, Navy and Air Force to extend our defence cooperatio­n not only in terms of training and education, but intelligen­ce and informatio­n sharing, among other defence pacts.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria