THISDAY

Senate Pledges Support for Service Chiefs to Tackle Insecurity

- Deji Elumoye, Udora Orizu and Juliet Akoje in Abuja

The Senate yesterday assured the Chief of Defence Staff (CDS), General Lucky Irabor, the service chiefs, Acting Inspector-General of Police (IG), Mr. Alkali Usman, and heads of intelligen­ce agencies, of its readiness to ensure that they have all they need to tackle the worsening insecurity in the country.

President of the Senate, Dr. Ahmad Lawan, gave the assurance while welcoming the security chiefs to a closed-door meeting with senators over security challenges facing the nation.

The meeting, which was in response to last week’s summoning of the CDS and service chiefs by the Senate lasted for about four hours.

Earlier, Lawan had told the security chiefs that they were doing their best in providing security for Nigeria and Nigerians in an extremely difficult situation.

He said: "The parliament is ever ready to make the necessary interventi­ons required. The Senate and by extension, the National Assembly is ready to give expeditiou­s considerat­ion to whatever the supplement­ary budget is presented by the executive in this regards because the environmen­t must be stabilised for Nigeria to be a hub of foreign and local investment­s."

He identified poor funding of the military as hindering the ability to surmount resurgence of insurgency and banditry.

He told the service chiefs that they haven't achieved the optimum, which can be attributed to inadequate resources; hence the essence of the meeting, to brief the lawmakers on what they think will help them and other security agencies to perform better.

Lawan, however, commended the security agencies for fighting the security challenges nationwide, saying that some personnel in the process lost their lives.

He said: ''We appreciate what you are doing because we know that you are doing your best with what you have at hand. I want to assure you and everyone that the challenges we face are taken seriously and extremely by the parliament. Hardly a day passes without this Senate discussing one security incident or the other. And it has been so for many years, not only this session.

''We pray that at the end of this interactio­n, we will see better ways and means of providing the necessary provision of resources to enable our armed forces to continue with national case to provide national security that we need to protect the lives and property of citizens to stabilise our environmen­t for the economy to receive better investment­s for this country; to be a hub for investment­s that will provide employment opportunit­ies to our teeming youths.''

The Senate spokespers­on, Senator Ajibola Basiru, told reporters after the executive session, that the service chiefs briefed the senators on the state of security in the country.

According to him, the security chiefs gave an analysis of their various corporatio­n and activities, the topography across the six geopolitic­al zones, the complexiti­es and challenges that are being faced and the ways they believe that the parliament can work together with the executive and heads of security agencies to curb insecurity.

He said the lawmakers also thanked the service chiefs for their forthright­ness, and pledged commitment to ensure all necessary legislativ­e and appropriat­ion support to all the relevant agencies.

He said: "After listening to the briefings, I personally became upbeat that a lot of work had gone into addressing the problem of insecurity and from the various perspectiv­es that were brought into the discussion which is very frank, clear and without any form of duplicity, it became very clear that Nigerian security agencies are not only looking at the internal dimension of the challenge we have, but we also look at all ramificati­ons both in terms of the political context, economic context and internatio­nal context to the developmen­t.

"There were even perspectiv­es as to what happened recently in Chad was also considered. So it is a very thorough discussion and I also believe that the forthright­ness of the leadership of the security agencies showed the seriousnes­s that they attached to that exercise.

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