Home Project-material THE PROBLEM OF FOREIGN AID IN NIGERIA, ASSESSING THE IMPACT OF BOKO HARAM INSURGENCY

THE PROBLEM OF FOREIGN AID IN NIGERIA, ASSESSING THE IMPACT OF BOKO HARAM INSURGENCY

Dept: HISTROY AND INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS File: Word(doc) Chapters: 1-5 Views: 2

Abstract

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INTRODUCTION

1.1 Background of the Study

Terrorism, arguably, is the biggest threat to global peace and stability in the contemporary

times. Since the dawn of this millennium, the incidence of the terrorism has been on a steady rise

worldwide.

Hitherto, terrorism was more or less a national or regional affair. This trend, however, has since

changed as been observed by Awake:

Just few years ago, terrorism seemed to be restricted to a few isolated places, such as Northern

Ireland, the Basque Country in Northern Spain, and some areas of the Middle East. Now –

especially since September 11, 2001, with the destruction of the Twin Towers in New York –

worldwide phenomenon (June, 2006).

Indeed, the worldwide manifestation of terrorism has been evident in Africa, but also in Nigeria.

With particular reference to Nigeria, the phenomenon has found expression in the emergence of

Boko Haram insurgency. Since its advent, the sectarian insurgency has wrecked immense havoc

in the country, especially by ?using explosives and firearms with gruesome, fatal? consequences

(Awake June, 2008).

The Nigerian government has adopted different counterinsurgency strategies to curb the

terrorist activities of the Boko Haram group. Counterinsurgency (frequently referred to by the

acronym COIN) is just the opposite of insurgency. To put it differently, it involves a

combination of measures undertaken by the legitimate government of a country to curb or

suppress an insurgency taken up against it. So while insurgents for instance try to erase or

overthrow the existing political authority in order to establish theirs, the counter-insurgent forces

try to reinstate the existing political structures as well as reduce or annihilate the usurping

authority of the insurgents.

For the past three years, developments and operations in Nigeria have forcibly rekindled the need

to rethink the best possible ways to fight insurgencies, thus finding a strategy to address these

emerging threats. At the onset, it is important to note that similar counterinsurgency strategies

applied by the U.S. and its allies in Afghanistan and Iraq have not yielded the desired and

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predicted results. Put differently, there are even more cases of insurgencies and terrorism after

the US (alongside the United Kingdom) 2001 declaration of ?war on terror.‘ According to Lauren

(2014), approximately 10 years after the 9/11 attacks, the United States faces a more diverse, yet

no less formidable, terrorist threat than that of 2001. In this increasingly complex and dynamic

threat environment, not only does Pakistan-based al Qaeda possess the ability to project itself

across the globe to stage attacks against the West but so do groups based in Yemen, Somalia, and

Iraq.

The above view is instrumental and applicable to the Nigerian situation where a similar

counterinsurgency approach was adopted by the Nigerian state against Boko Haram and there are

even strong connections between Boko Haram and al Qaeda as well as Al Shabaab of Somalia.

(Adebowale, 2013)

Socioeconomic inequalities, injustice, corruption, ethnic intolerance and religious extremism

are some of the vices which have culminated and metamorphosed into fanatical movements

demanding radical change. Insurgencies, and the terrorism that accompanies them, have become

the order of the day thus posing complex challenges threatening political and social stability and

defying military attempts to suppress or defeat them.

Worse still, these insurgencies when wrongly countered by the State can grow into full terrorism.

It needs be emphasized that insurgency is not same as terrorism (Brock, 2012)

The high level of terrorism and violence in Nigeria by the fundamentalist group (Boko Haram)

has heightened fears among the populace and the international community and has eaten deep

into the economy and as a matter of fact, the hostility has gone beyond religious or political

coloration.

Several meetings, summit, conferences etc have been held in a bid to curb the menace in the

country and there have been responses of supports to that effect. There has been foreign aid in

the form of military support to curb the insurgence. In spite of this there continue to be evolving

problem as the next sub heading dwells on it.

1.2 Statement of the Problem

If the conceptual confusion arising from the several debates with regards to counterinsurgency is

anything to go by, then the government seems to have forgotten the past while attempting to

reinvent and restructure the future. It also seem to have forgotten that there are more insurgencies

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and cases of terrorism after the US declared the ?war on terror‘ which is often seen as the

milestone of terrorism.

The lack of an integrated and multi-dimensional approach to these new threats too often leads to

confusion and disjointed responses and acrimonious debates not only over what needs to be

done, but who- military or civilian-should do it. In the absence of an overarching strategic and

operational understanding of the problem, military and civilian planners default to their own

experiences and ideas, and, in many cases, grasp prevailing assumptions and accord them the

status of historical truths. The Nigerian military for instance has been accused of killing and

torturing innocent civilians in a bid to defeating Boko Haram and only on October 2012, thirty

(unarmed) civilians were shot dead by the Nigerian military in pursuit of Boko Haram in the

north-eastern city of Maiduguri. Three weeks later, the Nigerian military carried out another

operation in Maiduguri that killed seventy people whose connection with Boko Haram were not

established. In this order, the notion of a “war” on terrorists or countering insurgency has

somewhat been over-exploited by the Nigerian state, thus reducing civil liberties as well as

infringing upon fundamental human rights issues. It is thus unlikely that Boko Haram or any

other international terrorism can be brought to an end by military means.

To many, the new threats we face pose unprecedented challenges. Transnational conflict and

weapons proliferation, religious and ethnic extremism, and mushrooming urbanization have

changed the landscape on which insurgencies are being fought.

1.3 Objectives of the Study

The main thrust of this research work is to examine the problem of foreign aid in Nigeria:

assessing their impact on boko haram insurgency. The specific objectives of the study are to:

i. examine the long term impact of foreign aid to Nigeria with regards to Boko Haram

insurgency

ii. Examine the relationship between poverty, education, bad governance and the

emergence of Boko Haram?

iii. Examine whether the military option is a possible solution in tackling the menace?

.

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1.4 Research Questions

The following research questions are formulated to guide this research work: Accordingly, this

study seeks to answer the following questions:

i. What long term impact can foreign aid to Nigeria with regards to

Boko Haram creates?

ii. Is there relationship between poverty, education, bad governance and the emergence of

Boko Haram?

iii. Is the military option the possible solution in tackling the menace?

1.5 Significance of the Study

This study is timely because it provides measures to tackle or avoid insurgency, which is still an

on-going challenge for Nigeria as well as other countries of the world. Similarly, this research

project presents facts about the possible counterproductive outcome of countering an insurgency.

Drawing from this, it provides an opportunity for governments of all countries to invest heavily

in human development and eradicate societal vices as poverty, illiteracy or unemployment as

measures to help avert insurgency and terrorism. Admittedly, the collective responsibility

espoused in this thesis is not just for the security of Nigerians but also for the wellbeing of all

humans regardless of their respective country. So if various governments become very much

aware that the prevalence of insurgencies and terrorisms in various parts of the world is heavily

connected to governmental lapses or bad governance and work tirelessly to adopt some of the

measures suggested in this thesis, the scourge of insurgencies and terrorism would be immensely

reduced. In this order, this study provides insight with the realization that countering an

insurgency, which is often done with brutality, only helps to institutionalize insurgencies and

take it to the level of wider terrorism.

1.6 Scope of the Study

Looking at the actual origin of Boko Haram which is deep rooted in the early 1990s and what

foreign aid to Nigeria have so far achieved in fighting Boko Haram insurgency, the scope of this

study would then be to investigate and identify the actual factor which triggered the group into

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its present form or phase and to examine the problem and perhaps prospect of foreign aid in

Nigeria regarding the insurgency.

1.7 Limitation of the study

The main limitation for this research rests on my inability to have real and first-hand interviews

with current or even former members of Boko Haram. This is because Boko Haram is still an ongoing threat and as such even going to the Northern part of Nigeria remains a risk. Another basic

limitation rests on the collection and availability of data especially with regards to Boko Haram

attacks. While some of the sites are locked while others have some earlier information removed.

1.8 Organization of the Chapters

This project is divided into five chapters. The first chapter is the introduction, and contains the

background to the study, statement of problem, objective of study, scope and limitation, and

organization of study. The second chapter is the literature review, and is made up of the

conceptual clarifications and theoretical frameworks. Chapter three is the research methodology,

and includes the research design, research population, sample procedure and sampling technique,

research instruments, validity and reliability of instruments, methods of data collection, and data

analysis technique. Chapter four is the data analysis; the first part is the primary analysis which

has to do with the responses obtained through distribution of questionnaire while the last part

presents the analysis based on research hypotheses. Chapter five encompasses the summary of

findings, conclusion and recommendations

1.9 Definition of terms

This entails stating the meaning of various concepts used earlier, so as to give a better

understanding of the meaning and also give a vivid picture of these concepts in the minds of the

readers.

Terrorism: this is an illegitimate means of attempting to effect political change by the

indiscriminate use of violence. Also it is the use of violence to achieve political objectives.

Nationalist: A person who advocates that the interests of the nation or country are primary and

deserving preference over other individual‘s interests. A nationalist is concerned mainly with

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promoting the concept of the nation in its various forms that may include any or all among the

economic, cultural aspect of the country.

Menace: menace means a possible danger, a threat, or an act of threatening. It also means

something that threatens to cause evil, harm, injury etc. this also means the show of an intention

to inflict evil, indication of a probable evil or catastrophe to come.

Insurgence: Armed uprising or rebellion against a government. The term has been used

variously to describe revolutionary movements, civil wars, anti-colonial struggles and terrorist

agitations; it is also seen as the state or attitude of being indulgent or tolerant.

Economy: This refers to the wealth and resources of a country or religion, especially in terms of

the production and consumption of goods and service. It is also the state of a country or region in

terms of the production and consumption of goods and services and the supply of money.


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