The Chief of Defence Standards and Evaluations at the Defence Headquarters (DHQ) Major General Adekunle Ariyibi says foreign collaborators are funding Boko Haram and other terrorists.
Ariyibi made the comment on Channels Television’s The Morning Brief saying Boko Haram and the Islamic State in West African Province (ISWAP)’s foreign backing is one of the reasons the war against terrorism has lingered in Nigeria.
“There’s no doubt about it that this sort of operation cannot be sustainable for the past 15 years without some sort of external collaboration and assistance,” he said on Monday’s edition of the breakfast show.
“It’s obvious that the operations of Boko Haram and the Islamic State in West African Province (ISWAP) have metamorphosized since their allegiance with ISIS, and they have had access to international funding which is beyond the shores of Nigeria. It’s obvious in the caliber of weapons you see them display. It’s obvious in the sort of sustainability plans that they have. Right now, they are moving into drones and not only surveillance drones but also drones that can deliver lethal weaponry.”
Ndume Calls For Probe
(FILES) People queue to receive items at a USAID distribution point in Port-au-Prince on January 23, 2010, following the massive 7.0-magnitude quake that shattered the country. (Photo by Jewel SAMAD / AFP)
A few days ago, US Congressman Scott Perry said that the aborted United States Agency for International Development (USAID) funded terrorist bodies such as Boko Haram.
That comment has continued to steer debates in Nigeria and beyond, and General Ariyibi agrees that such terrorist organisations have foreign backers.
“So, there’s no doubt about it that this is the lifeline which is sustaining these operations beyond the local collections that they make on taxing and all of that,” Major General Ariyibi argued.
Following Perry’s comment, Senator Ali Ndume asked the Federal Government to probe the claim.
“You can’t say it’s just an allegation; it’s more than that,” Ndume who is the former Chairman of the Senate Committee on Army said on Channels Television’s Sunday Politics. “That’s why the Nigerian government and the National Assembly, especially, need to look into it to investigate and verify the veracity of such a very weighty allegation.”
In 2024, the Federal Government named some persons and and Bureau de Change (BDCs) as terrorism funders. Authorities in the United Arab Emirates and the US had at some point frozen the assets of some persons over links to terrorism funding.