NIGERIAN PRESIDENT, GOODLUCK JONATHAN FINGERS EXTERNAL FORCES ARMING BOKO HARAM

PRESIDENT Goodluck Jonathan is convinced that external forces are arming the Islamist sect, Boko Haram, in its insurgency in the north.
He said yesterday in Abuja that ordinarily the sect members whether as a group or as individuals lack the wherewithal to buy the sophisticated weapons they are using in terrorising people especially in Adamawa,Borno and Yobe States.
“When you look at the characters that carry the weapons in the turbulent areas including the northern part of my country, you see a young person carrying an AK-47 rifle that is approximately more than $1,000 but the total sum of everything  the person wears on his body, from the canvass to whatever he puts on, is not up to $50,” President Jonathan said  at the Seventh Joint Annual Meeting of the Economic Community of Africa (ECA), Conference of African Ministers of Finance, Planning and Economic Development, and African Union (AU) Conference of Ministers of Economy and Finance.
He wondered: “Where is the money coming from that they are using to buy these expensive guns and very poor wretched boys carry these weapons to kill, destabilise the society, increase our problems in terms of economic development?
“Are there some external forces that don’t want Africa to grow that are providing these weapons?”
President Jonathan urged African governments to ”deepen our regional integration efforts and also to work towards a continental free trade area” and implored the continent’s leaders to find answers to “why is it that our economic growth is not being translated into job creation in the continent.”
He could not understand why Africa is yet to shift away from its economy based on primary commodities.
“Is it because of lack of energy? Is it because of corruption in government and in the private sector? Is it the key infrastructural issues? Is it because our governments are very unstable? Is it because of security issues?”
Jonathan asked delegates at the conference with the theme  ‘Industrialisation for Inclusive and Transformative Development Agenda’ to all “work together as a team, exchanging ideas, sharing  knowledge and learning from each other’s experience.”
He also charged them “to work together for regional infrastructural projects to implement our plans for industrialisation and trade integration.”

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