This is a Follow up on This STORY.
HBC: Omoh! Let them stop this thing OoO! The reason why Nigeria's crime rate is rising exponentially is because of our government's inability to hit the insecurity problem with common-sense.
-1- Our security forces need the best and the latest equipments to work with or at least, they should be better equipped than the criminals. If for instance you are armed with a machete in a fight and your enemy has a machete too, there is already a 50:50 chance of you winning the fight. And if your enemy is willing to give his life fighting for: his belief, a cause or the millions of naira he is earning that you want to put a stop to and you are fighting (not willing to give your life) for your country (that doesn't give-a-damn about you) and for some small change at the end of the month that is called "Salary", hahahahah...your chances of winning the fight is now down from 50% to 10%.
But if your enemy has only a sword and you have a loaded riffle, it is enough an intimidation to make your enemy surrender or suffer the consequence.
-2- Without proper and regular training to out security forces on how they can effectively perform their duties with courage and professionalism, even if provided the best tools, they will end up performing rubbish like we are witnessing in the recent Baga incident where over 200 people lost there lives and over 4000 houses where burnt...so sad that lives means nothing in Nigeria anymore...
President GEJ |
The Nigerian government has summoned the management of Elbit Systems,
an Israeli security firm contracted to spy on Nigerian Internet users,
for a meeting to explain why the contract should not be revoked after it
allegedly breached a confidential agreement in the contract.
The management of the Israeli company are expected to first appear
before two Nigerian security chiefs – the national security adviser and
the director general of the National Intelligence Agency – in Abuja this
week. They would then be taken before President Goodluck Jonathan, who
is miffed that Elbit’s action had let this newspaper to probe into
details of the secret contract.
The security chiefs will relay government’s anger over Elbit System’s
‘breach’ of confidentiality in the $40million contract which will see
the Israeli company spy on citizens’ computers and Internet
communications under the guise of intelligence gathering and national
security.
The Nigerian government is angry the Isreali company went public with the contract, in a global press release that tipped off PREMIUM TIMES which, after extensive investigation, revealed the details of the deal.
The disclosures sparked national outrage, with a lot of Nigerians now
apprehensive that their country might be sliding back to dictatorship.
A source close to the deal has told this newspaper the government is angry for two reasons.
First, the administration is angry and embarrassed that the contract,
considered by government as top national security secret, has now been
blown open.
Elbit announced the contract award few weeks ago in a global press
release in an opaque statement that did not disclose the Nigerian
destination of the deal.
“Elbit Systems will supply its Wise Intelligence Technology (WiT)
system to an unnamed country in Africa under a new $40 million contract
announced on 24 April… for Intelligence Analysis and Cyber Defense,” the
company’s general manager, Yehuda Vered, said.
But PREMIUM TIMES was able to tap its sources within the
administration to determine that Nigeria is indeed the “unnamed African
country.”
The contract will help the Jonathan administration access all
computers and read all email correspondences of citizens in what is
clearly, an infringement on constitutionally guaranteed freedom of
expression, multiple channels confirmed.
On the other hand, politicians in Aso Rock are angry over the
disclosure of the contract sum, and what is left of the originally
approved sum, our sources say.
The administration had indicated in the 2013 budget that it would
procure a Wise Intelligence Network Harvest Analyzer System, Open Source
Internet Monitoring System and Personal Internet Surveillance System at
a cost of N9.496 Billion ($61.26 million).
With that the contract awarded to Elbit for about $40million, and the
story made public, attention has been drawn to the leftover $21million
earmarked for the project.
“That money was meant to be shares,” our source said. “It is a
security contract and no one will ever ask questions. Now everybody is
angry that sharing the money is now difficult.”
Investigations indicate that the Isreali company was awarded the
contract without tenders or call for bids, just as there were no public
announcements.
Source: Premium Times
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