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Human rights impact of UK military aid to Nigeria under fresh scrutiny

Press Release 5 Sep 2013 admin

*** For immediate release ***

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Saturday 17 August 2013

Human rights impact of UK military aid to Nigeria under fresh scrutiny

Armed Extraction: The UK Military in Nigeria

https://platformlondon.org/p-publications/armed-extraction/

A UK government official has raised questions over the impact of UK military aid to Nigeria, admitting that “we’ll never know how effectiveit is.” The government has provided escalating levels of military aid to Nigerian troops patrolling the volatile Niger Delta region, where western companies like Shell have extracted oil for decades.

The UK’s role in the militarisation of Nigeria’s oil region comes under fresh scrutiny in a new briefing by oil watchdog Platform, Armed Extraction: The UK Military in Nigeria. The briefing highlights serious inadequacies in UK policy, the human rights impacts of military aid and the government’s lack of risk assessment and monitoring.

Key findings include:

Eager to get a slice of Nigeria’s growing ‘security’ market, the UK government has actively promoted security and military contracts in Nigeria to UK companies.

UK private military and security companies (PMSCs) like G4S, Executive Outcomes, Control Risks Group, Erinys and Saladin Security have all been awarded security contracts in the Delta region. These companies have profited from Nigeria’s oil conflict.

Sarah Shoraka of Platform said: “As budget cuts put pressure on vital public services, the UK cannot afford to risk engagement in the Nigeria’s oil conflict. UK taxpayers are funding a policy that supports repressive troops and subsidises the operating costs of oil giants like Shell. The UK government has promoted the interests of oil companies, arms traders and PMSCs at the expense of human rights and regional stability.”

Sarah Waldron of Campaign Against Arms Trade said, “The UK government does not appear to have made any demands for accountability in the Nigerian armed forces in return for military aid. Instead the UK has promoted arms exports while turning a blind eye to Nigeria’s excessive use of force. Though Nigerian troops have failed to resolve the Delta conflict, the UK and US have actively supported the militarisation of the area and the wider Gulf of Guinea.”

The report suggests that the UK could pay a more positive role in the Delta by focusing more resources on the urgent issues of poverty, corruption and weak governance, helping to clean up the decades of oil pollution and enabling local residents to hold companies and the Nigerian government accountable for violations of human rights.

Contact:

Sarah Shoraka, Platform, [email protected], +44 (0)7528 785027

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