[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 28 (Thursday, February 16, 2017)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1297-S1299]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
SECURITY AND HUMANITARIAN SITUATION IN NORTHEASTERN NIGERIA
Mr. CARDIN. Mr. President, today I wish to shine a spotlight on the
dire security and humanitarian situation in northeastern Nigeria and
the Lake Chad basin, precipitated by Boko Haram, and to urge the new
administration to organize quickly to address it. Nigeria has been
referred to as one of the anchor states of sub-Saharan Africa and our
bilateral relationship is one of our most important on the continent.
It is the most populous country on the continent. It has the biggest
economy. It has contributed troops to regional and U.N. peacekeeping
missions for decades and is a major oil-producing country. Nigeria's
population is forecast to grow to 400 million by 2050, overtaking the
United States and becoming the world's third most populous country.
Nigeria's political and economic influence in the region is difficult
to overstate, and it will only increase as the population and economy
grow.
That is why I joined Senator Corker in writing to President Obama
urging high-level engagement with Nigeria in the wake of the 2015
elections, elections which, while perhaps not perfect, turned out to be
a positive story of respect for democracy in the region. For the first
time in the nation's history, there was a peaceful transition of power
between opposing political parties. Though people feared the worst,
Nigerians proved they can be leaders on the continent and in the world.
However, for Nigeria to fully realize its enormous promise, it must
deal with a range of challenges from rampant corruption, to insecurity
and intercommunal violence in the Niger Delta and the Middle Belt,
tensions in the southeast, and most immediately the continuing threat
Boko Haram poses in northeastern Nigeria and other countries in the
Lake Chad basin. It is critical that we help with these efforts.
Since 2010, Boko Haram has devastated northeastern Nigeria. According
to the 2016 Global Terrorism Index, Boko Haram has the chilling
distinction of being among the deadliest terrorist groups in history,
with the second highest death toll from attacks out of all terrorist
groups since 2000. In recent years, its attacks have spread to
Cameroon, Chad, and Niger. The group, which pledged allegiance to ISIS
in 2015 and now calls itself the Islamic State West Africa Province,
has killed almost 16,000 people. Thousands of others have died as a
result of clashes between the military and Boko Haram. The terrorist
group has kidnapped thousands, including nearly 300 girls from Chibok
in April 2014. The whereabouts of almost 200 of the girls remains
unknown.
Countries in the Lake Chad basin are experiencing what U.N. officials
and aid workers have called a forgotten crisis as a result of the
terrorist group's activities. Nearly 2 million people have been
displaced in Nigeria alone. Two hundred thousand Nigerians have fled
across borders as refugees. Eight-and-a-half million people in
northeast Nigeria are in need of humanitarian assistance. Nearly 2
million people are estimated to be at risk for starvation. Continued
insecurity has prevented aid workers from reaching some areas, so the
actual needs may be even greater. Last November, Doctors Without
Borders expressed fears that malnutrition could wipe out the under-5
population in parts of Nigeria's Borno state.
In his 2015 inaugural address, President Muhammadu Buhari cited Boko
[[Page S1298]]
Haram as the most pressing issue facing his administration, and to his
credit, he has taken some action. The command center for counter Boko
Haram operations has been relocated to Maiduguri, and Nigerians are
coordinating military action with other countries in the Lake Chad
basin. However, despite the Nigerian Government's claims, Boko Haram
has not been largely defeated, and attacks continue. Just last month,
the Nigerian military warned of a horrifying new tactic: women suicide
bombers carrying babies in order to evade detection.
The reports of continued attacks are profoundly disturbing. As
tempting as it is to focus on a military solution, we must be very wary
of falling into the trap of thinking that the scourge of Boko Haram can
be overcome through military means alone. It is critical that we
continue to encourage and support the Nigerian Government's use of all
of all available tools to counter violent extremism in the northeast.
The Obama administration engaged former President Goodluck Jonathan on
the need to develop a holistic civilian-security focused
counterterrorism strategy, one that addresses legitimate political and
economic grievances in affected communities, but that approach was
never fully embraced.
There has been movement towards a countering violent extremism
approach under President Buhari's leadership, and we should continue to
encourage Nigerians to do more. One of the most important ways to
engender the trust of the population is to provide access to justice
for human rights abuses by security forces. After nearly 2 years in
office, Buhari has yet to keep commitments to do so. The government
created a human rights desk for the national army last year, which I
welcome, but the establishment of the desk in and of itself is not
enough. The military has made very serious mistakes for which it must
be held accountable.
In mid-2015, Amnesty International released a report alleging that
the deaths of 8,000 civilians are attributable to the Nigerian military
in northeast Nigeria. The report calls for the investigation of
specific military commanders who are alleged to have had knowledge of
torture, extrajudicial killings, and arbitrary detentions in
overcrowded facilities that lead to thousands of deaths. Buhari said he
would launch an investigation. However, we have yet to see any one
prosecuted, tried, or convicted. The results of a commission of
judicial inquiry into the massacre of more than 300 people in the
northern city of Zaria in December 2015 were made public last year. The
inquiry found that the deaths were a result of excessive force on the
part of the Nigerian army. To date, there has been no action on the
part of the federal government to hold abusive security forces
accountable. Impunity for human rights abuses serves to undermine all
of the work we are doing to counter violent extremism.
In addition to widespread allegations of extrajudicial killings,
there are accusations that the military has stolen humanitarian
supplies and sexually exploited and abused those living in camps for
internally displaced. And many of those freed from Boko Haram have been
kept in internment camps for indefinite amounts of time, subject to a
screening process that appears inconsistent and is not transparent.
Internally displaced persons have reported that the military and local
militia take men and boys seeking refuge in camps for screening and
they are never seen again. All of these actions have a deleterious
effect on efforts to win the hearts and minds of the communities of the
northeast, a critical objective to any strategy to defeat Boko Haram.
Military impunity is why I remain leery of the proposed sale of Super
Tucano fighter aircraft to Nigeria. Now is not the time for the United
States to focus on the provision of aircraft and heavy munitions,
especially in the wake of the Nigerian Airforce's bombing of a camp for
IDPs last month that may have killed up to 200 innocent people and
injured many more. Make no mistake. I support security assistance
provided in compliance with the Leahy laws. But I support assistance
that will have an actual impact on the Nigerian military's
effectiveness. Lack of airpower or munitions are not its problem. The
real impediments to success include poor command and control,
insufficient air to ground coordination, impunity for human rights
abuses, and little to no experience working with local communities and
humanitarian partners. Addressing those issues could have an enormous
impact on the ground.
To help Nigeria respond to the challenges in the northeast, I urge
the new administration to take three steps immediately. First, increase
our overall humanitarian assistance budget. The administration should
ensure that the President's budget request for fiscal year 2018
provides increased baseline funding for all foreign assistance
programs. Such funding is currently 30 percent lower than it was in
fiscal year 2010, and it is critical that we return baseline funding to
a normal and sustainable level following several years of inadequate
requests. An approach that erodes baseline funding while temporarily
substituting emergency funds is not workable if the United States wants
to continue to set an example in the world. An increase in the budget
will enable us to make a significant pledge at the February 24 donors
conference in Oslo. We have been generous, but the scale of the
emergency demands that we--and our partners--do more. The United States
has always led the international response to emergencies such as these,
and we must continue to do so. But we can't get blood from a rock.
There is no way we can provide adequate money to help the traumatized
people in Nigeria and other countries of the Lake Chad basin unless we
ensure that the budget for humanitarian assistance is robust without
relying on transient funding like OCO. I encourage the administration
to continue to inform Congress of the status of the humanitarian
response, so that we can work as a unified government to help the
people of Nigeria overcome the destruction left in the wake of Boko
Haram.
Nor can we afford a draconian cut to our contributions to
international organizations. The World Food Program, WFP, is just
beginning to scale up its operations in northeastern Nigeria. But it is
under enormous strain. In December, the organization was forced to cut
the amount of food it is providing to people in the Central African
Republic due to insufficient resources. In fact, funding for CAR is so
scarce that in 2016 it was able to give aid to less than a third the
number of people it aimed to support. A new drought in Ethiopia has
left 5.6 million people in urgent need of assistance according to
authorities. The U.N. humanitarian coordinator for Somalia, Peter de
Clercq, warned earlier this month that, without a massive scale up in
assistance, parts of Somalia may face famine. Needs in South Sudan
continue to rise, with warnings of famine on the horizon. Slashing
funding to WFP would be incredibly unwise, as would deep cuts to UNFPA.
Women have suffered enormously in this conflict. UNFPA is on the ground
supporting mechanisms to both prevent and respond to gender-based
violence and care for pregnant women and newborns. We cannot let the
specific needs of women and girls go unmet.
Second, the new administration must work with career experts to surge
our capacity on the ground. The administration needs to make clear that
the current hiring freeze will not affect lifesaving efforts here or
abroad, and Embassy Abuja should approve USAID's request to station
additional humanitarian experts at post as quickly as possible. We need
experienced people working with the Nigerian Government and the
international community to coordinate more effective aid delivery. I
applaud the U.S. Agency for International Development, USAID, for
dispatching a disaster assistance response team, DART, to Nigeria in
November to support government of Nigeria-led efforts to reduce food
insecurity in the Boko Haram-affected regions of the country's
northeast. The country has not faced a humanitarian emergency like this
in a generation. National and state emergency management agencies are
overtaxed, have little familiarity with providing a large-scale aid
response, and are not accustomed to working with the U.N. in this
manner. Our aid professionals can help. Let me be clear; Nigeria must
continue to do its part. It is imperative that
[[Page S1299]]
President Buhari set a positive cooperative tone with the international
community. However, there is no question that we must continue our
robust humanitarian response.
Finally, we must get smart about our security assistance. Agreeing to
sell planes with more sophisticated targeting systems that will not be
on the ground for 2 more years will not fix what is broken with respect
to the Nigerian military's response in the north. Right now--today--we
and our international partners should redouble our efforts to work with
the Nigerians to develop a list of short-term interventions and a long-
term plan to address issues related to military professionalism,
accountability, improved command and control, more effective
communication between and within services, strategic planning,
logistics, and auditing. The strategic governance initiative is a step
in the right direction, but we must take action that will translate
into results in the field as quickly as possible.
The situation in Nigeria is urgent. Few Americans are aware of the
importance of Nigeria to the United States or the degree of suffering
in northeastern Nigeria, but those of us who are policymakers cannot
afford to drop the ball on our support of Nigeria's fight against Boko
Haram or for those suffering in the Lake Chad basin. I recognize that
it seems to some people that we are being called on to do more now
internationally than ever. But we can do this. We are the Nation that
conceived the Marshall Plan, worked with allies to execute the Berlin
Airlift, and more recently, developed and implemented PEPFAR. We are up
to the task. And we are not alone. Where America leads, our partners
will follow. And I strongly encourage them to do so. Failure to
redouble our efforts in these areas could mean that ISIS will gain a
foothold in West Africa for a generation.
I thank my colleagues.
____________________