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Agriculture Lifted 4.21m Nigerians Out Of Poverty —FG - Politics - Nairaland

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Agriculture Lifted 4.21m Nigerians Out Of Poverty —FG by deji17: 6:03pm On Oct 15, 2021
Agriculture lifted 4.21m Nigerians out of poverty —FG
Okechukwu Nnodim, Abuja
15 October 2021



The Federal Government on Friday said about 4.21 million Nigerians were lifted out of poverty through the agricultural sector within the past two years.

Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Mohammad Mahmood, said this at a ministerial press briefing in celebration of the 2021 World Food Day in Abuja.

He said, “Through our various empowerment initiatives, along with production, processing and marketing of agricultural commodities, we have lifted a total of 4,205,576 Nigerians out of poverty in the last two years.

“This is going to continue as part of Mr. President’s promise to lift 100 million Nigerians out of poverty within the next 10 years.”

In the area of capacity building, Mahmood said a total of 2,205,576 farmers comprising youths and women were trained and empowered on different agricultural value chains, as the exercise was still ongoing.

He noted that through the National Accelerated Fish Production Programme, a total of 783,102 metric tonnes of fish was cultivated via the exploration of marine resources in the Deep Sea/Exclusive Economic Zone and the exploration of inland water bodies by fish farmers and fishermen.

The minister further stated that the agricultural sector would increase its contribution to the nation’s Gross Domestic Product from 23 per cent to 50 per cent in the next 10 years.


He noted that with the concerted efforts of agricultural entrepreneurs and the inputs of other industry operators, the sector would achieve the target.

“With the concerted effort of agro-entrepreneurs, I am very optimistic that the contribution of agriculture to the Nigerian economy will increase exponentially from 23 per cent to over 50 per cent in the next 10 years,” Mahmood said.

He said the objective of the WFD celebration was to promote worldwide action to end hunger, malnutrition, poverty and ensure that everyone at all times and places had physical and economic access to nutritious food.


https://punchng.com/agriculture-lifted-4-21m-nigerians-out-of-poverty-fg/?amp&__twitter_impression=true

Re: Agriculture Lifted 4.21m Nigerians Out Of Poverty —FG by BeardedMeat(m): 6:05pm On Oct 15, 2021
Buhari is a disaster. 2023 should come quickly mehn!

3 Likes

Re: Agriculture Lifted 4.21m Nigerians Out Of Poverty —FG by athaboi(f): 6:07pm On Oct 15, 2021
God will punish all of you plus your generation unborn

1 Like

Re: Agriculture Lifted 4.21m Nigerians Out Of Poverty —FG by deji17: 6:08pm On Oct 15, 2021
BeardedMeat:
Buhari is a disaster. 2023 should come quickly mehn!

2023 will be here before you know it. Who is your candidate for 2023? Also, how do you think the new President will make your life and that of millions of other Nigerians better?
Re: Agriculture Lifted 4.21m Nigerians Out Of Poverty —FG by Nobody: 6:08pm On Oct 15, 2021
Re: Agriculture Lifted 4.21m Nigerians Out Of Poverty —FG by deji17: 6:09pm On Oct 15, 2021
athaboi:
God will punish all of you plus your generation unborn
Wetin make you dey curse like this?
Re: Agriculture Lifted 4.21m Nigerians Out Of Poverty —FG by Penguin2: 6:10pm On Oct 15, 2021
I’m sure the FG is talking about Buhari’s kith and kin in Niger Republic and not Nigeria.

Always churning out fictitious statistics to be rehashed by their zombies.

Ndi ala!

2 Likes

Re: Agriculture Lifted 4.21m Nigerians Out Of Poverty —FG by SarkinYarki: 6:11pm On Oct 15, 2021
Even the FG has been put in poverty by Buhari govt
Re: Agriculture Lifted 4.21m Nigerians Out Of Poverty —FG by athaboi(f): 6:13pm On Oct 15, 2021
deji17:

Wetin make you dey curse like this?
are you not hungry?
Re: Agriculture Lifted 4.21m Nigerians Out Of Poverty —FG by MadamVanessa(f): 6:13pm On Oct 15, 2021
It shall never be well with Buhari even after death, the most hottest part of the hell Should be reserved and kept for him.

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: Agriculture Lifted 4.21m Nigerians Out Of Poverty —FG by Fahdiga(m): 6:15pm On Oct 15, 2021
Terrible liars
Re: Agriculture Lifted 4.21m Nigerians Out Of Poverty —FG by Nadaken: 6:17pm On Oct 15, 2021
You mean 4.2m farmers which you displaced from Farmers through fulani terrorists

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: Agriculture Lifted 4.21m Nigerians Out Of Poverty —FG by SensetionalGoal(m): 6:18pm On Oct 15, 2021
To this slap op with his worthless minister just dey hungry me angry

1 Like

Re: Agriculture Lifted 4.21m Nigerians Out Of Poverty —FG by helinues: 6:26pm On Oct 15, 2021
Very good

1 Like

Re: Agriculture Lifted 4.21m Nigerians Out Of Poverty —FG by ogododo: 6:32pm On Oct 15, 2021
deji17:
Agriculture lifted 4.21m Nigerians out of poverty —FG
Okechukwu Nnodim, Abuja
15 October 2021



The Federal Government on Friday said about 4.21 million Nigerians were lifted out of poverty through the agricultural sector within the past two years.

Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Mohammad Mahmood, said this at a ministerial press briefing in celebration of the 2021 World Food Day in Abuja.

He said, “Through our various empowerment initiatives, along with production, processing and marketing of agricultural commodities, we have lifted a total of 4,205,576 Nigerians out of poverty in the last two years.

“This is going to continue as part of Mr. President’s promise to lift 100 million Nigerians out of poverty within the next 10 years.”

In the area of capacity building, Mahmood said a total of 2,205,576 farmers comprising youths and women were trained and empowered on different agricultural value chains, as the exercise was still ongoing.

He noted that through the National Accelerated Fish Production Programme, a total of 783,102 metric tonnes of fish was cultivated via the exploration of marine resources in the Deep Sea/Exclusive Economic Zone and the exploration of inland water bodies by fish farmers and fishermen.

The minister further stated that the agricultural sector would increase its contribution to the nation’s Gross Domestic Product from 23 per cent to 50 per cent in the next 10 years.


He noted that with the concerted efforts of agricultural entrepreneurs and the inputs of other industry operators, the sector would achieve the target.

“With the concerted effort of agro-entrepreneurs, I am very optimistic that the contribution of agriculture to the Nigerian economy will increase exponentially from 23 per cent to over 50 per cent in the next 10 years,” Mahmood said.

He said the objective of the WFD celebration was to promote worldwide action to end hunger, malnutrition, poverty and ensure that everyone at all times and places had physical and economic access to nutritious food.


https://punchng.com/agriculture-lifted-4-21m-nigerians-out-of-poverty-fg/?amp&__twitter_impression=true

Na opposite of truth.
Re: Agriculture Lifted 4.21m Nigerians Out Of Poverty —FG by Lovelive: 6:32pm On Oct 15, 2021
BeardedMeat:
Buhari is a disaster. 2023 should come quickly mehn!

My prayer and I say a big AMEN my dear

1 Like

Re: Agriculture Lifted 4.21m Nigerians Out Of Poverty —FG by Lovelive: 6:35pm On Oct 15, 2021
MadamVanessa:
It shall never be well with Buhari even after death, the most hottest part of the hell Should be reserved and kept for him.

Let God decide his faith but truth must be told Buhari is a bid disaster.
Re: Agriculture Lifted 4.21m Nigerians Out Of Poverty —FG by Luckydubby7(m): 7:00pm On Oct 15, 2021
It is well with buhari and APC

1 Like

Re: Agriculture Lifted 4.21m Nigerians Out Of Poverty —FG by immortal2: 7:20pm On Oct 15, 2021
Many SW elites who came back to had to run for their lives. So how is the job created. My boss lost over N100mn invested on her farms due to Buharis evil agenda to suffocate Southern Nigerian so that the North will have food advantage over the South.

unfortunately, the poorly educated Yoruba youth cannot discern danger due to agberoism.
Re: Agriculture Lifted 4.21m Nigerians Out Of Poverty —FG by omowolewa: 7:22pm On Oct 15, 2021
Good

1 Like

Re: Agriculture Lifted 4.21m Nigerians Out Of Poverty —FG by deji17: 8:09pm On Oct 15, 2021
athaboi:
are you not hungry?

No I am not. In fact I am one of those who is smiling to the bank a result of employment through Agriculture. You too can try it. Agriculture is the cure for hunger and it has proved true since the creation of Adam and eve.
Re: Agriculture Lifted 4.21m Nigerians Out Of Poverty —FG by Racoon(m): 8:47pm On Oct 15, 2021
Which agricultural, poverty & employment? Everyone in this gaddamned regime are always smoking shit.

1 Like

Re: Agriculture Lifted 4.21m Nigerians Out Of Poverty —FG by ThatFairGuy: 8:55pm On Oct 15, 2021
That's why Rice Farmers' association of Nigeria contributed money for Buhari's reelection in 2015.

Truth be told, Farmers really enjoy this Buhari's administration.
But they're majorly domiciled in the North
Re: Agriculture Lifted 4.21m Nigerians Out Of Poverty —FG by Nobody: 9:16pm On Oct 15, 2021
Wowor nor fit ever fine
Re: Agriculture Lifted 4.21m Nigerians Out Of Poverty —FG by athaboi(f): 11:14pm On Oct 15, 2021
deji17:


No I am not. In fact I am one of those who is smiling to the bank a result of employment through Agriculture. You too can try it. Agriculture is the cure for hunger and it has proved true since the creation of Adam and eve.
where are you at? Somewhere in southern kaduna, you can't farm in peace bcoz you will get killed
Re: Agriculture Lifted 4.21m Nigerians Out Of Poverty —FG by Oluwadare316(m): 7:44am On Oct 16, 2021
MadamVanessa:
It shall never be well with Buhari even after death, the most hottest part of the hell Should be reserved and kept for him.
Chaii
Re: Agriculture Lifted 4.21m Nigerians Out Of Poverty —FG by Cholls(m): 7:46am On Oct 16, 2021
My brother I find this article really insightful.


Under the cover of counterterrorism, AFRICOM is beefing up Nigeria’s military to ensure the free flow of oil to the West, and using the country as a proxy against China’s influence on the continent.


Last month, Nigeria’s President Muhammadu Buhari wrote an op-ed in the Financial Times. It might as well have been written by the Pentagon. Buhari promoted Brand Nigeria, auctioning the country’s military services to Western powers, telling readers that Nigeria would lead Africa’s “war on terror” in exchange for foreign infrastructure investment. “Though some believe the war on terror [WOT] winds down with the US departure from Afghanistan,” he says, “the threat it was supposed to address burns fiercely on my continent.”

With Boko Haram and Islamic State operating in and near Nigeria, pushing a WOT narrative is easy. But counterterror means imperial intervention. So, why is the Pentagon really interested in Nigeria, a country with a GDP of around $430 billion – some $300 billion less than the Pentagon’s annual budget – a population with a 40 percent absolute poverty rate, and an infant mortality rate of 74 deaths per 1,000 live births, compared to 5.6 per 1,000 in the US?

A US Naval Postgraduate School doctoral thesis from over a decade ago offers a plausible explanation: the Gulf of Guinea, formed in part by Nigeria’s coastline, “has large deposits of hydrocarbons and other natural resources.” It added: “There is now a stiff international competition among industrialized nations including the United States, some European countries, China, Japan, and India.”

Since then, the US has been quietly transforming Nigeria’s police and military into a neo-colonial force that can support missions led by the US Africa Command (AFRICOM). Buhari’s offer makes US involvement in Nigeria appear as if Nigeria is asking for help, when in fact the stage is already set for AFRICOM.

The Pentagon’s broader aim is to stop China and Russia from gaining a foothold in the continent. In the meantime, it aims to crush any and all opposition groups that disrupt energy supplies so that oil giants can continue exploiting Nigeria’s resources.

A brief history of a complex country

It’s important to get an idea of Nigeria’s ethnic and regional complexities. The country’s 206 million people, nearly half of whom are Muslim and nearly half Christian, live north of the equator in West Africa. Their country has 36 states, seven of which are coastal. The country borders Cameroon in the east, Benin in the west, Chad in the northeast, and Niger in the north and northwest.

A US Strategic Studies Institute report from the mid-‘90s describes Nigeria as “an artificial state created according to colonial exigencies rather than ethnic coherence.” Its fragility explains the country’s susceptibility to ethnic, religious, and class warfare. The majority of Nigerian Muslims are Sunni, but Islam in the country spans the spectrum, from Sufism to Salafism. The Christian population is distributed among the Protestant majority as well as Anglicans, Baptists, Evangelicals, Catholics, Methodists, and Roman Catholics. Most of Nigeria’s Muslims live in the north in 12 states whose laws are based on sharia.

Nigeria boasts hundreds of languages and ethnicities, the largest groups being the Hausa (who make up 30 percent of the population), Yoruba (15.5), Igbo (a.k.a., Ibo 15.2), and Fulani (6 percent). There are, of course, exceptions, but in general the Hausa-Fulani and Kanuri peoples tend to be Muslim and the Igbo, Ijaw, and Ogoni Christian. Islam and Christianity tend to be mixed among the Yoruba. During the late-19th century “Scramble for Africa,” the British colonized the region, Christianizing the south and leaving in place the Islamic political structures in the north both for convenience and as a useful divide and rule technique.

Black gold, British rule

Drawing up “contracts” for energy companies, the Foreign Office (FO) created a monopoly for Anglo-Persian oil (later BP) and particularly for Shell. Prospecting contracts were awarded by the FO in the late-1930s, but it was as late as 1956 that financially viable amounts of black gold were struck. Most of the country’s oil is in the southern, Niger Delta region populated by the Ijaw and Ogoni peoples, hence there is little militant Islam in Nigeria’s illicit oil sector. Shell operations began in Ogoniland in 1958.

Nigeria gained slow and painful independence from Britain in 1960. Seven years later, armed Igbo fought a war of secession in the oil-rich south to try to form their own country, the Republic of Biafra. Under a One Nigeria policy, the British supported the central regime of General Yakubu Gowon during the Biafra War (1967-70). Fighting and blockade  led to three million deaths. Biafra failed to secede.

The UK Labour government’s Commonwealth Minister, George Thomas, explained at the time: “The sole immediate British interest in Nigeria is that the Nigerian economy should be brought back to a condition in which our substantial trade and investment in the country can be further developed, and particularly so we can regain access to important oil installations.”

As the British Empire declined, the US gradually pursued the same policy in Nigeria. At first, the US considered supporting Biafra.

The Kennedy administration initiated $170 million in economic and military spending in Nigeria under a plan that continued until 1966, into the Johnson administration. William Haven North, who served as the Director for Central and West African Affairs for the US Agency of International Development (USAID) said: “The issue of supporting Biafra was also tied up with the question of oil interests; the major part of the oil reserves in Nigeria were in the Eastern Region with substantial American oil company investments.” In 1978, the US Navy’s Sixth Fleet began the regular exercises in the Gulf of Guinea that continue to the present.


Indigenous activist Ken Saro-Wiwa was arrested on phony charges and executed by a Nigerian military functioning as a private army for the Shell oil company

Enter Uncle Sam

In 1990, the Nigeria-dominated Economic Community of West African States (ECO) established a military wing, the so-called Monitoring Group (ECOMOG). The George H.W. Bush administration contributed $100 million. The succeeding Clinton White House said that for so-called peace-keeping operations in other African countries like Liberia and Sierra Leone, “Nigeria provided most of the ‘muscle’.” At this point, the seeds were sown for Nigeria’s use as a delegate for US wars in Africa.

By the dawn of the new millennium, the 3rd Special Forces Group (Army Command) was training Nigerian battalions to assist United Nations support missions. The Nigerian military enjoyed tens of millions of dollars-worth of US weapons.

Meanwhile, indigenous activists suffering under oil spills and environmental destruction established the Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People. Nine of this group’s leaders, including Ken Saro-Wiwa, were later arrested on trumped up charges and executed by the national military that had been funded by Shell to act as its own private army.

The murders sparked international outrage and activists successfully pressured the US to terminate military aid. General Sani Abacha, under whose dictatorship the Ogoni Nine were hanged, established a Multinational Joint Task Force (MNJTF) to fight both activists and gangs. The MNJTF was later centered in Chad and used as a base from which to fight Boko Haram.

In 1999, Nigeria ended its military rule, at least on paper. By the mid-2000s, Human Rights Watch was wrote that, under the façade of parliamentary democracy, “the conduct of many public officials and government institutions is so pervasively marked by violence and corruption as to more resemble criminal activity than democratic governance.”

With the Ogoni, Ijaw, and other Niger Delta peoples crushed with force, some turned to violence. Following lobbying by Shell, Nigeria’s old colonial master, the UK, began spending taxpayer money on military operations to counter armed groups: £12 million between 2001 and 2014, when Campaign Against the Arms Trade (CAAT) co-authored their report. CAAT documents the UK exportation of nearly £500m-worth of weapons to Nigeria in that period, including missiles and grenades. It cites increased UK arms exports as a direct reason for the failure of the southern ceasefire. UK “security contractors” including Control Risks, Erinys, Executive Outcomes, and Saladin Security were embedded with mobile police units to crush protestors.

Nigeria and the “war on terror”

Western propaganda paid less attention to Shell’s systemic violence against the Ogoni and other peoples, focusing instead on the more headline-grabbing resistance, such as high-profile ransom kidnappings and pipeline disruption. State oppression in the drier, less fertile north, meanwhile, fed the narrative pushed by Islamic groups: that Western culture is toxic.

Founded in 2002 and led by Mohammed Yusuf who was later executed by the state, Boko Haram is officially called the Group of the People of Sunnah for Preaching and Jihad (Jamā’at Ahl as-Sunnah lid-Da’wah wa’l-Jihād). It emerged in the northeastern city, Maidugari, close to Chad and Cameroon, where it set up semi-autonomous communities. Religious graduates who studied in Sudan attempted to form similar communes but were attacked by the police. In 2009, Boko Haram members allegedly fired at a police station in Bauchi. The government response was to trigger civil war.

The MNJTF mentioned above, is described as “notorious” in a British House of Commons Library report. It was reactivated, this time to fight the Islamists. The report also notes how the Nigerian Armed Forces terrorized the civilian population with raids, arrests, and indiscriminate shelling.

The UK ramped up its training of Nigeria’s military while the US used Chad as a base for its “war on terror” operations: the Pan-Sahel Initiative (covering Chad, Mali, Mauritania, and Niger) and the Trans-Sahara Counterterrorism Partnership (which included Algeria, Morocco, Nigeria, and Tunisia). AFRICOM’s initial operations in Nigeria involved maritime training and integrating the country’s forces with those of other African nations to foster pan-African military alliances.

In its early years, AFRICOM paid little attention to Boko Haram. But this changed as the profile of attacks got bigger.

In 2011, Boko Haram launched a formal insurgency. A report published that year by the US House of Representatives Homeland Security Subcommittee on Counterterrorism and Intelligence outlined Boko Haram’s roots and the reasons for its popularity. They included “a feeling of alienation from the wealthier, Christian, oil-producing, southern Nigeria, pervasive poverty, rampant government corruption, heavy-handed security measures, and the belief that relations with the West are a corrupting influence.” It added that “[t]hese grievances have led to sympathy among the local Muslim population despite Boko Haram’s violent tactics.”

These grievances were met with the kind of violence that further fuels grievances.

The US escalates involvement

In the context of the “war on terror,” the Pentagon saw Boko Haram as an opportunity to train Nigeria’s military and employ it for its objectives. The primary US goal was ensuring that the oil-rich regions did not fall into enemy hands.

The Congressional Research Service noted that by the time AFRICOM was founded in the late-2000s, Africa “supplie[d] the United States with roughly the same amount of crude oil as the Middle East.” An Armed Services Committee report in 2011 noted: “Nigeria’s oil rich Niger Delta is a major source of oil for the United States outside of the Middle East.” The US Energy Information Administration states: “Nigeria is the largest oil producer in Africa. It holds the largest natural gas reserves on the continent and was the world’s fifth–largest exporter of liquefied natural gas.” The country has 37 billion barrels of proven crude, second only to Libya, which was bombed to pieces by the US and NATO in 2011.

Nigeria’s forces summarily executed Boko Haram’s leader Yusuf in 2009. A thesis published by the US Naval Postgraduate School notes that in addition to the assassination, “security forces killing or displacing thousands of Nigerian Muslims, is credited with swelling [Boko Haram BH]’s ranks.”

Yusuf’s deputy, Abubakar Shekau, took over and escalated a suicide bombing campaign. The Navy thesis also notes that “the actions of BH, along with other militant groups such as the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND), have reduced the country’s oil production, displacing Nigeria from 5th to 8th on the list of America’s largest foreign oil suppliers.”

In 2013, the states of Adamawa, Borno, and Yobe imposed emergency powers. The Pentagon announced a $45 million-dollar budget to counter Boko Haram by training troops in Benin, Cameroon, Chad, Niger, and Nigeria. One of the consequences is that Nigeria has been transformed from a peripheral US interest to a proxy force. Years of war, mostly in the north and border regions, have led to 2.1 million internally displaced people. The World Food Program calculates that 3.4 million face hunger and that 300,000 children are malnourished.

Building a Sparta state

In June 2014, it was reported that a 650-person unit, the Nigerian Army’s 143rd Battalion, was set up on the ground and trained by US Special Forces from the California Army National Guard’s Special Operations Detachment-US Northern Command and Company A, 5th Battalion 19th Special Forces Group (Airborne). By then the Nigerian Army was active in 30 out of the country’s 36 states.

Chief of the US Army Africa’s Security Cooperation Division, Colonel John D. Ruffing, said: “It is not peacekeeping … It is every bit of what we call ‘decisive action,’ meaning those soldiers will go in harm’s way to conduct counterinsurgency operation[s].” One US soldier said: “This is a classic Special Forces mission—training an indigenous force in a remote area in an austere environment to face a very real threat.”

In 2015, Boko Haram’s leader Shekau reportedly pledged allegiance to Islamic State, rebranding the organization IS West African Province (ISWAP). A Congressional Research Service report notes that ISWAP “has surpassed Boko Haram in size and capacity, and now ranks among IS’s most active affiliates.”

It’s not as if strategists don’t understand that violence doesn’t work. They understand that violence escalates violence which can then be used as pretexts for more violence. A US Council on Foreign Relations article from 2020 notes: “the last two years have been deadlier than any other period for Nigerian soldiers since the Boko Haram insurgency began.”

As the war against Boko Haram waged on, Niger Delta gangs in the south threatened to resume attacks on oil infrastructure. US “aid” expanded to include training the Nigerian Police Force (NPF) across the country. In November 2016, 66 officers graduated from the Fingerprint Analysis and Forensics training program, an initiative run by the US Embassy in collaboration with the Office of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement and Atlanta Police Department.

In March 2017, 28 Nigerian officers graduated from courses offered by the International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs division, led by US police from Prince William County, Virginia. The program also provided “equipment, training, mentoring, and capacity-building support to various Nigerian law enforcement and justice sector institutions.”


U.S. Army soldiers deployed to Nigeria Army’s School of infantry trained more than 200 Nigerian soldiers in 2018

Expanding AFRICOM’s role

In what the US State Department calls a “whole of government” approach, military operations continued as police training expanded. In early-2018, 12 US Army soldiers, led by Captain Stephen Gouthro, trained 200 Nigerians at the Nigerian Army’s School of Infantry. Facilitated by the US Army Africa, eight Security Assistance and Training Management Organization soldiers and four 1st Brigade Combat Team soldiers shared “ground-combat tactics” with the Nigerian Army’s 26th Infantry Battalion.

In July this year, US Army Special Forces trained 25 officers of the Nigerian Navy Special Boat Service as part of JCET: a five-week Joint Combined Exchange Training program.  The Acting US Consulate Political and Economic Chief, Merrica Heaton, says that the training is designed to help the Nigerian military stop crime in the Gulf of Guinea and “counter violent extremists in the Northeast and enforce the rule of law throughout the region.”

As observers seemingly spotted the top-secret US stealth drone—Northrop Grumman’s RQ-180—over the Philippines, the Department of Defense sold nearly $500 million-worth of propeller planes to Nigeria, marking what the US Embassy and Consulate describes as “an historic level of cooperation …  between the U.S. and Nigerian militaries.” AFRICOM recently confirmed that the inauguration of twelve A-29 Super Tucanos into the Nigerian Air Force will serve a “critical role in furthering regional security and stability.”

The Pentagon allocated $36.1 million to the US Army Corps of Engineers to renovated Kainji Air Base, which will host the Super Tucanos. In addition to training simulator and small arms storage units, the Base includes “aircraft sunshades, a new airfield hot cargo pad, perimeter and security fencing, airfield lights, and various airfield apron, parking, hangar, and entry control point enhancements.”

To be continued on request!!!!!!

1 Like

Re: Agriculture Lifted 4.21m Nigerians Out Of Poverty —FG by rayvelez(m): 9:25am On Oct 16, 2021
Lol no be this same coutree buhari terrorists boys beheaded 49 farmers and Garba blamed d same dead farmers for not asking for permission from NA before deh go to thr farm.

1 Like

Re: Agriculture Lifted 4.21m Nigerians Out Of Poverty —FG by whoawa(m): 12:44pm On Oct 16, 2021
Wrong statistics, the one I personally carried out shows 42.1million Nigerians.

Ndi ara

1 Like

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