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Nigeria has one million illegal guns, other weapons – Report

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This Wednesday, June 29, 2016, photo shows guns on display at a gun store in Miami. After a gunman killed more than 50 people in Las Vegas in the nation’s latest mass shooting, stocks in the gun industry rose, Monday, Oct. 2, 2017. (AP Photo/Alan Diaz)

A strategy document from the Office of the National Security Adviser has revealed that no fewer than one million small arms and light weapons are in circulation in Nigeria at the moment.

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The document, which was prepared in 2014, has raised fears that the weapons in circulation in the country may have increased astronomically this year.

Commenting on the report, the National Security Adviser, Maj. Gen Babagana Monguno (retd.), said, “Most of the threats identified in the 2014 document are still present with us.”

The NSA document, which was sighted by The Punch, identified the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, recurring communal, ethno-religious and pastoralists/farmers’ conflicts as other key security challenges confronting the country.

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The document partly read, “The proliferation of small arms and light weapons is a global phenomenon arising from conflicts across the globe. Presently, more than 90 countries produce various types of small arms and light weapons. It is estimated that more than 857 million weapons are in circulation aside from 12 billion rounds of ammunition produced annually. Of these, 10 million small arms and light weapons are estimated to be in Africa, of which one million are in Nigeria.

“The weapons were compounded by major conflicts in West and North African countries, notably Liberia, Sierra Leone, Cote D’Ivoire and much more recently, Mali and Libya.

“The proliferation of nuclear, radiological, chemical and biological weapons of mass destruction and their means of delivery constitute grave threat. The proliferation constitutes a challenge in itself since the weapons may reach their targets in non-conventional ways.

“In spite of this, a national security strategy that involves the development of technological, biological and chemical capabilities to neutralise these threats and reduce their impact on the civilian populace and the nation’s critical assets is desirable.”

Speaking at a meeting on Thursday with the military and security stakeholders in Abuja, Monguno said the 2014 security document would be replaced by a draft 2019 national security strategy to accommodate the contemporary threats facing the country.

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