Thursday, July 4, 2024 -Jemo Ibrahim, senator representing Ondo south, says a software on his mobile phone that detects the number of guns around him detected over 277 guns around the Senate chamber.
Ibrahim spoke on the floor of the
senate on Wednesday, July 3, while contributing to a motion sponsored by Ali
Ndume, senator representing Borno south.
Ndume had dwelt on the recent suicide
bombings in Gwoza, an LGA in his senatorial district.
Reacting, Jimoh Ibrahim advocated the
need for technology in the fight against insecurity.
“I don’t want to take much of your
time but I will say clearly it costs nothing for the intelligent army to get
devices in their phone to know where these notorious criminals live,"
Ibrahim said.
“As I am here, I check my phone
regularly and I know the number of guns that are very close to me here. This is
just less than one thousand installations. Within us now, there are over 277
guns around here just because an armoury is close to this place.”
Senate President Godswill Akpabio
then asked him, “Of the 277 guns around you here, do you know how many of them
have bullets inside?”
Ibrahim responded that since there is
an amoury close to the National Assembly, the senators were safe.
Ibrahim emphasised the need for the
military to use technology in the fight against insurgency.
“So, what I am saying? We can use
technology, just like distinguished Senator Ndume had said, to deploy
technology rather than using soldiers,” he said.
“I want to say very clearly that the
military should stop using unconventional strategies to fight insurgency in
Nigeria. There is a distinction between unconventional and conventional
strategy. We need to use conventional strategy to fight unconventional war.
Boko Haram is an unconventional war,” Senator Jimoh Ibrahim argued.
“We are all aware of what happened in
Kenya. We cannot close our eyes, we need to wake up. So, I will finally suggest
to you, Mr Senate President, and my distinguished colleagues, that this Senate
under your leadership, sir, must have a closed-door meeting for one day and
then use that whole day to discuss security matters. Our lives are very
important.”
Senator Jimoh described the Gwoza, Borno
State bombings as saddening and an embarrassment.
“Living with insecurity cannot be the
only way to understand security. We should not get to that,” he said,
“How can you be going to a wedding and somebody just put a bomb to attack you and people started dying? It is uncalled for, it is rejected in the totality of its formulation.”
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