Thursday, January 29, 2026 - The Federal Government has earmarked over N13.12bn for the procurement of arms, ammunition and related equipment for Nigeria’s security agencies in the 2026 appropriation bills.
Budget documents show that a total of N13,124,747,575 has
been allocated across key security institutions for weapons acquisition and
protective equipment.
Under the proposal, the Ministry of Defence will receive
N688.8m for the purchase of arms and ammunition for the Armed Forces, while the
Defence Headquarters is allocated N1.46bn for similar procurements.
The Nigerian Air Force accounts for the largest share of the
allocation, with N6.13bn set aside for various aircraft platforms, arms and
ammunition.
In addition, the Air Force is expected to spend N1.79bn on
the procurement of 2,000 AR-M5T assault rifles.
The Nigerian Immigration Service has been allocated N702.7m
for arms, ammunition, webbing and ballistic protection equipment, while the
Nigeria Police Force will receive N1.03bn for arms, ammunition and protective
gear.
The Department of State Services is expected to spend N1bn
on arms and ammunition under the 2026 budget.
Other beneficiaries include the National Park Headquarters,
which is to procure 100 firearms and ammunition with N68.8m, and the Nigerian
Defence Academy, which will deploy N253.5m for the acquisition of automatic
rifles and magazines for cadet training.
The allocations follow a sharp decline in Nigeria’s spending
on arms and ammunition in 2025.
Data from the National Bureau of Statistics showed that arms
and ammunition imports dropped to about N49bn in 2025, compared with N520bn
recorded in 2024.
According to the NBS foreign trade reports, arms imports
stood at N22.08bn in the first quarter of 2025, declined to N4.87bn in the
second quarter, before rising to N23.49bn in the third quarter.
The figures were compiled from multiple sources, including
the Nigeria Customs Service, the Central Bank of Nigeria, the Nigerian National
Petroleum Company Limited, oil and gas firms, private sector operators, as well
as aviation and port authorities.
Analysts note that unless further procurements are approved,
Nigeria’s arms acquisition spending could decline further in 2026 despite
mounting security challenges across the country.

0 Comments