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JUNE, 2009.
ABSTRACT
This paper examines the causal relationship as well as the general influence of poverty on the
prevailing state of insecurity in Nigeria. The paper approaches this question from the perspective
of the integrative security approach which postulates that any proper understanding of internal
security problems among modern states in contemporary period must necessarily start from the
economic and political development of the country concerned. It is revealed that the negative fall-
out of poor economic development – inequality and unemployment – and those of political
development – policy inconsistency and corruption – nurture and sustain poverty on the largest
scale possible in Nigeria. In turn, this provides the nourishing ground in which all forms of anti-
social tendencies and crimes germinate and grow. The general consequence of this is the
prevailing level of insecurity in Nigeria today. Rightly therefore, to address insecurity in Nigeria
is in fact to address the crisis of economic development, crisis of democratic development and the
crisis of inequality and poverty in the country.
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INTRODUCTION:
The relevance of internal security to any country’s sustainable development has never
industrial activities and trade can take place and prosper; development would forever
remain illusive. To achieve this, states, world over, devise security strategies and policy
frameworks that ensure adequate security for their citizens and their properties. In
Nigeria, the strategy adopted for this purpose is hinged on the conventional security
doctrine (NNDP, 2006). The efficacy of this strategy to internal peace and stability is
security challenges – the Niger-Delta militancy, youth violence, armed robbery, thuggery,
crimes such as murder of political opponents, drug trafficking and abuse, petty crimes
development and leadership are ignored in this strategy. This situation leads to faulty
threat assessment and non-efficacious measures of containing such threats. This paper
examines the relationship between poverty and internal security. The objective is to
FRAMEWORK OF ANALYSIS:
In most countries today, the thrust on the question of security centres on the
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including the instruments of coercion such as the police and armed forces. This doctrine
proceeds from the view that “the threat of violence may successfully deter an enemy
summarises the thrust of the conventional security strategy and doctrine thus:
The conventional security doctrine rests on the assumption that only a strong military
system can effectively deter force (attacks) and threats of force (blackmail) aiming at
changing the society and also provides a means of fighting if the attack is not deferred.
The adoption of this strategy in Nigeria owes much to the historic origins of the
Nigeria’s entire security structure and system. The security structure including the armed
forces and the police are a product of British colonial heritage. However, owing primarily
to the limited utility of the conventional doctrine, many scholars reject the notion that
security is obtainable via force and as an alternative, propose that security questions must
to Braithwaite (1992:9), security “is more than territorial defence. It focuses on the
physical, social and psychological quality of life”. Similarly, Tedheke (1998:6) points out
that “security can be…understood as overall socio-economic well being of the society”.
Security means development. Security is not military force though it may involve it:
security is not traditional military ability though it may encompass it; security is not
military hardware though it may include it. Security is development and without
development, there can be no security. Any country that seeks to achieve adequate
military security against the background of acute food shortages, population explosion,
low level of productivity, fragile infrastructural base for technological development,
inadequate and inefficient public utilities and chronic problem of unemployment has
false sense of security.
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A SYNOPSIS ON POVERTY:
Oxford Advanced Learners Dictionary (2005) defines poverty “as the state of being
poor”. Grolier Encyclopedia (2000:165) offers a more graphic definition of poverty thus:
when people lacks the means to satisfy their basic needs (Brittanica, vol. 9, 1995:652).
Although the identification of what constitutes basic needs to people may significantly
varies defending mainly on the level of economic development of the society concerned,
it is not likely that in economies like Nigeria, this identification is altogether difficult.
These include food, shelter, access to health care and sanitary facilities, affordable
education and gainful employment opportunities for all people without prejudice. Again,
it is none debatable to posit that the highest percentage of Nigerians have access to
neither of these. A recent study by the United Nations Development Project (UNDP) puts
Friday, May 29, 2009:6). Considering that the last census puts the number of Nigerians
Although this paper is not specifically concerned with either the nature or level of
economic development in Nigeria, yet it is not possible to completely ignore them. This
is because a study into the nature of Nigeria’s economy and distribution of resources
and moral degeneracy of the entire political class, a cleavage is created in the country.
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This not only leads to poverty, but nurture and nourishes it as well. Development of the
Nigerian economy has since the early 1980s taken a turn for the worst. Unemployment
challenges. The nature of the economy since independence – weak industrial and
productive base driven primarily by a mono-culturally, export oriented royalty oil sector
– is perhaps the greatest indicator of how its development remains stagnant. For instance,
crude oil accounts for about 80% of all government revenues, 90-95% of export revenues
and over 90% of foreign exchange earnings from 1980-2001 (Analysis, Vol.1. No.3,
September 2002:23).
capital, market and aid. Because of this poor level of economic development in Nigeria,
the mass of the citizenry could not partake in gainful endeavours that are necessary to any
stability and order in the country (Anyanwu, 1992:1). This undeveloped nature of the
national economy makes it possible and even nourishing, for all manner of anti-social
tendencies – drug abuse, prostitution, youth militancy and violence, moral deprivation,
armed robbery, assassinations, and general level of societal insecurity that characterised
Nigeria over the last ten years – to grow which in themselves have become serious
How then does poverty constitutes a threat to the internal security of Nigeria?
Imobighe (in Alabi, 1997:140) defines threat as “anything that can undermine the security
of the nation, or anything that constitutes danger to its survival as a corporate entity, as
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well as undermine the prospects of the harmonious relationship of the various
communities that make up the nation, or the peaceful co-existence of its people”.
Certain observations can be made concerning threats. For instance, there is hardly any
country which does not have one threat or another hanging over it and there is hardly
any state which can provide completely against all the threats to which it may be
exposed to…Given this situation, it becomes necessary for each nation to analyse and
perceive correctly what constitutes a threat. Failure to do so will result either in
utilising all its resources in order to counter imaginary dangers, to the detriment of the
various aspects of national development, or in adopting a complacent attitude leading
to inadequate provisions…for the nation which may lead to disaster in the event of a
major threat. The correct perception of threat…enables a state to adopt the correct
posture…and to make contingency plans should any threat materialise. It is also the
basis for the formulation of a realistic defence policy.
The danger that poverty poses to Nigeria’s internal security is pervasive. It is not
however so much in how it spreads among the population but in what it breeds. Poverty
constituent units. These in turn combined to breed a society in which crime, youth
violence and thuggery, drug trafficking and abuse, armed robbery, assassination,
kidnappings, human trafficking, ritual killings, cultism, prostitution and other forms of
These feeling do not only generate resentment to the existing socio-political system,
through frustration with the system, they often create a situation whereby the
survivability and stability of the system itself became particularly tenuous. According to
Abdullahi (2005):
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Security involves food security and health-care delivery. You do not get anything, far
less self-reliance, from people who are hungry or sick. If people are too concerned with
their securities, there would be no time to be patriotic or to think of production of
goods and services. The young and able-bodied would be too busy seeking other means
of survival, begging or stealing…Where self-survival is at stake, talk of self-reliance is
useless.
It is quite appropriate to posit that patriotism and nationalistic sentiments – two most
important prerequisite of any lasting security strategy – are only obtained in a country in
which the mass of the citizenry have experienced or are experiencing significant and
noticeable improvement on their standard of living. If on the other hand, majority of the
population have experienced, or are convinced that they are experiencing daily, steady
decline on their general standard of living while a fraction of the same population is
impossible to talk of patriotism among the mass of the people. This impossibility not only
compromises and undermines the internal security of the country, but equally betrayed a
profound lack of vision on the part of the political elite which itself is part of the security
problem.
and leadership – are sine quo non to any meaningful and viable strategy of maintaining
by Dudley Seers is the universal key to the general peace and security of any society in
The questions to ask about a country’s development are therefore: What has been
happening to poverty? What has been happening to unemployment? What has been
happening to inequality? If all three of these have declined from higher levels, then
beyond doubt this has been a period of development for the country concerned. If one
or two of these problems have been growing worse, especially if all three have, it
would be strange to call the result ‘development,’ even, if per capita income doubled.
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Today in Nigeria, one needs no Seers to observe that all these three indices are on the
manifestation of poor economic development, have worsened over the last decade. The
resultant effect of this is the growing level of general insecurity both of life and property
in the country.
level of the development of political institutions and leadership in a country. The place of
developed political institutions in security question is that they provide a ready and
vibrant platform upon which genuine aspirations of the people could be addressed. In this
regard, democracy has been found, among all other forms of government, to yield the
democracies such as that of Nigeria, the outcome has always been different. Over the last
ten years of democracy in Nigeria, the leadership has consistently failed to impact
positively on the lives of the citizenry. On the contrary, the political class evidently seems
people through bogus, anti-people and often violent policies and programmes. Diversion
of public resources for personal uses and outright looting of the public treasury by
politicians and other public officials are all manifestations of the underdeveloped nature
This situation can not provide the much needed respite from the prevailing level of
insecurity in the country. There is the need therefore not only to strengthen democratic
institutions and structures in the country, but adequately ensure the judicious use of
national resources towards improving the living conditions of the people. This would
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ensure the entrenchment of equality among all segments of the society; addresses the
question of unemployment and goes towards reducing incidences such as armed robbery
CONCLUSION:
The issue of internal security is far above and beyond the narrow militaristic thinking
which most policymakers reduced it. The consequence of this attitude to security in
Nigeria is the increased state of insecurity prevailing today in the country. The position of
this paper is that poverty contributes the most towards this state. Combating insecurity in
the police is severely constrained by many considerations. Not the least is the proclivity
to do with the fact that it engenders arms-race between criminal groups and the
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Alabi, D. O. (1997). Issues and Problems in the Nigerian Defence Policy in the 1990s: a Critical
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