James Entwistle
was sworn in as the United States Ambassador to Nigeria on October 28, last
year. Ambassador Entwistle spoke with reporters in Lagos yesterday on his
impression of Nigeria, the war against terror, the same-sex marriage
prohibition law and so on.
Impression of Nigeria before and now
I have been a student of Africa and African
history for a long time. I have always read a lot about Nigeria and in fact,
many, many years ago, I was a school teacher in Kenya in the 70s. One of the
books I had to teach to Kenyan students was Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe.
Put aside the image of some American trying to teach an African novel, I don’t
know if my students learnt anything or not, but that introduction to the
literature of Nigeria has remained with me ever since. I remember when I was
very young, we heard of the tragedy of the Biafran war and I have always stayed
with anything Nigerian and so on. I have always been interested by the two
religions, Christianity and Islam, how they get along. In other countries that
I have served in, there was this issue of if you have massive like Uranium or
copper or oil, how do you exploit the resources in a way that is good to the
people, which, of course, is a challenge for you. Having heard all that over
the years, I was very excited to come and see for myself. In the last three
months, my overwhelming impression is Nigerian people are intelligent. Every
conversation I have on any subject, (I am just coming from a roundtable
discussion on the power sector here), I have really been impressed by the
energy and the drive and I get this sense that Nigerian people are saying:
‘yes, we have challenges; things we have to deal with but we can do this. This
is our country. We will get this done.’ They appreciate help from outsiders and
they just have this very strong sense of pride that ‘this is our country. We
are going to get this right.’
Matching Nigeria’s
potentials with reality
Let me say that all these issues that you
mentioned of course are very big problems and I think we have to always
remember history in what happens in a country. Sometimes we tend to focus too
much on the past instead of the future and I am impressed by the creative
spirit of the Nigerian people as they address all these challenges. Now, the
things you touched on are huge. As I was getting ready to testify before the
Senate for my confirmation for this job, I was interested to read development
statistics, especially health statistics regarding Nigeria being one of the
worst in Africa and I thought how can that be in Nigeria? It is clear there are
huge challenges; that is the government’s responsibility, the government of
Nigeria’s responsibility. That said, development partners, such as the United
States, we stand ready to help in any way we can. We are hugely committed here,
especially the health sector, especially on the struggle against HIV/AIDS. As I
said I was just coming from a discussion on the power sector; all of these are
things that must move forward, but I think with the government, private sector
and foreign investors, these things can get done. The bottom line, I am a
proponent of Nigerian solution to Nigerian problem; yes, with support from
friends like us. You guys can do it. I am very confident of that.
Why Nigeria is important
to America
Nigeria gets more assistance from us every
year than Ghana and South Africa combined. In terms of why Nigeria is
important, you have one of the largest markets in Africa; you are huge; in the
gulf of Guinea, you are a significant oil and gas producer; you are one of the
largest democracies in Africa . All of these are things the United States of
America deeply cares about and they are parts of the reasons we have such a
rich partnership with you.
The Bi-National Commission
I have been struck in my short time here.
Almost every sector that I look at, health, education, security, take your
pick, the United States and Nigeria already have strong partnership. We have
lots of stuffs going on. So, I see my task as expanding the partnership,
building in it. You mentioned the Bi-National Commission, which we see as an
excellent device between our two countries, which creates an umbrella to
discuss issues. In a couple of weeks, we are hoping to have the next session of
the BNC in Abuja to focus on governance and transparency and issues like that.
So, it is a very useful mechanism for us our because it brings us together
across the table to discuss important issues. Obviously, one of the issues we
all pay attention to is your elections, which have been announced. I had a long
session with the chairman of INEC, Prof Jega the other day to discuss overall
how he sees things and what we can do to help with the elections. We are
working out the details of that. We will be very interested in perhaps helping
to train Nigerian election monitors to build their capacity and things like
that and in terms of the elections, what the United States wants to see in the
elections , we want to see the kind of transparency and credible elections the
Nigerian people want and deserve.
Designation of Boko Haram as a terrorist
organisation
I think what we were trying to do by
designating the Boko Haram and Ansaru as foreign terrorist organisations is,
first of all, it allows us to pay more attention to financial flows going out
of the U.S. I guess that is not a big issue with Boko Haram. Designation is
basically symbolic to make it clear that we stand by your country in this
challenge. I made it clear to President Goodluck Jonathan when I presented my
credentials to him and I have said it in public a number of times is that we
want Nigeria to win the war on terror. Now, there are several aspects of that.
There is the military aspect; there is the economic system aspect; there is
helping the civilian population; there is the aspect about having a policy of
transparency in the detention of Boko Haram suspects. All of these things fit
together into a successful counter-terrorism campaign and policy. I was very
pleased the other week in Abuja when we heard a session where some of our
counter-terrorism experts came in and this was done not in the spirit of
arrogance but in the spirit of humility: ‘look we have had counter insurgency
and terrorism challenges…’ Our experts came and sat with your experts sat and
shared ideas and see if they will be helpful here. That is the kind of things
we should be doing as partners and exactly the kind of things I will work to
continue while the ambassador here.
The bounty on Shekau
The reward for justice is a useful tool we
use to fight terror around the world sometimes. I’m not aware Shekau is dead.
It is very difficult to track him and figure out where he is, but, to my
knowledge, he is still alive. Again, it is very difficult to know. The
challenge of fighting terror is that you don’t lose your own soul when it comes
to human rights and you must maintain the rule of law…When you apprehend Boko
Haram suspects, you should take them into detention and treat them fairly and
find out: Were they in fact members of Boko Haram? Or just some guy who
happened to walk down the street at the wrong time? Carefully sort them out and
even when you have gotten the people you know are the bad guys, there is no
need to brutalise them. It is much better to treat them fairly and walk them
through the judicial system. Yes, it is hard, but do it that way…Part of the
challenge of counter-terrorism is that you are fighting an enemy who mixes with
the population and I am a civilian; I am not a military guy, but I have to
imagine that is one of the most difficult things for the military guys, to go
into a mixed setting like that, figure out who is a terrorist and who are the
innocent civilians. Carefully separating them is not easy. These are enormously
difficult thing to do and that is why we are trying to help your government do
better on this front as a friend, as a partner.
Winning the war on terror
Whether it is fighting terror or the war on
drugs or any of these international problems that cut across borders, no one
nation can do it by itself. To really get at Boko Haram, your government needs
to continue working with Cameroun and Chad because these guys cross the
borders. These are guys for whom international borders are largely meaningless.
The only way to deal with these guys is to collaborate with your neigbours and
relevant international organisations.
I think in my conversation with your
government and military, I think there is a growing concern over finding an
enemy who mixes with the civilian population. So, that needs to be a focus. I
think one needs to look at why did it start in the first place? What drew
people to this organisation in the first place? Was it lack of employment
opportunity? Was it education system? I am not sure what the reasons might be.
Sometimes it is hard to do but we need to ask why is it happening in our country
and what can we do better in our country to make sure that this type of thing
does not happen again. But we know that it is hard to look at yourself like
that, but sometimes in life you have to.
Extremism and poverty
In my experience over the years, there might
be not just one cause for a thing. It (extremism) can be driven by poverty,
lack of economic opportunities, lack of educational opportunities. Many of
these groups all over the world twist religions to promote violence, which none
of the great religions of the world like.
Break up of Nigeria
If this country is going to break up in 2015,
to me, I don’t see any sign of it. You have challenges in this country, but you
are moving forward towards a bright future. There is no issue that the country
might break up. Yes, your country had a devastating civil war just like my own
country. It almost tore us into two. I think both of our countries have learnt
how difficult it is to hold a country together and that has certainly been a
big factor in my country. The idea that Nigeria is going to fall apart in the
coming months, I am not sure where that idea is coming from.
Oil theft and U.S.
It is difficult to prove that (stolen crude
oil find their way to the U.S.) because the international financial market is
so amorphous. When you take oil and it goes out of the country, exactly where
it ends up is very difficult to determine. But what is clear is that there is
the issue of oil theft in this country…Reading about the Niger Delta before I
came into this country, I had this idea that oil bunkering was a very
clandestine, surreptitious activity…, but flying over the Delta in a helicopter
and you can see huge (illegal) bunkering operations. Everyone knows where it
is; everyone knows who is in it. It was quite an eye opener for me about how in
the open it is. Yesterday (Wednesday), I spent the afternoon with your navy,
looking at some trainings we are doing together and one of the observations we
had was that your navy is quite capable. They have what they need. We have
provided some over the years. They are well-trained. In addition, there are
some stations onshore, radar stations and other sort of things that can help
tell who is on the water. I think physically in terms of having the tools that
you need to prevent physical act, you are in pretty good shape. But of course,
the other issue is after a barrel of oil is pumped, where does the money go?
That is a much more complicated equation. What we have said to your government
is that we see this as a Nigerian problem, but one that has a very clear
international element. If your investigation uncovers a money trail that it may
head towards the United States, then please share that information with us and
we will be delighted to have our law enforcement officers look into that.
Stolen finds stashed abroad
If there is a clear evidence that stolen
money finds its way into the United States, we want to know about it.
Obviously, I cannot go into specific visa cases, but corruption is a factor and
sometimes some Nigerians did not receive U.S. visa or had their U.S. visas
revoked because of their involvement in corrupt activities. I cannot go into
details. We have very strict privacy laws… Corruption begins to end, especially
when the average guy who does the right thing; pay his tax and goes to work
every day begin to say: ‘Wait a minute. I want to know what you are doing with
the taxes we are paying’. That is what begins to make a difference.
Bringing back stolen fund
First it is up to your law enforcement
agencies and when they see it they should point it in our direction so that we
can investigate. Second, citizens like you should ask where all the money is
going into. That kind of civil society effort. I think it is also about using
effective watchdog, like your EFCC. Also, you have to do quite a lot in the
public arena.
African Growth Opportunity Act (AGOA)
I think AGOA will continue to live on … I
think every step of the way we will continue to review it as you have to do
with every programme…Here in Nigeria, you know it is mainly oil at benefits. We
will like to see other export sector of the Nigerian economy begin to take
advantage of AGOA.
Same-sex prohibition law
We have tremendous respect for the
sovereignty of other nations. Now, on the same-sex marriage bill, let me be very
clear: same-sex marriage is a controversial issue all over the world, including
in my country. I think it is now legal in 17 or 18 states; that means it is not
legal in two-third of the country. May be someday a federal court will make it
the law of the land, but for now it is not. So, we understand that same-sex
marriage is a very controversial issue. Quite frankly, the issue of what
defines a marriage in Nigeria should be left to the Nigerian people. I think
even before this bill was passed the Marriage Act specified that a marriage is
between a man and a woman. That is a Nigerian issue, but as a friend of
Nigeria, what worries us about this law is that,( I am not a lawyer) but when I
read this law it looks to me that it puts restriction on freedom of assembly
and the freedom of expression, which, I think, U.S. journalists will be
particularly concerned about. I understand the issue of homosexuality is a hot
topic here, but if you can no longer talk about it, if you can even meet to
talk about it, it means to me it is a slippery slope. What is the next topic
you will no longer be able to talk about or meet about? I think in a hard-won
democracy like yours, when you start limiting the freedoms, it is a very
worrisome thing. Take the bill, take out the word gay, put in the word
‘journalist’, how do you feel about that? The other point I will make, we are
very concerned as a huge HIV/AIDS partner. Since the inception of our PEPFAR
programme, I think we have spent about three and a half billion dollars in this
country on the struggle against HIV/AIDS. We and many partners were concerned
that…it might affect people coming for HIV/AIDS treatment and that kind of
thing. I was very pleased the other day that NACA, I think the director came
out to clarify that nothing in this bill should be misconstrued to mean people
should not seek healthcare. So, I was very glad to see that. I was very
concerned. Finally, the other thing that concerns me is that sadly there have
been incidences around this country where the bill has been used to justify
violence against gays, breaking into their homes, things like these and I have
to think that all well-meaning Nigerians, regardless of what you think of
homosexual conduct, you have to condemn this kind of thing, that kind of violence
against any Nigerian.
Mr ambassador you spoke very well but to say US government doesn't knw if most of Nigeria stolen oil comes into the US I beg to disagree US govt are very much involved in the business.As for the issue of Gays Nigerian govt ve taken its stand on the issue and we expect u to respect that as we respect some the decision of some states to legalise it in ur country.Welcome to Nigeria
ReplyDeleteWe av borrowed enough of Ɣõu̶̲̥̅̊r cultures,but as for the Gay we stand boldly to say "NO" we are not interested how Ɣõu̶̲̥̅̊ see it
ReplyDeleteThank you for acknowledging Nigerians are intelligent. Partnership of mutual respect is what we want and if truely you respect our right to enact our own laws as a sovereign nation then stop threatening us with your aid. The same-sex marriage act has come to stay, this is what we are, our belief, our culture as the Almighty creator made it and wants it, not what any other man or country wants. We can't completely throw away who we are to pls some foreign partners. "I'm here to ask for practical help as friend and equal" - Aung San Suu Kyi, addressing the British parliament on the 21/01/2012. So deal with us as equals and not subordinates. Welcome to Nigeria Mr ambassador!!
ReplyDeleteLEAVE US ALONE!!
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