The United States government on Thursday donated 24 Mine-Resistant Armour Protected, MRAP, vehicles to the Nigerian military.
Presenting
the armoured vehicles worth N2.2 billion to the army in Lagos, the
representative of the US government, Patrick Doyle said, “As part of the
continuing support from United States to the government, and the people
of Nigeria to defeat Boko Haram, I am proud to stand here today as the
representative of the US secretary of defence, Ashton Carter, and
commander and the representative of the US Africa command, General David
Rodriguez, to present the donation of this 24 Mine-Resistant
Armor-Protected (MRAP) vehicles to the Nigerian army.
The 24
vehicles cost $11million, the other eight cost $7.4 million.”
Doyle stated that the equipment needed to be serviced and fixed with good spare parts before they could start operating.
“The
repairs of the vehicle is up to the Nigerian government to do; they can
repair them on their own if they have the facility to do that, but of
course, the spare parts are very particular to this vehicle and we have
been in discussion with the army previously and we are working out the
modalities of how we will get those parts to them.
“They will have to order those parts from the United States and we will work out those conditions.
“Nigeria
is also in the process of receiving eight more of this vehicle through
the same programme, which is called the excess defence article program,
designed to transfer excess US military equipment to partner nation.
Speaking with newsmen, Barry Ndiomu, a General representing the chief
of army staff, Lt Gen Tukur Yusuf Buratai said the equipment will help
in protecting Nigerian troops fighting Boko Haram insurgents in the
north-eastern part of the country.
“The MRAP equipment will
protect our troops, especially against the menace of improvised
explosive devices, without any doubt it will help. It will also help us
to move the men in a manner in which we will probably have less or fewer
casualties.
“We have our own technical outfit, the Nigerian army
electrical maintenance engineers; they have workshop which is the SVP
plant in Bauchi.
“The vehicles will be moved there as soon as
possible, they will make the necessary assessment and I believe with the
ongoing discussions with our American partners, the spear parts should
be made available and they will be repaired,” he said.
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