Defence Corporation Act: Lawyer hails Tinubu, says Nigerians yearning for results
According to him, locally producing military equipment in the nation is the wisest and right way to go, considering the current economic challenges.
A Lagos-based constitution lawyer, Mr. Jide Ologun, has applauded President Bola Tinubu for assenting to the Defence Industries Corporation of Nigeria Bill 2023, saying Nigerians are yearning for results.
Ologun, a former chairman of the Nigerian Institute of Public Relations (NIPR) Ikeja Branch and public affairs analyst, made the remark in an interview with the newsmen on Saturday in Lagos while reacting to Tinubu’s assent on the bill.
According to him, locally producing military equipment in the nation is the wisest and right way to go, considering the current economic challenges.
“In a season when Nigeria is under a huge and negative burden of debt, particularly driven by imported goods and services consumption, the best initiative is that which revives local production for local consumption.
“This will eventually be groomed to engage the exportation space, by virtue of which we earn foreign currencies, with resultant relief for the FOREX crises currently experienced by our economy.
“Regrettably, huge sums of money got channelled to the purchase of Tucano jets, military helicopters, and ammunition from abroad,” Ologun said.
The legal practitioner and social commentator, however, decried that the Petroleum Industry Act, though applauded on arrival, was yet to profit the nation.
He urged the government to redouble efforts at making many of the reforms yield results quickly in the socio-economic lives of the people.
According to him, the Act, if properly executed, will also assist in reducing insecurity through a cost-effective fight against terrorism and insurgency.
Ologun wished the president the best as he steered the affairs of the nation.
NAN recalls that Tinubu, on Thursday, assented to the bill that repealed the previous iteration of the Defence Industries Corporation of Nigeria Act.
The Defence Industries Corporation of Nigeria was established on Aug. 1, 1964, by an Act of Parliament and revised as the DICON Act in Chapter 94 of the Laws of the Federation, 2004.
Sponsored by the Chairman of the House of Representatives Committee on Defence, Babajimi Benson (APC-Lagos State), the new iteration empowered the DICON to operate, maintain, and control subsidiaries and ordnance factories to manufacture, store, and dispose of ordnance and ancillary stores and materials.
The Act also made for the establishment of the Defence Industry Technology, Research, and Development Institute to create an elaborate scientific and research-based technological foundation for Nigeria’s defence industry.
The Act provided a comprehensive regulatory framework for the regulation of the manufacturing, distribution, storage, and disposal of defence articles in Nigeria.
It also encouraged the development of a nuanced financing architecture that enabled private capital to facilitate research, development, and production in the defence sector in a transparent and predictable fashion.