
Rethinking terrorism financing and democracy in Africa: The Nigeria case
Author(s) -
Friday E. Nkwede,
Joseph Okwesili Nkwede,
Bigben C. Ogbonna
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
ogirisi
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1597-474X
DOI - 10.4314/og.v16i1.9
Subject(s) - terrorism , democracy , politics , political science , spanish civil war , development economics , political economy , economic growth , finance , economics , law
Terrorism financing has become a threat to humanity and democracy in Africa. Most terrorist organizations in Africa need money to carry out their massacre activities, which threatens African democracy, political stability, and economic development. The wave of terrorism activities and terrorism financing in Africa have remained a major cause for concern. The pervasive widespread of terrorist attacks seem to have defile all situations. Apparently, in Nigeria, terrorist attack reports have become a daily menu. The lethal killings by Boko Haram in Nigeria can be likened to the era of the Nigerian Civil war. This paper therefore, compares and contrasts the terrorism financing vis-à-vis the nascent democracy in Africa with a focus on Nigerian cases of Boko Haram. Terrorism financing misrepresents democratic growth and economic development in Africa, which brought about a rise in terrorist widespread and negative financial growth and progress in Nigeria and Africa. The multi-dimensional of terrorist financing has brought difficulties to trace terrorist funds due to legitimize illegal sourcing of funds to terrorist accounts. The paper finds that the current wave of terrorism financing have made African democracy unstable and pathetically feeble.
Keywords: Terrorism, financing, security, democracy