Sarah Sewall, the United States Under Secretary of State for Civilian Security, Democracy and Human Rights on Wednesday, said that corruption is hindering the fight to put an end to the radical Islamist sect, Boko Haram, an international media reported.
Sewall who was with a Pentagon top Africa official, Amanda Dory made the assertion during a hearing at the House Foreign Affairs Committee.
She said that the insurgency being experienced in the North-Eastern part of Nigeria would have been ended if the Nigeria military had overcome entrenched corruption and incompetence.
The US official told New York Times that the Nigeria military can only rescue the over 234 abducted school girls from Chibok, Borno State, when they completely flush out corruption.
She recalled and noted that despite the country's $5.8 billion security budget for 2014, it was appalling to discover that the army lacks the needed apparatus to combat insurgents.
"Corruption prevents supplies as basic as bullets and transport vehicles from reaching the front lines of the struggle against Boko Haram".
She further revealed to the committee that the Nigerian soldiers morale were low, causing desertions to be very rampant in the 7th Army Division fighting the Boko Haram sect.
When one of the lawmakers asked her for an update about the abducted girls location and welfare, Sewall said: "Given time, I am hopeful that we will make progress."
It would be recalled that on May 13 in Abuja, Sewall explained the US level of involvement in the rescue mission, when she noted that their personnel would not be combative. She also said it was left for the Nigeria government to decide either to swap the kidnapped girls for detained terrorists members as offered by Abubakar Shekau, the leader of the deadly sect.
Meanwhile, Dory in her testimony, said that Pentagon expressed optimism that the girls might have been broken into several smaller groups.
"They may or may not all be in Nigeria," she said, adding that "Nigerian military's heavy-handed tactics with Boko Haram risked further harming and alienating local populations".
Boko Haram which has its strong hold in the northeastern part of the country, Cameroon and Niger, has carried out several attacks and bombings which have claimed thousands of innocent souls in their quest to Islamise the country and put an end to what they described as westernisation.
The sect on April 14, abducted over 234 female students from Government Girls Secondary School, Chibok, Borno State. They were also responsible for Tuesday's twin bomb blast in Jos, the capital of Plateau State where over 200 lives were lost. The militants also killed about 29 people in a recent attack launched in Alagarno village in the same state.
The sect's menace has however, attracted the attention of international communities like France, U.S, China, Israel among others, whom have all volunteered to help the Nigerian Government in flushing them out as well as rescuing the kidnapped school girls.

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