This is not good enough for our dear country Nigeria.
The Fund for Peace, a Washington D.C.-based non-profit, non-governmental research and educational institution, has ranked Nigeria as one of the world's most unstable countries.
The Fund for Peace, a Washington D.C.-based non-profit, non-governmental research and educational institution, has ranked Nigeria as one of the world's most unstable countries.
In its 12th annual Fragile States Index (FSI) released wednesday, Fund
for Peace ranked Nigeria alongside war-torn Afghanistan, Haiti, Iraqi, Guinea,
Pakistan, Burundi and Zimbabwe.
It stated that the situation in Nigeria deteriorated in 2015 when
compared with 2014.
Fund for Peace cited the economic downturn occasioned by the fall in oil
price and the activities of Boko Haram in the North-eastern part of Nigeria for
classifying Nigeria among countries where peace deteriorated in 2015.
Nigeria was also placed among countries classified as "high
alert" meaning that the situation in Nigeria had worsened compared to the
previous year.
This category is just one level shy of the "very high alert"
which comprises countries like Syria, Somalia, Central Africa Republic, Congo
Democratic Republic, Yemen, Chad, Sudan and South Sudan where peace had totally
collapsed.
The 2016 FSI, the 12th edition of the annual index, comprises data
collected between January 1, 2015 and December 31, 2015 -- thus certain
well-publicised events that have occurred since January 1, 2016 are not covered
by the 2016 index.
The index is an annual ranking of 178 nations based on their levels of
stability and the pressures they face.
The index is based on the Fund for Peace's proprietary Conflict
Assessment System Tool (CAST) analytical platform. Based on comprehensive
social science methodology, data from three primary sources are triangulated
and subjected to critical review to obtain final scores for the FSI.
Millions of documents are analysed every year, and by applying highly
specialised search parameters, scores are apportioned for every country based
on 12 key political, social and economic indicators and over 100 sub-indicators
that are the result of years of painstaking expert social science research.
In an explanation note, the Fund for Peace, after making reference to
Syria, cited Nigeria as another example where destabilising cross-border
effects could be seen.
It said: "Beset by a tumultuous electoral campaign in 2015 that saw
the administration of Goodluck Jonathan unseated by the return to power of
Muhammadu Buhari, Nigeria's standing in the Fragile States Index has worsened,
as the economy is deeply impacted by falling oil prices and the north of the
country is terrorised by Boko Haram insurgency."
It stated that like the crisis in Syria, pressures had bled across
Nigeria's borders to its neighbours.
It categorised Nigeria's neighbour, Cameroun, as the second most
worsened country in 2016.
Cameroun had seen a marked increase in cross-border violence perpetrated
by Boko Haram.
The organisation observed that Boko Haram has widened its campaign
beyond Nigeria's borders and is kidnapping and ambushing Camerounian security
forces, as well as targeting Camerounian civilians.
It said: "Cameroun is also experiencing increasing pressures from
Nigerian refugees fleeing into Cameroun to escape the violence in their own country,
and in turn, placing intense pressure on food and medical supplies in Cameroun.

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