The Deputy Speaker of the House of Representatives, Mr Benjamin Okezie Kalu, has urged Nigeria’s defence industry to deepen local capacity for building arms instead of relying on imports, while charging the financial sector to tighten its financial net against criminal and terrorist financial flows.
Speaking at a security meeting tagged “Nigeria People’s Strategic Conference and Defence Exhibition 2026” with the theme “Building a Modern Security Ecosystem: Integrating Private Sector Capacity into Nigeria’s National Security Architecture” in Abuja, Kalu said Nigeria must end dependence on foreign arms and build a homegrown defence ecosystem that creates jobs and reduces vulnerabilities.
The Deputy Speaker also called on the nation’s financial sector to strengthen due diligence and transaction monitoring to block all kinds of illicit funding.
He stressed that the conference must translate into binding commitments across all sectors.
He said the technology sector should provide platforms for intelligence sharing and early warning and tasked the civil society on bridging the gaps between communities and government, while the legislature will continue to provide legal scaffolding through constitutional review, appropriation, and oversight.
“Every sector represented in this room must leave with a specific, measurable role in Nigeria’s security architecture. The defence industry must deepen local capacity so that we do not import what we can produce. The technology sector must offer platforms for intelligence sharing and community early warning. The financial sector must tighten the checkpoints through which criminal and terrorist financing flows. The civil society must continue to build the bridges between communities and government that make sustainable peace possible.
“And the legislature, we will continue to provide the legal scaffolding on which all of this is built. We will continue to review the constitution where it needs reviewing. We will appropriate resources where resources are needed. We will provide oversight to ensure that what is promised is delivered. We will legislate not for public applause but for the protection of lives and the dignity of every Nigerian,” Mr Kalu said.
He noted that the House recently voted 289 to 2 in favour of a safer Nigeria through the State Police constitutional amendment, describing the near-unanimity as patriotic rather than partisan.
“I am proud to serve in an assembly that just two days ago voted 289 to 2 in favour of a safer Nigeria. That near-unanimity was not partisan. It was patriotic. And it must be matched by an equal unity of purpose in this room today.
“There is a Nigeria on the other side of this season. That Nigeria is not a promise. It is a project. A project that belongs to all of us; both the legislature and the executive, the uniform and the suit, the community and the corporation, the government and the governed,” he mentioned.
We are a people worth fighting for. This republic is worth building. And let this moment be the moment we decide, formally and finally, to build it together,” he said.
The Deputy Speaker also dismissed the feelings in some quarters that Nigeria was failing.
The event drew participants from the defence industry, financial institutions, civil society, and security agencies

