FG To End Importation Of Defence Equipment
The Federal Government has disclosed that it is laying the foundation to end the importation of defence and security equipment, with plans to produce all required assets locally within the next two to five years.
The Minister of State for Defence, Bello Matawalle, made this known on Thursday in Abuja at the unveiling of the DICON X-Shield light tactical armoured vehicle and a range of civilian armoured vehicles produced in Nigeria.
Matawalle, who was represented at the event by the Director-General of the Defence Industries Corporation of Nigeria, Major General Babatunde Alaya, said the current efforts at indigenous defence manufacturing marked only the starting point of a broader strategy aimed at full local production of military and security equipment.
“This is just the beginning. We will do more so that we can ensure that all required defence and security equipment are produced locally, and in two to five years’ time there will be no more importation,” he said.
He said the future of Nigeria’s defence and security capability would be built locally through indigenous innovation and strategic partnerships.
“The future of Nigeria’s defence and security capability will be built at home by Nigerian hands through trusted partnerships such as the one we celebrate today.
“By localising production, it will open pathways for export and regional leadership in defence manufacturing. It creates skilled jobs, transfers technical knowledge and conserves foreign exchange,” he said.
He said the unveiling of the armoured vehicles demonstrated the convergence of security needs, indigenous capacity, industrial expertise and commercial opportunity, noting that it was not just a product launch but a reflection of growing confidence in Nigeria’s technical competence.
According to him, DICON was established to drive indigenous defence manufacturing, reduce reliance on foreign supply chains and position Nigeria as a credible producer of military and security equipment.
He stressed that achieving this mandate required partnerships with private sector organisations with the technical expertise, discipline and long-term vision to support sustainable local production.

Olamilekan Adigun is a graduate of Mass Communication with years of experience in journalism embedded in uncovering human interest stories. He also prioritises accuracy and factual reportage of issues.







