Mills disclosed this after meeting with the Nigeria
Governors Forum in Abuja late Wednesday.
He assured that if any evidence is found that USAID funds
Boko Haram or any terrorist group, the US government will work with the
Nigerian government to investigate the matter.
He said, “Let me be clear— there is no friend of Nigeria
stronger in condemning Boko Haram’s violence and disregard for human life than
the United States.
“We have designated Boko Haram as a foreign terrorist
organisation since 2013, blocking the group from transferring assets to the US
and allowing us to arrest and seize its members.
“We cooperate in investigations with the Nigerian
government. I can assure you that we have strict policies and procedures to
ensure that USAID funding or any other US assistance, whether from USAID, the
Department of Defence, or the State Department, is not diverted to terrorist
groups like Boko Haram.
“There is absolutely no evidence of such diversion, and if
we ever had evidence that any programme funding was being misused by Boko
Haram, we would immediately investigate it with our Nigerian partners.”
Recall that on February 13, Congressman Scott Perry accused
USAID of funding terrorist groups, including Boko Haram.
The lawmaker, Perry, a Republican from Pennsylvania, made
this statement during the first hearing of the Subcommittee on Delivering on
Government Efficiency.
“Who gets some of that money? Does that name ring a bell to
anybody in the room? Because your money, your money, $697 million annually,
plus the shipments of cash funds in Madrasas, ISIS, Al-Qaeda, Boko Haram, ISIS
Khorasan, and terrorist training camps. That’s what it’s funding,” he said.
The claim had sparked a reaction on the role of USAID in
Nigeria and globally.
Consequently, on Wednesday, the Nigerian Senate called on
the National Security Adviser, Nuhu Ribadu, along with the heads of the
National Intelligence Agency and the Defence Intelligence Agency, to address
allegations of terrorist funding involving USAID.