Article by , Secretary of State for
International Development, originally published in the Times on 4
September 2017.
A young woman in northeast Nigeria was woken in her bed by the
blast of two suicide bombers. Looking down at herself covered in
blood she felt relief, thinking it was hers. Only then did she
realise that one of her four children was lying dead beside her.
Her story was one among many of the victims of Boko Haram, the
terrorist group that now calls itself Islamic State West Africa
Province. Scores have been murdered and many survivors are left
hungry, homeless and terribly injured. Babies’ bodies are
shutting down and mothers who have lost everything else are
fighting to keep them alive. These horrors feel a world away from
life in Britain. But we would be foolish to think they do not
touch us.
The fact is, a country such as Nigeria matters to the UK. There
is evidence to show that Nigerians make up the largest proportion
of migrants making the Mediterranean crossings to Europe. More
than 16,000 Nigerians have arrived in Italy via the central
Mediterranean route so far this year. We know that Nigeria is the
fourth largest source country of modern slavery to the UK and
that 875,500 Nigerians are living in modern slavery worldwide,
including in Britain. The terrorist attacks we have experienced
recently in European cities are a reminder that extremism
fostered far away can end up on our streets.
We cannot ignore the fact that what is happening abroad, whether
that is conflict, humanitarian disasters or grinding poverty and
lack of opportunity, has impacts that we feel here at home.
Global challenges such as mass migration, trafficking and disease
pay no attention to national borders.
When the UK takes a stand, as we did last week in Nigeria, by
taking action to provide lifesaving support for 1.5 million
people on the brink of famine, or by helping 100,000 boys and
girls to stay in school and build a brighter future, or simply by
giving a young man the basics that he needs and making him less
vulnerable to radicalisation, taxpayers can know that their money
is being spent not just on transforming the lives of some of the
world’s most vulnerable and impoverished people, but also on
creating a safer life in the UK.
If we were to stand back from this fight, we would be both
abandoning our moral responsibilities and allowing other
countries’ problems to come closer to our shores.