Vice
President Kwesi Amissah-Arthur has challenged security experts meeting
in Accra to come out with strategies that could offer state security
forces the required advantage to deal with emerging threats.
He
said the menace from non-state actors such as terrorists and insurgents
have made it essential for nation-states to share experiences so that
they could identify the right policies and systems to tackle the
problem.
Vice President Amissah-Arthur made the call when he
opened the 2015 Command, Control, Communication, Computer, Intelligence,
Surveillance, Reconnaissance (C4ISR) and African Homeland Security
Conference and Exhibition in Accra.
The two-day conference,
which is being attended by security professionals from Greece, South
Africa , Nigeria, Togo among others would discuss topics such as
delivering C4ISR capabilities to troops participating in Peace Support
Operations, establishing a maritime security system in West Africa and
fighting terrorism especially learning the proper lessons from
operations against Boko Haram.
It is also expected that
participants at the conference would offer great insight into senior
level decision-making, especially the networking and information-sharing
opportunities for the benefit of everybody.
President
Amissah-Arthur stated that traditionally military structures have been
very hierarchical however the basis for this chain of command have been
undermined by modern innovations in computer and communications that
have made redundant the monopoly of information and their strict
categorisation and sharing.
He said an emerging emphasis on
operations other than war may require more flexible non-traditional
organisational structures such that the volume of information generated
could be processed and disseminated to enhance command and control.
He said increasingly the country’s military forces are involved in
operations other than war such as peacekeeping, counter terrorism and
humanitarian relief, search and rescue operations and in flood and
disaster control.
Major General Richard Opoku-Adusei, Chief of
Army Staff stated that the country is happy to be associated with the
conference because it seeks collaborate defence and homeland security
professionals to integrate intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance
capabilities to achieve control over a spectrum of defence, terrorists
threats and transnational crime.
He said in recent times
security challenges such as drug trafficking, organizsd crime, human
trafficking and terrorism among others demands new approach to security
operations, adding that the information technology sector is a critical
partner in confronting these challenges.
Maj Gen Opoku-Adusei
also stated that the issue of homeland security has become a major
concern because of globalisation and advance in technology have driven
unprecedented increases in innovation, competitiveness and economic
growth around the world.
He said the digital economy is booming, creating new jobs and opportunities the nation could not have imagined a decade ago.
He said the economic platforms of the future are increasingly online
adding that with this new digital economy, comes new threats.
Maj Gen Opoku-Adusei stated that the national and economic security of
the country depends on the reliable functioning of critical
infrastructure, like internet, roads, power grids and water supply
systems.
He said interestingly, “our adversaries equally employ ICT to disable the platforms provided for national economic survival”.
He therefore called on the participants attending the conference to
examine policies that could define the framework for C4ISR architecture
that militaries could adopt to enhance interoperability and efficient
utilisation of systems. |
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