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Showing posts with label Nigerian Army. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nigerian Army. Show all posts

JAILED, Demoted; 2 Soldiers Who Tortured Cripple In Onitsha

JAILED, Demoted; 2 Soldiers Who Tortured Cripple In Onitsha

JAILED, Demoted; 2 Soldiers Who Tortured Cripple In Onitsha
The Nigerian Army has demoted two soldiers, Cpl. Bature Samuel and Cpl. Abdulazeez Usman of 82 Provost Company in Onitsha, Anambra, to Private for human rights abuse

The Nigerian Army spokesman, Brig.-Gen. Sani Usman, made this known in a statement in Abuja on Friday.

Usman said the demoted soldiers on Feb. 7, maltreated a physically challenged person, Mr Chijioke Uraku, on the street of Onitsha, Anambra, for allegedly wearing Army camouflage uniform.


Usman said they were arrested, summarily tried on two counts and found guilty.

“Consequently, both have been sentenced to reduction in rank from Corporal to Private Soldiers and 21 days imprisonment with Hard Labour, respectively.

“It includes forfeiture of 21 days pay to the Federal Government of Nigeria.

“The Nigerian Army has also reached out to the victim of their unjustifiable assault, Mr. Chijoke Uraku (alias CJ), as widely reported by the media.

“We wish to reiterate our avowed determination to ensure that troops conduct themselves in the most orderly and professional manner at all times.

“Any act of indiscipline would not be tolerated,” he said.

NAN
JAILED, Demoted; 2 Soldiers Who Tortured Cripple In Onitsha
The Nigerian Army has demoted two soldiers, Cpl. Bature Samuel and Cpl. Abdulazeez Usman of 82 Provost Company in Onitsha, Anambra, to Private for human rights abuse

The Nigerian Army spokesman, Brig.-Gen. Sani Usman, made this known in a statement in Abuja on Friday.

Usman said the demoted soldiers on Feb. 7, maltreated a physically challenged person, Mr Chijioke Uraku, on the street of Onitsha, Anambra, for allegedly wearing Army camouflage uniform.


Usman said they were arrested, summarily tried on two counts and found guilty.

“Consequently, both have been sentenced to reduction in rank from Corporal to Private Soldiers and 21 days imprisonment with Hard Labour, respectively.

“It includes forfeiture of 21 days pay to the Federal Government of Nigeria.

“The Nigerian Army has also reached out to the victim of their unjustifiable assault, Mr. Chijoke Uraku (alias CJ), as widely reported by the media.

“We wish to reiterate our avowed determination to ensure that troops conduct themselves in the most orderly and professional manner at all times.

“Any act of indiscipline would not be tolerated,” he said.

NAN

The Uniqueness in 2017 Armed Forces Remembrance Day, By Uche John Madu

The Uniqueness in 2017 Armed Forces Remembrance Day, By Uche John Madu

buhari at 2017 armed forces day
“We do not know this hero’s name. We do not know where he was born. We do not know where he lived and when he chose to leave the comfort of his home to go in defense of our territorial integrity. His, was an assignment motivated by the love for the nation, and ethnic biases and other little fears were not issues he concerned himself with. - Akwa Ibom state Governor Udom Emmanuel appreciating the sacrifices of officers and men of the Nigerian Armed Forces in a speech after the laying of wreath in his state for the 2017 commemoration of Armed Forces Remembrance Day in Uyo.


Ordinarily, nothing is striking on January 15 of every year, the day set aside to celebrate the gallant officers and men of the military, wrapped as Armed Forces Remembrance Day. Across Nigeria, it is always the same boring and lifeless speeches of state governors, often delivered by cronies. The week-long activity terminates with the laying of wreath for the Unknown Soldier or launching of emblems and token donations to legionnaires.


The monotony of the actions predicts the pattern of the next event. However, the 2017 Armed Forces Remembrance Day impinged itself on the psyche of Nigerians differently. Across the nooks and crannies of the country, the lips of Nigerians never ceased quivering with songs of praises over the conquest and defeat of Boko Haram terrorists. It overshadowed and brightened the customary ceremonies associated with the celebration. Speeches from personalities of all hues, engagingly and emotionally amplified the essence of the 2017 Remembrance Day as unique.

Nigeria is a country that has survived a nearly three-year civil war, when troops battled in the jungles and forests to preserve the unity and peace of the nation. Now battling insurgency, the Armed Forces Remembrance Day is routinely celebrated. Legionnaires, serving military personnel, government at all levels, families of fallen heroes, leaders of all shades and indeed, the entire humanity anxiously look forward to this day.

To give it a special coloration, Nigerians have captured it as “Armed Forces Remembrance Day and Appeal Week,” which exposes the intention to plead welfare for the courageous officers and men of the Armed Forces who have sacrificed their lives to preserve, protect and defend the territorial integrity and sovereignty of Nigeria. The Day is marked with a lot of professed concern, especially by governments at all levels.

But the 2017 edition of the Armed Forces Remembrance Day was observed in Nigeria very uniquely and quite different from preceding ones. Both at the state and the federal level, outside the usual eulogies of gallantry, valour and token donations to families of fallen heroes and heroines, what coloured the celebration was the recurring preoccupation of every Nigerian with the joy and happiness over soldiers' conquest of terrorism in the country.

The Nigerian Army under the leadership of the Chief of Army Staff (COAS) Lt.Gen. Tukur Yusufu Buratai set the tone and the mood by releasing 257 Boko Haram detainees cleared of any connection with insurgents. It was a profound statement about the success of the anti-terrorism campaigns in Nigeria’s Northeast and the country generally.

As soldiers celebrated the Day in camps on the field, the Theatre Commander of Operation Lafiya Dole, Gen. Lucky Irabor said, “The 257 Boko Haram detainees have been screened and found to be innocent. The Army Day celebrations have afforded us the opportunity to free them to mark the occasion.”

Borno state Governor Kashim Shettima, who is the metaphor of the horror and sorrows of Boko Haram insurgency exploded in excitement, declaring that the military has made the 2017 Armed Forces Remembrance Day unique, by its demolition of Sambisa Forest, the dreaded terrorists camp zero.
Shettima stated, “We must be committed to ensure that the labours of our heroes past are not in vain. I commend the Nigerian military and other security agencies for wiping out terrorists from Sambisa Forest. In fact, it makes this year’s remembrance ceremony unique.”

Senate President, Senator Bukola Saraki also paid glowing tributes to the departed officers and men of the Armed Forces, but emphatically pledged support to the military, as he congratulated; "President Muhammadu Buhari and all the members of the military for the progress they have made in routing the Boko Haram insurgents out of the North East and restoring peace and stability.”

A pleasantly shocked Saraki added, “Nobody would have imagined where we would have been if our military do not rise to the occasion every time that we face threats of internal and external aggression. These men continue to face the fire to ensure that the people of the North-eastern part of the country are not subjected to the unreasonable dictates of Boko Haram insurgents.”

Echoes of troops subjugation of terrorists also resonated in Nigeria’s Southern state of Osun. Governor, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola who launched the 2017 Emblem of the Armed Forces Remembrance Day, relived the pains and anguish of families of fallen heroes and heroines, but only felt emotional fulfilment when he devoted time to chorus lullabies for soldiers in the counter-insurgency war.

He stated, “Our soldiers also fought a 30-month Nigerian Civil War which kept the country as one and have been saddled with the responsibility of putting down various insurgencies in the country, with the current efforts at extirpating the militancy in the Niger Delta and terrorism in the North East.”

According to him, Nigeria’s courageous soldiers “fought bravely, and under a new godly and committed leadership, they have been able to defend the territorial integrity of our fatherland.”

Governor Udom Emmanuel simply said, “We must commend them for defending our national interest and the unity of our nation. Let us never forget that those that they are fighting against are murderous bunch with no respect for the sanctity of the human lives or their God’s given rights. Let us not forget that they are defending our democracy. Let this be a day of national consecration when all Nigerians would pray that this evil of Boko Haram we see today we shall see no more in our shores.”

In faraway Katsina state, Governor Aminu Bello Masari sermonized peace, denounced violence, but expressed happiness that Boko Haram insurgency which appeared intractable before now has been subdued by Nigerian soldiers.

Masari said: “Within one and half years, the Nigerian Armed Forces has shown that what Nigerians went through was akin to civil war but Buhari pulled the nation out of the challenges.”

In Port Harcourt, Rivers state, the irrepressible and opposition Governor Nyesom Wike addressed legionnaires and families of fallen heroes and heroines, but remained on the same page with all Nigerians, as he loudly endorsed the recent successes recorded in the North-East against terrorists. To him, it is an indication that the Armed Forces were committed to a peaceful Nigeria.

From Lagos state, Governor Akinwunmi Ambode also appreciated the sacrifices of soldiers in quashing insurgency saying, “Officers and Men of the Nigerian Armed Forces are on the battlefield. They have continued to demonstrate bravery, courage and valour in order to protect the sovereignty and territorial integrity of our nation. They do this on our behalf that we may continue to live in peace and security.”

Speaking under the theme “Appreciating the Resilience of the Nigerian Armed Forces", President Buhari, who was represented by the Vice President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo paid glowing tributes to the valour and sacrifices of the military in defeating terrorism in Nigeria.

Buhari touchingly said in appreciation of troops; “As a nation we are grateful to our loyal and gallant troops for ensuring that terrorism and hate do not prevail in our land and doing so with such commitment. To their families we owe an even greater debt of gratitude and a permanent duty and promise that we will not forget.”

The President implored Nigerians to appreciate the sacrifices and services the Nigerian military has rendered to the nation by procuring and wearing the Armed Forces Remembrance emblem with dignified pride. He urged Nigerians to “donate very generously in support of our veterans and families of our fallen heroes. This would show that we appreciate their sacrifices and services to the survival of our dear Nation and fatherland”

Madu contributed this piece from the Badagry Leadership Institute, Lagos.
buhari at 2017 armed forces day
“We do not know this hero’s name. We do not know where he was born. We do not know where he lived and when he chose to leave the comfort of his home to go in defense of our territorial integrity. His, was an assignment motivated by the love for the nation, and ethnic biases and other little fears were not issues he concerned himself with. - Akwa Ibom state Governor Udom Emmanuel appreciating the sacrifices of officers and men of the Nigerian Armed Forces in a speech after the laying of wreath in his state for the 2017 commemoration of Armed Forces Remembrance Day in Uyo.


Ordinarily, nothing is striking on January 15 of every year, the day set aside to celebrate the gallant officers and men of the military, wrapped as Armed Forces Remembrance Day. Across Nigeria, it is always the same boring and lifeless speeches of state governors, often delivered by cronies. The week-long activity terminates with the laying of wreath for the Unknown Soldier or launching of emblems and token donations to legionnaires.


The monotony of the actions predicts the pattern of the next event. However, the 2017 Armed Forces Remembrance Day impinged itself on the psyche of Nigerians differently. Across the nooks and crannies of the country, the lips of Nigerians never ceased quivering with songs of praises over the conquest and defeat of Boko Haram terrorists. It overshadowed and brightened the customary ceremonies associated with the celebration. Speeches from personalities of all hues, engagingly and emotionally amplified the essence of the 2017 Remembrance Day as unique.

Nigeria is a country that has survived a nearly three-year civil war, when troops battled in the jungles and forests to preserve the unity and peace of the nation. Now battling insurgency, the Armed Forces Remembrance Day is routinely celebrated. Legionnaires, serving military personnel, government at all levels, families of fallen heroes, leaders of all shades and indeed, the entire humanity anxiously look forward to this day.

To give it a special coloration, Nigerians have captured it as “Armed Forces Remembrance Day and Appeal Week,” which exposes the intention to plead welfare for the courageous officers and men of the Armed Forces who have sacrificed their lives to preserve, protect and defend the territorial integrity and sovereignty of Nigeria. The Day is marked with a lot of professed concern, especially by governments at all levels.

But the 2017 edition of the Armed Forces Remembrance Day was observed in Nigeria very uniquely and quite different from preceding ones. Both at the state and the federal level, outside the usual eulogies of gallantry, valour and token donations to families of fallen heroes and heroines, what coloured the celebration was the recurring preoccupation of every Nigerian with the joy and happiness over soldiers' conquest of terrorism in the country.

The Nigerian Army under the leadership of the Chief of Army Staff (COAS) Lt.Gen. Tukur Yusufu Buratai set the tone and the mood by releasing 257 Boko Haram detainees cleared of any connection with insurgents. It was a profound statement about the success of the anti-terrorism campaigns in Nigeria’s Northeast and the country generally.

As soldiers celebrated the Day in camps on the field, the Theatre Commander of Operation Lafiya Dole, Gen. Lucky Irabor said, “The 257 Boko Haram detainees have been screened and found to be innocent. The Army Day celebrations have afforded us the opportunity to free them to mark the occasion.”

Borno state Governor Kashim Shettima, who is the metaphor of the horror and sorrows of Boko Haram insurgency exploded in excitement, declaring that the military has made the 2017 Armed Forces Remembrance Day unique, by its demolition of Sambisa Forest, the dreaded terrorists camp zero.
Shettima stated, “We must be committed to ensure that the labours of our heroes past are not in vain. I commend the Nigerian military and other security agencies for wiping out terrorists from Sambisa Forest. In fact, it makes this year’s remembrance ceremony unique.”

Senate President, Senator Bukola Saraki also paid glowing tributes to the departed officers and men of the Armed Forces, but emphatically pledged support to the military, as he congratulated; "President Muhammadu Buhari and all the members of the military for the progress they have made in routing the Boko Haram insurgents out of the North East and restoring peace and stability.”

A pleasantly shocked Saraki added, “Nobody would have imagined where we would have been if our military do not rise to the occasion every time that we face threats of internal and external aggression. These men continue to face the fire to ensure that the people of the North-eastern part of the country are not subjected to the unreasonable dictates of Boko Haram insurgents.”

Echoes of troops subjugation of terrorists also resonated in Nigeria’s Southern state of Osun. Governor, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola who launched the 2017 Emblem of the Armed Forces Remembrance Day, relived the pains and anguish of families of fallen heroes and heroines, but only felt emotional fulfilment when he devoted time to chorus lullabies for soldiers in the counter-insurgency war.

He stated, “Our soldiers also fought a 30-month Nigerian Civil War which kept the country as one and have been saddled with the responsibility of putting down various insurgencies in the country, with the current efforts at extirpating the militancy in the Niger Delta and terrorism in the North East.”

According to him, Nigeria’s courageous soldiers “fought bravely, and under a new godly and committed leadership, they have been able to defend the territorial integrity of our fatherland.”

Governor Udom Emmanuel simply said, “We must commend them for defending our national interest and the unity of our nation. Let us never forget that those that they are fighting against are murderous bunch with no respect for the sanctity of the human lives or their God’s given rights. Let us not forget that they are defending our democracy. Let this be a day of national consecration when all Nigerians would pray that this evil of Boko Haram we see today we shall see no more in our shores.”

In faraway Katsina state, Governor Aminu Bello Masari sermonized peace, denounced violence, but expressed happiness that Boko Haram insurgency which appeared intractable before now has been subdued by Nigerian soldiers.

Masari said: “Within one and half years, the Nigerian Armed Forces has shown that what Nigerians went through was akin to civil war but Buhari pulled the nation out of the challenges.”

In Port Harcourt, Rivers state, the irrepressible and opposition Governor Nyesom Wike addressed legionnaires and families of fallen heroes and heroines, but remained on the same page with all Nigerians, as he loudly endorsed the recent successes recorded in the North-East against terrorists. To him, it is an indication that the Armed Forces were committed to a peaceful Nigeria.

From Lagos state, Governor Akinwunmi Ambode also appreciated the sacrifices of soldiers in quashing insurgency saying, “Officers and Men of the Nigerian Armed Forces are on the battlefield. They have continued to demonstrate bravery, courage and valour in order to protect the sovereignty and territorial integrity of our nation. They do this on our behalf that we may continue to live in peace and security.”

Speaking under the theme “Appreciating the Resilience of the Nigerian Armed Forces", President Buhari, who was represented by the Vice President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo paid glowing tributes to the valour and sacrifices of the military in defeating terrorism in Nigeria.

Buhari touchingly said in appreciation of troops; “As a nation we are grateful to our loyal and gallant troops for ensuring that terrorism and hate do not prevail in our land and doing so with such commitment. To their families we owe an even greater debt of gratitude and a permanent duty and promise that we will not forget.”

The President implored Nigerians to appreciate the sacrifices and services the Nigerian military has rendered to the nation by procuring and wearing the Armed Forces Remembrance emblem with dignified pride. He urged Nigerians to “donate very generously in support of our veterans and families of our fallen heroes. This would show that we appreciate their sacrifices and services to the survival of our dear Nation and fatherland”

Madu contributed this piece from the Badagry Leadership Institute, Lagos.

BREAKING: Military Fighter Jet Kills Innocent Civilians, International Aid Workers In Borno

BREAKING: Military Fighter Jet Kills Innocent Civilians, International Aid Workers In Borno

BREAKING: Military Fighter Jet Kills Innocent Civilians, International Humanitarian Workers In Borno
The Army said a fighter jet had misfired and shot some humanitarian aid workers of the International Committee of Red Cross and the Medicines Sans Frontiers, and some civilians in Kala Balge in Borno during an operation.

The Theatre Commander of Operation Lafiya Dole, Maj.-Gen. Lucky Irabor, on Tuesday in Maiduguri said, “This morning, we received a report about the gathering of Boko Haram terrorists around Kala Balge area of Maiduguri.

“I coordinated and I directed that the air component of the operation should go and address the problem.

“Unfortunately, the strike was conducted but it turned out that other civilians were somewhere around the area and they were affected.

“So far, it is a little bit disturbing; death has occurred. There are casualties; there were deaths and injuries but on the actual number of casualties, we would get back to you later.

“I am yet to get the number of casualties of civilians killed, but two soldiers were also affected.

“Some humanitarian staff of Medicines Sans Frontiers and some staff of International Committee of Red Cross were also affected.

“We are sending helicopters to evacuate those that were critically wounded, including our wounded soldiers.”

NAN
BREAKING: Military Fighter Jet Kills Innocent Civilians, International Humanitarian Workers In Borno
The Army said a fighter jet had misfired and shot some humanitarian aid workers of the International Committee of Red Cross and the Medicines Sans Frontiers, and some civilians in Kala Balge in Borno during an operation.

The Theatre Commander of Operation Lafiya Dole, Maj.-Gen. Lucky Irabor, on Tuesday in Maiduguri said, “This morning, we received a report about the gathering of Boko Haram terrorists around Kala Balge area of Maiduguri.

“I coordinated and I directed that the air component of the operation should go and address the problem.

“Unfortunately, the strike was conducted but it turned out that other civilians were somewhere around the area and they were affected.

“So far, it is a little bit disturbing; death has occurred. There are casualties; there were deaths and injuries but on the actual number of casualties, we would get back to you later.

“I am yet to get the number of casualties of civilians killed, but two soldiers were also affected.

“Some humanitarian staff of Medicines Sans Frontiers and some staff of International Committee of Red Cross were also affected.

“We are sending helicopters to evacuate those that were critically wounded, including our wounded soldiers.”

NAN

EXCLUSIVE: Secret Shake-up In Nigerian Army, 11 Generals, Other Top Officers Affected

EXCLUSIVE: Secret Shake-up In Nigerian Army, 11 Generals, Other Top Officers Affected

Tukur Buratai,
Premium Times's Exclusive - The Nigerian Army has either appointed or redeployed no fewer than 14 officers to different military units across the country.

The exercise, approved by the Chief of Army Staff, Tukur Buratai, on January 9, 2017, affected six major generals, five brigadier generals, two captains and one major, documents exclusively obtained by this newspaper showed.

It came a month after Mr. Buratai promoted 227 Army personnel, including a son of former President Olusegun Obasanjo, Adeboye, who was made a colonel.


The first in the list of redeployed officials is M.H. Garba, a Major General, who was moved from Army Headquarters’ Department of Military Secretary to the Army Corps of Artillery.

Mr. Garba, whose redeployment takes effect from January 16, 2016, also received the Chief of Army Staff Commendation Award, the memo showed.

Next on the list is K.I. Abdulkarim, also a Major General, who was transferred from Nigerian Army 6 Division Headquarters to the Defence Headquarters with effect from January 12, 2017.

Major Generals O.U. Obono was moved from Nigerian Army Corps of Artillery Headquarters to the Defence Headquarters from January 12, 2017; and E.O. Udoh, from Defence Headquarters to the Nigerian Army 6 Division Headquarters from January 12, 2017.

Major General I.O. Rabio was moved from Nigerian Army School of Signals to Army Headquarters Department of Military Secretary from January 16, 2017.

Finally, Major General E.G. Whyte has been redeployed from Defence Headquarters to Nigerian Army School of Signals as the new commandant beginning January 12, 2017.

For the rank of brigadier general, the following officials were affected in the latest posting exercise.

I.A. Adegboye was transferred from Defence Headquarters to 82 Division Garrison as commandant with effect from January 12, 2017.

The appointment of S.O. Olabanji as the commandant of Nigerian Army Amphibious Training School will take effect from January 12, 2017. He was transferred from Nigerian Army 3 Brigade Headquarters.

O.T. Akinjobi was moved from 82 Division Garrison to 3 Brigade Headquarters as the new commandant with effect from January 12, 2017.
A. E. Attu was redeployed from the National Defence College to 9 Brigade as the new commandant with effect from January 12, 2017.

S. Mohammed has been transferred from 9 Brigade to Defence Headquarters as the Deputy Director of Land System from January 12, 2017.

From January 12, 2017, Captain A.M. Dankabo will remain in the Chief of Army Staff’s office as L.O.; while Captain I.N. Garba will move from the Chief of Army Staff’s office to the Nigerian Defence Academy as an instructor, also from January 12, 2017.

Effective January 7, 2017, Major H.I. Mbe was appointed as the ADC to the Chief of Army Staff.
Tukur Buratai,
Premium Times's Exclusive - The Nigerian Army has either appointed or redeployed no fewer than 14 officers to different military units across the country.

The exercise, approved by the Chief of Army Staff, Tukur Buratai, on January 9, 2017, affected six major generals, five brigadier generals, two captains and one major, documents exclusively obtained by this newspaper showed.

It came a month after Mr. Buratai promoted 227 Army personnel, including a son of former President Olusegun Obasanjo, Adeboye, who was made a colonel.


The first in the list of redeployed officials is M.H. Garba, a Major General, who was moved from Army Headquarters’ Department of Military Secretary to the Army Corps of Artillery.

Mr. Garba, whose redeployment takes effect from January 16, 2016, also received the Chief of Army Staff Commendation Award, the memo showed.

Next on the list is K.I. Abdulkarim, also a Major General, who was transferred from Nigerian Army 6 Division Headquarters to the Defence Headquarters with effect from January 12, 2017.

Major Generals O.U. Obono was moved from Nigerian Army Corps of Artillery Headquarters to the Defence Headquarters from January 12, 2017; and E.O. Udoh, from Defence Headquarters to the Nigerian Army 6 Division Headquarters from January 12, 2017.

Major General I.O. Rabio was moved from Nigerian Army School of Signals to Army Headquarters Department of Military Secretary from January 16, 2017.

Finally, Major General E.G. Whyte has been redeployed from Defence Headquarters to Nigerian Army School of Signals as the new commandant beginning January 12, 2017.

For the rank of brigadier general, the following officials were affected in the latest posting exercise.

I.A. Adegboye was transferred from Defence Headquarters to 82 Division Garrison as commandant with effect from January 12, 2017.

The appointment of S.O. Olabanji as the commandant of Nigerian Army Amphibious Training School will take effect from January 12, 2017. He was transferred from Nigerian Army 3 Brigade Headquarters.

O.T. Akinjobi was moved from 82 Division Garrison to 3 Brigade Headquarters as the new commandant with effect from January 12, 2017.
A. E. Attu was redeployed from the National Defence College to 9 Brigade as the new commandant with effect from January 12, 2017.

S. Mohammed has been transferred from 9 Brigade to Defence Headquarters as the Deputy Director of Land System from January 12, 2017.

From January 12, 2017, Captain A.M. Dankabo will remain in the Chief of Army Staff’s office as L.O.; while Captain I.N. Garba will move from the Chief of Army Staff’s office to the Nigerian Defence Academy as an instructor, also from January 12, 2017.

Effective January 7, 2017, Major H.I. Mbe was appointed as the ADC to the Chief of Army Staff.

Diaspora Group Lauds Nigerian Army Over Successful Routing of Boko Haram At Sambisa

Diaspora Group Lauds Nigerian Army Over Successful Routing of Boko Haram At Sambisa

Diaspora Group Lauds Army Over Successful Routing of Boko Haram At Sambisa
The Nigerians In Diaspora Monitoring Group(NDMG) is happy to learn that the Nigerian Army has cleared out ‘Camp Zero’, which until that action was Boko Haram terror group’s last hideout in the dreaded Sambisa Forest. This will successfully bring an end to the nefarious activities of the terrorists which were planned, incubated or hatched from that location.

Months after Boko Haram was designated as technically defeated, this new development tactically implies that the group has now been duly crushed.


We laud the Nigerian Army for achieving this feat in tandem with the assurances given earlier. And we acknowledge the fact that we were not surprised as the Chief of Army Staff (COAS), Lieutenant General Tukur Yusuf Buratai had declared December as a month of decision. He had given the marching order for troops to finish off the terrorist group this month.

This pronouncement by the COAS has spurred the troops of Operation Lafiya Dole to embark on Operation Rescue Finale and recording this landmark success that has seen the last of the terrorists holed up in that forest fleeing their camps in different directions. The liberation of Sambisa Forest have ushered unto the scene a situation where numerous terrorists are now willingly giving up their arms and choosing to embrace the path of peace.

It is remarkable that troops successfully cleared out Sambisa Forest in spite of the concerted and coordinated onslaught by Boko Haram sponsors that consistently placed obstacles before the army as an institution and its leadership as individuals.

NDMG totally aligns with President Muhammadu Buhari and echo his directive to the Army. We ask that the fleeing terrorists must be tracked, chased down their holes like the common criminals that they are, apprehended and made to answer for their atrocities.

Beyond the fleeing fighters, attention must also be given to the intellectual, financial and propaganda wings of the terror group so that the possibility of resurgence is completely ruled out.

Even as we are not unaware of the economic situation in the country, we extend our hand our fellowship to the present administration under the leadership of President Muhammad Buhari, in the same manner as urge the federal government to speed up the rebuilding and reconstruction efforts in the areas affected by Boko Haram’s acts of terror so that members of re-established communities can contribute to preventing remnants of the fighters from regrouping using some sort of community policing and intelligence sharing.

To Nigerians, we appeal that sectarian, religious, political, ethnic and regional differences should be shelved or eschewed and citizens once again demonstrate the much needed unity of purpose as their unrelenting contribution to scrape out the last of this dwarfed evil from our fatherland.

Engr. Adekaa Onyilo
UK Co-ordinator, NDMG
Diaspora Group Lauds Army Over Successful Routing of Boko Haram At Sambisa
The Nigerians In Diaspora Monitoring Group(NDMG) is happy to learn that the Nigerian Army has cleared out ‘Camp Zero’, which until that action was Boko Haram terror group’s last hideout in the dreaded Sambisa Forest. This will successfully bring an end to the nefarious activities of the terrorists which were planned, incubated or hatched from that location.

Months after Boko Haram was designated as technically defeated, this new development tactically implies that the group has now been duly crushed.


We laud the Nigerian Army for achieving this feat in tandem with the assurances given earlier. And we acknowledge the fact that we were not surprised as the Chief of Army Staff (COAS), Lieutenant General Tukur Yusuf Buratai had declared December as a month of decision. He had given the marching order for troops to finish off the terrorist group this month.

This pronouncement by the COAS has spurred the troops of Operation Lafiya Dole to embark on Operation Rescue Finale and recording this landmark success that has seen the last of the terrorists holed up in that forest fleeing their camps in different directions. The liberation of Sambisa Forest have ushered unto the scene a situation where numerous terrorists are now willingly giving up their arms and choosing to embrace the path of peace.

It is remarkable that troops successfully cleared out Sambisa Forest in spite of the concerted and coordinated onslaught by Boko Haram sponsors that consistently placed obstacles before the army as an institution and its leadership as individuals.

NDMG totally aligns with President Muhammadu Buhari and echo his directive to the Army. We ask that the fleeing terrorists must be tracked, chased down their holes like the common criminals that they are, apprehended and made to answer for their atrocities.

Beyond the fleeing fighters, attention must also be given to the intellectual, financial and propaganda wings of the terror group so that the possibility of resurgence is completely ruled out.

Even as we are not unaware of the economic situation in the country, we extend our hand our fellowship to the present administration under the leadership of President Muhammad Buhari, in the same manner as urge the federal government to speed up the rebuilding and reconstruction efforts in the areas affected by Boko Haram’s acts of terror so that members of re-established communities can contribute to preventing remnants of the fighters from regrouping using some sort of community policing and intelligence sharing.

To Nigerians, we appeal that sectarian, religious, political, ethnic and regional differences should be shelved or eschewed and citizens once again demonstrate the much needed unity of purpose as their unrelenting contribution to scrape out the last of this dwarfed evil from our fatherland.

Engr. Adekaa Onyilo
UK Co-ordinator, NDMG

Nigerian Army and its Deliberate Persecution, By Philip Agbese

Nigerian Army and its Deliberate Persecution, By Philip Agbese

Tukur Buratai
The Nigerian Army (NA) is facing one of its worse moments in the history of its existence in the country. It is confronted with the difficult and unenviable duty of quelling internal insurrections across the country. Those conversant with the core mandate of the army would agree that such domestic assignments are outside the gamut of its original responsibility of protecting the sovereign territorial boundaries of Nigeria.

And despite its milestones in the enthronement of internal security and peace to troubled communities, soldiers are being daily persecuted in public eye by a bunch of cabal, which has vowed never to see anything good in the NA. They endlessly search for the fortuitous missteps of soldiers to amplify the faults and where none exists, they invent their own fiery tales to trumpet.


In pursuit of this mindset, various publications have continued to be churned out against the Nigerian army, alleging unsubstantiated professional misconducts, human rights violations, nepotism and so forth. Both some traditional and social media platforms have become veritable platforms for these bile campaigns on Nigerian soldiers by veiled antagonists.

A recent publication by a news Magazine, captioned, “The Nigeria Army: New Era of Impunity,” is the latest of such publications. It crucified the NA for imaginary offences, craftily ensconced in the jaundiced arguments of the proclivity of soldiers to unprofessionalism; descent into the “dark days” of tribalism and partiality in the army.

But on the contrary, the NA of today is quite different from the Army of yesterday, which Nigerians came to identify as a burden on the nation. The army has been repositioned in a manner which clearly publicizes its dedication to ethics and professionalism.

From the outset, the Commander-In-Chief of the Nigerian Armed Forces, President Mohammedu Buhari and the Chief of Army Staff (COAS) Gen. Tukur Yusuf Buratai were equivocal about their agenda to reposition the Nigerian army back to its professional path. As the largest arm of the Nigerian military, concerns were raised over its deep and destructive involvement into partisan politics and other extraneous trappings which erode public confidence in soldiers and encumber their acceptance in the communities they are deployed to serve.

Just recently, at the 2016 Nigerian Army Day Celebration (NADCEL) 2016, Gen. Buratai again, reiterated his resolve to have a NA that would be the pride of all as “a professionally responsive Nigerian Army in the discharge of its constitutional roles.” The army has also been structured to keep an eagle eye in the observance of human rights and other related international principles on the matter in the discharge of its constitutional duties.

This is elaborately evident in Buratai’s establishment of the Army Human Right Desk at the Army Headquarters with a firm pledge to members of the public to investigate all reports of human rights abuses. Added to it, the Army Chief has revived the Regimental Sergeant Major (RSM) office, which midwife’s soldiers for improved services.

Maj.-Gen. Adamu Abubakar who represented the COAS, eloquently averred that “We are going back to regimentation and professionalization of Army. “ Therefore, an institution which has taken such internal steps for sanity, would not willingly abuse the same values it holds sacrosanct, as portrayed in the publication.

Furthermore, under Buratai the soldiers on special assignments are compelled to integrate themselves in the communities to clear the aura of intimidation associated with the army. This has rewarded hence members of communities’ now see soldiers as protectors, rather than aggressors. Soldiers also often offer free medical services to communities in the Niger Delta, much as the Northeast and indeed, everywhere they are deployed to serve.

These are the conscious efforts to improve military-civil relations, which has paid off in the strings of successes the Nigerian Army has recorded in the terror war, cattle rustling and banditry as well as militancy in the Niger Delta.

But in spite of these alluring accomplishments of soldiers, there appears to be concerted efforts to demonize, discredit and malign the integrity of soldiers and its leadership by unscrupulous individuals. And the dragnet seems to be wide, with some army officers within suspected to be part of this scheme.

Nigerians must first appreciate that it is not within professional jurisdiction of soldiers to get involved in suppressing crimes like militancy, kidnappings/abductions and cultism. It is the conventional duty of the Nigerian Police, the Civil Defence Corps and other such similar security agencies. The drafting of Nigerian soldiers to such internal security duties by the government is apt indication of the sophistry of the crimes, which have not only become violent, but have gone beyond the capacity and strength of designated and convention security outfits.

The said publication endorsed the excellent performance of Nigerian Army over Boko Haram Terrorists. But it left soldiers on the cliffhanger for promoting ethnicity, nepotism, partiality and abuse of the rule of law in their field operations and its handling of Service administrative procedures in dealing with perceived erring officers of the Army.

While the issues raised can be discussed on their merits, based on what anybody feels or how he has been wronged, the unnecessary infusion of the elements of ethnicity, nepotism, partiality and the likes, has questioned the genuineness of the issues by those claiming to have been wrongly treated by the army.

Nigerians have a penchant to easily resort to the ethnic garb for protection, each time they are made to face the consequences of their transgressions or misdemeanors.

No Nigerian is in doubt about the menace of cultists across the country. They are not only daring in their exploits against victims, but extremely violent. Sometimes, cultists in action overpower the police, with the sophistry of their weapons and strike recklessly.

While not attempting to disparage, the South, cultism has become a blossoming trade in this part of the country, fed from the retinue of political thugs, usually armed to the teeth. Reports indicated that the violence that marred the 2015 governorship elections in Rivers state was amplified by a combination of cultists and political thugs of rival camps. This is the experience in many states of the region.

For instance, mid this year, at Oboburu in Ogba/Egbema/Ndoni LGA of Rivers State, members of the community lodged a report with soldiers at the 2 Brigade of the Nigerian Army in Port Harcourt of the camping of suspected cult members in their midst, who were harassing and intimidating indigenes.

When soldiers were deployed to the area, the cultists engaged the soldiers in a shootout lasting for several hours. Panicked community members had to flee for their lives. This scenario does not suggest that cultists are armed with bows and arrows and therefore, only reasonable force should be applied by soldiers.

Therefore, NA’s confrontation with suspected cultists is not and cannot be a storm in a tea cup, as some people may expect. It has the tendency to result into casualties on both sides. The publication under scrutiny, could not find justification for the overtly accidental alleged shooting of Izu Joseph, a footballer with the Ibadan-based Shooting Stars Sports Club,( 3SC), in Okarki, Bayelsa State and three others in what was apparently a cultists clash with soldiers of military Joint Task Force on the Niger Delta in the vicinity.

These are misfortunes normal with such engagements, but to give it an ethnic colouration, the report claimed a soldier on the squad ignored the deceased footballer’s identity upon sighting his identity card and exclaimed, “Danburuba,” an Hausa expression. This mindset runs through the publication and the report further insinuated that only officers from the North are posted to head the juicy commands in the South and even among the 38 officers sacked for alleged refusal to support APC in 2015 general elections, in the warped reasoning of authors of the report, 80 percent of them are from the South.

It is difficult to believe that everyone who speaks Hausa language fluently is a Northerner and which command of the Nigerian army are less juicy and meant for slaves in the profession is another funny angle to this vile propaganda. But it is unreasonable for Nigerians to begin to pick-bones with internal routine postings or deployments of officers or the rank and file of the NA citing regional affinity. It demonstrates an irritating emptiness and desperation to make a mountain out of a molehill.

The publication was steeped in anger about the impunity of NA for allegedly annexing 400-plots at the Maitama Extension and ignored all entreaties to relinquish the plots.

“The National Assembly, whose principal officers’ houses are being built in the district, other plot owners and the general public have condemned the illegal act and wondered if Nigeria is being run by the rule of the jungle or the rule of law.”

But the rule of law is not only meant to be observed by the government or its institutions. Individuals whose rights and liberties are trampled upon should be more encouraged to seek legal redress in law courts. What has stopped those who claimed their plots have been annexed from approaching the courts for litigation to reclaim them?

Each of the two chambers of the National Assembly has Standing Committees on the Army, but none has bothered to summon the army hierarchy to explain the “illegal” acquisition of plots?” And the FCT administration itself is not concerned?

Soldiers are humans prone to mistakes or even mischief in some instances, but since the law is no respecter of persons, the FCT and Nigerians whom the NA has infringed on their rights to own property should have approached the court and the failure to execute this action, says nothing more than blackmail of the NA.

Nevertheless, it is open secret that in the last two political dispensations in Nigeria, security agencies, not just the army drafted for election duty have been found to have compromised the electoral process. The FGN and military authorities have always been inundated with petitions from the public against senior military officers involved in the conduct of elections at various times.

But the matter came to the fore, during the Ekiti state governorship election, which enthroned, the incumbent Ayo Fayose as governor.

A junior officer, Captain Sagir Koli who was on the team of soldiers for the 2014 Ekiti state guber polls exposed the conspiracy of top army officers with politicians to rig the polls in favour of the winner. His discreetly recorded video tape showed his commanding officer, General Aliyu Momoh, a former Minister of State for Defence, Musiliu Obanikoro, a former Minister of Police Affairs, Jelili Adesiyan, Governor of Ekiti State, Ayo Fayose, and two chieftains of the Peoples Democratic Party, Senators Andy Uba and Iyiola Omisore caught in the act.

This was the disposition of soldiers in Ekiti, Osun, Edo states and in many other locations across the country where they were deployed to secure a free ballot. Edo state governor Adams Oshiomhole had lamented the illegal use of soldiers by those who wield power. He petitioned the Commander of the 4 Brigade Headquarters of the Nigerian Army in Benin City, Brig-Gen. Olajide Laleye, alleging the illegal deployment of three trucks of soldiers to the Owan Federal Constituency and other parts of Edo North Senatorial District by Lt. Col Abiodun Uwadia (rtd), the then Special Adviser to President Goodluck Jonathan, during the 2015 National Assembly and Presidential elections in Edo state, who ordered them to shoot at sight any APC member who resisted his instructions.

It was based on the pressure mounted by these complaints that the NA under Buratai set up a Board of inquiry, chaired by Major-General Adeniyi Oyebade, to review the conduct of its officer deployed for election duty.

And like the publication itself admitted, the board of inquiry found the dismissed army officers culpable of offences ranging from corruption, partisanship and disciplinary ground. Army Spokesperson, Col. Sani Usman also explained that the sacked officers were found wanting on arms procurement fraud and professional misconduct.

Over 100 army officers appeared before the panel and 42 of them were sent to the Army council for a final verdict based on recommendations of the panel, as the report also admitted. The four names dropped were from various parts of the South, yet the Army council had the liberty to slam a blanket punishment on all the 42 officers recommended to it , assuming the intention was to haunt Southern officers.

Interestingly, those attacking the NA for the sack of the 38 officers for the offences they have been found culpable should not forget that they were either partisan or corrupt by engaging in fishy deals in the defence contract scandals. The argument that the sacked soldiers have been punished for not supporting the APC win elections in 2015 is immaterial.

That they supported PDP means they were partisan in outright abuse of their professional integrity and deserves to be punished. The bottom-line remains that the officers were partisan, against their code of conduct and whether it was PDP, APC or SDP they backed does not obviate the guilt.

The assertion that officers who were accused of partisanship were only those who served in states like Rivers, Bayelsa, Akwa Ibom, Delta, where the APC lost during the 2015 presidential elections is ghoulish. Every Nigerian knows, elections in the aforementioned states were like a theatre of war and soldiers who were supposed to be neutral arbiters, played partial roles as confirmed by the army panel.

President Buhari as a candidate of his party never asked or even implied by body language that he wanted power desperately, so soldiers should assist rig elections for him. The said officers could not be said to be punished based on such spurious assumptions.

According to the publication “ A panel does not have the power to make recommendations’; rather it should only return a verdict of guilty or not guilty of the offence.” In the Army, discipline of personnel is not subject to the adjudication by regular courts, but by military panels or special courts, which was done in this instance and headed by Gen. Gen. Oyebode, which the report described as “proper and competent panel of inquiry”.

The accused officers appeared and were cross-examined, before the recommendations made. What other fair hearing is being advocated and why would some of the sacked officers claim they do not know the disciplinary grounds they were retired from service when they appeared before the panel?

Nonetheless, why would the magazine want a response from the Nigerian Army headquarters over the issue, when they stated explicitly, that the authorities have filed documents in court in defence of the actions they have taken in respect of the penalized officers?

The retirement of Brig.Gen. Olajide Olaleye is most appropriate, at least in public morality. Why would he declare the NA was not in possession of Buhari’s certificates, but reversed himself after the declaration of Buhari as President –elect. Why would such unprincipled officers be allowed to keep polluting the army? Officers with such inclination can mortgage their country to an enemy.

The publication says 30 out of the 38 officers have petitioned President Buhari for a review of their cases, which it admitted the Chief of Staff, Abba Kyari has been directed to work on it . But the veiled attackers’ are not patient enough to wait for the outcome of the president’s reaction, but have chosen to go to town with the news that President Buhari is victimizing soldiers who never worked for his success at the polls in 2015.

And betraying the motive of the sponsors of this vile propaganda against the army, in spite of knowledge of the action of the 30 officers to annul their dismissal or retirement which is still pending before Buhari, the president is still maliciously queried by the same magazine for directing the reinstatement of Gen. Ahmed Mohammed, compulsorily retired by former President Goodluck Jonathan for “dereliction of responsibility in the war against Boko Haram.”

What has happened to the 38 officers is just caution to other army officers who may nurse such thoughts. It is part of the cleansing of the system, which President Buhari has vowed to accomplish to make Nigeria a better nation.

Agbese is a Uniter Kingdom based human rights activist and writes from Middlesex University, London.

Tukur Buratai
The Nigerian Army (NA) is facing one of its worse moments in the history of its existence in the country. It is confronted with the difficult and unenviable duty of quelling internal insurrections across the country. Those conversant with the core mandate of the army would agree that such domestic assignments are outside the gamut of its original responsibility of protecting the sovereign territorial boundaries of Nigeria.

And despite its milestones in the enthronement of internal security and peace to troubled communities, soldiers are being daily persecuted in public eye by a bunch of cabal, which has vowed never to see anything good in the NA. They endlessly search for the fortuitous missteps of soldiers to amplify the faults and where none exists, they invent their own fiery tales to trumpet.


In pursuit of this mindset, various publications have continued to be churned out against the Nigerian army, alleging unsubstantiated professional misconducts, human rights violations, nepotism and so forth. Both some traditional and social media platforms have become veritable platforms for these bile campaigns on Nigerian soldiers by veiled antagonists.

A recent publication by a news Magazine, captioned, “The Nigeria Army: New Era of Impunity,” is the latest of such publications. It crucified the NA for imaginary offences, craftily ensconced in the jaundiced arguments of the proclivity of soldiers to unprofessionalism; descent into the “dark days” of tribalism and partiality in the army.

But on the contrary, the NA of today is quite different from the Army of yesterday, which Nigerians came to identify as a burden on the nation. The army has been repositioned in a manner which clearly publicizes its dedication to ethics and professionalism.

From the outset, the Commander-In-Chief of the Nigerian Armed Forces, President Mohammedu Buhari and the Chief of Army Staff (COAS) Gen. Tukur Yusuf Buratai were equivocal about their agenda to reposition the Nigerian army back to its professional path. As the largest arm of the Nigerian military, concerns were raised over its deep and destructive involvement into partisan politics and other extraneous trappings which erode public confidence in soldiers and encumber their acceptance in the communities they are deployed to serve.

Just recently, at the 2016 Nigerian Army Day Celebration (NADCEL) 2016, Gen. Buratai again, reiterated his resolve to have a NA that would be the pride of all as “a professionally responsive Nigerian Army in the discharge of its constitutional roles.” The army has also been structured to keep an eagle eye in the observance of human rights and other related international principles on the matter in the discharge of its constitutional duties.

This is elaborately evident in Buratai’s establishment of the Army Human Right Desk at the Army Headquarters with a firm pledge to members of the public to investigate all reports of human rights abuses. Added to it, the Army Chief has revived the Regimental Sergeant Major (RSM) office, which midwife’s soldiers for improved services.

Maj.-Gen. Adamu Abubakar who represented the COAS, eloquently averred that “We are going back to regimentation and professionalization of Army. “ Therefore, an institution which has taken such internal steps for sanity, would not willingly abuse the same values it holds sacrosanct, as portrayed in the publication.

Furthermore, under Buratai the soldiers on special assignments are compelled to integrate themselves in the communities to clear the aura of intimidation associated with the army. This has rewarded hence members of communities’ now see soldiers as protectors, rather than aggressors. Soldiers also often offer free medical services to communities in the Niger Delta, much as the Northeast and indeed, everywhere they are deployed to serve.

These are the conscious efforts to improve military-civil relations, which has paid off in the strings of successes the Nigerian Army has recorded in the terror war, cattle rustling and banditry as well as militancy in the Niger Delta.

But in spite of these alluring accomplishments of soldiers, there appears to be concerted efforts to demonize, discredit and malign the integrity of soldiers and its leadership by unscrupulous individuals. And the dragnet seems to be wide, with some army officers within suspected to be part of this scheme.

Nigerians must first appreciate that it is not within professional jurisdiction of soldiers to get involved in suppressing crimes like militancy, kidnappings/abductions and cultism. It is the conventional duty of the Nigerian Police, the Civil Defence Corps and other such similar security agencies. The drafting of Nigerian soldiers to such internal security duties by the government is apt indication of the sophistry of the crimes, which have not only become violent, but have gone beyond the capacity and strength of designated and convention security outfits.

The said publication endorsed the excellent performance of Nigerian Army over Boko Haram Terrorists. But it left soldiers on the cliffhanger for promoting ethnicity, nepotism, partiality and abuse of the rule of law in their field operations and its handling of Service administrative procedures in dealing with perceived erring officers of the Army.

While the issues raised can be discussed on their merits, based on what anybody feels or how he has been wronged, the unnecessary infusion of the elements of ethnicity, nepotism, partiality and the likes, has questioned the genuineness of the issues by those claiming to have been wrongly treated by the army.

Nigerians have a penchant to easily resort to the ethnic garb for protection, each time they are made to face the consequences of their transgressions or misdemeanors.

No Nigerian is in doubt about the menace of cultists across the country. They are not only daring in their exploits against victims, but extremely violent. Sometimes, cultists in action overpower the police, with the sophistry of their weapons and strike recklessly.

While not attempting to disparage, the South, cultism has become a blossoming trade in this part of the country, fed from the retinue of political thugs, usually armed to the teeth. Reports indicated that the violence that marred the 2015 governorship elections in Rivers state was amplified by a combination of cultists and political thugs of rival camps. This is the experience in many states of the region.

For instance, mid this year, at Oboburu in Ogba/Egbema/Ndoni LGA of Rivers State, members of the community lodged a report with soldiers at the 2 Brigade of the Nigerian Army in Port Harcourt of the camping of suspected cult members in their midst, who were harassing and intimidating indigenes.

When soldiers were deployed to the area, the cultists engaged the soldiers in a shootout lasting for several hours. Panicked community members had to flee for their lives. This scenario does not suggest that cultists are armed with bows and arrows and therefore, only reasonable force should be applied by soldiers.

Therefore, NA’s confrontation with suspected cultists is not and cannot be a storm in a tea cup, as some people may expect. It has the tendency to result into casualties on both sides. The publication under scrutiny, could not find justification for the overtly accidental alleged shooting of Izu Joseph, a footballer with the Ibadan-based Shooting Stars Sports Club,( 3SC), in Okarki, Bayelsa State and three others in what was apparently a cultists clash with soldiers of military Joint Task Force on the Niger Delta in the vicinity.

These are misfortunes normal with such engagements, but to give it an ethnic colouration, the report claimed a soldier on the squad ignored the deceased footballer’s identity upon sighting his identity card and exclaimed, “Danburuba,” an Hausa expression. This mindset runs through the publication and the report further insinuated that only officers from the North are posted to head the juicy commands in the South and even among the 38 officers sacked for alleged refusal to support APC in 2015 general elections, in the warped reasoning of authors of the report, 80 percent of them are from the South.

It is difficult to believe that everyone who speaks Hausa language fluently is a Northerner and which command of the Nigerian army are less juicy and meant for slaves in the profession is another funny angle to this vile propaganda. But it is unreasonable for Nigerians to begin to pick-bones with internal routine postings or deployments of officers or the rank and file of the NA citing regional affinity. It demonstrates an irritating emptiness and desperation to make a mountain out of a molehill.

The publication was steeped in anger about the impunity of NA for allegedly annexing 400-plots at the Maitama Extension and ignored all entreaties to relinquish the plots.

“The National Assembly, whose principal officers’ houses are being built in the district, other plot owners and the general public have condemned the illegal act and wondered if Nigeria is being run by the rule of the jungle or the rule of law.”

But the rule of law is not only meant to be observed by the government or its institutions. Individuals whose rights and liberties are trampled upon should be more encouraged to seek legal redress in law courts. What has stopped those who claimed their plots have been annexed from approaching the courts for litigation to reclaim them?

Each of the two chambers of the National Assembly has Standing Committees on the Army, but none has bothered to summon the army hierarchy to explain the “illegal” acquisition of plots?” And the FCT administration itself is not concerned?

Soldiers are humans prone to mistakes or even mischief in some instances, but since the law is no respecter of persons, the FCT and Nigerians whom the NA has infringed on their rights to own property should have approached the court and the failure to execute this action, says nothing more than blackmail of the NA.

Nevertheless, it is open secret that in the last two political dispensations in Nigeria, security agencies, not just the army drafted for election duty have been found to have compromised the electoral process. The FGN and military authorities have always been inundated with petitions from the public against senior military officers involved in the conduct of elections at various times.

But the matter came to the fore, during the Ekiti state governorship election, which enthroned, the incumbent Ayo Fayose as governor.

A junior officer, Captain Sagir Koli who was on the team of soldiers for the 2014 Ekiti state guber polls exposed the conspiracy of top army officers with politicians to rig the polls in favour of the winner. His discreetly recorded video tape showed his commanding officer, General Aliyu Momoh, a former Minister of State for Defence, Musiliu Obanikoro, a former Minister of Police Affairs, Jelili Adesiyan, Governor of Ekiti State, Ayo Fayose, and two chieftains of the Peoples Democratic Party, Senators Andy Uba and Iyiola Omisore caught in the act.

This was the disposition of soldiers in Ekiti, Osun, Edo states and in many other locations across the country where they were deployed to secure a free ballot. Edo state governor Adams Oshiomhole had lamented the illegal use of soldiers by those who wield power. He petitioned the Commander of the 4 Brigade Headquarters of the Nigerian Army in Benin City, Brig-Gen. Olajide Laleye, alleging the illegal deployment of three trucks of soldiers to the Owan Federal Constituency and other parts of Edo North Senatorial District by Lt. Col Abiodun Uwadia (rtd), the then Special Adviser to President Goodluck Jonathan, during the 2015 National Assembly and Presidential elections in Edo state, who ordered them to shoot at sight any APC member who resisted his instructions.

It was based on the pressure mounted by these complaints that the NA under Buratai set up a Board of inquiry, chaired by Major-General Adeniyi Oyebade, to review the conduct of its officer deployed for election duty.

And like the publication itself admitted, the board of inquiry found the dismissed army officers culpable of offences ranging from corruption, partisanship and disciplinary ground. Army Spokesperson, Col. Sani Usman also explained that the sacked officers were found wanting on arms procurement fraud and professional misconduct.

Over 100 army officers appeared before the panel and 42 of them were sent to the Army council for a final verdict based on recommendations of the panel, as the report also admitted. The four names dropped were from various parts of the South, yet the Army council had the liberty to slam a blanket punishment on all the 42 officers recommended to it , assuming the intention was to haunt Southern officers.

Interestingly, those attacking the NA for the sack of the 38 officers for the offences they have been found culpable should not forget that they were either partisan or corrupt by engaging in fishy deals in the defence contract scandals. The argument that the sacked soldiers have been punished for not supporting the APC win elections in 2015 is immaterial.

That they supported PDP means they were partisan in outright abuse of their professional integrity and deserves to be punished. The bottom-line remains that the officers were partisan, against their code of conduct and whether it was PDP, APC or SDP they backed does not obviate the guilt.

The assertion that officers who were accused of partisanship were only those who served in states like Rivers, Bayelsa, Akwa Ibom, Delta, where the APC lost during the 2015 presidential elections is ghoulish. Every Nigerian knows, elections in the aforementioned states were like a theatre of war and soldiers who were supposed to be neutral arbiters, played partial roles as confirmed by the army panel.

President Buhari as a candidate of his party never asked or even implied by body language that he wanted power desperately, so soldiers should assist rig elections for him. The said officers could not be said to be punished based on such spurious assumptions.

According to the publication “ A panel does not have the power to make recommendations’; rather it should only return a verdict of guilty or not guilty of the offence.” In the Army, discipline of personnel is not subject to the adjudication by regular courts, but by military panels or special courts, which was done in this instance and headed by Gen. Gen. Oyebode, which the report described as “proper and competent panel of inquiry”.

The accused officers appeared and were cross-examined, before the recommendations made. What other fair hearing is being advocated and why would some of the sacked officers claim they do not know the disciplinary grounds they were retired from service when they appeared before the panel?

Nonetheless, why would the magazine want a response from the Nigerian Army headquarters over the issue, when they stated explicitly, that the authorities have filed documents in court in defence of the actions they have taken in respect of the penalized officers?

The retirement of Brig.Gen. Olajide Olaleye is most appropriate, at least in public morality. Why would he declare the NA was not in possession of Buhari’s certificates, but reversed himself after the declaration of Buhari as President –elect. Why would such unprincipled officers be allowed to keep polluting the army? Officers with such inclination can mortgage their country to an enemy.

The publication says 30 out of the 38 officers have petitioned President Buhari for a review of their cases, which it admitted the Chief of Staff, Abba Kyari has been directed to work on it . But the veiled attackers’ are not patient enough to wait for the outcome of the president’s reaction, but have chosen to go to town with the news that President Buhari is victimizing soldiers who never worked for his success at the polls in 2015.

And betraying the motive of the sponsors of this vile propaganda against the army, in spite of knowledge of the action of the 30 officers to annul their dismissal or retirement which is still pending before Buhari, the president is still maliciously queried by the same magazine for directing the reinstatement of Gen. Ahmed Mohammed, compulsorily retired by former President Goodluck Jonathan for “dereliction of responsibility in the war against Boko Haram.”

What has happened to the 38 officers is just caution to other army officers who may nurse such thoughts. It is part of the cleansing of the system, which President Buhari has vowed to accomplish to make Nigeria a better nation.

Agbese is a Uniter Kingdom based human rights activist and writes from Middlesex University, London.

Army ARRESTS 4 Boko Haram Commanders Specialized In tactical Operations Of The Sects, See Photos

Army ARRESTS 4 Boko Haram Commanders Specialized In tactical Operations Of The Sects, See Photos

Army ARRESTS 4 Boko Haram Commanders Specialized In tactical Operations Of The Sects, See Photos
Statement according to Colonel Sani Kukasheka Usman, the acting Director of Nigerian Army Public Relation has it that the troops of 3 Battalion, of 22 Task Force Brigade have made an unprecedented catch with the arrest of 4 Boko Haram terrorists Ameers (kingpins) at Rann, headquarters of Kala Balge Local Government Area of Borno State yesterday, Friday 22nd April 2016. 

The Acting Army Spokesman said that the four  Boko Haram commanders were specialised in sustaining the activities of the Boko Haram through all manner of criminal acts were arrested following a tip-off by members of the public at Rann, the headquarters of the Kala Balge Local Government area of Borno State on Friday

He gave the identities of the arrested kingpins as Rediyo (Radio Technician), Umaru Mai Nama, (who specialises in cattle rustling and sales), Alifa Makinta (a specialist on stealing foodstuffs) and  Balu Jugudum (in charge of stolen jewellery).
Umara Mai Gyaran


"The arrested kingpins specialized on various aspects of criminality to sustain the Boko Haram terrorists group in their areas." 

Army ARRESTS 4 Boko Haram Commanders Specialized In tactical Operations Of The Sects, See Photos"The four terrorists were arrested following a tip off by well meaning members of the public."

"Subsequently, the troops conducted a cordon and search operation in the general area that led to the apprehension of the terrorist leaders, who contribute to the sustenance of the insurgency through their illegal trade specialization."

"The arrested kingpins include Umara Mai Gyaran Rediyo (Radio Technician), Umaru Mai Nama, (who specialize in cattle rustling and sales), Alifa Makinta (a specialist on stealing foodstuffs) and Balu Jugudum (in charge of stolen jewelleries)."

"Presently the suspects are undergoing interrogation", Usman said in the statement



Army ARRESTS 4 Boko Haram Commanders Specialized In tactical Operations Of The Sects, See Photos
Statement according to Colonel Sani Kukasheka Usman, the acting Director of Nigerian Army Public Relation has it that the troops of 3 Battalion, of 22 Task Force Brigade have made an unprecedented catch with the arrest of 4 Boko Haram terrorists Ameers (kingpins) at Rann, headquarters of Kala Balge Local Government Area of Borno State yesterday, Friday 22nd April 2016. 

The Acting Army Spokesman said that the four  Boko Haram commanders were specialised in sustaining the activities of the Boko Haram through all manner of criminal acts were arrested following a tip-off by members of the public at Rann, the headquarters of the Kala Balge Local Government area of Borno State on Friday

He gave the identities of the arrested kingpins as Rediyo (Radio Technician), Umaru Mai Nama, (who specialises in cattle rustling and sales), Alifa Makinta (a specialist on stealing foodstuffs) and  Balu Jugudum (in charge of stolen jewellery).
Umara Mai Gyaran


"The arrested kingpins specialized on various aspects of criminality to sustain the Boko Haram terrorists group in their areas." 

Army ARRESTS 4 Boko Haram Commanders Specialized In tactical Operations Of The Sects, See Photos"The four terrorists were arrested following a tip off by well meaning members of the public."

"Subsequently, the troops conducted a cordon and search operation in the general area that led to the apprehension of the terrorist leaders, who contribute to the sustenance of the insurgency through their illegal trade specialization."

"The arrested kingpins include Umara Mai Gyaran Rediyo (Radio Technician), Umaru Mai Nama, (who specialize in cattle rustling and sales), Alifa Makinta (a specialist on stealing foodstuffs) and Balu Jugudum (in charge of stolen jewelleries)."

"Presently the suspects are undergoing interrogation", Usman said in the statement




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