Tag: Army

  • 190 Lieutenants to sit for promotion exams

    The Nigerian Army Training and Doctrine Command (TRADOC) on Sunday said that no fewer than 190 lieutenants would sit for promotion examination beginning from Feb. 13.

    The Commander of TRACDO, Maj.-Gen Hassan Umaru said in Kaduna that the practical promotion examination would end on Feb. 17.

    Umaru who is also the President, Examination Penal, said that for the first time, three female officers would sit for the exams.

    ” Nigerian Army is gender sensitive. The candidates will sit for seven subjects, including French Language.

    “It is the examination that will propel them to higher heights; to understand the profession much better and to see and add value to the security architecture of the country,’’ he said.

    The Commander urged the candidates to work hard to pass the examination.

    “The Nigerian Army will not tolerate any indiscipline as it has zero tolerance for exams malpractice,” he stressed.

    Also speaking, the General Officer Commanding, 1 Division, Nigerian Army Kaduna, Maj.- Gen Adeniye Oyebade tasked the personnel to remain focused and professional in their conduct.

    “Open your mind and concentrate to make sure you pass the exams,’’ Oyebade said.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports successful candidates would be decorated with the rank of Captain. (NAN)

  • Maltreatment of cripple: Army demotes soldiers

    Maltreatment of cripple: Army demotes soldiers

    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-count charge 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)

  • Army donates clothing, cash to assaulted physically challenged person

    Army donates clothing, cash to assaulted physically challenged person

    The Nigerian Army has offered clothing and undisclosed amount of money as succour to Mr Chijioke Orakwu, a physically challenged person, assaulted by two military police officers in Onitsha for allegedly wearing army camouflage.

    Orakwu was manhandled by two soldiers on Feb. 7, at New Market Road,

    Col. Sagir Musa, the Deputy Director, Public Relations, 82 Division of the Nigerian Army, presented the item and cash on Friday.

    Musa said that the Army would not condone acts of indiscipline or gross misconduct by any member.

    He said that the action of the soldiers did not reflect the attitude of today’s soldiers under the leadership of Lt.-Gen. Tukur Buratai.

    “Already, those who perpetrated the act have been arrested and tried, and because of the seriousness of the offence, they have been referred to higher authorities for further action.

    “The Nigerian Army is seriously concerned about the incident.

    “We want to assure Nigerians, particularly the international community that the Nigerian Army has core values and respect for the rights of people,” Musa said.

    The army spokesman urged the public to view the case as an isolated one, assuring that future assault similar to the Onitsha incident would be treated with serious action.

    He said the army volunteered to take Orakwu to hospital but that he refused orthodox medication.

    Musa added that the doctors, who examined him physically, confirmed him to be physically fit.

    The army spokesman emphasised that the items given to Orakwu were not to compensate him but to show that the Nigerian Army cares and respect rights of individuals.

    “All we did was not an issue of compensation but to show Nigerians and the international public that the Nigerian Army is disciplined, responsive and responsible, and that we care,” he said.

    The Army, he said, had warned against the abuse of military uniforms, saying it remain its policy which the army holds in high esteem.

    Also, the Commander, 302 Artillery Regiment, Onitsha, Col. Idongesit Akpan, assured that such incident would not repeat itself.

    The representative of the state government, Dr Victoria Chikwelu, expressed satisfaction with the efforts of the Army in handling the case.

    He said that Gov. Willie Obiano was not in doubt of what the Army would do as regards the disciplinary measures against the perpetrators.

    “Obiano has passion for the physically challenged and that is why he appointed one of them as his Special Assistant and also built three special skill acquisitions centres for their use,” Chikwelu said.

    Chikwelu, who is the Commissioner for Women Affairs and Social Development, said that the state government had plans to also empower Orakwu at a later date.

    Responding, Orakwu, who expressed happiness, commended the army for the kind gesture. (NAN)

  • Corrupt uniformed men to blame for high cost of food items- Minister

    Corrupt uniformed men to blame for high cost of food items- Minister

    Minister of Agriculture, Chief Audu Ogbeh, has  blamed rising cost of food items on corrupt practices of men of the Nigeria Police, Nigeria Army, and Nigeria Customs Service.
     
    Ogbeh told stunned members of the Senate Committee on Agriculture that the extortionist practices of the uniformed operatives especially at the numerous check points and ports was responsible for the acute hunger in the land. 
     
    The minister spoke at the 2017 budget defence of his ministry.
     
    He noted that despite having written formally to the Inspector General of Police, Ibrahim Idris, Comptroller General of Customs, Hameed Ali and other heads of security agencies against the unhealthy situation, the fraudulent practices remained unabated. 
     
    Ogbeh said: “One of the factors responsible for the high cost of food items is the daily unbearable extortions men of the Nigeria Police, their counterpart in the Army and Customs Service visit on truck drivers conveying farm produce from the hinterland to urban centres under the guise of carrying out security checks.
     
    “These truck drivers based on raw lamentations made to the Ministry in recent time, alleged that at every check points, they are always forced to part with reasonable amount of money by any group of the security agencies, which they said, made farmers to have no option than to factor cost of the extortion into prices of the food items”.
     
    Ogbe also listed other factors that affect government’s agricultural policies including  high cost of diesel which now sells for N300 per litre .
     
    He noted that because trucks conveying farm produce are powered by diesel, the cost of diesel affect the cost of the produce.
     
    He also said that the treaty on free movement of goods and services put in place by the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) among member states, paved the way for movement of not less than 300,000 trucks of grains outside Nigeria on daily.
     
    The Ministry of Agriculture, he said, cannot check such huge movement of grains outside the country..
     
    He assured that the federal government would soon reduce prices of food items following the Presidential committee set up to that effect.
     
    He however said that farmers were already kicking against the move to reduce the prices of food items.
     
    Ogbeh noted that farmers were angry with him over the move to reduce prices of food items because they see the subsisting situation as very favourable economically to them.
     
    He said: “The situation on ground as far as high prices of food items are concerned is one of a dilemma to me because while the city dwellers are unhappy with us, farmers are very happy and seriously kicking against any move to tamper with their happiness by cutting down the  high price  of farm produce for now.”
     
    The Minister said one of such farmers asked him recently in Katsina not to tamper with the present price of food items.
     
    The farmer, he said, claimed that he made N4 million from the sales of Sorghum which had catapulted him from the realm of poverty to that of affluence.
     
    He said that another farmer in Anambra state claimed to have made N1 million profit from sales of rice as a result of the current market price.
     
    Ogbeh told the committee that his Ministry’s 2017 budget  would be driven by the need for food security in the country.
  • Army opens operation base in Kaduna

    Army opens operation base in Kaduna

    The Chief of Army Staff (COAS), Lt.-Gen. Tukur Buratai, at the weekend laid the foundation stone for the Forward Operation Base (FOB) of 2 Battalion in Zango Kataf Local Government Area of Kaduna State.

    The Army School of Artillery in Kachia council was used as the military formation in Southern Kaduna.

    Gen. Buratai said the Army would ensure peace and security in Nigeria, adding that the need to end incessant herdsmen/farmers clash informed setting up the base.

    He urged Nigerians to co-exist peacefully.

    Governor Nasir El-Rufai vowed to end the incessant crisis, saying those sponsoring it will be brought to book.

    “Whether they are my children or relations; Muslim or Christian; someone will be jailed to end the crisis,” El-Rufai said.

    During an earlier visit to the Emir of Jama’a, Alhaji Muhammadu Isa Muhammadu, Buratai directed troops in Southern Kaduna to move deep into the forest to fish out perpetrators of the violence.

    The COAS also visited the Chief of Kagoro, Dr Ufuwoi Bonet, and appealed to the monarch to help in ending the crisis.

    At Ninte, the scene of the most recent clash, Buratai addressed troops of 101 Special Force and urged residents to live in unity.

    He called on traditional rulers and other leaders to join efforts to bring peace to the area.

  • ‘My hand, leg chopped-off because I wanted to surrender to the army’

    ‘My hand, leg chopped-off because I wanted to surrender to the army’

    Muhammad Abubakar, a 31 year-old Boko Haram insurgent on Thursday said his hand and leg were chopped off because he was planing to surrender and quit the battle in Sambisa forest.
    Abubakar disclosed this to newsmen in Maiduguri during briefing organised by Maj.-Gen. Lucky Irabor, the Theatre Commander, Operation Lafiya Dole, to update journalists on ‘Operation Rescue Finale’.
     Abubakar said he was punished because his decision to renounce his membership of the group and embrace peace.
    “I had told a friend, Hassan Dan-Guduma, that I was going to surrender as the movement had no meaning to me anymore.
    “Hassan Dan-Guduma initially bought my idea but later betrayed me. Shortly after our discussion, he went and came back with three others whom I am sure he must have  told them about our  plan to surrender.
    “They said I was planing to exposed them to the Nigerian Government, so they did all this to me.
    ” After they chopped off my right hand and left leg, they threw me into a culvert where I was left struggling, until soldiers came and rescued me.
    ” All I can say is that all we had been told by Boko Haram leaders,were lies and misleading. I  never joined them to kill anyone,” he said.
    Maj.-Gen. Lucky Irabor, The Theatre Commander, said Abubakar was still undergoing interrogation.
    “You can see what they did to one of their own because he decided to quit,” said Irabor.(NAN)
  • The army and Premium Times

    •The law, not personal or institutional arrogance, must prevail

    A titanic legal battle was shaping up between the Nigerian Army and the online newspaper Premium  Times. It had the major elements of news:  conflict, power, and novelty.

    It was especially rich in novelty.

    It began with a letter from the Nigerian Army, addressed to Dapo Olorunyomi, publisher and managing director of Premium Times, taking issues with a story to the effect that the Chief of Army Staff, Lt-Gen T.Y. Buratai, had been questioned by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) over his declaration of assets, and with the paper’s overall reporting on the army’s counter-insurgency operations in the Northeast.

    The letter charged that the publication regarding Gen Buratai was defamatory, and demanded that an apology be published in three consecutive days in three different media outlets.

    This was a sharp and reassuring departure from the reflex recourse to force and self-help that the Nigerian Armed Forces had traditionally employed in reacting to provocations real or perceived, with scant regard for the rule of law. The mechanism for the apology is needlessly burdensome, but it is in keeping with the civil course the Nigerian Army chose to follow.

    However, the charge that the publications at issue “confirmed” the paper’s “unalloyed loyalty to the terrorist’s cause” was at once ominous and exorbitant. From there it was but a short step from charging the paper with treason.

    Alarmed, Premium Times struck back, through its principal attorney, Jiti Ogunye, with a comprehensive indictment of the Nigerian Army, drawing on its role in the various crises that have racked Nigeria, from the January 1966 coup to the debauched rule of General Sani Abacha.

    The Nigerian Army’s letter, Ogunye said, constituted an implicit threat to the lives and livelihood of his clients, and to their fundamental human rights guaranteed by the Constitution.  He demanded that the Nigerian Army apologise to his clients and retract the letter, failing which his clients would seek legal redress.

    It was at this point that reason gave way to force. The police, most likely acting at the behest of the Nigerian Army, swooped down on the offices of Premium Times, and seized Olorunyomi, and Evelyn Okakwu, author of some of the stories at issue. The two have since been released. No charges have been pressed, but the Nigerian Army’s letter contains a hint of what a formal indictment might consist in.

    It is neither in the interest of the Nigerian Army nor that of the media that this matter should escalate. General Buratai is perfectly at liberty to pursue a defamation lawsuit in his personal capacity. It is a civil matter and the courts will handle it as such. Premium Times will confine itself to putting up the usual defence, without seeking to put the Nigerian Army on trial.

    To pursue the matter outside this narrow confine will serve no useful purpose.

    The police raid is deeply to be deplored. It is a throwback to those dark days Nigerians thought they would never have to go through again. It throws up an irony that cannot be lost on the public and the media, least of all on Olorunyomi.

    Through his journalistic and political exertions, Olorunyomi was in the front ranks of those whose sacrifices made possible the freedoms we enjoy today. He was persecuted and hounded into exile. His family endured ceaseless harassment and acute deprivation.

    Nothing should be done now and in future to make him and all those who contributed in various ways to bring democratic rule to Nigeria question the worth of their labours.

  • Army makes ‘unprecedented’ arms recovery

    Army makes ‘unprecedented’ arms recovery

    • As three soldiers die in operation
    The troops of Operation Lafiya Dole on Wednesday made contacts with ‘fleeing Boko Haram terrorists during a clear out operation at Dulsa and Buk, Damboa local government area of Borno state.
    The soldiers from 25 Task Force Brigade, 7 Division Nigerian Army recovered Armoured Fighting vehicle, trucks, arms and ammunition.  However, three soldiers died while five were wounded in the operation.
    Director, Army Public Relations, Brigadier-General Sanni Usman told The Nation that a large number of Boko Haram terrorists were neutralised in the operation.Army arms recovery
    Usman said: “At Dulsa this morning, the troops cleared the hideout of the terrorists during which they neutralised six Boko Haram terrorists, recovered 1 Light Machine Gun, 2 Rocket Propelled Grenade Tubes and 1 Extra Anti-Aircraft Gun Barrel.
    “The troops also encountered Boko Haram terrorists camp at Buk where they were engaged by the terrorists.”During the encounter, the troops
    “During the encounter, the troops neutralised large numbers of the Boko Haram terrorists and wounded several others. They also made an unprecedented recovery.
    “The items recovered include 9 AK-47 rifles, 3 Fabrique Nationale rifles, 2 Rocket Propelled Grenade Bombs, 1 Mortar Tube, 1 Shilka, 1 Gun truck mounted with Anti-Aircraft Gun and 2 Hilux vehicles.
    “Unfortunately, however, 3 soldiers paid the supreme price, while 5 others were wounded in action. Similarly, 1 Mine-Resistant, Ambush-Protected vehicle belonging to the Brigade was badly damaged.”
    The Army spokesman said the bodies of the late soldiers and those that sustained injuries have since been evacuated while the wounded soldiers are in stable condition.
  • Soldier who brutalised female passenger under interrogation

    Soldier who brutalised female passenger under interrogation

    The Nigerian Army has confirmed that a soldier who allegedly brutalised a female passenger who was travelling from Port Harcourt to Onitsha, is under interrogation. The incident allegedly occurred at a military checkpoint in Port Harcourt on Monday. The Army authority also pleaded with the public to have faith and confidence in it to handle all such cases.

    According to a post on the victim’s social media account, the lady simply identified as Jewel Infinity said she was on her way to Onitsha aboard a Toyota Sienna bus when her car was pulled over at a checkpoint “immediately after the airport.”

    Jewel recounted that she was molested by a young soldier named Sulaiman Olamilekan who accused her of “discussing him,” and ordered her to disembark from the vehicle, kneel down and apologise to him.

    “To my greatest dismay, this dude went in search of any object at his disposal ( a huge stick) and started hitting it all over my body, he shoved me out of the vehicle and when he pieced (sic) the stick on me, he went in search of another thing and he came back with a big rod…” Jewel recounted.

    She claimed the incident was later reported at the Army Barracks and sympathetic officers laterapologisedd and took her to the hospital for treatment. But in a swift reaction, the Director, Army Public Relations, Brigadier General Sanni Usman said the issue is currently under investigation.

    Usman said: “As regards to the lady, I have communicated the matter to the General Officer Commanding (GOC) 6 Division and they are taking necessary action. I know that the soldier and his guard commander have been invited and effort is on to locate the lady.”

    The Army spokesman also appealed to the general public to immediately report to the Army authorities any act of misdemeanour committed by any army personnel against the civil population. “ Please help us enlighten the public to have faith, confidence and trust in us by reporting such issues properly and if nothing is done, then they can go public with it,” Usman said.

  • Questions as Army burns  kidnappers’ den in Aba

    Questions as Army burns kidnappers’ den in Aba

    Soldiers from 144 Battalion of the Nigerian Army have set ablaze a house near Aba, Abia State, allegedly used by kidnappers to detain their victims until ransom is paid. But how long was the den used by the criminals, and why did it escape the villagers’ notice? Sunny Nwankwo reports 

    IT was a small shelter, no bigger than a farm hut. Its corrugated roofing sheets had seen better days. The mud wall looked fairly strong, dignified with sheets of window louvres. But tucked in the bushes  in the backyards of a village near Aba in Osisioma Local Government Area of Abia State, the mudhouse was a curious structure.

    What was it used for in Umuagbai village, a sleepy community not too far from the bustling Enyimba City?

    The soldiers who visited it had one answer: a kidnappers’ den where victims were holed up while ransom negotiations went on.

    It won’t serve that purpose anymore. For the soldiers promptly descended on it, smashing its wall down before setting it on fire. The operation was led by the Commanding Officer of the battalion, Umar Sidi Kasim.

    The gang was said to be operating from neighbouring Rivers State. The kingpin and members of the group, it was gathered, relied on some local members, usually commercial motorcycle and tricycle operators, who tracked and provided information on targets before the kingpin and others would move in for the kill.

    The local foot soldiers reportedly set up the small den where the victims were kept pending the outcome of negotiations.

    Speaking on how his men busted the kidnappers’ hideout just over 30 minutes’ drive from the heart of the commercial town, Lt. Col. Sidi brought it all down to a persistent, long and meticulous effort of the battalion’s intelligence team following a tip-off.

    Sidi said the hoodlums had been terrorising Aba and its environs, kidnapping many, one of whom was a Dubai-based businesman.

    It was gathered that the Dubai based victim whose name was yet to be ascertained was said to have been kidnapped by the gang at Okpu Umuobo being being taken taken to a location which was discovered to be Umuagbai village.

    It was gathered that while the kidnappers were on their way to their hideout, soldiers got hint of their movement and laid ambush for them. On sighting the soldiers, the kidnappers reportedly engaged the army in a shootout which forced them to abandon their victim and a black coloured Land Rover Sports Utility Vehicle with registration number Lagos FST 754 DC.

    Two members of the gang were reported dead during the shootout, while two others said to be kingpins of the group escaped during the crossfire; the victim was said to have escaped from them.

    Questions arise: how long has  the kidnappers’ hideout been in existence? How many victims were taken there? Why did the villagers not spot the den as soon as it was put up, and why did they not report to the authorities?

    Sidi said that other gang members were being trailed even as he confirmed that the gang came to Aba from Port Harcourt, the Rivers State capital, to strike whenever their target was spotted in town by their informants in Aba and would immediately leave for Port Harcourt after their operation, leaving their victim in the custody of their gang members in Aba. It was said that the local gang members were the ones who released the victim as soon as a deal was struck with the  family.

    He said that burning down the house was part of government’s step to discourage people from using their houses as hideouts for kidnappers and keeping victims of kidnapping.

    Urging the residents of Aba to provide the army with prompt information about the activities of criminal elements within their vicinity, the army colonel assured that the army would ensure that residents of Aba sleep with their eyes closed.

    In a similar development, the soldiers attached to Operation Mensa 14 Brigade, Ohafia Forward Operation Base (FOB), Owaza in Ukwa West Local Government of Abia State have confiscated an unmarked white truck carrying about 50,000 liters of unrefined crude oil.

    Speaking to newsmen at Umuebulungwu village in Asa, Ukwa West LGA, the 14 Brigade Commander, Brigadier-General Lawrence Fejokwu represented by Captain Ishaya Banki, the Officer in-charge of FOB, said they were able to trace and confiscate the truck through with the assistance of the Umuebulungwu community. He, however, attributed the success of the operation to the fallout of the operation “Crocodile Smile” recently launched by the Chief of Army Staff, Lt. General Tukur  Burutai.

    Banki, lamenting that the country was losing so much money to the activities of vandals, described the act of the vandals as economic sabotage to the country’s economy and President Muhammdu Buhari administration’s efforts to reposition the economy in the face of the global economic downturn.

    He warned vandals to look for something meaningful to do, saying that they would not fold their arms to watch criminals satisfy their selfish desires and cause more pains to Nigerians.

    “The hoodlums laid a pipe from the source where they were siphoning the crude from to the bank of Ohando waterfront, using a pumping machine to pump the crude into the waiting truck. When we got the information, we analysed and swung into action. But by the time we got to this waterfront they had already moved the truck and smartly covered their tracks. But with the help of the villagers and our intelligence, we were able to trace the truck to this village (Umuebulungwu) and have been guarding it since Wednesday.

    “We are however making arrangements to tow back the truck to safety and awaiting further directives. So far, from our investigations, we believe the crude in the truck is about fifty thousand liters and efforts are on to track the owner of the truck. But like I said, our next moves will be determined by the orders I get from my superior”.

    Some of the nearby residents denied having knowledge of the vandals as they claimed that they saw the truck parked in their neighbourhood while they returned home from their farms.

    Recall that the federal government had launched the operation “Crocodile Smile” to curb the activities of vandals and pirates on the country’s waterways, an exercise that has started yielding fruit in Abia State.