Tag: Army

  • One soldier injured in clash with worshippers, says Army

    The Army yesterday confirmed the clash between some of its men and some worshippers in Southern Kaduna on Sunday that led to the death of no fewer than six people and others injuredý.

    Even though, it claimed that there was no official statement about what transpired yet, the Army said one of its soldiers in the area was also injured.

    Spokesman of 1 Division Col. Abdul Usman told our correspondent that a senior officer had been sent down Gidan-Waya to ascertain what really transpired and report back to the division.

    Some of the survivors of the clash have been discharged from a State General Hospital. Others are still lying on their hospital beds.

  • Court fines Army N10m for assault, detention

    Court fines Army N10m for assault, detention

    A Federal High Court in Akure, the Ondo State capital, has awarded N10 million damages against the Army for the assault and unlawful detention of a lawyer, Zerubbabel Omoyele.

    Former Chief of Army Staff Lt-Gen Azubuike Ihejirika; Commanding Officer, 19 Battalion, Naquora Barracks, Okitipupa, Ondo State, Capt M.C Ndubuisi and Hassan Habila were joined as respondents.

    The victim’s counsel, Tope Temokun, said his client was assaulted and harassed on March 11, 2013, at Okitipupa when he tried to gather evidence in an assault matter against his own client, Joseph Omoranmowo.

    Temokun said Omoranmowo was unlawfully detained and allegedly assaulted by Capt Ndubuisi and Habila of the Naquora Barracks, Okitipupa Local Government Area.

    The lawyer said Omoyele  invited a photographer to take photos of Omoranmowo.

    Temokun added that he (Omoyele) was forcibly taken to the barracks, detained and beaten up for daring to obtain evidence against the military officers.

    He argued that the military officers violated and breached his client’s right to dignity and personal liberty.

    But Army counsel Yemi Akinseye-George contended that the Army set up a panel to investigate the incident.

    He argued that since the chief of Army staff and the commandant of the 19 Battallion did not authorise or consent to the acts of the fourth and fifth respondents, they could not be liable.

    Justice I.M Sani said it was wrong for the military to assume the role of the police when they were meant to take care of the territorial borders of the country and protect the citizens from internal terrorism.

    The court berated the officers for the condemnable act, saying soldiers had no power under the law to beat and detain the citizens they ought to protect.

    It ordered the Army to pay the applicant N10 million as exemplary damages for the violations of his rights and order of injunction.

    The court also restrained the officers and the Army from further harassment of the applicant.

  • Minimah: Army ‘ll regain more territories soon

    The Chief of Army Staff, Lt. Gen. Kenneth Minimah, has assured that more territories under the Boko Haram sect would soon be captured and the war against terror won.

    He said the successes recorded in the last few days followed joint operations between the Nigerian forces and their Cameroon, Chad and Niger counterparts.

    The Army Chief spoke yesterday at the opening of a five-day seminar for operational level officers of the Nigerian Army by the British Military Advisory and Training Team (BMATT), at Jaji Military Cantonment, Kaduna.

    According to Gen. Minimah, “at the end of the seminar, the Army is expected to generate more capacity to gain more, recover more territories. It will help our army to perform better and be more professional.

    “It is gratifying to note that our drive in retraining, in conjunction with the valued partnership, is beginning to yield greater results. The ongoing counter-terrorists campaign in the Northeast, coupled with the awakening of Cameroon, Chad and Niger forces, has boosted our successes, leading to the liberation of more communities hitherto under the siege of Boko Haram terrorists.”

  • Whose army?

    Whose army?

    During the June 12 saga, my former editor and once dean of Nigeria’s columnists, Lewis Obi, wrote an unforgettable piece. He titled the article “The Caliphate’s Army,” and he posited that the army had held democracy and Nigeria spellbound because it belonged to the heirs of the Sokoto Caliphate. The Hausa-Fulani elite, that is.

    Recent events compelled me to contemplated Obi’s thesis, and I tried to cast the army of the June 12 era to the present.

    In the June 12 era, the Hausa-Fulani elite was smug, peacocky and ruthless, even in spite of the tempests of protests and resistance. They supposedly held power and controlled the army, including the puffy officers. Today, the commander-in-chief and the chief of army staff are from the same tribe, and it is not Hausa-Fulani. The proverbial table has turned, and the most vociferous critics are from the Hausa-Fulani stock, who have been accused of looking back to their glory days with a royal sense of entitlement.

    But this is not a Nigerian army. It is an army of carpetbaggers. It is because we do not have an army born and bred Nigerian. It is fragile like an orphan. Anyone can own it today, and another tomorrow. That was the thought that overwhelmed me when I read the interview in this newspaper last week with Captain Sagir Koli. He unveiled to our eyes the tale of the Ekiti Election, and how a general (Aliyu Momoh), a buffoon politician now governor (Ayo Fayose ), a businessman (Chris Uba ), the presidency (that implies Goodluck Jonathan) and a raft of Yoruba renegades like Adesiyan and Obanikoro, sat to rig the Ekiti polls. No matter what may have been written about the so-called stomach infrastructure, no one can say with absolute certainty that Fayose won the election. Some have said Fayose won given the acclamation on the streets. If an election is close, that is always a possibility. When soldiers take over polling stations, muzzle the opposition and allow the politicians a free rein, anything is possible.

    When the army holds sway, the civilian is at its mercy. We may now recall the takeaways of the governor of example, Babatunde Raji Fashola, SAN, in which he asked basic questions. One of them was, how could Fayemi have lost in all local governments? It reminds me of the pamphlet titled Commonsense by Thomas Paine during the American Revolution. Captain Koli’s core revelations, not denied by anyone, only show how the army has been captured by the cabal in power.

    So, is it still the caliphate’s army? Not today. It is Jonathan’s army and whomever he puts in charge, including Uba who cruised brazenly into Ekiti with officers while elected governors were shut out.

    I recall some lines from the best war novel ever, All Quiet on the Western Front, by Erich Maria Remarque. “We came to realize – first with astonishment, then bitterness, and finally indifference – that intellect apparently wasn’t the most important thing… not ideas; but the system; not freedom, but the drill. We had joined up with enthusiasm and with goodwill; but they did everything to knock that out of us.”

    Those lines must mark the disillusionment of Captain Koli. He had the naïve dignity of an officer. He still soared with the ideals of soldiery. Reality choked him into hiding. He should have read the history of the army. Some societies have army with a state, while others have state with an army.  The western societies often began with the elite and they formed militias, including the United States. Once the states are established, the military is canonized as an integral part of society. It marked the transition from feudal to capitalist democracy. The rule of law subjected everything and everybody under the state. Hence no army officer can defy his president and no president can defy the law. Since the law is based on higher values, no group or individual can manipulate the law at the expense of the higher social mores. That was how the developed societies were formed. Even in Ancient Greece and Rome, where all citizens were soldiers, everyone had a sacred sense of their responsibilities. Tensions have existed between the civilian authorities and their generals, but the civilian leader prevailed only within the social values. Lincoln and Macllelan, Churchill and Montgomery, Truman and macArthur. Once al Haig challenged Reagan, and the president proclaimed, “I’m in charge here,” before firing the general. Not hanky-panky of the sort we see today with the service chiefs.

    In 19th century Europe, however, following the hurly burly of the French revolution, some societies, especially Germany under Bismarck and Austria under Metternich, had armies with states. That martial ardour gave us two world carnages – First and Second World Wars – and today they have tucked the bloodthirsty excesses under the clear-eyed vigilance of the rule of law.

    Armies are made to defend societies against external enemies. In West Africa, our soldiers are rooted in the psychology of putting down internal rebellion. The military under the so-called West African Frontier Force in British colonies or Senegalese Sharp Shooters in French ensured that after independence, the soldiers and police did not belong to the country but those who formed them. So when the colonial masters left, the military fell into the hands of the nationalist elite, the politicians, who became the new leaders. Just as civil servants, teachers, city dwellers felt some disconnect with the new state, so did the army.

    W all inherited a post-colonial society. The state was too artificial to belong to anyone. Tribes and tongues differed because there was no brotherhood. Without brotherhood, bonds failed. The only bond – that is, the state – was abstract and distant. Consequently, the army in spite of its discipline and name did not segue into its classic role in a modern state.

    Tribal elites in the cloaks of politicians scrambled for control. We witnessed the struggle in the First Republic between the Hausa-Fulani and the Igbo, and that precipitated a 30-month civil war. Since the Hausa-Fulani prevailed, they ruled the nation until June 12, 1993, which inspired Obi’s seminal piece.

    So, this is not a state with an army. Neither is it an army with a state. Philosophers speak of strong and weak states. Ours is often described as weak. It is wrong language. We don’t have a Nigerian state yet.  We have what Italian philosopher Antonio Gramsci calls the political society. Even soldiers when in power acted more like politicians. We have the politician’s army. The state is so artificial that it exists in names, symbolisms, protocols and documents; a state in body but not in spirit.

    That explains why we even debate whether soldiers should play a role in elections, even when the constitution forbids it and a judge frowns at it. An army denies its former leader’s qualifications because it has a new loyalty. Boko Haram could be born in Nigeria because politicians nurtured it in its infancy. The militancy in the Niger Delta also fattened on politicians. Every politician sees force as a quality of being. He casts the military in his own image. This is a stylized Hobbesian state. So, why was it a surprise that the service chiefs pitched their tents with Jonathan over putting off the polls? It is because we still don’t know the historic disconnect between the army and the artificial state of Nigeria. It is not the army alone, though. Civil servants pillage resources because they don’t feel they are destroying their own societies. That partly accounts for why students damage their labs during riots.

    The national conference held recently only recapitulated all we have said from day one in this country. We need a people’s constitution that will define the roles of the army, the law maker, the teacher, the parent, the use of resources, the schools, etc. After that, the army can fully play its role as a legitimate defender of the country, and not a tool of a section of the political elite.

  • ‘Army, police should not be willing tools in elections’

    ‘Army, police should not be willing tools in elections’

    In the speech of Mr. Ayo Fayose, he said propaganda would only waste time and that attack is the best form of defence. He maintained that the party in general and the Southwest PDP needed to be valiant to face the Tinubus anywhere they are. He further said we have control of the police and the army and I cannot afford to lose my control on police and the army and, without Jonathan being the President, we will lose the control. Further, he said the presidential election is a do or die affair, but Governor Mimiko quickly countered that it should not be a do or die affair but rather a do-and-win affair” – Sahara Reporters

    The above statement was culled from the report of the inaugural meeting of the Southwest PDP held on Saturday December 27, 2014 at Government House, Akure, Ondo State capital. It was lifted from Sahara Reporters (SR). I was moved to write this open letter to the military and the police because of the weight of the statement above and the danger it poses to our renascent democracy. I write as a concerned Nigerian who wants the best for my country at this critical point in the nation’s history. I write to appeal to the conscience of the Army and the police to take a deep and honest look at the above statements and rise up to defend democracy and Nigeria. I write to ask the Army and the police to issue a warning to Governor Fayose and his forty thieves before they destroy further the already battered image of these vital institutions.

    The Nigerian police have been battling with credibility crisis for years now and today most Nigerians see that very important and strategic institution as a government parastatal at the centre. For almost 16years since 1999, a vast preponderance of both the senior and junior officers have abused, rubbished and disgraced that very important institution to the extent that there is no trust again that they can get it right. The Nigeria’s police duty is to protect the 150 million Nigerian irrespective of tribe, tongue, religion, and culture but they have abandoned their primary duty in order to serve whoever is in power in Abuja. They help to rig elections, they help to oppress, repress and suppress the opposition, they intimidate, abuse, hound and physically assault the populace. Police are used to settle scores, they are used to retrieve debts, they sometimes encourage armed robbers, they beat up Nigerians at the drop of a hat. I can go on and on but time has come for the Nigerian police to take stock and try to redeem its battered image to face the challenges of the days ahead.

    The Nigerian Army I knew then was one of the best in Africa. They have given good accounts of themselves in peace keeping missions abroad and they are rated very high even outside Africa. But the emergence of Boko Haram few years back and the news from the Army formations across the country have become worrisome. Today we hear of mutiny in the Army, we hear of junior officers refusing orders from superiors, we hear of our once strong soldiers running away from Boko Haram rag-tagged shooters, we hear of Boko Haram seizing Army Barracks and carting weapons away, we hear about funds meant for junior soldiers being diverted, we hear about our soldiers being arrested by Cameroon Army and today we hear that there are Boko Haram sympathizers in the nations security agencies and even in Ministries, Parastatals and agencies of government. This is unbelievable and unpleasant story to believe in the 21st century and even at peace times in Nigeria. We can ignore the antics and rude shock from the Nigeria police but allowing the famous Nigeria Army to degenerate further is like committing suicide. The country will be dangerously exposed to external aggressors if nothing is done to rebuild, reconstruct and rehabilitate the Army of Nigeria. Nigerians will go the polls on February 14 2015 to make an important statement that will determine the road to travel in the years ahead. Nigerians are expected to rebuke those that have stunted our growth and made Nigeria to move at 5metre per hour instead of moving at 50 kilometers per hour. Nigerians will take a very important decision that will bring respect and honor to our country.

    This decision will change the way we do things, the way we think, the way we reason, the way we work and the way we relate with others. Nigerians will by that very important decision stop impunity, corruption, insecurity, indiscipline, brigandage, mediocrity, thuggery and abuse of democratic institutions like the Security Agencies, INEC, NYSC, Civil Defense, the Judiciary and others. These institutions must work effectively for us to get what we want. Like my friend Sonala Olumhense says, nobody is expected to sit on the fence this time around. It is either you are for change or for the maintenance of status quo. The choice is yours. Nobody is interested in mantra that PDP and APC are the same. It is either you are in APC or PDP. If out of omission or commission, the agents of change lose again next months, Nigeria may go down in history. We must all join hands in one accord, in amity, in agreement, in unity, and in tandem chase away PDP for Nigeria to breathe fresh air.

    I am therefore appealing to the Army, Navy, Air force, Police, INEC, NYSC, Civil Defense, Judiciary, Road Safety, DSS, SSS, etc to gear up for democracy. These vital institutions of democracy must do their work this time around. We expect impartiality, we expect cooperation, we expect full protection of all and sundry, we expect team work, organisation, networking and understanding. We must all prove that Nigeria is not a basket case.

    Now I want the Nigeria Army and the police to call Governor Ayo Fayose and his gang to order. This impunity and abuse of power and office must stop. A lot was revealed in that Akure Meeting and APC leaders should open their eyes wide now.

  • General sues Army for ‘unlawful retirement’

    General sues Army for ‘unlawful retirement’

    A Federal High Court has fixed February 3, 2015 for mention in a suit alleging unlawful retirement of an officer, Brig-Gen. Abdul Qadir Abubakar, from the Nigerian Army.

    Brig-Gen. Abubakar sued the Armed Forces Council, Nigerian Army Council, the Chief of Defence Staff, the Chief of Army Staff and the Ministry of Defence before the court, challenging his retirement from the Nigerian Army without completing the normal mandatory period.

    The retired Army officer, in the suit filed on his behalf by a Kaduna-based lawyer, Tajudeen Oladoja, is asking the court to set aside his purported retirement from the Army by the defendants.

    He also asked the court to reinstate him back into the service with all his rights and promotion to the rank of a Major-General.

    The suit alleged that the defendants, without looking into his appeal, carried out the retirement against Section 178 (2) of the Armed Forces Act, CAP A 20 Laws of the Federation, 2004.

    Counsel to the plaintiff said a letter from the second defendants dated  December 11, 2014, in which the plaintiff was advised to apply for voluntary retirement not later than  January 31, 2014, so that the Army Council would not consider him for compulsory retirement, was against justice and fair hearing.

    According to the lawyer, while the plaintiff’s appeal was pending for redress and yet to be determined by the Commander-In-Chief of the Armed Forces, the second defendant met on April 10, 2014 and approved the plaintiff’s retirement.

    In the Writ of Summons, the  counsel is urging the court to give an order directing the second defendants to review the Nigerian Army 2011-2013 promotion exercise concerning the plaintiff and to grant him elevation to the rank of Major-General as well as restore his promotion, rights, privileges and statutory career at the age of 54 years.

  • General sues Army over ‘unlawful retirement’

    February 3, 2015 has been fixed for mention in a suit of alleged unlawful retirement of Brigadier-General Abdul Qadir Abubakar (rtd) from the Nigerian Army.

    Brigadier-General Abubakar had dragged the Armed Forces Council, Nigerian Army Council, the Chief of Defence Staff, the Chief of Army Staff and the Ministry of Defence before a Federal High Court challenging his retirement from the Nigerian Army without completing the normal mandatory period.

    In a suit filed on his behalf by a Kaduna Lawyer, Tajudeen Oladoja, Brigadier Abubakar who is also a lawyer has approached the Court to set aside his purported retirement from the Army by the Defendants and reinstate him back into the service with all his rights and promotion to the rank of a Major-General.

    The Suit No: FCH/KD/CS/56/2014 alleged that the Defendants without looking into his appeal carried out the retirement against Section 178 (2) of the Armed Forces Act, CAP A 20 Laws of the Federation, 2004.

    Counsel to the Plaintiff said a letter from the second Defendants dated 11th December, 2014 in which the Plaintiff was advised to apply for voluntary retirement not later than 31st January, 2014 so that the Army Council may not need to consider him for compulsory retirement by the Army Council was against justice and fair hearing.

    According to the Counsel, while the Plaintiff appeal was pending for redress and yet to be determined by the Commander-In-Chief of the Armed Forces, the second Defendant met on the 10th April, 2014, and approved the retirement of the Plaintiff from the Nigerian Army.

    In the Writ of Summons, the Plaintiff Counsel has approached the Court to give an order directing the 2nd Defendants to review the Nigerian Army 2011-2013 promotion exercise concerning the Plaintiff and to grant him elevation to the rank of Major General the Nigerian Army.

    The Counsel also asked that the Court should declare that the Plaintiff and indeed no Commission Officer of the Nigerian Army can be forcefully removed or coerced to retire in manners inconsistent with the Armed Forces Act 2004.

    He requested the Court to also direct the Defendants to immediately restore the Plaintiffs promotion right, privileges and statutory career age of 54 years.

    The Plaintiff is also demanding a Court order setting aside, nullifying and rendering ineffective the 2nd Defendants letters which forced the Plaintiff to retire without completing the mandatory age.

     

  • Government and his army

    Government and his army

    Bad blood. Lives lost. Properties destroyed. Neigbours becoming suspicious of one another. Trust taking a long vacation. And like Femi Kuti noted in one of his songs: “Truth don die.” This, in a nutshell, is the tale of the $16b Export Processing Zone (EPZ) project in Warri southwest, Delta State, which has remained stagnant all this while.

    But despite all these, nothing prepared me for the event of Sunday, November 16. My phone buzzed. The first instinct when the inspiring ringtone “There is power in the name of Jesus” blared out was for me to meditate and allow the phone ring for some time before answering it.

    The man at the other end is Shola O’Neil, our Southsouth Regional Editor, who I consider one of the shining stars of Nigerian journalism’s new generation.

    I was nearing the newsroom’s door when his call came in. I had taken permission to close early because I needed rest. Unlike my restless self, I had sat the bulk of the four hours or so that I spent at work that day.

    “Hello Shola,” I said.

    “Hello editor,” he answered me. The humble man in Shola always likes to address me as editor.

    “I don’t even know how to start,” he said and paused, “we are in a kind of situation.”

    The reception was not very good. So, at some point, I was not hearing Shola very well.

    He told me a group of 14 reporters, including two from The Nation— Shola and Bolaji Ogundele— were in the custody of men of Tompolo, the man whose full name is Government Ekpumopolo.

    The phone cut at a point. I went into my car and re-dialled Shola’s number. He explained to me that they were arrested on their way back from a news conference addressed by Itsekiri over the controversial EPZ that President Goodluck Jonathan was not allowed to carry out its ground-breaking last weekend.

    The EPZ has been a subject of controversy between the Ijaw and Itsekiri since the idea was mooted. Last week, this paper had used the picture of Ijaw youths declaring war against the Itsekiri to lead its Southsouth edition. With this in mind, I wondered why it became a sin for reporters to cover the Itsekiri side of the debacle. Shola was in Oporoza, the home town of Tompolo to cover this news conference and rally over the $16bn EPZ project. Shola has been on top of the fuzz over the project and he was excited when he got a call that the Itsekiri were also protesting at Ogidigben. So, there he went to get their side of the EPZ brouhaha.

    On their way back to Warri from the Itsekiri event, Tompolo’s boys hijacked the boat conveying them and took them to their camp in Oporoza.  They seized all documents on them and the pictures of the Itsekiri protest.

    What Shola told me next shocked me: “They came with a rifle, which they claimed to have found on our boat.” The gun, Shola said, was only ‘discovered’ two clear hours after they were seized by gun-wielding men and held at their camp. The mention of camp got me thinking. Do they still have camps? I thought all such camps were disbanded when the militants accepted the presidential amnesty programme. I began to query the sincerity of the leadership of the militants to the whole amnesty programme.

    The excuse that a gun was found on the boat carrying the reporters, which also had some civilians on it, gave the militants the temerity to manhandle them. Shola, Bolaji, Shola Adebayo, Regional Editor of Leadership, who has covered Delta State for many major newspapers in the country, and others were there for no less than six hours before they were handed over to the Navy.

    Other seized reporters are: Regional Editor of Vanguard, Emma Amaize, Warri correspondent of National Daily, Emma Arubi, Awoso Harry of Delta Broadcasting Service (DBS) Warri; Olu Philips and Paulinus Odedeyi of Channels Television; Osarose Sadoh and Alex Omoniyi, of Africa Independent Television (AIT); Anthony Ebule, Celestine Ukah, Josephine Ughweri and Victoria Nwaeze, all of Fresh Angle, a Warri-based tabloid.

    The excuse for handing them over to the Navy was that a gun was found on their boat. That makes them criminals. Warped logic.

    The news hounds were thus guilty of taking sides with the Itsekiri to attack them. Their explanation of covering the Itsekiri event for fair hearing made no sense to the obviously high militants, who detained them from 1pm till about 7pm.

    Shola could only call after they had been handed over to the Navy. The militants, he told me, said Itsekiri journalists were colluding with their people. Shola is Itsekiri. Bolaji is not and the bulk of the 14 seized reporters are not Itsekiri. So, how did they arrive at this conclusion?

    The reporters spent the night at the NN base in Escalon and were brought to Warri on Monday morning. When I spoke with Shola on their way to Warri, I assumed they were being taken home by the Navy. How wrong I was! They were actually taken to another naval base in Warri for detention. They spent several hours and only regained their full freedom in the evening. They left the naval base traumatised and sorry for our dear country.

    Daily Independent’s Arubi was tortured alongside the other six non-journalists seized on the boat. Their sin: being Itsekiri. They accused Arubi of writing ‘nonsense’ against their leader (Tompolo). He was forced to hold a rifle and his picture was taken and reportedly published on the social media.

    What kind of a nation is this? The militants who handed over the reporters to the naval men for alleged gun-running were also bearing arms, which I doubt they have licence for. The navy could not query them on this; yet, it willingly detained men who have, over the years, contributed through their pen to the nation.

    Aside contributing to the nation, these men have also contributed to the lives of men such as Tompolo, who became overnight billionaires. In saner societies, Tompolo and his like are unlikely to be treated as heroes. It is very unlikely they will have the sort of access they have to the corridors of power, not to talk of enjoying million-dollar contracts from government agencies.

    Since we started Niger Delta Report last year, Shola has repeatedly promoted the activities of a Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO) floated by Tompolo to burnish his image. He would always plead with me to accommodate the stories on the foundation. That was why I was shocked that Shola could have problem with Tompolo’s boys.

    Perhaps Shola and others fell victim to the dictum that “all is fair in a war” because that is what the EPZ matter has become.  Brothers do not trust brothers again. Or how does one explain the situation in Ugborodo, one of the communities hosting the EPZ? Camps have emerged in Ugborodo and destruction has been the name of the game. And now the Ijaw have joined the fray demanding that the name of the project must reflect joint ownership by Ijaw and Itsekiri. The Itsekiri say the project is on their land and so should have no Ijaw colouration.

    What is in a name, you may ask? Will the project be more beneficial to the people on the account of the name it is given? Will its name mean a better tomorrow for the people?

    My final take: This avoidable fight over name and sundry issue has dragged on unnecessarily. I suggest that a neutral name should be found to ease the tension. I believe Jonathan can call Tompolo to order and remedy the situation. Detaining and torturing reporters for writing ‘nonsense’ against Tompolo gives me the impression he runs a government of his own. At the risk of being marked for writing ‘nonsense’, I dare say that the fact that he bears ‘Government’ and is close to the powers-that-be should not get into his head. He has been lucky thus far and should not take it for granted.

  • Army retires 15 generals

    The Nigerian Army has retired 15 Generals from the Nigerian Army School of Electrical and Mechanical Engineering (NASEME) Auchi, Edo state from active service.

    Of the 15, 10 are 10 Brigadier Generals while five are Major Generals.

    The Major Generals are Edem Ekwo, Thompson Oliomoghe, Richard Maduegbunam, Friday Airende and Abass Adekanye , while the Brigadier Generals included Idi Adamu, Patrick Oviaghase, Samuel Ayo, Peter Aremu, Jacob Amao, Joshua Ibilaye, Ibrahim Alawode, Samuel Adesogan, Chukwuka Ani and Abel Okpeki.

    Speaking at a pulling out parade held in honour of the retirees on Friday, the Corps Commander of NASEME, Major General S Labaran said that the retired officers served the country meritoriously

    Labaran wished them well in their various endeavours.

    One of the retired Generals, Thompson Oliomoghe who spoke on behalf of others thanked the Nigerian Army for the opportunity to serve the nation.

  • Army or oppressors?

    SIR:I wish to say a very big thank you to all those who helped train our men in uniform (Army) especially those within and around Auchi, Edo State.

    Our military men, it appears, have so prepared for combat that they don’t seem to remember that we are in a democratic system and that we, bloody civilians are not at war with them, and that they were commissioned to protect and not to oppress us, bloody civilians.

    Hardly does a week go by without incidents of military men beating up civilians within Auchi (I know not of other places). This is often at the slightest provocation. For instance, an officer comes to use an ATM machine, he expects everyone else to move aside from the queue and anyone stupid enough to complain gets a nice beating. As a boys scout, I recall how much emphasis was placed on discipline among our members. Are these fellows not trained in the rudiments of law and order?

    It’s not just at ATMs that our men show how poor their moral values are but they try hard to show it everywhere else. I hope somebody becomes concerned about this before these soldiers have nobody to protect (or oppress).

     

    • Ishaq Umason,

    Auchi