Tag: Chief of Air Staff

  • Insurgency: Minister commends Armed Forces for restoring peace

    Insurgency: Minister commends Armed Forces for restoring peace

    The FCT Minister, Malam Muhammad Bello, on Tuesday commended the Nigerian Armed Forces for restoring peace and giving hope to many parts of the country.

    Bello made the commendation while receiving a delegation of the Nigeria Air Force led by the Chief of Air Staff, Air Marshal Sadique Abubakar, in his office in Abuja.

    Bello said that the armed forces had diligently worked to stamp out the activities of insurgents in the North East as well as criminal activities in other parts of the country.

    “You have restored hope at least to so many parts of this country”.

    Bello said that the intervention of men and officers of the armed forces during the last few months in the North East and South-South, respectively deserved commendation.

    The minister particularly praised the military for the planned aerial surveillance of Abuja-Kaduna Road; Abuja-Jos Road as well as Abuja-Lokoja Road.

    According to him, the action will go a long way in ensuring security of motorists on these busy roads.

    “I assure you that this additional support you want to give in terms of aerial surveillance of the major arteries into the territory is a welcome development.

    “If there are new areas you want to partner with us in terms of support, we are available.’’

    Bello said that he appreciated the wonderful relationship that the FCTA and Nigerian Air Force had maintained, adding that it would be sustained.

    “The Air Force as an institution has been a very important agent of development in this nation and you have done tremendously well for the country over the years.”

    Commenting on the plan of the service to provide houses for the lower ranks, the minister said that the initiative was very timely and in line with the FCT Administration’s general vision and focus.

    “Last week, we held an interactive meeting with officials of the Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria.

    “We told them in clear terms that any new land we provide for mass housing will now really be geared towards the lower income level,” he said.

    Bello said that over the last few years, private individuals and estate developers had built a lot of houses in Abuja.

    “But all tended to cater for the high end market and as a result, most of these houses are still unoccupied and have remained a big challenge.’’

    Earlier, the Chief of Air Staff lauded the excellent relationship between the Air Force and the FCTA.

    He said that as a service, the Nigeria Air Force had the responsibility to ensure that every inch of the Nigerian territory was secured and also safe for people to go about their legitimate aspirations.

    Abubakar also said that the Air Force would continue to do everything humanly possible in support of other security agencies, particularly the Police, which is constitutionally empowered to handle the issues of internal security.

    He thanked the minister for all the titles the force had received for its landed properties in Abuja.

    “The service is looking at addressing the welfare needs of officers and men, particularly the air men who deserve some attention in the area of ensuring that their welfare is well taken care of.

    “That is why we are looking at a way of coming up with non-commissioned officers’ housing programme.

    “This is a programme that is aimed at giving opportunities to non-commissioned officers to also have opportunities to own a house by the time they leave the service.”

    Abubakar said the Air Force would continue to function in line with its constitutional responsibilities and continue to collaborate with other security agencies to ensure that the FCT remained safe and secured.

     

  • CAS reaffirms commitment to reposition Nigerian Air Force

    CAS reaffirms commitment to reposition Nigerian Air Force

    The Chief of Air Staff, Air Marshal Sadique Abubakar, on Thursday reiterated his commitment to strengthen the Nigerian Air Force for optimal performance.

     

    Abubakar, who made the remark in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja said that there was no better time to achieve that, than now.

     

    Abubakar said that the Nigerian Air Force was in dire need of repositioning, adding that such had been one of the cardinal points of his administration.

     

    “Our aim is to reposition the Air Force; we are interested in ensuring that we are operating as professionals.

     

    “Professionalism and regimentation in the service is a very important area of interest that we have in the Air Force,’’ he said.

     

    Abubakar said that because of the important role Regimental Sergeant Majors (RSMs) and Warrant Officers (WOs) played in the Air Force, the senior officers deemed it necessary to meet with them on quarterly basis.

     

    According to him, the quarterly meeting enabled him and other officers to interact with them, communicate clear doubts and give them guidelines on what is expected of them.

     

    Abubakar said that the quarterly meeting also availed them of the opportunity to remind the RSMs and WOs of the very crucial role they played in repositioning the Air Force.

     

    Abubakar said that the Air Force had always been part of the operations against criminality and other anti-social vices in the South-South region, adding that it would continue in that direction.

     

    “We are also playing an important role alongside other security agencies in the North-East to bring sanity to the area,’’ he said.

  • Boko Haram insurgency to end soon – Chief of Air Staff

    The Chief of Air Staff, Air Marshall Sadiq Abubakar, Thursday said the Boko Haram insurgency in parts of northern Nigeria would soon end.

    Speaking when he paid a maiden visit to the 207 Special Mobility Group of the Nigerian Airforce in Calabar, he said that the military was at the “tail end of totally eliminating the Boko Haram insurgency in the North-East.”

    According to him, the movement of the sect in long convoys from one village to the other, killing innocent people has been curtailed.

    He said that the military has re-captured most of the territory that were previously in the control of the sect.

    “We are not only winning the war against Boko Haram, we are actually at the tail end of the battle.

    “It is just a matter of time; this issue of insurgency will definitely come to an end.

    “If you visit Maiduguri today and witness the level of economic activities going on, you will believe with me that peace is fast returning back in that area.

    “In counter insurgency operation you cannot automatically rule out any chance. Where are these female suicides coming from? Who is arming them?

    “Boko Haram have been degraded and like I said, we are at the tail end of the battle,’’ he assured.

     

  • Kaduna crash: El-Rufai commiserates with victms’ families

    Kaduna crash: El-Rufai commiserates with victms’ families

    Governor Nasir El-Rufai of Kaduna State has commiserated with the families of the seven people that died in a Donier plane crash on Saturday in Kaduna.

    A statement signed by the governor’s spokesperson, Samuel Aruwan, in Kaduna on Saturday, said the governor also condoled with the Chief of Air Staff, and the officers and men of the Nigerian Air Force over the incident.

    The statement quoted the governor as saying that he received the news of the plane crash in Kaduna with “shock and sadness”.

    “We offer our deep condolences to the families, who have been bereaved by this incident.

    “May Almighty God, in His infinite mercies, grant their souls eternal rest and uphold their families in this moment of grief and sorrow,” the statement added.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the Nigerian Air Force Dornier-228 aircraft crashed into Ribadu Cantonment (Old NDA) at about 6.45 a.m., killing all the seven people on board.

  • Court voids appointment of service chiefs

    Justice Adamu Bello of the Federal High Court, Abuja, on Monday voided the appointment of the nation’s three service chiefs.

    The judge declared as illegal and unconstitutional, the appointment of the Chief of Air Staff,  Chief of Army Staff and Chief of Naval Staff by the President without “first seeking and obtaining the confirmation of the National Assembly.”

    He granted an order restraining “the President from further appointing service chiefs for the country without first obtaining the confirmation of the National Assembly.”

    The judgment was on a suit instituted in 2008 by rights activist, Festus Keyamo.

    Keyamo had argued that the practice of side-stepping the constitutional requirement of National Assembly, in the appointment of service chiefs, began under former President Olusegun Obasanjo.

    He stated that subsequent administrations have adopted the illegal practice.

    By implication, it means that such appointments made before now without the confirmation of the National Assembly were unconstitutional.

    Keyamo had in the suit marked: FHC/ABJ/CS/611/2008 sought a determination of the following questions:

    * Whether by the combined interpretation of the provisions of Section 218 of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 and Section 18 of the Armed Forces Act, Cap. A.20, Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 2004, the President can appoint the service chiefs of the federation without the confirmation of the National Assembly first sought and obtained.

    * Whether Section 18 (1) and (2) of the Armed Forces Act, Cap. A.20, Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 2004 is not in conformity with the provision of the 1999 Constitution so as to fall within the category of existing laws under Section 315 (2) of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999, that the President, may, by order, modify its text, to bring it into conformity with the provisions of the Constitution.

    He also sought the following orders:

    * A declaration that the appointment of Service Chiefs for the Federal Republic of Nigeria by the President, without the confirmation of the National Assembly is illegal, unconstitutional and void.

    *A declaration that Section 18 (1) & (2) of the Armed Forces Act, Cap. A.20, Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 2004, is in conformity with the provisions of the 1999 Constitution so as not to fall within the category of existing laws under Section 315 (2) – of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999, that the President, may, by order, modify its text, to bring it into conformity with the provisions of the Constitution.