Tag: Colonel

  • Army Council confirms 227 promotions

    The Army Council Friday, approved the promotion of 227 senior officers from various ranks to the next higher ranks in the Nigerian Army. Those promoted include 21 Brigadier Generals to Major Generals, 93 Colonels to Brigadier Generals and 113 Lieutenant Colonels to Colonels.

    The newly promoted officers are Brigadier General CM Abraham Acting General Officer Commanding (GOC) 2 Division, Brigadier General OU Obono, Acting Corps Corps Commander, Nigerian Army Artillery Corps, Brigadier General PJ Dauke Acting GOC 3 Division, Brigadier AA Nani Acting GOC 8 Task Force Division, Brigadier General JB Olawunmi, Acting Coordinator, Nigerian Army Aviation Corps, Brigadier General CC Okwonkwo, Commander 48 Task Force Division Engineers, Brigadier General MSA Aliyu and Brigadier General AM Jalingo, were all promoted to the rank of Major General, among others.

    Among the Colonels promoted to the rank of Brigadier Generals are Colonel IY Dogara, Colonel EO Aikhomu, Colonel Aminu Bande, Colonel IFD Briggs, Colonel PA Alamba, Colonel UU Bassey, Colonel UT Musa, Colonel AS Ndalolo, Colonel AI Taiwo, Colonel Y Hassan, Colonel IOO Olotta and Colonel UT Utaru.
    Others include the Acting Director Army Public Relations, Colonel SK Usman, Acting Director of Chaplain Service (Roman Catholic) Colonel CC Iroegbu, Acting Director of Chaplain Service (Protestant), Colonel DD Danfulani, and Acting Director Islamic Affairs, Colonel SG Mustapha.

    Promotion in the Nigerian Army is an annual exercise by the Service to qualified personnel who have distinguished themselves over a stipulated period of time. Earlier in the year, the Nigerian Army carried out several promotion exercises for other categories of its personnel. These include the Junior Non-Commission Officers (JNCOs), Senior Non-Commission Officers and Warrant Officers category, as well as Junior officers from the rank of Second Lieutenant to Lieutenants, Lieutenants to Captains and from Captains to Majors.

    The approval of the promotion by the Army Council for the senior officers is the last for the year. The promotion exercise is expected to re-energise the beneficiaries towards the discharge of their onerous tasks and responsibilities.

  • How Buhari led us to flush out invaders from Chad-Retired Colonel Musiliu Olaore

    How Buhari led us to flush out invaders from Chad-Retired Colonel Musiliu Olaore

    Political commentator and public affairs analyst, Musiliu Shittu Olaore, retired from the Nigerian Army as a colonel about 14 years ago. He explains the circumstances that led to his exit, in this interview with ADEKUNLE JIMOH. He also relives his interesting times in the army. Excerpts:

    How would you describe yourself?

    I hail from Offa, Kwara State. I am also a practising medical doctor. I was born in Kumasi, Ghana, when my father went there on business. My father was trading in fish before he relocated to Nigeria in 1960.

    When were you born?

    I was born in the late 1950s. I started primary school in Ghana and completed it in Nigeria, mostly in mission schools like Baptist before my secondary education at the then Niger State Provincial Secondary School, Bida. It is now Government College, Bida. I finished from there in 1967 and proceeded to Government College, Keffi, in then Plateau State for Cambridge Higher School Certificate from 1967 to 1969.

    In 1970, I proceeded for my medical course at the University of Lagos where I qualified as a medical doctor in 1975. I did my housemanship between 1975 and 1976 and went for the mandatory National Youths Service Corps (NYSC) in 1977. Then in 1978, I joined the army.

    Will you say you were born with silver spoon?

    No. My father was a moderate man. He was self-contented. That is why I am following in his footsteps.

    Why did you elect to enlist in the Nigerian Army?

    When I left the NYSC, I saw the military as a bastion of vigour and good life. Otherwise, after NYSC, I was asked to come to the Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH) for my post-graduate programme in Gynaecology. But whilst serving as a youth corps member, I saw the benefits of serving the nation on a higher scale. That is why when I completed my NYSC programme, I went back to LUTH and started the post-graduate programme. But not more than three months into the programme, I just saw my name in Daily Times that I should come for an interview in Ibadan, because I had applied while serving as a youth corps member.

    So I went and the late General Mamman Vasta asked, “So you are a medical doctor?” and I said yes. He said we need people like you in the army. That was how I joined the army. Afterwards, I had to go back to LUTH to tell them of my decision. The authorities of LUTH encouraged me to stay back and finish my post-graduate programme but I refused. That was how I joined the army in October 1978. I spent 24 years, six months and four days. I voluntarily retired from the army in 2003.

    Since retirement, I have not really engaged in any active work, because one thing about the military is that once you serve there and retire and you are contented, you will not want to serve under anybody again. Except maybe you just want to offer service.

    Tell us about your major postings in the army

    Having completed my mandatory military training in the Nigerian Defence Academy (NDA) in Kaduna and Nigerian Military Depot, Zaria, both in Kaduna State, I was posted to the military hospital Enugu, as captain, general duties medical officer. While I was there, within eight months, I was seconded to serve in the United Nations peace-keeping force in Lebanon, to lead the contingent under the command of the late Lt-Col. Yohanna Madaki. I came back to the military hospital. From there, I was posted out again on a course at the Command and Staff College, Jaji, in Kaduna State. From Jaji, I was posted to Yola, then in Gongola State as Commanding Officer, 15 Field Ambulance Brigade, under the Brigade Commander, Brigadier-General Y.Y Kure.

    From there, the Maitasine riot broke out in Kano and spread to Yola. The then General Officer Commanding (GOC), General Muhammadu Buhari, now the current president, visited us in Yola and said we should be ready to move to that place. I pinned down at Munguno field hospital as the commander of the field hospital and Baga axis in Borno State. The then General Buhari came down from Jos. We were there. And when Chad operations came again, we moved to Baga under Buhari as GOC 3rd Armoured Division. We flushed them up to Chad. In fact, the then Chadian President complained to Alhaji Shehu Shagari why Nigeria was invading his country. Buhari’s coming is not ordinary; it is divine. He is one of the greatest Nigerians that can look anybody in the face. He is not corrupt. He does not drink, he does not smoke and he does not womanise.

    We are not in this world to make money but for God and humanity. When we finished the Chad operations, I came back to Yola and from there to the Military Hospital Jos as senior medical officer. After two years, I was posted out to the Military Hospital, Yaba, Lagos from 1987 to 1989, and from there, I was posted to Markudi as Commanding Officer of the 31 Infantry Brigade Para-trooper. After, I was posted back to my headquarters in Lagosthe Nigerian Army Medical Corps. I was there for four years.

    In 1994, I was moved from there to 44 Armed Forces Reference Hospital, Kaduna. After one or two years, I was posted to Enugu again as medical officer of the whole 82 division. From there I went back to Lagos. All my children knew about all these movements, as I always took them along.

    Do you have a hospital of your own?

    No, I don’t. But I am proposing to have one, because a medical doctor is always one for life. But I will not tell you lies, very soon, I will have my own hospital. Over the years, I have been a political commentator and an analyst.

    Are you married?

    Yes, I am married and blessed with three boys and one girl. They are graduates now in various disciplines.

    Do you have any regrets in life?

    My greatest regret is that when I was in the army, I saw that the professionals were not being treated like the non-professionals. So I started asking myself, ‘I’m I in the right place?’ But I trudged on. When it was time for me to go, I voluntarily retired; not that anyone forced me. It was because of the discrimination in promotions; that certain categories of soldiers could not go beyond certain ranks. I said I didn’t bargain for such brazen discrimination. Another regret was when my wife quit the marriage, leaving me with four toddlers. I was saying, would I cope? Since she left me, I have not remarried. God helped me to train them; even when my late mother said I should bring them to her, I refused. To God be the glory, all of them are graduates. That is my joy.

    What are your happiest moments?

    When I saw my children growing and they were graduating. When the last two finished, that was my happiest moment. Because I voluntarily resigned so that I would take care of these children no matter what, and God has been very faithful to me.

    What were your challenges during active service?

    The army operates on discipline. It is not about whether you are right or you have a contrary opinion. Once a decision is taken by a superior officer, you must abide. Anybody who joins the military and he is not subservient cannot last. Even though you are right, you must obey before complaints. Then you can now go round and sell your idea again quietly. That is why the army is able to fight. When they say go right, left or centre, you don’t ask why. If you look back, you are court-martialled and shot dead on the field. The peace time court-martial is also there. The normal discipline of the army is spelt out when you are joining the army.

    What are your comments on the country’s economic recession?

    Look, the revelations about mind-bugling corruption of military officers having billions of naira, malls and shops! Look, they should be shot! Professionals who have gone to the universities doing their works or trading don’t have such huge amount of money. They just go to government and embark on a looting spree. The judiciary is not helping matters. Judges just grant frivolous interlocutory injunctions. Nigeria is not ready for democracy. We need militocracy; what the late Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe referred to in 1976 as diarchy; that is a combination of military and civilian rule.

    I am happy the Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN) said he has received petitions, promising to look into them. President Muhammadu Buhari should liaise with the CJN for accelerated completion of all corruption-related cases.

    Would you say you are a fulfilled man?

    Honestly, I am a fulfilled man. All my children are graduates. That is my greatest joy in life. Money or no money, what I will eat till I die, God has provided it. I am not looking for anything again than to be free and do what I want. What is this life all about?

  • Army chief vows to arrest colonel’s killers

    Army chief vows to arrest colonel’s killers

    The body of abducted Col. Samaila Inusa was yesterday buried at the old Nigerian Defence Academy (NDA) burial ground in Kaduna.

    The deceased was buried according to Islamic rites, after which he was given military honour with three gun salutes.

    Dressed in the national colours of the green-white-green, the body of Col. Inusa arrived at the old NDA cemetery around 11.45 am from the  44 Army Reference Hospital, Kaduna.

     He was buried at noon.

    But the Chief of Army Staff (COAS), Lt-Gen. Tukur Buratai, vowed to arrest his killers to make them face the law.

    Represented by the Chief of Administration at the Army Headquarters, Maj.-Gen. Ado Abubakar, the COAS said the Army was mourning the slain senior officer, who had served the country meritoriously.

    He described the late officer as a gallant and professional soldier, noting that the Army was not happy the way and manner Inusa was killed.

    The Army chief said: “Col. Inusa was a great soldier. We feel the pains. Though death is inevitable and nobody can run away from it. I came in to represent my boss, the chief of Army Staff, because the Army is mourning one of us that has served this country greatly and we are not happy the way he died.

    “But whatever happens, we shall see to the end of it all.”

    Also, Commander, Nigerian Army School of Infantry Maj.-Gen. Kasim Abdulkarim said the late colonel, who served under his command, was a loyal, committed and hard working officer.

    He added that Colonel Inusa would be missed by his colleagues.

    Gen. Abdulkarim urged officers and men of the military to take precautionary measures in safeguarding their personal security.

    “I feel bad because the officer is directly under me. He was a loyal, committed and hard working officer. We should take our personal security seriously,” he said.

    The late colonel, who was chief instructor at the Nigerian Army School of Infantry, Jaji, near Kaduna State, was kidnapped at gunpoint on Refinery Junction in Chikun Local Government of Kaduna State at the weekend.

    The abductors dropped off Inusa’s wife and left with him in his car, heading towards Abuja.

    On Tuesday, his decomposing body was found on the Kaduna Eastern bypass, a few kilometres away from where he was abducted.

    Born in 1972 in Nasarawa Local Government of Kano State, Col. Inusa attended Ramat Special Primary School in 1979-1985 and proceeded to Ahmadiyya Secondary School, Kano, and obtained his West African School Certificate in 1991.

    The late Col. Inusa entered the Nigerian Defence Academy in 1992 as member of the 44th Regular Course and passed out in 1997 with a Bachelor of Biological Science.

    He was aide-de-camp to Sierra Leone Vice President and was promoted to colonel last year.

    His last appointment was chief instructor at the Nigerian Army School of Infantry, Jaji, near Kaduna.

    Also yesterday, a pro-democracy and non-governmental organisation, Human Rights Writers Association of Nigeria (HURIWA), condemned the killing.

    A statement by its leader, Emmanuel Onwubiko, said Inusa’s kidnap and murder was a sad reminder of a near-fatal encounter Lt.-Gen. Buratai had with alleged armed followers of the Kaduna-based Shiites Movement, which precipitated a clash leading to the death of many people.

    HURIWA demanded a comprehensive forensic crime investigation of the criminal act of abduction and assassination of the officer to bring perpetrators and their sponsors to justice.

  • Army Colonel abducted

    Army Colonel abducted

    Gunmen at the weekend abducted a top army officer Col. Samaila Inusa on the highway in a commando style in Kaduna.

    The gunmen suspected to be kidnappers whisked away the officer who was riding in his Mercedes-Benz car around Kamazo, along Kaduna Refinery Road, in Chikun local government area of Kaduna State. He was with his wife.

    Deputy Director, Army Public Relations Officer of 1 Division Nigerian Army, Colonel Abdul Usman in a statement yesterday confirmed the Saturday night’s abduction.

    According to him, “the abductors dropped off Colonel Inusa’s wife and left with him in his car. The car headed towards Abuja.”

    The statement said: “This is to inform the general public that a senior officer of the Nigerian Army, Colonel Samaila Inusa serving in Nigerian Army School of Infantry Jaji Kaduna was abducted around Kamazo near NNPC junction, Kaduna.

    “The abductors dropped off his wife and left with him in his car. The car headed towards Abuja.

    “Anybody with useful information or assistance should please assist in tracking these abductors. They are in a Mercedes Benz GLK Black colour with registration number Abuja, KUJ 154 TZ.

    “This happened at about 7:30pm on Saturday, 26 March, 2016. The following numbers could be reach for further contact; 08033865572, 08030489203, 08023445961, 07038025282 or 08058130703.”

    The General Officer Commanding (GOC) 1 Mechanized Division of the Army, Major General Adeniyi Oyebade, has promised N500,000 cash reward for anyone with useful information that could lead to the release of Col. Inusa.

    Division Spokesman, Col. Usman assured that such information would be treated with utmost confidentiality.

  • Falana rejects demotion of Maj. Gen. Ransome-Kuti

    Counsel to Ransome-Kuti, Mr. Femi Falana (SAN) said Wednesday night ‎that the demotion of his client from the rank of a Major General to that of a Colonel is “totally unacceptable”.

    Falana, maintained that there was no justification whatsoever ‎to warrant the demotion of the former Army General.

    “That is my first reaction. But I am holding a meeting with my client Thursday for further direction on the matter,” he said.

     

  • Colonel under fire for  invading church in Warri

    Colonel under fire for invading church in Warri

    The Commanding Officer of the 3 Battalion, David Ejoor Barracks, Effurun in Delta State, Lt Colonel Igwe Omoke, is under fire for ordering the military invasion of Assemblies of God Church in Effurun, last Sunday.

    The Prof Paul Emeka-led national headquarters accused Lt Colonel Omoke of taking sides in the crisis rocking the church, after it emerged that he led soldiers to invade and shut the Glory House Parish on Otti Street, Effurun.

    Eyewitness accounts and photographs of the military invasion showed that Lt-Col Omoke  directed the disruption of worship, because of his alleged sympathy for Rev Chidi Okoroafor’s faction in the crisis.

    “On the morning of the attack, the CO (Omoke) came with the troops. He was dressed in white native attire and he wore sunglasses. He earlier visited the church and made inquiries from  neighbours about the whereabouts of the pastor (Omole).

    “The soldiers, who came that Sunday, told us we had 10 minutes to round off whatever we were doing and shut the church and we could not argue with them because they were armed and had removed their name tags and the number plates from the two vans they came with.

    “The vans were fitted with guns – maybe machine guns – and the soldiers were menacing. We were in Sunday School, but we could not finish because the soldiers were counting down: ‘eight minutes, five minutes etc,” a female member of the church, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said.

    Lt-Col. Omoke, on telephone, denied knowledge of the military operation, saying he was not aware of what the reporter was “talking about”.

    However, the military officer, on Tuesday afternoon, told reporters that he took the action, following a February 11 petition (three days before the invasion) that the church leadership was disobeying a court order and there was a threat to peace in the area.

    He said: “To avert further crisis, I told my men to conduct patrol along the area and ensure that what happened last two weeks did not occur again. So for any person to say I am taking sides is unfortunate. I have sacrificed my time to ensure there is peace in Warri”, Lt-Col Omoke said.

    The District Superintendent and Warri District Secretary, Rev Fred Iyorhiobhe and Rev Blessing Ogwuche, slammed the military invasion.

    Oguwche told reporters at the NUJ Press Centre: “The national leadership crisis crept into the states and branches where the church divided into two factions, led by the two leaders. In Warri, the factions affected worshippers as they were loyal to their preferred factions.

     “But in Warri, our branch, Glory branch, is with the original Assemblies of God, led by Rev. Prof. Paul Emeka.

    ‘’But the Assemblies of God faction, led by Rev. Chidi Okoroafor, made everything possible to compel us to support his faction,’’ he added.