Tag: military

  • Military prepares 39 Generals for retirement

    THE Nigerian military yesterday commenced plans for a seamless retirement for 39 generals.

    The generals, comprising 15 from the Army, 10 each from the Navy and Air Force as well as four attached to the Defence Headquarters (DHQ), were enrolled into a two-week entrepreneurship and management training programme organised by the Nigerian Armed Forces Resettlement Centre (NAFRC) and Empretec Nigeria Foundation.

    The trainees, who are the second batch to undergo the course at NAFRC, are expected to come up with viable business plans that would be scrutinised by the training facilitators.

    Inaugurating the workshop in Lagos yesterday, the Chief of Defence Staff (CDS) Gen. Gabriel Olonisakin urged participants to take the training seriously.

    Olonisakin said: “As senior managers of the military enterprise, you are now being prepared to deploy knowledge already acquired in the course of your career to more civil use. There is no doubt that life after service presents peculiar challenges; one of which is the need for retired officers to be able to still engage in meaningful economic activities with the aim of ensuring a productive and wholesome life after military service.

    “This is the aim of this training workshop. l have been reliably informed that this training will expose you to discussions and exercises that would adequately prepare you to handle challenges encountered in retirement, particularly concerning that of starting your own businesses.

    “I, therefore, congratulate you all on your nomination to this workshop and urge you to take full advantage of the benefits it offers. I also expect that some of the skills you will acquire would add value to your productivity at your respective services.”

    NAFRC Commandant Air Vice Marshal Ajibola Jekennu said the training was designed to equip the senior military officers within retirement bracket with essential tools and requisite information for a productive post-service life.

    He said: “The aim of the programme is basically to refocus attention of the retiring or soon-to retire senior officers to the fact that a meaningful and productive life can still be pursued at retirement. In a couple of days, the trainees shall be taken through various modules in entrepreneurship and management field. These modules have been specially prepared to meet specific needs of the senior officers. They have been designed to be more practical and interactive.

    “Our belief is that experiences and skills, which were accumulated while in service, could still be put to use in civilian business pursuits in order to live wholesome and fulfilling life after retirement.

    “On the long run, our wish is to have officers pre-retirement training fully domiciled at the centre with a regular programme while retaining organisations like Empretec Nigeria Foundation and Yabatech Consult as partners.

    “For now, NAFRC only facilitates such entrepreneurship training through these organisations. Eventually, we hope to develop in-house capacity for entrepreneurial training for officers of all cadres and not just those slated for retirement.

    “Our partnership with Yabatech Consult leads to the award of Advanced Professional Diploma in occupational, security and safety management, which provides our trainees with better employment opportunities and easy job placement in the labour market.

    Empretec’s Country Director Mrs. Onari Duke urged the generals to give in their best, adding that those with good business plans would have access to local and international grants available.

    According to her, the initiative was from the United Nations (UN) and was presently running in 33 countries.

     

     

  • Taraba govt alleges sudden withdrawal of military

    The Taraba  Government on Saturday expressed shock over alleged sudden withdrawal of military contingent deployed to enforce peace and security in southern part of the state.

    In a statement by the Senior Special Assistant to the Gov Darius  Ishaku on Media and Publicity, Mr. Bala Dan-Abu, the government lamented what they described as  “unceremonious withdrawal of soldiers from the operations.

    “The surprise is that no reason was given for the withdrawal and the government was not aware.

    “At the moment the reason for the withdrawal of the soldiers is not known to us,” the statement added.

    Also the Chairman of Donga Local Government Council, Mr Nashuka Ipeyen told newsmen, in an interview, that soldiers deployed to troubled spots in the local government started pulling out around 1:00am on Saturday.

    Ipeyen explained that on receipt of the information he quickly contacted the Commanding Officer,  93 Battalion Ada  Barack Takum,  Lt. Col. Ibrahim Gambari who said he ordered the withdrawal of the soldiers.

    “I complained to him over the withdrawal of soldiers because we received information that some villages were going to be attacked,  but he told me he would not risk the lives of his soldiers.

    “The Commanding Officer insisted that he was withdrawing the soldiers until the state government write an undertaking that it will take responsibility if any of the soldiers is attacked or  killed.

    “I don’t know why the state government would have to do that for the soldiers when the attackers are killing civilianson daily.

    “However,  I have made arrangement with the commissioner of police who has since deployed three trucks of mobile police personnel to provide security for the people,” he said.

    In a swift reaction,  the Assistant Director Army Public Relations,  23 brigade Yola, Maj. Kamarudeen Adegoke, denied the allegation saying  no soldier was withdrawn from the local government.

    “All our men are still stationed at their various duty posts.

    “I don’t know where the state government has gotten its information that troops have been withdrawn, but what I can confirm to you is that our men are fully on ground,” he said. (NAN)

  • Tambuwal applauds military for tackling insurgency

    The Governor of Sokoto State, Waziri Tambuwal has applauded the efforts of the Nigerian military in the fight against insurgency and Internal Security challenges in the Country.

    Tambuwal who was represented by the State Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice, Hon Suleiman Usman SAN and Commissioner for Energy, Hon Bello Mohammed Goronyo gave this commendation at the 2018 West African Social Activities (WASA celebration held on Saturday at 26 Battalion Parade ground, Giginya Barracks, Sokoto. He commended the efforts of the military for being professional and responsive in the discharge of their constitutional duties in the country particularly in the fight against insurgency in the North East and Internal Security challenges in Benue, Taraba, Zamfara and Plateau States.

    He also expressed satisfaction in particular on the efforts of the troops of 1 Brigade, Sokoto in assisting the government to combat security challenges within the State. He stressed that several military operations being undertaken in Tureta, Goronyo, Isa and Sabon Birni Local Governments in the last two years have helped to ensure serious security challenges been faced in other states were not allowed to rear their ugly heads into the State. He however, pledged that the State Government will continue to support the military towards achieving its mandate as their roles in ensuring the protection of territorial integrity of the Country and aiding the civil authority in Internal Security cannot be over emphasized.

    Earlier in his welcome address, the Commander 1 Brigade, Brigadier General Lynus Kennedy Udeagbala stated that WASA is an age-long much cherished Nigerian Army regimental and social tradition that provides opportunity for officers, soldiers and their families to come together to celebrate successes achieved during the outgone year. It further avails the opportunity for a formation or unit to establish start lines and focus for the activities for the New Year.

    WASA is usually conducted in a relax ambience of socialization that often showcases the rich cultural heritage that abounds in our Country. The occasion provides an opportunity for the leadership of a Command to appreciate troops for their contributions to successes achieved by the Command during the outgoing year. It fosters unity, enhance civil – military relations as well as regimentation. Gen Udeagbala thanked the Chief of Army Staff, Lt Gen TY Buratai and the GOC 1 Division, Maj Gen M Mohammed for their support to the Brigade.

    The Celebration was colourful as guests were thrilled with performances by diverse cultural troupes, tug of war competition and other comic reliefs.

    The occasion was graced by His Eminence Sultan of Sokoto who was represented by Ardon Shuni, Alhaji Mohammed Jabbi Harande, Commander Forward Operation Base, Nigerian Air Force, Gp Capt EE Owei, Zonal Commanding Officer Federal Road Safety Corps, ACM Ayobami Omiyale, Commander, Military Hospital, Sokoto, Lt Col II Amara, Commanding Officer 26 Battalion, Lt Col PO Alimekhena and representatives of Heads of Security Agencies in the State, Captain of Industries as well as the families of officers and soldiers from 26 Battalion, Brigade Garrison and Military Hospital Sokoto.

  • Senate aborts debate on allegation against military

    THE widely reported debate of former Defence Minister General Theophilus Danjuma’s claim that the military was “colluding” with alleged killer herdsmen to perpetrate ethnic cleansing was aborted in the Senate yesterday.

    The debate of the controversial claim was not listed in the Order Paper and Senator Yusuf Abubakar Yusuf, who raised the matter, also kept silent.

    No reason was given for what appeared to be a deliberate omission of the item on the Order Paper.

    Senator Yusuf (Taraba Central) on Tuesday drew the attention of the Senate to Danjuma’s allegation against the military over unbaiting killings in Taraba State and parts of the country.

    The Taraba Central lawmaker sought and was granted leave to bring a substantive motion on the issue yesterday.

    Spirited effort by another Taraba senator, Emmanuel Bwacha, to reopen the matter failed.

    The Taraba South senator, however, succeeded in laying letters to show what Danjuma claimed was reported to federal authorities, including the military high command.

    Bwacha told the Senate that as the senator representing Danjuma, he was in position of publications showing that federal authorities and the military high command were duly alerted about the activities of some military personnel in Taraba State, who were allegedly aiding and abating killer herdsmen.

    Some senators felt uncomfortable over what Bwacha was saying and attempted to stop him.

    Senate Leader Ahmed Lawan reminded the upper house that the issue Bwacha wanted to discuss was the same issue raised by Yusuf.

    Lawan said it would be proper to guide Bwacha to reserve his submission until Yusuf presented his motion.

    Senate President Bukola Saraki agreed and asked Bwacha to suspend his submission until the motion was presented.

    Although Saraki said the motion would come up in another legislative day, it was not clear when it would be presented.

    Some senators said the security nature of the motion may be taken into account in presenting the motion.

  • Military takes over Abuja airport road

    Normalcy has returned to the Umaru Musa Yar’Adua expressway after days of protest by angry traders and villagers over the demolition of Gosa market by the Abuja Metropolitan Management Council (AMMC).

    Military officers, police, officials of the Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC), among others, have been deployed in the area to forestall a breakdown of law and order.

    The traders on Monday made a bonfire on both sides of the road, thus preventing motorists from using the highway.

    The development caused a gridlock as protesters brandished dangerous weapons like daggers, cutlass and planks.

    When the Minister of the FCT, Muhammad Bello, visited the market, he insisted that all illegal markets on major FCT road corridors will be demolished.

    Bello said it has been agreed that all markets on road corridors, especially the Abuja Airport road, will be relocated gradually, while that of Gosa will be immediate.

    He assured that open markets in communities will still be allowed to function as it is customary to operate open markets in the territory.

    The minister was on site to show the stakeholders and journalists the location of the new Gosa Market and urged the traders to move there.

    He reiterated that the old market has to go because it has spilled into the road, creating nuisance and danger to road users and traders.

    Bello also instructed community leaders to take ownership of the markets and provide security and enforcement so that traders do not encroach on roads further.

    He also urged them to ensure that refuse is no dumped on the roads.

    On behalf of the stakeholders, Chairman of Abuja Municipal Area Council (AMAC), Abdullahi Adamu Candido assured the minister that they have agreed with the community to protect the road corridors to ensure they don’t cause nuisance on the roads.

    Candido was excited that the minister has given the people the much craved integration, and promised they would do everything within their power to support him.

    He also assured that AMAC would not collect taxes or any kind of levy on the new market till the market stabilises in the near future.

  • Danjuma: Military colluding in herdsmen killings

    •Alleges ethnic cleansing
    •Says ‘we must resist it, we must stop it’

    FRom an unlikely source yesterday came a massive indictment of the military for allegedly aiding killer herdsmen in the country.

    Former Chief of Army Staff, Lieutenant General Yakubu Danjuma (rtd) said the armed forces “are not neutral” in the intermittent attacks on innocent Nigerians by “armed bandits.”

    “The armed forces are not neutral. They collude; they collude; they collude with the armed bandits that kill people and kill Nigerians. They facilitate their movement. They cover them,” Danjuma, an ex-defence minister said yesterday in a rare outburst.

    He spoke at the maiden convocation and 10-year anniversary celebration of the Taraba State University (TSU), Jalingo.

    He is from Taraba, which along with Benue and Adamawa, have borne the brunt of the herdsmen attacks.

    Danjuma, a one-time minister of defence, described what is happening in Taraba and other states as ethnic cleansing and warned that it must stop, “otherwise Somalia would be a child’s play.”

    Responding to remarks by the university’s vice chancellor, Prof Suleiman Bagoro, moments after an honorary degree was conferred on him, the former chief of army staff said: “I wish I was asked to donate something more relevant to the university than a sports complex I was asked to. I would have loved to donate artificial intelligence to the university.

    “But being as it is, I will make my own pledge. I pledge to donate the sum of N100 million.

    “The orator referred to me as a politician. This is one profession I do not belong to, and I have no desire being a politician.  Because, if I were a politician, I would not be saying what I am going to say to you all now.

    “When I arrived here, I watched the cultural display by the theatre and cultural department. It was fascinating to see the rich diversity of cultural heritage.

    “Taraba State is a mini Nigeria where we have many ethnic groups living together peacefully.

    “But the peace in this State is under assault. There is an attempt at ethnic cleansing in this State, and of course all the riverine states of Nigeria.

    “We must resist it. We must stop it. Every one of us must rise up. The armed forces are not neutral. They collude; they collude; they collude with the armed bandits that kill people and kill Nigerians. They facilitate their movement. They cover them.

    “If you are depending on the armed forces to stop the killings, you will all die one by one.

    “This ethnic cleansing must stop in Taraba State. It must stop in all the states of Nigeria. Otherwise Somalia would be a child’s play.

    “I ask every one of you Nigerians, to be alert to defend your country; defend your territories, because you have nowhere to go.

    “Thousands have been displaced from their homes which have been destroyed. Many, injured, are still hospitalised. Farmlands have been lost. Hunger is looming.

    “God bless our country.”

    Danjuma’s indictment of the military came on the heels of a similar allegation by Amnesty International (AI).

    The international human rights watchdog, in a January 29, 2018 statement, said little or nothing was being done to curb the mayhem by the herders.

    The statement signed by its country director, Osai Ojigho, said: “The Nigerian authorities’ response to communal violence is totally inadequate, too slow and ineffective, and in some cases unlawful. “Clashes between herdsmen and farmers in Adamawa, Benue, Taraba, Ondo and Kaduna have resulted in 168 deaths in January 2018 alone.

    “Hundreds of people lost their lives last year, and the government is still not doing enough to protect communities from these violent clashes.

    “Worse, the killers are getting away with murder. In 2017, clashes between nomadic herdsmen and local farmers resulted in at least 549 deaths and thousands displaced across Enugu, Benue, Taraba, Zamfara, Kaduna, Plateau, Nasarawa, Niger, Plateau, Cross Rivers, Adamawa, Katsina, Delta and Ekiti states.”

  • Ekweremadu, military intervention or anarchy

    Ekweremadu, military intervention or anarchy

    Deputy Senate President, Ike Ekweremadu’s admonition on the floor of the Senate, this week, to his fellow political actors against actions capable of provoking another military truncation of democratic governance in the country, a scenario which he considers not improbable, has at least served two useful, even if unintended, purposes. First, it has compelled the military to reassure the country of its commitment to democracy, loyalty to the Head of State and Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces and its institutional fidelity to its constitutionally stipulated role of protecting the territorial integrity of the polity. We will recall that in May, last year, the Chief of Army Staff, Lt-Gen. Tukur Buratai, felt sufficiently concerned to publicly warn soldiers to steer clear of politics in the light of information he claimed to have that certain individuals had been approaching some officers and soldiers for political reasons.

    Secondly, it has given an opportunity for individuals and groups within civil society including lawyers, the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), Trade Union Congress (TUC), Arewa Consultative Forum (ACF), Ohaneaze and Afenifere to reiterate the readiness of Nigerians to resist any form of military intervention no matter the weaknesses and shortcomings of our current democratic practice. A cardinal lesson of our political history is that persistence in the practice of democracy, notwithstanding inevitable challenges, problems and crises, is the only path to systematically incremental political development even though the process may be slow, seemingly chaotic, fractious and arduous. The illusion of the military as political messiah has been shattered forever and military intervention no longer an even remotely feasible option in Nigeria.

    Intense and passionate debate, Open and acrimonious disagreement and contention as well as ceaseless disputation are necessary and inevitable ingredients of a viable and vigorous democratic system even as is witnessed in the most advanced democracies. The imposed peace of the graveyard, which military dictatorship claims to guarantee is not only detrimental to development, it also contains the seeds of future instability leading to the path of national disintegration. Even then, Ekweremadu’s warning must not be dismissed lightly. Yes, military rule may not be an option. But when an elected governor behaves no better than a military dictator and demolishes a Senator’s house for partisan political reasons while hiding under the guise of enforcing urban planning laws or Senators are prevented from visiting their constituencies in Kano and Kogi States, for example, or acts of political intolerance, aggression and violence pervade the polity, democracy is clearly endangered.

    When political actors brazenly disregard the constitutions both of their parties and that of the country with impunity and provoke resentment and bitter opposition through the arrogant and unrestrained deployment of power, as is the case with Governors Nasir ‘el Rufai and Yahaya Bello in Kaduna and Kogi states, respectively, something worse than military intervention is being invited – a descent to indescribable and uncontrollable anarchy. Democracy can only serve as the best option for the peaceful resolution of disputes and crises that are unavoidable in an open, free and complex plural society like ours when political actors faithfully adhere to what Professor Billy Dudley describes as the ‘constitutive and regulative rules’ of the game. That I think is the essence of Ekweremadu’s warning even if he could have framed it differently.

    It is for the same reason that Afenifere, Ohaneze, ACF, NLC, TUC, ASUU as well as several lawyers have vehemently denounced Ekweremadu’s comments on the possibility of military intervention if political actors do not moderate their behavior that this column has consistently opposed the call in some quarters for a jettisoning of the extant 1999 constitution and a regression to an overly romanticized 1963 constitution or one untested variant or the other of regionalism. No matter the challenges confronting Nigeria today, the country has experienced considerable political development over the last 19 years of unbroken civilian rule. The successful democratic and peaceful transfer of power from an incumbent to an opposing political party in 2015 shows that the country is gradually moving from being an essentially illiberal democracy towards being a genuinely liberal one. Yes, there is a long road to travel in this regard but truncating the present process and jumping back to 1963 or leaping in the dark in pursuit of some fanciful but unrealistic experiments in regionalism cannot be the option.

    Some have dismissed the 1999 constitution as a military creation and imposition, which does not truly reflect the will of the Nigerian people. Indeed, the late legal luminary, Chief Rotimi Williams, who was a member of a socio-political pressure group, The Patriots, was of the view that the phrase ‘We the People’ that prefaces the constitution is a fraud because the document is not allegedly the product of the collective will of the Nigerian people. If the General Abdulsalam Abubakar regime that handed over to the new democratically elected government in 1999 had done so on the basis of the 1995 draft constitution engineered  by the regime of General Sani Abacha or the earlier 1989 draft constitution drawn up under the Babangida regime, I would have understood this point of view. The 1989 and 1995 constitutions, although drafted with considerable civil society input through national conferences made up of selected eminent Nigerians, had their credibility and integrity tainted by the regime perpetuation schemes of the two dictators.

    That is probably why the Abdusalam Abubakar regime accepted the recommendation of the Justice Niki Tobi Constitution Review Committee, which it had set up to review past constitutions and make recommendations, that the 1979 constitution with appropriate amendments was preferable to the 1989 and 1995 draft constitutions. The Abubakar regime thus handed over to an elected civilian government in 1999 on the basis of the 1979 constitution, which was drawn up under the Murtala/Obasanjo regime, with slight amendments. The 1999 constitution is thus virtually a carbon copy of the 1979 constitution. Can the 1979 constitution be regarded as a military imposition? That would surely be a misleading and rather shallow reading of the genesis and subsequent evolution of the 1979 constitution. It would appear that the Murtala/Obasanjo regime itself was conscious of the intellectual deficiency of the military as regards the task of constitution-making.

    Thus, according to the eminent political scientist, Professor Alex Gboyega, in selecting members of the Constitution Drafting Committee (CDC) to draw up the proposed new constitution for the Second Republic, the regime placed premium, in the words of General Murtala Mohammed, on “our learned men in disciplines considered to have direct relevance to Constitution-making namely – history, law, economics and other social sciences, especially political science and eminent Nigerians with some experience in Constitution-making making were brought in to complete the spectrum”. Let’s face it. Constitution-making is an essentially elitist, not a populist, enterprise. I cannot be expected, for instance, to discuss constitutional issues with the depth, perspicacity and authoritativeness of a constitutional lawyer or a Professor of history or political science.

    Yes, the sanctioning of a constitution by the majority certainly enhances the document’s legitimacy. But it is understandably always a small intellectual elite with the requisite technical knowledge that will be the ultimate determinants of its substantive content. This is probably why the trio of Alexander Hamilton, James Madison and John Jay, authors of ‘The Federalist Papers’ had such an immense influence on the promotion and ratification of the United States constitution.

    Headed by Chief Rotimi Williams, the CDC was made up of some of Nigeria’s brightest and best brains although it was observed that there was no woman on the committee. The draft constitution proposed by the CDC was subjected to a three-month public debate tagged ‘The Great Debate’ on the platform of the defunct Daily Times, which at the time circulated close to half a million copies nationwide and contributions to the debate later published in two volumes. The draft proposals were then considered and ratified by a Constituent Assembly headed by Justice Udo Udoma and made up of members elected, directly or indirectly, on the platform of the local government councils as electoral colleges. True, the military made about 17 insertions into the final document forwarded to it by the CDC. But there was absolutely nothing preventing the succeeding civilian administration from expunging these military insertions if that was the will of the majority of Nigerians.

    As I said earlier, the 1999 constitution is basically a reproduction of the 1979 constitution. There is no doubt much that is wrong with this constitution that promotes excessive centralization of power at the centre. But throwing the entire document away and starting a new experiment de novo after 19 years of unbroken civilian rule under its provenance would be most prodigal, which is why this column supports ongoing, even if too long delayed, efforts to amend the constitution to decentralize greater powers, responsibilities and resources to the states and local governments.

    Even then, decentralization can be ultimately dysfunctional and counterproductive if you have ‘democratically elected’ executive tyrants and virtual monarchs like Nasir ‘el Rufai, Yahaya Bello,  Rochas Okorocha, Nyesom Wike or Ayodele Fayose in power in the states. It is obviously the behavior of political actors like these that prompted Ekweremadu’s controversial comments on military intervention. As I said earlier, however, a greater danger than military intervention, if our political actors continue on the path of impunity, is a descent to total anarchy.

  • Apapa Gridlock: Military, LASG, give truck drivers 48 hours to vacate bridge

    Apapa Gridlock: Military, LASG, give truck drivers 48 hours to vacate bridge

    Stakeholders, including the Nigerian Military and the Lagos State Government (LASG) on Wednesday gave a 48-hour ultimatum to all tanker drivers to vacate the bridge in national interest and security.

    The resolution was reached during a one day stakeholders meeting at the Naval Base in Apapa, comprising the military, Nigerian Port Authority(NPA), LASG, Nigerian Union Petroleum Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG).

    Others who attended the stakeholders meeting were Nigerian Police, Dangote Group, Apapa Residents Association, Lagos State Traffic Management Authority, Apapa Government Reserved Area Resident Association, among others.

    The Flag Officer Commanding, Western Naval Command of the Nigerian Navy, Rear Adm. Sylvanus Abbah, who was the conveyner of the meeting, appealed to the tanker drivers to leave the bridge in national interest.

    According to him, terrorists might take the advantage of the traffic situation to strike in Lagos and this has to be prevented from happening.

    “Costain is going to be the turning point of the trucks.

    “After 48 hours, no truck will park on the bridge because of national interest and I hope you will all take the decision of this meeting,” he said.

    He said that some of the trucks had been parked on the bridge for weeks, adding that the bridge might collapse which would be an additional problem.

    Abbah said a committee would also be set up which would involve the major stakeholders including NUPENG to further address the traffic situation.

    “All major stakeholders most especially the shipping lines will be in the committee and if I have my way, the Apapa Local Government Chairman would spearhead the committee,” he said.

    The NPA Traffic Manager, Mr Ogini Victor, who represented the Port Manager, Mrs Aisha Ali-Ibrahim, said that the Apapa Gridlock had become a barber’s chair that was rotating and not moving anywhere.

    “Synergy is the keyword that can solve the problem of the gridlock.

    “We have also decided that all empty containers should go to holden bays and we will make sure our men give us report on how many trucks park at the bay daily,” he said.

    The representative of NUPENG, Comrade Adekunle Adelaja, while reacting to the directive, said that the union does not support tankers parking on the bridge.

    He enjoined all stakeholders to find a lasting solution to the problem as it was affecting everyone.

    “We need to have another meeting and call all the farm tankers. Let us see how we can be able to do the programming that trucks will just go to the depot without parking on the bridge,” he said.

    The Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Transport, Mr Taiwo Salau, said that there should be good synergy among security agencies to resolve the traffic situation.

    “There should be synergy among security agencies so that these areas can be cleaned up and have a check point before the long bridge,” he said. (NAN)

  • Defence chief advises military officers on financial literacy

    Chief of Defence Staff, Gen. Abayomi Olonisakin, has called on military officers to embrace financial literacy and save for retirement.

    He spoke during a three-day workshop conducted for the Nigerian Armed Forces by ABO Services and Konsult, an investment and personal finance training company. The training titled: ‘Impact of Financial Literacy on Successful Retirement Planning and Wealth Creation’, was held at the Army Resource Centre, Abuja.

    Olonisakin, who was represented by the Director of Veteran Affairs Division, Maj-Gen. Edmond Obi, said the workshop was necessary to train officers on how to navigate the financial challenges they might experience when they are no longer on regular salary incomes, adding that it would help them to be financially organised and appreciate their jobs better.

    He attributed the hardship faced by many retired officers to “poor or lack of proper planning while in active service” and called on officers to embrace proper financial management skills from the early days of their careers.”

    He added: “The aim of the workshop is to educate officers and men of the armed forces on the significance of financial literacy with a view to preparing them for a successful retirement life. It has been discovered that lack of financial literacy is one of the major reasons there is wide economic disparity in the country.

    “It is believed that, in addition to the vocational and professional skills that are taught in training institutions, money skills, which can only be acquired through financial education, must be taught to fully equip individuals for retirement.”

    Managing Director of ABO, Abimbola Olanrewaju, said financial literacy was necessary for all categories of employees and professionals. He said financial literacy skills would help individuals to have blissful retirement.

  • Slippery military, spidery terror

    SIR: The abduction of dozens of girls from a government technical school in Yobe State few days ago appears to confirm that a conspiracy of the people in government at state and federal levels, pretentious religious leaders and military command sympathizers of the doctrine and goals of the jihadist group will prolong sorrow, tears and blood for long.

    Is it not strange that the abduction of secondary school girls in Chibok, some years ago, is repeated so easily with the Yobe State government and the military singing different tunes while the parents of the children and Nigerians wail in lamentation of what has become of their nation, Nigeria?

    The Yobe government claimed it relied on the military statement  Friday,  February  23,  that more than 40 of the about 110 pupils were rescued only to find out that it was false.  The governor had to go to the concerned parents to apologize for the claimed misinformation, within 24 hours, signaling a depressive disconnection between state bureaucracy and security architecture.

    Indeed, the serial death of Shekau, the Boko Haram chief terrorist, proclaimed by the military since the Jonathan era, and the current military bounty placed on Shekau wanted dead or alive, indicates unprofessional and strange military propaganda, not different from political party propaganda. This is tragic for integrity of Nigerian military with international reputation for discipline.

    I am amazed at the linear thinking process of governments since 2001 when Boko Haram insurgency started waxing strong.  Worse still is that two military generals who prosecuted the Nigerian civil war, Olusegun Obasanjo and Muhammadu Buhari would believe they could fight guerrilla war with conventional weapons, instead of adopting strategies to identify and deal decisively with the sabotaging  moles in the military and deploying public enlightenment campaigns, through the numerous and largely idle government broadcast media, to counter the religious misinformation that jihadists will go to heaven by committing mass murders.

    What with the suspected several millions of dollars that has been doled out to rescue the Chibok girls of 2014, dozens still remaining held back as possible prey for extortion.  University of Maiduguri’s kidnapped lecturers were released recently by Boko Haram after hefty ransom was allegedly dished out.  With the Boko Haram splinter group of al Barnawi fingered as being responsible for the kidnap of the Dapchi girls, Nigerians should be prepared for a mushrooming of rogue terrorist groupings encouraged by ransom payments.

    It is instructive that federal government has set up a panel over Dapchi kidnap. To what extent will a largely military panel expose and deal with moles and suspected conspirators and apportion blames to genuine culprits?

     

    • Soni Ehi Asuelimen,

    soniasuelimen@yahoo.com