Tag: military

  • Military hands over 566 orphans, widows to Borno

    Military hands over 566 orphans, widows to Borno

    Another set of 566 Boko Haram orphans and widows have again been released to Borno State by the military in Maiduguri, the Borno State capital, making it the fourth time the army has done such an exercise.

    Gov.  Kashim  Shettima, who received them yesterday, explained  that Borno State,  under his leadership, will continue to cater for the children and families of the insurgents in order to break  the Boko Haram cycle of violence as a way of securing the future of the state.

    A breakdown of the number shows 355 babies,149  mothers and 62 children who  are under age.

    The Nation gathered that  a substantial  percentage of the  number are believed to be families of the insurgents saved after the military took over the camps during operations.

    The handing over  was done by the General Officer Commanding the 7th Division of the Nigerian Army in Maiduguri, Brigadier General Victor Ezugwu, at a rehabilitation and reintegration centre newly opened by the Borno State Government in Maiduguri.

    Gov. Shettima, during his address, said: “What is of importance we should all know, is that an average male member of the Boko Haram has one great wish and that wish is for his son or daughter to inherit his doctrine of violence. The insurgents seriously take to child bearing as a strategy of not only multiplying their number, but also producing children, they hope, will continue from where their fathers stop in violent killings as their own form of worship.

    “The goal of Boko Haram fathers is that even if they are killed by our armed forces, they want to bequeath to us, a future of violence in Borno State, a future of violence in the northeast and a violent future for our country. Our ultimate aim in taking custody of families of insurgents is to cut the cycle of violence so as to secure the future of Borno State. Our aim is to give education to the children of the insurgents so that these children will grow to despise the values and doctrines their parents lived and preached.

    ”The children will not be trained with any element of hate for their parents, they won’t even be told about the ways of their parents so that they don’t grow with deflated self-esteem. These children will be raised like every other child; they will be raised to love and not to hate like their parents wished for them. They will be trained to save lives

  • How we battered Boko Haram, by Buratai

    How we battered Boko Haram, by Buratai

    CHIEF of Army Staff (COAS) Lt.-Gen. Tukur Buratai has addressed top United States (U.S.) defence officials and policy leaders on the efforts being made by the military in the fight against insurgency in the Northeast.

    Army spokesman Col. Sani Usman told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in a telephone interview that Buratai spoke at the Africa Center of the Atlantic Council in Washington DC, U.S.).

    Usman said the presentation was titled: “Nigerian Army Challenges and Priorities in the Ongoing Operations against Boko Haram Terrorists and Other Threats to Peace and Security.”

    He said the presentation at the centre was part of the Army chief’s programme on his official visit to the US.

    Usman said Buratai emphasised the fact that the fight against terrorism was one that concerned the entire global community and not only the countries.

    He said the chief of army staff talked about addressing the issues of insecurity in Nigeria at the strategic, tactical and operational levels as well as the challenges in tackling the threat of terrorism.

    Usman said the Army chief applauded the strategic leadership provided by President Buhari in the reinvigorated fight against Boko Haram.

    “Buratai enumerated the Presidential strategic directive of relocating the Military Command and Control Centre from Abuja to Maiduguri, which was followed by the directive of defeating the insurgents by the end of December 2015.

    “He spoke about the involvement of neighbouring countries, as well as provision of necessary arms and logistics, assisted in the defeat of the terrorists.

     “Buratai maintained his stand to undertake and sustain the current level of operations to ensure complete defeat of the Boko Haram terrorists.

    “The aim is in ensuring the safety and freedom for all abducted persons and creation of favourable environment that would permit the return of all refugees and internally displaced persons to their original home,’’ he said.

    Buratai , Usman noted, also informed his audience of the Army’s commitment to developing capacity through local training and international collaboration in the provision for equipment, training support, equipment maintenance, intelligence and respect for human rights.

    He said Buratai sought the support and understanding among all cooperating agencies and international partners for a collective action against Boko Haram terrorists.

  • We’re not criminals, militants tell military

    We’re not criminals, militants tell military

    The Co-ordinator of the Niger Delta People Volunteer Front (NDPVF), Mr  Asu Simeon Mbi, popularly known as General Simba, has told the Nigerian military to stop tagging them as criminals and economic saboteurs.

    General Simba said that using derogatory words to describe them was provocative.

    Speaking yesterday on the heels of the Defense Headquarters’ vow to sustain the military onslaught in the Niger Delta and purge the region of “criminals and economic saboteurs”, the militant leader also vowed that they would sustain their agitations.

    The militant leader, who claimed to be speaking for other militant groups in his region, said Niger Delta militants were not criminals, describing themselves as freedom fighters, fighting the Federal Government’s unjust leadership.

    He said:”We are freedom fighters and not criminals and nobody, no authority should call us criminals or economic saboteurs.  We are fighting a just cause and no amount of threat from any quarters would dampen our spirit.

    “The Niger Delta struggle is a collective one, and there is no way we can be subdued. There is no going back and everybody should sustain the struggle.

    “We are still very strong in this fight. We are up and doing and will not bow to any threat by the military.  We have long been totally neglected and enough is enough”.

  • Military disowns unauthorised pension figures

    The Military Pensions Board (MPB) yesterday denied unauthorised figures for the  harmonised military pension peddled in major online news websites.

    Flight Lieutenant Ikenna Ezendu, MPB’s public relations officer, said the harmonisation was not an increment, but meant to bridge the gap in pensions among certain ranks of pensioners, who retired before and after consolidation of salaries in July 2010.

    He said: “Harmonisation is not a pension increment, but rather a deliberate effort to bridge the gap in pensions between certain ranks of pensioners, who retired before and after consolidation of salaries in July 2010.

    “Therefore, pensioners should endeavour to find out the actual gap between these categories of pensioners to avoid speculation.”

    He said the most affected rank brackets are Private to Sergeant as well as Brigadier General and above.

    “The harmonisation takes effect from August 2016. However, Pension Review Committee, under the auspices of the Chief of Defence Staff, is working to review military pensions for all retirees.

    “The MPB, in conjunction with National Salary Income and Wages Commission, are working to ensure that the approved table by Federal Government is applied during implementation.

    “Consequently, military pensioners and other stakeholders are advised to disregard unofficial figures circulated for harmonisation of military pensions,” Ezendu warned.

     

  • Military has no plan to invade Delta communities- Brutai

    The Nigerian military has said recent fears over likely federal forces offensive in the Niger Delta were unnecessary as there are no such plans.
    Chief of Army Staff, General Yusuff Buratai allayed the fears during a courtesy call on the Olu of Warri, His Royal Majesty, Ikenwoli, in his palace on Ajamimogha Road, Warri.
    The army chief, who had earlier Saturday morning flagged off the special military drill, codenamed ‘Operation Crocodile’s Tears’ in Sapele, said the exercise would focus on training for military personnel and not aimed at witch-hunting or victimising anyone.
    “The exercise is a training routine and not designed to witch-hunt anyone. To this end, I urge all law abiding citizens to go about their normal daily activities without fears”, he said
    The Olu of Warri, in his reaction, said that Nigeria remained indissoluble, saying his subjects and all Deltas believe in one Nigeria.
    It will be recalled that in its logistics build-up to the commencement of the exercise, the military has embarked on a free medical outreach for Sapele communities in Delta State.
    Medical personnel from the Nigerian Army Medical Corps were deployed to attend to medical needs of people of the communities free of charge.

  • Military/Shi’ite clash report: ‘President must be firm’

    •Group faults police’s killing of protesting workers in Nasarawa 

    A group, Citizens United for the Rehabilitation of Errants (CURE-Nigeria), has asked President Muhammadu Buhari to be transparent, truthful and decisive in handling reports of enquiry into the last military/Shiite clash in Kaduna State.

    CURE-Nigeria, in a statement by its Executive Director, Sylvester Uhaa, said the way Buhari handles the report will impact “on the rule of law and protection of human rights, especially the protection of the right to life.”

    The group’s position followed President Buhari’s assurance that the Federal Government would respond appropriately to findings in the report.

    Uhaa faulted the killing by policemen of two workers in Nasarawa State, who were among those protesting the state’s planned reduction in wages.

    He described the incident as “barbaric, cruel and unlawful.”

    Uhaa hailed the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) for its decision to probe the Nasarawa killings, and urged it to this to other killings, such as pro-Biafra supporters in Onitsha last June.

    The executive director, an expert in international human rights law, urged the Federal Government to enact an adequate domestic framework on the use of force by law officers.

    He said the government should provide law personnel with less lethal weapons and train them on managing  assembly to reduce the use of lethal weapons to prevent the continued arbitrary and unlawful use of lethal force against unarmed citizens.

    “A situation where police officers are provided with only two weapons – a firearm and a baton is unacceptable, as it encourages the use of firearms,” Uhaa said.

    He faulted the practice where citizens obtain police permission before engaging in protest, saying “the right to peaceful assembly is a right and not a privilege.”

    Uhaa argued that such request could only be justified where it is required “for the purpose of facilitating the enjoyment of this right and to ensure that other citizens enjoy their rights as well.

    “Therefore, failure to notify authorities does not render an assembly unlawful and should not form any basis for dispersal. And shooting into the crowd is prohibited.

    “Also, the right to peaceful assembly is an individual right, and not a group right, meaning that the violent actions of some participants cannot be used as an excuse to employ lethal force to disperse those whose intention and actions remain peaceful.

    “Also, organisers of peaceful assembly should not be held civilly, criminally and administratively accountable for organising or participating in a peaceful assembly.

    “In addition, participants in peaceful assembly require the protection and enjoyment of a broad range of rights, including the right to freedom of peaceful assembly, expression, association and belief, participation, bodily integrity, which includes the right to security, dignity, privacy, freedom from torture, inhuman and degrading treatment and punishment as well as the right to an effective remedy, should any of these rights are violated.

    “Even if participants in an assembly are not peaceful and as such lose their right to peaceful assembly, other rights remain intact, only subject to normal limitations.

    “The right to peaceful assembly places an obligation on the state to protect, respect and fulfil this right, and when those trusted with the responsibility to respect, protect and fulfil this right become its violators, they must be held accountable, as failure to do so in itself constitutes a violation of this right,” Uhaa said.

  • Militancy: Delta community alleges plan by military to invade it

    Militancy: Delta community alleges plan by military to invade it

    Just a few days after leaders of the Niger Delta advised the federal government to jettison the military option in solving the Niger Delta problem, one of the communities of the region, Gbaramatu Kingdom, Warri South-West council area of Delta State, has alerted of an alleged plan to launch a military offensive against its people by federal forces.

    Spokesman of the kingdom, Chief Godspower Gbenekama, speaking at a briefing in Warri yesterday, alleged that the nation’s security forces had concluded plans to attack Gbaramatu communities under the pretext of searching for members of the insurgent group, Niger Delta Avengers.

    Gbenekama, who said the state’s Commissioner for Information announced a plan by the military to embark on a two-week training in the creeks around the kingdom, noted that the announced plan was too much for convenience.

    “Please help us tell the whole world that the military has concluded plans to invade Gbaramatu communities under the guise of looking for members of the Niger Delta Avengers. It is the innocent people of our communities that will suffer should the military go ahead to bombard our communities. We don’t harbour members of the Niger Delta Avengers. The agitation cuts across the region so why single out only Gbaramatu kingdom?

    ” It is just not the training, we already know that they are training people to attack our people, they are bringing military men to attack our people. This has happened to us before.

    “We are aware that while the kings and Chiefs of the Niger Delta are struggling to bring peace because of the displeasures that are going on at government critical oil facilities, the government is thinking otherwise.

    “While we are begging for peace, the government is struggling, making arrangements to bombard Gbaramatu communities. We call you to cry out for us, let the world hear that we have said it in different occasions that we Kings, chiefs, chairmen and community leaders do not know who the members of the Niger Delta Avengers are.

    “We don’t know them. They don’t live in Gbaramatu; We don’t know where they live but agitations about better living is something that cuts across the whole Niger Delta region. That is why the present trend of companies facilities has been in the length and breadth of the whole Niger Delta and not limited to Gbaramatu”, he said

     

  • Military: 8,000 Boko Haram members surrender

    Military: 8,000 Boko Haram members surrender

    The military yesterday in Abuja said 8,000 Boko Haram members voluntarily surrendered to its “Operation Safe Corridor” in the Northeast.

    Director of Defence Information Brig.-Gen. Rabe Abubakar spoke at a lecture organised by the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Correspondents’ Chapel.

    Abubakar said the surrendered insurgents were in a camp in Gombe waiting to be “de-radicalised” by the military.

    He also said over 10,000 Boko Haram captives were  rescued by the military.

    The Defence spokesman  said some of them were reunited with their families, while others were taken to Internally Displaced Person’s (IDP) camps.

    Abubakar said Boko Haram had been decimated by the military, and that the Federal  Government would rehabilitate victims and rebuilt affected areas.

    He also hinted that the military would launch “Operation Safe Corridor” to address the menace of herdsmen across the country.

    The Defence spokesman promised that the military operation would put an end to the killings by herdsmen.

    Responding to questions on the action by the military declaring some journalists wanted, he urged the media not to allow sentiments to influence their judgment on the issue.

    He said the military should be allowed to do its work, while assuring them that no journalist would be victimised.

    Abubakar said good military-media relationship was crucial to winning the war against insurgency.

    He said the media drove public support for the militar, which had boosted the morale of officers and the rank-and-file.

     

  • ‘Military’s plan to rehabilitate Boko Haram members okay’

    Concerned Professionals Congress (CPC) said yesterday the initiative by the Defence Headquarters to rehabilitate, de-radicalise and re-integrate about 800 repentant Boko Haram combatants into the society will quicken the peace process and boost reconstruction efforts in the Northeast.

    Describing the initiative as novel, bold and courageous, they said it would inspire hope, strengthen faith and restore confidence among Nigerians in the unity, stability and indivisibility of the country.

    The group’s Coordinator, Tukur Musa Tilde and Chief Media Strategist, Emeka Nwapa, in a statement yesterday in Abuja, said the move by the nation’s military high command to de-radicalise the sect’s repentant ex-combatants and offer them opportunity to contribute to the growth of the society  will advance the frontiers of humanity in the nation.

    Expressing regret at the incalculable but avoidable damage which the activities of the sect had done to the destinies of families, institutions, communities and careers in the last five years, the group praised the Armed Forces of Nigeria (AFN)  for galvanising the patriotic and gallant efforts of its troops in alliance with other security forces to downgrade Boko Haram terrorists in the Northeast, thereby setting the stage for robust global interest for rebuilding programmes.

    It further observed that Operation Safe Corridor offers the nation and its citizens an opportunity of reinventing and reinforcing its unity, sovereignity and indivisibility in line with the aspirations, dreams and philosophy of one nation, one destiny of its founding fathers.

    The group argued that Liberia and Sierra Leone were instances of countries with worse cases of crimes and criminalities committed by citizens against fellow citizens as well as felony against the state but are today living in admirable peace and harmony because the ex-combatants surrendered and were de-radicalised, rehabilitated and re-integrated by their people into the society.

  • Restructuring and Military Avengers

    For many credible voices in our nation, the answer to our unresolved national question is a return to our 1954 structure, negotiated by our founding fathers ‘to promote the unity of Nigeria and protect the interest of diverse elements that make up the country’, with some modifications to reflect current realities. The open endorsement of agitation by some restive groups for self-actualization and ‘less centralised, less suffocating and less dictatorial’ central government by Atiku Abubakar seems to have brought a new focus on an old issue. The former governor of Kaduna State and leader of the Conference of Nigerian Political Parties, Alhaji Balarabe Musa, has added his voice. According to him, ‘a return to regional arrangement, where each region can create states they can cater for, would certainly reduce injustice and inequality among the people’. Emeka Anyaoku, the former Commonwealth Secretary-General has also renewed his call for ‘a return to the regional structure practiced in the First Republic, with the country’s six regions forming the federating units’. For Gen Akinrinade, “anyone that wishes Nigeria well and wants our states to develop will join in the growing agitation to restructure the country”. And reacting to the opponents of restructuring who have consistently said ‘Nigeria unity is not negotiable’, Wole Soyinka, regarded by many as the conscience of the nation has said the basis of our association needed to be renegotiated if we are to prevent a disastrous disintegration. Agreeing with him, The Guardian in an editorial in its edition of June 26, submitted “The present structure has bred identity politics of ethnocentrism, undermined national unity and patriotism, institutionalised corruption, violation of the rule of law and a dehumanisation of the people – antinomies that have led to state-led violence and enduring separatist impulses on the part of many nationalities that make up the country”. But long before now, other patriotic Nigerians such as the late Pa Tony Enahoro, Pa Adekunle Ajasin, two of our founding fathers, as well as human right activists such as Alao Aka Bashorun and Beko Ransome-Kuti, engaged in a life long struggle for a restructured Nigeria.

    While many concerned Nigerians agree with these patriots that Nigeria is just not working as presently constituted, the Nigerian military and their apologists who after destroying the inherited superstructure, imposed a unitary system, abridged the political socialization process, insisted on teaching Nigerians that started party system in 1923 how to form political parties, decimated the political class which was replaced with military- baked new breed politicians that bred nothing but corruption and wanted to maintain the status quo.

    Beyond these self-delusions, the Nigerian military have other reason to sustain the status quo. Studies have now shown that like their counterparts elsewhere in West Africa, who joined the military to climb the social ladder, they harboured deep-rooted hatred for the dominant groups in society such as the politicians, the civil servants and intellectuals they saw as the source of their marginalisation.

    In fact those first recruited by the British into what eventually became the Nigerian military from the north according to Ahmadu Bello ‘were slaves who ran away from their masters and labourers from the market places’. The status of a soldier was not better in the east. Professor Adekanye, quoting N. J. Miners called our attention to one Major Eze, who writing in the 1963 issue of old Nigerian army magazine after the Second World War said: ‘The army was a place for the illiterates and criminals whose duties were to kill and be generally brutal”. In the west, those who joined the military were considered rascals. Adekanye also told us the poor image of the military can be measured in terms of low remuneration; the army recruit was paid less than unskilled daily paid government labourer and the army members of the NCO earned less than their counterparts in the police.

    Like their counterparts in West Africa such as Liberia where Sergeant Doe, after taking over power, lined up, shot and dragged 11 bodies of President Tubman’s associates on the streets only to get himself  integrated into their Whig Party he had accused of corruption, Nigerian military also first murdered their benefactors, threw the political class into disarray, destroyed the bureaucracy and the university system ostensibly because of corruption but ended up paying themselves higher salaries,  awarding salaries for life to their Generals while many retired into life of opulence as owners of banks, captains of industries and owners of oil wells after murdering   benefactors they had accused of being ‘ten per centers’.

    The new acquired status provided Obasanjo an opportunity to appoint the 49 wise men that drafted the 1979 constitution which traded our inherited parliamentary system for a presidential system that unlike the former allowed him to be crowned President even after his rejection by his people.

    Babangida demonstrated his own complex by hilariously calling himself President after his palace coup, executed not because of his lofty vision for the nation but according to Buhari, to protect Gusau who was accused of corruption by the Buhari military junta. He humoured himself as the ‘Maradona’ of Nigerian politics, manipulated the political class, decreed two parties, institutionalized corruption through SAP, took the nation through eight years of fraudulent transition programme at the end of which he annulled the most credible election ever conducted in our nation won by his friend MKO Abiola.

    Abacha reduced the political class to comedians. For his own fraudulent transition, his five decreed political parties described as ‘five fingers of a leprous finger’ by the late Bola Ige were falling over each other to adopt him as their presidential candidate until he was visited by death, the leveller.

    General Abdulsalami Abubakar, using the same military tactics humbled the political class. The highly respected caustic mouth, Bola Ige who was credited with writing the PDP, APP and AD constitutions long after the military had decided to impose Obasanjo as President was no exception. He was tricked to lower his guard by Obasanjo’s patronizing “Bola Ige is the only Yoruba man I fear’ during the 1999 election he was programmed to win. His assassination as Attorney General of the federation inside his room remains unresolved.

    And of course Obasanjo did not disappoint his military constituency. PDP party chieftains became ‘garrison commanders’. Leaderships of the party as well as those of the two legislative houses were routinely shuffled like cards. The highly compromised legislatures often resorted to military tactics to outwit party members each just as the current leadership did in June last year.

    The nation cannot move forward with restructuring. The military and their fronts who become multi-billionaires in their late thirties, the senate where members who routinely pass resolutions to cover up alleged fraud, the lower house currently enmeshed in allegation of massive padding of the budget cannot be regarded as patriots that care about the future of our nation.

    We are therefore left with President Buhari who had restructuring as part of his 2015 campaign manifesto. He was voted President because Nigerians trusted him. He must remain faithful to his contract with Nigerians. Once a victim of betrayal by his military colleagues, he should know wealthy retired Generals and their fronts who insists “Nigeria Unity is not negotiable’ do not have history on their side. With those who have served jail term for corruption and others facing corruption charges in court openly canvassing for votes, it must be clear by now to the President that his lasting legacy will not be fighting corruption but a restructured Nigeria that prevents a disastrous disintegration.