Tag: soldiers

  • Soldiers uncover hideout of gunmen in Jos

    Soldiers uncover hideout of gunmen in Jos

    THE Special Task Force (STF) on Jos crisis code named “Operation Safe Heaven” has said it has discovered the hideout of gunmen who invaded Mbar village of Bokkos local government of Plateau State. Four of the suspected gunmen were arrested when the special task force stormed their hideout. The task force confirmed that the suspected gunmen were those who attacked Mbar community last Sunday where they killed 5 members of the community and set over 20 residential houses ablaze.

    Among victims of the gunmen attack on Mbar community included a 40 year old woman and her two children. In a press statement by the task force, signed by its media officer Captain Ikedichi Iweha, the STF said it traced the gunmen to their hideout and over powered them after a gun battle with the gunmen.

    The statement said, “In keeping with the tradition of the STF of updating the general public with developments as they occur, the STF hereby states that following the Commander STF’s visit to Mbar, his deployment of additional personnel to comb the entire hills and surrounding bushes and resources to complement troops search, head way is gradually being made. It said, “A middle aged man has been arrested in connection with the attack on Mbar community. He was arrested in the hills surrounding mbar community, following troops tracking of the trail of the attackers.

    Twenty three rounds of 5.65mm and 5 cartridges of ammunition were recovered from him. Search of the general area is in progress and investigation is ongoing. “Similarly, a middle aged man has been arrested for illegally being in possession of a fire arm. He was arrested at Kugot in Barkin Ladi Local Government Council. He claimed the riffle belonged to his community as he was part of the community vigilante group.

    No member of the community corroborated his story or came forward with prove of ownership of the riffle. An AK 47 riffle and 30 rounds of 7.62mm ammunition were recovered from him.

    All four suspects have been handed over to the Police for prosecution” The Special Task Force reiterates its readiness to respond to any act of criminality and all forms of threat reported to it promptly.

    Residents within its area of operational responsibility are equally assured of their safety always. STF said, “It took a lot of efforts to restore the prevailing peace to the state and would not fold its arm to allow all the efforts wasted through the activities of unknown gunmen” The STF therefore solicits for timely information from members of the community.

    It reassures members of the general public of its determination to protect lives of law abiding citizens. We also continue to thank the good people of Plateau State for their co-operation in providing prompt information to security agencies on issues bordering on public safety.

  • ‘Don’t allow execution  of convicted  soldiers’

    ‘Don’t allow execution of convicted soldiers’

    A member of the Senate Committee on Defence and Army, Babafemi Ojudu, has appealed to the panel to canvass for the commutation of the death sentence passed this week on 12 soldiers for mutiny.

    He made the plea in a letter dated September 17, 2014, to the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Defence and Army, George Sekkibo, a copy of which was also sent to Senate President David Mark.

    The senator, in the letter made available to reporters yesterday, contended that the actions of the erring soldiers was brought about by the “dwindling fortunes of the Nigerian Army over the years”, which had lowered the morale of soldiers drastically.

    He said though he was aware of the rules of engagement in the military as regards mutiny, allowing the soldiers to be executed would further lower the morale of other soldiers.

    Ojudu added: “Allowing these frustrated soldiers to die for their action is like treating the symptoms of our disease rather than going into the root cause of our problems, which is low morale arising from inadequate training, provision of modern equipment and deficit in welfare.”

    The senator, who is also the Vice Chairman of the Senate Committee on Public Service and Establishment, urged the committee on defence to as a matter of urgency seek clemency for the soldiers.

    However, the convicted soldiers, who were fighting Boko Haram insurgents in Borno State, had on May 14, fired on the convoy of the Commanding Officer of the 7th Division of the Nigerian Army, General Amadu Mohammed.

    Their action, which took place at an army medical centre in Maiduguri, was in protest of lack of adequate weapons to confront the insurgents.

    However, last Monday, a nine-member military tribunal sentenced the erring soldiers to death for what it called mutiny.

  • 12 Nigerian soldiers sentenced to death for mutiny

    12 Nigerian soldiers sentenced to death for mutiny

    The military authorities  Tuesday  morning sentenced 12 soldiers to death for mutiny.
    The soldiers were charged with six count of criminal conspiracy to commit mutiny, disobeying lawful orders and various acts said to be inimical to the military service.
    The nine-member all military Court Martial, also found the soldiers guilty of insubordinate behaviour, use of abusive language, leveling false accusation against their superior officers, among others.

    They were similarly found guilty of attempting to kill their erstwhile General Officer Commanding 7 Division, Major General Ahmed Mohammed by shooting at his official car, between May 13 and 14, 2014. The car was bullet proof.

    The incident took place at the Maimalari Barracks, Maiduguri in the course of the ongoing counter insurgency campaign.
    The court also found them guilty of preventing the movement of some of their injured colleagues to hospital and obstructing evacuation of their dead ones who were killed in ambush on their way from an operation in Chibok, Borno State.
    Those to die are: Cpl. Jasper Braidolor, David Musa, Friday Onu, Yusuf Shuaibu, Emmanuel Igomu, Andrew Ngbede, Nurudeen Ahmed, Ifeanyi Alukhagbe, Alao Samuel, Amadi Chukwudi, Alan Linus and Stephen Clement.
    Jeremiah Ichocho, who was found guilty of Absence Without Official Leave (AWOL) was sentenced to two years without labour.
    Five were discharged and acquitted, having been found not guilty by the court.
    The court said the sentences were subject to confirmation by higher authorities and acknowledged the right of the soldiers, who pleaded not guilty to most of the charges, to appeal the judgment.
    The court was presided over by Brig. Gen. CC Okwonkwo.

     

    Other members of the court are: Col. TS Nurseman, Col. TO Olowomeye, Col. IG Lassa, Lt.Col. JK Feboke, Lt. Col. CR Nnebeife, Major I Yusuf, Major TA Yakubu and Major AE Martins.
    Lt. Col. AA Audu and Lt. Col. U Ukpe served as prosecutors.
  • Soldiers kill 50 terrorists in hideout assault

    The Defence Headquarters said yesterday that troops on assignment in Borno State killed over 50 terrorists during an afternoon raid of a Boko Haram hideout at Kawuri, Konduga Local Government Area of the state.

    “Over 50 terrorists died this afternoon as troops raided their hideout in Kawuri before setting out on a planned attack on Konduga,” it tweeted last night.

    A Fabricated Artillery Gun, two Anti-Aircraft guns, an armoured vehicle and assorted ammunition were also seized during the raid.

    “Some hardware, weapons, food items and personal belongings were also destroyed in the Kawuri Raid,” according the DHQ.

    However, one officer and two soldiers were wounded in the operation.

    The claim could not be independently verified.

  • Soldiers’ tactical maneouver: Oversighting military is sensitive-Reps

    Soldiers’ tactical maneouver: Oversighting military is sensitive-Reps

    The National Assembly must deploy an  effective means of tracking budgetary allocations to the armed forces  if the  insurgency in parts of the country is to be curbed, members of the House of Representatives have said.

    Minority Leader  in the House, Mr. Femi Gbajabiamila believes that the National Assembly may not have taken its oversight duty of the military seriously.

    House spokesman,Mallam  Zakari Mohammed blamed administrations that came after the Shehu Shagari in 1983 for the emerging decadence in the security sector.

    Gbajabiamila says it is now imperative, given the   current security situation in the country,  that the  National Assembly should   be creative in tracking budgeted allocation to the military to ensure proper utilization.

    The lawmakers were asked if the National Assembly has not failed the nation on account of its  inability to ensure that monies allocated for defence purposes are well utilized.

    The military  had complained about inadequate  and obsolete equipment .

    The situation is believed to be responsible for the ‘tactical maneuver’  of Nigerian soldiers to Cameroon while confronting the Boko Haram in the North East.

    The Minority Leader  said: “Quiet honestly I have no answer. You are right that the National Assembly may have  dropped the ball and failed somewhat in its oversight of the military.

    “Oversight function is one area of our legislative work that we need to take more serious as  we can now see what can happen when we are not thorough”.

    The House spokesman, in his response,said there is a limit to what the National Assembly can do in scrutinizing  the workings of the military.

    His words: “I believe that what we are witnessing now  is a strong sign of the neglect of the military over time. What I mean by over time is that for instance,  we heard that the last time an Alpha jet was bought was  in the 1980s during the civilian administration President Shehu Shagari.

    “Since then none has been bought.

    “These are the challenges and when we rub minds with the Service Chiefs, these issues came up. As leaders in our rights, what we feel we can do is to find how to proffer solutions to these problems.

    “This is not to say that money that have been appropriated are not well used.  Yes, to some extent, there may be issues of abuses here and there  but the National Assembly is finding ways of how to track these money.

    “But don’t forget that if not for the insurgency that is rocking our country now,  Defence vote is usually considered as not auditable.”

  • Our soldiers’ burden

    Soldiers bear heavy load. Those of us who know nothing about soldiering see them as super human. We expect them to perform gigantic feats just because they are soldiers. Yes, as soldiers they know that much is expected of them because, as a nation, we have given them much to be able to defend our territorial integrity when the need arises.

    This is precisely the point. Have we given our soldiers much to  demand that they put down their lives for our country? In the last five years that  Boko Haram has been killing, maiming, looting and burning, our soldiers have been in the news, all for the wrong reasons. It is either that they are fleeing from battle or that they do not have enough arms and ammunition. In some cases, it may be that their bush allowance has not been paid. Yet, allocation would have been made for  payment.

    On some occasions, we have heard of our soldiers’ refusal  to fight over the non-payment of their allowances. Whenever  they take such action, they are  accused of mutiny and court-martialled. In the army, it seems it is a cardinal sin to fight for your right even when  your superiors deliberately deprive you of your entitlement. What these superior officers forget  is that  only a well catered for soldier will do justice to his calling in times of war. So, when we see our soldiers in rubber slippers instead of boots and in tattered iniforms we know those to hold responsible.

    To get the best out of our soldiers, we must give them the best in terms of kitting  and equipping them for battle. We have heard stories about our soldiers in recent times that are not palatable.  If these stories are true, it means that we are in trouble as a nation because we cannot say that we have  an army in the real sense of the word.  The army of a nation should be its pride. It should be a standing force that can be called upon at anytime to defend the nation and it should be able to rise to the occasion.

    Our soldiers’ exploits in the ongoing battle with Boko Haram does not seem to  show that we have such a force. If our soldiers have  been finding it difficult to cut Boko Haram to size all these years, then we are in trouble; serious trouble. To say that they are not trained to fight an ‘enemy’ like Boko Haram, as the Chief of Army Staff, Lt Gen Kenneth Minimah, said some weeks ago, will be begging the issue. To a layman, a soldier is a soldier and he  should be able to live up to that name, anywhere and anytime and against any opponent, whether a militia or soldier.

    Nigerians who have  been looking forward to  our soldiers  finishing  off Boko Haram never imagined that they were putting too much faith in their soldiers. To them, it was a matter of national pride to have had such expectation of their soldiers, a fighting force which they could hide under in times of trouble. So far, Nigerians have been disappointed by their soldiers. This disappointment is fast giving way to fear in case of attack by an external aggressor. Many are asking can these soldiers save us from an  external army   when they cannot fight Boko Haram?

    I share their apprehension because Boko Haram seems to be having the upper hand in its encounters with our soldiers. Whether we like it or not, Boko Haram is determined in its bid to reduce our troops to nothing. So, the sect  seizes every opportunity to paint our soldiers as sissies before the world. How does it do this? By deliberately attacking our soldiers and pushing them out of their strongholds as we  have witnessed in Damboa, Gwoza and Bama, all in Borno State, which is supposed to be under emergency.

    As at today, Boko Haram is exercising suzerainty over Gwoza, where it has declared a caliphate, meaning an Islamic republic right under the nose of our soldiers. With its flag flying in Gwoza, Boko Haram is inching towards capturing more towns in that troubled state. On Tuesday, it succeeded in its bid when it overran Bama, the second largest town in the state, which became famous in 1991 when former Petroleum Minister Prof Tam David-West was jailed there. The battle for Bama was fierce, with the sect losing no fewer than 40 militants on Monday.

    Their loss did not deter them as they returned on Tuesday to resume fighting. Their targets were said to be the Mohammed Kur Barracks and the police station in Bama, a town said to be strategic to the sect because most of its leaders have their base there. If our soldiers could repel Boko Haram on Monday, how did the tide turn overnight? Is it that we do not have what it takes to sustain such advantage? How was the sect able to rout out our soldiers? Were they better equipped than our soldiers? Do they have more men than us? If our soldiers cannot keep  a territory seized from Boko Haram elements, a band of loose fighters, I am afraid of what may happen if we fight  a trained army.

    The prayer of many Nigerians today is that Nigeria may not have cause to go to war with another country. The Boko Haram insurgency has exposed so many things about not only the army, but our military in general. There is need to overhaul our armed forces to meet the exigencies of the time. If it takes our experience with Boko Haram to reinvent our armed forces, the nation will be the  happier for it

    But first, we must reverse the Gwoza and Bama losses before Boko Haram becomes  so emboldened as  to attempt an attack on Maiduguri, the Borno State capital,  which is said to be about 64 kilometres to Bama. What we are witnessing today is highly disturbing. It is a shame that Boko Haram is running rings around our soldiers. I do not know why our soldiers, who are known for their outstanding performance  in peace operations abroad, can allow themselves to be so treated by Boko Haram?

    It is no longer tactical  for them   to hold their peace against Boko Haram, which does not deserve to be treated with kid gloves. If a loose band of soldiers feels that it has what it takes to confront trained soldiers it should be prepared to pay the price for its action. Boko Haram has made its choice, so it should be ready to live with it.  We can no longer watch while the sect treats our soldiers like a bunch of fighters, who do not know why they are donning their uniform. It is time to make Boko Haram stew in its own juice.

    If Cameroon can mount an assault against  Boko Haram,  why are we shy of doing the same? Boko Haram cannot take on the Nigerian Army; no never. So, our soldiers must wake up from their slumber  and redeem their image that has been sullied by Boko Haram. As the mirror image of our nation, they cannot afford to fail us.  Enough of running away from these insurgents. They should take the fight to the sect and flush its members out of Gwoza, Bama and of course,  Sambisa Forest and bring back our girls.

  • ‘Deployment of soldiers for election duties illegal’

    It is ultra-vires (outside) President Goodluck Jonathan’s powers to deploy solders during elections, a human rights group, One Voice, has said.

    In a statement by its media committee chairman Pastor Deji Adeleye, the group said the police is being undermined by the deployment of soldiers to maintain law and order during elections.

    “OneVOICE, acting in consultation with some of the best legal luminaries in the country, believe that it is illegal and ultra vires the part of President Jonathan to deploy the military to maintain law and order during elections.

    “It is incongruous with sections 215 and 217 of the Constitution which made it abundantly clear that the power of the President to deploy Armed Forces for internal security is limited to the suppression of insurrection, including insurgency and aiding the police to restore order when it has broken down.

    “The use of soldiers during elections is ill-advised. Instead, the police should have been strengthened to discharge the duty of ensuring internal security while the military is restricted to the defense of the Nation’s territorial integrity.

    “What militarisation does is to invoke fears on voters to make them not consider participating in the election thereby disenfranchising them,” One Voice said.

    The group said the coercive apparatus of the state constitutionally mandated to maintain law and order is the police, not the military or the Department of State Security (DSS) whose legal existence is unknown to any law in Nigeria, or masked persons.

    “Indeed, the duty of the military is to defend the territorial integrity of the country or quell insurrection in any section of the country where the Police has proved incapable of handling the situation.

    “ONEVOICE is, therefore, demanding a stop to the use of the military and DSS operatives in subsequent election including the 2015 general elections,” it said.

    The group also condemned the current gale of impeachments and attempted impeachments of state governors, saying: “The road to the present democratic dispensation in Nigeria is undoubtedly a tortuous one and we cannot afford to allow our democracy to come to peril.”

    The development, the group said, has grave implications on constitutionalism and the rule of law, especially as laid down constitutional rules are being violated and trampled upon with impunity.

    It added that unlike America where impeachment is the last resort when all other options had failed, the reverse is the case in Nigeria.

    “It is always the first option with the legislators threatening the president or state governor at will.  To date, only twice have the American congress impeached the President since 238 years ago that America gained independence.

    “Although no Nigerian President has been impeached, many State governors have been sacked through impeachment since 1999 under the present dispensation. Under the former President olusegun Obasanjo, two governors, Joshua Dariye of Plateau State and Ayo Fayose of Ekiti State were impeached.

    “Under President Jonathan, impeachment notices against many governors have become very rampant. Indeed, political watchers see this method as a subversion of the constitution which portends danger for the political stability of the country,” One Voice said.

  • Soldiers relish new Officers’ Mess

    Soldiers relish new Officers’ Mess

    Professionally, they are saddled with defending the country against external aggression. They are also called to assist should there be any internal insurrection that may lead to the breakdown of law and order. Though they are soldiers, they are also social beings.

    In peace time, they socialise with family members, friends and associates. After the day’s work, they relax and, most times, make merry at their recreation centre known as Officers’ Mess.

    However, the facility became decrepit and there was the need for a new and befitting one. Happily, a modern facility has been built for the comfort of the soldiers. It was inaugurated by the Chief of Army Staff (COAS), Lt-General Kenneth Minimah.

    Its inauguration at the headquarters of the 34 Artillery Brigade Obinze, Imo State, was a proof that, for the Army, it is not just fighting and warfare as portrayed by their mien. The Officers’ Mess, built at the centre of the headquarters’ premises, has all the trappings of a first-class relaxation centre.

    Speaking during the inauguration, the President of the Mess Committee, Col. A.T Adedoja, said the construction of the Officers’ Mess began few years ago but was delayed as a result of the death of the contractor. The situation, he said, stalled the work.

    He noted that the Mess was built with the best quality finishing which will provide maximum comfort and serving as a perfect relaxation centre for officers.

    He said: “It took the dexterity and commitment of the Commander, Brigadier General Lanre Bello to complete and equip the Officers’ Mess. It was also made possible through the assistance of friends of the Command who had donated generously towards the building of the edifice.

    “We are appealing to the authority and other public-spirited Nigerians to assist the Command in offsetting the remaining cost incurred in furnishing the Mess with first-class furniture and electronic gadgets.”

    Declaring the Officers’ Mess open, Lt.-Gen. Minimah, who was accompanied by the General Officer Commanding (GOC) 82 Division Enugu and other top military officers, praised the Command for achieving the feat, noting that it would go a long way in assisting the officers in relaxing after their daily routine.

    He further said soldiers should make out time to relax and socialise with one other in order to promote cohesion and unity.

    In a chat with reporters shortly after the inauguration of the facility, the Army boss, who was on a familiarisation tour of the 82 Division, said the Army is winning the war against terrorism.

    He also allayed the fears of Nigerians in the Southeast over possible infiltration by members of Boko Haram sect, adding that the few security threat recorded in the zone may not be connected with the insurgents.

    The Army boss noted that the two incidents in Imo and Abia states allegedly linked to the Islamic Sect may have been the handiwork of some elements within the zone which wanted to take advantage of the insurgency in the country to cause mischief.

    “What happened at the Winners Chapel Church in Imo and the arrest made in Abia State cannot be totally blamed on the insurgents because some mischievous elements can be making bombs to cause trouble and make it seem as if Boko Haram had carried out the action.

    “Some elements within the states may want to cause problem. Some mischief makers might want to take advantage of the insurgency in the country to foment trouble. But the Military is ready to check all forms of security threats,” Minimah said.

  • Inside the mess soldiers call home in Warri

    Inside the mess soldiers call home in Warri

    At a glance from the NPA Expressway, the David Ejoor Barracks, Effurun-Warri, Delta State, the home of the 3 Battalion of the Nigerian Army, reveals freshly painted walls, a beautiful iron gate guarded by plain-clothed and uniformed stern-faced soldiers.

    A stroll further into the military community through the secured gate will reveal well-manicured lawns edged by trimmed bushes and orderly trees. The main road into the military community becomes two a few yards later. The two branches reveal deliberate attempt to keep them well-maintained, howbeit through unconventional means – with broken bricks, stones and other debris.

    Advancing into the heart of the barracks, to the left is the office of top ranking officers, including the Commanding Officer (CO) and his principal officers; to the right is the way to the ‘B Company’ and other formations. This building, like most structures around the area, is spotting fresh paint and is edged by orderly shrubs amidst verdure vegetation and neatly lined trees that provide shades and ensure that the offices are perennially cool.

    It is a perfect picture of how an army barracks should look. The tidiness extends to the areas inhabited by the CO and other high ranking officers of the formation and it about ends there.

    But, what you see from the outside is mere aesthetic that ends as one moves westwards to the ‘A Company’, one of the residential areas of the real David Ejoor Barracks. Several rows of rotten, decaying bungalows stand out in stark contrast to the scenic beauty at the beginning of the journey. From a distance, this area looks like a ghost town, long forgotten and disused. The houses are aptly located near the cemetery where those who fought and died for their country are buried – mostly in unmarked graves.

    The buildings here seem desolate and abandoned. They are long, endless mass of bricks and woods with leaky roofs, decaying surroundings, overflowing cesspools, faulty plumbing and lacking of every comfort that an apartment should provide.

    As one moves closer, he will begin to feel the buzz of life. This doesn’t look like a military residential area but like a refugees’ camp or a slum in any of the government abandoned parts of the country. In some areas it is difficult to tell how the buildings formerly looked because of the presence of several foreign matters added to support them.

    As you move even nearer, you are hit by the strong repulsive stench of decaying human wastes mixed with bathwater and indiscernible smell of rotten food, faeces and others. As one gets acquainted with the ugly, putrid site and smell, he begins to understand the topography of the mess. Greenish dirty pools are formed by water from pits and septic tanks that have  caved in. Some residents make feeble, fruitless efforts to patch up the mess of pits. Others ignore the squalor, accept their fates or are immune to the deadly mixture of bath water, sewage, faeces swirling around them.

    corporal, who spoke to our reporter on condition of anonymity, said he was recently deployed to one of the northern states but could not concentrate on the task because he constantly received reports of one problem or the other.

    “Na so we de see am everyday. Any time I comot, my wife will call me to say that they didn’t sleep last night because of rain water entering the house. What we used to block the ceiling had been blown off. Sometimes it is because the windows are broken or any other problem.

    “Wetin man go do? Na where our government put us and we must remain for there until situation change. That is what we have been hoping for since. Even me ma, I don tire but how I for do. We must endure until Allah answers our prayer but the condition is very bad, walahi,” he said in an admixture of English and vernacular.

    In one part of the barracks a group of teenagers played football on heap of dirt. One of the young boys waded through the green puddle to retrieve the ball and then playfully splattered the water on his colleagues. He told our reporter that they are used to filth but noted that the rainy season is the most difficult time for those who live in the barrack.

    “If you look around, you will see that the soak-away pits are all broken and there are pits everywhere. If you do not know the area very well, you might fall into the pit and break your legs. It happens, it is real.

    “When I was younger, I fell into one of the pits; I could have been dead, but for my friends that quickly rushed to get help. By the time I got out I had drank from the dirty, shit water,” he said.

    Some of the building walls have collapsed and the foundations are caving in and falling apart due to the effect of the water from faulty plumbing work, collapsed drains and other factors. The unlucky inhabitants of such houses use plywood, corrugated sheets, cardboard papers and any other materials they can lay their hands on to fill the gaps on their walls.

    The roofs are in worst shapes; trampolines, cement bags and other emergency cover inhabitants have outnumbered the Super-7 asbestos roofing sheets that were originally used when the houses were built over 30 years ago.

    “I have done my best,” Agnes (not her real name), told our reporter as she cleared utensils from her makeshift kitchen built with sticks and plywood besides her home.

    “I have been in this barrack for years now and there has never been any kind of maintenance since. All the patches on the wall, the pits and anything around here are done through self-help. Any household that feels they cannot take the situation, raise money and do whatever they can to improve their environment. So, any new brick work, attachment or roof you see on any house is done by those who live there.

    “Every time it rains, we have huddled in the least leaky room and the next morning my son would climb to identify the leaking spots and get cellophane or trampoline to cover them. But these days that provides no consolation because the wood and roofing materials are so bad that sometimes the covering we put to stop the rain would just cave in from the weight of the water,” Agnes added in smattering English.

    Our findings revealed that social services in the barracks have deteriorated over the years leading to the collapse of the public water supply system and waste management. Refuse heaps dot every corner and roads in the residential areas. Each block of flats has its own ‘refuse grave’ where they bury their household wastes.

    It was gathered that the refuse grave became fashionable years ago when waste was posing health threat to inhabitants of the barracks. Soldiers and their children would usually dig pits of about three to six feet deep. Wastes generated by the households are dumped in the pits.

    “When the pits get full, we use the sand we dug out from it to cover it up and then we move to another pit. That is how we have been managing our wastes for years now,” a junior ranked soldier told our reporter also on strict condition of anonymity.

    A source at the barrack said living condition at the barracks plunged deeper in the early 2000s when Commanding Officers and other high ranked officers started living outside the barracks.

    “When Gen Elias Zamani was brought here to head the Joint Task Force in 2003, he was the highest ranking officer but he never spent a night in the barrack. Instead, he stayed somewhere in Bendel Estate (an exurb civilian estate in Effurun). Most of the officers are provided plush hotel accommodations so they do not know how the junior offices are faring,” our source added.

    When contacted for comment on the deplorable state of the barracks, the Commanding Officer of 3 Battalion, Lt Colonel Bassey, denied angrily that the barrack was in a deplorable state.

    The CO, who spoke in a short telephone conversation with our reporter on Monday afternoon, retorted with series of questions: “When was the last time you visited the barracks? What did you come to do? How do you know the place is very dirty? I am very sure that it is not this barracks that you are talking about. Have you seen the renovation that is going on in the barracks and you are telling me that the barrack is dirty? Look, my friend, don’t get me angry with you,” he said before he hung up the phone.

    Lt Col Bassey, who was clearly angry about the question, alluded to the maintenance works that were ongoing at the officers’ quarters and administrative buildings of the station, which unfortunately, had yet to get to the living areas of the junior officers at the time of this report.

    Speaking in his defence, a middle-ranked officer said: “The CO just came a few months ago and this rot has been on for several years. You do not expect one or two leadership change to alter it. But in fairness to the current man, he his vigorously undertaking maintenance work. He should be commended.”

    Although our checks revealed that Bassey and his predecessor, Lt Col Ifeanyi Otu, have taken active steps to change the fortune of the garrison, the magnitude of the rot and the pace of work are light years apart.

    Besides, it was gathered that the true situation on ground at the military post is hidden from the military high command in Abuja. A source said the pace of the maintenance is exaggerated when the reports are being made, adding, “When they complete the renovation of a building, they will say they have done five and at the end it is the junior officers who suffer.”

     

     

     

  • Lawyers divided on use of soldiers for elections

    Lawyers divided on use of soldiers for elections

    Lawyers have expressed divergent views on the use of military personnel, particularly masked armed men, for elections in the country. Some described their deployment as illegal and unconstitutional, while others saw nothing wrong in it, saying as long as it ensures a free and fair election.

    One of those, who spoke against it was the former chairman of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), Ikorodu branch, Sahid Shillings. He said it was dangerous deploying masked armed personnel.

    He said if one was caught in a cross-fire, it was unlikely to seek  protection with masked armed personnel even if he was fighting one’s enemy.

    Shillings said: “Some of the security experimentations, including allowing policemen in mufti carry ammunitions, could endanger the public even when the intention is genuine.

    “I first saw masked soldiers at the NBA election in Abuja. I was shocked and a bit frightened because anything could happen. Somebody must explain to me what a security officer does that he needs to hide behind a mask. If I am caught in crossfire, I will not run to a masked man even if he is shooting a known enemy. There seems to be danger lurking behind these masks. We will never get used to them. In fact, they only remind us of the predictions for 2015. The Federal Government should reconsider the action because we are preparing too.’’

    Former secretary of Ikeja branch of the NBA, Mr. Adesina Adegbite, also condemned the action strongly, saying: “It was indeed, a very demeaning and condemnable act that is not good for the image of the country.”

    However, an activist, Ikechukwu Ikeji, disagreed insisting that it does not in any way violate any provisions constitution. “it is playing the ostrich to say that the deployment of soldiers to help the security apparatus during the Osun State governorship election was an outright violation of the constitution. Nothing can be farther from the truth. This view point is either borne out of ignorance of the law or mischief or propaganda,” he said.

    Section 218 (1) of the 1999 Constitution of Nigeria, According to him,  provides as follows: “The powers of the President as the Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of the Federation shall include power to determine the operational use of the armed forces of the Federation.” This simply portends that if the President determines that it was necessary to send in the armed forces to help the security, he is acting very much within his powers under the Constitution.”

    Ikeji argued that soldiers have been used by sundry States in Nigeria to help the Police to combat armed robbery and kidnapping and that there has been no criticism of that process, “with even most state Governors providing financial and material support to the military in these combined operations.

    “In Lagos State, for example, we have the OPERATION MESA operating under the command of an army officer and having armed forces personnel as key members. This simply portends an unusual situation. Unusual problems require unusual remedies”, he stated.

    He said “the essence of our present democratic pursuit is to achieve a one man one vote electoral process and the Osun and Ekiti elections, in my humble view, have both achieved this. The use of the military did not derogate from this result. One can claim that the result of the Osun State governorship election was rigged or manipulated or was not a reflection of the wishes of the Osun people but we can only honestly ascribe this success to the presence of the military.”

    Ikeji advised that people  should desist from being unduly cynical about a necessary event that the presence of the military is.

    “Some questions come to mind. Did the military stop one man one vote? Did the military stop anyone from coming out to vote or did the military force anyone to vote against his or her wish or did the military change the election results?

    “Those saying that the presence of the military was over militarisation have not given us a realistic option.

    He advised that what we should take out of the present situation is to start putting effective measures in place to ensure that with time, we can conduct elections without the deployment of troops.

    “This will happen over time, but for now, our democracy and politicians are too corrupt to leave in the hands of politicians in the strict sense. In Osun, there was was massive turn out, people behaved themselves and even the military never interfered with the process.

    “If you juxtapose this with the fact that the President has a constitutional power to deploy troops, then we would all be in agreement that the will of the people came to pass and that is the bottomline in elections.

    “It is too utopian to leave elections in the hands of politicians today and expect a free and fair election.

    “One would even suggest that the Osun State governorship election template be used by INEC to conduct the entire local government elections in Nigeria until such a time that we could put our acts together,” he stated.