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INTERVIEW: How I’d like to be remembered — Alex Ekweme

The interview, granted to leading Hausa newspaper, Rariya, was first published by PREMIUM TIMES in 2013. Mr. Ekwueme spoke about his life, his politics, his struggles and his visions for Nigeria.
Excerpts:
How was growing up like in Oko in the 30s?
Well, Oko was a very rural village but I didn’t actually grow up there because my father was a church teacher for the Church Missionary Society (CMS) which is now the Anglican Church and at the time they were called CMS Agents that is Church Missionary Society Agents. Today, they call them Evangelists. They were responsible for going to rural villages where Christianity had not penetrated and primarily to set up Christian churches so although officially I am from Oko, I was not actually born in Oko. I was born in a village about 11 miles east of Oko call Uga because sometimes my father was in charge of Emmanuel church at Uga so I was born within the church premises and from there, after I was four, my father was transferred to another town Nkpologwu, to Emmanuel Church Nkpologwu.
There, he stayed for just one year before he was transferred again to another church, St Jude Adazi Ani where we stayed two years and where my younger brother, Professor Laz Ekwueme, the present traditional ruler of Oko was born. After that, we moved to a place called Oba which is the remotest part of the state that my dad had to serve. He was the pioneer missionary there. He set up the first church and assimilated the first Christians and after two years there, we came back to Oko. That was when we started living at Oko from 1940 generally and that was at the age of seven.
It was then a very rural setting. And from Oko, I went to a primary school in a neighbouring town which was about four miles away and as we moved on foot every day until 2 years after that- February, 1942, my father died and my aunt then asked me to come and live with her. When my father died my mother had me and the traditional ruler Professor Laz and another Prof, the surgeon, Obumneme, and after my father died my mother delivered twin girls so the burden of looking after three of us and the twins was too much for her and her husband. So, my aunt asked me to come and live with her which served two purposes.
First, it relieved my mother the burden of having to look after me and secondly, I was able to keep my aunt company because she was living alone. But from there, to continue going to school there meant a journey of five and half miles every morning on foot which was very strenuous. But it toughened me because we used to leave in the morning as early as five o’clock and get to a stream on our way and we stop there to have our morning bath and from there we start walking from that stream to the school went uphill and it was very very strenuous. And you have to get to school on time because when you come late you know you are in trouble. When we close, we start trekking back five and half miles and when I get back to my aunt’s place, I had to go to the stream to fetch water for us to use and come to help cook the evening meal. It was very strenuous but it was useful as I said it toughened me and I was able to cope with tough situations later in life.
From there to Kings College. How did you get to King’s College from a village?
That’s a good question. Fortunately, my elder brother had gone into DMGS, Denis Memorial Grammar school at Onitsha. In fact, my dad just settled him in at the Grammar school in January and he died in February. So, he was the one who suggested that I should take entrance examinations to what he considered good secondary schools in Nigeria and Kings College was one of them. He mentioned Government College Umuahia which was also a good school and then, of course, there was DMGS, the one he was attending, there was Methodist College Uzuakoli, Hope Waddel College Calabar and so on.
And the first examination that came up was that of King’s College. And that was June 1944, and then a month and half after we did the examination I was asked to come for the interview. They sent a warrant to enable the child (me) travel by train to Enugu at the age of eleven.
And then you settled in Kings College?
Yes, we did the interview and I was given a scholarship…four of us were granted scholarships and only 25 were taken to class one the following year. Officially, we would have started in September but it was during the war so we started in January 1945.
Who were your contemporaries at Kings College?
Out of a class of 25, we were only (those of us still alive today) about seven. We were four from the east and that four out of coincidence were distributed among the 4 provinces. I was the only one from Onitsha province, and there was Gogo Nzeribe the trade unionist, who was from Owerri Province, there was Okon from Calabar province and there was another person from Ogoja Province. There were four of us from the East, twenty from the West and only one from the North, Bashir from Ilorin.
In the class above us, we had Odimegwu Ojukwu and his first cousin, Emmanuel Ojukwu, and another boy who later became the President of the Nigerian Bar Association. We had quite a few bright people like Professor Olaitan who was at University of Benin and who later became an Arch Deacon. There was Adesugba who later became the Deji of Akure and others.
Was it after High school that you went to study architecture in the US?
Yes, it was after Secondary school. I did my school certificate in December 1949 and we finished from King’s College in June 1950. Then in December 1950, I did a Higher School Certificate examination which is called A Levels now in Arts subjects- English Latin and history. Then, when the results came out the following month and I passed, the Principal who was my mentor, had gotten me back to the school to work as Technical Assistant and Science Instructor to the junior classes.
While I was teaching there, in December 1951, I took another Higher School Certificate in the Sciences- Physics, Chemistry and Mathematics. It was the Principal who suggested that I should study Architecture because it was a field in which there were no Nigerians at the time and that with my wide background and my ability in arts, I should make a good architect. Fortunately, then we set up that year and they asked for arts students in North America in the secretariat in Broad Street and for the first time, Nigerians were eligible to apply for a scholarship under the Fulbright Act sponsored by the Department of State to exchange students.
That year, four Nigerians were awarded this scholarship but because we were a colony, we were not eligible to be awarded the scholarship as Nigerians so we were awarded the scholarship as part of the United Kingdom contingent. So, they took two of us undergraduates and two postgraduates but they took us first to England where they took us round all the scenic places: English speaking places like Cambridge, Oxford, the Theaters, Birmingham and opera and so on. After they thought we were sufficiently drilled, we went across to the United States.
While you were there, you were eclectic in your choice of study-philosophy, sociology, law. Why did you take all these diverse courses and you had degrees in all of them?
First, I had some crucial courses I had passed before coming into the full programme. I had exemptions from Intermediate Bachelor of Arts degree from London University so I’d registered for the London University BA degree before I got the scholarship to come and study Architecture. While I was studying Architecture… well, the American system then, coursework, we had to have a certain number of credits to get a degree and because I had done those Higher school in arts, English and History and sciences Physics, chemistry and mathematics, I was exempted from English language courses. I was exempted from mathematics courses for architects even from the sight and sound which you had to do in preparation for mechanical equivalent of buildings in architecture.
But having been excepted from all these, I think they didn’t give me credits for that so I still had to make up to get the required number of credits required for graduation. So, I used all those open spaces to concentrate on my electives- philosophy, sociology and so on. Within three years of my coming in, I took my London University External BA examination in History, Philosophy and Constitutional law. That was in June 1955 and in August that year, that’s 3 months after, because I had accumulated enough courses in sociology, I was eligible to get a degree in sociology.
Is it true that you were the first to establish an architectural firm in Nigeria?
January 2 1958, Ekwueme Associates Estate and Town Planning was registered and that was the first architectural firm in Nigeria.
You said that when you came back after your PhD, you joined politics. How did that happen?
At a dinner we had in Glasgow after my PhD, there were many Nigerians there. Around September or so, the military government had lifted the ban on politics. Those who came from Nigeria were intrigued by the change from military to the civilian administration and at the dinner, they all said that I should come back and contest for the governorship of Anambra state.
I gave two conditions. First and foremost, I had spent 24 months doing this work and that I was really exhausted…really exhausted because during the research work and preparing for my LLB examinations, it took a lot away from me. And I shuttled back and forth to Nigeria 13 times during those 2 years. Although I had partners who were running the firm but still those people who gave us their commissions asked of me because they knew me. So, I had a personal responsibility to ensure that those projects were properly handled so I travelled 13 times. So, I said first I need to rest. After that, the next condition was that I didn’t have the resources for campaign and won’t be able to rush into the campaign with that kind of energy. What they told me was ‘don’t worry. We will take care of all that’. That I should just accept the nomination.
I came back to Nigeria in November and by the time I came back, they had formed the parties and it was four days before the primaries but however, they postponed it for another one week. So, I came in 11 days to the primary nomination. And true to the promise they made, they had mobilised people. And many of those who had indicated interest to run all stepped down and said they would support me.
Anambra state as it was then composed, had polarisation between its north which is now Enugu State and south which is presently Anambra and people from Enugu state already felt they were dominated by people in what is Anambra now. And CC Onoh wanted to be governor and from my own part the state, there were three of us. We sat down and everyone stepped down except Chuba Okadigbo. So, we came to the primaries and there were three of us coming from what was then Anambra and only one coming from Enugu so the result was a foregone conclusion. Then we went to Casino Cinema in Lagos, on December 10, for the presidential primaries. It was there that Alhaji Shehu Shagari was nominated after Maitama Sule stepped down so we didn’t go for a second ballot.
There were general arrangements the party had agreed to before I came back from the United Kingdom. The north was to produce the president and they were six of them contesting for it. Four western states would produce the chairman of the party and what is now the South-east would produce the vice president and what was called southern minorities or the south-south today should produce the senate president. So, after the presidential primaries at Casino Cinema, matters came up for the selection of Vice President. The committee that was set up by the party to go to Anambra and Imo to find out whom they thought would be able to partner with Alhaji Shehu Shagari in the contest of the country went around but didn’t quite conclude.
In fact they were to do their work between that time and to finish by December 26th or 27th so what happened was that because I was not mentally prepared for the post of vice president, what I came back to contest was that of governor. So, on the 21stDecember, while the committee was going round, I left the country with my family. We went to Douala in the Cameroons. Then on the 24th we moved from Douala to Nairobi and spent Christmas in Nairobi and then came back to Nigeria on the 29th December by which time we thought they must have finished the selections but they hadn’t.
At the Hotel Presidential Enugu, where the state chairman of the party, Dr. Ralph Orizu, former president of the Senate was staying, he called leaders of the party from Anambra and Imo to come to his suite and when they came, he told them that the slot for vice president had been allocated to Anambra and Imo and that Anambra and Imo States should bring one person each who they would like to occupy the slot. He said those two people should bring their CVs the next morning.
So, as it turned out, the state executive submitted my name. The next morning, we submitted our CVs to Alhaji Shehu Shagari and he spent the next day in Enugu. Then the day after that, they moved us from Anambra to Benue. When we got to the Anambra/Benue border, the Benue contingent had come to meet us. While we were exchanging greetings, Alhaji Shehu Shagari called me aside and said that he had reached an agreement and that he would like to work with me.
I thanked him for the honour for considering me a suitable associate for the office of the vice president. So, we went back to Lagos after the tours and they fixed a National Executive Council meeting.
I was in London for my convocation when the treasurer of the party in Anambra state called me on the phone and said ‘what are you doing there?’ I tried to explain to him and he said ‘jump into a plane and come back immediately’. I said, ‘what is happening?’ But he said just jump on a plane and come immediately. I came back and so on the 23rd January at the NUC, I was invited to Jibowu street and after the NUC met, they had consultations with Alhaji Shehu Shagari and he announced to them that the party had adopted me as running mate to Shehu Shagari.
How did you emerge as an Igbo vice president to a northern President when Zik (Nnamdi Azikwe) from your locality was the presidential candidate in another party, NPP? Did it add any political pressure on you since both of you are from Anambra state?
One of the things I mentioned at the dinner in Glasgow was that I would like to get involved in the governorship thing and I would like to do it on the platform of a party that has a nationwide appeal. And as of the time we were doing primaries at Enugu, Zik had not declared for NPP. Infact, a delegation had gone to see him at Nsukka and I think it was on their way back that one of them, Chief Agbaje from Ibadan, died in an accident on their way back. What he told the delegation was that he would consider their invitation for him to join and that he would announce a decision in due course. But as soon as we finished the nomination in Enugu, the following week, NPP came to do their own. Zik then declared for NPP. He was persuaded by a team that went from Lagos, some of his old colleagues NCNC, to come and join the NPP and to lead. Waziri Ibrahim pulled out and took his own group as Great Nigeria People’s Party (GNPP).
Did you have any form of relationship with Alhaji Shehu Shagari before your nomination as his running mate?
Well, it was when he was commissioner for finance and a mutual friend of ours who has passed on now, took me to him because the military were acquiring my properties in Port Harcourt and had defaulted. They had not paid their rent up to date so he told me that Alhaji Shagari would be able to help me. So, I saw him and he called Alhaji Shehu Musa, the late Makama Nupe who was a deputy Permanent secretary in the Ministry of Defence, and told him that he was sending me to him and that he should solve the problem. So, when I got to Alhaji Shehu Musa office, he invited one Shittu, one of his assistants, who took the matter and they sorted it out and paid all the arrears they were owing. That was my closest contact with him prior to NPN convention.
What was the nature of your working relationship with the President?
We had a very close working relationship. He is a person who is forthright and principled. I tell you one thing. The first cabinet council meeting we had, papers had been circulated earlier on but throughout the meeting, I didn’t say anything because usually memoranda were signed by the president and of course he didn’t draft them. It was drafted by civil servants but declared under his name. So as soon as the meeting ended, he invited me to his office. It wasn’t a very expansive office. From the council chambers to his office was just a flight of stairs. He asked me why I didn’t make any contribution to the discussion that went on at the council. I told him that the memoranda came under his signature and I found a lot of things I was not happy with and I didn’t think it would be tidy for me to come and start pointing out those issues because it would seem as if we were working at cross purposes.
So, I said that there are two ways of handling these issues. Either I see these memos and add my input before they come which would preserve the integrity of the presidency or not. He said that I should go ahead and add my views. He said he didn’t know that this problem was sometimes created by civil servants and sometimes they come so late, a day or two before council meeting and there won’t be time to go through it. He said that I should be free to express my views on any of the items so I thought it was very unusual because most people would be sensitive about seeing a paper they signed being criticised by their deputy. So, we worked together amicably.
One of the traits of your government is that the President and his deputy were men of proven integrity but the government was accused of massive corruption. Give us an insight on how two of you dealt with the issue of corruption
The problem of corruption was magnified beyond proportion because the media was in total control of UPN which was in opposition to us. Well, as you can tell, when the military came in and they set up military tribunals, the first people to be jailed for corruption were those taking kickbacks from the Great Nigeria Insurance which went up in flames a few days ago.
It wasn’t NPN government, it was UPN people government. And the people who had longer sentence for abuse of office was not NPN governors, it was NPP governors. So, the thing was magnified out of proportion. When contracts were awarded, it was out of the competitive tendering process. Directors had power up to N250, 000, permanent secretaries had up to so much and ministerial tenders board had so much and beyond that, it has to come to Federal Tenders Board. Now admittedly, we had a few ministers whose conduct fell below the norm and it’s a difficult thing to police because it was not something that was easily proven so that you say this is the proof.
Once you heard that sort of thing and you confront the minister or the person concerned, he denies totally that there was no such misconduct. But what happened then was that during the second term, of course, we knew that this problem was there So, we required all those who were appointed ministers to sign undated letters of resignation so as not to cause us any embarrassment so that when we have this sort of story about a minister collecting money, we would just say that he has tendered his letter of resignation on personal grounds.
Shortly after the 1983 coup, there was a coup. The principal officers, particularly at state and federal levels, were arrested and detained by the military including the president. What can you tell us about what happened?
As you know I was first the person to be arrested. They came to my house at about 1 am and then it was my friend’s (Emir of Gwandu) son, Major Jokolo, who came to arrest me.
After I was arrested, we went to the House of the Speaker where they arrested Benjamin Chaha from Benue. In the first term, we had NPN/NPP accord so the Speaker came from NPP and that was how Ume Ezeoke became Speaker, otherwise, Benjamin Chaha would have been Speaker. Because of that, he was made a minister. That position was zoned to North-central. So, Benjamin Chaha was coming to the House for the first time. He was a school teacher and my house was very close to his place and apparently, the driver forgot the way to his house and he went round and round looking for it. So, when we got there anyway, he was very frightened. When he came to the car and saw me, he calmed down. He said if I was there and was not panicking, why should he be panicking.
They said you had information that these soldiers were planning (a coup). Why didn’t you arrest them? It was alleged that both President Shagari and you got a hint that they were planning the coup?
Maybe President Shagari got a hint, I didn’t have a hint
During the regimes of Buhari and Babangida, you were relatively quiet. You didn’t engage government during this period but when Abacha came you were so active even leading some opposition to the military. What were you doing during Babangida and Buhari period?
First, in the Buhari period which lasted for 20 months, I was in detention. I went from Bonny Camp first to a House in Temple Road and from there to Kirikiri then from Kirikiri to Ikoyi Prison. It was there in Ikoyi prison in August that Buhari was shunted aside by Babangida. It was Babangida that got us out of Ikoyi prison and back to house arrest where we started. House arrest first at Hawksworth then from Hawksworth to Roxton then from Roxton to Milverton. That went on like that for a space of about 10 months.
From there, I was taken to my home at Oko and placed under restriction. I could not go out of my Local Government. I was not allowed to make any statements so naturally, I had to comply because I signed that I would comply with and I did comply. After the restriction within my local government, they expanded it and said I should not move out of my state. From my state, I was kept within Nigeria until 1989. Six years after that, I was allowed to travel out of the country. That was why you didn’t hear much from me. Then Babangida came and promised to hand over after a period of time. He set up institutions, Centre for Democratic Studies, so many institutions, and created parties. Well, what I decided was that I would not participate in any political activity. I wouldn’t be a member of any of the parties and institutions.
Then when Abacha came, what really triggered me was his modus operandi. He came and it was clear that he didn’t have any regards for the civilian population. He thought everything was to be accomplished by force of arms. We organized first as civil society, nine of us to tried and really appreciated that if we don’t extricate ourselves from the military, we will remain slaves to them forever. Then from the Institute for Civil Society, we decided to hold a summit which was held at Eko Hotel. While that was holding, he (Abacha) sent thugs to disperse us. After that, we heard that he was planning to transit from a military to civilian Head of state and we found that that was unconscionable.
So, after the summit, all of us in civil society met again and recognised the summit and felt it was widely assumed that they were all supporting Abacha because he was a Northerner so we agreed that they would make the first move, telling Abacha that what he was doing was not acceptable. So, we met at Kaduna and drafted a memorandum which Solomon Lar delivered to him (Abacha) by a group of 18. Then after that, I called a full meeting at Glover Hotel in Yaba where 34 of us met and I prepared a memorandum which we gave to him which was G34 Memorandum.
So, it was the G34 that metamorphosed into PDP?
Well, the G34 midwifed the PDP. After Abacha’s death and General Abdulsalam came, we were allowed to start partisan politics. It was G34 that called the associations we had in Lagos and eventually decided to get political associations because we had come to the conclusion that we must forget every difference and come together so the associations that were in existence came together – ANC, ADP, PDN, PCS, PNS. And so that was how PDP emerged formally on August 21 at the National Conference Centre in Abuja. It formally became a party.
During the 1994/95 constitutional conference you championed the restructuring of Nigeria into 6 geo-political zones. What was the motivation?
What was exactly wrong with the structure of the Nigerian Federation at independence and thereafter? We had three regions-the North, the East and the West. The drawbacks of that structure were that the north was bigger than the other two regions put together which meant that in a parliamentary system if all the other MPs vote together, they will always produce the Prime Minister. This meant that some parts of the country will consider themselves second-class citizens if they cannot aspire to the highest office in the land. That was the first pitfall.
The second one was that we met the structure for each region such that in each region, we had a majority ethnic group and then a group of minority ethnic groups. In the north, Hausa/Fulani, then the others like Kanuri, Gwari, Nupe and so on coming down to others like Angas and Tarok.
In the West, we had Yoruba and then Edo, Urhobo, Itsoko Itsekiri, Western Ijaw. In the East, Igbo majority, then Ibibio, Efik the Eastern Ijaw, Ogoja area, Ogoni. So, all these minority groups felt that by the structure of the region they were again second-class citizens. So, it was in their interest that they should be in opposition. The Midwest was able to be established as the first region. The minorities in the east and north were not so lucky so my thinking was how do we cure these two defects.
First, the overbearing size of land in the federating units and secondly the conflict between the majority and minority groups and of course if you cure these two then we have a stable country. So, we said that we should have in the north, 3 zones: North-west, mostly Hausa/Fulani, North-east and North-central mostly minorities, South-west mostly Yoruba, the South-east, mostly Igbo and South-south mostly minorities again. Although we have some Igbo in Delta, you have some Yoruba in Edo and you have some Hausa in Auchi so, with this arrangement, we now have 3 majority zones and 3 minority zones.
The presidential campaign you ran during the formation of the PDP was exciting because of the issues and the difference. Most of the northern elders like Adamu Chiroma or those in NPN rallied around you but somehow Obasanjo was also supported by the military. So, the military was for Obasanjo and politicians were for you and he got it. In 2003, a similar thing happened. What actually played out then?
It was not quite right to say that politicians were for me while the military was for Obasanjo. Two politicians, for example, were for Obasanjo. Rimi was a politician. Even in the stadium there where they were choosing the candidate, he was campaigning for Obasanjo in Jos. And then Bamanga Tukur who was in ANC who I campaigned for in 1983 when he was running for the governorship of Gongola. He gave his reasons for supporting Obasanjo in the book ‘This House Has Fallen’. You see where he was interviewed and he said that Obasanjo was like a truck driver and I was like a limousine driver.
You know Obasanjo is a rough person and I was a gentleman type of politician and that what Nigeria needed at that time was a truck driver and not a limousine driver. So, he was supporting Obasanjo. Even Solomon Lar, may his soul rest in peace, who was the chairman of the party and who was my deputy in all those organisations, supported Obasanjo in Jos. Jerry Gana who was my Secretary in Civil Society, Secretary in G34, Secretary in PDP, Secretary of Board of Trustees when I was Chairman, he was also an ‘Obasanjo’ man.
So, it was not just not a military affair. We had more to it but what most people didn’t understand is that I could have scuttled the whole thing in Jos because in November 1998, at a meeting of the National Executive Committee of the party, which we had before local government elections of December, the government had said that it was the performance of the local government elections that would decide which parties would get final registration.
So, it was crucial for every party to succeed in local government elections and at this meeting it was stated in black and white that anybody who did not win his local government will not be eligible to contest for the presidency. Anybody who did not win his ward will not be eligible to contest for the governorship. After the election of December 5, the next NEC meeting, which was chaired by late Afolabi because Solomon Lar was not present that day, approved and confirmed this decision of the NEC.
Now in my pocket in Jos, I had a copy of the decision and also the constitution of the party. The chairman of the party was like the chairman of the Board and Secretary of the party was like the Managing Director so it was the Secretary who had executive powers, not the Chairman. When the result was announced in Jos and they said Obasanjo won, I had the option of saying I didn’t accept it or say I accept it, embrace it and work together to make sure the party wins. I could have said that of all the candidates that contested, it was only 6 that were eligible.
I had the highest number of votes so I expected the party to send my name to INEC and having said that and read the minutes of the NEC meeting it was incontrovertible that a person who did not win his local government area, he didn’t win his ward, he didn’t even win the polling station in front of his house so with the NEC decision he couldn’t be the party’s candidate. And this decision was mentioned at the screening committee when we applied to contest.
When the screening committee read the letter and its implications, Solomon Lar (may his soul rest in peace) wrote to them to plead that they should give Obasanjo provisional clearance to contest.
Secondly, it could have given the military the chance to prolong their stay which would defeat all the efforts we made and the risk we took to place our lives on the line during Abacha. My own personal ambition was not worth putting Nigeria at risk and that was why I embraced Obasanjo and went on to campaign for him. Few days after, fundraising was done at the congress hall and I chaired that fund-raising ceremony.
Times have changed since you left government. One is corruption. The magnitude of corruption now is very high. The military accused Shagari government of corruption but what is happening now makes it look like child’s play. How do you feel?
I feel very sad that I think we must leave the blame squarely at the feet of the military because the military that was accusing us of corruption had absolutely no checks. I said earlier on that no contract was awarded without tender. Except those of defence that didn’t have to come into the open, military procurement. Otherwise, everything was transparent. But in their own case, there was no processing. Just call somebody and give him a contract without due process and unfortunately the civilians that came after them thought that that was a way to operate and the public servants helped to encourage corrupt practices in all areas of governance.
But as I said, when we had a workshop on anti-corruption in 1991, I told them that corruption exists in every country and most human beings have the tendency of being corrupt if they think they will get away with it. Corruption is low in America because it is difficult to get away with it. They will track you down. We can reduce corruption if we take just two steps.
The first one is to allow an exception to our jurisprudence especially the part we inherited from Britain that says you are assumed innocent until you are proven guilty. And that puts the burden of proving you guilty on the person who accuses you so that can be very difficult burden to discharge. So, we need to give exception in some cases and say you are presumed guilty unless you prove yourself innocent. For instance, if you are a civil servant on level 10 and you are driving a Mercedes Jeep and you are living in a palace in Maitama and your lifestyle is such that cannot be justified or defended by your legitimate earnings then you are deemed guilty until you prove otherwise.
If the structure of that jurisprudence makes that exception, then the incidence of corruption will reduce. The second one is to have whistle-blowers protection act. Anybody who demands gratification from you, you are free to meet his demands provided you will blow the whistle on him immediately and whatever is been recovered from him, some of it would be returned to you and you will be protected by law from being accused of inquisitorial harassment. A slight change in our jurisprudential norms and promulgation of a Whistle-blowers Act will bring down corruption.
Your last attempt at the presidency was the nearest for any person of Igbo ethnicity. How do you foresee an Igbo presidency in the nearest future?
Well, it’s something that has to be based on structural refinement. I don’t think any Nigerian will be happy if his regional block or ethnic block or geopolitical block is seen to be excluded from vying for the highest office in the land for whatever reason. In 1987, I understand Umaru Dikko gave a press conference in London after he escaped from here where he said that the coup which took place in December 1983 was put in place by the Army to prevent me from taking over from Shagari in 1987 and they didn’t want it to linger until that time so they decided to do it at a time we were complaining of the elections, hoping that they would receive the sympathy of non NPN supporters.
I don’t know how Umaru got his information but that is what he said. Then in 1999, the same scenario played itself out in a different way. Also, in 2003. You know the format was that presidency was just a single term. Now if I had won in 1999, by 2003 I would have served one term and it goes to the North-east with a vice president from South-south to serve one term. By 2007 a south-south man would have served as a president and he would have someone from North-west as his vice so by 2011, a person from North-west will be president with a VP from South-west. By now we would have the opportunity for every geopolitical zone to produce a president and I am persuaded that every geo-political zone in this country has competent man power and can serve in the highest office in the land.
How would you like the Nigerian society to judge you?
Well, I cannot and should not blow my own trumpet. My music teacher in secondary school said you have to blow your own trumpet because if you don’t, no one will blow it for you until it gets rusty. But I will like to be remembered as someone who came into public office to render service and rendered that service selflessly.
What is your vision for Nigeria and the future?

My vision for Nigeria is that Nigeria should become a nation rather than a country. Ghana is a nation. The type of massacre of people from certain groups that takes place from time to time in Nigeria won’t happen in Ghana. You will not see people from Ashanti descending on the Fantis and the Ga and others and killing them as if they are not citizens of the same country. And when you talk a Ghanaian without being told you will see that he is talking as a Ghanaian but when you talk to a Nigerian, by and large it will not show that they are Nigerians first and foremost.


Culled from PremiumTimes

OBITUARY: Ekwueme, the accidental VP who wanted MKO’s name written in the constitution

When Alexandra Ifeanyichukwu Ekwueme drew his last breath on Saturday night at a London hospital, it was not just a chapter that closed in Nigeria’s history: a library also shut down. Regarded as one of the most educated politicians Nigeria has ever produced, Ekwueme churned out political ideas that have continued to shape the debate around the country’s nationhood.
There is an irony to the timing of his passing. His daughter, Alexandria Chidi Onyemelukwe, had just lost her bid to become deputy governor of Anambra state as running mate to Oseloka Obaze on the platform of Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). Willie Obiano of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) took his opponents to the cleaners. TheCable understands that Ekwueme was unaware of the development, having not recovered from the coma he slipped into early November. He was flown abroad in an air ambulance.
Maybe governorship is not for the family after all.
When Ekwueme received his LLB and a second PhD in Scotland in 1978, his convocation dinner was attended by a large delegation from the old Anambra state. One person after the other spoke, asking him to come home and be part of the transition to civil rule, as the ban on politics had just been lifted by the military government of Olusegun Obasanjo.
They asked him to contest for the governorship of Anambra state. He was reluctant but he gave two conditions: first, he was really exhausted from his academics and was not in a state of mind to embark on an elaborate campaign, so they would have to undertake to do it for him; second, he had not much money at the time so they would have to raise the funds. They agreed to both conditions.
Pronto, he came back to Nigeria, with the governorship primary just a few days away. But he got a breather, as it were, as it was moved by one week.

ACCIDENTAL VICE-PRESIDENT
Since he was not at home when NPN was formed, it was always going to be a tough call to get the party’s ticket. CC Onoh (father of Bianca Ojukwu) was already on ground nursing his own ambition. He was campaigning then that northern Anambra (Enugu, Abakaliki and Nsukka senatorial districts) should produce the governor, as against the south, made up of Awka and Onitsha districts. The north had 23 local governments, while the south, where Ekwueme came from, had only 15. It was a battle the man with two PhDs would not win.
But life is full of twists and turns.
“This is where God comes into the affairs of men: I lost the governorship ticket at a time when NPN was quite popular here. But shortly after that, Nnamdi Azikiwe came into the picture and it changed all the dynamics and calculations when he became the presidential candidate of the NPP (Nigerian Peoples Party)… if I had won that (NPN) guber primaries, I would have also lost the election for the office of governor,” Ekwueme would say later. Of course, Onoh lost to NPP’s Jim Nwobodo.

BIONOTES
Born on October 21, 1932, Ekwueme started primary school at the St John’s Anglican Central School, at Ekwulobia, then he proceeded to King’s College, Lagos. As an awardee of the Fulbright Scholarship in the US. He one of the first Nigerians to win the award. He attended the University of Washington where he earned bachelor’s degree in architecture and city planning and a master’s degree in urban planning. He also earned degrees in sociology, history, philosophy and law from the University of London. He later proceeded to obtain a Ph.D in architecture from the University of Strathclyde, before gaining the BL (honours) degree from the Nigerian Law School.

Meanwhile, Shehu Shagari, who had just been nominated the presidential candidate of the National Party of Nigeria (NPN) for the 1979 election, was on a vote mobilisation tour of the east. At Enugu, he asked to meet NPN leaders from Imo and Anambra states (today’s Imo, Anambra, Ebonyi, Abia and Enugu states). The meeting took place at Hotel Presidential.
NPN had zoned the vice-presidential slot to the east, so it was also time to discuss potential candidates. Shagari told both states to nominate candidates by consensus, and he would then pick one based on the decision of the executive committee of the party. Anambra nominated Ekwueme — in fact, Onoh nominated him and it was unanimously supported — while Imo nominated Macaulay Nwankwo. Both nominees were friends. Shagari got their resumes.
Campaign done and dusted in the east, the Shagari train headed for Benue state. At the Anambra-Enugu border, the unexpected happened — according to Ekwueme.
“When we got to the border, the people from Benue state were waiting to receive Shagari and we parked, did some back-slapping and just while all that was happening, Shagari drew me aside and said he wanted to tell me himself and that he would like us to work together once the NEC approves, that he wants to work with me; but he said I should still keep it to myself. I thanked him right there at the border; but again, something very interesting happened. As we were returning to our state, some people who were still interested in the job still went with him to Benue state and all along with the campaign until he came back to Lagos,” Ekwueme told Vanguard in an interview in 2009.


Culled from The Cable

OPINION: Like Ken Saro-Wiwa, like Nnamdi Kanu, by Sam Amadi

Today is 22 years since the Nigerian state killed Ken Saro-Wiwa on the allegation of murder of Ogoni Chiefs. Ken Saro-Wiwa was tried alongside other Ogoni leaders and citizens, including Mr. Ledum Mittee for allegedly instigating and killing their brothers. The death of those Ogoni chiefs was an unfortunate and unexpected turn of event, occasioned by intolerable disagreement on the strategies for the emancipation of Ogoni people.
This could be a case of what behavioral scholars call ‘predictable surprise’. With ‘hindsight bias’, one could say that the level of venom and angst in this strategic contention would definitely lead to epic tragedy. But, in the thrills of self-determination, no one would have expected the gruesome killing of those who disagreed.
Ken Saro-Wiwa was tried by a special military tribunal headed by the immediate Chief Judge of the Federal High Court, Justice Ibrahim Auta, who was then a junior judge of the Federal High Court, Lagos. Other members of the tribunal were Col Ali, former Military Governor and now Comptroller General of Customs, and a senior judge from Cross River State whose name I can’t easily recollect. The trial was my closest and most insightful encounter with the Nigerian state.
I was a young lawyer, barely two years from the Law School, when Ken’s lawyer and my principal, Gani Fawehinmi, drafted me as co-counsel in the trial. The trial became a ruse to put away a very costly irritation to the Nigerian state. As one of the tribunal members explained to us, it was a strategic mistake that the Nigerian state did not deal ruthlessly with the Ogoni ‘insolence and provocation’ long ago. In his view, Abacha should have exterminated this irritation. But, nevertheless, General Abacha got around doing what a ruthless state gets to do: brutally put off the agitation.
The ‘persecution’ of the Ogoni leaders was expected but the execution of Ken Saro-Wiwa and the other accused persons-minus Mittee- was a real surprise. Both Ken Saro-wiwa and Gani Fawehinmi knew the trial was a sham. As I explained to the Newsweek magazine, the Auta tribunal was a ‘hangman’s court’.
In fact, Ken Saro-wiwa, realizing that the trial was a predetermined extermination of the dangerous Ogoni agitation, counseled Gani Fawehinmi not to put up a defence on his behalf. In Ken’s view, the Nigerian state wanted to kill him after a sham trial whose only redemption would be that such high caliber lawyers represented him. Gani, understood that this Auta Tribunal was a ‘hangman’s court but countered that we needed to push the Tribunal to serial errors to discredit the trial. Thereafter, we would back down.
The defence strategy was delivered up to the hilt. We so exposed the tribunal’s bias and partiality that the envoy of the Law Society and the Bar Council in the UK wrote a damning report of the trail. The Report resulted in worldwide denunciation of the trial. But we missed an important point. Ken had asked me whether I thought Abacha would execute him after conviction and sentence (we knew that Auta and co would convict and sentence Ken and his comrades to death).
I painted scenarios and predicted that how Abacha would treat General Obasanjo and Yaradua, two eminent leaders he had convicted for coup plotting in another Kangaroo military tribunal, would determine his treatment of Ken & co. in my flawed thinking, I believed that if Abacha listened to international outcry and reduced the death sentence on Obasanjo and Yaradua to prison terms then we should be sure he would put Ken into prison and not to the gallows. Then, perhaps, Ken’s dream Nobel Prize could be on the way.
But we failed woefully. I did not reckon that the Ogoni struggle is a different kettle of fish. To the grand commanders of this unfair republic to challenge the unity of Nigeria (a euphemism for challenging the neo-feudal foundations of the Nigerian state) is the unpardonable sin. A coup plotter is pardonable. But the one who puts his hands against the Lugardian knots pays dearly. Ken Saro-wiwa paid the price for raising his voice in the manner in which Adaka Boro and the Biafran soldiers did. It is a legendary irony that Ken Saro-wiwa thoroughly deprecated Ojukwu and his comrades for foolishly rushing to self-determination instead of parleying with the Nigerian state that was already murdering Igbos.
He even called ‘Ojukwu ‘inglorious braggart’, and queried the wisdom of the Igbo struggle. He was not alone in this put-down of the Biafra insurrection. Prof Ali Mazrui seriously lampooned the poet, Chris Okigbo, for abandoning poetry and taking up arms to defend Biafra. I confronted Ken with this irony while he was in prison and he gave me a copy of his ‘On a Darkling Plain’ to debunk allegation of Igbo hatred. Obviously, he did not hate the Igbos. Like most of us he simply failed to see the body in the corpse until death hit home.
About 25 years after the Biafra revolt, Ken inspired a powerful Ogoni rebellion. About 22 years after the Ogoni rebellion was fiercely exterminated, the Nigerian army moved again to the east to quell another insurrection against the Nigerian state. The Indigenous Peoples of Biafra (IPOB) hoisted another flag of a separatist enclave (don’t forget that MOSSOP had Ogoni flag and Anthem). A young man, Nnamdi Kanu, who, like Ken Saro-Wiwa, is privileged with good education and quality of life, swore that he wanted either Biafra or death. Nnamdi Kanu thinks that his Igbo people are being enslaved in Nigeria.
Ken thought Nigeria turned Ogonis into hewers of woods and fetchers of water. Kanu believes that the problem of his Igbo people is that they are enslaved by the Fulani caliphate. Ken believed that the Nigerian military-business complex was imprisoning Ogoni people. Both of them wanted some kind of out.
The pacification of Ogoni was brutal and unfair. In the guise of restoring peace to a troubled land and bringing murderers to justice the Nigerian state brutalized Ogoni and dismantled one of the most vehement and revolutionary political agitations in Nigeria. In his written address to the tribunal Ken Saro-wiwa warned that if Nigeria rebuffed his peaceful agitation for environmental justice and political self-determination, it would contend with violent challenge to its iniquitous order. But Nigeria was not in the mood for reason. And as predicted, the Ijaws took over from where the Ogoni left. Militants swarmed the Niger Delta and forever changed Nigerian politics.
After Ken’s execution, a Nigerian journalist, Adewale Adeoye, and myself decided to publish a book on the Ogoni trial and the political future of Nigeria. In chapter 6 of the proposed book I argued that the future of Nigeria after Ken Saro-wiwa requires a rethinking of the federal system of government. I argued that until we reconceive the Nigerian state on the line of democratic citizenship, without subjecting the state to ethnic and religious competition and dominance, we could lose the nation. In mimicry of the fabled but failed nation-building project in Nigeria, we abandoned the book project. That was over a decade before the present feverish clamor of restructuring and the thunderous chant-down of ‘Nigerian unity is non-negotiable’.
Presumably, we have neatly dispatched off Nnamdi Kanu and his noisome pestilence through the ‘Operation Python Dance’, just the way we extirpated the Ogoni struggle through the Rivers State Internal Security Committee of dreaded Col Okuntimo. The clamor of the Biafran agitators has been drowned in the cacophony of bullets and martial law. We have cured the disease but multiplied the virus. As we ruthlessly fall down those who stand up to question the political fundaments of the Nigerian state and refuse to deal with the issues they raise, we continue to weaken the foundations of Nigeria’s sustainability.
The union grows weaker and weaker after each successful expedition. The Nigerian unity is more threatened today than in 1995 when Ken Saro-wiwa and his colleagues were hanged for asking inconvenient questions. Yes, we dealt with them neatly but we did not answer their queries. 22 years after we are still dealing ruthlessly with, perhaps, a much more inconvenient and insolent query: the new Biafra self-determination movement. It is now time to stop bolstering and bluffing, sit down and ask really difficult question: why does the nation has to be severely threatened every other decade? We can’t we secure the nation on something stronger than individual and group aggrandizement? Can’t we form a less imperfect union?
Dr Sam Amadi, former chairman and chief executive of Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC), was a defence counsel to Ken Saro-Wiwa and other Ogoni leaders at the trial

Source: The Cable




Lt Col Abu Ali: Tribute to a brave heart, by Rotimi Opeyeoluwa

Late Lt Col. Abu Ali
“Gentlemen, stay alert, alive and be prayerful. I don’t want any of my solider injured or losses his life in this operation, and if at all someone may go down, let me be the one” — Lt Col Abu Ali
Plato, the great philosopher ranked man in terms of precious metals. Some he classified as gold, others as silver and another group he categorised as bronze. Lt. Col Abu Ali, the slain Commander of the 272 Task Force Tank Battalion was pure gold, whose death leaves a festering wound on the heart. He was until his brutal death in the hands of Boko Haram insurgents this time last year a moving spirit whose acclaim as a determined fighter was already established. He was a patriot and worthy commander who earned the respect of his troops by leading the charge from the frontlines.
He was courageous, radical, dedicated and fiercely independent minded and inspire the ideals of an Army that had earned its reputation as a tenacious and battle-tested with a resolve to win against all odds. He didn’t care for glory, matter of fact, in not seeking glory; he became a legend. It is said that dead lions don’t roar, not in the case of Abu Ali, whose deeds on the battlefield continue to animate discussions and salutations ever since. Following his death and in recounting his exploits on the battlefields, I have heard some refer to the late officer as plainly suicidal. I beg to disagree with such assertion. Matter of fact, indeed, nothing can be further from the truth. If he had drive-it was inspired by patriotism-pure and simple.
A rare breed by all assessment, as an officer, he never flinched under imminent danger but rather he with his with some soldiers leaned into danger to do their duties. In dying, they didn’t think of their lives as important, didn’t flee for family, neither did they care for anything as important-not even living. They stepped into eternity with heads unbowed and as warriors fighting for a worthy cause.
Abu Ali was a man of tremendous strength of character and was led to live for and die for the love of country. He lived for a high mission in his short life and by the time of his painful exit, he had won the admiration and respect of all who came to know of his exploits on the battlefield. His was a gallant life. That much can be said of the former commander of the 272 Task Force Tank Battalion whose death and those of six other soldiers, (Sgt. Muazu Ibrahim, Sgt. Hussani Jafaru, Sgt. Bassey Okon, Cpl. Chukwu Simon, Able Sea Patrick Paul and Pte. Salihu Lawal) rightly sparked national mourning, deservedly so.
As ferocious as he was-he was not reckless, conscientious and self-sacrifice defined his motives. He was never a coward. The tales of his heroics, especially in the retake of cities such as Monguno, Mallam Fatori, Gamboru-Ngala, Baga and others is still spoken off with fondness by soldiers. Abu Ali exemplified the truest and ennobling spirit and fine qualities which a soldier should posse. He died as he lived, a warrior whose love for country was un-surpassing. His death was simply for Nigeria’s honour and the defence of the integrity of an army he was proud to serve. As it with people of extraordinary courage, tales about him can never fade.
Even in death, it is difficult not to assess with fascination, albeit fully the plain, complex, brave and fierce contribution of this particular officer continue to hold for future generation of soldiers and officers in Nigeria. A legend whose death left us permanently disgusted, saturated with gloomy thinking and highly sadden, even now, one year after, we owe him a debt of gratitude. At his burial officers and men of the Nigerian Army broke down even the Chief of Army Staff, Lt. General Tukur Burutai, openly wept. His course mates, members of the 45th Regular course of the Nigerian Defence Academy lost a great comrade whose loss, they lament as ‘an irreplaceable asset’.
It cannot be contested that soldiering is a dangerous and tasking calling the world over. Their calling is risky and their enterprise is fraught with injuries and instant death. Nothing much has changed about their fate even as technological advancement continue to dictate the pace of victory or defeat and direction of warfare, especially in modern times, be it conventional or unconventional warfare. Such is the reality of soldiering and are soldiers trained to accept the reality of their risky and frightful eventuality from their point of enlistment. Good soldiers prepared their fate with equanimity uncommon and inspiring, mindful that by their very calling, though born out of service to their country, they are fated to early demise or grave injuries on behalf of their citizenry.
The epitaph of the America’s 2nd division memorial at Kobima, Burma, attributed to John Edmond in 1944, says a lot of the mindset of the average soldier: “When you go home, tell them of us, and say-for their tomorrow, we gave our today”. This gallant and extremely genuinely brave heart and patriot par excellence fell in battle for a worthy cause. It is mandatory for Nigerians to know and recall the remarkable life of sacrifice of this officer and others maimed or killed in action by insurgents with a sense of gratitude.
A hero and extremely selfless officer, it is with tremendous pain in my heart that I recall where and how I received the terrible news of his death in the hands of blood thirsty vampires and I and several other Nigerians were plunged into a bottomless depth of despair. His death saddens me till date- I remain utterly devastated and inconsolable. What a loss! I kept wondering why I was so grief stricken at the death of a total stranger. I am only just coming out of grief for him. Pained and vexed in equal measure, I am left with nothing but to philosophise on the ephemeralness of life and resigned to the fact that from God we came, to Him shall we all return. While I gave him a moment of blessed prayers, I heaped curses of the insurgents and their supporters.
Stricken by the shattering reality of his passage, I am consoled by the beauty of his contribution to the counter-insurgency operation. Such a courageous, indefatigable, committed and inspiring figure that had led series of fight the insurgents, displaying in the full and at great personal risk, his commitment to the notion of one, indefensible and secured Nigeria, is no more, but his contribution to the eradication of terrorism in Nigeria is forever etched on our hearts. We shall forever be grateful to him and live with his memory as a patriot and may his heroism inspire others in our quest for a more stable and peaceful country. By his demise, he has showed how war with its unique mix of sacrifice and, courage both burdens and strengthens the heart of combatants, who learns in equal measure how cruel and how noble human beings can be as alluded to by John McCain.
Lt. Col. Ali, exemplifies the truest and ennobling qualities which a good solider should possess. He died that we may have a peaceful and more secured country. Though resting in the national military cemetery, his legacies lives on, in fact, he is a model in toughness and supreme bravery. By his actions and eventual death, his life is an essential lesson in the meaning of honour, integrity, sacrifice, devotion to duty, bravery and character. Abu Ali, offered himself by the ethos he lived and died fighting for: Nigeria’s honour and territorial integrity is inviolable.
Abu Ali and other soldiers were there for Nigeria, at our country’s hour of maximum danger. As he lies in eternal rest at the Military Cemetery in Abuja out of love for his fatherland, I ask, is Nigeria there for him and his dependants at this moment? I remain awe at his sacrifices, steadfast dedication to duty, sense of esprit de corps and valiant commitment. I am bolstered by his outstanding professionalism, physical and mental toughness and selfless service to our country-his kind is rare.
His love for the country was unmistaken. His was a willingness to sacrifice and above all, total commitment to the principles of duty, honour and country. That was his essence and he died in its defence. He was awarded the Chief of Army Staff award for exceptional bravery and excellence and was leap forwarded from the rank of Major to Lt. Colonel in recognition of his sterling qualities. It must be noted that it the sacrifices made thus far by officers and men that the war against these criminally minded insurgents must be fought and won. Abu Ali, a legend and a patriot, we ask, whence cometh another?

This piece, by Rotimi Opeyeoluwa, is taken from an unpublished book, ‘Milestone in Bravery: A Chronicle & Impression of War Time Commanders in Nigeria’.

Source: The Cable



How Nigerian military operations are named

Military historians say code names for military operations started during World War I between 1914 and 1918 but became widely used during World War II from 1939 to 1945.
For instance, in Nazi Germany, the initial code name for the invasion of Russia was “Operation Fritz” but its leader, Adolf Hitler, didn’t like that name because it didn’t strike fear. He changed it to “Operation Barbarossa” after the Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire, Frederick I Barbarossa.
In modern times, many countries and military outfits still use code names for operations. Perhaps, the most popular code name in modern war history was the Gulf war after Iraq invaded Kuwait in the 1990s. At first, the build up to the war waged by a coalition led by the United States to ousted Iraqi forces was named “Operation Desert Shield” but the actual battle was code named “Operation Desert Storm.”
Indeed, code names are not meant to divulge the intention of military actions and that which cannot be easily decoded. The objective would be known. Invariably, the army provides code names that are very striking.
In Nigeria for instance, the military has over 10 simultaneous internal security operations and military exercises ongoing in the six-geopolitical zones of the country with various code names.
But, even before now, code names had been used in the country. For instance, the military officers who staged the coup of January 15, 1966 led by Major Chukwuma Kaduna Nzeogwu code named it “Operation Damisa.” This was mainly to cover up their clandestine activities that eventually led to the Nigerian civil war.
At that time, there were also “Operation Kura” believed to be targeted at eliminating certain chiefs, “Operation Zaki” to kill the remaining chiefs and “Operation Giwa” meant to carve the country into districts administered by Igbos.
Why code names?
The Nigerian Army spokesman, Brigadier General Sani Usman, said code names of military operations are determined by the circumstances and peculiar traditions.  He said it sometimes include the topography of the locations where the exercise is to take place.
He added that there is no hard and fast rule on how the code names come about, but only that they are usually two words. According to him, the operations are backed by the constitution which foresaw the need for the military to assist civil enforcement agencies in the protection of lives and property.
However, a security expert, Kabir Adamu said internal security military operations are usually what he described as “displacement of security challenges”, a situation that meant while trying to solve one problem another is created. Adamu blamed the introduction of “operations” on  lack of confidence in other civil security agencies.
Current operations with code names
There are many military operations going on in the country aimed at checking various security challenges.  Some are: 
Operation Lafiya Dole: The operation was set up to counter terrorism and insurgency. It was later expanded to specialized operations including “Operation Crackdown”, “Operation Gama Aiki” and “Operation Safe Corridor.”
Operation Gama Aiki was launched to clear remnants of Boko Haram from northern part of Borno State and the border regions with Chad and Niger Republic. It is a joint operation with the Nigerian military and the regional Multinational Joint Task Force. In fact, Gama Aiki is targeted at terrorists fleeing “Operation Crackdown.”
Operation Python Dance II: This was launched about a year after Operation Python Dance I in the Southeast. It is said to be a field training exercise.
The army said it was designed to, if necessary, dovetail into real time activities such as anti-kidnapping drills, patrols, raids, cordon and search, check points, road blocks and show of force.
The exercise is multi-agency in nature and execution, as the police, Civil Defence Corps, State Security Service and Federal Road Safety Commission collaborate to ensure overall success of the exercise.  It is with the aim of checking anticipated rising wave of crimes usually prevalent during festive periods.
Operation Crocodile Smile II: This is an exercise which involves amphibious war games in the Niger Delta region and parts of Ogun State. It is also aimed at protecting the nation’s crude oil infrastructure.
Operation Tsera Teku: This operation was officially launched in Warri, Delta State in February this year to check piracy in the Niger Delta region.
The operation is expected to curtail pipeline vandalism, armed robbery and other offshore and around the creeks criminality. It is also aimed at protecting ships and oil and gas installations.
Operation Awatse: It started in July 2016 and was to dismantle the operational bases of pipeline vandals and militants in the coastal areas of Southwest Nigeria.
Operation Sharan Daji/ Operation Harbin Kunama II:  It was established in the Northwest to battle armed bandits, cattle rustlers and robbers operating particularly in Zamfara, Kaduna and fringes of Sokoto, Kebbi, Katsina and Kano states.
Operation Mesa: This operation has been a nationwide joint police-military security taskforce. It is called “Operation Yaki” in Kaduna State and “Operation Zenda” in Benue State.
Operation Safe Haven: It is stationed in Plateau State with areas of operation extending to Benue, Kogi, Nasarawa and Kwara states to quell ethno-religious conflicts and other criminal activities.
Operation Delta Safe: This was set up to replace Operation Pulo Shield. It is aimed at containing security challenges in the Niger Delta, especially protection of critical national assets and provision of security in the area.
Operation Ruwan Wuta II: The operation is a further crackdown on Boko Haram terrorists as part of efforts to decimate them and check their ability to freely operate in the country by the Nigerian Air Force (NAF). Air Force spokesman, Air Commodore Olatokunbo Adesanya, said the operation is an intensive day and night aerial bombardment designed to rain significant fire on freshly discovered hideouts of Boko Haram terrorists.

Source: Daily Trust


Biafra : 'Ojukwu lied his way into civil war' - Gowon

Former military Head of State, General Yakubu Gowon (rtd), says the late Chief Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu, was to blame for the civil war that engulfed Nigeria from 1967 to 1970.
Ojukwu was the Governor of the Eastern region when a spate of attacks and reprisal attacks in the South and North of Nigeria, plunged the West African nation into a civil war that ended the lives of over a million Igbos.
The scars from that war remain, in a nation still in search of its soul.
In 1967, delegates from the federal government and the eastern region led by Gowon and Ojukwu, trooped to Aburi, in Accra, Ghana for a meeting that was supposed to prevent an all out war.
However, the accord broke down; no thanks to a difference in interpretation from both sides of the divide.
The civil war ensued.
Speaking during a breakfast program on AIT on Tuesday, October 24, Gowon said Ojukwu's interpretation of the accord was a tissue of lies.
“We agreed to put our heads together, to regain the trust and confidence of Nigerians. We went to Aburi, to agree to deal with the situation of our country, by ourselves", Gowon said.
“We did not go with any prepared position on the federal side, but Ojukwu came with a paper he prepared. His prepared position was on a pink paper. Usually, pink paper at the Staff College is directing staff solution to the problem.”
Gowon said one of the resolutions reached in Aburi was that he would be the first to make a statement as Nigeria's Head of State, upon return.
Ojukwu however took the wind off his sails and reneged on the agreement, Gowon alleged.
“But, by the time I returned, I was ill; I had fever. I could not make any statement. But, Ojukwu went to the radio, to make a statement and said the things we never agreed on.
“David Ejoor was the one who called me one early morning to ask if I had heard what Ojukwu said, and I said no. He then reeled out all that Ojukwu had said and I asked David, in all honesty, if that was what we agreed. He said no.
“To keep the country together was not a task that I could do alone. I needed the cooperation and understanding of every Nigerian. And, in order to ensure we kept the country together, I reckoned that we needed to have discussions among ourselves. We had a civil servant who was exceptionally experienced and good".
“We went there (Aburi) to restore the trust of our country. If we were working together, anyone with conscience will assuage the feelings (of the South-easterners). But, Ojukwu thought otherwise. He had in mind all along, based on what happened to his people in the North, that secession was the only way out. But, we were thinking of the whole country, because all parts of the country were involved. The military was not involved in the killings of South-easterners in the North,” Gowon said.


Source: PulseNG