Nigerian Army refuses to reinstate 16 generals despite NASS resolutions, court orders

Nigerian Army refuses to reinstate 16 generals despite NASS resolutions, court orders

Daily Nigerian

Nine Major Generals and 7 Brigadier Generals ‘arbitrarily’ sacked by the Nigerian Army in 2016 for not justifiable reasons have been technically eased out of the service, despite interventions of Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami.

PRNigeria gathered that the affected generals have reached their run out date this year and cannot be reinstated into the military even after the resolutions of the National Assembly, NASS, and several courts ordered their reinstatements which were flagrantly ignored by the Nigerian Army.

The affected military generals were among the 38 Army Officers that were compulsorily retired on 9 June 2016 without any cogent reason.

The after officers ‘technically’ eased out of service while waiting for justice are Major Generals F. O. Alli; E.J. Atewe; I.N. Ijioma; L.C. Ilo; T.C. Ude; L. Wiwa; S.D. Aliyu; M.Y. Ibrahim and; O. Ejemai.

The Brigadier Generals are D. M. Onoyeiveta; A.S.O. Mormoni-Bashir; A.S.H Sa’ad; L.M. Bello; K.A. Essien; B. A. Fiboinumama and; I. M. Lawson.

Meanwhile, three brigadier generals: D. Abdusalam; A. I. Onibasa and; G.O. Agachi can still be reinstated as they still have active years to serve.

Several attempts by Mr Malami to resolve the impasse between the Army Generals and their military authorities were also futile.

PRNigeria gathered from credible investigation that the Army Council, then presided by the trio of Mr. Mohammed Mansur Dan-Alli (then Minister for Defence), General AG Olonsakin (then Chief of Defence Staff) and Lt Gen TY Buratai (then Chief of Army Staff) sat and announced the compulsory retirement of the 38 Army officers.

The announcement of the compulsory retirement of the 38 officers was made via the media even before the affected officers were eventually informed by text messages of their retirement, sources revealed to PRNigeria.

While announcing the compulsory retirement to the media, the Nigerian Army claimed that the 38 Army officers that were compulsorily retired have been investigated and found professionally corrupt in defence procurement and/or election-related offences in the 2015 General Elections.

But one of the sources, with vast knowledge on the case, maintained that none of the 38 Army Officers that were compulsorily retired was ever investigated or court-martialled before their public compulsory retirement.

The source, a senior serving military personnel, who asked not to be named, said: “None of the affected officers was ever at any time before their public compulsory retirement queried, notified of any culpability, or subjected to any military police investigation and none was ever court-martialed – these are the mandatory disciplinary process in the military as recognized by law…

Report

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *