11

May

2009

Nigeria Betrayed Them PDF Print E-mail
By Emmanuel Franklyne Ogbunwezeh

Nigeria Betrayed Them

By Emmanuel Franklyne Ogbunwezeh 

Our consideration was in receipt of news relating to the sentencing to life-imprisonment of 27 Nigerian soldiers, who participated in United Nations Peace-keeping Operations in Liberia. They were charged and convicted of mutiny and to that effect, were sentenced to life-imprisonment by a military tribunal constituted to that end. 

We must confess that all the information consulted by the tribunal in reaching its judgement is not available to us. To that end, we are not in a position to critically appraise this judgement from a legal perspective. It is our understanding that some other more competent hands and heads have had a field day in this regard. Besides, we equally understand that the defence is considering an appeal of the judgement, and we would never want to prejudice a process that is ongoing. 

Be that as it may, we wish to offer some ethical perspective to this whole saga. First of all, let’s deal with the preliminaries! 

We understand that mutiny is a serious charge, when preferred against a soldier, who is trained to obey orders at all times. But time and time again, history has shown us that the obligation to obey orders cannot trump the tugging of one’s conscience. The obligations to obedience are never excuses to underwrite injustices or human rights violations. Such arguments like “I was bound to obey orders” or “I just did my duty”, never sufficed as grounds enough to excuse the criminal complicity of Nazi War Criminals during the Nuremberg trials. It neither justified their active complicity in convoking that “Banality of evil”, nor did it suffice to excuse the inaction that made such an abomination possible. 

We are equally of the opinion that such excuses in whatever modern shape or form it assumes, would never suffice in any other occasion or context, where injustice runs the risk of having a walk-over. 

To this end, we wish to submit that every human being reserves the right to disobey illegitimate orders, or orders that stands contrary to the dictates of his conscience. A soldier is trained to obey orders, but to refuse to obey orders which violate the dictates of natural justice; equity and good conscience could never be a crime in any legal tradition. To create a criminal out of a soldier, who dared protest the injustice meted out on him is to my mind a very cheap benediction that collective or bureaucratic stupidity pays to injustice. 

The facts speak for themselves in condemnation of this injustice. 27 Nigerians soldiers were a part of the United Nations Peace-keeping force in Liberia. They served their charges, and fatherland creditably and gallantly, as no cases of misdemeanour or crime was hitherto preferred against any of them. No disciplinary action was recommended against any of them prior to their arraignment for mutiny. 

They served well fulfilling their own part of the contract. To that end, they are entitled to the fulfilment of the other party to the contract. Unfortunately, the other party defaulted. Their salaries and entitlements were withheld from them after their service. They were not paid. They received no money although they served their part in full. 

They may or may not have exhausted other avenues of getting their entitlements paid them, but there are examples in recent memory, of retired Nigerian soldiers, whose entitlements were embezzled; and who were forced to sleep on the streets of the Nigerian capital. 

They decided to protest this injustice. Their protest would be deemed a peaceful one. They carried no arms to do that. There was no report of an arson or destruction of properties recorded against them and their protest. They were arrested by the military authorities for daring to protest; and arraigned before a tribunal. 

They were tried and sentenced to life imprisonment for protesting!!! 

According to some authorities, soldiers in uniform are not supposed to protest. That may hold true if that entertains the risk of destroying military discipline, which is a condition-sine-qua-non, in the world of the military, where obedience to a simple order may be the difference between a battle won, and a war lost. This is the ideal upon which protest from soldiers was banned or view with serious consternation in military quarters. One can understand that under normal circumstances. But the funny thing remains that no Nigerian circumstance is a normal one. Injustice is so rife and has penetrated the system so very much that only extraordinary measures can awaken our authorities from their visionless slumber. Nigeria is a state where the abnormal has metamorphosed into the normal. The Nigerian Police is on record as going on strike to protest poor conditions of service and the non-payment of their salaries and arrears. The government has on many occasions released and failed to release the money appropriated in the budget to these parastatals. But the rank and file has been on record as being owed their salaries in many years’ arrears. Tafa Balogun for instance; a Police chief was on record as stealing over 103 Million dollars Police fund, while his men were living in chill penury. This extravagant thief instituted an Operation “Fire for fire”, where petty thieves were massacred on sight, instead of being brought to justice; while his dishonourable self; who is a high thief, got on 6 months suspended sentence. What a mockery of justice? 

These 27 soldiers live in a society that abided these kinds of chill injustice! They wanted their just reward for the service they performed. All they got in exchange is being sentenced to life-imprisonment by an establishment bent on laundering a non-existing image, and the deafening silence of their fellow country men and women. 

The treatment of these soldiers smacks of high handed wickedness. The question the tribunal failed to answer is: Where is the salaries of these gallant men and women? Who sat on these monies? Has it grown wings and flown like all other instances in Nigeria which are too numerous to mention? Many pensioners have died on queues waiting to claim non-existing pensions. Many of them worked all their lives and contributed their hard earned cash to these funds. The funds were embezzled and these people who contributed their sweat, blood and youth to serve their country, were taken for a ride and treated with absolute disdain. 

Yet, nobody has ever answered the question that justice has continued to pose: what happened to their money? Are they not in justice entitled to an answer in order to make their memories rest in peace? Is their posterity not entitled to access what their father’s worked for? What precedents are we setting in Nigeria? Is Nigeria a Black-hole of justice? What about common decency? Where are we heading to as a nation? What has happened to natural justice? What has happened to “A worker deserves his wage”? Every principle that comes to Nigeria is raped and plundered of meaning, before being deployed as a corrupt vestige of irresponsible power. These Soldiers placed their lives on the line to serve. They did not betray their country, rather their country betrayed them. 

Nigeria betrayed them! 

The military authorities that sentenced them to life-imprisonment are trying to cover up the fact that for years, thousands of Nigerian soldiers have perished on the job, with the compensation due them and their families growing wings and flying, without the families getting a kobo. The wives, families and kids of many dead soldiers, who we proclaimed heroes on the days we buried them, are today living in absolute poverty due to the fact that they got only promises from the military authorities that should in justice accord them the monetary compensation due them. What happened to their money? No one can tell!!! This is because a cabal of senior officers and their corrupt vestiges sat upon these funds and embezzled the entitlements due our heroic dead; and all we do as Nigerians is simply to keep quiet because it does not concern us. 

What actually concerns Nigerians, one may ask? The plunder of our nation by leeches does not concern us. The rape of our common posterity by the elitist bandits of today does not concern us. The visionless wickedness of our government officials and public servants does not concern us. The destruction of our educational system does not concern us. The dysfunctionality of our infrastructures does not concern us. 

What actually concerns us? 

It seems that Nigerians of today in timidity have sold their futures, with their silence and inaction, to a gang of buccaneers, who are hell bent in ransacking every sanctuary of decency and meaning in genuflection to their yawning greed. The plight of these 27 soldiers is an advertisement of the worst form of official callousness. Those who sat in judgement over these soldiers only showed the world how leprous their consciences are. Either way, they deserve nothing more than to have history efface their memories forever. If they were tools in the hands of a cabal trying to bury their cosmic crimes, then history will rightly visit them with derision. If they were simply following their consciences, then those consciences are seriously malformed and remain a danger to our body politic. If they are obeying the orders of a higher authority to deal with these men in order to forestall future occurrence, then justice really needs a radical redefinition in the Nigerian context. 

That Nigerians save for a few voices virtually kept mum at such a military outrage bespeaks of a populace sleeping on duty. The vigilance quotient of the average Nigerian happens to be 0.5 on a scale of 100. He is too engrossed in chasing after his basic Maslownian needs to understand that these needs will never be guaranteed if the higher questions bordering on social and political justice in his country are not answered. He would never be sure of his daily bread if the government remains construed as a huge distribution agency designed to distribute unearned privileges to the rich, the powerful and their cohorts, which constitutes less than one percent of every normal population. He and his children will always be raped, plundered, lied to, abused and killed by its government, if he fails to rein in the government and through mass action establish the boundaries for government and ensure compliance with it. If the people fail to govern their governments, their government will degenerate into a tyranny that will endanger the civil rights of the people and jettison its responsibilities to its citizens in obeisance to the selfish and mercenary considerations of those in power. 

This is why Nigerians should seek every opportunity to protest the inanities of their government. They should never plead their fears as reasons not to engage their governments and its agencies; or hold them accountable for their actions. It is either liberty or death proclaimed Patrick Henry as an attitude that one should adopt for his country. It is either, we live as free men or we live a life, where our government is a huge slave master, and we the slaves to the capricious whims of a few corrupt men, in whose interest it is that we remain slaves. 

Nigerians need an explanation from the Nigerian Army, the Defence Headquarters and the Presidency, on why these soldiers did not receive their salaries in the first place, which opened the way for their protest. We need explanations on why they should spend a day in jail, while those who starved them of their legitimate rights got off with slaps on the wrist. 

If due to arrogance of power or position those responsible deem it below their dignity to explain to Nigerians the reasons for their actions, they should be aware that a Pharaoh who never knew Joseph once arose in biblical Egypt. And the rest they say is history. A woman who manhandled her aged mother in front of her kids is invariably and inadvertently teaching the kids how to manhandle her in her old age. The next generation is watching. 

These 27 genuine Nigerian heroes should be released, with their positions restored; full apologies rendered them, and compensation paid them for the insults that a country they served so well meted out on them. 

This is what natural justice recommends. 



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RobotRobot is offline

 # 1 | 11.05.2009 08:07

Nigeria Betrayed Them ByEmmanuel Franklyne Ogbunwezeh Our consideration was in receipt of news relating to the sentencing to life-imprisonment of 27 Nigerian soldiers, who participated in United Nations Peace-keeping Operations in Liberia. They were charged and convicted of mutiny and to that effect, were sentenced to life-imprisonment by a military tribunal constituted to that end. We must confess that all the information consulted by the tribunal in reaching its judgement is not available to us. To that end, we are not in a position to critically appraise this judgement from a legal perspective. It is our understanding that some other more competent hands and heads have had a field day in this regard. Besides, we equally understand that the defence is considering an appeal of the judgement, and we would never want to prejudice a process that is ongoing. Be that as...Read the full article.

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akuluounoakuluouno is offline

 # 2 | 11.05.2009 12:02

Dear Frank,

Those soldiers were a bit naive. Whoever egged them on must now be ruing the mess he sent them into. My heart goes to their families, relations and those whom they were breadwinners to. For sure I know that they have been thrown out of the barracks and their spouses and children subjected to all kinds of exposure.
I hope the relevant authorities having made their point will now temper justice with mercy:rose:

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agbonizuanghweagbonizuanghwe is offline

 # 3 | 11.05.2009 14:19

Please sir, what are the facts of the story?:confused1

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ZumaZuma is online

 # 4 | 11.05.2009 14:26

I had a hard time understanding it all, but for the simple fact I had previously read this story online.

http://www.vanguardngr.com/content/view/34558/42/


Mutiny: 27 soldiers get life jail

http://www.vanguardngr.com/images/stories/Solders1.jpg


Newsvine!
AKURE — THE military court-martial trying the 28 soldiers for mutiny yesterday sentenced 27 of them to life imprisonment after being in detention for over nine months.

Delivering the judgment which lasted seven hours in Akure, President of the seven-member panel, Brigadier-General Ishaya Bauka however discharged and acquitted Private Bala Aliu for want of evidence by the prosecutor, Lt. Col Samson Nurseman.

Cross section of the 28 soldiers at the sitting of the court martial at the Owena Barracks, Akure, yesterday.

But in a swift reaction to the conviction, their lead counsel. Mr Femi Falana, described the judgment as “a charade that cannot stand.”

Falana said that by Monday, the soldiers would appeal the judgment after having submitted during the proceedings that the president of the court-martial was biased.

The seven members of the court-martial include Brig.-Gen ASB Ngorgi, Brig.-Gen U Chima, Brig.-Gen FS Owonibi, Group Capt ME Ahmed Col WOV Ijide and Col S Ado.

The judgment is coming barely four months after the same court-martial convicted four senior officers of the Nigerian Army, including a serving Commanding Officer of 72 Army Battalion, Markurdi, Col A.A Awotoye for conspiracy and stealing contrary to Armed Forces Act.

Sixteen witnesses were called during the trial by the prosecution to prove its case and evidences including video recording of the protest from where he identified some of the soldiers were tendered.

Apart from conspiracy and stealing, the army officers were also pronounced guilty of negligence of duty and failure to perform their statutory functions as senior officers. They were consequently sentenced to various punishments in accordance with the armed forces regulations.


Others officers convicted by the Brig.-Gen Bauka-led court-martial trying the 28 soldiers who protested the delay in payment of foreign mission allowances were Lt Col Paul Baba, Major AK Shonva and Major C H Chajoku and Sergeant Yahaya Umar.



All the five accused officers were serving with the finance offices at the Defence Headquarters, Abuja and were responsible for the payment of entitlements to the soldiers who went to Liberia for peace keeping mission. They were vicariously liable for the protest of the soldiers on April last year.


The soldiers convicted by the Court Martial were: Sergeant Akwara Oliver, Corporal Princewell Onwunare, Corporal Paul Maikudi, Corporal Abass Salisu, Lance Corporal Okani Pope, Lance Corporal Lawal Abubakar, Lance Corporal Pascal Stephen, Lance Corporal John Felix, Lance Corporal Yomi Ibukun, Lance Corporal Loveday Mmapie, Lance Corporal Umar Abdulkadir, Lance Corporal Musa Salisu, and Lance Corporal Innoncent Egbuna.

Others are Lance Corporal Wanogho Shedrack, Lance Corporal Bello Zaharaeed, Private Chukwuda Onwukanjo, Private Jonathan Komo, Private Samuel Ogbe, Private Nkawor Esther, Private Mary Idoko, Private Olanihun Yetunde, Private Anthony Jonathan, Private Salisu Ibrahim, Private Aderaloye Olalekan, Private Kabiru Mohammed and Private Anukan Kelechi.



According to Brigadier Bauka, the convicted persons were charged under Section 52 sub-sections 2 of the Armed Forces Act 2004. He however said that the sentences were subject to confirmation by the appropriate authorities.

Bauka who after listening to the plea of the counsel to the convicted persons agreed that after going through their records of service it was discovered that they “have maintained good record, no record of disciplinary cases and that they are first offenders.

“We have also considered the plea that they have being in detention for nine months and that they are the bread winners of their families and also that the Nigerian Army had expended so much on them but the punishment for mutiny is life imprisonment and we cannot give them lesser sentence.

“This court has therefore found you guilty of the one count charge of mutiny and has therefore sentenced the 27 soldiers to life imprisonment.”

Bauka pointed out that the soldiers action was a “deliberately design to undermine the Nigerian Army. They failed to follow due process in making their grievances known; they failed to follow the military tradition of seeking redress and therefore have put the Nigerian Army in serious and imminent danger.

“Security was threatened by their unprofessional action; their action was a serious threat to the command structure of the Military.”

According to Bauka, the soldiers instead of listening to the Commanding Officer, Lt Col Godwin Umelo, after it was discovered that there were shortfall in their allowances, ignored him and took to the streets, chanted war songs and made bonfires, disrupted traffic for hours and engaged in an unprofessional acts.

He said that witnesses gave a graphic picture of how the soldiers disobeyed the Commanding Officer and went on the rampage in the streets of Akure.

“You all conducted yourselves in a riotous manner unbecoming of soldiers. And you know that military discipline requires soldiers to follow instruction and laid down procedures. Your action negated discipline in the Nigerian Army.

“We found out that your action strike at the foundation of discipline in the Nigerian Army and have put the Army in imminent danger.”

The solders that went to Liberia under United Nation in Mission in Liberia (UNMIL) were the most affected as they were being owed more than six months salary arrears. They were expected to be paid $1,228 per month.




Interesting. Tafa Balogun, Deprieye Alamayesiegha and Lucky Igbinedion got lucky I guess.

I wonder what manner of sentences would be meted out to Arogundade and his thugs if convicted at all.

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DeepThoughtDeepThought is offline

 # 5 | 11.05.2009 16:03

I'm really, really tired of that country. Just when you think it can't get any worse you then read something like this.

Maybe its time to finally give up on Nigeria.

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AlbanyAlbany is offline

 # 6 | 11.05.2009 16:11

Frank,

you seem to have analysed the issue purely from a moral stand point. Remember that the Army as an institution is completely separate from the civil society, in terms of rules governing its activities. That is the more reason the soldiers were not tried in a civil court but by a military court martial.
I am not a soldier but i know that in the Army 'discipline' is the watch word. The soldiers themselves know this much. If it is true that they did not exploit all other options before taking to the streets, then they deserve to be punished. I am, however, of the opinion that life jail for them is rather too extreme, especially, considering the fact that they had a genuine reason for their protest. Unfortunately, my opinion doesn't count here.
I hope Femi Falana gets a mild and deserved sentence for them during the appeal and those responsible for withholding their pay adequately punished, as i do not believe it was an oversight.

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ZumaZuma is online

 # 7 | 11.05.2009 16:23

If discipline is the 'watchword' for the army, then it has no business owing arrears and breaking any contract of discipline. How calm does anyone think any employee would remain having been owed 6 months arrears with no hopes of ever collecting? Of course an uprising was inevitable. A hungry man is an angry man without an ounce of self control.

Life imprisonment for 'mutiny' as first time offenders constitutes tyranny to the highest degree. I am sure these 27 soldiers had complained to the highest order but met with deaf ears. Just goes to show that corruption has many faces in Nigeria.

So much for basic human rights. I guess other soldiers in the army have learned a grave lesson.

Due process indeed!

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oxygenplusoxygenplus is offline

 # 8 | 11.05.2009 17:00

1.There has been a peculiarity with 'mutiny' trials in Nigeria;a soldier or two is always released at the end of the kangaroo court for want of evidence. This is to give the trial a semblance of fairness.
2. So what happens to the big ogas that stole the money in the first instance? Are they not the cause of the whole saga? Ah Nigeria, we hail thee.

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b4bestb4best is offline

 # 9 | 11.05.2009 18:11

"It seems that Nigerians of today in timidity have sold their futures, with their silence and inaction, to a gang of buccaneers, who are hell bent in ransacking every sanctuary of decency and meaning "

Great article and I must say that you are so right-the quote above that... It is sad that it is true. I am sure there is something "we" do?
What do you suggest that people who read this article do?
How can we help to make the situation better for these men...
The recent case of the Iranian/American journalist- jailed in Iran- Because people spoke up, she has been release from prison.
How can we get this out to a wilder audience- so the same effect can be acheived?

Thanks,
B4best
 

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