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SAS, Ihejirika and Oritsejafor

8 Min Read
Former Chief of Army Staff, Lt. General Azubuike Ihejirika

If there were any doubts about who is responsible for the death of innocent citizens in the name of insurgency in the past, now there isn’t. Nigeria has lost close to 300,000 people mostly in the northern part of the country, particularly from the north east and predominantly Christians. All have been blamed on Boko Haram, the self- appointed agents of death in the name of Allah.

Most Muslims have consistently argued that Boko Haram was not prosecuting the biddings of Allah but the errands of the devil. But many members of the Christian Asso­ciation of Nigeria, CAN, refused to believe them or their explanations. Christian groups even went further, through Pastor Ayo Orit­sejafor, the President of CAN, to ask govern­ment to deal ruthlessly with anyone involved in the crime, in an effort to smear Islam and Muslims.

Today providence has forced CAN to ad­mit, with the arrest of Oritsejafor’s private jet in South Africa on charges of illegal pur­chase of arms, that the country’s super Chris­tian may be a catalyst in abetting terrorism. Pastor Oritsejafor whose association with guns is threatening his relationship with God is the one who blessed President Goodluck Jonathan in a church in Abuja, an action that elicited a lot of criticism nationwide. They said to bring the president to his knees would give one unfair influence including getting the president to ignore one’s infractions. It’s happening today, live.

The former governor of Borno State, Modu Ali Sherriff may be President Goodluck Jon­athan’s friend but he is also among the most prominent names associated with Boko Ha­ram. Sheriff had frequented the Villa since his exit from Government House, Maiduguri and many people believe he is the architect of Jonathan’s north-east policy, which has left many people childless, homeless or life­less.

And there is Ihejirika. Azubike Ihejirika may have cracked the records when he be­came the first post-war Chief of Army Staff of the Igbo stock but his tenure has been tainted by negativity at home and abroad. Ihejirika is accused of misappropriating close to N40bn meant for the acquisition of ammunition for the Nigerian armed forces. While he is busy denying that accusation, those who agree that he did purchase weap­ons are alleging on the other hand that he supplied them or even sold them to the insur­gents instead of equipping his men.

That the governor of Borno State, Kashim Shettima regretted that the Boko Haram was better equipped and better motivated than the Nigerian military is an understatement and just by the way. Soldiers who protested against going to battle unarmed have been sentenced to death by court marshal .

The havoc that these three men have caused this country in lives, money and material is inestimable. Any country would have pub­licly brought these men to question but in Nigeria they are being celebrated by the presidency, escorted by the government and admitted into the ruling party.

Despite its clinical approach to the value of proof in any allegation, the United States it­self has openly accused Ihejirika of complic­ity in the fraud in executing the war against insurgency in the country but Nigeria is look­ing the other way. His colleague in the army, Major General Cecil Ehekhaigbe whose last posting was as Nigeria’s Defense Adviser in London had petitioned the presidency accus­ing Ihejirika of dipping his hands in defense funds soon after insurgency emerged but the government did not listen.

Instead, Ehekhaigbe was sacked and brought back to Nigeria in chains for daring to blow the whistle against the COAS. Gov­ernment did not even take into cognizance the closeness of Cecil to the COAS which helped provide proof that the London soldier had no other justification than his patriotism to make those weighty allegations against his powerful and power-drunk friend know­ing the consequences of his actions.

The basis on which government continues to behave as if the whole country is wrong and the negligible number in power is right, is not only erroneous but suspect. Nigeria is looking more comfortable and more wel­coming to criminals than a foreign jail for hardened criminals. Those who are close to government can do no wrong and this impu­nity is crossing the limits of mere political patronage and all other barriers of friendship to a kind of occultism which has no value for human life.

As a press release issued by Senator George Akume explained in the case of Oritsejafor, following his denial of complicity in the il­legal arms deal which was detected by the South African authorities, the chain of ethical liability in his case is unbroken and it makes prosecution inevitable.

If the government which is largely con­trolled by Christians is impervious to the death of men of its faith, the people them­selves must begin to stop chasing shadows and scrutinize the true agents of death in the north east region and not be hoodwinked by the sepulcher of a shorthanded Boko Haram.

There is compelling reason to interrogate Modu Ali Sherriff, Ihejirika and Oritsejafor. It is a norm of civilization that all men are innocent until proven guilty, but it is a mis­nomer to allow people who are openly ac­cused of crimes involving loss of lives and breach of national security to continue to walk simply because they are close to people in power.

Government must not sit on its hands and allow people with visible stains of political liability to bestraddle its corridors with im­punity unless it is itself a party to the crimes being committed.

Sadly, it has tried time and again to dissoci­ate itself from most of these men or to excul­pate them of blame but the harder it tries, the more grease they get on their arms.

A clear case was the prominence of Modu Ali Sheriff on the entourage of the president to TChad where they visited that country’s president who himself is said to have strong ties with insurgents. Or is President Good­luck Ebele Jonathan hiding something from the people?

 

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