General
Ibrahim Babangida, former Military president, has called on pro-Jonathan
campaign groups to desist from insulting the military in any of their campaign
documentaries. In a statement he signed and released yesterday March 25th,
General Babangida said:...
"In clear
attempts to whip up support for President Goodluck Jonathan, certain persons,
groups and individuals have embarked on several campaigns of calumny against
former military Heads of State and presidents who have had the opportunity to
govern this country. Of particular reference is a one-hour documentary aired on
Silverbird Television on Tuesday night; 24th March, 2015 that deliberately
impugned the integrity of Generals Olusegun Obasanjo, Muhammadu Buhari, my
humble self; Ibrahim Babangida, the late Sani Abacha, Abdulsalami Abubakar, and
T.Y. Danjuma; all of whom have had the privilege of presiding over the affairs
of this great country at various levels.
It is either that those promoting the hate documentary are intellectually delinquent or they suffer memory loss; or a combination of both. I have my very strong reservations about the contents and thematic focus of the said documentary. Apart from promoting hate campaign which clearly undermines the modest contributions of these former presidents, the commentaries in the documentary against the former presidents leave a sour taste in the mouth. Nobody is stopping anyone from campaigning for their preferred candidates contesting various positions in the elections, but to do that at the expense of the reputation, contributions, patriotism, loyalty and sacrifice of former presidents to the Nigerian state is, to say the least, immature. The military is at present combating the dreaded Boko Haram sect to restore Nigeria’s territorial integrity. What law under a democracy forbids retired military personnel from participating in politics and presenting themselves for election? Over 90 per cent of American Presidents have military background.
It is either that those promoting the hate documentary are intellectually delinquent or they suffer memory loss; or a combination of both. I have my very strong reservations about the contents and thematic focus of the said documentary. Apart from promoting hate campaign which clearly undermines the modest contributions of these former presidents, the commentaries in the documentary against the former presidents leave a sour taste in the mouth. Nobody is stopping anyone from campaigning for their preferred candidates contesting various positions in the elections, but to do that at the expense of the reputation, contributions, patriotism, loyalty and sacrifice of former presidents to the Nigerian state is, to say the least, immature. The military is at present combating the dreaded Boko Haram sect to restore Nigeria’s territorial integrity. What law under a democracy forbids retired military personnel from participating in politics and presenting themselves for election? Over 90 per cent of American Presidents have military background.
Leadership
training is better grounded in the military than any other profession. And the
military parades some of the best brains in any country, including
Nigeria. In fact, some of my military students that I tutored have Doctorate
Degrees. It is, therefore, callous, wicked, out-of-sync, cynical and a
show of crass ignorance for anyone to undermine the military institution by
embarking on mudslinging campaigns against former presidents and leaders with
military background. While those campaigners are pointing their accusing
fingers at us, they forget to recall that the present Director-General of the
PDP Presidential Campaign Organisation is actually a retired military
officer. It is this form of demonisation and stigmatisation that often
compels us to exhibit esprit de corps amongst
ourselves in support of our military institution and colleagues when the stakes
are high.
As
disciplined military officers, we are patriotic Nigerians and must be treated
with utmost respect and decorum. The military is an institution that is so
dear to my heart. It is an institution that nurtured my growing up and my
achievements in life. I am not only sold to the military institution and by
extension the Nigerian state, I am betrothed to it.
As a profession,
retirees are bound to participate in politics and democracy as an all-inclusive
process, same way that doctors, lawyers, teachers, nurses, and civil servants
get involved in it. It is the reason why I ventured into politics in 2003
before I quit in 2010. It is the same reason why General Obasanjo participated
and got elected; and now General Buhari.
It is therefore
very curious that promoters of President Goodluck Jonathan’s aspiration would
attempt to demonise and stigmatise former military leaders and cast aspersions
on them in order to malign their reputation. This is very unfair. Fact is;
the military fought a civil war to keep this country together. What I suffer
today is a consequence of the injuries I sustained during the Nigeria Civil
War. I am not sure there is any patriotism that is more than that. Some of us
were prepared to die for the country.”he said in the statement
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