How I escaped Orkar’s coup – Ibrahim Babangida
Ahead of his 74th birthday today,
erstwhile military president, General Ibrahim Babangida had an interactive
session with journalists in Minna, Niger State. In the revealing interview he
opens up on his response to the coup plot led by Major Gideon Orkar in April
1990, the Dimka coup plot earlier in 1976, his assessment of the unfolding
Muhammadu Buhari led administration and of his thoughts towards his one time
friend, Chief Moshood Abiola among other things.
Excerpts
By
Wole Mosadomi
SIR, is it true that you are from
Ogbomosho, a claim that is backed by assertion that your second name ‘Badamasi’
was coined from the Yoruba name Gbadamosi? Please can you clear the air?
General
Ibrahim Babangida (rtd),
I
appreciate your concern. I had to answer the question way back in November
1962. I answered the question during my final year in secondary school when I
had to answer that question and 52 years later, I am glad I am answering the
same question.
The
truth is that I hail from here, Niger State. My parents were from between
Wushishi and this town (Minna). My grandparents travelled to settle down here
and I think that that says it all but there is nothing wrong in being from any
part of the country. The truth is that I hail from Niger State.
Indigene of Niger State
My
grandparents and great grandparents moved from somewhere to settle down in
Niger State. There are some who still call us settlers in Niger State and that
we are not indigenes of the state because our grandparents came from somewhere
to settle here but having lived all my 74 years in Niger State, I think I am
more than qualified to be called an indigene of Niger State.
What is your reaction to reported claims
by U.S. officials that Nigerian troops were not properly trained to fight Boko
Haram?
I
must admit that a lot of us were trained in America, so it is not anything new
to talk about training because they knew they had trained people. I was trained
in America, I was in a place called Portsmouth in Kentucky where I did my
senior officers course, so you can see that a lot of us were trained in
America. They are right but there is an old saying that says, no matter the
sophisticated weapons we have, the man behind the weapon really matters. I
appreciate what they are trying to do.
Are you satisfied by the Federal
Government’s renewed fight against insurgents? ( cuts in sharply)
Yea,
they have to be fought. I think the renewed effort and fight the Federal
Government is doing is commendable.
But it was thought that the
insurgents had been routed at the end of the Jonathan administration. So, what
do you think may have happened that gave them fire as President came on board?
I
think there is a general misunderstanding of the whole concept of insurgency. You
can call it anything, instability, terrorism. The fact is that we are not
fighting a regular army where you can confront them with sheer use of force and
weapons to overwhelm the enemy.
No,
we have gotten a small trained army whose tactics is to inflict maximum
casualty on his so-called enemy, inflict casualty on him when and where he
least expects it. The army is not fighting a conventional war and that makes it
exceptionally difficult. They blow out bridges, they go as far as blowing up
barracks. This is an unconventional war. I think the soldiers are trained for
it and they know this is the sort of thing they do. I think the public should
be educated about this unconventional war.
How do you feel celebrating your 74th
birthday, given that several attempts were made against your life while you
were in service?
I
will continue to be grateful to God and it strengthens my belief that no matter
what happens, if God doesn’t will it, nothing will happen to me.
Gratitude to God
So
it is a matter of believing that no matter what happens, either good or bad,
nothing happens without the approval of Allah.
I
am grateful to God for sparing my life up to this time despite what we went
through. Those who participated in combat will say the same. God has kept me
and I remain grateful to Him and grateful to you all for your support.
Don’t you think that it is necessary to
have a body of elder-statesmen to proffer advice to successive administrations
especially given the situation Nigerians found themselves after the recent
transition?
I
think one of the most unique things in Nigeria is that this is one African
country that is specially blessed. There are about seven of us (former leaders)
alive today and every one of us has his experience in one way or the other but
the other good thing is that there is a forum where we all meet the current
leadership, chat with him, talk about the situation in the country discuss and
offer solutions to any problem confronting us. All of us are always free, we
are very accessible to government, so we can either put across either in
writing or talking.
In your opinion what are the key areas
the present government should focus so that the country will move on?
I
must commend the present leadership for identifying even before and after the
election some of the problems facing this country. Number one has to do with
security and the president talked about it extensively.
Security of the state
The
security of lives and property, the security of the state, the security of this
environment called Nigeria has been identified.
And
the second one has to do of course with the way we live, the way we walk and
the way we behave which is corruption. The third one has to do with the
economic development of the country. We should support the President towards
achieving these objectives.
Talking of corruption, what is your
reaction to the President’s vow to recover stolen funds from the nation’s
treasury?
During
the tenure of my boss, President Obasanjo, he had a similar strategy and to be
fair to him, he made a lot of recoveries, so we should support this present
Federal Government in trying to do the same to achieve the same objective. If
that objective is pursued, I believe it will achieve some degree of nrecovery
of stolen funds. You talk about oil theft, I am sure President Buhari is
resolute to stamp out all those and to bring to book all those who have
tampered in stealing our oil.
What is your reaction to the Federal
Government’s assertion that it could negotiate with Boko Haram?
The
President has got it right by saying he will talk to people who are credible
who have been identified as some of the leaders of the insurgency but so far,
apart from one or two names, we do not hear any other name.
Democratic practices
I
don’t think the government will like to talk in a vacuum, to talk to people who
are not worth talking to as far as these issues are concerned. So the
government is right in being careful to identify and talk if there is anything
to talk about.
How do you feel as a leader of a former
leading party that you are now in the opposition and secondly, do you think the
PDP can come out of the waters in 2019?
For the full story, check the Vanguard Newspaper.
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