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BARRACKS: THE HISTORY BEHIND THOSE NAMES (PART
7 - EPILOGUE Section 1)
“Between Orok Edem and Theophilus Danjuma”
By
Dr. Nowa Omoigui
Now that the Nigerian Ministry of Defence (MOD)
has officially reacted to the report of the Johnson Committee for the renaming
of Nigerian Military Barracks, the time is right for an epilogue to my six part
series on “Barracks – The History behind those names.” The introduction was
published on October 5th, 2002. [http://www.gamji.com/nowa41.htm]
The conclusion was published on February 8th this year. [http://www.gamji.com/amnews9.htm]
There are now additional reasons for further
comment from this writer. They are:
1.
The extension of the mandate of the committee to cover Air Force and
Naval installations, although the initial announcement focused on the Nigerian
Army and the committee (at inception) was exclusively comprised of Army
Officers. This initial focus influenced the emphasis of my essay, to the extent
that, although I certainly reviewed USAF, USN, RAF and RN Barrack naming
practices, one did not deeply delve into then existing Nigerian Naval Ship and
Base nomenclature as a basis for arguing that names be kept or discarded.
2.
Orok Edem, the webmaster of
www.nigerdeltacongress.com has reacted negatively to the decision of the MOD
to change the names of many Nigerian Naval Bases, particularly those named after
sacred amphibious deities traditional to the South-South coastal zone of
Nigeria. He did so in his contribution titled ‘Troubled Waters: That
Cozenageous Renaming of "Our" Naval Bases’, a copy of which he sent to me
privately. [http://www.gamji.com/NEWS2453.htm]
3.
Major General David Ejoor (rtd), former Chief of Staff (Army) has also
publicly reacted to the MOD decision, specifically with reference to what is now
known as the “Warri Barracks”, formerly known as the David Ejoor Barracks at
Effurun, near Warri. His concern is that it ought to have been named “Effurun”
Barracks rather than “Warri Barracks.” (See Vanguard and This Day
of May 23rd, 2003)
4. A distinguished personality from Edo
State (who does not want to be named) expressed some concern to me about the
decision to name the Nigerian Air Force Base in Benin City after the late
Colonel Shittu Alao who hails from Ogbomosho in Oyo State. His concern is that
deserving personalities ought to be memorialized as close to their home states
and regions as possible, and that Edo/Delta States or the former Midwest region
should not be an exception to the pattern established elsewhere in the country.
But before I proceed, let me share the complete
text of the speech made by the former Minister of Defence, Lt. Gen TY Danjuma (rtd)
when he officially renamed the military barracks in the Abuja area on May 14th,
2003:
SPEECH BY HONOURABLE MINISTER OF DEFENCE LT GEN TY
DANJUMA (rtd) GCON ON THE NAMING OF MILITARY BARRACKS AND CANTONMENTS
“On 12th September 2002, I inaugurated
a committee headed by Brig Gen Mobolaji Johnson (rtd) to harmonise the policies
for the naming of military barracks and cantonments, and to review the names of
existing barracks and cantonments to conform to the approved criteria. The
Committee submitted its report on 16th April 2003 and the following
recommendations have been approved:
a.
Barracks should be named after important battles or campaigns where
Nigerian Armed Forces participated.
b.
All names of barracks in existence during the colonial era up to the
Nigerian Civil War shall be retained.
c.
Only in exceptional cases should barracks be named after individuals.
These exceptions shall be for purely military professional excellence and may
only be conferred postthumously.
d.
Barracks named after political figures or living individuals should
revert to their original names or the names of their locations.
e.
Barracks named after deceased individuals not purely out of military
considerations should revert to their original names.
f.
Naval bases are to be named after geographical features or to reflect
technical duties performed at the bases. They may also be named after deceased
personnel who contributed immensely to the development of the Nigerian Navy.
g.
Nigerian Air Force bases should be named after towns or cities where they
are located. Deceased personnel who contributed immensely to the development of
the Nigerian Air Force may also have bases named after them.
h.
The following barracks named postthumously after individuals are to
retain their names:
(1) Aguiyi Ironsi Barracks - Abuja
(2) Hassan Katsina Barracks - Bauchi
(3) Joe Akahan Barracks - Makurdi
(4) Kur Mohammed Barracks - Bama
(5) Maimalari Cantonment - Maiduguri
(6) Nigerian Navy Ship (NNS) Wey - Ojo
(7) Ribadu Cantonment - Kaduna
(8) Sam Ethnan Base (NAF) - Ikeja
(9) WU Bassey Barracks - Abuja
i.
The following barracks named after political figures are to revert to
their original locational names, i.e nomenclature of the unit and town:
(1) Akanu Ibiam Barracks - Abakpa, Enugu
(2) Jim Nwobodo Barracks - Enugu (Awkunanaw)
(3) Ukpabi Asika Barracks - Onitsha
j.
The following barracks named after living individuals are to revert to
their locational names:
(1) David Ejoor Barracks - Warri
(2) Ike Nwachukwu Barracks - Owerri
(3) Theophilus Danjuma Barracks - Takum
(4) Zamani Lekwot Barracks - Port Harcourt
k.
The following barracks named after living individuals, one of whom is now
deceased, shall be renamed as follows:
(1) Fort I Babangida, Abuja - Niger Barracks
(2) Gado Nasko Barracks, Abuja - Lungi Barracks
(3) Sani Abacha Barracks, Abuja - Mogadishu
Cantonment
(4) Yakubu Gowon Barracks, Abuja - Mambilla
Barracks
l.
The following barracks and cantonments though named after deceased
individuals, did not follow purely military considerations; they are to revert
to their locational names:
(1) Adaka Boro Barracks - Elele
(2) Emmanuel Ekpo Barracks - Ikom
(3) Godwin Ally Barracks - Ogoja
(4) Patrick Dan Archibong Barracks - Calabar
m.
Dalet Barracks, Chindit Barracks and Bonny Camp are to be renamed Dalet
Cantonment, Chindit Cantonment and Bonny Cantonment.
n.
Nagwamatse Barracks Kontagora may be retained subject to detailed
research and composition of an appropriate citation.
o.
Niger Barracks Lokoja is to be renamed Chari Magumeri Barracks.
p.
Odogbo Cantonment Ibadan is to be renamed Adekunle Fajuyi Cantonment
q.
Rukuba Cantonment Jos is to be renamed Maxwell Khobe Cantonment
r.
NAF Base Benin is to be renamed Shittu Alao Base
s.
The following Nigerian Navy Barracks are to be renamed as follows:
(1) NNS OLOKUN - NNS BEECROFT
(2) NNS UMALOKUN - NNS DELTA
(3) NNS URHIAPELE - Nigerian Navy Engineering
College (NNEC) Sapele
(4) NNS KAMANU - Nigerian Navy Finance and
Logistic School (NNFLS) Owerrinta
(5) NNS AKASO - Nigerian Navy Basic Training
School (NNBTS) Onne
(6) NNS ONURA - NNC ONNE
(7) NNS ANANSA - NNS VICTORY
(8) NNS OKEMINI - NNS PATHFINDER
(9) Naval Medical Centre - Obisesan Naval Medical
Centre, Apapa Mobil Road, Apapa
2. A committee comprising the Chief of
Administration – DHQ as Chairman and the Chiefs of Administration of the
Services has been established to implement these decisions. What we are
witnessing today is the beginning of the implementation process whereby all
barracks/cantonment affected in Abuja are being renamed in accordance with the
approved guidelines. I have directed the Service Chiefs to instruct their GOCs/FOCs/AOCs
to effect changes to barracks/cantonments affected in their areas of
responsibility.
3. It is hope that this exercise will
sanitise the process of naming barracks and cantonments, thereby contributing to
the re-professionalism of the Armed Forces. Thank you all. “
COMMENTS
First let me state that the committee did an
excellent job overall and both the committee and the MOD deserve a pat on the
back for the effort. That there has been some controversy was to be
expected. The comments that follow are intended to support the process and
improve upon it, raising issues that may have been glossed over or
under-emphasized at Committee, Ministry or National Defence Council stages of
deliberation.
However, as I stated in my previous conclusion,
the process for memorialization should always take cognizance of (but not be
selectively held hostage by) local sentiments and follow a bottom-up ladder. I
also suggested that public input be allowed in the public arena or parliament
because of the potential to impact civil-military relations. It does appear
that behind the scenes, consultations with informed insiders took place in
various parts of the country, but not in a uniform and standardized manner.
Some of the unhappiness that has, therefore, so far been expressed, privately
and publicly, particularly from South-South States, reflects a failure to be
transparent to all stakeholders. One of my readers pointed out that the
original list of members of the committee did not make any allowance for
representation from any of the six states in that part of the country.
Considering the effort to ensure that every other major political zone or region
was represented, that – in his view - was an error of judgment.
Nevertheless, to a large extent, the
recommendations of the committee that:
·
‘Barracks should be named after important battles or campaigns where
Nigerian Armed Forces participated’.
·
‘All names of barracks in existence during the colonial era up to the
Nigerian Civil War shall be retained’.
·
‘Only in exceptional cases should barracks be named after individuals.
These exceptions shall be for purely military professional excellence and may
only be conferred postthumously’.
are reasonable, and entirely consistent with
positions this writer advocated (with caveats) on gamji.
The recommendations of the committee that
·
‘Naval bases are to be named after geographical features or to reflect
technical duties performed at the bases. They may also be named after deceased
personnel who contributed immensely to the development of the Nigerian Navy’.
·
‘Nigerian Air Force bases should be named after towns or cities where
they are located. Deceased personnel who contributed immensely to the
development of the Nigerian Air Force may also have bases named after them’.
are not unreasonable, but require flexible
interpretation and deft implementation. Nor should they be regarded as utterly
exclusive.
General Danjuma said:
“The following barracks named postthumously after
individuals are to retain their names:
(1) Aguiyi Ironsi Barracks - Abuja
(2) Hassan Katsina Barracks - Bauchi
(3) Joe Akahan Barracks - Makurdi
(4) Kur Mohammed Barracks - Bama
(5) Maimalari Cantonment - Maiduguri
(6) Nigerian Navy Ship (NNS) Wey - Ojo
(7) Ribadu Cantonment - Kaduna
(8) Sam Ethnan Base (NAF) - Ikeja
(9) WU Bassey Barracks - Abuja”
Most of these names are well known from the dark
days of Nigeria’s crises between 1966 and 1970. Some are more recent. The
table below briefly summarizes their accomplishments and circumstances of death
(if relevant).
General Danjuma said:
“The following barracks named after political
figures are to revert to their original locational names, i.e nomenclature of
the unit and town:
(1) Akanu Ibiam Barracks
- Abakpa, Enugu
(2) Jim Nwobodo Barracks
- Enugu (Awkunanaw)
(3) Ukpabi Asika Barracks
- Onitsha”
This appears self-evident. None of the listed
personalities ever had anything to do with the military.
General Danjuma said:
“The following barracks named after living
individuals are to revert to their locational names:
(1) David Ejoor Barracks
- Warri
(2) Ike Nwachukwu Barracks
- Owerri
(3) Theophilus Danjuma
Barracks - Takum
(4) Zamani Lekwot
Barracks - Port Harcourt”
This, based on principle, should ordinarily not be
controversial but General Ejoor has raised an angle.
Many Army Barracks tend to be located on the
outskirts of major towns. The splitting of hairs over “Effurun” versus “Warri”
Barracks is a reflection of local political tensions, because the “Warri”
Barracks is in fact physically in Effurun (5 miles away) and the MOD claims the
name is “locational”. The term “Warri” could alternatively refer to a town,
port, river, division, former province, local government, or the site of a civil
war battle and air raid.
To untrained eyes, Effurun and Warri have grown
into one another. However, they are different communities. But there has been
a military presence in Warri for many years. During the first republic, a
platoon of the 4th battalion at Ibadan seconded from the company in
Benin used to go there from time to time. It was known officially as Warri
Barracks during and after the civil war, before much later being renamed Ejoor
Barracks. Land pressure and lower cost of development influenced the
acquisition of land in Effurun when the MOD was engaged in massive
reconstruction of Barracks all over the country. Although he denies it as a
factor, it may be that General Ejoor (rtd) was slighted by the name change and
is being disingenuous (since it was popularly called Warri Barracks when he was
the Chief of Staff). But the fact that such a nomenclatural issue emerged
publicly after a committee process that took six months may be a reflection of
insufficient consultation and the absence of a sensitive committee member from
that part of the country. A compromise may be found in the way other
peripherally located Barracks are named. Examples include Enugu (Awkunanaw),
Enugu (Abakpa), Ibadan (Odogbo) and Jos (Rukuba). Along these lines it could be
Warri (Effurun), or simply, Army barracks, Effurun, Warri or Army Barracks,
Effurun. It is noteworthy that the Ikeja Cantonment in Lagos is called Ikeja
Cantonment.
General Danjuma said:
“The following barracks named after living
individuals, one of whom is now deceased, shall be renamed as follows:
(1) Fort I Babangida, Abuja
- Niger Barracks
(2) Gado Nasko Barracks,
Abuja - Lungi Barracks
(3) Sani Abacha Barracks,
Abuja - Mogadishu Cantonment
(4) Yakubu Gowon Barracks, Abuja
- Mambilla Barracks”
The official citations for each of these renamed
Barracks was as follows:
CITATION ON MAMBILLA
‘The Mambilla Plateau is located in the North
Eastern Region of Nigeria in Taraba State. Its plains extend into the Cameroun.
The Mambilla is renowned for its beautiful scenery and tourism potentials. It
has the best grazing lands for life stock and also growth of different cash
crops such as coffee and tea. Efforts and plans are underway to establish the
Mambilla hydroelectricity project to supply the North east region of Nigeria and
environs. Simply put, the Mambilla is a honey well waiting to be exploited. In
recognition of the vast potentials of the Mambilla, the Yakubu Gowon Barracks is
renamed Mambilla Barracks. ‘
CITATION ON MOGADISHU
‘Mogadishu is the capital of the country Somalia.
Nigerian troops participated gallantly as Nigerian Regiment, part of the West
African Frontier Force (WAFF) in the Abyssinian campaign (1940 – 41) during the
Second World War. The city of Mogadishu is situated in the South – East of
Somalia in the Benadir Region.
Mogadishu was founded around the early 10th
Century by Arab merchants. By the 12th century, the city had become a
substantial trading station. However, economic activities have been severely
disrupted by the nation’s protracted civil war which escalated in the 1990’s.
Mogadishu is effectively a lawless society controlled by rival clans. As a
result of the civil war, a United Nation’s Peace Keeping and Famine-relief
mission was sent into the country between 1992 – 1995. Nigeria was part of the
UN Mission to the country for the second time.
Nigerian Regiment that participated in the
fighting during Abyssinian campaign was made up of young soldiers who never had
any war experience. It is for the memory of those who lost their lives and to
recognize the gallantry of those who became heroes, that this barracks has been
approved by the HMOD to be called MOGADISHU Barracks’.
CITATION ON NIGER
‘Niger is the name given to one of the largest
rivers in Africa. Rising in Guinea and flowing for about 4,180km, the river runs
through Mali, Niger and Nigeria to the Gulf of Guinea. The Benue River which
joins the Niger at Lokoja in Nigeria is its chief tributary. The Niger has
created the Niger Delta which is about 36,300sq and the largest Delta region in
Africa. The river is navigable almost all year as far upstream as Lokoja. In
other areas, navigability is seasonal. The average discharge of the river at its
mouth is about 6 million litres per second.
The upper Niger was a core area of the old empires
of Mali and Songhai; During this time Timbuktu, at the great bend of the river
was a major cultural and commercial centre. Western geographers long sought to
establish the course of the Niger. The Scottish explorer Mungo Park determined
as far back as 1796 that the river flows east and in 1830 the English brothers
Richard Lander and John Lander proved that the Niger empties into the Gulf of
Guinea.
The Niger has so much endowed Nigeria in the areas
of agriculture, transportation, tourism, mining, provision of electricity and
source of drinking water for the people.
It is in recognition of the enormous benefits of
the river to the Nation that the HMOD decided to approve the name of the river
for this barracks’.
CITATION ON LUNGI
‘Lungi is the name of the only International
Airport in Sierra Leone. For many reasons, the Airport is of very significant
importance to the Nigerian Armed Forces. At the beginning of ECOMOG operations
in Liberia, Lungi International Airport was used as the landing and airlifting
port of most of the troops that went to Liberia to participate in the Peace
Keeping/Peace enforcement groups in the war torn Liberia. This same Airport was
used as an escape route by President Tejan Kabbah on 25 May 1997 to Guinea when
mutineers led by Major Koromah sacked the Presidential palace. It is to the
credit of Nigerian troops that the escape was made possible as they put up
spirited resistance to the rampaging Koromah boys.
It was also at Lungi International Airport that
Nigerian Battalion (NIBATT) 35 suffered heavy casualties on arrival from Nigeria
as rebels made surprise attack on them thereby causing temporary setback in the
operation at hand. The Airport was not only used as a landing and airlifting
base for the NA, the NAF had its base located there throughout the duration of
ECOMOG operations.
For these and some other reasons not mentioned in
this citation, the HMOD has approved the re-naming of this barracks as LUNGI
BARRACKS’.
These citations are plain enough and
self-explanatory. However, some points are worth musing about.
Mogadishu Barracks was formerly located in Kaduna
before the civil war.
Lungi Barracks is a namesake of the Lungi Garrison
in Lungi, near Freetown, Sierra Leone, the location where – in addition to its
significance to Nigerian military operations there - excess weapons were
publicly destroyed at the formal close of the Sierra Leone civil war.
Niger Barracks, named after the great River Niger
is clear enough although the military significance of the Niger (or the name
“Niger”) might have been helpful to clarify. But the decision to retain “Niger”
as the name of a Barracks and also transfer it from Lokoja to Abuja is
politically interesting because it appears to be part of a pattern to avoid
renaming formerly individually named Barracks in Abuja after other
individuals, even if deserving. It also has the psychological benefit of
reassuring those from ‘Niger’ State from where former Head of State General
Ibrahim Babangida hails, that they did not lose out altogether. Fort IB
Babangida, named after Babangida of Niger State became Niger Barracks. The real
“Niger” Barracks at Lokoja, where the river “Niger” actually meets the river
Benue was renamed Chari Maigumeri Barracks after an outstanding soldier who this
writer had strongly recommended for memorialization in a prior essay.
The old local name for the River Niger was "River
Quorra". ‘Quorra’ was a local African (ancient Egyptian) name. Italians also
know it as a word meaning “Heart.”
The word "Niger" is actually a Greek imposed Latin
name, which means "Black" or “very dark brown”. Interestingly, although
unrelated to the subject matter, there was once a powerful ancient Roman General
by the name Pescennius Niger who ruled over Syria.
What we now call the river Niger was the
combination of two different rivers that originally flowed in opposite
directions. The Joliba (named after a Malinke word meaning "great
river"), was the upper Niger, originally arising near the Atlantic and flowing
500 miles in a northeasterly direction beyond Timbuktu, to drain into the lake
of Juf. The Quorra (also known as Kwarra or Kworra) on the other hand
originated in the Sahara desert and flowed into the Gulf of Guinea. As the
Sahara region of ancient Africa slowly dried up over a period of centuries, the
rivers shifted in position and the Quorra captured the Joliba. The Great Bend of
the Niger we all read about in geography marks the site of the capture. Other
local names for that section of the River are Mayo Balleo and Isa Eghirren.
Funny enough the Hausa name for the Niger was Farin Ruwa, meaning “white water’,
a far cry from the Latin rendition.
Nigeria got its name from Lady Lugard who called
it the “Niger Area”. In other words the area around the Black or dark brown
river.
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