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Military Rebellion of July 29, 1975:The coup against Gowon - Part 9continued from http://www.dawodu.com/omoigui45.htm
By
Nowa Omoigui
Day Break,
Tuesday July 29, 1975
IN KAMPALA
“Abinde mu ka jin soro, ya faru agida”
By time zone, Kampala in Uganda is two hours ahead
of Lagos in Nigeria. In other words, 0600 hours in Lagos on July 29, 1975 was
actually 0800 hours in Kampala. When at about 0400 hours Lagos time
conspirators in Dodan Barracks were putting final touches to the speech Colonel
Garba would deliver at dawn, it was already 0600 hours in Kampala. Gowon,
focused on his agenda for the day, was oblivious of what was about to happen.
He was unaware that his emissary to Lagos, Lt. Col. WG Walbe had been detained
and his executive aircraft seized the day before. Throughout the crucial hours
of July 28, as plotters put finishing touches to their plans and mobilized
openly, no one contacted the General. It was as if he had been living – and
ruling - on borrowed time.
Professor Elaigwu has provided, based on
interviews with General Gowon, a comprehensive and accurate documentation of
events in Kampala in his book “Gowon.” All the essential details have been
reconfirmed by a civil servant that was a member of the Nigerian delegation
whose account I was privy to in the days following the return of the delegation
to Lagos.
At the Nile Hotel in Kampala, getting up early on
that second day of the OAU conference, General Gowon, a former Chairman of the
organization, prepared himself for the usual diplomatic push and pull of the
summit. During opening formalities the day before, he was the keynote
speaker. His speech, an inspiring one by all accounts, on behalf of Nigeria,
was titled “The Unity of Africa.”
On his way to the Nile Mansions conference hall,
Zaire’s General Mobutu delayed him for about half an hour, discussing the
Angolan situation. Thereafter, Gowon entered the hall. Mr. Mbow of UNESCO was
delivering a speech at the time. Ugandan President Idi Amin then called Gowon
to the high table and gave him a note, which contained the news that he had been
deposed in a coup. Gowon reportedly read the note and, in response to an
inquiry from Amin, said the situation would become clearer as the day wore on.
Apparently, this initial note did not specify the identity of the radio
announcer in Lagos. Privately, Gowon was still thinking Colonel Garba was on
his side and that no coup would succeed without fierce resistance from the elite
brigade of guards. He was wrong.
He returned to his seat (next to Alhaji Usman
Faruk). Gowon then quietly told the Governor, in Hausa,
“Abinde mu ka jin soro, ya faru agida”
This means, in English,
“What we have been afraid of at home, has
happened.”
He then consoled Faruk, who was shattered by the
news, saying,
“I have a clear conscience. There is nothing to
worry about.”
According to former Commonwealth Secretary-General
Emeka Anyaoku, as reported by his biographer, Phyllis Johnson, a presidential
aide wearing agbada entered the conference center via a side-door, made his way
to the General and whispered some information into his ears. It was at that
point that Gowon got up, acknowledged the Chairman (Idi Amin), and departed from
the conference room, straight for his hotel room. It was apparent by now that
the officer who announced that he had been deposed was none other than Colonel
JN Garba himself, Commander, Brigade of Guards, who repeated his pledge of
loyalty just before Gowon left the country. Clearly, things were a lot more
complicated than he had thought.
According to sources in the civil service of that
era, when Gowon got back to his room, he was contemplative and inquisitive but
dignified. Over the course of the day he wanted every little piece of
information from and about Nigeria brought to his attention. One of those
present says he asked if the announcement from Lagos was the only announcement
from Nigeria.
“What about Kaduna?”
“What about Ibadan?”
“What about Jos?”
The answer was the same. No counter-announcement
was heard from any of the headquarters (at that time) of the Army’s Infantry
Divisions. There was no news of fighting.
At this point let us briefly return to Nigeria.
IN NIGERIA
Radio signals coming in to the plotters in Lagos
from various divisional headquarters in the country had all said the same
thing. Night-Time operations had been accomplished without resistance and
troops in support of the putsch were deployed at critical points.
From the 1st division HQ at Kaduna, Lt.
Col. Muhammadu Dan Ma’ji Jega, Colonel General Staff, was monitoring the
situation. Jega was Yar’Adua’s course-mate from their days at the NMTC back in
1962, served with him (and Jalo) in the 1st battalion at Enugu before
the July 1966 coup as well as the 6th battalion during the Bonny
landings of 1967. Jega took over command of the 6th Brigade of the 2nd
Division at Onitsha when Yar’adua was wounded in 1968. The GOC 1st
Division, Brigadier IBM Haruna, himself a former GOC of the wartime 2nd
Division, did not react – having been co-opted by Brigadier Jalo (another
wartime GOC of the 2nd Division).
From the 2nd Division HQ at Ibadan, Lt.
Col. Abdullahi Shelleng, Colonel General Staff, was monitoring the situation.
Shelleng was also Yar’Adua’s course-mate from their days at the NMTC back in
1962 before he went to Pakistan, along with Jega, for Regular Officer training –
while Yar’Adua went to Sandhurst. Shelleng served in the 1st
Division under Shuwa (and later Bissalla) during the war. According to a
source, his boss, the GOC 2nd Division, Brigadier James Oluleye, was
away from Ibadan on vacation in the remote riverine areas of present Ondo state.
From the 3rd Division HQ in Jos, the
investment in time and effort made by Colonels JN Garba and Ibrahim Taiwo had
paid off. The GOC, Brigadier TY Danjuma did exactly as he said he would do -
absolutely nothing.
The word from Kano was also good. The Brigade
Commander, Colonel Ejiga, had successfully moved into position and kept a large
number of senior officers (including Deputy Chief of Staff, SHQ Maj. Gen. Hassan
Katsina) under isolation and close surveillance. They could neither shoot nor
move, nor could they communicate with anyone else who could shoot or move.
Confirmation was also obtained from Brigade
Commanders at critical locations outside Lagos that had been privy to the coup.
To give just one example, Colonel (later Major General) George Innih was a very
close friend of Colonel (later Major General) JN Garba. They worshipped at the
same Cathedral whenever postings made them serve together in Lagos. In fact
when then Lt. Col. JN Garba first got married back in 1972, it was then Lt. Col.
GA Innih that delivered an invitation to my family. Although senior to him,
Innih also attended the Royal Military Academy at Sandhurst during the same era
as Lt. Col. SM Yar’Adua. On July 28/29, 1975, Innih was the Commander of the 5
Infantry Brigade at Onitsha. His task – which he was initially quite
uncomfortable with - was to block any East-West movement across the Niger
Bridge of hostile forces that might be mobilized against the putsch in Lagos in
the event of all-out fighting. (Although the Brigade Commander in Enugu had
been approached he did not give express consent to participate).
In the meantime, although all airports were
closed, a commercial aircraft carrying Brigadier Murtala Mohammed back from
London was allowed to land at the Kano International Airport.
Confident that the putsch had succeeded nationwide
– and that no negative reaction was forthcoming from the Guards Brigade -
Colonels Garba and Ochefu released Lt. Col Walbe from Dodan Barracks. They –
along with other putschists - then turned their attention to the next phase of
the operation – incorporating a wider swath of officers in the military and
public servants in the unarmed segments of the bureaucracy. To do this, they
sent signals declaring their intention to summon what can best be described as a
“military convention” in Lagos at which the new leadership – supposedly
excluding themselves – would presumably be chosen. They were careful – except
in one case - not to betray prior arrangements with Brigadier Murtala Mohammed –
or anyone else at that point. It was important to project political, ethnic and
religious neutrality and hide behind institutional and national loyalty until
all those that could cause trouble later were gathered in one place – under the
control of the plotters. By so doing, units and commanders that had elected to
take a “wait-and-see” attitude would be dissuaded from coming down on the side
of the Gowon regime until the situation was clear – from their own standpoint.
At 0900 hours, therefore, an aircraft left Lagos
to bring senior officers (including service chiefs) to Lagos. It hopped from
airport to airport gathering officers all over the country. Meanwhile Garba
listened to himself on radio repeatedly and drove around Lagos inspecting points
of deployment. He returned to the Radio Station several times – at one point
engaging one of the young officers there in conversation about the officer’s
concern that there were too few soldiers on guard at the station. This officer,
then 2/Lt. Garba Ismaila, (who was not from the middle belt) having finally
realized what he had been “innocently” deployed to the radio station to do
became alarmed at the prospect of counter-attack. Colonel JN Garba, who had
more inside information about the big picture, was not too concerned – or did
not appear so in the adrenergic state he was in. Lt. Col. Ibrahim Babangida
had deployed additional Armoured vehicles from Ikeja to Dodan Barracks in
expectation of the arrival of senior officers. And Radio Nigeria was just across
the road.
Meanwhile, then Brigadier Olusegun Obasanjo had
lost his appetite. According to him,
“I sent for newspapers and I kept myself busy by
reading every print including the small advertisements.”
Obasanjo kept checking in with MD Yusuf about the
security situation in the country and was re-assured - repeatedly - that the
nationwide deployment of soldiers overnight had been peaceful. At 1500 hours
(3 pm), Colonel Abdullahi Mohammed and Lt. Col. Shehu Yar’Adua, two of the
original “three musketeers of July 1975”, (the third being Colonel Taiwo),
walked into Obasanjo’s house. They invited him for the planned meeting of
senior officers scheduled for 1600 hours (4 pm) at Dodan Barracks – but took
some time to sound him out on his views about the situation in the country.
Col. Abdullahi Mohammed made a slip of tongue and told Obasanjo to “help us put
some of these ideas into practice” which prompted Yar’Adua to interrupt him.
The plan had not been to betray any specifics about the proposed new
leadership. Such information in the wrong hands at the wrong time could spell
trouble. (Not even Brigadier Murtala Mohammed, who had been tapped in April as
the new leader was told of certain intended changes in the way the country was
to be run after the coup).
Nevertheless, Obasanjo, wearing mufti, drove
himself unarmed in his private vehicle to Dodan Barracks. According to him there
were some officers there before him and “Nobody asked the other any question on
what had happened but the atmosphere was jovial, cordial and tension-free.”
According to Garba, it proved to be quite a
difficult task to round up senior officers from other parts of Nigeria because
most were in a “summer holiday” mood attending to all sorts of non-military
pursuits while others had traveled abroad. A speedboat, for example, had to be
sent to the riverine area of present Ondo State to fetch Brigadier Oluleye. An
additional factor in the difficulty of rounding up officers was the instinctive
self-protective need to lie low after a coup is announced – particularly when
the agenda of the putschists is unclear.
Garba wrote:
“It was not until about five in the afternoon that
a large number of them finally assembly in Dodan Barracks to hear what we, who
came to be known as the Junta, had to say. We kept everyone waiting in the
large council chamber, after plucking out our proposed ruling triumvirate of
Murtala Muhammed, Olusegun Obasanjo, and T.Y. Danjuma, to inform them of their
new jobs.”
The three officers who jointly announced the
identities and jobs of the proposed triumvirate in the coffee room at Dodan
Barracks were Colonel JN Garba (the main spokesperson), Colonel Abdullahi
Mohammed, and Lt. Col. SM Yar’Adua. These officers explained that although
Brigadier Murtala Mohammed (from Kano in the core north) was militarily junior
to Brigadier Olusegun Obasanjo (from Abeokuta in the southwest), “real
politik” made it necessary to offer the position of Head of State to
Mohammed. Obasanjo quickly accepted to serve under his junior, Murtala
Mohammed, as long as his new job – as Chief of Staff, SHQ - carried real power
and responsibilities. Danjuma was offered the position of Chief of Staff
(Army), which he later clarified was now to be called Chief of Army Staff – an
important distinction.
The putschists nominated Air Force Colonel John
Yisa Doko of the Military Airlift Command as the new Air Chief and Navy
Commodore Michael Ayinde Adelanwa of the Western Naval Command as the new Chief
of Naval Staff. Both men were civil war front-line combat veterans. They
nominated MD Yusuf, (Gowon’s Chief Security Officer) as the new Inspector
General of Police. This nomination met with resistance from Brigadier Mohammed
but he eventually agreed to it in deference to the weight of opinion in the
room. As far as most were concerned, MD Yusuf had “handled himself well” during
the preceding 48 hours.
The putschists then demanded that Military
Governors no longer be members of the Supreme Military Council. In response,
Obasanjo suggested the creation of a new body to be known as the “National
Council of States” to which the Governors should belong. Lastly, the putschists
made it clear that what they wanted was power sharing, not one-man rule. They
proposed that two-thirds majority of the SMC could overrule the Head of State.
According to Garba and Obasanjo, Mohammed’s opposition to this demand was
fiery.
Garba wrote:
‘When I finished my talk, Murtala burst out, “To
hell with all of you! I have said I don’t want to be anybody’s Head of State.
But if you’re inviting me to be one, I’m not going to allow you to tie my hands
behind my back. I must have executive authority and run the country as I see
best.” I tried to reason with him, but twenty minutes later he was still
arguing.’
With other senior officers – including Yar’Adua’s
Boss, Brigadier Godwin Ally of the Lagos Garrison Organization - getting
uncomfortable about the delay and wondering what was going on behind the closed
doors, Garba asked Murtala Mohammed to step out of the coffee room. The
leadership position was then offered, first to Obasanjo, and then to Danjuma but
both declined, pleading with the younger officers to keep up the persuasion
pressure on Mohammed. Garba invited Mohammed back into the room and asked him
if he had reconsidered, to which Mohammed again said no. He wanted absolute
power.
At this point Garba explains that he was very
tired and getting angry. He had been awake for two straight days and nights
under “inconsiderable pressure.” It is very plausible that he suffered many
anxieties, misleading Gowon with a straight face, handling the airport departure
of the General with external calm but internal eruption, and co-opting fellow
Guards Brigade officers – who were sworn to defend the General - into the plot,
for example. He also helped deal with emergencies such as when arrangements had
to be made – through Taiwo and Ochefu - to recruit an Army accomplice in Kano to
address the Hassan Katsina problem, and secure Danjuma’s cooperation – through
Taiwo - rather than risk arresting or shooting him. But by far his greatest
scare was the rumored return of General Gowon on July 28. When the executive
jet was approaching the airport in Lagos it was not immediately apparent that
Lt. Col. Walbe was the only passenger. Air Force officers alerted Garba that
the plane was inbound. Alarmed, he desperately sought Yar’Adua to update him on
the development and come up with a plan of action. Yar’Adua was playing a game
of billiards (and chain smoking) when Garba charged into the mess, wired up.
When Muktar Mohammed detained the aircraft it became apparent that Walbe was
alone, considerably reducing tension. But then Garba later had to confront
Walbe – an officer and former classmate at the NMS – who had been sent to assist
him to put down a coup, which he was actually in the process of organizing.
That done he had to be on the lookout for any last minute reactions from the
Guards Brigade. Any one of the soldiers who was upset enough could have walked
up to him and shot him. With all of this at the back of his mind, tearing at
the foundations of his sense of integrity, he was in no mood for Mohammed’s
theatrics.
At this point, Colonel Abdullahi Mohammed,
Director of Military Intelligence, took over. Based on Garba’s recollection he
made the following appeal to Mohammed:
“Brigadier Muhammed, when we were planning this
coup, we assessed all the senior officers in the Army, and we decided that you
were the best man to lead the country. We also agreed on some fundamental
changes in how our new government should work. Garba has explained this to you.
If you do not accept it, we cannot force you. But we happen to know that you
have a large following in the Army and in the country at large. If we appoint
someone else as Head of State instead of you, there are those who will wonder
why, and they may create problems for us. We can appoint another man if we have
to, but to pre-empt these your admirers, before doing so, we will first tell the
whole nation about this meeting, and pour conditions and the fact that you
refused them. Once more, I am going to explain to you what it is we are asking
of you.“
Following Abdullahi Mohammed’s repeated
explanation, Garba explains that Murtala Mohammed
“…..exploded, shouting, ‘This is blackmail! I am
not going to have you blackmailing me…’”
But Garba astutely observed that,
“We could see behind this somewhat theatrical
outburst that he would give in, but not gracefully. Then, he said, but
protesting all the while, that all this should have been explained to him
before. He then accepted our terms. Thus we had a new Head of State.”
At this point, Murtala Mohammed, Obasanjo, Danjuma,
JN Garba, Abdullahi Mohammed, and SM Yar’Adua rejoined the officers waiting in
the main conference room. Garba then announced the names of the main figures in
the new regime. At that point, the now ex-Service Chiefs and pro-Gowon senior
officers present were not in a position to do anything. They were unarmed,
marooned inside Dodan Barracks, surrounded by Babangida’s Armoured Vehicles and
Garba’s infantry – all heavily armed. They accepted the situation as a fait
accompli and left quietly.
The new triumvirate then made arrangements to meet
with core putschists later that evening at about 2200 hours (10 pm) in Brigadier
Mohammed’s house to reach agreement on the detailed composition of the new
regime at Federal and State level, as well as within the Army.
Meanwhile some of the putschists attended to
housekeeping chores. According to sources, Colonels Garba and Babangida went
over to the house of Alhaji MT Usman, then Federal Director of Public Works, and
a relation of Yar’Adua to give message to Lt. Col. SM Yar’Adua’s family that all
was well with the Colonel and that they could return home. As he left to carry
out his part of the operation the day before Yar’Adua had dropped off his family
at Usman’s house, informed him that a coup was about to occur and asked him to
take care of his family if he did not return.
Let us now briefly return to Kampala.
IN KAMPALA
After departing from the conference hall, Gowon
spent the rest of the day quietly. Cameroon’s President Ahidjo had sought his
audience to commiserate and get an update on the situation. Ahidjo – who was
reportedly shattered by the development - was particularly astonished by Garba’s
involvement. Other African leaders like Generals Jaffar Numeiri of Sudan, Idi
Amin of Uganda, and Mikael Andom of Ethiopia, also called on him to express
support. There is no record, however, that any of them offered specific
military assistance to beat back the coup.
Thereafter, Gowon, who was getting quite
uncomfortable with the not so subtle alleged surveillance and containment
activities of NAF Lt. Col. Mustapha Amin and Mr. Muhammadu Gambo of the Police
Special Branch, reportedly gave them a piece of his mind. Then he retired to
play a game of squash at the University.
Shortly after the Dodan Barracks “military
convention”, the BBC monitored a broadcast from Lagos announcing that Brigadier
Murtala ‘Rufai’ Mohammed had been chosen to lead the new regime. A day later,
however, the middle name was corrected by the BBC to read “Ramat” and the last
name re-spelled to read “Muhammed”.
By nightfall in Kampala, therefore, Gowon knew
that Murtala Muhammed and Joe Garba were definitely involved. Who were the
others, he wondered? When word came that Brigadier TY Danjuma, one of those he
had counted on for support, had been appointed Chief of the Army in the new
dispensation, Gowon was crushed. But most of the shock would come when the full
list of members of the SMC and new State Governors was released the next day.
Let us return again to Nigeria.
IN NIGERIA
Later that night, at about 2200 hours Lagos local
time (midnight in Kampala) there was a crucial meeting at the house of Brigadier
Muhammed along 2nd Avenue in Ikoyi. The putschists – mainly
represented by an inner circle junta comprising SM
Yar’Adua, JN Garba, Abdullahi Mohammed,
Muhammadu Buhari, and Ibrahim Taiwo, among others - had started out by
saying they did not want to play any political role in the new government.
Garba in particular was initially very concerned that given his relationship
with Gowon, his role in the coup would come to be seen as opportunist and
selfish if he emerged as part of the new political administration.
However, Obasanjo opposed the complete exclusion
of the plotters from government, fearing – by his own account - a repeat of the
scenario between General Mohammed Neguib and Colonel Abdel Nasser of Egypt.
Nasser and the Free Officers movement staged a coup against King Farouk and
placed Neguib in office on July 23, 1952. (Lt. Col. Anwar Sadat announced the
coup.) Neguib became Commander-in-Chief, Prime Minister and President of the
republic. But Nasser and his boys later eased Neguib out on November 17th
1954. Nasser became Prime Minister from 1954-56 and President of Egypt from
1956 until he died.
In citing this historical example as his reason
for opposing the exclusion of the putschists of July 1975 from political office,
Obasanjo misread history. Neguib did not exclude the Free Officers from
political office. In fact, the 34-year-old Colonel Nasser became the Interior
Minister (and deputy to Neguib) in 1952. Political infighting among the Free
Officers resulted in the departure of Khaled Mohieddin and Youssef Siddiq from
key positions in 1953. Nasser and the remaining Free Officers (like Anwar Sadat,
Baghdadi and Kamaleddin Hussein, Sarwat Okasha, Abdel Hakim Amer, etc.) later
pushed Neguib aside – allegedly because he was too moderate. The change was
executed from within the regime in a palace coup.
On the other hand, making theoretical arguments
about the need to avoid political office is easy when talking from the
standpoint of idealistic opposition officers meeting in secrecy to overthrow a
government. Once power is actually seized, however, it requires a whole new
level of determination and forthrightness – and confidence in the leadership of
those to whom you then entrust the government - not to yield to temptation.
With the new situation on ground, the putschists did not strongly resist
Obasanjo’s pragmatic (but historically inaccurate) argument. They gladly agreed
to take political appointments in recognition no doubt of their “hard work”.
Garba rationalized it by saying they “had found themselves unavoidably
drawn into political jobs…”
In the meantime, to avoid denuding the Army of
high quality officers, Brigadier Danjuma was giving priority in choosing his
team first before political appointments were made. Colonel JN Garba – who had
initially argued successfully to stay away from a political job - was first
offered the position of Deputy Commandant of the NDA, which he turned down
because “it involved too much administrative routine for my liking”. Although
Garba says that the “junta” had decided that “hierarchy and seniority in the
army must remain undisturbed, apart from the three top appointments” his comment
about the posting to NDA betrays a subtle lack of institutional discipline and
regimentation. Officers should not typically be able to lobby themselves out of
military appointments because they do not “like the routine”. But Colonel Garba
was a member of the junta that had just “appointed” Brigadier Danjuma – who did
nothing to stop the coup - to his new job. Thus the Brigadier had many dynamics
to contend with, at least at that stage of the game. This real-politick
tolerance and accommodation of Garba’s rejection of a military posting is to be
contrasted with what happened when Brigadier Oluleye – the GOC who chose not to
resist the coup but was not an insider - rejected his own posting to the NDA as
the Commandant. Mohammed and Obasanjo asked Oluleye, point-blank, to resign his
commission. His career was, however, saved because – according to him - some of
the putschists had served under him before and opposed his retirement. He was,
therefore, compensated with a federal ministerial position. These events provide
insight into some of the deep problems that were to consume the military in that
and subsequent military regimes.
In the haggling for office that followed his
rejection of a military posting to the NDA, Garba ended up being given a
political position as Federal Commissioner for Transport which he only accepted
when told that “…the Ministry also controlled the Nigerian Railways and
Airways…”. Lt. Col. SM Yar’Adua was initially appointed Governor of Rivers
State, and then moved to take the Foreign Ministry. Buhari, Taiwo and Abdullahi
Mohammed bagged State Governorships. Other core putschists or collaborators
also got these and other types of “good appointments” within and outside the
Army. Several former Brigade Commanders became Governors.
Garba left the meeting at 0400 hours and returned
home to brief his spouse. She reminded him of his promise – before the coup -
not to accept any appointment. Therefore, he returned to Muhammed’s house after
daybreak to decline the offer of Transport Commissioner, again citing his
closeness to Gowon and the danger of being misunderstood. With Obasanjo’s
support, Muhammed dropped Garba’s name from the cabinet. Yar’Adua was then
moved to Transport because of the urgency of the Ports Decongestion issue and
the request by the Permanent Secretary in that Ministry – Alhaji Yusuf Gobir -
that whomever took the job must have strong leverage within the regime.
The External Affairs Ministry was, therefore,
vacant and massive lobbying for the job commenced – as is typical of Nigeria.
Indeed there would be no federal cabinet until a week later. Meanwhile, in the
late afternoon/early evening of July 30, the new Head of State proceeded to make
his maiden broadcast. In it he aimed at consolidating the authority and
legitimacy of the new government by exploiting the various controversial
political issues and undercurrents that alienated Gowon from key constituents
over the course of several years.
“Fellow Nigerians
IN KAMPALA
All the world 's a stage…..
Having reviewed the extent of the conspiracy,
based on the astonishing list of names of those who now constituted the new
regime, General Gowon chose not to fight the situation by making appeals to
potential loyalists still hidden away in the background. He also wanted – he
says - to make sure that those who might be considering resisting the new regime
should not go down that path. It was a path that was fraught with danger of
bloodshed, he thought. Wearing a white traditional Nigerian Agbada and cap to
match, therefore, he called an International Press Conference.
He opened the conference with an off the cuff
remark in which he quoted the first few lines from a section of William
Shakespeare’s “As you like it”:
“All the world 's a stage,
He then delivered a prepared speech (with
interruptions):
“From all indications a new government has been
established in Nigeria. I wish to state that I on my part have also accepted the
change and pledge my full loyalty to my nation, my country and the new
government. Therefore, in the overall interest of the nation and our beloved
country, I appeal to all concerned to cooperate fully with the new government
and ensure the preservation of peace, unity and stability of our dear
motherland.
As a Nigerian, I am prepared to serve my country
in any capacity, which my country may consider appropriate. I am a professional
soldier and I can do any duty that I am called upon to do.
May I take this opportunity to thank all the
people of Nigeria and friends of Nigeria for the support and cooperation that
you all gave me during my tenure of office and call upon all of you to give the
new government of our nation the same support and cooperation in the interest of
our beloved country.
Long live one united, happy and prosperous
Nigeria. Long live the Organization of African Unity. May God bless you all.”
Continued
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