Sunday 18 May 2014

Jonathan Can't Go to Chibok Bcos He's Afraid of Soldiers Mutiny ––Says Femi Falana


Hmmmm wahala dey o! Popular human rights activist and lawyer, Femi Falana (SAN) has described President Goodluck Jonathan’s suspended visit to Chibok as an expression of his fear for the soldiers in Borno State.
“Why did President Goodluck Jonathan cancel his visit to Chibok? Is he afraid of Boko Haram? No. He is afraid of the soldiers, his army. The mutiny that occurred in Chibok was a reaction against the way the authority is treating the soldiers. They are not happy. Even Jonathan admitted to these soldiers being ill-equipped during his last media chat. What happened to the trillions of naira budgeted for the army in the last three years? 
“These soldiers are not motivated. For instance, for every soldier killed in Iraq or Afghanistan, the US Secretary of State sends a handwritten and signed letter to each family of the killed soldiers. The American government pays all their entitlements within two, three weeks or one month. The Americans care for their soldiers. They give the dead soldiers a hero’s burial. 
“Here [in Nigeria] we don’t even get to know the names of the fallen soldiers. Their families are not usually cared for. One thousand soldiers died and we don’t know them; we don’t have their names. The press is just reporting about Boko Haram and the number of people killed. No one is talking about the soldiers, the number and names of those killed and their families.”
The human rights lawyer, in a chat with Punch said it was obvious the President put on hold his visit to Chibok not because he was afraid of Boko Haram but because he feared the likely action of the soldiers stationed there in view of the mutiny on Wednesday by the 7 Infantry Division of the Nigerian Army in Maiduguri.

He added that Nigerian soldiers fighting Boko Haram were demoralised and not motivated. He also alleged that the soldiers were thrown into battle terrains they were not familiar with.

Speaking further, Falana said, “The military authority commanded these valiant soldiers to go to terrains they don’t understand. It’s too easy for them to be ambushed by the insurgents. These are fantastic men who had done well in peacekeeping missions in Sierra Leone and Liberia. The Amnesty International’s report is true. The security operatives were given advance information about Boko Haram; but they claimed they had too many pieces of information they were working with.”

Meanwhile, the authorities of the Nigerian Army on Thursday reacted to the mutiny of some of its soldiers of the 7 division by instituting a high-powered delegation to investigate the occurrence. We await the outcome.

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