You must represent Nigeria positively, Saraki tells Ambassadorial Nominees
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/07/you-must-represent-nigeria-positively-in-your-postings-saraki-tells-ambassadorial-nominees/
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/07/you-must-represent-nigeria-positively-in-your-postings-saraki-tells-ambassadorial-nominees/
The first
shots shattered the peace of the night at the Abeokuta Garrison of the Nigerian
Army a few minutes after midnight on July 29, 1966. Three casualties lay
instantly dead in the persons of Lieutenant Colonel Gabriel Okonweze, the
Garrison Commander, Major John Obienu, Commander of the 2nd Reece Squadron, and
Lieutenant E. B. Orok, also of the Reece Squadron. It was the beginning of the
much-touted revenge coup of Northern Nigerian army officers and men against the
regime of Major General Johnson Thomas Umunnakwe Aguiyi-Ironsi. coupBy August
1, when Lieutenant Colonel Yakubu Gowon assumed power in Lagos as Nigeria’s
second military Head of State, the bullet ridden bodies of both Ironsi and his
host, Lieutenant Colonel Francis Adekunle Fajuyi, the military Governor of
Western Nigeria, lay buried in shallow graves at Iwo, outside Ibadan. “Within
three days of the July outbreak, every Igbo soldier serving in the army outside
the East was dead, imprisoned or fleeing eastward for his life”, observed
Professor Ruth First in The Barrel of a Gun: The Politics of Coups d’Etat in
Africa [Allen Lane The Penguin Press, London, 1970, p317.] But Africa’s
bloodiest coup did not stop at that stage, despite the shooting deaths of 42
officers and over 130 other ranks, who were overwhelmingly Igbo. The killing
sprees and ever-expanding killing fields spread like wild fire across most of
the country. There were three phases to the coup – the Araba/Aware massacres in
northern Nigeria pre-July that called for northern secession, the July Army
bloodbath, and the ethnic cleansing that went on for months after Ironsi had
been assassinated and his regime toppled. The maelstrom prompted Colonel Gowon
into making a radio broadcast on September 29, 1966. This was the kernel of
what he said: “You all know that since the end of July, God in his power has
entrusted the responsibility of this great country of ours into the hands of
yet another Northerner. I receive complaints daily that up till now Easterners
living in the North are being killed and molested, and their property looted. I
am very unhappy about this. We should put a stop to it. It appears that it is
going beyond reason and is now at a point of recklessness and
irresponsibility.” Salutary intervention But Gowon’s salutary intervention
changed nothing, as the massacres continued unabated. Northern soldiers and
civilians went into towns, fished out Easterners and flattened them either with
rapid gunfire or with violent machete blows, leaving their properties looted or
torched. According to the Massacre of Ndigbo in 1966: Report of the Justice G.
C. M. Onyiuke Tribunal, [Tollbrook Limited, Ikeja, Lagos] “…between 45,000 and
50,000 civilians of former Eastern Nigeria were killed in Northern Nigeria and
other parts of Nigeria from 29th May 1966 to December 1967 and although it is
not strictly within its terms of reference the Tribunal estimates that not less
than 1,627,743 Easterners fled back to Eastern Nigeria as a result of the 1966
pogrom.” Counter-coup This is contemporary Nigerian history, only 50 years old.
But when experts like Dr. Reuben Abati and Professor Jonah Elaigwu write about
it, they lose all sense of numeracy and statistical acuity, and glibly state
that the July 29, 1966 counter-coup cost “many” Igbo lives. Well, the truth is
that the July 29 counter-coup appears to be the bloodiest in the world’s
recorded history because the casualty figures it posted far outstrip those
registered in decided bloody coups like the Glorious Revolution of 1688 in
which King James II of England was overthrown by an invading army led by
William III of Orange-Nassau; the 18 Brumaire of 1799 coup in which General
Napoleon Bonaparte overthrew the French Directory on November 9, 1799; the
Wuchang Uprising of 1911 that overthrew the Qing Dynasty and led to the
establishment of the Republic of China; the Bolsheviks October Revolution of
1917 that led to the creation of the Soviet Union; and the Iraqi coup d’état of
1936, the first among Arab countries. Each of these coups/revolutions led to
war. But none of them managed anything near the sea of blood occasioned by July
29, 1966. Giving their interest in posting photographs and videos on the
Internet by Instagram and Snapchat, and advertising mostly poor language on
Facebook and other such portals, today’s Nigerian youths may know next to
nothing about what led to the catastrophe of July 29. But the details follow
here for those of them interested in learning. The problem sat rigidly on the
superficiality of Nigeria, a geographical expression contrived by colonialist
Britain. At Independence in 1960, the country operated a federal system of
government with three powerful regions that didn’t take dictation from Lagos,
the nation’s capital. A fourth region, the Midwest, with capital in Benin City,
was created in June 1963. But destroying the very fabric of the artificial
political entity were tribalism and corruption, corruption which by today’s
standards, would seem like cloistered nuns delightfully engaging in a game of
Ping-Pong! Controversial census There were the 1960 and 1964-1965 uprisings in
the Tiv country of the Middle Belt, and fractious elections in Western Nigeria
in 1964 and 1965. There was the highly controversial national census exercise
of 1963, and there was the military action of Isaac Boro’s Niger Delta
Volunteer Force. Then, the military moved in on January 15, 1966, having
contracted the germ of the idea of military putsches running riot across the
world. In Algeria, for instance, Colonel Houari Boumediene and Ahmed Ben Bella
overthrew Benyoucef Benkhedda on July 3, 1962. Three years later, on June 19,
1965, Boumedienne overthrew Ben Bella. More: In Argentina, General Eduardo
Lonardi overthrew President Juan Domingo Peron on September 16, 1955. On March
29, 1962, General Raul Pogi overthrew President Arturo Frondizi. In Brazil on
March 31, 1964, Humberto de Alencar Castelo Branco overthrew João Goulart to
set up a 21-year-long dictatorship. In Indonesia General Suharto overthrew
President Sukarno on September 30, 1965. First West African coup Inside Africa
itself, coups were also trending. Colonel Gamal Abdel Nasser had overthrown
Muhammad Naguib as far back as February 27, 1954. The first coup in West Africa
was on January 13, 1963, when Etiene Eyadema overthrew Sylvanus Olympio. Colonel
Joseph (later Mobutu Sese Seko) toppled Prime Minister Patrice Lumumba on
September 14, 1960 and “neutralized” all political parties in Congo-Kinshasa.
In neighbouring Benin Republic, Christophe Soglo overthrew Hubert Maga on
October 28, 1963. Soglo carried out another coup on November 27, 1965, toppling
Sourou-Migan Apithy. Both coups happened when the country still bore the name
of Dahomey. On New Year’s Day of 1966, Colonel Jean-Bedel Bokassa overthrew his
cousin, President David Dacko in Central Africa Republic. Two days later,
Lieutenant Colonel Sangoulé Lamizana overthrew President Maurice Yaméogo in
Upper Volta, which was renamed Burkina Faso in 1984 by Marxist revolutionary
Captain Thomas Sankara. But there was a difference between the rash of coups
that occurred elsewhere and the one of January 15, 1966 in Nigeria. The
Nigerian coup took an immediate ethnic colouration, and for reasons that were
all too obvious. Of the five Majors that formed the innermost circle of the
plotters, four were Igbo – Patrick Chukwuma Kaduna Nzeogwu, Emmanuel Arinze
Ifeajuna, Donatus Okafor, and Chris Anuforo. But there was also among them
Major Adewale Ademoyega, a Yoruba. Then, there was also the more disturbing
fact that most of the coup’s casualties were non-Igbo, like Prime Minister Sir
Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, Northern Premier Sir Ahmadu Bello, Western Premier
Chief Samuel Akintola, and Federal Finance Minister Chief Festus Okotie-Eboh.
No Igbo politician had lost his life in the bloody action. Further, in executing
the coup, the military had turned against itself in the killings of the
following Northern military officers: Brigadier Zakariya Maimalari (Commander 2
Brigade), Colonel Kur Mohammed (Chief of Staff, Army Headquarters), Lieutenant
Colonel James Yakubu Pam (Adjutant-General), and Lieutenant Colonel Lieutenant
Colonel Abogo Largema (Commander 4th Battalion, Ibadan). Two Yoruba officers
were also victims: Brigadier Samuel Ademulegun (Commander 1 Brigade), and his
deputy, Colonel Ralph Sodeinde. The coup was, in effect, as bloody as they
come. Its very nature fanned the fiction that it was an Igbo coup. Chuks
Iloegbunam (iloegbunam@hotmail.com), is the author of Ironside, the biography
of General Aguiyi-Ironsi.
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/07/july-291966-counter-coup-africas-bloodiest-coup-detat/
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/07/july-291966-counter-coup-africas-bloodiest-coup-detat/
The first shots
shattered the peace of the night at the Abeokuta Garrison of the
Nigerian Army a few minutes after midnight on July 29, 1966.
Three casualties lay instantly dead in the persons of Lieutenant Colonel
Gabriel Okonweze, the Garrison Commander, Major John Obienu, Commander
of the 2nd Reece Squadron, and Lieutenant E. B. Orok, also of the Reece
Squadron. It was the beginning of the much-touted revenge coup of
Northern Nigerian army officers and men against the regime of Major
General Johnson Thomas Umunnakwe Aguiyi-Ironsi.
coupBy August 1, when Lieutenant Colonel Yakubu Gowon assumed power in
Lagos as Nigeria’s second military Head of State, the bullet ridden
bodies of both Ironsi and his host, Lieutenant Colonel Francis Adekunle
Fajuyi, the military Governor of Western Nigeria, lay buried in shallow
graves at Iwo, outside Ibadan.
“Within three days of the July outbreak, every Igbo soldier serving in
the army outside the East was dead, imprisoned or fleeing eastward for
his life”, observed Professor Ruth First in The Barrel of a Gun: The
Politics of Coups d’Etat in Africa [Allen Lane The Penguin Press,
London, 1970, p317.]
But Africa’s bloodiest coup did not stop at that stage, despite the
shooting deaths of 42 officers and over 130 other ranks, who were
overwhelmingly Igbo. The killing sprees and ever-expanding killing
fields spread like wild fire across most of the country. There were
three phases to the coup – the Araba/Aware massacres in northern Nigeria
pre-July that called for northern secession, the July Army bloodbath,
and the ethnic cleansing that went on for months after Ironsi had been
assassinated and his regime toppled. The maelstrom prompted Colonel
Gowon into making a radio broadcast on September 29, 1966.
This was the kernel of what he said: “You all know that since the end of
July, God in his power has entrusted the responsibility of this great
country of ours into the hands of yet another Northerner. I receive
complaints daily that up till now Easterners living in the North are
being killed and molested, and their property looted. I am very unhappy
about this. We should put a stop to it. It appears that it is going
beyond reason and is now at a point of recklessness and
irresponsibility.”
Salutary intervention
But Gowon’s salutary intervention changed nothing, as the massacres
continued unabated. Northern soldiers and civilians went into towns,
fished out Easterners and flattened them either with rapid gunfire or
with violent machete blows, leaving their properties looted or torched.
According to the Massacre of Ndigbo in 1966: Report of the Justice G. C.
M. Onyiuke Tribunal, [Tollbrook Limited, Ikeja, Lagos] “…between 45,000
and 50,000 civilians of former Eastern Nigeria were killed in Northern
Nigeria and other parts of Nigeria from 29th May 1966 to December 1967
and although it is not strictly within its terms of reference the
Tribunal estimates that not less than 1,627,743 Easterners fled back to
Eastern Nigeria as a result of the 1966 pogrom.”
Counter-coup
This is contemporary Nigerian history, only 50 years old. But when
experts like Dr. Reuben Abati and Professor Jonah Elaigwu write about
it, they lose all sense of numeracy and statistical acuity, and glibly
state that the July 29, 1966 counter-coup cost “many” Igbo lives.
Well, the truth is that the July 29 counter-coup appears to be the
bloodiest in the world’s recorded history because the casualty figures
it posted far outstrip those registered in decided bloody coups like the
Glorious Revolution of 1688 in which King James II of England was
overthrown by an invading army led by William III of Orange-Nassau; the
18 Brumaire of 1799 coup in which General Napoleon Bonaparte overthrew
the French Directory on November 9, 1799; the Wuchang Uprising of 1911
that overthrew the Qing Dynasty and led to the establishment of the
Republic of China; the Bolsheviks October Revolution of 1917 that led to
the creation of the Soviet Union; and the Iraqi coup d’état of 1936,
the first among Arab countries. Each of these coups/revolutions led to
war. But none of them managed anything near the sea of blood occasioned
by July 29, 1966.
Giving their interest in posting photographs and videos on the Internet
by Instagram and Snapchat, and advertising mostly poor language on
Facebook and other such portals, today’s Nigerian youths may know next
to nothing about what led to the catastrophe of July 29. But the details
follow here for those of them interested in learning.
The problem sat rigidly on the superficiality of Nigeria, a geographical
expression contrived by colonialist Britain. At Independence in 1960,
the country operated a federal system of government with three powerful
regions that didn’t take dictation from Lagos, the nation’s capital. A
fourth region, the Midwest, with capital in Benin City, was created in
June 1963.
But destroying the very fabric of the artificial political entity were
tribalism and corruption, corruption which by today’s standards, would
seem like cloistered nuns delightfully engaging in a game of Ping-Pong!
Controversial census
There were the 1960 and 1964-1965 uprisings in the Tiv country of the
Middle Belt, and fractious elections in Western Nigeria in 1964 and
1965. There was the highly controversial national census exercise of
1963, and there was the military action of Isaac Boro’s Niger Delta
Volunteer Force.
Then, the military moved in on January 15, 1966, having contracted the
germ of the idea of military putsches running riot across the world. In
Algeria, for instance, Colonel Houari Boumediene and Ahmed Ben Bella
overthrew Benyoucef Benkhedda on July 3, 1962.
Three years later, on June 19, 1965, Boumedienne overthrew Ben Bella.
More: In Argentina, General Eduardo Lonardi overthrew President Juan
Domingo Peron on September 16, 1955. On March 29, 1962, General Raul
Pogi overthrew President Arturo Frondizi. In Brazil on March 31, 1964,
Humberto de Alencar Castelo Branco overthrew João Goulart to set up a
21-year-long dictatorship. In Indonesia General Suharto overthrew
President Sukarno on September 30, 1965.
First West African coup
Inside Africa itself, coups were also trending. Colonel Gamal Abdel
Nasser had overthrown Muhammad Naguib as far back as February 27, 1954.
The first coup in West Africa was on January 13, 1963, when Etiene
Eyadema overthrew Sylvanus Olympio. Colonel Joseph (later Mobutu Sese
Seko) toppled Prime Minister Patrice Lumumba on September 14, 1960 and
“neutralized” all political parties in Congo-Kinshasa. In neighbouring
Benin Republic, Christophe Soglo overthrew Hubert Maga on October 28,
1963. Soglo carried out another coup on November 27, 1965, toppling
Sourou-Migan Apithy.
Both coups happened when the country still bore the name of Dahomey.
On New Year’s Day of 1966, Colonel Jean-Bedel Bokassa overthrew his
cousin, President David Dacko in Central Africa Republic. Two days
later, Lieutenant Colonel Sangoulé Lamizana overthrew President Maurice
Yaméogo in Upper Volta, which was renamed Burkina Faso in 1984 by
Marxist revolutionary Captain Thomas Sankara.
But there was a difference between the rash of coups that occurred
elsewhere and the one of January 15, 1966 in Nigeria. The Nigerian coup
took an immediate ethnic colouration, and for reasons that were all too
obvious. Of the five Majors that formed the innermost circle of the
plotters, four were Igbo – Patrick Chukwuma Kaduna Nzeogwu, Emmanuel
Arinze Ifeajuna, Donatus Okafor, and Chris Anuforo. But there was also
among them Major Adewale Ademoyega, a Yoruba. Then, there was also the
more disturbing fact that most of the coup’s casualties were non-Igbo,
like Prime Minister Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, Northern Premier Sir
Ahmadu Bello, Western Premier Chief Samuel Akintola, and Federal Finance
Minister Chief Festus Okotie-Eboh. No Igbo politician had lost his
life in the bloody action.
Further, in executing the coup, the military had turned against itself
in the killings of the following Northern military officers: Brigadier
Zakariya Maimalari (Commander 2 Brigade), Colonel Kur Mohammed (Chief of
Staff, Army Headquarters), Lieutenant Colonel James Yakubu Pam
(Adjutant-General), and Lieutenant Colonel Lieutenant Colonel Abogo
Largema (Commander 4th Battalion, Ibadan). Two Yoruba officers were also
victims: Brigadier Samuel Ademulegun (Commander 1 Brigade), and his
deputy, Colonel Ralph Sodeinde. The coup was, in effect, as bloody as
they come. Its very nature fanned the fiction that it was an Igbo coup.
Chuks Iloegbunam (iloegbunam@hotmail.com), is the author of Ironside,
the biography of General Aguiyi-Ironsi.
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/07/july-291966-counter-coup-africas-bloodiest-coup-detat/
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/07/july-291966-counter-coup-africas-bloodiest-coup-detat/
The first shots
shattered the peace of the night at the Abeokuta Garrison of the
Nigerian Army a few minutes after midnight on July 29, 1966.
Three casualties lay instantly dead in the persons of Lieutenant Colonel
Gabriel Okonweze, the Garrison Commander, Major John Obienu, Commander
of the 2nd Reece Squadron, and Lieutenant E. B. Orok, also of the Reece
Squadron. It was the beginning of the much-touted revenge coup of
Northern Nigerian army officers and men against the regime of Major
General Johnson Thomas Umunnakwe Aguiyi-Ironsi.
coupBy August 1, when Lieutenant Colonel Yakubu Gowon assumed power in
Lagos as Nigeria’s second military Head of State, the bullet ridden
bodies of both Ironsi and his host, Lieutenant Colonel Francis Adekunle
Fajuyi, the military Governor of Western Nigeria, lay buried in shallow
graves at Iwo, outside Ibadan.
“Within three days of the July outbreak, every Igbo soldier serving in
the army outside the East was dead, imprisoned or fleeing eastward for
his life”, observed Professor Ruth First in The Barrel of a Gun: The
Politics of Coups d’Etat in Africa [Allen Lane The Penguin Press,
London, 1970, p317.]
But Africa’s bloodiest coup did not stop at that stage, despite the
shooting deaths of 42 officers and over 130 other ranks, who were
overwhelmingly Igbo. The killing sprees and ever-expanding killing
fields spread like wild fire across most of the country. There were
three phases to the coup – the Araba/Aware massacres in northern Nigeria
pre-July that called for northern secession, the July Army bloodbath,
and the ethnic cleansing that went on for months after Ironsi had been
assassinated and his regime toppled. The maelstrom prompted Colonel
Gowon into making a radio broadcast on September 29, 1966.
This was the kernel of what he said: “You all know that since the end of
July, God in his power has entrusted the responsibility of this great
country of ours into the hands of yet another Northerner. I receive
complaints daily that up till now Easterners living in the North are
being killed and molested, and their property looted. I am very unhappy
about this. We should put a stop to it. It appears that it is going
beyond reason and is now at a point of recklessness and
irresponsibility.”
Salutary intervention
But Gowon’s salutary intervention changed nothing, as the massacres
continued unabated. Northern soldiers and civilians went into towns,
fished out Easterners and flattened them either with rapid gunfire or
with violent machete blows, leaving their properties looted or torched.
According to the Massacre of Ndigbo in 1966: Report of the Justice G. C.
M. Onyiuke Tribunal, [Tollbrook Limited, Ikeja, Lagos] “…between 45,000
and 50,000 civilians of former Eastern Nigeria were killed in Northern
Nigeria and other parts of Nigeria from 29th May 1966 to December 1967
and although it is not strictly within its terms of reference the
Tribunal estimates that not less than 1,627,743 Easterners fled back to
Eastern Nigeria as a result of the 1966 pogrom.”
Counter-coup
This is contemporary Nigerian history, only 50 years old. But when
experts like Dr. Reuben Abati and Professor Jonah Elaigwu write about
it, they lose all sense of numeracy and statistical acuity, and glibly
state that the July 29, 1966 counter-coup cost “many” Igbo lives.
Well, the truth is that the July 29 counter-coup appears to be the
bloodiest in the world’s recorded history because the casualty figures
it posted far outstrip those registered in decided bloody coups like the
Glorious Revolution of 1688 in which King James II of England was
overthrown by an invading army led by William III of Orange-Nassau; the
18 Brumaire of 1799 coup in which General Napoleon Bonaparte overthrew
the French Directory on November 9, 1799; the Wuchang Uprising of 1911
that overthrew the Qing Dynasty and led to the establishment of the
Republic of China; the Bolsheviks October Revolution of 1917 that led to
the creation of the Soviet Union; and the Iraqi coup d’état of 1936,
the first among Arab countries. Each of these coups/revolutions led to
war. But none of them managed anything near the sea of blood occasioned
by July 29, 1966.
Giving their interest in posting photographs and videos on the Internet
by Instagram and Snapchat, and advertising mostly poor language on
Facebook and other such portals, today’s Nigerian youths may know next
to nothing about what led to the catastrophe of July 29. But the details
follow here for those of them interested in learning.
The problem sat rigidly on the superficiality of Nigeria, a geographical
expression contrived by colonialist Britain. At Independence in 1960,
the country operated a federal system of government with three powerful
regions that didn’t take dictation from Lagos, the nation’s capital. A
fourth region, the Midwest, with capital in Benin City, was created in
June 1963.
But destroying the very fabric of the artificial political entity were
tribalism and corruption, corruption which by today’s standards, would
seem like cloistered nuns delightfully engaging in a game of Ping-Pong!
Controversial census
There were the 1960 and 1964-1965 uprisings in the Tiv country of the
Middle Belt, and fractious elections in Western Nigeria in 1964 and
1965. There was the highly controversial national census exercise of
1963, and there was the military action of Isaac Boro’s Niger Delta
Volunteer Force.
Then, the military moved in on January 15, 1966, having contracted the
germ of the idea of military putsches running riot across the world. In
Algeria, for instance, Colonel Houari Boumediene and Ahmed Ben Bella
overthrew Benyoucef Benkhedda on July 3, 1962.
Three years later, on June 19, 1965, Boumedienne overthrew Ben Bella.
More: In Argentina, General Eduardo Lonardi overthrew President Juan
Domingo Peron on September 16, 1955. On March 29, 1962, General Raul
Pogi overthrew President Arturo Frondizi. In Brazil on March 31, 1964,
Humberto de Alencar Castelo Branco overthrew João Goulart to set up a
21-year-long dictatorship. In Indonesia General Suharto overthrew
President Sukarno on September 30, 1965.
First West African coup
Inside Africa itself, coups were also trending. Colonel Gamal Abdel
Nasser had overthrown Muhammad Naguib as far back as February 27, 1954.
The first coup in West Africa was on January 13, 1963, when Etiene
Eyadema overthrew Sylvanus Olympio. Colonel Joseph (later Mobutu Sese
Seko) toppled Prime Minister Patrice Lumumba on September 14, 1960 and
“neutralized” all political parties in Congo-Kinshasa. In neighbouring
Benin Republic, Christophe Soglo overthrew Hubert Maga on October 28,
1963. Soglo carried out another coup on November 27, 1965, toppling
Sourou-Migan Apithy.
Both coups happened when the country still bore the name of Dahomey.
On New Year’s Day of 1966, Colonel Jean-Bedel Bokassa overthrew his
cousin, President David Dacko in Central Africa Republic. Two days
later, Lieutenant Colonel Sangoulé Lamizana overthrew President Maurice
Yaméogo in Upper Volta, which was renamed Burkina Faso in 1984 by
Marxist revolutionary Captain Thomas Sankara.
But there was a difference between the rash of coups that occurred
elsewhere and the one of January 15, 1966 in Nigeria. The Nigerian coup
took an immediate ethnic colouration, and for reasons that were all too
obvious. Of the five Majors that formed the innermost circle of the
plotters, four were Igbo – Patrick Chukwuma Kaduna Nzeogwu, Emmanuel
Arinze Ifeajuna, Donatus Okafor, and Chris Anuforo. But there was also
among them Major Adewale Ademoyega, a Yoruba. Then, there was also the
more disturbing fact that most of the coup’s casualties were non-Igbo,
like Prime Minister Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, Northern Premier Sir
Ahmadu Bello, Western Premier Chief Samuel Akintola, and Federal Finance
Minister Chief Festus Okotie-Eboh. No Igbo politician had lost his
life in the bloody action.
Further, in executing the coup, the military had turned against itself
in the killings of the following Northern military officers: Brigadier
Zakariya Maimalari (Commander 2 Brigade), Colonel Kur Mohammed (Chief of
Staff, Army Headquarters), Lieutenant Colonel James Yakubu Pam
(Adjutant-General), and Lieutenant Colonel Lieutenant Colonel Abogo
Largema (Commander 4th Battalion, Ibadan). Two Yoruba officers were also
victims: Brigadier Samuel Ademulegun (Commander 1 Brigade), and his
deputy, Colonel Ralph Sodeinde. The coup was, in effect, as bloody as
they come. Its very nature fanned the fiction that it was an Igbo coup.
Chuks Iloegbunam (iloegbunam@hotmail.com), is the author of Ironside,
the biography of General Aguiyi-Ironsi.
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/07/july-291966-counter-coup-africas-bloodiest-coup-detat/
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/07/july-291966-counter-coup-africas-bloodiest-coup-detat/
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