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Herdsmen Kill 2 Soldiers, Take Captive; Burn Operational Vehicle In Benue/Taraba - Crime (3) - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Crime / Herdsmen Kill 2 Soldiers, Take Captive; Burn Operational Vehicle In Benue/Taraba (23559 Views)

Suspected Kidnappers Set Ablaze In Orile In Their Operational Vehicle (Graphic) / Bandits Kidnap A Chinese In Niger State, 2 Soldiers Shot Dead / Lady Overpowers 2 Soldiers Trying To Flog Her In Lagos (2) (3) (4)

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Re: Herdsmen Kill 2 Soldiers, Take Captive; Burn Operational Vehicle In Benue/Taraba by joenor(m): 9:31am On May 21, 2018
Hummm there is something behind this whole killing, These ppl won't stop at nothing to islamist this country.
Re: Herdsmen Kill 2 Soldiers, Take Captive; Burn Operational Vehicle In Benue/Taraba by freeze001(f): 9:32am On May 21, 2018
sarrki:


I throw to you this question

Why are you full of so much hatred in your heart against a fellow being ?

I will believe it straight up that you are one of those that live in solitary

He's too worthless to hate and certainly not worth my while. It's just unfortunate that he's at the helm of affairs driving the country to perdition.

1 Like

Re: Herdsmen Kill 2 Soldiers, Take Captive; Burn Operational Vehicle In Benue/Taraba by Alphalite(m): 9:34am On May 21, 2018
*[[Mat 11:28]] KJV* Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Jesus saves, Jesus is the way to heaven.

1 Like

Re: Herdsmen Kill 2 Soldiers, Take Captive; Burn Operational Vehicle In Benue/Taraba by Simbrixton(m): 9:34am On May 21, 2018
Geofavor:
We didn't have all these nonsense during OBJ's administration. He would have wiped off every fulani (buhari included) off the face of the Earth. What we need is a no-nonsense smart president, not one wornout baba. Nigerians, come 2019, be wise.

Obj wipe off fulani loool
Re: Herdsmen Kill 2 Soldiers, Take Captive; Burn Operational Vehicle In Benue/Taraba by ugwuishi(m): 9:36am On May 21, 2018
poor soldiers!!!! Heavily armed headsmen vs poorly armed soldiers!
Re: Herdsmen Kill 2 Soldiers, Take Captive; Burn Operational Vehicle In Benue/Taraba by Simbrixton(m): 9:41am On May 21, 2018
sarrki:


Seriously sis

Politics aside

Know leader that will ascend that height will support the killings of those he’s governing

Let’s be sincere here

Even if he or she is a fanatic

He will have a change of heart immediately he ascends the throne

Seems you dont know buhari well
Do you know in 2001 buhari led a strong fulani delegation to confront governor lam adeshina after a clash between yoruba and fulanis in saki
Adeshina had to explain to him that the casualties was indeed higher on the yoruba side
I put it to you buhari is a sectional leader and unfit to rule

1 Like

Re: Herdsmen Kill 2 Soldiers, Take Captive; Burn Operational Vehicle In Benue/Taraba by StaffofOrayan(m): 9:46am On May 21, 2018
Before our very eyes, a new terrorist unit has been born
I just wonder the scale of killings if Buhari wins a 2nd term
Re: Herdsmen Kill 2 Soldiers, Take Captive; Burn Operational Vehicle In Benue/Taraba by Emusan(m): 9:50am On May 21, 2018
jerseyboy:
It will never end ....until Buhari is GONE

This is what people were saying before 2015 election thinking GEJ and PDP are the causes of Boko Haram but we're still on it till today.
Re: Herdsmen Kill 2 Soldiers, Take Captive; Burn Operational Vehicle In Benue/Taraba by seenga(m): 9:58am On May 21, 2018
Please just for curiosity's sake, where are the pictures ?

At least the pictures of the burnt operation vehicle.
Re: Herdsmen Kill 2 Soldiers, Take Captive; Burn Operational Vehicle In Benue/Taraba by NairaMaster1(m): 10:00am On May 21, 2018
13Ebisco:
No fewer than five soldiers have been reportedly killed and two others kidnapped after suspected herdsmen clashed with some personnel in Logo LGA of Benue State on Sunday.

The attackers also burnt down Army patrol vehicles during the clash.

MC EBISCO gathered that the herdsmen had wanted to attack a village in Logo but where foiled by the Army men.

The confrontation resulted into fire exchange between the herdsmen and military personnel.

A resident of the area hinted our reporter that the herdsmen overpowered the soldiers and whisked away two others.


More to come…

http://www.mcebisco.com.ng/2018/05/breaking-herdsmen-kill-soldiers-kidnap.html

Good News
Re: Herdsmen Kill 2 Soldiers, Take Captive; Burn Operational Vehicle In Benue/Taraba by zoedew: 10:06am On May 21, 2018
I thought TY Danjuma’s take on the herdsmen attack was a storm in a teacup! PMB/NA deal with it!!
Re: Herdsmen Kill 2 Soldiers, Take Captive; Burn Operational Vehicle In Benue/Taraba by Topshow2010(m): 10:11am On May 21, 2018
Its so glaring dt these are not herdsmen but book haram members in disguise ,its high tym d FG and d security apparatus in dis nation takes d bull by d horn by dealing ruthlessly wit dis blood suckers. angry
Re: Herdsmen Kill 2 Soldiers, Take Captive; Burn Operational Vehicle In Benue/Taraba by ujampie: 10:17am On May 21, 2018
Funny enough """ the law enforcement agencies should see this dastard act of this trigger happy herdsmen as an act of pure terrorism..... Rest in peace to the dead.... embarassed

Re: Herdsmen Kill 2 Soldiers, Take Captive; Burn Operational Vehicle In Benue/Taraba by ujampie: 10:22am On May 21, 2018
Funny enough """ the law enforcement agencies should see this dastard act of this trigger happy herdsmen as an act of pure terrorism..... Rest in peace to the dead.... :-
Re: Herdsmen Kill 2 Soldiers, Take Captive; Burn Operational Vehicle In Benue/Taraba by weyreypey: 10:27am On May 21, 2018
Auxtin85:


May you feel the same pain the victims of your kinsmen are feeling now. Do you even have shame? It gives you all joy to see people cry.... Your end is near
Not possible.... I am not a collaborator... back to the sender.
Re: Herdsmen Kill 2 Soldiers, Take Captive; Burn Operational Vehicle In Benue/Taraba by Nobody: 10:30am On May 21, 2018
White007:
This article was written by Femi Adesina the current Spokesperson to President Buhari in 2012 after the demise of Ikemba Odumegwu Ojukwu.
Hmmmmm...... Plz read;

THE ABURI ACCORD THAT WOULD HAVE SAVED NIGERIA FROM ALL HER PROBLEMS...( but aborted by the Fulani Oligarchy)

By FEMI ADESINA( current spokesperson to President Buhari)
In December 2009, I was at Aburi, while holidaying in Ghana. We Nigerians call it A-b-u-r-i, but the Ghanaians pronounce it as E-b-r-i. For those who have read widely about the civil war that we fought between 1967 and 1970,

Aburi is a significant place. This was what I wrote about Aburi, after returning from that journey:

“Aburi. Beautiful, serene Aburi, set daintily atop a hill. It is home to a botanical garden that is 119 years old. But for us in Nigeria, Aburi goes beyond just nature and its preservation.

It is the town where General Yakubu Gowon and Odumegwu Ojukwu met, to try and avert the Nigerian Civil War that lasted between 1967 and 1970. They came out with Aburi Accord, which later broke down. And a shooting war started.

You could see the Presidential Lodge on a hill, where the Nigerian leaders had parleyed at the behest of Ghanaian leaders. It all ended in futility.”

As one of the key parties to the Aburi Accord, Dim Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu, returns to mother earth today, it is also apposite to return to Aburi, and look at the letter and the spirit of the accord once again, an agreement that was violated by the Federal side, and which made a bloody internecine war inevitable.
For most part of 1966, the northern part of Nigeria, particularly, had been turned to killing fields.

Non-natives, especially Igbos, were killed in thousands. Many fled, many others were displaced. There was complete anarchy in the land. The average Igbo looked up to Lt. Col Odumegwu Ojukwu, military governor of the Eastern Region, to provide leadership and direction. He did not fail. He picked the gauntlet and championed the cause of his people.

By January 1967, the drums of war were loud and clear, reverberating across the length and breadth of Nigeria. But there was a last ditch effort to prevent what was imminent. There was a peace meeting hosted at Aburi, in Ghana, by the then Ghanaian head of state, Gen J. A. Ankrah.

At the meeting were Gowon, Ojukwu, all the military governors of the regions, and some top civil servants, both from the Federal side and the Eastern region. The meeting held on January 4 and 5, 1967, and came out with what is popularly known today as the Aburi Accord.

The agenda of the meeting consisted of three crucial issues: (i) Reorganization of the Armed Forces (ii) Constitutional agreement (iii) Issues of displaced persons within Nigeria.

The two-day meeting reached consensus that were acceptable to both sides. Among others, it was resolved that legislative and executive authority of the Federal Military Government was to remain in the Supreme Military Council (SMC), to which any decision affecting the whole country shall be referred for determination provided it is possible for a meeting to be held, and the matter requiring determination must be referred to military governors for their comment and concurrence. What does this mean in simple language?

The SMC would run the affairs of the country, but not without consulting the regions as represented by the military governors. This was something akin to federalism, even under a military government.

Other terms of the agreement include that appointments to senior ranks in the police, diplomatic and consular services as well as appointment to superscale posts in the federal civil service and the equivalent posts in the statutory corporations must be approved by the SMC. What does this mean again in simple language? Equity, fairness, true federalism.

Other matters like the holding of an ad hoc constitutional conference, fate of soldiers involved in the January 15, 1966 coup, rehabilitation of displaced persons, etc, were also amicably resolved, and the conferees returned happily to Nigeria. Only for the Federal side to deliver a blow to the solar plexus: the Aburi Accord, Gowon said, was unworkable, and he reneged on all the agreements.

Using the Eastern Nigerian Broadcasting Service, Ojukwu played the tape recording of the proceedings at Aburi repeatedly, to educate the populace on who was playing Judas. Later, he made a broadcast in which he said: “we in the East are anxious to see that our differences are resolved by peaceful means and that Nigeria is preserved as a unit, but it is doubtful, and the world must judge whether Lt. Col Gowon’s attitudes and other exhibitions of his insincerity are something which can lead to a return of normalcy and confidence in the country.

“I must warn all Easterners once again to remain vigilant. The East will never be intimidated, nor will she acquiesce to any form of dictation. It is not our intention to play the aggressor. Nonetheless, it is not our intention to be slaughtered in our beds. We are ready to defend our homeland.”

In a piece I did last December, shortly after Ojukwu passed away, I said he was virtually pushed into war by the infidelity of the Federal side to the Aburi Accord. I still stand by that position. Ojukwu was called ‘warlord’ for many decades, but he was by no means a warmonger. He only did what he needed to do for his people–and for the country.

As his earthly remains are interred today, it is tragic that Nigeria is still submerged in the morass that Ojukwu already identified about 45 years ago. Today, bombs go off like firecrackers in the country. There is agitation for the review of the revenue allocation formula.

There are strident calls for the convocation of a sovereign national conference. Even some component parts are threatening to pull out of the federation if anything happened to their ‘son’ who is now in power. Didn’t Ojukwu warn of these landmines ahead? Were all these issues not already settled at Aburi?

Foremost journalist and media administrator, Akogun Tola Adeniyi, in a recent media interview, explained the Aburi Accord this way: “Let every region be semi-autonomous and develop at its own level.” Yes, that was the spirit and letter of Aburi, but which sadly became a road not taken.

And is that not why we are still suffering today, living in a rickety and decrepit country that can burst at the seams any moment? I tell you, Ojukwu was a prophet, and like most prophets, he had no honour in his own country. Pity. But whether we like it or not, there’s no way we won’t return to Aburi. Willy-nilly. I only hope it will be sooner than later, before Nigeria goes to grief. On Aburi I stand.

Federal Government was perfidious and duplicitous on Aburi. It is still the same way today. That is why as Nigerians, we are most times disillusioned, dismayed, dispirited, dejected and depressed. When will change come to this land? Our hearts are getting weary.

Last December, I wrote that Ojukwu should be buried like a hero. I’m glad at the rites of passage so far, culminating in the interment today. Yes, bury him like a true hero. An icon, an avatar, deserves no less. This generation will surely not see another like Ojukwu. He fought not only for his own people, but for a true federation founded on justice, fair play, equity and rectitude. Unfortunately, he did not see the Nigeria of his dreams. Will we? Adieu the Ikemba, the Eze Igbo Gburugburu. May your soul rest in peace. Ka nkpur’obi gi zue ike n’adukwa.

By Femi Adesina

Friday March 02, 2012

"THE QUESTION IS, CAN HE ( FEMI) STILL BOLDLY WRITE THE SAME ARTICLE NOW OR ADVICE HIS PRINCIPAL ON WHAT HE WROTE?

You see, most of these people know what the truth is but will rather look the other way when they start eating.

In the end, it will remain a merry go round of follow my words and not my foot steps.

We are just postponing dooms day. If we do not do the needful, doomsday will remain inevitable.@RiLtd Ridh.

Can you attach a source to this?
Re: Herdsmen Kill 2 Soldiers, Take Captive; Burn Operational Vehicle In Benue/Taraba by Assassin101: 10:35am On May 21, 2018
the clueless dullard told y'all that they were trained by Ghaddafi and y'all made a joke of it
Re: Herdsmen Kill 2 Soldiers, Take Captive; Burn Operational Vehicle In Benue/Taraba by Nobody: 10:46am On May 21, 2018
White007:
This article was written by Femi Adesina the current Spokesperson to President Buhari in 2012 after the demise of Ikemba Odumegwu Ojukwu.
Hmmmmm...... Plz read;

THE ABURI ACCORD THAT WOULD HAVE SAVED NIGERIA FROM ALL HER PROBLEMS...( but aborted by the Fulani Oligarchy)

By FEMI ADESINA( current spokesperson to President Buhari)
In December 2009, I was at Aburi, while holidaying in Ghana. We Nigerians call it A-b-u-r-i, but the Ghanaians pronounce it as E-b-r-i. For those who have read widely about the civil war that we fought between 1967 and 1970,

Aburi is a significant place. This was what I wrote about Aburi, after returning from that journey:

“Aburi. Beautiful, serene Aburi, set daintily atop a hill. It is home to a botanical garden that is 119 years old. But for us in Nigeria, Aburi goes beyond just nature and its preservation.

It is the town where General Yakubu Gowon and Odumegwu Ojukwu met, to try and avert the Nigerian Civil War that lasted between 1967 and 1970. They came out with Aburi Accord, which later broke down. And a shooting war started.

You could see the Presidential Lodge on a hill, where the Nigerian leaders had parleyed at the behest of Ghanaian leaders. It all ended in futility.”

As one of the key parties to the Aburi Accord, Dim Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu, returns to mother earth today, it is also apposite to return to Aburi, and look at the letter and the spirit of the accord once again, an agreement that was violated by the Federal side, and which made a bloody internecine war inevitable.
For most part of 1966, the northern part of Nigeria, particularly, had been turned to killing fields.

Non-natives, especially Igbos, were killed in thousands. Many fled, many others were displaced. There was complete anarchy in the land. The average Igbo looked up to Lt. Col Odumegwu Ojukwu, military governor of the Eastern Region, to provide leadership and direction. He did not fail. He picked the gauntlet and championed the cause of his people.

By January 1967, the drums of war were loud and clear, reverberating across the length and breadth of Nigeria. But there was a last ditch effort to prevent what was imminent. There was a peace meeting hosted at Aburi, in Ghana, by the then Ghanaian head of state, Gen J. A. Ankrah.

At the meeting were Gowon, Ojukwu, all the military governors of the regions, and some top civil servants, both from the Federal side and the Eastern region. The meeting held on January 4 and 5, 1967, and came out with what is popularly known today as the Aburi Accord.

The agenda of the meeting consisted of three crucial issues: (i) Reorganization of the Armed Forces (ii) Constitutional agreement (iii) Issues of displaced persons within Nigeria.

The two-day meeting reached consensus that were acceptable to both sides. Among others, it was resolved that legislative and executive authority of the Federal Military Government was to remain in the Supreme Military Council (SMC), to which any decision affecting the whole country shall be referred for determination provided it is possible for a meeting to be held, and the matter requiring determination must be referred to military governors for their comment and concurrence. What does this mean in simple language?

The SMC would run the affairs of the country, but not without consulting the regions as represented by the military governors. This was something akin to federalism, even under a military government.

Other terms of the agreement include that appointments to senior ranks in the police, diplomatic and consular services as well as appointment to superscale posts in the federal civil service and the equivalent posts in the statutory corporations must be approved by the SMC. What does this mean again in simple language? Equity, fairness, true federalism.

Other matters like the holding of an ad hoc constitutional conference, fate of soldiers involved in the January 15, 1966 coup, rehabilitation of displaced persons, etc, were also amicably resolved, and the conferees returned happily to Nigeria. Only for the Federal side to deliver a blow to the solar plexus: the Aburi Accord, Gowon said, was unworkable, and he reneged on all the agreements.

Using the Eastern Nigerian Broadcasting Service, Ojukwu played the tape recording of the proceedings at Aburi repeatedly, to educate the populace on who was playing Judas. Later, he made a broadcast in which he said: “we in the East are anxious to see that our differences are resolved by peaceful means and that Nigeria is preserved as a unit, but it is doubtful, and the world must judge whether Lt. Col Gowon’s attitudes and other exhibitions of his insincerity are something which can lead to a return of normalcy and confidence in the country.

“I must warn all Easterners once again to remain vigilant. The East will never be intimidated, nor will she acquiesce to any form of dictation. It is not our intention to play the aggressor. Nonetheless, it is not our intention to be slaughtered in our beds. We are ready to defend our homeland.”

In a piece I did last December, shortly after Ojukwu passed away, I said he was virtually pushed into war by the infidelity of the Federal side to the Aburi Accord. I still stand by that position. Ojukwu was called ‘warlord’ for many decades, but he was by no means a warmonger. He only did what he needed to do for his people–and for the country.

As his earthly remains are interred today, it is tragic that Nigeria is still submerged in the morass that Ojukwu already identified about 45 years ago. Today, bombs go off like firecrackers in the country. There is agitation for the review of the revenue allocation formula.

There are strident calls for the convocation of a sovereign national conference. Even some component parts are threatening to pull out of the federation if anything happened to their ‘son’ who is now in power. Didn’t Ojukwu warn of these landmines ahead? Were all these issues not already settled at Aburi?

Foremost journalist and media administrator, Akogun Tola Adeniyi, in a recent media interview, explained the Aburi Accord this way: “Let every region be semi-autonomous and develop at its own level.” Yes, that was the spirit and letter of Aburi, but which sadly became a road not taken.

And is that not why we are still suffering today, living in a rickety and decrepit country that can burst at the seams any moment? I tell you, Ojukwu was a prophet, and like most prophets, he had no honour in his own country. Pity. But whether we like it or not, there’s no way we won’t return to Aburi. Willy-nilly. I only hope it will be sooner than later, before Nigeria goes to grief. On Aburi I stand.

Federal Government was perfidious and duplicitous on Aburi. It is still the same way today. That is why as Nigerians, we are most times disillusioned, dismayed, dispirited, dejected and depressed. When will change come to this land? Our hearts are getting weary.

Last December, I wrote that Ojukwu should be buried like a hero. I’m glad at the rites of passage so far, culminating in the interment today. Yes, bury him like a true hero. An icon, an avatar, deserves no less. This generation will surely not see another like Ojukwu. He fought not only for his own people, but for a true federation founded on justice, fair play, equity and rectitude. Unfortunately, he did not see the Nigeria of his dreams. Will we? Adieu the Ikemba, the Eze Igbo Gburugburu. May your soul rest in peace. Ka nkpur’obi gi zue ike n’adukwa.

By Femi Adesina

Friday March 02, 2012

"THE QUESTION IS, CAN HE ( FEMI) STILL BOLDLY WRITE THE SAME ARTICLE NOW OR ADVICE HIS PRINCIPAL ON WHAT HE WROTE?

You see, most of these people know what the truth is but will rather look the other way when they start eating.

In the end, it will remain a merry go round of follow my words and not my foot steps.

We are just postponing dooms day. If we do not do the needful, doomsday will remain inevitable.@RiLtd Ridh.



Can this be a new thread pls. It is important and timely
Re: Herdsmen Kill 2 Soldiers, Take Captive; Burn Operational Vehicle In Benue/Taraba by Ken4Christ: 10:48am On May 21, 2018
I sense betrayals among the military. An insider may have disclosed their movement. Or most likely, someone deliberately plot the death of soldiers not confirming to their internal plans.
Re: Herdsmen Kill 2 Soldiers, Take Captive; Burn Operational Vehicle In Benue/Taraba by chubinwa(m): 10:55am On May 21, 2018
Imagine herdsmen overpowering Nigerian soldiers. this should tell u that this people is IN for their mission with supports from higher authority in this country...
Meanwhile, OP is expecting more rampage as in regards to his "more to come" conclusion. lol
Re: Herdsmen Kill 2 Soldiers, Take Captive; Burn Operational Vehicle In Benue/Taraba by yazach: 11:09am On May 21, 2018
13Ebisco:
No fewer than five soldiers have been reportedly killed and two others kidnapped after suspected herdsmen clashed with some personnel in Logo LGA of Benue State on Sunday.

The attackers also burnt down Army patrol vehicles during the clash.

MC EBISCO gathered that the herdsmen had wanted to attack a village in Logo but where foiled by the Army men.

The confrontation resulted into fire exchange between the herdsmen and military personnel.

A resident of the area hinted our reporter that the herdsmen overpowered the soldiers and whisked away two others.


More to come…

http://www.mcebisco.com.ng/2018/05/breaking-herdsmen-kill-soldiers-kidnap.html

This lies are so interesting, op can we have another one

1 Like

Re: Herdsmen Kill 2 Soldiers, Take Captive; Burn Operational Vehicle In Benue/Taraba by Meritocracy: 11:17am On May 21, 2018
package7:
Go and get your PVC now, we the electorates shall decide their faith come 2019


Smart Youths South not Lazy Youths North.
Is PVC the solution, killing has been happening for long and is political, those you're thinking to vote for come 2019 might be the one behind it.
Re: Herdsmen Kill 2 Soldiers, Take Captive; Burn Operational Vehicle In Benue/Taraba by Godhead4(m): 11:40am On May 21, 2018
ikennaf1:
Just close your eyes and imagine Ipob doing a quarter of what these Fulani terrorists are doing.

Indeed a certain people are above the law.

BTW why is the Nigerian Army so weak against armed people, but so strong against unarmed citizens.





Sad truth

1 Like

Re: Herdsmen Kill 2 Soldiers, Take Captive; Burn Operational Vehicle In Benue/Taraba by positivethought: 11:41am On May 21, 2018
When last week there was a report of a police officer shooting a soldier in mufti in PH for only God knows reason,instead of the army authority to have professionally gotten in contact with the police authorities to produce the culprit,they storm the police station to arrest the DPO n others in a public show to ridicule their fellow security agency,also the army were reported to have caused lot of havoc in naka town of benue state sometimes ago over the killing of a supposed soldier, now known criminals has actually attacked killed n captured some army personnel,i'm waiting to see how the army will storm the Libyan immigrants camp,destroy everything in sight n arrest the ardo.
Re: Herdsmen Kill 2 Soldiers, Take Captive; Burn Operational Vehicle In Benue/Taraba by 2016v2017: 12:35pm On May 21, 2018
jerseyboy:
It will never end ....until Buhari is GONE
Re: Herdsmen Kill 2 Soldiers, Take Captive; Burn Operational Vehicle In Benue/Taraba by 2016v2017: 12:38pm On May 21, 2018
HiddenShadow:
To my Igbo people on Nairaland, pls take note.


Talking On Nairaland and insulting or praising Kanu/IPOB will not secure the East.

Get into your labs & workshops and start secretly developing the necessary things that can stop these Buhari backed terrorists once they step their feet on Igboland.

Start acquiring & developing the necessary knowledge, skills & things to secure the East.

The Ijaws are the only ethnic group ready enough to defend their homeland.

They are already in the East and waiting for the right time to strike from intelligence report available to the security agencies if you care to inquire from your love ones & friends in the security system.

It is time to be proactive and not reactive.

Tell Emma powerful & Uchemefor that words through their radio station will not secure our homeland.

gidgiddy, kettykings, Fulaniterrorists, firefire etc match your words on Nairaland with your actions in your labs & workshops.

These Buhari backed Jihadists mean business and can only be stopped by those well prepared.
Re: Herdsmen Kill 2 Soldiers, Take Captive; Burn Operational Vehicle In Benue/Taraba by 2016v2017: 12:40pm On May 21, 2018
White007:
This article was written by Femi Adesina the current Spokesperson to President Buhari in 2012 after the demise of Ikemba Odumegwu Ojukwu.
Hmmmmm...... Plz read;

THE ABURI ACCORD THAT WOULD HAVE SAVED NIGERIA FROM ALL HER PROBLEMS...( but aborted by the Fulani Oligarchy)

By FEMI ADESINA( current spokesperson to President Buhari)
In December 2009, I was at Aburi, while holidaying in Ghana. We Nigerians call it A-b-u-r-i, but the Ghanaians pronounce it as E-b-r-i. For those who have read widely about the civil war that we fought between 1967 and 1970,

Aburi is a significant place. This was what I wrote about Aburi, after returning from that journey:

“Aburi. Beautiful, serene Aburi, set daintily atop a hill. It is home to a botanical garden that is 119 years old. But for us in Nigeria, Aburi goes beyond just nature and its preservation.

It is the town where General Yakubu Gowon and Odumegwu Ojukwu met, to try and avert the Nigerian Civil War that lasted between 1967 and 1970. They came out with Aburi Accord, which later broke down. And a shooting war started.

You could see the Presidential Lodge on a hill, where the Nigerian leaders had parleyed at the behest of Ghanaian leaders. It all ended in futility.”

As one of the key parties to the Aburi Accord, Dim Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu, returns to mother earth today, it is also apposite to return to Aburi, and look at the letter and the spirit of the accord once again, an agreement that was violated by the Federal side, and which made a bloody internecine war inevitable.
For most part of 1966, the northern part of Nigeria, particularly, had been turned to killing fields.

Non-natives, especially Igbos, were killed in thousands. Many fled, many others were displaced. There was complete anarchy in the land. The average Igbo looked up to Lt. Col Odumegwu Ojukwu, military governor of the Eastern Region, to provide leadership and direction. He did not fail. He picked the gauntlet and championed the cause of his people.

By January 1967, the drums of war were loud and clear, reverberating across the length and breadth of Nigeria. But there was a last ditch effort to prevent what was imminent. There was a peace meeting hosted at Aburi, in Ghana, by the then Ghanaian head of state, Gen J. A. Ankrah.

At the meeting were Gowon, Ojukwu, all the military governors of the regions, and some top civil servants, both from the Federal side and the Eastern region. The meeting held on January 4 and 5, 1967, and came out with what is popularly known today as the Aburi Accord.

The agenda of the meeting consisted of three crucial issues: (i) Reorganization of the Armed Forces (ii) Constitutional agreement (iii) Issues of displaced persons within Nigeria.

The two-day meeting reached consensus that were acceptable to both sides. Among others, it was resolved that legislative and executive authority of the Federal Military Government was to remain in the Supreme Military Council (SMC), to which any decision affecting the whole country shall be referred for determination provided it is possible for a meeting to be held, and the matter requiring determination must be referred to military governors for their comment and concurrence. What does this mean in simple language?

The SMC would run the affairs of the country, but not without consulting the regions as represented by the military governors. This was something akin to federalism, even under a military government.

Other terms of the agreement include that appointments to senior ranks in the police, diplomatic and consular services as well as appointment to superscale posts in the federal civil service and the equivalent posts in the statutory corporations must be approved by the SMC. What does this mean again in simple language? Equity, fairness, true federalism.

Other matters like the holding of an ad hoc constitutional conference, fate of soldiers involved in the January 15, 1966 coup, rehabilitation of displaced persons, etc, were also amicably resolved, and the conferees returned happily to Nigeria. Only for the Federal side to deliver a blow to the solar plexus: the Aburi Accord, Gowon said, was unworkable, and he reneged on all the agreements.

Using the Eastern Nigerian Broadcasting Service, Ojukwu played the tape recording of the proceedings at Aburi repeatedly, to educate the populace on who was playing Judas. Later, he made a broadcast in which he said: “we in the East are anxious to see that our differences are resolved by peaceful means and that Nigeria is preserved as a unit, but it is doubtful, and the world must judge whether Lt. Col Gowon’s attitudes and other exhibitions of his insincerity are something which can lead to a return of normalcy and confidence in the country.

“I must warn all Easterners once again to remain vigilant. The East will never be intimidated, nor will she acquiesce to any form of dictation. It is not our intention to play the aggressor. Nonetheless, it is not our intention to be slaughtered in our beds. We are ready to defend our homeland.”

In a piece I did last December, shortly after Ojukwu passed away, I said he was virtually pushed into war by the infidelity of the Federal side to the Aburi Accord. I still stand by that position. Ojukwu was called ‘warlord’ for many decades, but he was by no means a warmonger. He only did what he needed to do for his people–and for the country.

As his earthly remains are interred today, it is tragic that Nigeria is still submerged in the morass that Ojukwu already identified about 45 years ago. Today, bombs go off like firecrackers in the country. There is agitation for the review of the revenue allocation formula.

There are strident calls for the convocation of a sovereign national conference. Even some component parts are threatening to pull out of the federation if anything happened to their ‘son’ who is now in power. Didn’t Ojukwu warn of these landmines ahead? Were all these issues not already settled at Aburi?

Foremost journalist and media administrator, Akogun Tola Adeniyi, in a recent media interview, explained the Aburi Accord this way: “Let every region be semi-autonomous and develop at its own level.” Yes, that was the spirit and letter of Aburi, but which sadly became a road not taken.

And is that not why we are still suffering today, living in a rickety and decrepit country that can burst at the seams any moment? I tell you, Ojukwu was a prophet, and like most prophets, he had no honour in his own country. Pity. But whether we like it or not, there’s no way we won’t return to Aburi. Willy-nilly. I only hope it will be sooner than later, before Nigeria goes to grief. On Aburi I stand.

Federal Government was perfidious and duplicitous on Aburi. It is still the same way today. That is why as Nigerians, we are most times disillusioned, dismayed, dispirited, dejected and depressed. When will change come to this land? Our hearts are getting weary.

Last December, I wrote that Ojukwu should be buried like a hero. I’m glad at the rites of passage so far, culminating in the interment today. Yes, bury him like a true hero. An icon, an avatar, deserves no less. This generation will surely not see another like Ojukwu. He fought not only for his own people, but for a true federation founded on justice, fair play, equity and rectitude. Unfortunately, he did not see the Nigeria of his dreams. Will we? Adieu the Ikemba, the Eze Igbo Gburugburu. May your soul rest in peace. Ka nkpur’obi gi zue ike n’adukwa.

By Femi Adesina

Friday March 02, 2012

"THE QUESTION IS, CAN HE ( FEMI) STILL BOLDLY WRITE THE SAME ARTICLE NOW OR ADVICE HIS PRINCIPAL ON WHAT HE WROTE?

You see, most of these people know what the truth is but will rather look the other way when they start eating.

In the end, it will remain a merry go round of follow my words and not my foot steps.

We are just postponing dooms day. If we do not do the needful, doomsday will remain inevitable.@RiLtd Ridh.
Re: Herdsmen Kill 2 Soldiers, Take Captive; Burn Operational Vehicle In Benue/Taraba by Charly68: 2:49pm On May 21, 2018
Now they have activated fire upon themselves that I know

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