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I Wanted To Join Army To Avenge My Father’s Killing – Kunle, Son Of Brig Ademule - Politics - Nairaland

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I Wanted To Join Army To Avenge My Father’s Killing – Kunle, Son Of Brig Ademule by Ebubu: 3:07pm On Jan 28, 2022
Published 28 January 2022

Mr Kunle Ademulegun is one of the children of the late Brigadier Samuel Ademulegun, who was killed in the first military coup in 1966. In this interview with PETER DADA, the 65-year-old speaks about the life after the death of his father

When Brigadier Ademulegun died, where were you?

He died in the first military coup of January 15, 1966 in Kaduna. I was in the barracks in Lagos where his children resided.

What do you do for a living?

I was once a freelance journalist and currently, I am into livestock farming.

What was your last encounter with your late father?

When he died, I was just 10 years old then and if I should recall what happened then, there was a military coup, because he was very friendly with the then Prime Minister, Alhaji Tafawa Balewa and Sir Ahmadu Bello, so the junior officers thought he was fraternising with the civilian rulers. There was a misunderstanding in the system on the basis that my father was number three in the army then. The late Aguyi Ironsi, Brigadier Bassey and Brigadier Zakariyah Maimalari were also senior officers then. My father was to succeed the expatriate GOC ( General Officer in Command) in Kaduna 1 Division. So after Aguyi Ironsi came back from Congo, he was promoted to Major General, my father was made to head the Division. As I learnt, when the coup was hatched, my father was penciled in among those to be executed and unfortunately for him, he was in the bedroom with one of his wives. The woman worked in one of the military hospitals. She had a pistol, I think she shot one of the soldiers. So that was how they killed her and my father at the same time.

So how would you describe him?

Bridagier Ademulegun was a detribalised military officer, which Chief Olusegun Obasanjo himself confirmed to me. He was a disciplined soldier when he was alive. He did not care whether you were a Yoruba, Hausa or Igbo or any tribe. If you merited anything, he would do it for you but the unfortunate thing for him was how they killed him.

You said you were 10 years old when your father died, how did you know all the stories about how he was killed?

Before he died, there was this Colonel Olaseinde (retd), he was a Yoruba man. He was the one who sat me down and briefed me on everything that happened. In fact, I wanted to join the Army too, but my mother insisted that I should not go because she knew that I was going there to avenge the death of my father and that time truly that was what I wanted to go into the army for. But my people convinced me to leave everything for God.

How has it been with the family after his death?

After his death, we children were being sponsored by the Nigerian Army all through our education and we are united, we meet and we discuss.

As the nation holds Army Remembrance Day on January 15 of every year to remember the fallen heroes, do you hold such a programme in the family to remember your father?

No, but we speak to one another on the phone and if any one of us is celebrating we will all move there as one Ademulegun’s family. The only thing about us in our family is that we were not trained in Yoruba ways of life. We don’t care about our members but we are all Ademuleguns.

You said your father was killed with one of his wives. How many wives did your father have while alive?

I don’t want to disclose that. I only know he was a polygamist. My mum is the third wife.

Aside your education which was sponsored by the army, is there anything spectacular that the government has done to honour Late Brig. Ademulegun?


That is what baffles me most that as a military officer, who died in active service, there should be entitlements for my late father which should have been given to the family. But then my people were afraid of the army, nobody wanted to face them to ask questions. I took it upon myself that we should know where my father was buried, so I was taken to Kaduna military cemetery where they buried senior military officers and I saw my father’s tomb, but I was not happy, that after serving the country for that long, what happened to his entitlements? So I went to Abuja to enquire, I went to the then GOC in Abuja, but the man directed me to the army pay and record department. So later I just discovered that there was no seriousness put into the matter. So I decided to put the demands in writing to be more explicit. But I was more worried that my father hailed from Ondo town and he didn’t have a single house of his own.The money they got from his account, they decided to put up a house there so that his children; that whenever they come back home, there will be something to show them. So I came back home to pursue it.


Who initiated the building of the house then?

Read Also

It was the Ondo State Government. I think the whole thing started around 1981. They called the family then, and they told us that they discovered some money in our father’s account and that it would not speak well if he did not have a single house in his home town, Ondo, and that they were going to remove certain amount to put up a 4-bedroom flat in Ondo town which they started since 1981 and up till now, nothing has been done to complete it and the contractor handling the project happened to be an Ondo man and after series of disappointments for the completion of the house and when I came back home, I got to the place, it was bushy. We can’t even say that the place is for Brigadier Ademulegun and I now called the other children to inform them about what is happening to the place and because most of us have got our own personal houses, nobody cares and I said I will not wait until the house collapsed.

Has the family made efforts to call the attention of the state government to the matter?

Yes! When I came back to Ondo, I went to the government and it seems they did not want to listen.

Since 1981, why haven’t you made move on the property until present time ?

I did. I went to the then Ministry of Justice in the old Ondo State around 1986 and I met one Mr Jayeola and this man told me that they would do what they could on it. I think he was the Attorney General of the state then. Thereafter, none of us came back to Ondo because as I said earlier, I stayed in Lagos. Later the man, Jayeola called me and said they could afford to pay the part of the money to build the house while we children would complete it. I was so furious about his statement, and this time around I have made up my mind that something must be done on the abandoned project.

So, what other steps have you now taken on the matter?

We have written several letters to the governor through one human rights group on the issue and they told me that Governor Akeredolu promised to look into it and that was in July 2021 but unfortunately, till now, nothing has happened from the governor.

What other means have you employed to see the governor?

I have not because I don’t know any other channel I could go through. I wanted to meet the SSG ( Secretary to the State Government) and they told me in her office that they were working on it since then. I don’t believe they are doing anything at all.

Before this present government came in, an Ondo man was the state governor. Do you take any step during his administration?

I did not because I was not in Ondo but lately, I had a telephone discussion through one of my friends with the former Governor Mimiko. He was even very annoyed, saying that he was in the government for eight years and “you people did not come.” He said there was nothing he could do that he could not approach the present governor about the issue.

As one of the fallen heroes, did the Federal Government specifically do anything in his honour?

Aside from naming a street after him in Abuja, Area 10, nothing again. I later went to Abuja around 2006 and I met the Chief of Army Staff then, he said many things but no action was taken on the issue.

All rights reserved. This material, and other digital content on this website, may not be reproduced, published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed in whole or in part without prior express written permission from PUNCH.



Source: https://semmatloaded.com/2022/01/i-wanted-to-join-army-to-avenge-my-fathers-killing-kunle-son-of-brig-ademulegun-assassinated-in-first-military-coup-in-1966/amp/

Re: I Wanted To Join Army To Avenge My Father’s Killing – Kunle, Son Of Brig Ademule by jaeyking(m): 3:13pm On Jan 28, 2022
Las las you fit join the army and bokoharam or bandit fit kill u before u do the revenge

1 Like

Re: I Wanted To Join Army To Avenge My Father’s Killing – Kunle, Son Of Brig Ademule by PrinceOfLagos: 3:13pm On Jan 28, 2022
Vengeance is of the lord
Re: I Wanted To Join Army To Avenge My Father’s Killing – Kunle, Son Of Brig Ademule by BKayy: 3:17pm On Jan 28, 2022
I don't know what this man is talking about but the first coup was a peaceful bloody coup. Those that died have a reason but some that also deserve similar faith were unfortunate to escape.
Re: I Wanted To Join Army To Avenge My Father’s Killing – Kunle, Son Of Brig Ademule by Anazp: 3:26pm On Jan 28, 2022
The Igbo coup. Very dubious set of people

7 Likes

Re: I Wanted To Join Army To Avenge My Father’s Killing – Kunle, Son Of Brig Ademule by Edoreborn: 4:17pm On Jan 28, 2022
So ds man na polygamist
Re: I Wanted To Join Army To Avenge My Father’s Killing – Kunle, Son Of Brig Ademule by Truammashton: 4:26pm On Jan 28, 2022
Ok na
Re: I Wanted To Join Army To Avenge My Father’s Killing – Kunle, Son Of Brig Ademule by Muna4real(f): 4:39pm On Jan 28, 2022
My question is,who did he want to revenge on? The people who killed his father are dead and have turned to crude oil by now.

1 Like

Re: I Wanted To Join Army To Avenge My Father’s Killing – Kunle, Son Of Brig Ademule by Tobest150(m): 5:03pm On Jan 28, 2022
Keep on waiting for Nigeria government to complete your father's house. You'll wait till eternity. undecided



Start a POS business today. Get your own POS terminal delivered to you in 24hours. You pay on delivery. For more info, call or SMS O7O 1.1.1..5.4.4..6.8

2 Likes

Re: I Wanted To Join Army To Avenge My Father’s Killing – Kunle, Son Of Brig Ademule by TheSameGuy(m): 5:08pm On Jan 28, 2022
His children should erect the 4 bedroom flat for the memory of their father if Government refused to.

Should that hard them
Re: I Wanted To Join Army To Avenge My Father’s Killing – Kunle, Son Of Brig Ademule by Beejayy20(m): 5:47pm On Jan 28, 2022
to hell with all ibo for what their fathers did to us,useless people!

3 Likes

Re: I Wanted To Join Army To Avenge My Father’s Killing – Kunle, Son Of Brig Ademule by Lanretoye(m): 6:08pm On Jan 28, 2022
There was a penalty for attempting a coup during the military, thats the consequence.
Re: I Wanted To Join Army To Avenge My Father’s Killing – Kunle, Son Of Brig Ademule by nnamdi640: 6:35pm On Jan 28, 2022
Beejayy20:
to hell with all ibo for what their fathers did to us,useless people!
Madness is when you accused people that knows nothing about your plight wrongly. Beside, the master mind of the coup was never an Igbo man from south-east, he (Okechukwu Kaduna) is from south-south, Delta state to be precise. We bear similar names but they don't see themselves as Ibos.

2 Likes

Re: I Wanted To Join Army To Avenge My Father’s Killing – Kunle, Son Of Brig Ademule by johnmartus(m): 6:41pm On Jan 28, 2022
They supposed to take ondo state government to court because his father left sum money which ondo state discovered and promised the family they will
use the money to build a house where his children will be calling their father house.
TheSameGuy:
His children should erect the 4 bedroom flat for the memory of their father if Government refused to.

Should that hard them

But like you said they should just complete it .

1 Like

Re: I Wanted To Join Army To Avenge My Father’s Killing – Kunle, Son Of Brig Ademule by tutudesz: 6:45pm On Jan 28, 2022
Lanretoye:
There was a penalty for attempting a coup during the military, thats the consequence.
His father was killed in the coup and not among the coup plotters
Re: I Wanted To Join Army To Avenge My Father’s Killing – Kunle, Son Of Brig Ademule by tutudesz: 6:46pm On Jan 28, 2022
BKayy:
I don't know what this man is talking about but the first coup was a peaceful bloody coup. Those that died have a reason but some that also deserve similar faith were unfortunate to escape.
peaceful bloody coup undecided

5 Likes

Re: I Wanted To Join Army To Avenge My Father’s Killing – Kunle, Son Of Brig Ademule by BKayy: 6:48pm On Jan 28, 2022
tutudesz:

peaceful bloody coup undecided
Yes, do you have any problem with it?
Re: I Wanted To Join Army To Avenge My Father’s Killing – Kunle, Son Of Brig Ademule by tutudesz: 6:53pm On Jan 28, 2022
BKayy:

Yes, do have any problem with it?
How can something be peaceful and bloody the same time

5 Likes

Re: I Wanted To Join Army To Avenge My Father’s Killing – Kunle, Son Of Brig Ademule by Ojiofor: 7:01pm On Jan 28, 2022
You wanna avenge on already dead Nzeogwu?
May of those that took part in that senseless anti Igbo coup paid with their lives too.
Re: I Wanted To Join Army To Avenge My Father’s Killing – Kunle, Son Of Brig Ademule by Christistruth00: 7:59pm On Jan 28, 2022
BKayy:
I don't know what this man is talking about but the first coup was a peaceful bloody coup. Those that died have a reason but some that also deserve similar faith were unfortunate to escape.


Bkayy

There is no such thing as a Peaceful bloody Coup

Give up the Mkpuru Miri and listening to Kanu

2 Likes

Re: I Wanted To Join Army To Avenge My Father’s Killing – Kunle, Son Of Brig Ademule by ClassicMan202(m): 11:02pm On Jan 28, 2022
Df.... Story long o
Re: I Wanted To Join Army To Avenge My Father’s Killing – Kunle, Son Of Brig Ademule by ablejesus26(m): 12:58am On Jan 29, 2022
Anazp:
The Igbo coup. Very dubious set of people

Igbo coup?
The said person had very little connection with Igbo,he had more connection with the north.

It was a military business,shit happens in the military,it shoulda stayed in the military.
Would have saved everyone a lot of bad blood if it had.
But some people brought it into the midst of civilians,and thought it was going to be chested without a fight as it was always done in the early 1940s.

Everyone should just focus on healing now.
My people are healing fast already,even with the obvious marginalization we are doing fine and great.
Everyone else should do so.
Perhaps all parties should sit on a round table and settle the haunting ghost and ask important questions, like do we really perceive each other as countrymen?
Re: I Wanted To Join Army To Avenge My Father’s Killing – Kunle, Son Of Brig Ademule by CaptainAyub: 4:39am On Jan 29, 2022
1735fiv:
[s][/s]
Patriot

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: I Wanted To Join Army To Avenge My Father’s Killing – Kunle, Son Of Brig Ademule by chrisxxx(m): 6:33am On Jan 29, 2022
Huge Money found then in his account? Married more than three women? Ondo dragging to build that house means they are not happy with what they saw.
Nzeogwu mistake was taking of lives. He would have locked some if these fellows up. It became sentimental with the wanton flow of blood. Otherwise the reason of the coup would have been justified even with the revelation of this interview.
Re: I Wanted To Join Army To Avenge My Father’s Killing – Kunle, Son Of Brig Ademule by OgwuEgo: 8:35am On Jan 29, 2022
So none of you is rich enough to build a house for your father, lazy people.

1 Like

Re: I Wanted To Join Army To Avenge My Father’s Killing – Kunle, Son Of Brig Ademule by CaptainAyub: 10:18am On Jan 29, 2022
OgwuEgo:
So none of you is rich enough to build a house for your father, lazy people.
Ndu ogvu.
Lazy baboons.
Always looking for handouts with their terrible sense of entitlement.
Him problem be say,just like buhari, most of them have lived all their lives dependent on govt money,no real job while he and his family are missing out of action

1 Like

Re: I Wanted To Join Army To Avenge My Father’s Killing – Kunle, Son Of Brig Ademule by Idiko1: 10:51am On Jan 29, 2022
Ebubu:
Published 28 January 2022

Mr Kunle Ademulegun is one of the children of the late Brigadier Samuel Ademulegun, who was killed in the first military coup in 1966. In this interview with PETER DADA, the 65-year-old speaks about the life after the death of his father

When Brigadier Ademulegun died, where were you?

He died in the first military coup of January 15, 1966 in Kaduna. I was in the barracks in Lagos where his children resided.

What do you do for a living?

I was once a freelance journalist and currently, I am into livestock farming.

What was your last encounter with your late father?

When he died, I was just 10 years old then and if I should recall what happened then, there was a military coup, because he was very friendly with the then Prime Minister, Alhaji Tafawa Balewa and Sir Ahmadu Bello, so the junior officers thought he was fraternising with the civilian rulers. There was a misunderstanding in the system on the basis that my father was number three in the army then. The late Aguyi Ironsi, Brigadier Bassey [/b]and Brigadier Zakariyah Maimalari were also senior officers then.[b] My father was to succeed the expatriate GOC ( General Officer in Command) in Kaduna 1 Division. So after Aguyi Ironsi came back from Congo, he was promoted to Major General, my father was made to head the Division. As I learnt, when the coup was hatched, my father was penciled in among those to be executed and unfortunately for him, he was in the bedroom with one of his wives. The woman worked in one of the military hospitals. She had a pistol, I think she shot one of the soldiers. So that was how they killed her and my father at the same time.

So how would you describe him?

Bridagier Ademulegun was a detribalised military officer, which Chief Olusegun Obasanjo himself confirmed to me. He was a disciplined soldier when he was alive. He did not care whether you were a Yoruba, Hausa or Igbo or any tribe. If you merited anything, he would do it for you but the unfortunate thing for him was how they killed him.

You said you were 10 years old when your father died, how did you know all the stories about how he was killed?

Before he died, there was this Colonel Olaseinde (retd), he was a Yoruba man. He was the one who sat me down and briefed me on everything that happened. In fact, I wanted to join the Army too, but my mother insisted that I should not go because she knew that I was going there to avenge the death of my father and that time truly that was what I wanted to go into the army for. But my people convinced me to leave everything for God.

How has it been with the family after his death?

After his death, we children were being sponsored by the Nigerian Army all through our education and we are united, we meet and we discuss.

As the nation holds Army Remembrance Day on January 15 of every year to remember the fallen heroes, do you hold such a programme in the family to remember your father?

No, but we speak to one another on the phone and if any one of us is celebrating we will all move there as one Ademulegun’s family. The only thing about us in our family is that we were not trained in Yoruba ways of life. We don’t care about our members but we are all Ademuleguns.

You said your father was killed with one of his wives. How many wives did your father have while alive?

I don’t want to disclose that. I only know he was a polygamist. My mum is the third wife.

Aside your education which was sponsored by the army, is there anything spectacular that the government has done to honour Late Brig. Ademulegun?


That is what baffles me most that as a military officer, who died in active service, there should be entitlements for my late father which should have been given to the family. But then my people were afraid of the army, nobody wanted to face them to ask questions. I took it upon myself that we should know where my father was buried, so I was taken to Kaduna military cemetery where they buried senior military officers and I saw my father’s tomb, but I was not happy, that after serving the country for that long, what happened to his entitlements? So I went to Abuja to enquire, I went to the then GOC in Abuja, but the man directed me to the army pay and record department. So later I just discovered that there was no seriousness put into the matter. So I decided to put the demands in writing to be more explicit. But I was more worried that my father hailed from Ondo town and he didn’t have a single house of his own.The money they got from his account, they decided to put up a house there so that his children; that whenever they come back home, there will be something to show them. So I came back home to pursue it.


Who initiated the building of the house then?

Read Also

It was the Ondo State Government. I think the whole thing started around 1981. They called the family then, and they told us that they discovered some money in our father’s account and that it would not speak well if he did not have a single house in his home town, Ondo, and that they were going to remove certain amount to put up a 4-bedroom flat in Ondo town which they started since 1981 and up till now, nothing has been done to complete it and the contractor handling the project happened to be an Ondo man and after series of disappointments for the completion of the house and when I came back home, I got to the place, it was bushy. We can’t even say that the place is for Brigadier Ademulegun and I now called the other children to inform them about what is happening to the place and because most of us have got our own personal houses, nobody cares and I said I will not wait until the house collapsed.

Has the family made efforts to call the attention of the state government to the matter?

Yes! When I came back to Ondo, I went to the government and it seems they did not want to listen.

Since 1981, why haven’t you made move on the property until present time ?

I did. I went to the then Ministry of Justice in the old Ondo State around 1986 and I met one Mr Jayeola and this man told me that they would do what they could on it. I think he was the Attorney General of the state then. Thereafter, none of us came back to Ondo because as I said earlier, I stayed in Lagos. Later the man, Jayeola called me and said they could afford to pay the part of the money to build the house while we children would complete it. I was so furious about his statement, and this time around I have made up my mind that something must be done on the abandoned project.

So, what other steps have you now taken on the matter?

We have written several letters to the governor through one human rights group on the issue and they told me that Governor Akeredolu promised to look into it and that was in July 2021 but unfortunately, till now, nothing has happened from the governor.

What other means have you employed to see the governor?

I have not because I don’t know any other channel I could go through. I wanted to meet the SSG ( Secretary to the State Government) and they told me in her office that they were working on it since then. I don’t believe they are doing anything at all.

Before this present government came in, an Ondo man was the state governor. Do you take any step during his administration?

I did not because I was not in Ondo but lately, I had a telephone discussion through one of my friends with the former Governor Mimiko. He was even very annoyed, saying that he was in the government for eight years and “you people did not come.” He said there was nothing he could do that he could not approach the present governor about the issue.

As one of the fallen heroes, did the Federal Government specifically do anything in his honour?

Aside from naming a street after him in Abuja, Area 10, nothing again. I later went to Abuja around 2006 and I met the Chief of Army Staff then, he said many things but no action was taken on the issue.

All rights reserved. This material, and other digital content on this website, may not be reproduced, published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed in whole or in part without prior express written permission from PUNCH.



Source: https://semmatloaded.com/2022/01/i-wanted-to-join-army-to-avenge-my-fathers-killing-kunle-son-of-brig-ademulegun-assassinated-in-first-military-coup-in-1966/amp/






The above junk is lettered with falsehoods which are usually conjured by Yoruba. There was no Brigadier Bassey in 1966 and certainly there were no military formation known as Division and Colonel Olaseinde. It is very laughable to tout detribalized military officer when he appointed a Yoruba officer as 2IC, Brigade Major was Yoruba, his ADC was a Yoruba, his orderly was a Yoruba, and his driver was a Yoruba. Ademulogun was not mere friends with Ahmadu Bello and Tafawa Balewa, he really fraternized with them which dripped into military decision-making. The case in point involved Major C. Anuforo who commanded the 1st Recce in Kaduna in 1964 during the political uprise in northern region known as TIV riot.

1 Like

Re: I Wanted To Join Army To Avenge My Father’s Killing – Kunle, Son Of Brig Ademule by Racoon(m): 11:39am On Jan 29, 2022
Though the coup was very unfortunate, but the pervading politico-military events preceding it were pointers that there were a lots of unaddressed grievances.

The ethno-religious supremacist agenda cum bastardization of the then military by the Balewa-led NPC govt, introduction of quota system into the military and civil service, suppression of vociferous cry of the Western/Middle Belt regions against marginaliz-ation by the northern controlled-army among many were among the catalysts.
Re: I Wanted To Join Army To Avenge My Father’s Killing – Kunle, Son Of Brig Ademule by Racoon(m): 11:40am On Jan 29, 2022
Idiko1:
The above junk is lettered with falsehoods which are usually conjured by Yoruba. There was no Brigadier Bassey in 1966 and certainly there were no military formation known as Division and Colonel Olaseinde.

It is very laughable to tout detribalized military officer when he appointed a Yoruba officer as 2IC, Brigade Major was Yoruba, his ADC was a Yoruba, his orderly was a Yoruba, and his driver was a Yoruba.

Ademulogun was not mere friends with Ahmadu Bello and Tafawa Balewa, he really fraternized with them which dripped into military decision-making. The case in point involved Major C. Anuforo who commanded the 1st Recce in Kaduna in 1964 during the political uprise in northern region known as TIV riot.
Thank you for schooling that ethnic jingonist. Always trying to distort histroy. I read:
-"OIL, POLITICS AND VIOLENCE: Nigerian Military Coup Culture(1966-1976) by Max Siollun.
-"NIGERIAN FIVE MAJORS" By Col.Ben Gbulie(Rtd)
Re: I Wanted To Join Army To Avenge My Father’s Killing – Kunle, Son Of Brig Ademule by Idiko1: 12:04pm On Jan 29, 2022
Racoon:

Thank you for schooling that ethnic jingonist. Always trying to distort histroy. I read:
-"OIL, POLITICS AND VIOLENCE: Nigerian Military Coup Culture(1966-1976) by Max Siollun.
-"NIGERIAN FIVE MAJORS" By Col.Ben Gbulie(Rtd)

Bros it delights me to bring truth to issues which involves dilapidated shithole called Nigeria. Ben Gbulie and Max Siollun were two authors who gave close to perfect accounts of what happened in pre-war Nigeria. Even when I had issue with certain facts written by Max Siollun, we have come to agreeable deduction. You had to be mindful Yoruba peeps are colorful storytellers. They can really paint a story.
Re: I Wanted To Join Army To Avenge My Father’s Killing – Kunle, Son Of Brig Ademule by OgwuEgo: 12:53pm On Jan 29, 2022
Very shameful keep begging 1 governor to the other for handouts after enjoying scholarship, so pitiful, he's even a proud entitled beggar.
CaptainAyub:

Ndu ogvu.
Lazy baboons.
Always looking for handouts with their terrible sense of entitlement.
Him problem be say,just like buhari, most of them have lived all their lives dependent on govt money,no real job while he and his family are missing out of action

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