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PoliticsRe: Governor Sanwo-Olu Lays Wreath At Murtala's Cenotaph (Photos) by naptu2(op): 12:21pm On Feb 08
johnie:
Watching this video, particularly the scene of the then Lagos State military governor, Adekunle Lawal in front of the Shitta Bey mosque on Martins Steet where chants of "Gowon Ole!, Dimka Ole!" can be heard in the background I remember some of the very nasty songs sung about the coup plotters. Some of the songs made references to the coupists' family members.

That impressed greatly upon me such that anytime a failed coup is uncovered, my greatest sympathy go to the families of the coupists.

I was glad that General Christopher Musa, made reference to the military supporting the family members of the alleged coupists in a recent interview he granted on Channels TV.
That's why I said that people that long for military rule do not know what they are wishing for. Coups are horrible things. Many innocent people are tortured and executed because they are roped into coups. Talking to someone, transfering money to someone, doing everyday things can get you in trouble if the person is accused of planning a coup.

Many innocent people are also killed during active coups.

It's also a terrible thing for soldiers because they don't know who is a friend or a foe.
PoliticsRe: Governor Sanwo-Olu Lays Wreath At Murtala's Cenotaph (Photos) by naptu2(op): 12:17pm On Feb 08
johnie:
Thanks for sharing Naptu2.

That traffic warden should have been traced and interviewed by the press by now.

I remember the confusion in my primary school that day.

We had to close and leave for home early.

The memory of the execution of the coup plotters is one that lingered eerily in my very young mind for years.

Just like those from the public execution of armed robbers.

The armed robbery of Boulus Enterprises, arrest, trial and execution of the criminals was one that particularly stuck in my mind. Till today, I recall the names of some of the executed robbery and the pictures from the execution, all I read from Daily Times.

Since then. every time a failed coup was uncovered, these gory scenes played in my mind.

Thank God that public executions had been stopped by the time we had the Orkar and subsequent coups.

To the best of my memory, the failed coup reported last year is the first under a civilian regime.
Man! I don't know how to describe this, but those executions both fascinated and spooked me.

They used to be held at Bar Beach, then they were moved to Kirikiri. It was initially still public after it was moved to Kirikiri, but over time they made it private (in the 1980s).

I was fascinated by the way the troops formed up opposite the convicts.

I always wondered what would happen if the marksmen missed. Then I was shocked when I found out.

It also spooked me because the executions were usually shown on the news, which meant that I watched them late at night.
PoliticsRe: Governor Sanwo-Olu Lays Wreath At Murtala's Cenotaph (Photos) by naptu2(op): 12:14pm On Feb 08
Rybnyk:
Unfortunately he will always be involved as he was the CO of the 2nd infantry division that carried out the massacre. If he didn't approve, Taiwo Ibrahim wouldn't go scot free. If there was a court martial and the 2nd infantry division was going to be reprimanded, murtala,the CO wouldn't be allowed to go scot free,he would have been punished. Calling it a lie is wild. It's a record in Nigerian history ...
higgs:
Soldiers under him murdered innocent children, women and elderly people in Asaba. It is against the rules of war and no honourable military officer engages in such reprehensible conduct.If he was a professional minded and humane commanding officer,he would have denounced and punished the culprits. Let's choose our heroes wisely
By now you guys should know that this is just a waste of time. Your arguments will always fall flat because it is built on nothing.

This argument comes from an earlier story that Murtala was present at Asaba and that he did all kinds of things. The argument was debunked and proven to be false because he was not even in Asaba in the first place.

It's simply because of the false story that people keep mentioning Murtala's name. Now let's look at facts.

One of you said that Murtala approved it because he did not reprimand his subordinates.

HOW DO YOU KNOW THATHE DID NOT REPRIMAND HIS SUBORDINATES??

HOW DO YOU KNOW THAT HE APPROVED IT??

The answer is that you don't know.

You say that Murtala was their commander.

OK, why is it only Murtala's name that is mentioned??

Joseph Akahan was the chief of army staff, but you don't mention him. Joseph Wey was the second in command, but he is not mentioned. Even people that were actually in Asaba are not mentioned, yet you continuously mention Murtala.

It's a waste of time, you cannot force him to be involved in something that he was not involved in, no matter how many times you repeat the propaganda. It's just not going to work.

Furthermore, these words that you guys come up with will also not work.

There was nowhere that I wrote about hero, achievement or celebration.

Posting words just so you can demolish them is another waste of time. I never used those words.
PoliticsRe: Governor Sanwo-Olu Lays Wreath At Murtala's Cenotaph (Photos) by naptu2(op): 11:23am On Feb 08
kernniejay:
But I think South Africa got independence in 1990, meaning that they were under direct rule of the British government. So how come General Murtala was supporting Angola and Mozambique (which were together under Portuguese Colonial government) against South Africa which was, as at then, still under the British?
South Africa did not get its independence in 1990.

South Africa gained self government in 1910 and it became independent in 1934.

However, the minority white population ruled the country and discriminated against the blacks until 1994. One-man-one-vote democracy came in 1994.

Angola and Mozambique gained independence in 1975. However, both countries were in civil wars even before independence.

In both countries there were groups that were supported by most African countries (especially Nigeria), the Soviet Union and Cuba and they were opposed to groups that were supported by the racist government of South Africa, the United States and the United Kingdom.

South Africa invaded Angola and Nigeria provided money weapons to the Angolan Government.
PoliticsRe: Governor Sanwo-Olu Lays Wreath At Murtala's Cenotaph (Photos) by naptu2(op): 11:01am On Feb 08
Rybnyk:
What agenda?lol. If he didn't reprimand his second in command giving a command that led to such an atrocity,it means he was in support. That's the point. Name calling and "agenda conspiracy accusations" will not change this. It's lack of knowledge of history that makes people celebrate such a person (murtala)
The agenda is the idea of forcing something on someone, even though he wasn't respinsible for it, simply because you don't like him.

There were manu soldiers in the chain of command, but people with an agenda blame Murtala even though he was not there and was not involved.

Your statement that he approved is simply a wild guess by someone that was not there.

You cannot force him to be involved no matter the number of times you repeat the lie.
PoliticsRe: Governor Sanwo-Olu Lays Wreath At Murtala's Cenotaph (Photos) by naptu2(op): 10:52am On Feb 08
Worryingly:
His questions are valid. Apart from the ethnic baiting part.

What special thing did Murtala do? What positive policies were he known for? We celebrate just about anyone in this country. Imagine celebrating a coup leader.
His questions are not valid because they were simply meant to derail the thread into nonsense about Tinubu and ethnic groups.

1) Anyone that wants to know what Murtala did can easily find out.

2) Anyone that wants to know how long Murtala ruled for and what was possible can easily find out.

3) Sharing information obviously does not mean "celebrating", but the trolls use that word simply so that they can attack anything that they don't like.
PoliticsRe: Governor Sanwo-Olu Lays Wreath At Murtala's Cenotaph (Photos) by naptu2(op): 10:49am On Feb 08
JuanDeDios:
The number one problem with military rule is the counter coups. Real coups. Fake coups. Killing themselves in the barracks. Sometimes the best officers are rounded up and wasted - because coup.

Those who think coups should be happening in 2026 don't know what they're asking for.
Most of the people that are calling for coups were not alive or were little children during military rule and they have no idea how bad it is.
PoliticsRe: Governor Sanwo-Olu Lays Wreath At Murtala's Cenotaph (Photos) by naptu2(op): 10:48am On Feb 08
Rybnyk:
The 2nd infantry division that carried out the massacre was under murtala's command. Taiwo Ibrahim was his second in command. Did murtala reprimand him? No.
So that means that Murtala Muhammed was there or that he ordered the Asaba Massacre.

As I said, I don't take you trolls seriously. Everything is agenda to you, even when it is obvious that it makes no sense.
SportsRe: Davis Cup: Nigeria’s No.1 Daniel Adeleye Claims Hard-Fought Victory by naptu2(op): 10:43am On Feb 08
The Davis Cup is the World Cup of tennis.

naptu2:
You see, I'm also guilty! I don't know what division we are in.

It was a really big deal in the 1980s. We were in the Euro-Africa Zone Group 1 and we were often playing for promotion to the World Group. Stars from all over the world came to Lagos to play.

I remember when we were relegated to the Euro-Africa Zone Group 2 in the early 1990s. It was heart breaking. We've been relegated again since then and I no longer know what division we are in.

We are playing Uzbekistan right now and nobody is talking about it. It used to be a big deal once upon a time.

I might create a thread about it.
SportsRe: Davis Cup: Nigeria’s No.1 Daniel Adeleye Claims Hard-Fought Victory by naptu2(op): 10:41am On Feb 08




Photos 3 and 4) Lagos Lawn Tennis Club, venue of the event.

SportsDavis Cup: Nigeria’s No.1 Daniel Adeleye Claims Hard-Fought Victory by naptu2(op): 10:38am On Feb 08


Davis Cup: Nigeria’s no.1 Adeleye claims hard-fought victory

February 8, 2026

Nigeria’s number one player, Daniel Adeleye, produced a determined comeback to defeat Abdulaziz Usmonjonov of Uzbekistan in the Davis Cup World Group II Playoffs on Saturday at the Lagos Lawn Tennis Club, PUNCH Sports Extra reports.

Adeleye showed composure and grit to record a 4-6, 6-2, 6-4 victory after dropping the opening set, earning Nigeria a crucial point and reigniting the home side’s challenge in the tie.

Usmonjonov started brightly, using his consistency and court coverage to edge the first set.

However, Adeleye responded like a top-ranked player, raising his intensity in the second set as he began to dictate rallies and put pressure on his opponent’s serve, racing to a 6-2 win.

The deciding set was tightly contested, with both players refusing to give ground.

Backed by a lively Lagos crowd, Adeleye displayed resilience and maturity in the key moments, breaking late before calmly serving out the match to seal a memorable victory.

Speaking after the match, the Nigerian number one highlighted the importance of staying mentally strong.

“I knew I had to be patient and trust my game, even after losing the first set. Playing at home gives me extra motivation, and I’m happy I could deliver for the team,” Adeleye said.

The win proved pivotal for Nigeria as the tie remained finely balanced, with Adeleye’s performance underlining his leadership role and importance to the team’s hopes in the World Group II Playoffs.
https://punchng.com/davis-cup-nigerias-no-1-adeleye-claims-hard-fought-victory/

PoliticsRe: Governor Sanwo-Olu Lays Wreath At Murtala's Cenotaph (Photos) by naptu2(op): 10:15am On Feb 08
Nigerians don't know their history and are easily swayed by propaganda. Murtala was not even in Asaba when the alleged massacre happened.
PoliticsRe: Governor Sanwo-Olu Lays Wreath At Murtala's Cenotaph (Photos) by naptu2(op): 9:55am On Feb 08
Murtala Muhammad ruled for only 6 months, from Tuesday, July 29th, 1975 to Friday, February 13th, 1976.
PoliticsRe: Governor Sanwo-Olu Lays Wreath At Murtala's Cenotaph (Photos) by naptu2(op): 9:51am On Feb 08
Fela Anikulapo-Kuti was also involved in the riot.

Late one night in February 1976, I arrived in Lagos to take up residence as the West Africa correspondent for The New York Times. The next morning I awakened to military music on the radio. A coup was under way, and the head of state, Murtala Muhammed, had been gunned down in his Mercedes in a traffic jam. The coup failed. But because it was said to involve a former ruler who lived in London, it ignited a week of anti-Western demonstrations, and during one of these I noticed a bizarre caravan of young people led by a Ken Kesey-type Day-Glo bus.


''What's that?'' I asked.

''That is Fela,'' said an Agence France-Presse man, the only other Western reporter in town, ''and to the government, he's nothing but trouble.'' Over the ensuing weeks, I heard more and more about him, so I resolved to meet this 38-year-old legend.
https://www.nytimes.com/2003/07/20/arts/music-how-fela-landed-me-in-jail.html
PoliticsRe: Governor Sanwo-Olu Lays Wreath At Murtala's Cenotaph (Photos) by naptu2(op): 9:38am On Feb 08
2019 posts.


Aha! I've written about this many many times on this thread.

Quiz: Can you figure out where the cameraman is standing??


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JuOVQEncaWY

I'll be back with the answer later.




Right! I almost forgot about this.

Like I said, I’ve written about this uncountable times before.

The cameraman is standing in a compound that I have written about many times and I’ve also written about the road beside this compound (the road of death).

So many people died on Ikoyi Road. Very many.

On January 15th, 1966, Brigadier Maimalari escaped from assassins that had been sent to his house. He scaled the fence behind the house and escaped while the soldiers were trying to get into the compound. Maimalari trekked towards Dodan Barracks, where his troops were, in an attempt to raise troops to investigate what was happening and solve the problem.

Somewhere on Bank Road, near the Ikoyi Club golf course, he saw Major Emmanuel Ifeajuna’s car. He hailed Ifeajuna, in order to get him to stop and give him a lift to Dodan Barracks. Ifeajuna stopped, got out of the car and shot Maimalari dead.




General Yakubu Gowon was fond of riding in stretch limousines and surrounding those limousines with long motorcades. The roads were often closed to traffic long before the general passed by and his outriders often performed stunts on the empty road. The first lady, Victoria Gowon, often rode in stretch limousines, as did Gowon’s deputy, the chief of staff, Supreme Headquarters, Vice Admiral JEA Wey.

Murtala Muhammad wanted to be different from Gowon. He did not move into State House Ribadu Road (Dodan Barracks), instead he continued to live in the same house that he lived in when he was minister of communications. It was on George Street in Ikoyi. There was no electricity generator in that house and General Obasanjo said that he and General Danjuma spent a long time begging Murtala to install a generator for security reasons.

General Muhammad banned all government officials, except the head of state, from using stretch limousines. In fact, he banned them from using sirens and long motorcades. Murtala Muhammad moved around town without any escorts, motorcades or sirens. It was only him, his ADC, his orderly and his driver in the car. There was no other car or escort. That was why it was easy for assassins to kill him in traffic.

Murtala’s limousine got to the junction of Bank Road and Ikoyi Road and it slowed down to merge with traffic on Ikoyi Road. At that time, Ikoyi was an upper class residential district, while the Marina and Broad Street area was the main financial district, so many people were leaving Ikoyi to go to work at Marina, therefore, there was a massive rush hour traffic jam. Suka Bukar Dimka and his gang, dressed in agbada and babanriga, walked up to the limousine, pulled out AK47s from beneath their robes and fired a hail of bullets into the limousine as it waited in traffic. The driver was killed immediately. His ADC, Lieutenant Akintunde Akinsehinwa, opened the door and attempted to return fire. The coupists had left the limousine and were walking towards Broadcasting House at that time. The opening of the door made them realise that the occupants of the car might still be alive (Murtala, his ADC and orderly had ducked when the shooting started). They returned and shot at the car again, killing Murtala and the ADC. The only person in the limousine that eventually survived (with injuries) was the orderly, Staff Sergeant Michael Otuwu.

A friend of mine who was on his way to school said that people abandoned their cars in traffic and everybody ran for their lives when the shooting started.

Later that day, there was a fire fight between troops loyal to Dimka who were in control of Broadcasting House, and troops under the command of Ibrahim Babangida and Chris Ugokwe, who were sent to dislodge the coupists. More people died on Ikoyi Road at that time. A colleague of my mum was trapped in State House during the fire fight.

The most chilling thing was what my mum told me. She sat outside late at night when everybody had gone to sleep. It was only her and the security guard. Then she saw a dreadful convoy. It was a convoy of Land Rovers and . . . well she described this vehicle and I know what it was. She said, “that small armoured vehicle that you can see the driver sticking out from the top”. Basically, it was a reconnaissance vehicle . . . a scout vehicle. What was chilling about the convoy was that it was carrying corpses. There were dead soldiers in the back of the Land Rover pickup trucks. Lots of dead soldiers.



Professor Wole Soyinka met with President Ibrahim Babangida at State House in the evening of April 21, 1990. Later that evening (after Soyinka had left), the chief justice of Nigeria, Justice Mohammed Bello and other senior Muslim members of government, came to break their fast with the president. They stayed at Dodan Barracks (State House) until late in the night.

After they left, President Babangida went upstairs and was watching Sky News when he slept off. A few hours later, his wife woke him up and told him that there were strange movements and sounds outside.

I woke up sometime later. Something had woken me up, but I didn’t know what it was. There was no electricity due to the fire at NEPA Building the previous day. We had once been on State House’s power line, which meant that we had nonstop power in 1988 (we didn’t lose power for even a second), but we were removed from the State House line in 1989, just before the great NEPA strike of 1989. So everywhere was pitch-black.

I couldn’t see anything and I couldn’t hear anything, everywhere was dark and quiet. It almost felt like I had lost my ability to see and hear. Yet, something had woken me, but I didn’t know what it was. Then I heard it before I could move a muscle.

BOOM

I decided that I was not going to face whatever that was alone.

Broadcasting House, Ikoyi was a heavily fortified place in the 1970s and ‘80s. There was a submachine gun nest next to the gate and there were several armoured vehicles on the lawn in the compound. Coupists had infiltrated the guards at Broadcasting House and the coupists were able to turn the other members of the guard that were not part of their plot. One of the coupists had also infiltrated State House earlier that evening and had been able to remove the firing pins from the armoured vehicles that were at State House.

So the coupists used the armoured vehicles at Broadcasting House to attack State House. That was the noise that woke me up.

President Babangida’s ADC, Colonel Usman Kakanda (UK) Bello had also become aware of strange troop movements in the area and he came to the residence soon after Maryam Babangida woke the president. Colonel UK Bello had two-way radios with him and he gave one to the president and he had the other with him as he went to Ikoyi Road to investigate what was happening. UK Bello was killed on Ikoyi Road and he joins the long list of people that died on that road.

The coupists invaded State House through the Ikoyi Road gate and the first battle raged before dawn. Lots of people died.

After President Babangida had been evacuated to Surulere, one of the coupists used the main gun on his armoured vehicle to completely destroy the residence.

Lots of people appeared at our house in the 7 o’clock hour. Some of them were military officers and it was almost like they were providing reports on what was happening. However, some of the reports did not make sense to me. An air force officer said that the coup had succeeded and that the coupists were simply communicating with each other. What did he mean by “communicating”? I’ll explain.

It really did feel like they were “communicating”, even though that’s not what was happening. You see, it was like a relay. You’d hear an explosion from State House, and then an explosion from Broadcasting House and then an explosion from Bonny Camp. It was like State House was speaking and Broadcasting House was replying and then Bonny Camp was also replying. This was also the case with the gunshots.

The coupists had gained total and complete control of Ikoyi Road. However, Brigadier Bamaiyi at 9th Brigade was able to regain control of his Brigade and that marked the end of the coup. Those armoured vehicles at Broadcasting House were no match for the main battle tanks from Ikeja Cantonment. Bamaiyi’s armoured column first arrived at Bonny Camp to gather more troops, then they went through Ozumba Mbadiwe Road, Five Cowrie Bridge, Awolowo Road, Okotie Eboh Road and then Ribadu Road. They barrelled through State House and then arrived at Ikoyi Road for the final battle. Lots of soldiers died at Ikoyi Cemetery (people dying on graves) and in fact, the wall of the cemetery was blown down.

Everything changed after that final battle. Everything.

You see, despite the fact that explosions rocked the house and we could hear gunshots, that did not feel like a coup. It didn’t feel like a coup at all.

Firstly, the phone rang. The phone rang! Phones do not usually ring during a coup. The last time that the phone rang during a coup, the coup failed. No sensible coupist will allow the phone network to work during a coup. I knew, as soon as the phone rang that morning, that the coup would fail. My aunt who lived just a few steps away from Flag Staff House called to say that there were soldiers in her garden. My uncle that lived at Festac Town called to find out how his kids (my baby cousins) were (they were spending the holiday with us). In fact, one of the crazy things was that many people did not even know that there was a coup. We called a former Nigerian national team player (who lived at 1004 on Victoria Island) and he did not know that there was a coup. He heard the noise, but he thought that it was thunder. If all these people could make phone calls, then it was extremely easy for military commanders to communicate with each other.

Not only did the phones ring, but people were easily moving around! My brother’s friend (well, he’s also a family friend) that lived off Ribadu Road called to say that he drove from his house to Ribadu Road and then down Awolowo Road. He said that he wanted to come to our house, but he saw our road and decided to respect himself (it was a good thing that he stopped himself. A tank blew up a J5 bus on that road). Our newspaper vendor delivered the newspapers as usual. Well, maybe not as usual. He showed up in his company bus, rather than on foot.

A student of the University of Lagos was coming to our house that morning. She left Unilag, got to Yaba and got a bus to Obalende without noticing that anything was wrong. The bus went through Yaba and on to the 3rd Mainland Bridge without any problem. It was only when the bus got to the exit at P&T that they noticed that there was a problem. Buses and cars were making U-turns at the exit because they heard that there was fighting at Obalende. She sat in the bus and it took her back to Yaba. It was at Unilag that she found out what was happening. The Unilag Students Union (ULSU) was mobilising students to come out and celebrate the end of the Babangida regime. In fact, she said that they hijacked a Coke truck and guys were knocking on doors in the female hostels and pushing crates of soft drinks into their rooms as part of the party to celebrate Babangida’s overthrow.

Would you believe that children were playing football just a few streets away from the battle (granted that this was around 10 o’clock when the battle had stopped for a while)?

All of that changed when Abacha made his speech. The first counter speech that I heard that afternoon was from Governor Sasaenia Oresanya on Radio O.Y.O. Then I heard Governor Rasaki’s speech on Radio Lagos. There was a difference between Oresanya’s broadcast and Rasaki’s broadcast. It sounded like Oresanya was in the B.C.OS studio, but Rasaki’s case was different. Radio Lagos had suspended their regular programs that day and instead they played Sunny Ade’s songs in a loop.

We could hear Sunny Ade, but occasionally we would hear squeaks and whistles and then Rasaki’s voice would suddenly come on air. The quality of the audio was different from the usual Radio Lagos quality and it sounded as if they had used a powerful transmitter to jam the Radio Lagos signal. And then we would hear Sunny’s music again, as if it had not just been interrupted by Rasaki’s broadcast.

Of course, both Oresanya and Rasaki were dissociating themselves, their state governments and citizens of their states from the coup. Most Lagosians heard Rasaki’s broadcast first and so he became a kind of hero to them.

Abacha appeared on Radio Nigeria at 4pm (After Bamaiyi had taken control of Broadcasting House) and that’s when it actually felt like a coup. The coupists had asked people to troop out onto the streets to support their revolution, but Abacha declared a curfew and all movements ceased. All passes were cancelled and all officers were asked to report at the nearest unit. That’s when military people stopped appearing at my house. In fact, the phone calls also stopped and it actually felt like a coup for the first time that day.

Lots and lots of people had died by that time. They actually blew down the wall of Ikoyi Cemetery. A certain billionaire had a tall building at Obalende Roundabout. His niece got to work the next day to find a bullet hole in the wall beside her chair. A friend of mine that living in a tall building that was a bit far away from Ikoyi Road discovered (a few days later) that a bullet was stuck in his roof. I haven’t even written about the invasion of 15 Awolowo Road and the confusion about Peugeot J5 buses.

(The government had recently bought new vehicles for the security services. The Peugeot 504 pickup trucks that were used for the mopping up operation were new. The government also bought Peugeot J5 buses for the SSS. That was the source of confusion on that day because Great Ogboru had also bought J5 buses for the coupists. How would a soldier be able to differentiate an SSS bus from a bus that belonged to the coupists? How did the Army know that it was not an uprising by SSS operatives?)

Then there was the submachine gun fire just before 7pm. This was just a few minutes before Babangida’s speech. Of course everybody carried Babangida’s speech – NTA, Radio Nigeria, Lagos Television, Radio Lagos, Ogun Radio, OGTV, Radio O.Y.O, everybody.

Lots of people died on that day. Lots of people died.




What’s all this got to do with that video?



Well, Olusegun Obasanjo, Shehu Shagari and Muhammadu Buhari often took the helicopter from Dodan Barracks to the airport and back again. They flew directly over my house. Those helicopters were large and noisy. Babangida rarely took the helicopter (some people said that he was afraid).

In fact, those helicopters did not fly again until Obasanjo became president in 1999. This time they had a different flight path. They flew in from the north, over the Lagos Lagoon, over Ikoyi Road and into the State House complex. President Jonathan’s helicopter followed the same route.

So that video was shot by a cameraman that was standing in the Broadcasting House Ikoyi complex and he was filming President Jonathan’s helicopter as it flew into the State House complex. He says that that was the last time that President Jonathan flew into State House Ribadu Road in the helicopter.




Yes, this is the same complex from which legends like:

Dr Christopher Kolade
Ikenna Ndaguba
Princess Banke Ademola

Sonny Irabor, Joseph Akinyemi Johnson (J.A.J), Boniface Onogwu, Vin-Martin Ilo, Momoh Kubanje, Willy Egbe, Ohi Alegbe, Jones Usen, Ihria Enakhimio, Aloma Nwogbe, Godwin Asuquo, Ndidi Osaka, Femi Sowoolu, Phil Ushie, Jim Lawson Maduike, Ohi Alegbe, Femi Sowoolu, Ihria Enakhimio, Zachary Mohamed (Captain ZM), Manny Onumonu, Evelyn Russell, Veronica Osawere, John Chukwu, Emeka Odikpo, Ernest Okonkwo, etc. spoke to Nigeria.

In fact, Dr Kolade was trapped in Broadcasting House during Dimka’s coup.


To be continued
PoliticsRe: Governor Sanwo-Olu Lays Wreath At Murtala's Cenotaph (Photos) by naptu2(op): 9:28am On Feb 08

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5iYVaTEC6zk?si=IeEaMSAUO8NNbTG3


Some people believe that the coup was sponsored by the Americans and the British because Murtala's policies were in conflict with their own policies.

Murtala donated our MiG 17 fighter jets to the Angolans and Mozambicans who felt threatened by South Africa. He then bought MiG 21 jets from the Soviet Union. However, that conflict was a proxy war between the West and the East. The Western Powers (US, UK, etc) supported South Africa and UNITA, while the Eastern Powers (Soviet Union, Cuba, etc) supported Dos Santos.

There was the feeling that Murtala brought Nigeria closer to the Soviet Union.

However, some also felt that the coup was sponsored by General Gowon and that it was a plot to bring him back to power.

Another school of thought is that the coup was a palace coup by members of the regime, who felt that Murtala was not following their agreed script. It was believed that Dimka was just a fall guy.

Lastly, others believe that the coup did not have any western connection and that it was not sponsored by General Gowon. They believe that the coup was simply the brainchild of the arrested coup plotters.

Which school of thought is correct? We may never know.
PoliticsRe: Governor Sanwo-Olu Lays Wreath At Murtala's Cenotaph (Photos) by naptu2(op): 9:26am On Feb 08
I'm going to help the troll by blocking him so that he'll never see my posts again. smiley
PoliticsRe: Governor Sanwo-Olu Lays Wreath At Murtala's Cenotaph (Photos) by naptu2(op): 9:24am On Feb 08
This is my post from September 7th, 2020

grin I still call it Bank Road. My mum had an office there a long time ago and I'm still used to calling it Bank Road.


Bank Road is the second road that has witnessed nationally significant deaths (Ikoyi Road is the first). Major Emmanuel Ifeajuna killed Brigadier Maimalari on that road on January 15th, 1966 and a team of assassins, led by Sukar Bukar Dimka, killed General Murtala Muhammed at the junction of Bank Road and Ikoyi Road on Friday, February 13th, 1976.


President Ibrahim Babangida held a ceremony there in 1987 to commemorate the anniversary of Murtala Muhammed's death. An obelisk was unveiled at the junction (the government initially wanted to erect a statue there, but Murtala's family objected because it was against Islamic principles) and the name of the road was changed from Bank Road to Murtala Muhammed Drive.


I still call it Bank Road.


This is my post from May 7, 2024

Meanwhile, I need to continue my search for the video of the second ceremony at Bank Road. It was once on the Internet, but it has vanished.

I have never seen a video of the first ceremony on the internet. I hope to see it one day.

I think the first ceremony took place in 1986 to mark the 10th anniversary of Murtala's death. I watched it on the news back then.

This is my post from December 27th, 2023

Old habits die hard.

I wrote about Bank Road. There was a time that I went to that road every day and it was called Bank Road. You probably won't see any Bank Road if you go there now.

c1987 there was a ceremony at the junction of Bank Road and Ikoyi Road to mark the anniversary of Murtala Muhammed's death. President Ibrahim Babangida unveiled an obelisk at the junction (it was said that Murtala Muhammed's family, being Muslims, did not want a statue of him to be erected). You can still see the obelisk there. On that day President Babangida renamed Bank Road and it became Murtala Muhammed Drive. But I still call it Bank Road.

The President then went down the road to Broadcasting House where he met Reverend Monsignor Colonel Pedro Martins. It was said that Babangida handed Broadcasting House over to Pedro Martins after flushing out the coupists (or was it the other way round? I can't remember).



I also referred to Queens Drive, but, of course President Babangida also renamed that road and it became Oyinkan Abayomi Drive (after Lady Abayomi died).


This is my post from May 1st, 2023

I'm an old man, so I still call it Nigeria 001. It's like the way I still say Kingsway Road, Queens Drive, Obalende Road, Western Avenue, Bank Road, etc instead of Alfred Rewane Road, Oyinkan Abayomi Drive, Nojim Maiyegun Road, Funso Williams Avenue and Murtala Muhammed Drive.


Once upon a time, the head of state of Nigeria was usually flown by special Nigeria Airways planes. The call sign for the aircraft carrying the president was Nigeria 001 at that time. There were also some small Air Force planes that occasionally carried the president, but the call sign was still Nigeria 001. What was written at the side of these Air Force jets was Federal Republic of Nigeria.



President Shehu Shagari changed things in 1982. He bought a new presidential jet and ordered that it should be kept by the Air Force. This started the Presidential Air Fleet.

Over time, the writing on the side of the planes changed from Federal Republic of Nigeria to Nigerian Air Force. The call sign has also changed from Nigeria 001 to NAF 001.


But I still call it Nigeria 001.

This is my post from May 7th, 2024

People are talking about flood, but there are two other things on my mind. Things I have mentioned here.

1) The name of the road:

Dear diary, I told you that I went to that road almost every day in the early 1980s and its name was Bank Road. I told you that I have a habit of calling it Bank Road even today.

However, I told you that there was a ceremony sometime around 1987, a ceremony to mark the anniversary of the death of General Murtala Mohammed and the name of the road was changed to Murtala Mohammed Drive. I told you that General Babangida was present at the ceremony.

I also told you that General Mohammed was killed at the junction of Bank Road ans Ikoyi Road and I told you that there was another ceremony in which an obelisk was erected at the junction. It was said that Murtala's family did not want a statue, because of their Islamic faith, so the government decided to erect an obelisk. General Abacha and Chief Abiola were present at this ceremony.

However, everybody in that exchange just now, including the commissioner, is calling the road Bank Road.


2) Cycle lanes: The video shows the cycle lanes that I was referring to. The Fashola administration built bicycle lanes on Bank Road and you can see it despite the flood.

This is my post from August 7, 2025

It's bad that I won't be able to follow written or verbal directions to places in Ikoyi, even though I know Ikoyi very well, so its time to learn the new names.

These are the 1990s - early 2000s name changes. I started with the easy ones (the ones I already know). Can anybody tell me what Club Road is now called?

(I will update this list as I find out the new names).

Old name - new name

Queens Drive - Oyinkan Abayomi Drive

Bank Road - Murtala Muhammed Drive

1st Avenue - Oba Adeyinka Oyekan Avenue

2nd Avenue - Mobolaji Johnson Avenue

Kingsway Road - Alfred Rewane Way

Bedwell Road - Adekunle Lawal Road

Mulliner Road - Ikoyi Club 1938 Road

Ruxton Road - Ojomu Road

Hawksworth Road - Ojora Road

This is another post from August 7th, 2025

These are almost all the Ikoyi street names that were changed. Most of the changes occurred in the 1990s, a few occurred in 1988 and 1989 and there was another set of changes in the early 2000s.

I'll make comments about some of the streets.


Old name - new name - comment

Queens Drive - Oyinkan Abayomi Drive - This road is right beside Five Cowrie Creek. I enjoyed going down this road in the 1970s and 1980s because I had a great view of the creek and Victoria Island (across the water). However, it was a source of anger in the 1990s as people built houses between the road and the creek (they even sandfilled the creek where there wasn't enough land). It's much worse today as people are building massive tower blocks on what used to be a small, quiet and peaceful street. Several senior government officials and wealthy individuals lived here in the 1970s and '80s. Lady Abayomi was a prominent politician and women's leader and her husband, Sir Kofo Abayomi, was a politician. The government renamed the road when she died in 1990.

Bank Road - Murtala Muhammed Drive - Murtala Died at the junction of this road and Ikoyi Road. I went to this road almost every day back in the early 1980s (I won't tell you why).

1st Avenue - Oba Adeyinka Oyekan Avenue

2nd Avenue - Mobolaji Johnson Avenue

Kingsway Road - Alfred Rewane Way

Bedwell Road - Adekunle Lawal Road

Mulliner Road - Ikoyi Club 1938 Road

Ruxton Road - Ojomu Road

Hawksworth Road - Ojora Road



I had lots of friends that lived on the next two streets back in the day.

Temple Road - Olu Holloway Road

Moorehouse Road - Bankole Oki Street

Club Road - Oba Elegushi Road

Waring Road - Bayo Kuku Road

Ikoyi Crescent - part of it is now Modupe Alakija Crescent and the other part retains the name Ikoyi Crescent.

Barrow Avenue - Bankole Cardoso Avenue

Shaw Road - Onilegbale Road

Forsbery Road - Oloto Road
PoliticsRe: Governor Sanwo-Olu Lays Wreath At Murtala's Cenotaph (Photos) by naptu2(op): 9:23am On Feb 08
Ebubu6:
What is so special about this Murtala that we will not hear word abeg. Very soon Naptu2 will memorize and idolise late Buhari like he was
This one is wasting his time if he thinks that he can determine what I will post and what I won't post.
PoliticsRe: Governor Sanwo-Olu Lays Wreath At Murtala's Cenotaph (Photos) by naptu2(op): 9:22am On Feb 08
My post from May 9th, 2025

This is a video of the day that I told you about.

State House, Ribadu Road has 3 gates. The Ribadu Road gate was the main gate and it was the gate that everybody used.

The Obalende Road gate was only used by the president/head of state.

General Gowon used the Ikoyi Road gate often, but Obasanjo rarely used it and Shagari and Buhari never used it.

General Babangida used that gate once, when he was returning to State House in 1990 after wishing Prince Charles and Princess Diana farewell.

The next time that a president used that gate was in 2012.

President Goodluck Jonathan was coming to Lagos. There had been complaints on social media that he would cause traffic jams in the city. In order to avoid this, he flew into State House Ribadu Road by helicopter and then went to Victoria Island by road. He left and returned to State House via the Ikoyi Road gate.

(I often call that gate the coup gate because it is the favourite gate of coupists).

Now to tell you about the place that the cameraman is standing. Famous people have died at or near that spot.

The cameraman is standing at the junction of Bank Road and Ikoyi Road. That's exactly where Murtala Muhammed died.

Murtala did not use sirens and he had no escorts. It was just him and his ADC at the back of the limousine and his orderly and driver at the front.

A lot of senior government officials and senior private company officials lived in Ikoyi back in the day. The main business district of Lagos at that time was the Broad Street and Marina area. Therefore, many people used either Awolowo Road or Ikoyi Road to get to work every morning and there were sometimes traffic jams on those two roads. Murtala's limousine slowed down at that junction in order to join the traffic on Ikoyi Road. Dimka and his team walked up to the limousine and opened fire on it, killing everyone in it except the orderly who survived.

If you study the video below you can see the Obelisk that was erected by the Babangida Administration to mark the spot where Murtala died (it is between the cameraman and the petrol station).


Brigadier Maimalari was also killed near here in 1966. He escaped the death squad that was sent to his house and he was walking to Dodan Barracks in the middle of the night. He saw Ifeajuna's car near this junction and he flagged it down. Ifeajuna stopped the car, came down and shot Maimalari dead.


Video: President Goodluck Jonathan's motorcade on Ikoyi Road in 2012.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bR4ToWb47iI?si=ECQIeV1rHw0dJAYv
PoliticsRe: Governor Sanwo-Olu Lays Wreath At Murtala's Cenotaph (Photos) by naptu2(op): 9:20am On Feb 08
I originally posted this on January 4th, 2021

We have often seen what happens when popular leaders are killed. It usually leads to violence and many more people end up dead and property is destroyed.


For example, General Murtala Muhammed wanted to live a simple life as head of state. He wanted to set himself apart from General Gowon who had long motorcades and whose officers often rode in Mercedes Benz stretch limousines. Therefore, he ordered that nobody else should use a stretch limousine as official car (not even the first lady or the chief of staff).

General Murtala lived in the same house that he lived in when he was minister of communications (it was on George Street in Ikoyi). He didn't move into Dodan Barracks. There was no electricity generator in the house. General Obasanjo said that he and General Danjuma had to put a lot of pressure on Murtala to install a generator in his house, for security reasons. When a journalist wrote a false story about Murtala and his wife, he was not arrested, instead Murtala sued him for defamation.


General Murtala did not use any motorcade or siren when he was head of state. He used a Mercedes Benz stretch limousine as his official car (the equivalent of an E Class stretch limousine) and it was only him, his ADC, his orderly and the driver in the car. There were no other cars, no motorcycle outriders or sirens. His car wasn't even armoured! He waited in traffic like any other person. The result was that he was killed while waiting in traffic.

Murtala was very popular with students, workers' unions and the poor masses and these groups of people blamed the US and the UK for his assassination. Therefore there was a riot after his assassination and many American and European businesses were attacked and their properties destroyed.

Video of the memorial church service for General Murtala Muhammed, the riot and attack on British and American properties after Murtala's death and the attempt by some foreigners to repair their building after the riot.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rgmQ-P-cfCY


Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa was another simple man. Reverend Monsignor Colonel Pedro Martins wrote about his strange experience with Sir Abubakar.


Colonel Pedro Ayodele Martins was a Catholic priest who at various times worked as a science teacher at St Gregory's College, as the head of the Nigerian Army Chaplaincy and as the Vicar General of the Catholic Archdiocese of Lagos. He died in 2014 at the age of 103 and he was reputed as being the oldest Catholic priest in Africa and probably the oldest retired Nigerian soldier at the time of his death.


When this incident occurred in the early 1960s, Pedro Martins was a reverend father and science teacher at St Gregory's College.


Father Pedro Martins was driving down Awolowo Road on his way to his residence at St Gregory's College when his car developed a fault. He parked at the side of the road and came down to figure out what was wrong. He was working on the car when another car parked behind him. To his surprise he saw that it was the prime minister.

"Father, what is the problem?" Balewa asked. Father Martins told him about the car and Balewa suggested that his driver should take Father Martins home and then get a mechanic to fix the car, while he and his ADC would walk home (the prime minister's residence was at the end of Awolowo Road, right beside Onikan Roundabout).

Father Martins was about to protest that he could not allow the prime minister to walk home, but the ADC had already brought out Balewa's things from the car and both of them started walking to the residence (it was only Balewa, his police ADC and the driver that were in the car. There were no escorts or sirens).

Of course we all know that Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa was assasinated and that his death (along with the death of other politicians and soldiers) led to the counter coup in which many people died and the counter coup led to the Civil War in which even more people died.
PoliticsRe: Governor Sanwo-Olu Lays Wreath At Murtala's Cenotaph (Photos) by naptu2(op):
Dimka's confession

This is from my 2013 thread.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xmU8dhla74Q?si=SwbuPrXar9HeDL6Z

The video begins with a shot of the Council. Chambers building at State House Dodan Barracks. There are soldiers in Land Rovers in front of the Council Chambers building. Then a sign is shown, which reads "SUPREME HEADQUARTERS DODAN BARRACKS".

Lieutenant Colonel Suka Bukar Dimka is seated and surrounded by journalists and security operatives. They are all listening to an audio tape being played on a reel to reel tape machine.

We hear Dimka's voice on the tape. He says, "but at least I. . . . .I want to talk. What ever is going to happen to me, I mean, let it happen to me, but I want. . . . . .I wanted to brief you myself. There was just some. . . .some" (inaudible), "Well I didn't have to know" (inaudible). "I thought at this initial stage, I'll continue to allow him to" (inaudible). "Anyway I. . . . .I thank you very much, actually, for having come". "In fact, if there's anybody that enjoys any. . . .any" (inaudible).

Dimka is speaking in the next clip. He says, "Of course, being a soldier, I made it a point of duty that I own. . . I mean, I have an honour to maintain and I believe I have no reason at this stage to lie. So all that you have heard has been my recording. . .personal recording."

The next clip shows a convoy of military trucks arriving the beach. Armed soldiers are seen milling around an armoured car. There's a huge crowd of civillians. Stakes have been erected at the beach in preparation for the executions. A black maria brings the prisoners to the beach. Dimka and the other prisoners are seen as they are being tied to the stake. The video ends.

Just before 8:30 a.m. on February 13, 1976, the following curious announcement was heard on Radio Nigeria:

"Good morning fellow Nigerians,

This is Lt. Col. B. Dimka of the Nigerian Army calling.
I bring you good tidings. Murtala Muhammed's deficiency has been detected. His government is now overthrown by the young revolutionaries. All the 19 military governors have no powers over the states they now govern. The states affairs will be run by military brigade commanders until further notice.

All commissioners are sacked, except for the armed forces and police commissioners who will be redeployed.

All senior military officers should remain calm in their respective spots. No divisional commanders will issue orders or instructions until further notice.

Any attempt to foil these plans from any quarters will be met with death.
You are warned, it is all over the 19 states.
Any acts of looting or raids will be death.

Everyone should be calm.
Please stay by your radio for further announcements.
All borders, air and sea ports are closed until further notice.

Curfew is imposed from 6am to 6pm.

Thank you. We are all together."


Just prior to this broadcast, then Head of State, General Murtala Ramat Muhammed, along with his ADC (Lt. Akinsehinwa), Orderly and driver, had been assassinated on his way to work in a thin skinned black Mercedes Benz car without escorts. The unprotected car had slowed down at the junction in front of the Federal Secretariat in Ikoyi, Lagos, when a hit team which allegedly included Lt. William Seri and others, casually strolled up and riddled it with bullets.



"The Dimka's Coup Attempt of February 13, 1976" by Nowa Omoigui. http://www.dawodu.com/dimka.htm


NIGERIA: STUDENT RANSACK BRITISH HIGH COMMISSION DURING DEMONSTRATION AGAINST ASSASSINS OF FORMER HEAD OF STATE GENERAL MUHAMMED, WHILE MEMORIAL SERVICE HELD FOR DEAD LEADER.

27 February 1976

Story

Rioting students, demonstrating over the death of former Nigerian Head of State, General Murtala Muhammed, ransacked the British High Commission in Lagos on Tuesday (17 February).

The students, calling for a full investigation into the attempted coup in which General Muhammed was killed, were eventually driven from the building by Police using tear gas. But first the hundreds of students smashed windows and ransacked the Reuter news agency office in the building.

The attack came after a visit to the High Commission by Lieutenant-Colonel B.S. Dimka, leader of the coup, who tried to have a message relayed to another former Head of State, General Yakubu Gowon, who lives in Britain.

The students carried banners and called for the extradition of General Gowon to Nigeria to face changes that the helped plan the coup.

Britain claimed compensation for damage to the building, but later withdrew the claim.

The Nigerian government issued a statement saying that the coup, on 13 February, was aimed at restoring General Gowon to power.

Most of the armed forces remained loyal to the government and quickly crushed the rebellion.

General Gowon was ousted by General Muhammed in July, 1975, while he was in Uganda for an Organisation of African Unity (OAU) Conference.

General Muhammed, who was 37, was buried at his home town of Kano, in Northern Nigeria 36 hours after his assassination in Lagos.

At the end of seven days of mourning on Friday (20 February) memorial services for the late General were held in Christian churches and mosques throughout the country.



Video of the execution of the coupists


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gKAA7AsSpn0?si=3GUMDaqU6zV2KTkJ

General Obasanjo announces the execution of the coupists


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hPsfD29Cn1E?si=amygdJKeq4GdTFlW


Photo) General Murtala Muhammed, Professor Bolaji Akinyemi and Lieutenant Akintunde Akinsehinwa

PoliticsRe: Governor Sanwo-Olu Lays Wreath At Murtala's Cenotaph (Photos) by naptu2(op): 9:17am On Feb 08
You must remember Rosaline Ogunro. She released some hit songs in the 1980s and early 1990s. Well, do you remember that she was also a broadcaster before she became a famous singer?

She was in the studio when Dimka appeared on February 13th, 1976 and I will post her account of what happened and hopefully the bot will not attack it.


Friday 13 February 1976

I was the early morning duty continuity announcer on Friday 13 February 1976, exactly 45 years ago.

My shift commenced at 5:30 am and would have finished at 11:30 am.

Things were going on smoothly until about 7:20 am when a rather scruffy man with red eyes as though under the influence of alcohol or other substances, in army uniform and armed with a gun, walked into the continuity studio with another army officer and one of my colleagues, a producer in the Hausa Service of Voice of Nigeria.

The scruffy officer was later to announce that he was Dimka. He said as they came in, ‘any resistance from these people, shoot’. He then demanded to use my microphone. I got up and he took over my seat and my microphone. He then announced that there had been a coup and that the Head of State, General Murtala Mohammed had been killed. He proceeded to make the infamous ‘dawn to dusk curfew’. He read from a scrap of paper.

After the announcement he asked if I had military (martial music) to which I said no. The colleague who accompanied the officers left immediately and returned quite quickly with a compilation of martial music records possibly from the music library. He seemed to have pre-compiled them. I was commanded to play them after Dimka’s announcement. I was not overly scared at this point. I thought to myself, ’just do as you are told’ especially as the man was armed with a gun.

Dimka left the studio and returned 15 minutes later to repeat his announcement. As he walked out of the studio after the second announcement, I followed him and his ‘accomplices’ though at that time I had not realised my colleague was an accomplice. I walked out with them to see if I could find any senior staff member to report that there had been an incident in the studio. We met the Director General, Dr. Christopher Kolade at the door of the continuity studio. He had been in his office upstairs, had heard Dimka’s announcement and had come down to investigate. Dimka happily announced to him that the then Head of State had been killed and that he Dimka would be returning to make further announcements. Quick thinking Dr. Kolade advised him to record his statement on tape instead of broadcasting the same message live every 15 minutes. I believe that advice saved lives that fateful day because it removed him from that area of Broadcasting House for the time being. His recording was subsequently played at 15 minutes intervals and bridged with martial music as commanded.


I was made to understand that Dimka later returned to make a fresh recording in one of the studios downstairs. This must have been about 11:00 am. Not long after, as I later learned, the army arrived in full force and completely surrounded Broadcasting House, Ikoyi, Lagos and proceeded to open fire at the station.

When the firing started the walls were shaking and I could see dust falling to the floor of the continuity studio. It felt like a bomb had been dropped on the building. It was as though the building was being razed. Mind you I had never witnessed a bomb being dropped on a building before except on foreign films. I realised then, when the building started shaking that this was a serious matter.

There were 2 studio managers and myself in the continuity studio that morning.

When the shooting started I instantly turned off the martial music that I was playing. (My mum and dad happened to be listening to the Radio that morning and when that music stopped they thought I had been shot).

The firing seemed to be directed at the continuity studio. The studio managers and I were separated by a glass partition. I quickly went over to the studio managers when the shooting stopped briefly and suggested they came over to my side of the studio which was situated in the inner part of the studio. We hid under my console. Soon after, the shooting started again.

Some bullets tore through the heavy doors and the glass partition and struck the records rack where fill-up records were kept. It was my first time of seeing the metal objects called bullets. I took some home later, I believe three, as a reminder of what happened that day.

When the shooting subsided about 30 minutes later; I suggested coming out of our hiding and out of the studio as it appeared that the shooting was being aimed at this part of the building. We could see bullets all over the corridor floor outside the continuity studio. As we came out we knocked on office doors but realised they were all locked and no one was responding. We moved further out to where we could be seen: I was leading the group of three with our hands up. It was then we saw the entire building surrounded by soldiers with guns pointing at it from the metal railings outside the main gate. The first time the soldiers caught sight of us I thought I heard ‘fire’ and we ran back. We tried calling out again to staff in offices to see if we could hide there but no one answered and the offices were still locked! I said to my two colleagues ‘we have to get out of here; the studio is being shot at’. We tried one more time and heard ‘hold fire, civilians.’ We were then led by some fierce looking soldiers down the bullet ridden staircase. They demanded to know what we were still doing in the building and where we were when members of staff were being moved from the building. All studios are sound proofed so we did not hear staffers being moved and no one came by the Continuity studio to alert us. There must have been a lot of panic on that day and as a result we were left behind.


We were taken by the soldiers to a sand-filled swampy area away from the building where we found members of staff who were still at the station that morning lying on their stomachs, on the ground and soldiers standing over them with their guns. We were made to join them on the ground. I remember one of the soldiers enjoying what was going on and saying “I like this, I have not shot for a long time”. There was a sigh of relief when colleagues and bosses saw the three of us.

Later that evening all other members of staff were allowed to go home. The afternoon and evening duty announcers did not show up because everyone had been advised in Dimka’s broadcast to stay at home. I was the only continuity announcer available so I was made to go back to the same studio to continue broadcasting to the nation. The two studio managers who went through the initial ordeal with me did not return to the studio with me. I cannot remember who replaced them at their desk but I think it was just now one instead of two.

I continued working as normal but as could be expected it was mainly about the coup the rest of the day; the News was all about it, interspersed with normal music this time (not martial/military) and reminding our listeners about the updated curfew; ‘dusk to dawn’ this time. I worked from 5:30 am till close down, just after midnight.

I was taken care of by the soldiers who provided me with hot dinner at about 10:00 pm, my first main meal of that day. I cannot remember what it was but it was delicious; I had not thought of food the whole day! After close down at 5 minutes past midnight, armoured vehicles accompanied our staff car to drop me off at home. My parents were delighted to see me safely back. They had been anxious all morning, afternoon and night with no word about their daughter. Not many people had land line phones; we did not. Mobile phones did not exist.

About three hours after being dropped at home the armoured vehicles and the office car returned to take me back to Broadcasting House to open the station. My parents would not let me leave home that morning but I told them not to worry, I would be alright. So, at the crack of dawn on Saturday, 14 February 1976 I was back in the same studio, opening the station once again at 5:30 am.

My very brave and courageous colleague and best mate, Siene All-well Brown who was not on the roster to work that morning risked everything and drove down to take over from me. She made it possible for me to go home to rest from the ordeal of the previous day.

I later heard that the command from high up in the Army ranks was to raze the entire building, but that another thought of the innocent civilians in the building and advised otherwise. I cannot say for sure who was involved in these decisions.

Dimka obviously escaped capture on that day but not the other accomplice officer who came to the studio with him. I understand he was shot dead.

I had only been at this job three years when this incident took place. I was frightened no doubt on the day of the coup but I kept my cool. I was later told by colleagues and listeners who heard me after I returned to the studio to get the station running again, that at no time did my voice betray any fright or discomfort.

I feel grateful that on that fateful day, Friday 13 February 1976 I did not let my nation down at its most critical time. I feel most grateful to God for sparing my life.

I had no idea my colleague who came to the studio with Dimka was involved in the coup until much later. He must have compiled the martial music in advance. He provided the records so quickly!

Dimka was arrested a few weeks after the coup and sadly that colleague was later executed by firing squad along with him and the other coup plotters.

I pray for peace and stability in our country Nigeria and in the whole world.

Account by Rosaline Ogunro nee Ogbangwor.



Rosaline Ogunro wrote something that you might have missed, so I'll emphasise it.

Coupists usually impose a dusk to dawn curfew. This means that there is restriction of movement and nobody should go out from 7pm (dusk/night time) till 7am (dawn/morning). Basically it's a night time curfew.


However, Suka Bukar Dimka's English was very poor and his coup speech was riddled with errors, so he declared a dawn to dusk curfew. In other words, he was saying that nobody should go out during daytime, but they could go out at night. It was obviously a mistake.
PoliticsRe: Governor Sanwo-Olu Lays Wreath At Murtala's Cenotaph (Photos) by naptu2(op): 9:15am On Feb 08
This is my post from March 31st, 2022

I have written about this before, but I'm now going to post a link to the interview, so that you can read it yourself.

I remember that there were all kinds of rumours back then (for example, some said that he was a mole), but all the rumours are false except for the one that said that he was already in the mortuary before they realised that he was alive. Believe it or not, some newspapers, magazines and websites still report that he died in the attack! This is more than 40 years later and they still report that he died!


Murtala Muhammed was going to work in his official car. Sitting in front were the driver, Sergeant Adamu Michika and the orderly, Sergeant Michael Otuwe. Sitting at the back were the ADC, Lieutenant Akintunde Akinsehinwa and the head of state, General Murtala Muhammed.


They were on Bank Road and got to the junction of Bank Road and Ikoyi Road, but the traffic warden stopped traffic from Bank Road from moving (actually, the traffic warden did not notice their car. There were around 4 or 5 cars between the traffic warden and the limousine).

The coupist shot the driver dead and continued firing into the car. Michael Owutu said that he immediately took cover and fell on the body of the driver. The head of state and the ADC also took cover. The coupists finished shooting and were heading to the radio station when the ADC opened the back door of the car. One of the coupists noticed the movement and shouted to his colleagues that they were not dead. They returned to the car and opened fire again. This time they killed the general and the ADC, but unknown to them, the orderly was still alive.


This is the interview with Michael Otuwe.



https://dailytrust.com/general-murtala-nearly-escaped-the-coupists-former-orderly



General Murtala Nearly Escaped The Coupists – Former Orderly

Fri, 12 Feb 2016 22:49:33 GMT

Today marks 40 years since the assassination of former head of state, General Murtala Mohammed in a failed 1976 coup de’tat. In this interview, the late General’s orderly, Master Warrant Officer Michael Otuwe (rtd), 69, in tears, narrates how the late charismatic leader almost escaped the coupists, and much more.

Daily Trust: Why did you join the army?

Master Warrant Officer Michael Otuwe (rtd): I am an Igala man form Olamoboro local government of Kogi State. I attended Ankpa Primary School and Ankpa Model Secondary School before I joined the profession I cherished most, the army. I joined the army on September 11, 1967, at Ikeja Military Cantonment in Lagos and that is where we underwent the mandatory six months training on the eve of the Nigerian Civil War. After the training I was posted to the Nigerian Army Signal Corps and incidentally, Muratla Ramat Mohammed was a Colonel then and the Inspector of Signals.

DT: How did he make you his orderly, did you lobby or somebody introduced you to him?

Otuwe: He told me that he noticed how immaculate I was in my army dress when we do master parade. He picked me to be his orderly when I was a Lance Corporal. I was young and I just have to be clean. I was with Murtala in all his posting and during the civil war as he was made the first General Officer Commanding Two Division of the Nigerian Army and beyond.

DT: How many years did you work with the late national hero as his orderly?

Otuwe: I worked with him till he was killed and that was 11 years and within the period he had only three children – Aisha, Zakari and Fatima.

DT: What is the secret behind your success in the civil war?

Otuwe: He was an organiser of men and their welfare. He was smart and hardworking and thought of Nigeria first before anything. He was always consulting his close ally, the chief Imam of the Nigerian Army, Brigadier Ndayawo who was also at the battle front.

DT: What were some of the exploits of your master that the public do not know?

Otuwe: He was gifted. I remember one occasion when Biafran soldiers encircled us, he did a wonderful tactical manoeuvre and retreated that baffled even we that were with him. When many wanted to surrender, he made a quest to fight and to win for Nigeria to continue as a united country. If you broke the law, he dealt with you accordingly. He had a good retentive memory and did not forget anything.

DT: Is it true that most of his colleagues were envious of him because of his exploits during the civil war?

Otuwe: I cannot really tell, even though it was something that was not in the open.

DT: How did you survive the many ambushes against the life of the General?

Otuwe: We encountered many ambushes and attacks but one of the most memorable one was when we were encircled at Ukpo Junction in Abbagana where Murtala did a tactical manoeuvre and withdrew and prepared for a defensive attack that led to the capture of many towns and cities. But all the Nigerian soldiers that captured Onitsha fell into a trap as they were encircled and fell to the fire-power of Biafran troops. We went to Asaba in speed boats and down to the northern region in Idah in present day Kogi State to prepare for attacks that eventually lead to the capture of more cities. In 1968 there was a reshuffle that took General Murtala back to Lagos as Minister of Communications an Inspector of Signals. That mean he was doing two jobs at the same time.

DT: How did you brief your wife about your schedule of duty?

Otuwe: (Laughter) She was married to a soldier and she had become part of the system as when she saw us at home, it meant we were off duty.

DT: How did your children react about the absence of their father?

Otuwe: Most of my children almost forgot me as I left home at dawn and came back late in the night. They saw me only on weekends even though I used to go to the house of the head of state even during weekends and even before he became the head of state.

DT: Is it true that Murtala once travelled from Lagos to Kano by road when he was head of state?

Otuwe: He didn’t do that while I was with him.

DT: Is it true that he used to camouflage and go round Lagos without being acknowledged?

Otuwe: Yes! It is true as I and his ADC, Lieutenant Akintunde Akinterinwa, once followed him to survey prices, the rising cost of goods. He wore a track suit, a face cap and dark goggles and rode a horse to a filling station, disembarked, tied it and entered Sangross (Lagos Island), then Ajegunle and later Agege markets. The ADC pretended that we are not together and the ADC was writing the prices and I was pretending as a window shopper. A market woman told him to give other buyers chance as people were more disciplined then as everybody queued for his or her turn then. After two weeks goods and meat came in ships. People tagged the meat as ‘Murtala Meat.’

DT: What happened the day he was assassinated?

Otuwe: He was assassinated on July 29, 1976 (Starts shedding tears). He ruled for six months from July 29, 1975 to February 13, 1976. He was a very good man as he did not allow the goods (personal effects) of General Gowon to be thrown out but to be removed gently and for the house to be renovated before he relocated from Dodan Barracks. That was why he was shuttling from Ikoyi without pilot cars, motorbike outriders, armed military and security bodyguards among others. He only rode in the official Mercedes Benz car with two flags the national flag on the left and the armed forces flag on the right. On that fateful day, we passed through Federal Secretariat in Ikoyi which was undergoing renovation and covered with zinc. When we reached Alagbgon Junction the traffic man did not notice the flags, he would have allowed the traffic in our direction to continue moving, but he stopped the five or six cars in front of us then I saw some people in agbada (Babanriga) and when they lifted them up they brought out AK-47 rifles and fired at us. Already a masked man had got the driver, Sergeant Adamu Michika, in the head and he feel on the arm-rest where the suit case containing the General’s mufti was. I took cover and fell on the driver. The General and the ADC also took cover. When the assassins left and were heading to National Broadcasting Corporation – Radio House – to announce the takeover, one of the Majors turned and saw when the ADC opened the door to help the General, the Major shouted and notified his colleagues that they were alive. This made them to turn and rush back and emptied there bullets in us. I was the only survivor as I was shot in the arm and the hip.
The troops loyal to General Murtala came after the soldiers and they took us to the mortuary. I recovered from coma when the breeze from the air conditioner and the pain woke me up. A mortuary attendant notice that I raised my hand and he alerted a doctor who said I was alive and they took me to Dodan Barracks and then to a hospital on Awolowo Road Ikoyi.

DT: How long did you take to fully recover and go back to work?

Otuwe: I spent six months to recover and resumed work with the Nigerian Army Signal Corps. Where I worked with Generals Adenaju, Raji Rasaki and lastly Tanko Ayuba.

DT: Have you ever been honoured?

Otuwe: No, not at all.

DT: Where are you staying now?

Otuwe: I am now staying in a rented two bedroom house in Maraba in Nasarawa State. The street has no name not to talk of house number. But I am working in the office of Riskua Murtala Muhammed in Maitama.

DT: When did you retire from the army?

Otuwe: I retired on the December 31, 1999 as a Master Warrant Officer.

DT: Are any of your children in the armed forces?

Otuwe: Not yet as they are schooling in high institutions.

DT: Do you regrets serving in the army?

Otuwe: No, no, no, not at all.
https://dailytrust.com/general-murtala-nearly-escaped-the-coupists-former-orderly

PoliticsRe: Governor Sanwo-Olu Lays Wreath At Murtala's Cenotaph (Photos) by naptu2(op):
My post from June 1st, 2025

I've posted all these before, but I want to put everything in one post.

What did Murtala Muhammed do?

Initially, during the First Republic, there wasn't much security around the president and prime minister. Then Tafawa Balewa was killed and it changed everything. There was overwhelming security around Ironsi and Gowon.

Murtala Muhammed changed all of that.

1) He did not move into Dodan Barracks. He continued to live in the official residence of the minister of communications (he was minister of communications in Gowon's government). The house was on 2nd Avenue in Ikoyi.

2) There was no electricity generator in that house. He suffered power outages just like everybody else. Obasanjo and Danjuma had to put a lot of pressure on him to buy a generator, because they thought that it was a security risk.


3) He went to Sandgrouse Market in disguise, in order to find out the prices of things and see how it affected the masses.


4) During the Gowon era, the head of state, first lady and chief of staff (military vice president) often rode in stretch limousines. Murtala stopped the practice. Only the head of state used a stretch limousine.

5) No government official was allowed to use sirens or motorcades. The head of state did not use any sirens or motorcades. He waited in traffic like everyone else.

Murtala Muhammed was killed when his limousine was waiting for traffic at the junction of Bank Road and Ikoyi Road. The assassins opened fire on his limousine and left. His ADC opened the door to return fire and the assassins returned and shot at the limousine again.

There were only 4 people in the car, the driver and orderly in front and the ADC and Murtala at the back. Only the orderly survived (because the driver fell on him when he was shot).

That's why students unions rioted when he was killed.

The Obasanjo Administration resumed the practice of having motorcades and guards for senior government officials.

Photo 1) Murtala Muhammad.

Photo 2) Murtala's limousine.

Photo 3) Lieutenant Akintunde Akinsehinwa (Murtala's ADC).

Photo 4) Sukar Bukar Dimka before he was executed.

PoliticsGovernor Sanwo-Olu Lays Wreath At Murtala's Cenotaph (Photos) by naptu2(op): 9:12am On Feb 08
Babajide Sanwo-Olu @jidesanwoolu

Fifty years after the passing of General Murtala Muhammad, his example still weighs heavily on our sense of duty as public servants.

He led with clarity and firmness. He expected discipline from the civil service and carried Nigeria’s voice with confidence beyond our borders, especially in matters of justice and African unity. His life remains a reminder that leadership is not about time spent in office, but about resolve and the courage to act when called upon.

Today, at this milestone anniversary, I am reminded of the standard he set. Government must be principled, focused, and united in purpose. The most meaningful way to honour his memory is to keep working toward a nation that lives up to those values.
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