•I won’t forget what IBB did to me, although I’ve forgiven him
•I’ve not forgiven Obasanjo
•My civil war experiences
•No regret shooting cocaine pushers
•I’ve not forgiven Obasanjo
•My civil war experiences
•No regret shooting cocaine pushers
Ever
since the Supreme Court ruled on the 2011 presidential election, former Head of
State and candidate of the Congress for Progressive Change (CPC), General
Muhammadu Buhari, has always refused to grant an elaborate interview on his
experiences and feelings.
However,
on the auspicious occasion of his 70th birthday, Buhari has finally spoken. In
an exclusive interview with Saturday Sun, he talked about his growing up days,
experiences in the Army, his emergence as head of state when he never
participated in any coup, the 1966 coup and the counter-coup, the General Ibrahim
Babangida coup that swept him out of office, the execution of cocaine
traffickers, Decree 4 and the controversial ‘53 suitcases’ that allegedly came
into the country during his government.
He
also spoke about his relationship with General Babangida, who he said he had
forgiven, although he would not forget what he did to him and his plan for the
2015 elections, among others.
Excerpts:
What kind of childhood did you have?
Well,
from my father’s side, we are Fulanis. You know the Fulanis are really divided
into two. There are nomads, the ones that if you drive from Maiduguri and many
parts of the North you will find. They are even in parts of Delta now. And
there are those who settled. They are cousins and the same people actually.
From my mother’s side and on her father’s side, we are Kanuris from Kukawa.
Where’s Kukawa?
Kukawa
is in Borno State. We are Kanuris. On her mother’s side, we are Hausas. So, you
can see I am Hausa, Fulani, Kanuri combined (he laughs). I am the 23rd
child of my father. Twenty-third and the 13th on my mother side.
There are only two of us remaining now; my sister and I. I went to school,
primary school, in Daura and Kaduna, also a primary school, in Kachia. I also
attended Kaduna Provincial Secondary School, now Government College. I
didn’t work for a day. I joined the military in 1962.
You mean as a boy soldier?
No,
after school certificate. There was an officer cadet school from here in
Kaduna, called Nigeria Military Training College then. In April 1962, I went to
the United Kingdom (UK), Mons Officers Cadet School.
You mean the famous Mons Officers…?
Yes.
And when I was commissioned, I came back and I was posted to 2nd Infantry
Battalion in Abeokuta. That was my first posting. The battalion was in the
Democratic Republic of Congo. I went there. When I came back from there, I was
first in Lagos, as Transport Officer. That was where I was till the January
coup. I was posted back to my battalion and we were posted to Kaduna here. And
then, there was a counter coup, civil war, coup and counter-coup. We
participated. I too was overthrown and detained for more than three years. And
having had that major political setback when I was made a head of state and
then, ended up in detention, I went out and eventually, I decided to join party
politics, participated three times and lost as presidential candidate and I am
still in and fighting.
You have never given up?
Even
though I said at some stage that I wouldn’t present myself for candidature
again, I said I remain in party politics as long as I have breath in me.
Your Excellency, why did you join
the Army?
The
interest was built while I was in secondary school. The emirs of Katsina, from
Dikko, were known to be interested in the military. They always have members of
the military or police in their family right from World War 11. One of the
emirs of Kaduna-Dikko died in Burma. And of course, everybody in the country
knows General Hassan, the son of the Emir of Katsina. He was grandson of Emir
Dukko. So, when General Hassan was in Sandhurst, we were in secondary school in
Kaduna. His father, the Emir of Katsina, Usman Nagogo, used to ask him to go
and talk to the senior students who were in form four to six, to get them
interested in the military. And we were told that he deliberately wanted a
military cadet unit in Kaduna Secondary School. Then, it was limited to Federal
Government Colleges or Government Colleges and we had a military cadet unit,
which I joined.
That was the transition?
That
was where the interest started.
Did your parents object to it?
No.
Well, I didn’t know my father really.
Oh! How old were you when he died?
I
think I was about three, four years? I couldn’t remember his face. The only
thing I could recall about my father was the horse because it threw me down. We
were on the horse with one of my half brothers going to water it and then, it
tripped and I fell. It stepped on me. So, that is the only impression I
have of him. That is the only thing I could recall.
What of your mother?
Oh!
my mother died in 1988 when I was in detention.
Ok, I remember then the controversy
of allowing you to go and see her buried. Did they eventually allow you?
No.
Then it was quite an issue …
Yeah,
it became an issue; so I was immediately released after she was buried.
You didn’t see her buried?
No.
It was after you were released you
then went to her grave and all that?
Exactly!
What kind of childhood did you then
have?
Well,
you know communities then were living communal life. Clearly, I could recall I
reared cattle. We had cattle; we had sheep and then, there was good
neighbourhood. Not many children had the opportunity to go to school, but I
went to school. I left home at the age of 10 or 11 and went to school, like I
said. And I was in the boarding school for nine years. In primary school and
secondary school, I was in the boarding house and from there, I went straight
into the Army.
So, you have always been on your
own?
In
those days, there were not many schools and the teachers then were
professionals. They were working teachers and were committed. And teachers then
treated the children as if they were their own students. You were made to work
and if you don’t, they never spared the cane really. So, I was lucky to be in
the boarding school for my impressionable years, nine years. I was very lucky.
Did you play any pranks as a young
person?
Oh,
certainly!
What where the things you did?
(Laughs)
I wouldn’t like to mention them.
Tell us some of them…
We
used to raid the emir’s orchard for mangoes mainly. Of course, unfortunately we
were caught and punished.
When people talk of Buhari today,
they are looking at a disciplined man. Was it the boarding house that put you
through that or the military? Was the boarding house part of where you
got your Spartan, disciplined life?
Both did. As I told you, the teachers then treated their
students as if they were their own children. So, we got the best of attention
from teachers. And as I told you, they never spared the cane. You were meant to
do your homework; you were meant to do the sports and clean up the environment,
the compound and the area of the school and so on. And from that type of life,
I moved into the military, the military of that time.
Would you say going into the
military was the best thing that ever happened to you?
I think so, because from primary to secondary school and in the
military, it will continue, both the academic and the physical one. I think it
was so tough, but then, once it was inbuilt, it has to be sustained because you
don’t contemplate failure.
You just succeed? Does it mean
failure was not an option?
No.
It was not.
Was
it also the Fulani training of perseverance? Because when you have reared
cattle, for those who have been doing it, they said it toughens you…
It
did.
The sun is there, the rain and you
are there with your cattle…
The
period was remarkable, in the sense that those who are brought up in the city
have limited space. If you are in a confined school, you learn from the school
and what you see immediately. But the nomad life exposes you to nature. You
will never learn enough of plants, of trees, of insects and of animals.
Everyday you are learning something.
You
have seen them and everyday you are learning. You will never know all of them.
So, it is so vast that it takes a lot of whatever you can think of. And then,
the difference again in the environment. In the Savannah, in the Sahel, after
harvest, you can always see as high as your eyes can go. And then, at night
when there is moon, it is fantastic. So, I enjoyed those days and they made a
lasting impression in me.
What are the remarkable things you
can think of during your military trainings?
Initially,
from here in Kaduna, at the end of your training, the height of the field
exercise was then conducted in two places. Here in southern Kaduna and
somewhere in Kachia area. There was a thick belt in that forest. You go for
field firing and so on. And then you go to Jos for map reading and endurance.
That was why mathematics at that level, the secondary school level, geometry
and algebra, were absolutely necessary. It had always been, because to be
a competent officer, you may be deployed to be in charge of artillery;
physics, where you help find your position. Wherever you are from, you
work it on the ground in degrees and so on. You have to do some mathematics.
We
were in Jos. Again, I was made a leader of a small unit. We were given a map, a
compass and you dare not cheat. If you are found out, you are taken 10 miles
back. So, you have to go across the country. You find your way from the map;
you go to certain points and on those points, mostly hills, you climb them and
you will get a box. The weather there is cold. You put your own coat and you
cover it over the hills and at the end of the exercise, part of your
scorecards, are those marks you won or you lost. We arrived with one compass,
which led us to a certain bushy hill.
In
Jos?
Yes,
in Jos. And it was night, dark and it was raining lightly and definitely, our
compass led us to that hill, which means there was a point there. And there
were five of us: myself, one Sierra Leonean or Ghanaian, one from Sokoto, and
one other. I think the other person is Katsina Alu, the former Chief Justice.
You mean he was in the military?
He
was. He did the training but he was never commissioned. He went to
university and did Law. I went up to the hill. I picked the box. I copied the
code, and I said if I were forced to join the Army, I would have left the
following day because that place, a viper or a snake or something or hyena or
lion could have finished me. But I said if I run away the following day, people
would say well we knew you couldn’t make it, we knew you would be lazy. But
because I voluntarily joined the Army, I said I have to be there. That is one
point. The second one was when I was in training in the UK. I came there and we
were drilled so much and at night again, we were on an exercise. We were
putting our formation. In anyway position was created, and they fired at us. We
went down automatically that day and by the time the commander asked us to
move, I fell asleep. It must be few seconds, not up to a minute. That was how
exhausted I was.
Was it really the cold or what?
It
was cold. It was 1962. It was cold and it was rainy again just like in Plateau.
Just between the time we went down and to move and climb the mountain, I fell
asleep. So, those two moments, I would never forget them.
Who were your classmates in the
military and in the officers’ training in the UK?
Well,
the late Gen. Yar’Adua. I was together with him throughout the nine years
primary, secondary school and in the military.
So, you have always been
colleagues…?
We
were together from childhood.
Ok, that is interesting. Who else?
Well,
not the ones that are here. In the military, most of them did not reach the
position I reached; myself, and Yar’Adua. They couldn’t make it.
Why did you choose the infantry and
not the other arms? What was the attraction?
Maybe
it was the training of the cadet unit in secondary school. I found the infantry
much more challenging and when we were doing the training, the Federal
Government decided that we were going to have the Air Force. So, I was invited.
A team came from the Ministry of Defence to interview cadets that wanted to be
fighter pilots in the Air Force. I was the first to be called in our
group. I appeared before them and they told me that those who could pass the
interview would be recommended to go to the Air Force training either in the
UK, some went to Ethiopia or United States or Germany. So, they asked me
whether I wanted to be a fighter pilot and I said no. They asked why, and I
said I wasn’t interested. We were given three choices. Number one, maybe you
went to infantry; number two, you went to reconnaissance then before they
became armour and later, maybe artillery. So, all my three choices, I could recall
vividly, I put infantry, infantry. So, they said why? I said because I liked
infantry. And they asked if I wouldn’t like to be a fighter pilot. I said no, I
didn’t want to join them. They said why. I said I hadn’t done physics.
Normally, I did some mathematics but to be a fighter pilot, you must do some
physics. They said no, that it was no problem, that I could have an additional
one academic year. So, since I had some mathematics background, it was
just one year purely to do physics and I would reach the grade required to be a
pilot. I said no, I didn’t want it. They again asked why. I told them I chose
infantry. The reason is: when I am fighting and I was shot at, if I was not
hit, I can go down, turn back and take off by foot. They laughed and sent me
out. So, I remained infantry officer.
Where were you during the coups and
counter-coups? And what rank were you in the military then?
I
was in Lagos, in the barracks, as transport officer. I was only a second
lieutenant.
That was during the January 15, 1966
coup?
Yes,
January 15, 1966.
The coup met you in Lagos?
Yes.
I think that was my saddest day in the military because I happened to know some
of the senior officers that were killed. In the transport company, after the
2nd Battalion and we came back, I was posted to Lagos to be a transport officer
and in my platoon, we had staff cars and Landrovers. So, I knew the Army
officers, from Ironsi, Maimalari, because I detailed vehicles for them every
working day. So, I knew senior officers.
So, you were in contact with them?
I
was in contact with them somehow because I was in charge of transportation.
Where were you that night of January
15 coup?
I
was in Lagos.
Can you recall the circumstance, how
you got to know?
The
way I got to know was, my routine then was as early as about six in the
morning, I used to drive to the garage to make sure that all vehicles for
officers, from the General Officer Commanding (GOC), who was then General
Ironsi, were roadworthy and the drivers would drive off. And then, I would go
back to the Officers Mess in Yaba, where I would wash, have my breakfast and
come back to the office. And around the railway crossing in Yaba, coming out
from the barracks, we saw a wounded soldier. I stopped because I was in a
Landrover. I picked him and asked what happened. He said he was in the late
Maimalari’s house and they were having a party the previous night and the place
was attacked. So, I took the soldier to the military hospital in Yaba and I
asked after the commander. Maimalari, I think, was commander of 2 Brigade in
Apapa. He was the 2 Brigade Commander. They said he was shot and killed.
Then, you didn’t know it was a coup?
Well,
that became a coup. That was the time I really learnt it was a coup.
And then there was a counter-coup of
July?
Yes, July.
Where were you at this time also?
I
was in Lagos again. I was still in Lagos then at Apapa at 2 Brigade Transport
Company.
And then, there was ethnic
colouration and all that. And at a point, they asked some of you to go back to
the North. Am I correct?
Yes,
because I was posted back then to the battalion. That was in Abeokuta. It was
first to Ikeja Cantonment, but after the counter-coup, we were taken to Lagos
by train, the whole battalion.
Did you play any role in the
counter-coup?
No!
Not that I will tell you.
You know at 70, you are reminiscing.
You are saying it the way it is, you don’t give a damn anymore…
Well,
there was a coup. That is all I can tell you. I was a unit commander and
certainly, there was a breakdown of law and order. So, I was posted to a
combatant unit, although 2 Brigade Transport Company was a combatant unit. You
know there were administrative and combatant units and the service unit, like
health, education. Even transport, there are administrative ones, but there are
combatant ones also.
The question I asked was, did you
play any specific role?
No.
I was too junior to play any specific role. I was just a lieutenant then. In
1966, January, I was a Second Lieutenant, but I was promoted, I think, around
April, May, or June to Lieutenant.
And what were your impressions of
that period?
You
see, senior military officers had been killed and politicians, like Sardauna,
Akintola, Okotie Eboh. They were killed. And then in the military, Maimalari,
Yakubu Pam, Legima, Shodeinde, and Ademolegun; so really, it had a tribal
tinge.
The first one?
Yes.
And then, there was a counter.
One mistake gave birth to another
one?
Certainly,
certainly.
And then long years of military
came?
Oh
yes.
From 1967-75, it was Gowon. At that
point in time, where were you?
When
Gowon came into power, I wonder whether I would recall where I was. It was July
1967 that Gowon came in. That was when I was in Lagos. I was again in Lagos,
then in the transport company.
Then he took over?
Yeah,
Gowon took over or Gowon was installed.
Well, more like you…
(Laughs)
Yes.
And then in 1967?
Civil
war.
So, you have to give me that part
because there are some books I have read, that featured your name. So, what
were your experiences during the civil war?
Well,
I told you that we were parked into the rail to Kaduna from Ikeja, 2nd Infantry
Battalion and when states were created by General Gowon, police action was
ordered; we were moved to the border in the East. We were not in Nsukka, but in
Ogoja. We started from Ogoja.
And you took active part?
Yeah. Well, I was a junior officer.
Who was your GOC then?
My
GOC was the late General Shuwa.
How did you feel during that period
of the civil war? Did you think that when the first coup started, that
civil war would just come?
No.
I never felt so and I never hoped for it. Literally, you are trained to fight a
war but you are not trained to fight a war within your own country. We would
rather have enemies from outside your country to defend your country, but not
to fight among yourselves.
Some of those officers you were
fighting were your comrades…
They
were.
You
knew some of them.
Some
of them were even my course mates. We were facing each other, like when we were
in Awka sector. The person facing me was called Bob Akonobi. We were mates
here.
Robert Akonobi?
Robert
Akonobi.
Who later became a governor?
Yes.
He was my course mate here in Kaduna.
And there you were…
Facing
each other.
It was really crazy.
It
was. It was unfortunate, but it is part of our national development.
And the way we are going, you think
it is a possibility again?
I
don’t think so. No, I don’t think so.
After Gowon, Murtala came.
Yes.
By the time you were no longer a
small officer…
No. I was just, I think, a colonel? Was it a lieutenant colonel
or major? I think I was a lieutenant colonel.
But during the Obasanjo
administration, you had become a minister, as it were.
No. I first became a governor when Murtala came, in North-East.
This same North East that is giving
problem now.
Yes.
I was there and there were six states then: Yobe, Borno, Bauchi, Gombe, Adamawa
and Taraba.
And they were all under your control
or command?
North
East went up to Chad; anyway, they are on the same latitude with Lagos. The
bottom before you start going on the Plateau, Mambilla Plateau, if you look
here on the map, the same latitude was in Lagos and then, up to Chad. That was
the extent of the whole North East.
Now, some of them can’t govern even
one state…
They
are now six states.
I know, but you governed six states
and now, some of them have problems with one state…
Yes.
What were the challenges you faced
governing the North East as a military governor?
Actually,
at that time, because of competent civil service… I was a military man but once
you get to the rank of a lieutenant-colonel, after major, you are being taught
some management courses. It needs a few weeks for somebody who has gone through
the military management training, you have junior staff college, senior staff
college; by that time, you will have enough experience for most administrative
jobs because you must have had enough of the combat ones. I think I didn’t have
much problem. And then, the competent civil servants. Civil servants then were
very professional.
And not political as we have them
now?
No.
They were really professionals and they can disagree with you on record, on
issues.
They were not afraid to make
recommendations to the military governor or administrator?
No,
they were never. People like the late Liman Ciroma, Waziri Fika, who was
eventually Secretary to the Government of Babangida. And the late Abubakar
Umar, who was Secretary to the Government of Bauchi State; and the late Moguno.
They were real professionals, committed technocrats.
So, you didn’t really have much
challenges?
No,
not much challenges.
There was no insecurity then, like
we have in the North East today?
No,
the police then, with their Criminal Investigation Department (CID), were very,
very competent. They interacted closely with the people. So, criminals in the
locality were easily identified and put under severe surveillance. And really,
there was relative peace in the country.
What were your major achievements in
the North East as governor?
I
think the way the state was divided into three; if you remember, it became
Borno, Bauchi and Gongola. So, the way we divided the assets, including the
civil service and so on, I think it was one of our achievements because it was
so peaceful then. We had a committee on civil service.
And eventually you became minister
of petroleum under Obasanjo?
Yes.
That was the only ministry you held
under Obasanjo?
Yes.
During your time as petroleum
minister, what were you doing differently that they are not doing now that has
made the sector totally rotten?
Well,
I was lucky again. When I was made a minister, I met an experienced man, a
person of great personal integrity, the late Sunday Awoniyi. He was
the permanent secretary then before the Supreme Military Council approved the
merger of the Nigerian National Oil Corporation (NNOC) and the Ministry of
Petroleum Resources and made Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation
(NNPC). Sunday Awoniyi was then the permanent secretary of the ministry. That
was when I was sworn in eventually, I think in 1977, it became NNPC when the
ministry and the NNOC were merged. He retired from the civil service. Another
competent technocrat, Morinho, he became the Director of Petroleum Resources
and he had a very competent team of Nigerian engineers, petroleum engineers and
chemical engineers. And as minister of petroleum, I signed the contract for
Warri Refinery, for Kaduna Refinery, for more than 20 depots all over the
country, for laying of pipelines, more than 3200 kilometers and I couldn’t
recall Nigeria borrowing a kobo for those projects. And then, by the time I
became head of state, because I went to War College in the United States before
the military handed over to the Second Republic and came back in 1980 and then,
there was coup at the end of 1983. And that time, you can verify from Professor
Tam David-West who was Minister of Petroleum Resources. We were exporting
100,000 barrels per day of refined products.
Exporting from the country?
Yes,
refined one.
Refined one, not the raw one they
are taking to import to…?
No.
100, 000 barrels?
Yes.
Because we had four refineries then.
They have all collapsed…
Well,
that is the efficiency of the subsequent governments!
You
achieved so much success and all that. But there was an issue that became quite
contentious: N2.8billion. They said N2.8billion oil money was missing.
It
couldn’t have been missing. The governor of the Central Bank then, the late
Clement Isong, said it was ridiculous, that N2.8billion couldn’t be missing
because he said even the king of Saudi Arabia, couldn’t issue a cheque of
N2.8billion. When you have paid your money for petroleum, they are normally put
in the country’s external account and no bank will release that amount of money
at a go because it was deposited. And then, at that time, Nigeria was exporting
about 1.82 million barrels a day. And the cost of barrel a day was about $18.
You work out N2.8billion. How could N2.8billion be missing and we still have
money to run the country? So, it was just a political…
How did that issue come about? What
happened and how did you feel during that period?
No,
no. Shagari did the only honourable thing. He ordered a judicial enquiry and
put a serving Justice of the Supreme Court, the late Justice Irikefe, to carry
out investigation. And their terms of reference were put there. They said
anybody who had an idea of missing N2.8billion, let him come and tell Justice
Irikefe. Nobody had any evidence. It was just rubbish. Well, later, Tai Solarin
and Professor Awojobi were confronted and Fela, the late Fela, to go and prove
their case. They had no evidence, most of them took the newspaper
cuttings of their allegations to the tribunal.
As evidence?
As
their evidence…Cuttings of newspapers publications where they said N2.8billion
was missing. That was their evidence. That was what they took to the Irikefe
panel.
And Fela sang about it! Fela was
your friend.
He
couldn’t have been, because of what Obasanjo regime did to him. Because we were
part of Obasanjo regime.
There
is one other incident that has also been in the public domain: that Shagari
gave you an order and you disobeyed your commander-in-chief. What happened
then?
Which
order was that?
That he gave you an instruction not
to go to war against Chad or something like that?
Well,
that was when I became GOC. When I came back from War College, I was in Lagos.
Then, 4 Infantry Division was in Lagos, in Ikeja. I was in War College when I
was posted there before General Obasanjo’s government handed over to Shagari.
So, when I came, after about four months or so, I was posted to Ibadan, to
command 2 Infantry Division. And after that, I was posted to Jos to command 3rd
Armoured Division. It was when I was there as the GOC that the Chadians
attacked some of our troops in some of the islands and killed five of them,
took some military hardware and some of our soldiers. Then, I went into Army headquarters
and told them then, the Chief of Army Staff then, General Wushishi, why they
shouldn’t just allow a country, our neighbour to move into our territory, where
we had stationed, to kill our people. So, I moved into Maiduguri, former
Tactical Headquarters, and I got them out of the country. Something dramatic
happened: I didn’t know I had gone beyond Chad and somehow, Shagari, in the
United States, was sent pictures that I was with my troops and had gone beyond
Chad, beyond Lake Chad. So, I was given direct order by the president to pull
out and I did.
Oh, you did?
I
did. I couldn’t have disobeyed the president. So, I handed over the division to
Colonel Ogukwe, who was my course mate but was my…
He was in National Population
Commission (NPC)?
I
think so. Colonel Ogukwe. Yeah, he must have been. I handed over the tactical
headquarters to him.
So, you never went against
presidential directive?
I
couldn’t have. He was the Commander-in-Chief. But maybe it was too slow for
them, for me to withdraw, but you don’t disengage so quickly.
But after that, Shagari was
overthrown?
Yes.
Now, they said you were invited to
head the government after the coup?
Yes.
As the most senior officer?
Yes.
What really happened because it was
not a Buhari coup?
No.
Could we say you never plotted a
coup throughout your military career?
No.
I didn’t plot a coup.
You were not a coup plotter?
No.
You were invited?
Yes.
Where were you when you were
invited?
I
was in Jos. They sent a jet to me flown by one of General Gowon’s younger brothers.
He was a pilot. He told me that those who conducted the coup had invited me for
discussion.
You went to Lagos?
I
went to Lagos. I was flown to Lagos. Yes. And they said ok, those who were in
charge of the coup had said that I would be the head of state. And I was.
When you made that statement that
‘this generation of Nigerians has no country other than Nigeria,’ for me it was
like a JFK statement asking Americans to think of what they could do for
America. Twenty months after, your same colleagues who invited you sacked you.
What happened?
They
changed their minds.
They changed their minds? So, what
happened in between that, because part of what they said when they took over
power was that you had become “too rigid, too uncompromising and arrogated knowledge
of problems and solutions to yourself and your late deputy, Idiagbon. What
really happened?
Well,
I think you better identify those who did that and interview them so that they
can tell you what happened. From my own point of view, I was the chairman of
the three councils, which, by change of the constitution, were in charge of the
country. They were the Supreme Military Council, the Executive Council and the
National Council of State. I was the chairman of all. Maybe when you interview
those who were part of the coup, they will tell you my rigidity and whether I
worked outside those organs: the Supreme Military Council, the Council of State
and the Council of Ministers.
Before I come to that, there was
also this issue of Decree 4, alleged drug peddlers who your regime ordered
shot. Looking back now, do you think you made mistake in those areas?
You
see, maybe my rigidity could be traced to our insistence on the laws we made.
But we decided that the laws must be obeyed.
But they said it was retroactive.
Yes,
they said so. But I think it should be in the archive; we said that
whoever brought in drugs and made Nigeria a transit point committed an offence.
These drugs, We We (Indian hemp), is planted here, but the hard drug, cocaine,
most Nigerians don’t know what cocaine is. They just made Nigeria a transit
point and these people did it just to make money. You can have a certain people
who grow Ashisha or We We and so on because it is indigenous. Maybe some people
are even alleging that those who want to come for operation, brought the seed
and started to grow it in Nigeria. But cocaine, it is alien to our people. So,
those who used Nigeria as a transit, they just did it to make money. And this
drug is so potent that it destroys people, especially intelligent people. So,
the Supreme Military Council did a memo. Of course, I took the memo to the
Supreme Military Council and made recommendation and the Supreme Military
Council agreed.
There was no dissenting voice?
There
was no dissenting in the sense that majority agreed that this thing, this
cocaine, this hard drug was earning Nigeria so much bad name in the
international community because Nigeria was not producing it, but Nigerians
that wanted to make money didn’t mind destroying Nigerians and other youths in
other countries just to make money. So, we didn’t need them. We didn’t need
them.
But there were pleas by eminent
Nigerians not to kill the three men involved in the trafficking?
Pleas,
pleas; those that they destroyed did they listen to their pleas for them not to
make hard drug available to destroy their children and their communities?
So, it is not something you look
back now at 70 and say it was an error?
No,
it was not an error. It was deliberate. I didn’t do it as an head of state by
fiat. We followed our proper system and took it. If I was sure that the Supreme
Military Council then, the majority of them decided that we shouldn’t have done
so, we could have reduced it to long sentencing. But people who did that, they
wanted money to build fantastic houses, maybe to have houses in Europe and
invest. Now, when they found out that if they do it, they will get shot, then
they will not live to enjoy at the expense of a lot of people that became
mental and became harmful and detrimental to the society and so on, then they
will think twice.
Decree 4 was what you used to gag
the press?
Decree
4. You people (press), you brought in Nigeria factor into it. When people try
to get job or contract and they couldn’t get it, they make a quick research and
created a problem for people who refuse to do the
Source:
Sun

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