The Chief of Army Staff, Lt.-Gen.
Azubuike Ihejirika, on Wednesday said some soldiers and officers of the
Nigerian Army had been arrested for conspiring with insurgents in the
ongoing face-off between the military and militants.
The COAS however did not give the number of soldiers that were arrested.
Ihejirika said that the affected troops
were caught while posting comments he described as “negative” and
conversing with terror suspects on the Internet.
He stated, “There are some soldiers that
have been found to be posting negative comments on the Internet and
some conversing with insurgents.
“I want to state that any officer or
soldier caught linked one way or the other will be disciplined severely,
there are no two ways about it.
“So the Directorate of Military
Intelligence is encouraged to continue to monitor the activities along
with military police and other commanders in the field because military
service is service of patriotism as I said earlier.”
Nigerian troops are currently
confronting militants in the three northern states of Yobe, Borno and
Adamawa, where President Goodluck Jonathan last week declared a state of
emergency in the efforts to rout members of the violent Islamic sect,
Boko Haram.
The Army chief spoke at the opening
ceremony of the Nigerian Army transformation and Innovation Centre on
Personnel Management and Development at the Command Officers Mess,
Asokoro, Abuja.
The seminar was held under the
leadership of the Chief of Army Transformation and Innovation, Maj. Gen
Ibrahim Sani, with the title, “Building Capacity of the Nigerian Army to
meet Contemporary Challenges.”
He warned that any officers found to be involved in such unacceptable conduct would be made to face the law.
Ihejirika urged the DMI, the
investigative arm of the Armed Forces, and the Military Police to put
commanders and soldiers in the field of operations under watch.
The Army chief explained that a soldier
who gave out information on troops’ movement to the insurgents that
attacked Mali -bound soldiers at Okene, Kogi State, had been arrested
and would be made to face military court-martial.
Two soldiers, a warrant Officer and Corporal were killed in the Okene attack claimed by an Islamic sect.
He said, “Again let me warn; let me also
use this opportunity to warn officers and soldiers who indulge in
giving out information both from the Army headquarters and other
formations; certain vital information that has in one way or the other
worked negatively in our operations.
“As you are aware, a soldier gave out information on the movement of our troops to Mali, movement of troops bound for Mali.
“The troops were attacked at somewhere close to Okene; the guy has been apprehended and is going to be court-martialled.”
Ihejirika also advised commanders of the
various Army formations in the country to exercise caution in
dismissing soldiers who had been trained in handling arms.
He said that if offences committed by
the affected soldiers were so grave as to prevent the soldiers from
being in the unit, a bold step should be taken to jail and to keep away
the offender as a result of the security situation.
He said that the Army would not jump
into dismissing people as was the case in the past because of the
prevailing security situation in the country.
“The situation we are facing today is
such that you cannot afford to discard any of them as was the case many
years back when we had the luxury to do that.
“It is also for the reason that I have
advised commanders to mellow down in dismissing soldiers who are already
trained and have acquired enough knowledge of use of arms.”
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