Indications
have emerged in Abuja that about 47 officers of the Nigerian Army
including eight (8) Major Generals and some Brigadier Generals have been
retired by the Nigerian Army in line with the terms and conditions of service.
The retirements
which flowed from the ranks of Major Generals, Brigadier Generals, Colonels and
Lieutenant Colonels down to those of Captains and Majors according to
military sources followed the approval of the recommendations submitted to the
council by the Chief of Army Staff, Lt. General KTJ Minimah.
Saturday
Vanguard gathered that the Army Council is headed by President Goodluck
Jonathan and it has as members, the Minister of Defence, Aliyu Gusau, Chief of
Defence Staff, Air Chief Marshal Alex Badeh, Chief of Army Staff, Lt. General
Kenneth Minimah and the Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Defence, Alhaji Aliyu
Sumaila took the decision on Wednesday.
The officers
according to sources were retired based on the fact that many of them had
been caught by age on rank rule.
Others were
retired because they were non-deployable owing to lack of capacity among other
reasons. Some were retired because they have failed promotions examination on the
three occasions they got the opportunity (non-promotability).
Others were
retired having put in their papers for voluntary retirement because they have
either attained the mandatory retirement age for their ranks. Some of the
Major Generals who are 57 years or have completed above
mandatory 35 years in service as stipulated in the civil service are affected.
Among the group
of those that voluntarily retired are some officers who held positions as
Principal Staff Officers, General Officers Commanding and Commandant of Army
Training Institutions during the tenure of the former Chief of Army Staff, Lt.
General Onyeabor Azubuike Ihejirika
•Army officers’
wives protest posting of husbands to fight Boko Haram
Authorities of
the Nigerian Army have set up a board of inquiry to investigate the
circumstances that led to the protest of wives of soldiers in Army barracks
Enugu.
Military sources
told Saturday Vanguard that the wives of soldiers of 103 battalion at Enugu
sometime last week, took to the streets protesting the posting of their
husbands to Maiduguri to join in the war against insurgency.
The source
revealed, that the wives numbering over 200, protested throughout the day,
demanding the army authorities to bring back their husbands.
According to the
source, the wives of the soldiers claimed that their husbands did not join the
army to die hence they (husbands) should be left afar from the war zone so that
the wives don’t become widows and the children fatherless at such young ages.
It was gathered
that, the army authorities in 82 Division Enugu, had to address the women and
assured them that their husbands are safe and alive, before nerves could be
calmed.
It was gathered that the women had written series of letters to the army authorities to bring back their husbands which did not see the light of day hence they had to embark on the protest to call the attention of the authorities to their plight.
It was gathered that the women had written series of letters to the army authorities to bring back their husbands which did not see the light of day hence they had to embark on the protest to call the attention of the authorities to their plight.
Tags
Society
good strategy towards 2015
ReplyDeleteArrant nonsense I dare say! When they were enjoying the perks n power etc, some even abuse this powers by oppressing civilians!theydid not complain now let the men do their work they are protesting? So na me go go? Soldiers are currency of war, so ladies think twice before you fall for that swashbuckling officer.its just what it is!
ReplyDeleteYou are right brother. Women should stop deceiving themselves in falling to the War vulnerable clan,b/c they may end-up as widows and opans.
ReplyDelete