Yakubu Gowon
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In office 1 August 1966 – 29 July 1975 |
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Preceded
by
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Succeeded
by
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Chief of Army Staff
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In office
January 1966 – July 1966 |
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Preceded
by
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Succeeded
by
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Personal details
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Born
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19 October 1934 (age 79
Kanke, Plateau State, Nigeria |
Spouse(s)
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Alma mater |
Royal
Military Academy Sandhurst
University of Warwick |
Religion
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General Yakubu
"Jack" Dan-Yumma Gowon (born 19 October 1934) was the head of state
(Head of the Federal Military Government) of Nigeria from 1966 to 1975. He took power after
one military coup d'état and was overthrown in another. During his rule, the
Nigerian government successfully prevented Biafran secession
during the 1967–70 Nigerian Civil War.
Gowon's education
University of Warwick (1983)
- Royal Military Academy
Sandhurst (1955 – 1956)
- Staff College, Camberley
- Joint Service Defence
College[1]
Early life
Gowon is an Ngas (Angas) from Lur, a small village in the
present Kanke Local
Government Area of Plateau State. His
parents, Nde Yohanna and Matwok Kurnyang, left for Wusasa, Zaria as Church Missionary
Society (CMS) missionaries in the early days of Gowon's life. His
father took pride in the fact that he married the same day as the future Queen Mother Elizabeth married the future King George VI. Gowon was the fifth of eleven
children. He grew up in Zaria and had his early life and education there. At
school Gowon proved to be a very good athlete: he was the school football goalkeeper,
pole vaulter, and long distance runner. He broke
the school mile record in his first year. He was also the boxing captain.[2]
Early career and political ascent]
Yakubu Gowon joined the Nigerian army in 1954, receiving a commission as
a Second Lieutenant
on 19 October 1955, his 21st birthday.
He also attended both the Royal
Military Academy Sandhurst, UK (1955–56), Staff College,
Camberley, UK (1962) as well as the Joint Staff
College, Latimer, 1965. He saw action in the Congo
(Zaire) as part of the United
Nations Peacekeeping Force, both in 1960–61 and in 1963. He advanced
to battalion commander rank by 1966, at which time
he was still a Lieutenant Colonel.
Up until that year Gowon
remained strictly a career soldier with no involvement whatsoever in politics,
until the tumultuous events of the year suddenly thrust him into a leadership role, when his unusual background as a
Northerner who was neither of Hausa or Fulani ancestry nor of the Islamic faith made him
a particularly safe choice to lead a nation whose population were seething with
ethnic tension.
In January 1966, he became
Nigeria's youngest military chief of staff at the age of 32, because a military
coup d'état by a group of mostly Igbo junior officers under Major Chukwuma Kaduna
Nzeogwu led to the overthrow of Nigeria's civilian government.[3] In the course of this coup, mostly
northern and western leaders were killed, including Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa,
Nigeria's Prime Minister; Sir Ahmadu Bello, Sardauna of Sokoto and Premier of the Northern
Region; and Samuel Akintola, Premier of the Western Region, Lt Col Arthur
Unegbe and so many more. The then Lieutenant Colonel
Gowon returned from his course at the Joint Staff College, Latimer UK two days
before the coup – a late arrival that possibly exempted him from the
coupist hit list.[4] Success in twentieth century world
affairs since 1919[5] and the subsequent failure by Major
General Johnson Aguiyi-Ironsi
(who was the head of state following the January 1966 coup-with Gowon his Chief
of Staff) to meet Northern demands for the prosecution of the coup plotters
further inflamed Northern anger. It should be noted that there was significant
support for the coup plotters from both the Eastern Region as well as the
mostly left-wing "Lagos-Ibadan" press.
Then came Ironsi's Decree
Number 34, which proposed the abolition of the federal system of government in
favor of a unitary state, a position which had long been championed by some
Southerners-especially by a major section of the Igbo-dominated NCNC. This was
perhaps wrongly interpreted by Northerners as a Southern (particularly Ibo)
attempt at a takeover of all levers of power in the country. The North lagged
badly behind the Western and Eastern regions in terms of education due to their
religious related unacceptance of western education early, while the
mostly-Igbo Easterners were already present in the federal civil service. On 29
July 1966, while Ironsi was staying at Government House in Ibadan, northern troops led by Major Theophilus Danjuma
and Captain Martin Adamu stormed the building, seized
Ironsi and his host, Lieutenant Colonel Adekunle Fajuyi, and subsequently had the two men
stripped naked, flogged and beaten, and finally shot. Other northern troops,
led by Lieutenant Colonel Murtala Mohammed, the real leader of the
counter-coup and who later succeeded Yakubu Gowon as head of state, then seized
the Ikeja airport in Lagos.
Several Igbo and Eastern minority officers were killed during the counter-coup.
The original intention of
Murtala Mohammed and his fellow coup-plotters seems to have been to engineer
the secession of the Northern region from Nigeria as
a whole, but they were subsequently dissuaded of their plans by several
advisors, amongst which included a number of high ranking civil servants and
judges, and importantly emissaries of the British and American governments who
had interests in the Nigerian polity. The young officers then decided to name
Lieutenant Colonel Gowon, who apparently had not been actively involved in
events until that point, as Nigerian Head of State. On ascent to power Gowon reversed
Ironsi's abrogation of the federal principle.[6]
Role in the Biafran War
In anticipation of eastern
secession, Gowon moved quickly to weaken the support base of the region by
decreeing the creation of twelve new states to replace the four regions. Six of
these states contained minority groups that had demanded state creation since
the 1950s. Gowon rightly calculated that the eastern minorities would not
actively support the Igbos, given the prospect of having their own states if
the secession effort were defeated. Many of the federal troops who fought the
civil war, known as the Biafran War, to bring the Eastern Region back to the
federation, were members of minority groups.
The war lasted thirty months
and ended in January 1970. In accepting Biafra' unconditional cease-fire, Gowon
declared that there would be no victor and no vanquished. In this spirit, the
years afterward were declared to be a period of rehabilitation, reconstruction,
and reconciliation. The oil-price boom, which began as a result of the high
price of crude oil (the country's major revenue earner) in the world market in
1973, increased the federal government's ability to undertake these tasks.[3]
Buildup to the Biafran War
In the meantime, the July
counter-coup had unleashed pograms against more than 50,000 Easterners
throughout the Northern Region. Hundreds of Eastern officers were murdered
during the revolt, and in the North, as commanding officers either lost their
control of their troops or actively egged them on to violence against Igbo
civilians, it did not take long for Northerners from all walks of life to
participate. Tens of thousands of Igbos were killed throughout the North. The
persecution precipitated the flight of more than a million Igbo towards their
ancestral homelands in eastern Nigeria. Lieutenant Colonel Chukwuemeka
Odumegwu Ojukwu, the military governor of the Eastern region who did
not allow attempts by Northern soldiers stationed in his region to replicate
the massacres of Igbo officers, argued that if Igbo lives could not be
preserved by the Nigerian state, then the Igbo reserved the right to establish
a state of their own in which their rights would indeed be respected.
There arose tension between
the Eastern region
and the northern controlled federal government led by Gowon. On 4–5 January
1967, in line with Ojukwu's demand to meet for talks only on neutral soil, a
summit attended by Gowon, Ojukwu and other members of the Supreme Military
Council was held at Aburi in Ghana, the stated purpose of which was
to resolve all outstanding conflicts and establish Nigeria as a confederation of regions. The outcome of this
summit was the Aburi Accord.
The Aburi Accord did not see
the light of the day, as the Gowon led government had huge consideration for
the possible revenues, especially oil revenues which were expected to increase
given that reserves having been discovered in the area in the mid-1960s. It has
been said without confirmation that both Gowon and Ojukwu had knowledge of the
huge oil reserves in the Niger Delta area, which today has grown to be the
mainstay of the Nigerian economy.
In a move to check the
influence of Ojukwu's government in the East, Gowon announced on 5 May 1967 the
division of the 3 Nigerian regions into 12 states: North-Western State,
North-Eastern state, Kano State, North-Central State, Benue-Plateau State,
Kwara State, Western State, Lagos State, Mid-Western State, and, from Ojukwu's
Eastern Region, a Rivers State, a South-Eastern State, and an East-Central
State. The non-Igbo South-Eastern and Rivers states which had the oil reserves and access to the sea, were carved
out to isolate the Igbo areas as East-Central state.[7]
One controversial aspect of
this move was Gowon's annexing of Port Harcourt, a large city in the Niger Delta,
in the South of Nigeria (the Ikwerres and Ijaws), sitting on some of Nigeria's
largest reserves, into the new Rivers State, emasculating the migrant Igbo
population of traders there. The flight of many of them back to their villages
in the "Igbo heartland" in Eastern Nigeria where they felt safer was
alleged to be a contradiction for Gowon's "no victor, no vanquished"
policy, when at the end of the war, the properties they left behind were
claimed by the Rivers State indigenes.
Minority ethnicities of the
Eastern Region were rather not sanguine about the prospect of secession,[8] as it would mean living in what they
felt would be an Igbo-dominated nation. Some non-Igbos living in the Eastern
Region either refrained from offering active support to the Biafran struggle,
or actively aided the federal side by enlisting in the Nigerian army and
feeding it intelligence about Biafran military activities.
However, some did play active
roles in the Biafran government, with N.U. Akpan serving as Secretary to the
Government, Lt. Col (later Major-General) Philip Effiong, serving as Biafra's Chief of
Defence Staff and others like Chiefs Bassey and Graham-Douglas serving in other
significant roles.
First Coup
The immediate reasons for the
first-coup, however, concerned the nationwide disillusionment with the corrupt
and selfish politicians, as well as with their inability to maintain law and
order and guarantee the safety of lives and property. During the initial
stages, Nzeogwu and his collaborators were hailed as national heroes. But the
pattern of killings in the coup gave it a partisan appearance: killed were the
prime minister, a northerner, the premier of the Northern Region, and the
highest ranking northern army officers; only one Igbo officer lost his life.
Also killed was the premier of the Western Region who was closely allied with
the NPC.[3]
Gowon as war leader#
On 30 May 1967, Ojukwu
responded to Gowon's announcement by declaring the formal secession of the Eastern Region, which was now to
be known as the Republic of Biafra. This was to trigger a
war that would last some 30 months, and see the deaths of more than 100,000
soldiers and over a million civilians, most of the latter of which would perish
of starvation under a Nigeria-imposed blockade. The war saw a massive expansion of the
Nigerian army in size and a steep increase in its doctrinal and technical
sophistication, while the Nigerian Air Force
was essentially born in the course of the conflict. However, significant
controversy has surrounded the air operations of the Nigerian Forces, as
several residents of Biafra, including Red Cross workers, foreign missionaries and
journalists, accused the Nigerian Air Force of specifically targeting civilian
populations, relief centers and marketplaces. Gowon has
steadfastly denied those claims, along with claims that his army committed atrocities such
as rape, wholesale executions of civilian populations and
extensive looting in occupied areas; however, one of his wartime
commanders, Benjamin Adekunle
seems to give some credence to these claims in his book, while excusing them as
unfortunate by-products of war.
The victims of air force
bombings, and those who starved to death during the blockade, were brought
again to popular consideration in 2014 when Gowon was declared the tenth most
lethal dictator of modern history in an internet meme
which was stated by viral meme hosting website imgur
to have gone viral on the internet.[9] Gowon has always denied the charges of
being a violent dictator.
The end of the war came about
on 13 January 1970, with Colonel Olusegun Obasanjo's acceptance of the surrender
of Biafran forces.[10] The next day Obasanjo announced the
situation on the former rebel radio station Radio Biafra Enugu. Gowon
subsequently declared his famous "no victor, no vanquished" speech,
and followed it up with an amnesty for the majority of
those who had participated in the Biafran uprising, as well as a program of
"Reconciliation, Reconstruction,
and Rehabilitation",
to repair the extensive damage done to the economy and infrastructure of the
Eastern Region during the years of war.[11] Unfortunately, some of these efforts
never left the drawing board. In addition to this, Gen. Gowon's
administration's policy of giving 20 pounds to Biafran who had a bank account
in Nigeria before the war, regardless of how much money had been in their
account, was criticised by foreign and local aid workers, as this led to an
unprecedented scale of begging, looting and robbery in the former Biafran areas
after the war.
Postwar Years
The postwar years saw Nigeria
enjoying a meteoric, oil-fueled, economic upturn in the course of which the
scope of activity of the Nigerian federal government grew to an unprecedented
degree, with increased earnings from oil revenues. Unfortunately, however, this
period also saw a rapid increase in corruption, mostly bribery, of and by
federal government officials; and although the head of State himself, Gen.
Gowon, was never found complicit in the corrupt practices, he was often accused
of turning a blind eye to the activities of his staff and cronies.[12]
Indigenization Decree
Another decision made by Gowon
at the height of the oil boom was to have what some considered negative
repercussions for the Nigerian economy in later years, although its immediate
effects were scarcely noticeable – his indigenization decree of 1972,
which declared many sectors of the Nigerian economy off-limits to all foreign
investment, while ruling out more than minority participation by foreigners in
several other areas. This decree provided windfall gains to several
well-connected Nigerians, but proved highly detrimental to non-oil investment
in the Nigerian economy.
Overthrow
On 1 October 1974, in flagrant
contradiction to his earlier promises, Gowon declared that Nigeria would not be
ready for civilian rule by 1976, and he announced that the handover date would
be postponed indefinitely. Furthermore, because of the growth in bureaucracy,
there were allegations of rise in corruption. Increased wealth in the country
resulted in fake import licenses being issued. There were stories of tons of
stones and sand being imported into the country, and of General Gowon himself
saying to a foreign reporter that "the only problem Nigeria has is how to
spend the money she has."
The corruption in Gowon's
administration culminated in the notorious "cement armada" in the
summer of 1975, when the port of Lagos became jammed with hundreds of ships
trying to unload cement. Somehow, agents of the Nigerian government had signed
contracts with 68 different international suppliers for the delivery of a total
of 20 million tons of cement in one year to Lagos, even though its port
could only accept one million tons of cargo per year.[13] Even worse, the poorly drafted cement
contracts included demurrage clauses highly
favorable to the suppliers, meaning that the bill began to skyrocket if the
ships sat in port waiting to unload (or even if they sat in their home ports
waiting for permission to depart for Nigeria). The Nigerian government did not
fully grasp the magnitude of its mistake until the port of Lagos was so badly
jammed that basic supplies could not get through. By that time it was too late.
Its attempts to repudiate the cement contracts and impose an emergency embargo
on all inbound shipping tied up the country in litigation around the world for
many years, including a 1983 decision of the U.S. Supreme Court.[14]
These scandals provoked
serious discontent within the army. On 29 July 1975, while Gowon was attending
an OAU summit in Kampala, a group of officers
led by Colonel Joe Nanven Garba
announced his overthrow. The coup plotters appointed Brigadier Murtala Muhammad as head of the new government,
and Brigadier Olusegun Obasanjo
as his deputy.
Later life
Gowon subsequently went into
exile in the United Kingdom, where he acquired a PhD in political science as a student at the University of Warwick.
His main British residence is on the north London / Hertfordshire border, where he has very much
became part the English community in his area. He served a term as Churchwarden in the local church, St Mary the
Virgin, Monken Hadley.
In February 1976, Gowon was
implicated in the coup d'état led by Lt. Col Buka Suka Dimka, which resulted in the death of
the now Gen Murtala Mohammed.
According to Dimka's "confession", he met with Gowon in London, and
obtained support from him for the coup. In addition, Dimka mentioned before his
execution that the purpose of the Coup d'état was to re-install Gowon as Head
of State. As a result of the coup tribunal findings, Gowon was declared wanted
by the Nigerian government, stripped of his rank in absentia and had his pension cut off. Gen
Gowon was finally pardoned (along with the ex-Biafran President, Emeka Ojukwu)
during the Second Republic
under President Shehu Shagari.
He returned to Nigeria in the
1983, and in the 1990s he formed a non-denominational religious group, Nigeria
Prays. Still based in the UK, General Gowon today serves an 'elder statesman'
role in African politics, operating (for example) as an official observer at
the Ghanaian presidential elections 2008.[15][16]
Furthermore, Gen. Gowon is
also involved in the Guinea Worm Eradication Programme as well as the HIV
Programme with Global Fund of Geneva. Gowon founded his own organization in
1992 called the Yakubu Gowon Centre. The organization is said to work on issues
in Nigeria such as good governance as well as infectious disease control
including HIV/AIDS, guinea worm, and malaria.
Source: Wikipedia
An elderstates man. True patriot. U saved the ppl of nigeria from disintegrating. We nigerians wish u good health sir. Ka ci gaba.
ReplyDeleteHe is supposed to have been cooling his heels at the Hague for the atrocious bombing of innocent women, men (elderly) & children @ markets and the blockage of relieves as accused by foreign aid workers like Red Cross, Journalists, Foreign War Observers. However, I wish him many more years, but quickly add here that our politicians & soldiers should be careful because should if such pogrom should rear its ugly head again in this modern ballistic age - let us all know that Asia (& the West in particular): have non-tested missiles which will be unleashed on the Nigeria soil by the East.
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