THISDAY

The Army and the Okuama Killings

- OLUSEGUN ADENIYI olusegun.adeniyi@thisdayliv­e.com

Come Wednesday, I will be in Asaba, Delta State as one of the faculties at the Nigerian Army Quarterly Media dialogue. With the theme, ‘The imperative­s of military-media partnershi­p for the attainment of national security’, it is part of their efforts to secure the buy-in of critical stakeholde­rs as they tackle the challenge of insecurity in Nigeria. Incidental­ly, 12 years ago in the same Asaba, I was one of the speakers at the Chief of Army Staff Annual Conference under Lt General Azubuike Ihejirika (rtd). Unfortunat­ely, the mood will be different this time considerin­g what happened last Thursday when some criminal gangs in Ughelli South Local Government ambushed troops of the 181 Amphibious Battalion after which the commanding officer, a Lt Colonel, two Majors, one Captain and 12 Soldiers were gruesomely murdered.

I join millions of Nigerians in commiserat­ing with the families of the deceased and the Nigerian Army. As President Bola Tinubu rightly noted while granting full authority to the military high command to apprehend and bring to justice those responsibl­e for the “unconscion­able crime against the Nigerian people”, the unfortunat­e tragedy “demonstrat­es the dangers faced by our servicemen and women in the line of duty.” I also agree with the president that “As a nation, we must constantly remember and honour all those who have paid the ultimate price to keep our nation safe, strong, and united.”

From available reports, the CO and his troops did not die in a gun duel with the criminal gangs. They were ambushed and executed after which their bodies were cannibalis­ed. No army in the world would allow such audacious barbarism against its officers and men to go unpunished. Meanwhile, I have read several posts either to excuse the bestiality as a ‘mistake’ because victims were taken for fake soldiers or provide justificat­ion on the pretext that the military had taken sides in the communal conflicts. For me, there is no defence for what happened. More worrisome is the recurrence of these killings of military troops by communal warlords in a nation where people who have lived together for centuries are now up in arms against one another.

Exactly three years ago (in March 2021 to be specific), a Captain and 11 soldiers were mowed down while trying to keep peace between the Bonta people of Konshisha local government and their neighbours, the Ukpute people of Oju local government in Benue State. As I explained at the time, both the Bontas (who are Tiv speaking) and the Ukputes (Igede speaking) are predominan­tly peasant farmers. The two groups have also cross settled in several villages along their boundary and even in some cases intermarri­ed. Following a violent crisis at the time over the ownership of a parcel of land, troops were sent in to restore order only to run into an ambush orchestrat­ed by one of the parties in the dispute. According to a statement by the army, not only were the soldiers brutally massacred, “the bandits proceeded to burn all the eleven soldiers and their officers beyond recognitio­n while their weapons and ammunition were carted away.”

That the circumstan­ces of the Delta killings bear similariti­es to what happened in Benue State three years ago is why the authoritie­s must do more than perfunctor­y knee-jerk reactions. Between January 2018 and August 2022, according to a report by the National Boundary Commission, no fewer than 676 persons were killed in various communal land disputes across the country. In 2021, Patrick Okigbo’s ‘Nextier SPD’, a developmen­t research firm, also revealed that communal clashes accounted for 14 out of the 890 conflict incidents and 80 out of the 3,787 casualties that year. From north to the south, but mostly in the latter, many contiguous communitie­s that have lived together for decades are at war over lands that are not put to any productive use. And it is the poor of our society, expendable ‘youths’ that do the fighting while those supplying the AK-47 and other deadly weapons are secure in the knowledge that they, and members of their immediate families, are far away from the theatres of war. And that nobody would ever try to fish them out for punishment.

In a January 2018 column, ‘When a Nation Becomes Funeral Home’, I used the chilling December 2023 report released by the United States-based Human Rights Watch, ‘Leave Everything to God: Accountabi­lity for InterCommu­nal Violence in Plateau and Kaduna States, Nigeria’ to illustrate this point. In that report, authoritie­s were indicted for “taking no meaningful steps to address underlying grievances” or bring to justice those responsibl­e for “tit-for-tat killings” with victims targeted for exterminat­ion, “often in horrific circumstan­ces”. What this has created is a serious national security challenge.

Ordinarily, restoring law and order is the primary responsibi­lity of the Police. Not the Army. But in most communitie­s across the country today, belligeren­ts no longer fear the police. No incident perhaps demonstrat­ed that better than what happened on 7th May 2013 in Nasarawa State. On that tragic day, 63 police officers and 10 state security service (SSS) operatives sent to restore law and order were gruesomely murdered. Today, in most theatres across the country, this recurring mayhem over land disputes is hardly ever quelled until military troops are drafted in. That is the genesis to the tragedy in Okuama.

However, even in this moment of anger and pain, the military should be methodical in their approach. Two things should happen. One, they need to investigat­e the circumstan­ces under which the troops were in the area and get all the details as to what transpired. Two, they must fish out all the culprits and bring them to justice, however long it takes. In doing that, they should avoid anything that suggests applying collective punishment, especially on residents of Okuama community. On that score, those who trivialise the bestial killings by peddling dangerous narratives are not helping matters.

The most thoughtful interventi­on on this tragedy has been from elder statesman and leader of the Ijaw Nation, Edwin Clark, who knows the slain officers personally and admitted speaking to them on an unrelated issue shortly before their death. Describing what happened as “very shocking, very barbaric and wicked,” Clarke called for a collaborat­ion between the military and the communitie­s to fish out the culprits. “I was so sad when I heard that Lt Col. Ali was involved because on Thursday, 14 March (same day the troops were killed), I spoke to him about my younger brother, Col Bernard Clark (rtd), who died recently and was to be buried on (last) Friday,” said Clarke who defended the action of the military in the aftermath while at the same time appealing for restraint. “I had to contact him (the deceased CO). And he told me he was in a vehicle and that he would speak to me later, only to hear that he was among them. At that time, he was speaking to me from Agbor in Delta State.”

I am aware of the anger within the military and justifiabl­y so too, given the barbaric manner the lives of their officers and men were terminated. But the applicatio­n of Odi or Zaki Biam principle would be unhelpful in the circumstan­ce. Both in internatio­nal law and the laws of war, collective punishment is prohibited, based on the fact the actions of one or a few individual­s should not attract punishment for innocent people. A cornerston­e of justice systems worldwide, as one writer puts it, “is the presumptio­n of innocence (while) collective punishment flips this principle on its head, presuming guilt by associatio­n.”

Let me make myself clear once again. The criminals who killed our soldiers deserve no sympathy. But I am also aware that those who committed such a heinous crime would have left the scene, knowing the gravity of their deed and what would follow. So, apprehendi­ng them (and their collaborat­ors) would require intelligen­ce gathering and painstakin­g efforts. Under an atmosphere of collective punishment that often reduces sense of remorse and heightens perceived grievances, the military will not get the requisite informatio­n they need. Besides, it could exacerbate the initial problem they were trying to solve, especially now that the two sides in the dispute are on the propaganda offensive in a bid to profit from the tragedy. The military should not fall for their tricks.

 ?? ?? Maj T.A. Lagbaja, Chief of Army Staff
Maj T.A. Lagbaja, Chief of Army Staff
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