Jump to navigation

Nigeria

After mounting security pressure, President sacks service chiefs

Sacking of the high command is part of a wider security reorganisation

Security experts in Abuja estimate that Nigeria's military, being deployed in over 30 of the country's 36 states, is under more pressure today than at any time since the civil war. That is driving President Muhammadu Buhari's belated rethink of the government's security strategy and his sacking the four service chiefs on 26 January.

For over a year the chiefs – General Abayomi Olonisakin (Defence), Lieutenant Gen Tukur Buratai (Army). Vice Admiral Ibok Ekwe Ibas (Naval), Air Marshal Sadique Abubakar (Air) – had fought back against a campaign for their dismissal, including resolutions by both houses in the National Assembly and indirect pressure from western states offering Abuja more military cooperation to fight the insurgents and criminal gangs sweeping across the north of the country if the chiefs were sacked.

Buhari has not yet explained his reasons for the sacking but it seems to be part of a wider shake-up in the security system which started earlier this month with the redeployment of over 1,500 officers, including 210 generals. The new high command is: Chief of Defence Staff – Major General Leo Eluonye Onyenuchia Irabor (from Delta State); Chief of Army Staff – Maj Gen Attahiru Ibrahim (Kaduna State); Chief of Air Staff – Air Vice Marshal Isiaka Oladayo Amao (Osun State); and Chief of Naval Staff – Rear Admiral Awwal Zubaru (Kano State) (AC Vol 62 No 1, Ready to rumble & Vol 61 No 4, Protest, what protest?). 



Related Articles

Ready to rumble

As President Buhari looks to his legacy, the jostling for succession will begin in earnest

In May, President Muhammadu Buhari will reach the halfway point of his second and final four-year term. It is that point in Nigeria's political calendar, when the main players' foc...

READ FOR FREE

Protest, what protest?

Official denials over the Lekki shootings fail to stand up against the mounting evidence, while activists are targeted in a clampdown

Nigerian government officials continue to downplay the army shootings at youth-led protests against the rogue Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) police unit in October, and are doub...


The gas ghost keeps haunting

US investigators say they have new evidence of corruption by international companies working on Nigeria's gas export plant

Criminal investigators in the United States and Europe are widening their probe into claims that the USA's oil service giant Halliburton and three other multinationals working on a...


Militants pick their party

In the oil-rich south-east, new wars are being swapped for old as politics gets murky in the run-up to the election

Oil industry sources murmur that President Muhammadu Buhari's initiatives to sustain peace in the restive Niger Delta may not prevail as political dirty tricks accelerate in the ru...


The General's election

Twenty years after he left power, Gen. Obasanjo looks set to return, this time with an electoral mandate

General Olusegun Obasanjo, Nigeria’s first military officer to hand power to an elected government, looks set - 20 years later - to become the first officer to win a presidential e...