The Save The Nation Movement has queried the exclusion of the Chief of
Army Staff, Lieutenant General Tukur Buratai from the $2.1 billion arms
deal investigation because he served as the Defence Headquarters
Director of Procurement between 2012 and 2015.
In a statement issued in Abuja yesterday January 24, 2016, and signed by its
National Secretary, Mazi Steven O. Chilaka, the group said it was
concerned that only Air Force chiefs were listed among those recommended
for probe by the committee established to audit the procurement of arms
and equipment in the Armed Forces and defense sector from 2007 to 2015.
The press statement reads...
The Save The Nation Movement (STNM) has questioned the rationale
behind the exclusion of the Chief of Army Staff, Major General Tukur
Buratai and other top army officers in the ongoing probe of the
alleged involved of some military chiefs in economic and financial
crimes in the management of personnel finances and the purchase of
arms for the prosecution of the war against insurgency, despite that
he (Buratai) was the Defence Head Quarters (DHQ) Director of
Procurement between 2012 and 2015.
In a statement issued in Abuja yesterday and signed by its National
Secretary, Mazi Steven O. Chilaka, STNM said it was concerned that
only Air Force chiefs were listed among those recommended for probe by
the committee established to audit the procurement of arms and
equipment in the armed forces and defence sector from 2007 to 2015.
The statement read; Major General Tukur Buratai was appointed Director
of Procurement DHQ in 2012, a position he held until May 2015 that he
was appointed Force Commander of the Multinational Joint Task Force
(MJTNF), an appointment he held till he became Chief of Army Staff.
As Director of Public Procurement at the DHQ, all procurements by the
military between 2012 and May 2015 passed through his office.
Our
question is; how can you probe procurement of arms within this period
without the involvement of Major General Buratai, the man who was the
Director of Procurement?
Curiously too, only retired and serving officers of the Nigerian Air
Force were said to have been indicted.
The officers indicted are former Chief of Defence Staff, Retired Air
Chief Marshal Alex Sabundu Badeh; Former Chief of Air Staff, Retired
Air Marshal Mohammed Dikko Umar, former Chief of Air Staff, Retired
Air Marshal Adesola Nunayon Amosu., Major General E.R. Chioba (Rtd),
Air Vice Marshal I.A. Balogun (Rtd), Air Vice Marshal A.G. Tsakr
(Rtd), Air Vice Marshal A.G. Idowu (Rtd), Air Vice Marshal A.M. Mamu,
Air Vice Marshal, O.T. Oguntoyinbo, Air Vice Marshal T. Omenyi, Air
Vice Marshal J.B. Adigun, Air Vice Marshal R.A. Ojuawo, Air Vice
Marshal J.A. Kayode-Beckley, Air Commodore Sa Yushau (Rtd), Air
Commodore A.O. Ogunjobi, Air Commodore G.M.D. Gwani, Air Commodore
S.O. Makinde, Air Commodore A.Y. Lassa, Colonel N. Ashinze, and Lt.
Colonel Mohammed Sambo Dasuki (Rtd).
Was the army being excluded from this probe to save Major General
Buratai? Or Could procurements have been made without his involvement
during the period that he was Director of Procurement?
Definitely, it won’t be funny if President Mohammadu Buhari’s fight
against corruption is also selective against the military as it
already appears to be against the political class and the President
must look into this obvious case of selective probe as a matter of
urgency.
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