Friday, 29 July 2016

Buhari plots to replace Buratai with General Ahmadu Mohammed 'sacked' by Jonathan for leaking information to Boko Haram


Buhari plots to replace Buratai with General Ahmadu Mohammed sacked by Jonathan for leaking information to Boko Haram

Do you remember the former General Officer Commanding (GOC)  of the 7 Division, Nigerian Army? The man whose infuriated soldiers shot at at their barracks, for leaking top secret information to Boko Haram elements, enabling the terrorists to successively launch successful ambush attacks on the soldiers. It got to a point that many soldiers were being brought back dead to their barracks forcing the young army officers to attempt killing the GOC. That GOC Ahmadu Mohammed who was said to have been sacked, by the Jonathan’s administration is to emerge as the Chief of Army Staff [COAS].


Secret Reporters investigations into the activities of the President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration, show that the current Chief of Army Staff [COAS], Tukur Yusuf Buratai, is on his way out.

That is the fallout of cases of fraud and his properties abroad.

The scandal reportedly brought untold embarrassment on the President Buhari’s administration.

With this, Buhari is to appoint a new Chief of Army Staff to replace Buratai.

Interestingly, Major General Ahmadu Mohammed, the General Officer Commanding (GOC) who was in charge of 7 Division, Nigerian Army, who was said to have been sacked, by the Jonathan’s administration is to emerge as the Chief of Army Staff [COAS].

The then GOC fired upon by some junior officers for intentionally giving wrong orders causing deaths amongst them in the fight against Boko Haram, is the man Buhari has found worthy to lead the Army.

Recollect that, in 2014, angry soldiers opened fire on his official vehicle when he came to address them at the Maimalari Barracks in Maiduguri, the Borno State capital.

Reports said the soldiers rebelled when they were forced to return to Maiduguri from Chibok as they considered it unsafe.

The soldiers argued that it was dark and dangerous to return to Maiduguri that night.

They, therefore, requested the then GOC to allow them spend the night in one of the villages considered to be safe for them.

He, however, insisted that they must return the same night and report to Maiduguri.

On their way back, they were ambushed leading to the death of some soldiers.

According to the sources, the troops arrived with the corpses of the slain soldiers to Maimalari barracks while the GOC was addressing some troops on the ongoing operation against the insurgency.

The soldiers then sighted the corpses of their deceased colleagues, and learnt about how they died.

They reportedly condemned the way their superior officers allegedly treated them in the course of the operation.

They, therefore, started shooting sporadically, while others opened fire on the GOC’s vehicle as he narrowly escaped from the scene.

According to the source, “what angered the soldiers most was the unnecessary deduction of their allowances and subjecting them to harsh working conditions without proper equipment to carry out their duties.

As a result, many of them were being killed like rats by the insurgents.

He was supposedly sacked alongside other officers but it turned out he was holing up in Jaji, in Kaduna State, and was never sacked as announced by the then administration.

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