General Murtala Ramat Muhammed |
President Muhammadu Buhari had yesterday
reflected on the death of former Head of State, General Murtala Muhammed, in a
coup attempt 40 years ago, and said his demise in that incident made Nigeria
lose momentum in its march to greatness.
Muhammed was assassinated when the
late Colonel Buka Suka Dimka and his gang ambushed him at Ikoyi,
Lagos, and shot him dead in a traffic jam.
Buhari, who had served under the
late head of state as military governor of the old Borno State, said at the
Murtala Muhammed 40th Memorial Lecture in Abuja, that the deceased was a loyal
Nigerian.
He challenged Nigerians to imbibe
the virtues of loyalty, honesty and determination like Muhammed rather than
mourn his death
Imbibing these virtues, he said will
make Nigeria better.
He said that Nigerians mourned the
death of Murtala because he was on his way to putting the country back on the
path of order and discipline, after years of drift, corruption and near
despair.
He said: “His love for Nigeria and
Nigerians, from wherever they came; his intense professionalism; his impatience
with incompetence and lack of patriotism; his loyalty to friends and
colleagues; his life, short though it proved to be, was marked by an
extraordinary passion, energy and determination to do better, and to make
Nigeria better.”
“These are values that young and old
alike should all remember and celebrate. On assuming the role of Head of State
in 1975, Murtala set out with a single-minded determination seldom seen in
Nigerian leadership. Decisions were on fast-track.”
Buhari said Nigerians would continue
to remember Muhammed’s legacies such as the naming of Abuja as Nigeria’s new
capital and the creation of seven new states.
On a personal note, he said
Muhammed developed a great liking and respect for him on account of his
professional excellence, competence, straight forwardness and genuine interest
and concern for up-and coming officers like him.
But he said: “Of course, no one is
without flaws. He was a man in a hurry, and sometimes this could make him
appear abrupt or even moody.”
“What he could not tolerate was
incompetence and idleness. By the time Murtala was given Command during the
Civil War, the Federal side was on the defensive.”
“The rebels had over-run the then
Mid-West, and reached as far as Ore, just 100 miles from Lagos.
“By dint of sheer bravery,
improvisation and resourcefulness, he mustered a rag-tag group of soldiers,
integrated them into an entirely new division, knocked them into fighting
shape, recovered Mid-West and ventured across the Niger.”
The Vice President of the Board of
Trustees of the Murtala Muhammed Foundation, Lt. Gen. Theophilus Danjuma
(rtd.), expressed joy for being associated with the late Murtala Muhammed early
in life.
Danjuma served as Chief of Army
Staff under Muhammed and told the audience yesterday that Dimka and his group
had slated him for elimination during the coup.
He said: “That I live today is by
the special grace of God. From that moment, 40 years till date, have been
moments of emotion for me. In fact, I have considered them as divine.”
He recalled that Dimka
originally listed him (Danjuma) as number three on the list of those to
be killed, and that when the list was shown to the then Minister of
Defence and one of the coupists, the late Major General Ilya
Bissala, he brought his name forward to number two, and he (Danjuma) would have
been killed after Murtala.
Danjuma commended the Foundation for
its efforts and advised it to embark on aggressive media campaign for the
purpose of educating members of the public on its activities and achievements
so far.
The guest speaker at the event, Mr.
David Richards, who spoke on the topic, ‘Regional Security and State Building:
Portents and prospects’, said that inter-state and intra-states rivalries had
continued to make the world unstable for mankind.
Richards, who is a former Chief of
Staff and professional head of the British Armed Forces, therefore challenged
leaders to find lasting solutions to socio-political crises across the world.
The Chief Executive officer of the
Murtala Muhammed Foundation, Mrs. Aisha Muhammed-Oyebode, saluted President
Buhari for embarking on the crusade against corruption in the country.
Muhammed-Oyebode also commended the
efforts of the Buhari-led administration towards the fight against Boko Haram
insurgency in the North East.
She was hopeful that the abducted
Chibok schoolgirls would soon be rescued in view of the successes being
recorded by the Nigeria Army and other security agencies in the country.
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