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| Defense Minister, Mansur Muhammad Dan-Ali |
The Minister of Defence, Brig.-Gen. Mansur Dan-Ali, says the recent retirement of 38 Army officers is part of an ongoing reform in the Armed Forces of Nigeria, rather than a witch-hunt.
The minister made the clarification when fielding questions from newsmen after delivering a lecture titled “Defence Management: the Nigerian Experience’’ at the National Defence College, Abuja, on Monday.
He urged Nigerians not to be misled by the false information about the retirement of the officers, adding that no innocent officer was retired unjustly.
Dan-Ali said what culminated into
retirement of the affected officers was a process of painstaking review and
assessment of officers’ conduct in various tasks assigned to them at a
particular time.
The minister explained that the
affected officers were indicted for offences ranging from professional
misconduct to financial corruption.
What we did was to make sure that
all those that were indicted in one way or the other for both professional
corruption and monetary corruption, had the opportunity to defend themselves.
What I mean by professional
corruption is soldiers’ involvement in partisan politics; if you are partisan,
then you are professionally corrupt; you will be asked to go; that was what
happened.
Of course, they were given fair
hearing; they were called by a board and they went and testified.
Don’t forget that in the military,
there is no half way to doing things; the moment you are found wanting, you
have to succumb and you will go.’’
He said that the Ministries of
Defence and Interior were collaborating, to ensure that police and other
paramilitary organisations were empowered to contain many of Nigeria’s security
challenges and depend less on the military.
The minister said that the planned
Defence reform would entrench professionalism and discipline in the armed
forces.
Similarly, a former Chief of Defence
Staff (CDS), Admiral Ola Ibrahim, noted that the achievements recorded by the
military were products of good virtues instilled in officers and soldiers by its
past leadership.
Ibrahim, however, identified
political interference and paucity of funds being responsible for the
shortcomings of the previous military leadership.
He said professionalism and improved
support would be required for the military to fully actualise its defence
objectives and duties to the nation.
The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN)
recalls that the Nigerian Army recently retired 38 senior officers over what it
described as service exigencies.
Source : Guardian News

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