In
this interview, Col. Tony Nyiam, who was part of the failed attempt to
oust the Gen. Ibrahim Babangida’s military government in 1990, tells
WAHEED BAKARE and ALLWELL OKPI, how the Orkar coup originated and its
relevance to Nigerian politics
You said what has come to be known as the Orkar coup was not a coup but an action. What is the difference between the two?
I said it was a pro-democracy action to
stop a situation where there would have been perpetual diarchy in
Nigeria, where politicians in uniform would have put a system in place
for them to rule forever. I’m talking about a system similar to what the
Arab uprising dismantled in Egypt.
But a more senior military officer, Gen. Olusegun Obasanjo, referred to it as a coup.
It is because in our setting we misuse
words. And because we are used to misusing words, we believe even words
that are not really the truth. A military coup would be a coup against
an elected government. Our action was not against an elected government.
In fact, it’s the responsibility of a military officer to rise up
against anybody who takes over power from an elected government, which
the government we took action against did. The government we took action
against, which was part of the Muhammadu Buhari to Ibrahim Babangida
regime, had usurped power from the elected government of Shehu Shagari.
If there is a coup that overthrows an elected government, it is the duty
of a military officer to do a counter-coup to restore democracy.
Would you have done the same thing if Buhari had remained in power to that time?
If we had seen the same indications
during Buhari’s time, the plan by the military to perpetuate itself, we
would have done that. But Buhari wasn’t of that kind of mould.
Are you saying your stay in power would have been brief, only long enough to prepare for elections?
Yes. We would have stayed just 18 months
to do basically three things, which Nigeria still needs to do. They
are: a national census, a proper headcount. I’m happy that as I’ve been
saying for years, Festus Odimegwu, the new chairman of the National
Population Commission, clearly said there has been no credible census in
Nigeria since 1816. The fact is that Nigerians have been so ignorant
and have refused to deal with the crucial matter. The census, right from
the British time, has always been used to perpetuate the internal
colonisers over the rest of Nigeria. The three things we would have
done; first a proper national census, so we can know how many we are and
how we are spread. If we truly know what the Nigerian population is,
over 40 per cent of the constituencies in the North-West and North-East,
would not exist. We can only know that if we do a proper census and
that is why today, Festus Odimegwu’s life is being threatened because he
wants to give us a true count for the first time.
The second thing would have been a
conference, which would allow Nigerians to negotiate how they want to
coexist. Today, we have a situation where there are abuses of the
federal character system. For example, a candidate from say Delta State
has to score 170 to pass, while another from another part of the country
is required to score eight. Such abuses cannot really be acceptable by a
people who have a nation. We are yet to have a nation. The imperative
of a conference cannot be ruled out; people need to negotiate. The third
thing was to conduct a free and fair election, which has eluded Nigeria
for long. In all the regimes, a semblance of free and fair election we
see only in a few states in Nigeria basically Lagos and the other states
in the South-West. I’m not saying they have achieved it, but we see
relatively free and fair elections in these regions. It is not
surprising why these regions are the most developing, South-West is the
most peaceful, relatively compared to other regions and of course it is
the region, where there is relative collective governance of the people.
I must give credit to this government, led by President Goodluck
Jonathan. The Ondo and Edo states governorship elections, which were
relatively free and fair, are credit to Jonathan’s government. These are
the things we would have done in those 18 months and those three things
whether we like it or not, have to be done. First, we must have a
proper census and that is why all Nigerians must support Festus Odimegwu
to give us a proper census. Two, we must sit down and negotiate our
corporate existence. We must stop deceiving ourselves with these
fraudulent elections we’ve been having.
There is the argument that we don’t need to have another conference since we have representatives at the National Assembly.
It is the most ignorant assumption. Why
do I say it is ignorant? With all the political scientists we have in
our midst, people forget that what we are practising is what we call
indirect democracy. What do I mean? The proprietary right over people’s
sovereignty is delegated to people we elect to make laws for us. When it
comes to making constitutional reforms or constitution making, you go
to what is called direct democracy. Direct democracy means direct voting
by the people in the form of a referendum and that is why the universal
practice is that a constitution making process that does not go through
a constituent assembly, whose decisions are approved by a referendum,
is null and void. We see the examples. Look at South Sudan; it’s
creation resulted from a referendum. How is it that Nigerians do not
understand that for a constitution to be legitimate, it has to be driven
by the people, and the people are usually represented by a constituent
assembly? And this constituent assembly is usually made up of
non-partisan politicians, because partisan politicians are only
concerned with the next election. They are not concerned about
posterity or long-term issues in the country. So, constitution which
outlives people and a generation should be driven by civil society,
collection of every nationality in the country and clerics. I would cite
an example. My second home is in Scotland and in Scotland those who
drove for the national conference were the clerics of the Church of
Scotland, they were at the forefront. We also saw it in Ireland. Britain
has the oldest parliament in the world, why are they allowing a
constituent assembly to go ahead, while there are parliaments? It is
only in Nigeria that such argument is raised because of the ignorance of
the difference between direct and indirect democracy. That’s why I have
tried to do an aide-memoir to aid constitution- making. There are
certain basic principles of constitution-making, which if we do not
follow, would be like building a house on quicksand.
Do you think we would have been able to tackle these problems if the June 12 election had not been annulled by Babangida?
The thing is, Chief MKO Abiola, who I
had the opportunity to work with when he escaped from Nigeria to UK, was
a man that we lost because his plan was to correct the national issues
and start democracy in Nigeria. But because some western interests in
Nigeria did not want this, they colluded to do away with him.
You once said soldiers could be recruited for a coup without their knowledge. How is that possible?
Yes, there are many instances. You might
want to verify this from Gen. Buhari, he was not the initiator of that
coup that brought him in as Head of State, it was Gen. Ibrahim Bako and
Babangida that initiated it. But because they wanted a credible figure
as a face, he was brought in. He did not know the genesis of that coup.
He was not quite aware of the original idea behind the coup and that was
why when he decided to make a change, he was forced to step aside. So,
if this could happen to a whole Gen. Buhari, who was supposedly the
leader of a coup, it shows how many soldiers can be brought in that way.
Does that mean overthrowing Shagari’s government was IBB’s idea?
It was the idea of late Gen. Bako and IBB. Buhari was only brought in because they needed a face with integrity.
Can you give other instances?
Gen. Yakubu Gowon was not part of the
coup that brought him in. He was a decent man. Nigerians like to play
what the Yoruba people call bojuboju; they bring a figure with
integrity to cover up their real intention; the real intention of
politicians in uniform who have found cheap party. Many elements of them
are in our partisan politics today.
That means such heads of states were under the control of the coup plotters that installed them.
Obviously. And these people are still
the reason why we are not allowed to have a proper census, they are
still the ones ensuring that we don’t have a conference as well as a
free and fair election because if you give the people their rights to
choose who to governs them, you have freed them and these oligarchs
don’t want that.
Could it be a defence in the military to say I wasn’t part of a coup, I was just brought in?
It couldn’t be a defence because at the point you know that it is a coup, you should do everything possible to resist it.
Even at the risk of taking your life?
That was what we did. At the point when
we realised that they were going to perpetuate the military government
in Nigeria, we took the risk.
Can we say this plan was an Hausa-Fulani agenda, since most of these military leaders are northerners?
We cannot reduce this thing to an issue
of a peaceful Hausa-Fulani man or a peaceful Yoruba man or a peaceful
Igbo man. I think we are above that. What we see is an interest of
oligarchs, who think power and money controls and there are all sorts of
people in that fold. For a long time, you may say one ethnic group has a
preponderant membership of that group.
It was reported that the late Gideon Orkar wanted to excise northern Nigeria from the country. Was it part of the agenda?
The unsung hero, Gideon Orkar, was far
from anybody who wanted to divide the country. He was calling all
regions of the country to some conditionality that they have to meet, if
they want us to coexist. It was because that was an era when certain
people were saying that they were superior, and that power was their
prerogative and that they had the monopoly of power.
Would that have been due to the ethnic coloration of previous coups?
Sure. It is sad that democrats are
missing the issue that we were fighting against, which we still need to
fight against. It is a situation where they take over power and give
advantage to their people to the extent that today if we count the local
governments we have in Kano and Jigawa which are states not up to Lagos
in population, the local governments are up to three to five times the
number of local government areas in Lagos. Lagos is a place, apart from
the Niger Delta which gives us foreign exchange earner. Lagos
contributes over 70 per cent of our non-oil revenue generation and the
same Lagos gets less than what Kano, which produces less than two per
cent, gets. This is why I must say Lagos State made a mistake, instead
of relocating the problem where it lies; it is not about deporting Igbo
beggars to Onitsha end of the Niger Bridge. Lagos should take the right
steps legally or otherwise to assert the rights of the state which is
being the owner of the Value Added Tax and the sales tax generated in
Lagos. The things we fought against are still structurally within our
polity. Today, you cannot pass a bill at the National Assembly, if two
zones — North-East and North-West — do not agree. So, two zones can stop
four zones — South-East, South-West, South-South and North-Central —
from moving forward. The irony of this is that these zones are in the
semi-desert areas that are usually less populated going by all empirical
evidence. We have problems with our census figure; that is why they
have all those constituencies and that is why they planned coups to
perpetuate that.
Do you think the action failed
because the northerners were not involved and because of the conditions
given to them to be part of Nigeria?
First of all, our action and Chukwuma
Kaduna Nzeogwu’s action were the only actions that were not palace coup.
The likes of Bako and IBB’s coup which brought in Buhari wer. The fact
is that the government of Shagari was a government that the military was
highly involved in because of the ethnic kinsmanship. There was a fight
over contracts that broke the coup. It was an in-house thing. So, the
coup was driven by people’s selfish interests and that is why I don’t
call it a military coup, I call it a politicians-in-uniform coup.
Nzeogwu’s action and our action were done by outsiders, who felt this
cash-and-carry ruling and stealing would not be allowed to continue.
If the action had been successful, who would have been the head of state?
It would have been Maj. Saliba Mukoro.
He was the initiator. They heard about me and they wanted some senior
people to be part of the action. When they approached me, I didn’t
accept immediately because I wasn’t the type that will go for a coup or
any action. But when I heard the strength of the argument, and in line
with my insight as to what was happening in government because I was a
close aide to Babangida and Sani Abacha. It would have been immoral of
me to report the young officers. I was torn in-between reporting these
young, overzealous and selfless boys, who wanted certain issues solved
and maitaining loyalty to the military government. People forget that it
was because of the action that Delta State was created. And the system
in Delta State today has fraudulently prevented one of the people who
initiated it, Great Ogboru, to govern. People forget that Bayelsa State
was created because of the action. And that’s why I still find it sad
that till today, even with the President coming from Bayelsa, no
Bayelsan government has honoured those boys who sacrificed their lives
for the Niger Delta. I have said it over and over that these chaps
deserve to be honoured. I think the Niger Deltans, President Jonathan
and the Ijaw should take cue from the Yoruba and honour those boys. The
majority of the boys in our action were Niger Deltans for obvious
reasons.
Were you the only colonel in the action?
We were two lieutenant colonels. I was
brought in by another lieutenant colonel. But that lieutenant colonel
sold out and that was why there was a leakage and we had to rush. The
person who recruited me had sold out.
Is he a Niger Deltan?
Yes. His name was Lt. Col. Patrick Oketa.
When you were pardoned, what was your feeling?
First of all, we were grateful to Gen.
Abdulsalami Abubakar and Admiral Mike Akhigbe, who were the initiators
of the pardon. These were two gentlemen who were never part of any coup.
Power was just dumped on Abdulsalami and true to his character; he
wasted no time in returning power to civillians. The system of returning
power to civilians should have been better but because he didn’t want
to stay a day longer, he left and this is a reflection of his character.
Do you still relate with your colleagues?
Sure, what we didn’t realise is that
most of our colleagues who were travelling were very helpful to us,
because they knew what we fought for. If our actions were not taken, you
would never have had the chance of having an Igbo man as Chief of Army
Staff. No Yoruba man would have had that chance either. Why do I say so?
Some of us had insight as to a succession plan in the army for the next
50 years. You would never have had the likes of Gen. Martin Agwai being
the Chief of Army Staff and Defence Staff, because he belongs to the
northern Christian minority. The army, after General T.Y. Danjuma’s time
became an army that was to be led by only an ethnic group. People
forget that there is a linkage between our action and the chance that
MKO Abiola was given for the election.
Now that we have Delta and Bayelsa
states and we have the Ministry of Niger Delta and an Ijaw man is the
head. Do you think these are enough to right the wrongs of the past?
Those issues are again the usual
Nigerian way of dealing with things; rather than go for a holistic
tactic. A fundamental thing essentially is to restore power. Once power
is restored to the people it is left to them. All these things are just
temporal measures. The fundamental issue is to return Nigeria to true
federalism. This talk of diversifying our economy cannot happen if we
do not have fiscal federalism. People forget that when we had proper
federalism, the main foreign exchange for Nigeria was agriculture. So,
we have to go back to that.
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WHERE ARE THOSE FOOLISH IGBOS AND YORUBAS WHO HAVE BEEN USING THIS MEDIUM(nigerianeye.com)TO VOMIT RUBBISH? . THIS IS THE TIME TO TALK .
ReplyDeleteYou dey mind dem. Oya make una talk now
ReplyDeleteTALK abt what? That a TIMID NEGER DELTAN gave out these YOUNG OFFICERS? That they also gave out late KEN SARO-WIWA?
ReplyDeleteBrothers nothing to say here rather to blame ill luck for leting that ACTION FAILED.
KUDOS to late GIDEON & others.
So why is it not called the NIGER-DELTA COUP? U all heard Lt col Nyiam. If it was mainly igbos the conspiratist will call it Igbo coup.
ReplyDeleteNdi ara.
I love you Lt Col Nyiam. I really wish that ACTION was successful.
THAT KIND OF WICKED AND UNGODLY ACTION CAN NEVER SUCCEED.
ReplyDelete