Boko Haram: Army colonel convicted for mutiny
Category: Boko Haram News
A serving Lieutenant-Colonel in the Nigerian Army has become the first casualty in the fight against Boko Haram.
• Court martial also demotes commander
A serving Lieutenant-Colonel in the Nigerian Army has become the first casualty in the fight against Boko Haram.
The court martial set up by the Army to try some officers for
offences committed while on internal security operations in the
North-East has sentenced him to one year in prison.
Similarly, another officer who served as a commander of one of the
battalions in the Boko Haram’s hotbed had been demoted in rank.
The jailed Lt-Col has concluded arrangements to appeal.
The court martial which sat in Kaduna, has since concluded its
sitting when it tried officers in the 1 Division of responsibility.
Meanwhile, it is also set to sit in 3Division, Jos to try an
undisclosed number of officers for offences committed in the fight
against insurgency. This is coming just as the court martial will soon
try 18 soldiers for mutiny at the 7 Division of the Army in Maiduguri,
Borno State. The court marshal resumes today.
The court was forced to go on one week recess to allow lawyers
appearing to attend this year’s conference of the Nigerian Bar
Association(NBA) in Owerri, the Imo State capital.
In an attempt to stop what it described as the “high rate of
indiscipline”, by soldiers and lukewarm attitude by some officers in the
fight against Boko Haram insurgency, the Nigerian army had in June,
constituted a General Court Martial(GCM), to try erring personnel for
offences committed in battle. .
The offences, committed mostly by Army personnel on operation in the
North- East, ranged from abandoning of military equipment and
indiscipline.
However, Daily Sun gathered that while some of the officers facing the court martial had genuine cases, others did not.
Some of the suspects who had genuine cases could not convince the
court because their lawyers are mostly civilian. Sources say getting a
military lawyer who has the necessary knowledge about military laws,
remains the best option for officers to defend them during court
martial.
Top Army sources said the rate of indiscipline was becoming worrisome
to the authorities as they are daily bombarded with phone calls from
highly placed individuals on happenings and demands by soldiers.
The source, who does not want to be mentioned, attributed the decay
in the Army to the recruitment process where applicants who cannot get
good jobs see the military as the last resort.
A total of 18 soldiers were arrested as being the masterminds of the
crisis that rocked the 7 Division of the Army in Maiduguri on May 14,
2014.
The soldiers, upon their arrest, disarmed after the investigating
team set up by the Army Headquarters found them culpable of the offence.
They were flown to Abuja and kept in the guardroom in one of the
barracks. Similarly, the officers found guilty, were also arrested from
their locations and flown to Abuja and locked in the Officers Mess from
where they were transported to Kaduna to face the GCM.
Source: The Sun
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