The Prelude: Bloody Coup of January 1966 By Nowa Omoigui, MD, MPH, FACC First Military Coup in Nigeria
The Prelude:
Bloody Coup of January 1966
By Nowa Omoigui, MD, MPH, FACC![]() |
First Military Coup in Nigeria |
In the Nigerian Army's official history of the Civil War, Major General IBM Haruna (rtd), said: "The dominance of the NPC and the perceived dominance of the North in the centre were like a threat to the presumed more enlightened and better educated Southerners who believed they were the backbone of the movement for Nigerian independence but did not succeed the colonial power to run the affairs of the state. So with that background one can now lay the foundation of the perception of the military struggle in Nigerian politics."
Reflective, therefore, of certain repeatedly articulated viewpoints in
sections of the Press, the opinion matured among a small budding caucus of
already politically inclined officers after independence, that every military
deployment for internal security in aid of the civil authority whose political
orientation they did not share, even if constitutional, was just another provocation.
These include:
1. 'Operation Banker', a joint Army-Police operation in the Western
region, led by then CO, 4th battalion, Lt. Col. Maimalari, allegedly at the
behest of the pro-NPC regional Premier (Akintola) culminating in the
declaration of a state of emergency in May 1962 after a fracas in the House of
Assembly and the appointment of an administrator. Interestingly, the General
Staff Officer
(2) at the Army HQ in charge of Intelligence was none other than Captain
PPatrick Chukwuma Nzeogwu who, as a Major, was later to play a key role in the
coup of January 1966 in which Maimalari lost his life.2. The arrest on
September 22, 1962 and subsequent imprisonment of the opposition leader, Chief
Awolowo, on suspicion of planning a civilian overthrow of the government. It
was alleged that 300 volunteers were sent to Ghana for 3 weeks militia
training. Certain accounts hypothesize two separate plots, one by Dr. Maja and
the other by Awo himself.
But there is a body of evidence that indicates that Dr. Maja was
actually collaborating with the government. The real plotters planned to
exploit the absence from the country of three out of the five Army battalions
to seize key points in Lagos and arrest leading figures of the government. The
absent battalions were in or on their way to and from the Congo. One available
military detachment at Abeokuta was out on military training exercises, while
the newly formed federal guard in Lagos was essentially ceremonial.
Thus, there was an internal security vacuum which the plotters intended
to exploit. Court records also indicate that an attempt was made to recruit
Brigadier Adesoji Ademulegun for the scheme but he refused to cooperate with
the plotters, choosing instead to remain loyal to the traditional military
hierarchy and government, which had just promoted him from Lt. Col. to
Brigadier. Whether this later played a role in his subsequent assassination in
January 1966 is unknown.
3. Army Stand-by during the acrimonious reactions to the National Census
of 1962/63 aand 1963/64.
4. Army Stand-by during the Midwest referendum of 1963.
5. Mobilization of the Army to provide essential services during the
General Strike of 1964. Even this apparently innocuous deployment in support of
the civil authority attracted criticism from some of the would-be plotters of
the January 1966 coup.
Captain Nwobosi (rtd), for example, has said that as a young officer
deployed to the railways as an escort, he was troubled by the fact that the
Prime Minister left Lagos for his home town in Bauchi during the strike,
leaving crucial matters of state to assistants in Lagos as well as the Army
which was fully mobilized. I have not been able to independently verify the
validity of this accusation against Balewa, but it does provide insights into
the expectations of soldiers of their civilian masters when they are drafted by
civil authorities to stabilize the polity.
A perception of lack of a "hands on" approach, even if false,
can undermine authority and the culture of respect.
6. Tiv Crises: As far back as April 1960 and July 1961 the Army had been
placed on standby in Tiv land. This became necessary again in February 1964.
However, on November 18, 1964 the 3rd battalion under Lt. Col James Pam which
was just returning from Tanzania was deployed in full for internal security
operations there. The choice of Pam's unit was a deft move because he was of
middle belt origin and the battalion had been out of the country training
another Army, and thus insulated from acrimony. The Nigerian Army actually
emerged from this operation with high mmarks because the local people saw Pam's
unit as more neutral than the Mobile Police. Interestingly, Major Anuforo of
the Recce unit at Kaduna was deployed in support of Pam for this operation.
This is the officer who later shot him during the January 1966 coup. Other
would-be plotters who served in Tiv land were Ademoyega and Onwatuegwu.
7. Constitutional crisis of January 1965:
Following the controversial Federal Election of December 1964,
ceremonial President Azikiwe of the NCNC, urged by radical intelligentsia,
refused to invite Prime Minister Balewa of the NPC to form a government and
issued orders mobilizing the Army to enforce his authority to suspend the
government, annul the elections and appoint a temporary interim administrator
to conduct elections. However, the oath of allegiance of the officer corps was
not only to the Commander in Chief but also to the government of Nigeria.
The Army Act (#26 of 1960) and the Navy Act (#9 of 1960) were also clear
on lines of authority and control.While the Army and Navy were "under the
general authority" of the Defence Minister in matters of "command,
discipline and administration", the authority for operational use and
control was vested in the Council of Ministers and the Prime Minister.
President Azikiwe and the service chiefs were so advised by the Chief Justice
and Attorney General of the Federation.
Thus the Navy Commander, Commodore Wey politely told the President that
the Navy (under him), the Army (under Major General Welby-Everard) and the
Police (under Louis Edet) had decided to refuse his orders. After a week of
cliff hanging tension, in which the military stood aside, a political
compromise was eventually reached and a government of "national
unity" formed under Prime Minister Balewa.
In the US Diplomatic Archives: Nigeria 1964-1968, the situation was
characterized in this manner: "Very complicated African politics, in which
tribes, religions and economics all play a part, are involved in the situation.
The Northern Premier is at odds with the Eastern Premier in whose region large
oil deposits have been discovered. In the heat of the election campaign, there
have been threats of secession by the east; threats of violence "that
would make Congo look like child's play" from the north.." At the
same time, strong rumors of an impending Army coup purportedly planned for the
annual Army Shooting competition were also heard in political circles. But the
status quo held, albeit temporarily.
8. Army Stand by during the ethnic leadership crisis between Yorubas and
Igbos at the University of Lagos in March 1965.
9. Army Stand-by during the Western regional Election of October 1965
which led to a break down of law and order. Political pressures and
recrimination resulting from this exposure finally cracked the façade of
political neutrality among some officers exposing deep personal, ethnic,
regional and political schisms in the process. To quote Captain Nwobosi again,
"When I was in Abeokuta, my soldiers were being detailed to go somewhere
towards Lagos from Abeokuta to guard ballot boxes that were not opened. They
were not opened but somebody had already been declared the winner. Everyday,
they would go and come back and in the process, I lost one of my corporals. You
know soldiers are soldiers and sometimes like children, you have your favourite
ones and this was personal."
10. A subsequent alleged plan to bring the situation in the West under
control by the NPC controlled federal government in support of its regional
ally, using the Army as had been done in 1962, allegedly brought forward the
date of the January 15 coup. The coup was organized by predominantly Eastern
officers sympathetic to the UPGA alliance of political parties that had lost
the 1964 federal elections and the October 1965 regional elections in the West.
The majority of casualties were Northern politicians and senior military
officers from the same alma mater all of whom were deemed to represent the NPC
or its interests. Others were politicians and officers from the western region
viewed as being in alliance w
ith the NPC leadership.
The coup failed to bring the "young turks" who led it to power
but it did result, through a complex and controversial series of events, in the
emergence of a military regime led by General Ironsi.There is a tragic
post-script to the widely held (but false) presumption that the January 15 coup
pre-empted an inevitable military operation to crack down in the West. This
presumption is based on a reported meeting between key NPC and NNDP political
leaders as well as certain senior military officers said to have occurred in
Kaduna on January 14.
However, the last interview granted to the magazine 'West Africa', by
the late Prime Minister Balewa on January 14, a few hours to his death, went
like this:
Question: Do you see the solution as taking the form of a coalition
government in the West?
Balewa: Yes, it would have to be that ...The Action group has accepted
my mediation, but the NNDP has asked for more time. If I use real force in the
West - and make no mistake about it, I haven't yet - then I could bring the
people to their knees. But I don't want to use force like that. Force can' t
bring peace to people's hearts.Question: Would you consider the release of
Chief Awolowo as part of a political solution of the West's troubles? Balewa: I
think that might be part of it; yes, obviously we would have to see."
This interview was not published until January 29, 1966.
CIVIL-MILITARY INSTITUTIONAL RELATIONSHIPS BEFORE 1966
Until the coup of 1966, civil-military relations after independence
basically followed the classic model. Soldiers were rarely seen in public in
their uniforms unless there was an official event. Barracks were mostly
separated and remote from concentrations of civilian housing. Political speech
making, writing articles in the lay press without approval, or political
campaigns in barracks by or at the behest of soldiers were not allowed.
Furthermore, in part because there was no significant external threat, but also
because of the predominance of British officers at the top until 1965, the army
command played very little role in security policy making. The major foreign
policy decisions of that era were made by the political class. Even in its
internal security role the Army did not make policy. It carried them out.
However, the socialization process that made this relationship possible
seemed to be confined to the uppermost echelons of the military where officers
who had spent the longest amount of time working directly with British officers
before independence were to be found. Coincidentally, certain key officers at
these levels shared certain social origins with key political leaders. Officers
at lower and middle rungs of the ladder, however, did not share many of those
attributes because the transition from decolonization to democratization was
rushed, driven by notions of patriotism.
From October 1st 1960 until May 1st 1965 when he died naturally of an
illness Alhaji Muhammadu Ribadu, the second Vice President of the Northern
Peoples Congress, served as Minister for Defence. From May 1965 until January
1966 his place was taken by Alhaji Inua Wada, also a member of the NPC. They
were both civilians with no prior military service. Ribadu (also known as
"Power of Powers") was a very influential and highly regarded
politician with extensive connections across the political divide. His sudden
death in April 1965 is said by some to have seriously undermined the
reconciliation of the frayed political relationship between the NPC and the
NCNC after the January 1965 crisis which may have prevented the January 1966
coup. Indeed, active plotting for coup actually began after his death that
year.
Ribadu presided over a rapid expansion of the Army and Navy as well as
the creation of the Nigerian Air Force. The establishment of the Defence
Industries Corporation, the Nigerian Defence Academy, a second Recce Squadron
(located at Abeokuta) and two new Artillery batteries occurred on his watch. He
got practically all his budgetary requests through parliament including approval
to spend 19.5 million pounds on defence from 1962-66 as compared with 5.5
million pounds during the preceding seven year period. Defence costs as a
percentage of Federal recurrent spending from 1958-1966 ranged from 7.7 to
9.9%. Defence costs as a percentage of Federal capital spending during the same
period ranged from 1.5 to 12.1%.
Pressure to expand the military did not originate from within the
military. It came from the political class. Resistance to additional defence
spending did not come from the legislature or the public. It originated in 1962
and 1964 from other Ministers as well as economists in the Ministry of Finance
concerned about failure to meet national economic targets. Ribadu lost the
Chairmanship of the Economic Committee of the federal cabinet in 1964, a
position he had used skillfully to protect and oversee his defence
appropriations. Thus civilian oversight of military budgeting in the first
republic was total and exclusive. In my opinion, the late Alhaji Muhammadu
Ribadu is probably Nigeria's best Defence Minister since Independence - a point
that belies the tendency these days to think that civilians with no military
experience cannot run the Ministry of Defence.
In addition to Ribadu there were Ministers of State for the Army and
Navy. From February 1960 until August 1961 Dr. Majekodunmi, a physician, was
the Minister of State for the Army. Then Jacob Obande held the position from
August 1961 until December 1962. From January 1963 until January 1966 the
position was held by Ibrahim Tako Galadima - a personality (unlike Ribadu)
whose grasp of military affairs and protocol was not respected within the
military. Mr. M. T. Mbu was Minister of State for the Navy from 1960 to 1966.
Mr. AA Atta was the permanent secretary from 1960-64 while Alhaji Sule Kolo
held the position from 1964-66. Like the substantive ministers of that era,
both were northerners.
One area in which there was direct political interference from the
political class as a group in military professional policy was in the question
of quotas for Army recruitment, which nevertheless reflected legislative
pressures in a multiethnic society. Such political pressures to apply the
federal character principle have found their way into subsequent Nigerian
constitutions. Other than one or two alleged cases, politicians generally
stayed out of purely military professional matters. Even when the departing GOC
General Welby-Everard, (for a variety of reasons dating back to events in 1951
and 1961), recommended either Brigadier Ademulegun or Ogundipe as his
successor, the Prime Minister and the Defence Minister chose to stick with the
principle of seniority and chose Ironsi instead - perhaps mindful of NCNC
sensitivities coming as it did, after the constitutional crisis in January and
around the time of the acrimonious fight over the Vice Chancellorship of the
University of Lagos.
The literature reports that Brigadier Ademulegun lobbied for the
position of GOC through his friend the Sardauna, but it would seem that the
political leadership of the Ministry resisted all such pressures. Until just
before the collapse, therefore, the link between the Army leadership and the
political class was mostly formal and appropriate. Although informal liaisons
existed on the basis of alma mater and other shared values, these did not rise
to the level of the client networks (such as "IBB Boys" or
"Abacha Boys") that came to characterize future military regimes in
the country. Nevertheless, in a country where ethnic identities were and are
often stronger than professional identities, any perceived coincidences of
liaisons with the ethnic, political and security map of the country were bound
to provoke suspicion among officers who considered themselves outside those
networks.
The final intervention of predominantly eastern junior and middle
ranking military officers resulted from the gradual decline in the cohesion and
legitimacy of civilian institutions, signs of which were already evident from
the time of the December 1959 federal elections before independence.
Certain long standing colonial military policies, amplified by the
fractious nature of Nigeria's political framework set against Nigeria's unique
history provided a backdrop to contentious civil military relations after
independence. As the role of the independent army evolved from external
missions and its participation in internal security deepened, political
antagonisms toward elements of the political class were amplified as it found
itself making judgments and allocating values.
Latent societal cleavages began to undermine esprit d'Corps. It was from
among those who enlisted between 1957 (when the FDC took over from the British
Army council and introduced quotas into the rank and file) and 1961 (when
quotas were introduced into the officer corps) that the deepest schisms
appeared, enabled by other political undercurrents in larger society. As the
Roman military writer, Vegetius (De Re Militari), wrote in 378 B.C.: 'An army
raised without proper regard to the choice of its recruits was never made good
by length of time.'
In the final analysis, driven by bitter fights for political control,
lack of unity in the civil class between the coalition partners, NCNC and NPC,
along with disenfranchisement of some stake-holders in the Action Group (who
continued to be loyal to the jailed Chief Awolowo) played a crucial role in
undermining whatever organized resistance (with or without British help) the
political class might have put up to save democracy when some soldiers came
calling in January 1966. Indeed, military intervention may have been sought by
aggrieved elements of the political class.
As the Police Special Branch report put it: "..sometime during
August 1965, a small group of army officers, dissatisfied with political
developments within the federation, began to plot in collaboration with some
civilians, the overthrow of what was then the Government of the Federation of
Nigeria."
Fearful of certain anticipated political decisions which might have
involved the use of the Army to forcefully restore order in the Akintola-led
Western region and cram the results of the controversial October 1965 election
down the throats of voters, the coup was finally launched on January 15,
1966. But as I have noted previously, the paradox about this alleged
NPC plan to "wallop" the West is that the late Prime Minister, Tafawa
Balewa, in his last interview just before the coup was actually contemplating a
political solution to the impasse in the Western region, one that might even
have involved a coalition government and the release of Chief Obafemi Awolowo
from jail.
At the final meeting just before H-hour in Major Ifeajuna's house in
Lagos, the Police report says "Major Ifeajuna addressed the meeting on the
subject of the deteriorating situation in Western Nigeria to which, he
contended, the politicians had failed to find a solution. He added that as a
result the entire country was heading toward chaos and disaster". One of
the key participants in the coup, Captain Emmanuel Nwobosi has also recently
expressed the opinion that there was "information" that the NPC
dominated Federal Government would declare a state of emergency in the NCNC
dominated Eastern region in coordination with an agitation for the creation of
Rivers state.
In the Army's Official history of the Civil War, Nwobosi said:
"Adaka Boro was stationed in the Rivers area to start off some
insurrection and the East would have been declared an area under a state of
emergency like was done in the West under Dr. Majekodunmi." Nwobosi also
said that this information "is not something you will hear and go to
sleep". Such perceptions - some of which were plainly false-among officers
with sympathies for (or views coincident with) the United Progressive Grand Alliance,
set against the NPC-NCNC-Army constitutional crisis of January 1965 and the
background tensions inherited at independence, provided fuel for the events of
January 1966.
Captain Emmanuel Nwobosi (rtd) who led operations in the West during the
coup, holds the opinion that President Nnamdi Azikiwe was briefed about the
coup plot by Major Emmanuel Ifeajuna in Lagos - but points out that his own
sub-group was not in on Ifeajuna's duplicity. He has also said that one of the
intentions of the plotters was to release Chief Awolowo from jail - a somewhat
strangely coincident plan to what Prime Minister Balewa was contemplating
before he was killed.
In the state of confusion that reigned after the Prime Minister's
abduction on January 15, refusal of the President of the Senate (Nwafor Orizu,
an easterner from the NCNC - who was also acting President) to accept the
appointment by the NPC dominated cabinet of an interim Prime Minister
(Dipcharima, a northerner) closed whatever option remained to formally invite
British Troops in (with or without a pact). With no constitutional provision
for such a move, Orizu and the rump cabinet chose to "hand over" to
the Army Chief, Major Gen Ironsi, (himself an easterner) allegedly to give him
needed authority to put down the coup attempt which had already collapsed in
the south.
It appears from testimony provided by former President Shagari that the
British would likely have responded to an invitation from Acting Prime Minister
Dipcharima in the same way as they did in East Africa two years earlier.
Indeed, other sources claim that a British Battalion was already on standby.
Interestingly, recently declassified American State department archives also
show that American intervention was also contemplated in Nigerian government
circles before the rump cabinet was advised to "hand over" to General
Ironsi to "avoid disaster".
Along with the brutal and regionally asymmetric murders that accompanied
the coup, this fateful decision, which Orizu later defended as
"patriotic", ushered in a very bloody chapter in Nigerian history.
However, surviving officers of the January 15 plot (like Nwobosi and Ademoyega)
seem united in their belief that it was General Ironsi's 'misrule', rather than
their unfortunate actions that night, that led Nigeria to chaos in the months
ahead
To be continued.....
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