27th February, 2020
PRESS RELEASE:
MURIC PETITIONS NASS SEEKING
FREEDOM FOR 54 SOLDIERS
The Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC) has taken
the case of the 54 soldiers to the National Assembly (NASS) in its prolonged
struggle to get them freed.
According to the human rights organization,
a petition to this effect has gone to the two houses: the Senate and the House
of Representatives. This was revealed in a press statement issued on Thursday, 27th
February, 2020. The statement was signed by the director of MURIC, Professor
Ishaq Akintola.
The petition read in part:
“The 54 soldiers on whose
behalf we have written this petition are presently serving a ten-year jail
term. They had fought shoulder to shoulder with their colleagues against Boko
Haram fighters who were armed to the teeth. They had earlier advanced with their
battalion on 9th July, 2014 under Lt. Col K. C. Uwa to recapture
Damboa but they were ambushed and they lost 23 men and four officers due to
inadequate equipment. Without fresh arms and without a single armoured tank,
they were again asked to advance on Damboa, Deluwa and Bullabilin.
“They therefore requested for more equipments from their
commander, Lt. Col. Oporum. It was not a mutiny. It was a mere request. But
instead of giving them more arms before facing a better equipped enemy, they
were rounded up. They were first sentenced to death on 17th December,
2014 although this was commuted to ten years imprisonment each by the Chief of
Army Staff (COAS), Major General Tukur Yusuf Buratai in December 2015.
“This is the ‘crime’ committed by the 54 soldiers. They blew the whistle
on the famous $2.1 billion which was meant for arms but which politicians
shared among themselves. They are whistle blowers and this government is a
government of change. The present administration called for whistle blowers and
there have been responses. It has led to the recovery of billions of stolen
money and some whistle blowers have already been compensated. What is the
difference between the 54 soldiers and other whistle blowers? They have been in
jail since. But is that where they should be?
“MURIC is concerned
because Islam frowns on injustice. The religion
of those soldiers does not matter to us. They are fellow Nigerians who fought
to keep Boko Haram away from the rest of us. Keeping those 54 soldiers in jail is
tantamount to gross travesty of justice. We began the struggle to free the 54 soldiers in December 2015 with
press statements on the subject matter. This is the thirteenth press statement
we have issued on the subject matter to date and they can all be verified.
“8th December, 2015 ‘Free Soldiers Charged For Refusing
to Fight Insurgents Without Adequate Weapons’. 21st December, 2015 ‘Wanted:
Presidential Pardon For 54 Convicted Soldiers’. 5th January, 2016, ‘66
Convicted Soldiers: MURIC Launches Online Petition For Presidential Pardon’. 5th
June, 2016 ‘Buhari Should Pardon the 54 Soldiers This Month Of Mercy’. 12th
December, 2016 ‘Set Innocent Captives Free’. 9th March, 2017 ‘MURIC
Calls For Presidential Pardon For 54 Soldiers’. 23rd June, 2017 ‘Set
the 54 Soldiers Free’ (used as a rider). 30th November, 2017 ‘Buhari
Should Pardon the 54 Soldiers’. 14th June 2018 ‘Id al-Fitr Message:
Set the 54 Soldiers Free’. 30th August 2018 ‘Prerogative Committee:
MURIC Calls for Pardon For 54 Soldiers’. 13th May, 2019 ‘54
Soldiers: Show them Mercy This Ramadan’. 26th December, 2019 ‘Dasuki,
Sowore Were Christmas Gifts, Give Us 54 Soldiers For the New Year’ and finally,
today’s statement under the caption ‘MURIC Petitions NASS Seeking Freedom For
54 Soldiers’.
“Distinguished
Senators and Honourable Members of the House, you must not allow this injustice
to stand. These 54 soldiers fought for their country but they discovered that
Boko Haram was gaining the upper hand due to the fact that the terrorists had
better weapons. They knew that the government had released money for the
purchase of arms but Nigerian soldiers continued to use archaic weapons at the
war front. They knew that Boko Haram might overwhelm the whole North East if
nothing was done. They therefore raised the alarm. They are now languishing in
jail with the terribly inhuman condition for which Nigerian corrective centres
are notorious. Our lawmakers cannot afford to ignore them.
Like Portia in Shakespeare’s Merchant of Venice (Act IV, Scene I), we approach our
Distinguished Senators and Honourable Members of the House crying “The quality
of mercy is not strained, it droppeth as the gentle rain from heaven upon the
place beneath; it is twice blest; it blesseth him that gives and him that
takes…”
“The ongoing armsgate trials have revealed that Nigerian soldiers
were actually deprived of arms at the time while the politicians diverted money
meant for the procurement of arms to electioneering campaigns. This may have
informed the decision of the COAS to commute the death sentence of the 54
soldiers to ten years imprisonment.
“The COAS has shown mercy to
some extent. The rest is in the hands of our lawmakers. To set them free or not
to set them free? That is the question. It hurts severely to be made to suffer
for so long for exposing large scale corruption in the army. We remind respected
members of the NASS that it was this case which actually revealed the massive
graft involving arms fund meant for soldiers fighting Boko Haram. It is therefore
paradoxical that the 54 soldiers who blew the whistle on armsgate are
undergoing punishment for exposing corruption in the army.
Equally ironical is the fact that the 54 soldiers who acted as
whistle-blowers in the arms fund case are rotting in jail at a time the Federal
Government promised reward for whistle-blowers in corruption cases. It is a sad
twist of fate and it may serve as a source of deterrent for prospective
whistle-blowers if their case is not urgently revisited.
“We believe that setting them free will reinforce the patriotic
zeal in hundreds of soldiers who are currently fighting insurgents in the North
Eastern part of the country. These 54 soldiers are from different religious and
ethnic backgrounds brought together by fate and a burning passion to free their
country from the claws of terrorists. Distinguished Senators and Honourable
Members of the Green Chamber, we rest our case”.
Professor Ishaq Akintola,
Director,
Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC)
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