Nigeria became an independent
nation on 1 October, 1960 and a republican country three years later and
it was then we began having a Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces
starting with Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe who was the ceremonial Head of State. It
was only during the First Republic when the office was separated from
that of the Prime Minister or the President. Alhaji Tafawa Balewa was
the only Head of the Government who was not the Commander-in-Chief
because we were practising the Parliamentary System of Government
imposed by the British government.
In 1979,
under the 1979 Constitution, the President gained executive powers,
becoming head of both state, government and the Commander-in-Chief.
Nigeria had experienced some military incursion into the government and
the head of the junta was called the Head of State and the
Commander-in-Chief.
We had the Monarchy rule from 1960 to 1963;
the First Republic ran from 1963-1966 when we had the first military
interruption. The military rule was in place from 1966 to 1979 they came
calling again on 30 December, 1983 and the military rule was in place
from 1983 to 1993 this was followed by the Third Republic briefly in
1993 when we had the Interim National Government which was later sacked
by the military the same year. This another military came into being
from 1993 to 1999 when the soldiers finally returned to the barracks and
we have been having a stable polity since.
Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe, the
first Commander-in-Chief came to the office on 16 November, 1963 and
left on 15 January, 1966 when the military struck. Major-General Johnson
Aguiyi-Ironsi became the Head of State and the Commander-in-Chief on 16
January 1966 and was sacked on 12 July 1966. It became the turn of
General Yakubu Gowon who was in the office from 1 August 1966 to 29 July
1975. General Murtala Mohammed succeeded Gowon after a successful coup
of that terminated his government while he was away from Nigeria and
Murtala too was in the office from 29 July 1975 to 13 February 1976 when
he was killed in an abortive bloody coup on 13 February, 1976 while on
his way to the mosque for Jumaat service. His deputy, General Olusegun
Obasanjo stepped into the shoes and he was in the office from 16
February, 1976 to 1 October 1979 when he voluntarily handed over baton
of leadership to the President-elect, Alhaji Shehu Shagari and democracy
returned and the Second Republic began.
But the military came
knocking again when his government was sacked for the alleged corrupt
practices and the massive rigging that characterised the 1983 general
election which gave ‘landslide’ victory to the ruling National Party of
Nigeria (NPN). Alhaji Shagari was in the office between 1 October
Thus
the next military rule was from 31 December 1983 and 26 August 1993. It
began with General Muhammadu Buhari who was in the office from 31
December 1983 to 27 August 1985 when he was deposed in a palace coup
staged by his Chief of Army Staff, General Ibrahim Babangida. Babangida
too was in the office from 27 August 1985 to 26 August 1993 when he was
forced to step aside as a result of the post-annulment of the June 12
presidential poll won by the late business mongul, Bashorun Moshood
Abiola.
The short-lived Third Republic was the planned republican
government of Nigeria in 1993 which was to be governed by the Third
Republican constitution. And Chief Ernest Shonekan was made the Head of
the National Interim Government. He was in the office from 26 August
1993 and 17 November 1993 when the most senior military officer, General
Sani Abacha forced him to resign and he took over. Welcome to another
military regime.
General Abacha was in charge between 17 November
1993 and 8 June 1998 when he expired while in office. He was succeeded
by the officer he had pencilled down his name for retirement, General
Abdulsalami Abubakar who was in a hurry to go. He was the C-i-C from 8
June 1998 to 29 May 1999 and the Fourth Republic began.
The first
man to kick off the Republic was the man who paved way for the Second
Republic, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo and he was in the office from 29 May
1999 and 29 May 2007. He handed over the baton of the C-i-C to President
Umaru Musa Yar’Adua on 29 May, 2007 and he was in charge until death
took him away on 5 May 2010. Then came President Goodluck Jonathan who
was the Deputy to the late President. He was sworn into the office on 5
May 2010 and he has remained on the seat till date. He is seeking the
second term mandate in the next year general election. If elected, he
would be the longest serving Commander-in-Chief the country ever had.
Obasanjo could only be if his era as Head of State is added to the eight
years as elected President.
Not a few pundits give kudos to the
military for resisting the temptation of interrupting the democratic
rule in the country again. The Chief of Defence Staff, Air Chief Marshal
Alex Sabundu Badeh has been consistently telling the military chiefs,
officers and soldiers that the military has no business in politics but
to protect the country.
As we celebrate 54 independent
anniversary, Defence Focus pays tribute to the leadership of the
military for its sense of patriotism and nationalism and wishing it an
enduring victory over the Boko Haram terrorism.
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