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Nigerian Army Sets Up Court Martial For 142 Soldiers Detained For Years Without Trial In Borno

Sahara Reporters 2024/9/28
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Major General A. C. Adetoba will lead the court, which includes a diverse panel of senior officers, a senior military source told SaharaReporters on Tuesday. 

The Nigerian Army has established a Court Martial to address the prolonged detention of 142 soldiers in Maiduguri, Borno State, following public outcry. 

Major General A. C. Adetoba will lead the court, which includes a diverse panel of senior officers, a senior military source told SaharaReporters on Tuesday. 

Other members of the panel include two Brigadier Generals - Brig. Gen A.Y Yakubu, (HQ 36 AB); Brig. Gen. Abubakar (NAHFC); Navy Commodore P.P. Nimmyel (NAHFC); Col G.E. Archibong (DSA) and seven others.

The prosecution team, headed by Lt. Col. W.F David, will present the cases against the soldiers, with trials set to commence on July 8, 2024, at the Command Guest House in Maiduguri. 

This move aims to ensure a fair and expeditious

No fewer than 142 Nigerian soldiers fighting insurgency had been incarcerated for over 10 months without trial in Maiduguri, Borno State, over alleged sundry offences including stealing of arms and ammunition or losing them to insurgents. 

SaharaReporters had reported that some of the detained soldiers had been in the war front for over six years without leave or PASS even as some had not visited their families to see their wives and children in the last three years. 

It was alleged that some of the detained soldiers reportedly stole some quantities of bullets while some others lost their guns to terrorists, among other sundry offences.

Among those detainees are about 20 soldiers who had been recommended to be released to their units because their cases were light according to military lawyers.

It was learnt that the military police had been collecting about N87,000 monthly feeding and other related allowances of most of the detained soldiers.

Some of the detained soldiers had been in the war front for over six years without being replaced with fresh hands or rotated just as they have not been issued with "PASS" to enable them travel to their various homes to see their parents or wives and children in the last three years.

Sources said that some of the soldiers were posted to the war front between 2017 and 2018 but have neither been rotated or transferred to other areas for fresh hands to move in since then.

A senior military officer who spoke on condition of anonymity said some of the soldiers are weary even as most are suffering from war fatigue, crack or depression.

Some of the soldiers who were taken to the war front between the middle of 2017 and early January 2018, also said that their welfare or feeding arrangements depended solely on the garrison or brigade commanders.

Occasionally, soldiers in war fronts are given "pass" to visit their families but some of us have not our wives and children in the last two and a half years, some of the troops said, adding that some of their wives had abandoned them for other men including their colleagues in the barracks.

Their words, "Some Garrison or Brigade Commanders are not interested in troops welfare. However, some are more interested in promotions while some only feed soldiers well and not care about promotion or other welfare issues.

"Some commanders are very bad; both garrison and brigade commanders. They  are not interested in paying their troops any benefits or promoting them. We have tasted all these types of denials."

Some of the troops in Bama, Borno State, said they need more hands to fight the insurgents.

Sometimes, they attack our units of five or 11 soldiers, using RPG and AGL bombs...while we use LMGs. If you abandon any weapon while escaping, you will be detained for a very long time, tried or court marshaled. 

Meanwhile, close relations of the soldiers are complaining that, "Our brothers and husbands have been serving in the North East since early 2017 or 2018, without being changed or even allowed to visit their families at all. 

"As we speak, we have not seen them since them for over two years and a half or three years. We learnt that some are feeling depressed.

"As their relations, we feel bad that these soldiers are unable to see their wives or children in the last three or four years. We feel emotionally disturbed. Some of them have lost their wives to other men or even fellow soldiers."

Meanwhile, SaharaReporters' efforts to speak with the Director Army Public Relations, Major General Onyema Nwachukwu, on the matter were unsuccessful as he didn't take his calls at the time of filing this report.

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