
In an interview with TheNEWS recently in the Former Heads of
state, Generals Aguiyi Ironsi, Murtala Muhammed Yakoyo country home in Ife
North Local Government Area of Osun State.
The Military Governor of Old Northern State, Hassan Katsina,
were, despite their Spartan persona, heavy alcohol consumers. This was revealed
by General Alani Akinrinade
He said this in passing when he responded to a question on
how the Army has been destroyed just like other major institutions in Nigeria.
Akinrinade lamented the loss of unity and camaraderie in the Nigerian Army
where ethnicity and religious bigotry had no place.
In his words: All the time, when I was in the armed forces,
I felt like I was in a family setting. Ethnicity, religion, etc., etc., merely
crept on us. The most atrocious thing that I noticed suddenly was an Army
officer talking about religion, about going to pray about don’t drink beer,
don’t drink alcohol. It was a shocker to most of us.
The best seat in the Bobby Benson’s Caban Bamboo in Lagos
belonged to Murtala Mohammed. He was one of the best friends that Bobby Benson
ever had. Even on Saturday, if he was not around, say he travelled out of
Lagos, we would go to the Murtala Muhammed special table, drink as much as we
wanted. The bill for five of us that night went to Murtala Mohammed’s account.
I don’t know whether the Army can get better drinkers than Murtala Mohammed,
and that is across the board.
He added: “The moment people started saying as Muslims they
were not supposed to drink, that diminished the camaraderie in the Army. Now, I
want to drink, and I’m not too sure whether you’ll like it. That cannot
strengthen espirit de corps. Before, it
wasn’t like that, people bought drinks for everybody. I didn’t know if anybody
drank whiskey more than Hasan Katsina. He was my Chief of Staff, I was his
Staff Officer. Between Ironsi and Hasan Katsina, I don’t know the person who
could drink the whiskey better. That’s how we related. That’s what we knew.”
On religion, Akinrinade lamented further: “We didn’t know
that anybody would listen to a Pentecostal Officer. But I can tell you by the
time I was leaving the Army, I was in the 1st Division, this thing had started
rearing its ugly head: my officers were joining the Pentecostals, going to the
hills to go and pray. It was anathema in the Army.
Religion didn’t play a part. Ethnicity didn’t play a part.
But by the time I was GOC, I had to retire a friend of mine for being absent at
a crucial time. He was commanding a unit of his own, he was reporting to Army
Headquarters, but I was in charge of his area, and things happened and he
disappeared, I couldn’t find him and then he showed up two days later and told
me he went to the hills for prayers. Pray for what? I just dismissed him. He
was my friend, but that was the Army that we knew.”
Then the ogre of ethnicity crept in. Akinrinade further
lamented: “As Chief of Army Staff under President Shehu Shagari, I discovered
that some people suddenly realized that they could use influence outside the
Army to get whatever they wanted. We were not used to that. That was anathema
to the Army. I tried to tell my Commander-in-Chief that this was a dangerous
road: don’t allow anyone to do it. I said, See what you’re trying to do, you’re
trying to post a northerner to my Headquarters, I already have one.
My deputy is a northerner, but I don’t see him as a
northerner.
Not only that, he was my senior, but we know how we manage
things, don’t rock the boat at all. This Officer refused to go to Kaduna
because you have assured him that he will stay in Lagos. I had to insist that
the officer should go to Kaduna. I told the officer that if he didn’t go to
Kaduna, I would retire him. That kind of abnormality is now the norm.”
General Akinrinade, in the same marathon interview, spoke on
his childhood, early education, days in the 3rd Marrine Commando, Civil War,
how he escaped death by the whiskers, Emeka Ojukwu, Olusegun Obasanjo, “June
12” struggles, life in exile, appraisal of the Muhammadu Buhari government and
other national issues.
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