We Have No Plans To Dethrone President Buhari – Nigerian Army
Reports suggesting that the Nigeria armed forces would take over
power from President Muhammadu Buhari, who is facing mounting pressure over the
country’s worsening insecurity have been dismissed by the Nigerian Army.
This is not the first time Nigeria’s armed
forces have issued a statement backing Buhari, but the latest has come after
weeks of criticism of the 78-year-old former general’s failures to stem the
protracted security crisis.
In a statement late Monday, the armed forces
said they would continue to “fully” support the government, remain politically
neutral and protect Nigeria’s democracy.
“Let it be stated categorically that the
Armed Forces of Nigeria remain fully committed to the present administration
and all associated democratic institutions,” army spokesman Onyema Nwachukwu said
in a statement.
“We shall continue to remain apolitical,
subordinate to the civil authority, firmly loyal to the President,
Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of the Federal Republic of Nigeria,
President Muhammadu Buhari and the 1999 Constitution as amended,” it said.
Last week, lawmakers had urged Buhari to
declare a nationwide state of emergency after a month of almost daily attacks,
kidnappings and killings across Africa’s most populous country.
The military statement referred specifically
to comments made by Robert Clarke, a prominent lawyer and social commentator.
He had said the country was on the brink of
collapse and suggested the political leadership hand power to the military so
that the security forces could be restructured.
Opposition figures like Bukola Saraki and
Nobel winner and playwright Wole Soyinka have also urged Buhari to seek
external help or resign.
Buhari meets security
chiefs
Buhari met with his top security chiefs last
week and again on Tuesday to discuss the country’s violence.
“We shall continue to discharge our
constitutional responsibilities professionally, especially in protecting the
country’s democracy, defence of the territorial integrity of the country as
well as protection of lives and properties of citizens,” the military statement
said.
The army expressed the hope that the nation’s
“current security challenges are not insurmountable.”
Nigeria returned to democracy in 1999 after
almost 16 years of military rule.
Buhari, a former army commander and military
ruler in the 1980s, was first elected in 2015 and re-elected four years later
on a pledge to end the Boko Haram insurgency in the northeast.
Rather than abate, the Islamist rebellion has
stubbornly persisted with a Boko Haram splinter faction, Islamic State West Africa
Province (ISWAP), becoming the dominant jihadist force.
Since 2009 when it began, the jihadist
uprising has killed 36,000 people and forced over two million others to flee
their homes in Nigeria’s northeast alone.
The violence has also spread to neighbouring
Chad, Niger and Cameroon, prompting a regional military coalition to fight the
insurgents. (AFP)

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