Lt. General Jeremiah Useni needs no
introduction. The prominent role he played during the reign of late Head of
State, Sani Abacha, as Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja, is
well known. However, there are two things about Jeremiah Useni, who was
referred to as ‘Jerry Boy’ at the time. He was indeed a Boy, because he joined
the Army at the age of 14. Firstly, he was one of the soldiers who fired shots
during the coup against General Ironsi in which the General was killed in
Ibadan. Mr. Useni was also the closest person to General Abacha up to his last
moments.
This interview, conducted in Hausa by
the Hausa language newspaper, Rariya, and translated to English by PREMIUM
TIMES’ Sani Tukur, reveals a lot of things many of us didn’t know, including
the conspiracies that denied him the opportunity of succeeding Mr. Abacha after
he died. Enjoy…
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You
joined the Army as a fourteen year old, and you were posted to England for a
Course at sixteen, how did you feel at the time?
Honestly, it was like a dream to me
because I broke my left leg during a game of football, just one year after I
joined the Army. As a young footballer, I had very strong shooting ability with
my left leg. Anyone who was unfortunate to be hit with my shots really suffered
no matter their size. I spent about four months at the hospital In Kaduna. Most
of the hospital staffs at the time were Europeans, and they were very
efficient. They joked a lot with their patients and they related with you as if
you had known them for ages. One day, they decided to come and test all of us
and see those who had made progress, so that they would be discharged. When
they came to me, they asked; ‘can you stand up?’ And I said, ‘yes’. Then I was
asked to stand up and walk. The whiteman said, ‘this one is ok now, he can be
discharged’.
Later, they said there would be exams
to select those who would go to England, and I had spent four years without
studies or anything. However, there was a senior officer who was teaching me,
and I went to write the exams, and I passed. I was not even sure we were really
going to Europe until one day when they came to the dining room and called out
our names, five of us; they asked us to go to a particular building, that our
attention was needed there. On getting there, we saw that they had prepared
omelet and other kinds of delicacies of the Europeans. At the time, we were
used to eating Garri only, we either soak or prepare Eba with one green soup
like that. We realised that we might really be going to Europe. That was
how I went as a very young boy, and I thank God for that because before we left
Nigeria, they were paying us one naira, in fact, we were first paid seventy kobo,
until after one year, when they increased it to one naira.
When I went to England, under the
Boys Company battalion, they started paying us four pounds after only two
months. I wrote to my father to tell him that we were now receiving four pounds
as pay, and I asked him to pay any tax he was asked to pay because I was also
enjoying. I told him that just to show him how happy I was.
Many
people were afraid of joining the Army at the time you joined. Were your
parents alive at the time?
They were alive. It was my father’s
friends that did not want me to join. My father was a Royal Guard, and you know
a royal guard does not fear anything. He was the most influential official next
to the emir, who knows any judge at time? We didn’t even see a policeman until
we went to Jos. My father’s friends were advising him not to risk his only son,
because I was an only child, but he said since that was what I wanted, I should
go ahead, he told them that only God would decide if I live or die.
You
had some time with the Sardauna and his Ministers, such as Michael Audu Buba?
We just hear them speak on the radio,
or read about them in Newspapers, but I saw Sardauna a lot when I was in Boys
Company. He used to visit us, because there was a sugar cane farm, where we
used to train, and after such trainings, most of us do get some sugar cane in
the farm. Sardauna used to come there and we saw him a lot. I first saw him in
1957.
After
your return from England, Sardauna , Tafawa Balewa and others were killed in 1966.
Where were you at the time?
So we organised ourselves and agreed
that what happened was very dangerous. We also learnt later that a broad
government was being formed. A northerner will be transferred to the South,
while a Southerner will be transferred to the north. General Hassan katsina was
the governor of the north at the time. People like Kashim Ibrahim were also
gone. So those of us, Army officers from the north were very angry really.
What
was your rank at the time?
I was a Second Lieutenant then, my
mates were Ibrahim Babangida, Garba Duba, Mamman Magoro, and the rest. I was
together with Yelwa in 4th Battalion,
while Duba was in Kaduna. There was another officer from Niger state, I have
forgotten his name, and he was even a Senator recently. We realised that Igbos
were behind all the killings, and were angered the more because they were not
even arrested. Although, they were later arrested and taken to jail, but
information came to us that they were just enjoying themselves there. Even
their ranks were returned to them and they were wearing their uniforms inside
the jail.
We started meeting to find a way out.
Our Brigade Commander, Maimalari was killed, Col. Pam, Tafawa Balewa and the
rest were all killed. We continued to meet in secret and strategising on how to
take revenge.
But while that was going on, words
started going round about what the Igbo officers were saying: that they had
killed the snake, but had failed to cut off the head. Which meant those of us
left might make them suffer later, that there was therefore the need to finish
us off. Instead of them to show remorse and apologise, they were planning
another sinister attacks. We were together with Col. Remawa at the time, he was
serving in Abeokuta, and we heard of a grand plot to kill our emirs. A meeting
of all emirs was called in Ibadan, all our emirs gathered in Ibadan, that the
head of state, Ironsi, would address them. So we said, are we going to let him
come, address them and leave? Or should we just kill him or what? Our
fear was that he was in the company of our emirs, and you know bullets do not
select whom to hit. What do we do? We don’t want even a single emir to die.
We also considered arresting him at
his lodge before he goes to meet with them. Col. Adekunle Fajuyi was the
governor of South West at the time, and the head of state, Ironsi, was staying
in his house in Ibadan. So we don’t want a situation where they would say he
conspired with us. So we decided the best thing to do was to open fire there
even if Governor Fajuyi was also caught, so that they would just be buried
together, and that was what happened.
Before that time, a party was
organised for officers, they brought all sort of drinks for us there. In fact,
since joining the Army, I had never seen so many assorted drinks like the one
they brought for us that day. The plan was to get us all drunk, so that they
would just come and open fire on us and kill us all. That was what they planned
for us at the 4th Battalion Ibadan because we were the most feared,
because we were the ones who lost a brigade Commander, Lagerma. When Murtala
returned from Lagos empty handed, everyone was just crying because Lagerma was
a very nice man. After the Coup, Gowon was made the Head of state.
When
Ironsi was arrested, T.Y. Danjuma was said to be in Ibadan, and there were
reports that you, Duba and Remawa were the ones who arrested him?
It was Garba Dada, the guy from Niger
state, the one I was telling you was a Senator recently. He was the Adjutant
General at the time, and he was our co-ordinator. We did not stay in one place
to meet. We used to drive up to beyond Ijebu-Ode meeting inside the car and
then turn back.
Was
Domkat Bali also in Ibadan at the time?
Why
was Gowon selected after the coup?
He was the most senior officer at the
time. But there was another reason too. There were people like T.Y. Danjuma and
Murtala. But Murtala was a bit less than Gowon in rank, and was too close to
us.
After
Ironsi was killed, the country was plunged into a civil war. You were heading
the logistics and in charge of most war equipment. What were the challenges you
faced during the war?
At times, it is good to be in the
forefront in battle, instead of nominating someone. Facing the enemy is a
difficult task that requires effective strategy. You need to put in place how
to effectively block the supply of enough ammunitions and back up to them. If
you do that, it will not be difficult to finish them off. That is the role I
played, I ensured that our troops get enough ammunitions and logistic support
all the time.
We started with General Danjuma, he
was the C.O. and then Mamman Shuwa, who was later transferred to Kaduna as the
GOC. So also was Martins Adamu. Adamu was leading Ogoja troop, Danjuma was in
Nsukka, and I was in Abakaliki.
What
do you think were the reasons Gowon was removed?
People began to feel he was
distancing himself from them. He was unreachable. The top officers of the
time felt he was building a wall between them, and so they felt there was need
for change. But he was not killed, they waited until he was out of the country
to Kampala, Uganda before they toppled him, and asked him not to return.
Murtala was then made his successor.
How
was your relationship with Murtala?
He was a gentleman. I could remember
when it happened, we just returned to Jos with my troop. We moved all our
military hardware on our vehicles and train and we even had to hire more
vehicles. When we arrived Jos, we went round the town with our entourage up to
the Government House just to show the people we have come, only to learn the
following morning that Gowon had been toppled. I was a Major at the time.
When
Murtala was killed, it was observed that most of the perpetrators were from
Plateau, such as Dimka and Bisalla; how did you feel?
Honestly, I was really surprised. We
were honest and cordial with each other, not knowing that some people had
sinister motive. When we did our own, it was revenge against the Igbos, but
people we don’t understand did this one. But we thank God that they were
identified after investigations. It was Dimka and his people that were planning
to return Gowon to power. But Bisalla, was saying ‘I am here, why should you go
looking for someone outside’? This country is lucky to have people like General
T.Y. Danjuma. When Obasanjo became the Head of State, he was supposed to be the
second in command, but Danjuma said no, there was no need for Murtala to be
killed, and an Obasanjo was made the head of State, with a T.Y. Danjuma second
in command. Then Shehu Yar’adua was brought in when he was a Lieutenant Colonel
but he was doubly promoted to a Brigadier General and made the second in
command to Obasanjo. Yar’adua was a gentleman, and that decision was taken to
promote peace in the land.
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How
did you meet Abacha, because you were the closest person to him?
All I can say is that it was God who
crossed our path together. Firstly, I am a Tarok man, and he was not. He was a
Muslim, and I am not. I was also much closed to Garba Duba. What happened was
that even while we were young officers after the civil war, when a small town
near Enugu was captured, then a message came that I was needed in Lagos. They
told me I would be going to Europe. At the time, there was no daily flight to
Lagos. So I took a Land Rover, and by 9am the following day, I was at the
office. However, I was told I still had three weeks before I departed. So I
went back to Enugu. We were all Lieutenants then and they said we should be
changed because people in Kaduna were afraid. They said the 4th battalion
should move to Kaduna, while the 3rd Battalion
in Kaduna should move to Ibadan.
It so happened Abacha was the officer
responsible for the movements of the Battalion from Kaduna to Ibadan, and I was
in charge of those moving from Ibadan to Kaduna. They were the first to arrive,
so I went to receive them at the train station and show them were to eat and
sleep. But Abacha waited at the train station so that any train that brought soldiers
from Kaduna, he would make sure soldiers from Ibadan followed the train back to
Kaduna. We continued to do that until all the soldiers were successfully
ferried. We then joined the remaining vehicles back to Kaduna, and I left him
at Ibadan. That was how we became friends. And we then went on to meet at 2nd Division
Ibadan.
That was also where we met with Duba.
He was at Asaba with his Armoured Division, and I was at the Headquarters at
Benin. Abacha was at Tom Ikimi’s town. We went out together anytime we met, and
we even used to sleep in the same house. Our friendship became so strong
that every weekend we visited each other’s houses and spend the weekend
together. We were going to the Houses on turn-by-turn basis, up until the time
Duba left the Army because of an ailment that was disturbing him. He went to a
hospital in Saudi Arabia three times before he said he was tired and would
simply retire. The three of us were very much close. Nothing came in between
us, and people were even calling us ‘triplets’. That is God you know. That is
why I always tell people that fighting is not good. If there were tribal
clashes, the three of us would not have been friends.
During
the time of Abacha was Head of State, people were saying you were in fact the
President, because Abacha was not even seen in public much, and he was not
close to his deputy. Others were saying the coup allegations against Obasanjo
and Yaradu’a was just fabricated to break them down. What is the truth of the
matter?
I have been asked this question
several times, and my answer always was that the coup attempt was real. Even if
I don’t like you, would I just pick you up and lock you up? There was a coup
attempt, and I said this even while Obasanjo was president. When General Diya
was being tried, you saw how he was kneeling down to beg Major Al-Mustapha who
was not in anywhere close to him in rank. Definitely there was a coup attempt,
but because Abacha was a good man, he did not kill them. When Obasanjo was a
military Head of state, there was a coup attempt, and he enacted a law that
killed the perpetrators.
But he was not killed, he was only
jailed for life, and they said when another government comes, they can decide
to release him. He was in jail when Abacha died, politics returned and so
there was selfishness and all sort of conspiracies. He knows he was the one who
signed the law that said even if you did not participate in a coup, and that
you only heard of it but decided to keep quiet, you are culpable, and you face
the same penalty as those who planned to execute the coup. He made that law.
When Abdulsalam assumed leadership,
there was a debate whether he should be released or not, but eventually they
decided to release him.
People
also said General Yar’adua had put pressure on your government, insisting at
the constitutional conference that power must be transferred to a civilian
authority, and he must have known about the coup because he had known about all
the others in the past?
A. Well I cannot say anything about
what I have no adequate knowledge about. Yar’adua and I were very close. He was
my good friend.
When
you were FCT Minister, you set up a committee of traditional rulers in which
you were the chairman
The name of the committee was
Traditional Rulers Forum and Leaders of Thought.
Why
was it formed, and what was the achievement of that committee?
We met a lot of problems on the
ground when we came to power, and I realised that they were relegated to the
background, they were not revered and their advice were not heeded, but whenever
there was any crises people rushed to them for solutions. So I set up that
committee so that traditional rulers would know what was going on, and also
know that they were highly valued by the government. There were actually two
committees, one of traditional rulers and the other of leaders of thought. We
did not claim to know everything, so our success came in the fact that the
traditional rulers were telling us what was going on among the people, and what
we needed to do for the people.
It is ideal to be discussing matters
of national security with them, but it is never done until something happens
before you see officials rushing to them in confusion. One day, Abacha informed
governors to include them in their security meetings. When a crisis occurred in
Kano, Abacha called the emir and asked him what was happening? The emir replied
that they had discussed and there was no tension anymore, and the emir told him
‘had we not been involved you would have heard of violence all over’.
We also looked at the allocations to
traditional rulers and realised that if you were not in good terms with the
governor, he would deprived you of funding. He will not renovate your palace,
unless if you are subservient to his wishes. Emir of Zaria was getting only 3%
and the Sultan was not getting up to 5%. Some Traditional rulers from the South
were so surprised when they heard that. You know there, most of them are even
businessmen. So we set up an investigative committee to help the emirs, under
the leadership of the emir of Gwandu, Jakolo. Emirs of the past were the ones
who give orders for something to be brought to them, and it was brought, but
emirs these days have burden and many take them to court for daring to touch
anything belonging to them. So we felt pity on them and took the report to
Abacha saying 10% is too much, but they should at least get 5% of allocations
under their domain.
Instead of holding these meetings in
Abuja alone, we were holding them in various states. We started with Oyo, then
Enugu. We were to hold the 3rd one
in Kaduna then Abacha died. The emirs and chiefs were enjoying it because they
were getting to know each other well and their domains too. I could remember
one day, Abacha was seeing off the emir of Katsina after a visit, and when he
saw me, he told Abacha,’ this is our Chairman, he told me we are going to Enugu
and I have never been to Enugu before’. He said if it were before, if he told
his people that he would be visiting Igbo land, they would ask him if he was
crazy, he also said, ‘but now that everything is fine, I will go’.
Will
you like to see such a committee continue to exist?
Of course yes. They need to continue
with it. One day, I met the Oba of Lagos, he told me he had travelled very far
and had seen a very mighty forest without a single tree.
Just like you said, you, General Abacha and Duba
were like triplets. There were reports that you were together the night he
died. How did you receive the news of his death the following morning?
I was very sad, despite the fact that
I was not told in time. It was much later that I was told I was needed urgently
at the villa. In fact, at first, I was even denied entry. One of my boys became
angry and corked his gun and said ‘was he not here last night’? Before they
allowed us to get in. I got there almost 11am. I met IGP Coomasie and other top
government dignitaries there, those that were informed before me, in spite of
the fact that his family knew I was his best friend. At first, I thought the
family was informed that I had a hand in his death. They started asking me
questions about what I knew about the death. We were together since we were
junior officers, is it now that I would kill him? After their investigations,
they realised that I had no hand in his dead.
After
Abacha’s death, many thought you would be the next Head of State, and there
were some arguments. Why did you not succeed him?
There was politics in the whole
thing. There were several meetings, but no unified decision was reached despite
the fact that I was the most senior officer of the lot. In the end, they said
Abdulsalami had been selected, because he was the most senior in terms of
office. I left without taking any appointment that is why up till today, no one
is accusing me of anything. That was what happened.
How
did you feel when that happened? Did you feel cheated or not?
As a Christian, I believe in destiny
In the past, northerners are ahead of the South in
terms of governance and administration, but today, the north has been relegated
to the background, no one is talking about a unified north anymore, just a
community divided along ethnic and religious loyalties. The Southerners also
have differences of religion and ethnicity, but it is not a source of conflict
there. How did the north get here?
Even you journalists know the kind of
cordial relationships that existed in the past. Truth is both sides are at fault.
We northerners have our own fault, and those opposing the north also have their
own fault. Did the Southerners plunge us into the crises we are witnessing
today? Many innocent people have been killed today, to the extent that there
was an attempt to kill the emir of Kano, just due to lack of security.
Not to talk of the Plateau. One cannot say these crises are as a result of
religious differences because it appears to surpass that.
But I believe we found ourselves in
this mess because we have turned our backs on God, and we are mostly selfish in
our affairs. We have hardened our hearts and are cheating each other, which
will not take us anywhere. Everything now is based on religious on ethnic
affiliations. Why won’t we continue to suffer? If we had not united ourselves
as northerners in the past when some Southerners killed our leaders we would
not have overcome. But today, this one will say I am a Muslim, while the other
one will say, I am a Christian. How can we make progress? We cannot make
progress by calling each other despicable names. Our leaders in the past did
not do that.
How
can relationships among northern people be improved?
Honestly, enough is enough. Emirs
should be visiting each other. We can solve this problem, if we sit down and
talk to each other. Emirs have stopped visiting each other. If you are angry
with someone, and then he visits you, I am sure you will forgive him. Our
governors too have a problem. We organised a meeting in Kaduna, the governors
came and everything was so good, then the following day, only Governor Yakowa
turned up, maybe he himself came because he was the host. They don’t
co-operate. We have to sit and love one another, cry and laugh together.
Otherwise, the upcoming generation will not inherit the right things from us.
From
the time he was the head of state up till today, many people have different
interpretations of who Abacha was. Some see him as a hero, while others see him
as a dictator who trampled on peoples’ right especially those opposed to him.
Can you briefly describe him?
Many people misunderstood who Abacha
was. He was very honest and well mannered. Whenever we sat together, everyone
would give their opinion, but whenever he decided, that was all. He knew how to
run the economy of a nation despite the fact that he did not train as an
economist. When he was the Head of State, he refused to take any loan from the
World Bank, so no one dared undermine his authority. But today, you can say all
sorts of things against the president and sleep peacefully in your house. So
Abacha was a man who believed in law and order. He was also a man who believed
in giving everyone their due. He used to listen to any complaint brought to him
that concerned matters of state, and he always made sure he solved the problem.
I knew him very well.
*We translated this interview from
Hausa and republished with permission from Rariya newspaper
Culled from Premium Times
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