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How The Coup Against Abacha Was Planned In 1997: The Unknown Details—Major Fadipe

<h4>How The Coup Against Abacha Was Planned In 1997<&sol;h4>&NewLine;<h4><&sol;h4>&NewLine;<p><em><strong><a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;openlife&period;ng&sol;">OpenLife Nigeria<&sol;a> <&sol;strong>reproduces critical narratives by Major Seun Fadipe &lpar;retd&rpar; &comma; former Chief Security Officer to the late Chief of General Staff&comma; Lieutenant General Oladipo Diya&comma; about how the 1997 coup against the government of late Head of State&comma; General Sanni Abacha&comma; was hatched&comma; planned and poorly executed&period;<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>The narratives were earlier published in The Sun Newspaper<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong>Can you tell us about what motivated you to join the military&quest;<&sol;strong><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>My journey into the military was by accident&period; When I finished secondary school and in my set then&comma; I had the best result&period; I could not get admission to any tertiary institution&period; Then&comma; I went to join my mum at my stepfather’s place in Kaduna&period; My stepfather was a soldier&period; But he did not indirectly put me in the Nigerian Army&comma; I was working at the Command and Staff College as a clerical officer&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Most times&comma; I would follow him to play squash&period; On this fateful day&comma; I went with him to the Police Academy in Kaduna&period; He had to play with one of his retired bosses&comma; one Col&period; Pam&period; After the game&comma; the moment we got outside&comma; the man asked&colon; &OpenCurlyQuote;Paul&comma; what is your boy doing now&quest;’ Paul is the first name of my stepfather&period; He just told him&colon; &OpenCurlyQuote;He works in Command and Staff College as a clerk&period;’<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The man became livid and said&colon; &OpenCurlyQuote;Paul&comma; why are you exposing this boy to money at this tender age&quest; And didn’t he pass his WAEC&quest;’ My stepfather answered&colon; &OpenCurlyQuote;Sir&comma; he passed&comma; and he even has one of the best results&period;’ His retired boss went further&colon; &OpenCurlyQuote;Why didn’t he go to the higher institution&quest;’ and my stepfather said &OpenCurlyQuote;No admission&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&OpenCurlyQuote;He then said&colon; &OpenCurlyQuote;Let him go and join the academy&period;’ My stepfather then said&colon; &OpenCurlyQuote;He doesn’t want to go sir&period;’<br &sol;>&NewLine;But for me&comma; I could not remember when we discussed that&period; For the first time&comma; I just voiced out&period; I said &OpenCurlyQuote;Sir&comma; I don’t know why he and my mum did not want me to go into the army&period;’ That was my response to the senior officer&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Then&comma; there was a serving Major with them that day&period; The Lieutenant Colonel told the Major to get me a form to try my luck in the academy&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The Major was working with my stepfather at the Nigerian Army School of Infantry&comma; while I was at the Command and Staff College&period; It was the same location&period; The Major just said&comma; don’t worry&comma; I will give your dad the form for you&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>After about two weeks&comma; I didn’t get anything from my stepfather&period; One afternoon during break&comma; I left my office and walked straight to the Major’s office to get the form&period; He brought out the forms for me&period; I filled one and submitted&period; I passed the entrance exams&period; In fact&comma; I came first in the Old Oyo State&period; I went for the interview&comma; and it was the same thing&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So&comma; I found myself in the Nigerian Defence Academy on the 14th of July 1981&period; But&comma; it was not a pre-planned arrangement for me to go into the army&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong>You said after your secondary education&comma; you went to stay with your mother and stepfather in Kaduna&period; What happened to your biological father&quest;<&sol;strong><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>I lost my biological father in 1966&period; I am the first child&comma; and I have two other sisters&period; Apparently&comma; my second sister was eight months old when our father died&period; He was a headmaster&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>You were the best cadet in your set at Nigerian Defence Academy &lpar;NDA&rpar;&period; How did you achieve the feat&quest;<br &sol;>&NewLine;Well&comma; I will just say commitment and dedication&period; Let me just point out something here&semi; my mum and my stepfather&comma; one way or the other&comma; maybe they were afraid of me joining the army&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>My mum&comma; especially&comma; was scared of me dying&period; So&comma; that was why they did everything to prevent me from joining the army&period; When it was obvious that I was not listening to them&comma; and I was about to leave&comma; my stepfather threatened me that &OpenCurlyQuote;we have been trying to dissuade you from going to the academy&comma; you did not listen&period; If you run away from the academy&comma; you are not coming back here&period; Just look for somewhere else and go&period;’<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>When I got to the academy&comma; although the training was fierce&comma; I had already made up my mind that I was not going to run away&period; I just stayed put&period; I was committed to whatever that happened&period; I told myself that &OpenCurlyQuote;if it means dying here&comma; I have to die&period; But I will make it&period;”<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>This was coupled with the fact that God has blessed me before&period; My brilliance did not start from NDA&period; Let me tell you something interesting&period; God has plans for everyone&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>At CAC Primary School&comma; Irefin&comma; Ibadan&comma; Primary One&comma; Two and Three&comma; I was coming last in class&period; I think he told the headmistress that &OpenCurlyQuote;I have one boy in my class&period; The boy is brilliant&period; But I think something is wrong with the boy&period; The boy comes last in the class for the three terms in Primary One&comma; the three terms in Primary Two and the three terms in Primary Three&comma; making a total of nine terms&period;’<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>If not for Providence&comma; they would have just forgotten about me&period; Then I found myself living with my uncle&period; He’s my mum’s younger brother in Osogbo&period; I think he worked with the Western State Government&period; He was in the Ministry of Education&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The man just took me to Salvation Army School in Okefia in Osogbo&period; He handed me over to my class teacher&period; The class teacher in turn now kept me with the most brilliant students in the class at that time&period; They told me whatever this boy does&comma; just do it because my handwriting was bad and everything about me was just hopeless&period; But that term&comma; my situation&comma; my fortune changed&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>I began to understand things&period; In fact&comma; in school&comma; my handwriting became the best&period; So&comma; from primary four to primary six&comma; I was the one that was even writing the register for teachers&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>When I left Osogbo back to Ibadan&comma; admission had closed for that year in 1974&period; So&comma; I went to CAC Modern School in Anlugbua&comma; at Bashorun&comma; Ibadan&period; It was a model school then&period; I think it’s Oba Akinyele Memorial High School&comma; So&comma; right there&comma; first term&comma; I came first&period; Second term&comma; I came first&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong>But at the NDA&comma; it wasn’t all about academic work&quest;<&sol;strong><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>It was about academics&comma; personal and physical quality&period; You would do other drills such as obstacle crossing&comma; weapon handling&comma; everything encompassing&period; If I was faking whatever I was getting&comma; or if I was being aided&comma; while I was there&comma; it would have been tough for me&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>But this thing has been part of me&period; So getting into the military proper after training shouldn’t be a big deal&period; I actually imbibed those trainings&comma; and the training was part of me&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So getting to the unit right now&comma; I should be able to exhibit those things that I’ve learned in training&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong>How did you get into the Gen Sani Abacha government&quest;<&sol;strong><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>When I was commissioned&comma; I opted to go to the <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;vanguardngr&period;com&sol;">Nigerian Army Ordnance Corps<&sol;a>&period; Although a lot of senior officers&comma; even my men&comma; were not happy with me&comma; because they believed that being the best all-round cadet at that time&comma; why should I go to Ordnance&quest; In those days&comma; everybody would be like&comma; once you get to Ordnance&comma; you are going to steal&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>You are going to be selling blankets and all these things&period; And honestly&comma; at the time&comma; I got crazy that&comma; look&comma; Nigerian Army Ordnance Corps is still part of the services to the Nigerian Army&period; So&comma; if you say&comma; because I’m the best graduating cadet&comma; I shouldn’t go to Ordnance&comma; then&comma; should all those that did not do well go to Ordnance&quest;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>When I got into the unit&comma; I made up my mind that I’m not in Ordnance to steal clothing or to make money&period; So&comma; I chose to go to the ammunition part of the Ordnance&period; In Ordnance&comma; you have the stores and the ammunition&period; Except I want to go there and be stealing ammunition&comma; and I’ll be stealing weapons -an easy way to jail&period; I finished 1984&comma; got posted to Ordnance Corps&period; I had my Basic Ordnance Officers training in 1986&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So in 1987&comma; I chose to go to the ammunition&comma; and again&comma; I went to specialise at the Ammunition and Armaments Technical Officer’s Course in Ojo&period; The training school was in Ojo Cantonment&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>But later in life&comma; I was a bit frustrated&period; When I finished my basic course&comma; the commandant then&comma; he’s late now&comma; promised that the first two officers would be sent abroad to either Pakistan or to the United Kingdom&period; And to God be the glory&comma; I came first in that basic course&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>And I was not sent abroad&period; Another person was sent abroad&period; I took it calmly&period; Now&comma; after my specialised course too&comma; in 1987&comma; the same promise came&comma; maybe to motivate us&period; I came first too&period; In fact&comma; the person that was sent abroad came third&period; So&comma; from there&comma; I was posted to Port Harcourt&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>I wanted to leave the Ordnance Corps&period; But it was Colonel Abutu Garba then – he left as a Major General&comma; he was our General Officer Commanding &lpar;GOC&rpar; in 82 Division&period; I booked an appointment to meet with him&comma; and the man gave me an audience&period; I told him I wanted to change corps&period; I told him I wanted to go to the Artillery Corps&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The man just looked at me&period; I was a Captain then&period; I was promoted captain in 1989&period; But it was around 1991 that I went to the GOC&comma; because he was an artillery officer&period; I wanted him to help me out from Ordnance to the Artillery&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>He said&comma; look&comma; young man&comma; let me advise you right now&period; According to what you have told me&comma; you have done all your courses in Ordnance&comma; except the final exams&comma; the final course&period; Ordnance is a specialised arm&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Artillery that you want to go to is another specialised arm of the Nigerian Army&period; Now&comma; before you know what is happening&comma; you’ll become a Major&comma; and going into artillery right now&comma; you have to start all over again&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>He said&comma; if I advise you&comma; go to the infantry&period; You have done infantry courses&period; You have done your specialised courses&period; So&comma; going to the infantry&comma; you are not going to miss out on anything&period; You just have to continue from where you have stopped&comma; unlike the artillery&period; He said&comma; I will allow you to go back&comma; think about it&comma; and come back&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>It was during this period that I was told that I had the DMI &lpar;Directorate of Military Intelligence&rpar; interview&period; Even my course mate called me&comma; General Wilbert&period; We were Captains then&period; He said I saw your name for the DMI’s interview&period; What did you do&quest; I said&comma; well&comma; I am so confident that I have not done anything untoward&comma; but you are there&period; Let me find out what my offence is&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Once you are called for DMI’s interview&comma; you know you have run foul&comma; one way or the other&period; I said&comma; I have no fear&period; I have not done anything&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So&comma; it was the second day that one Major Abbas&comma; who died in the 1992 Ejigbo crash&period; He was the officer in charge of the Intelligence Detachment in the Second Brigades&comma; Lagos&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>He called me and said Fadipe &comma; I have sent your name to DMI because now&comma; the majority of intelligence officers are leaving for this course&comma; and the intelligence has a dearth of officers&comma; and they said they should poach officers from other units into the intelligence corps&period; Or don’t you want it&quest; I said&comma; sir&comma; thank you very much&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>I was happy&period; I just said&comma; well&comma; that shows God has approved of my leaving the Ordnance Corps&period; So&comma; the letter came formally&comma; and I went for the interview&period; That’s where we were told that they are taking us from where we are&period; I think about 20 officers went for that interview&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>I think only eight or 10 of us were selected to join the intelligence corps&comma; and I finally left the Ordnance Corps in March or April 1992&period; I was doing my final course in Ordnance at that time&period; In fact&comma; I wanted to finish that course before joining&comma; but it’s like I was summoned from DMI headquarters&comma; because Ordnance didn’t want to release me to go into the Intelligence Corps&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In fact&comma; it was the Chief of Army Staff then&comma; Gen Salihu Ibrahim that had to step in&comma; whether Ordnance or Intelligence&comma; it’s still Nigerian Army&comma; that they should release me to go&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>When I got to the intelligence corps&comma; I was posted to Five Night Group&comma; which is Five Nigerian Army Intelligence Group&comma; supporting Lagos Garrison Command &lpar;LGC&rpar; then&period; My first commander there was Lieutenant Colonel Azazi&comma; the National Security Adviser &lpar;NSA&rpar; that died in that crash&period; I thank God that I passed through that man as my mentor in the intelligence corps&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Now&comma; my joining the intelligence late actually was the criteria for me that made me join the then Chief of Defence Staff&comma; Gen Oladipo Diya&period; When Gen Diya was appointed as the Chief of Defence Staff&comma; he was qualified to have a Security Officer&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>But the man did not like the Intelligence people&period; In those days&comma; when you see an intelligence officer or soldier&comma; you need to be extra careful&period; Then&comma; people were so scared of those in the Intelligence Corps&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So&comma; the man appointed an infantry officer as his security officer&period; And this Military Assistant &lpar;MA&rpar;&comma; Lt-Col Shoda&comma; told him&comma; sir&comma; you cannot appoint an infantry man as your security officer&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>If he’s just doing normal protection&comma; fine&period; It’s not that you cannot appoint him&period; But when it comes to the intelligence aspect&comma; the intelligence community will not relate with him because he’s not one of them&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So&comma; I think the man just said&comma; well&comma; go and get anybody&comma; but I don’t want anyone that is already involved in intelligence politics&period; According to what the MA told me later&comma; he said he remembered that he worked with my stepfather in 82 Division in Enugu&comma; and he knew I used to be in the Ordnance&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>He said he now remembered that I had transferred into the Intelligence Corps&period; He believed that in these two years&comma; I wouldn’t have been deep into intelligence politics&period; But he didn’t know where I was&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So&comma; one of these days&comma; in my unit there at LGC Kofo Abayomi&comma; the younger brother came into that place&period; I think he was looking for admission for one of his children into Command Secondary School&period; I came out of my office and the man saw me&period; He shouted&period; I was even embarrassed&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>He said his brother&comma; Col Shoda&comma; had been looking for me&period; He gave me Col Shoda’s number&period; I went back into the office and called him&period; He said he’s in Defence Headquarters and I should come to see him immediately&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;I went to see him and the first question he asked me was&comma; do you want to work for my boss&quest; I said&comma; sir&comma; if you find me worthy&comma; why not&quest;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>He said&comma; well&comma; what is qualifying you now is this&colon; my boss does not want somebody that has been long in intelligence because he said he does not like their ways of life&period; He said there were two other officers that had been lobbying to become the security officer&comma; but he knew that they were not qualified&period; So&comma; if you don’t mind&comma; send me your CV&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Then&comma; I’ll take it from there&period; That was how I was picked as the security officer&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;A lot of intelligence officers were not happy with me because they said&comma; why should I come from nowhere and take the shine off them&quest;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In fact&comma; someone still told me just last year when I went to the Retired Military Officers and Navy Association &lpar;RANAO&rpar; in Ibadan&comma; that I came from nowhere and I became the security officer to Chief of Defence Staff&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>He even accused me that I had not done my basics before I went there&period; I told him&comma; look&comma; you are still talking about something over 30 years ago&period; That was how I found myself working with General Diya&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>This was in September 1993 and by November&comma; himself and Gen Sani Abacha took over from Chief &lpar;Ernest&rpar; Shonekan&period; And again&comma; he retained me as his security officer&period; That was how I found myself working in the military council there&period; I was 32 years old&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong>What role did you play in ousting the Interim National Government led by Chief Ernest Shonekan&quest;<&sol;strong><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>What role would a security officer play&quest; I was just an errand boy&period; Let’s say I was fortunate to be at the villa at that time&period; My boss did not want to go with me to Abuja&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>He just told me on the 16th of November 1993 that he was travelling to Abuja in the morning&comma; but I would not be going with him&period; But the bodyguards would go with him and the ADC&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>They would make the arrangements&period; But as I was leaving this office&comma; he told me&comma; go and meet Hamza&comma; who was a Captain then too&period; The same Hamza Al-Mustapha&period; My boss said&comma; go and meet Hamza and ask him if you can go with us tomorrow&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>I went to him and said Oga sir&comma; my boss said I should ask you if I will be travelling with you tomorrow&period; And the man said&comma; if you are not travelling&comma; who else is going&quest; No&comma; you will be going with us now&period; So&comma; before I left&comma; he picked up the intercom and called Oga himself&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So by the time I got to Oga’s office&comma; Oga said he had spoken with him&period; Then&comma; Oga said you and the ADC will follow me tomorrow&period; So&comma; that’s how best I would say I was involved in that&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong>So you did not know what was going to happen&quest;<&sol;strong><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>I did not know because people don’t discuss things like that&comma; except they want you to play a particular role&period; If you are not to play any role&comma; and if that thing had failed that day&comma; I wouldn’t have any excuse&comma; because I was with them at the villa&period; But I was not given any particular role&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong>Can you briefly share your experience in the federal military government&quest;<&sol;strong><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>My major role was to protect my boss and his family&comma; and I know I did that to the best of my ability&period; Again&comma; it was my duty to share intelligence from other agencies such as the SSS&comma; the Air Force&comma; the Army&comma; and the Navy&comma; with my boss&period; My role there was just protection of my principal in and outside the office&comma; in and outside the nation&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong>The 1997 coup&comma; was it real or phantom&semi; What actually happened&quest;<&sol;strong><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Well&comma; let me paint a scenario for you&period; Assuming I come to you and say&comma; I saw gold somewhere in one office&comma; and I think we can steal the gold&comma; and it will make so much money for us&comma; and you agree with me&quest; You now have someone in your office that you want to join us to steal the gold&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>We agree and we plan everything on how to steal the gold&period; On my own&comma; I now decide to report to you that you have asked us to go and steal that gold in the office&period; The day myself&comma; yourself and your partner that you are bringing to this now&comma; decide to go and steal the gold&comma; we were arrested&period; Is that phantom or real&quest; It is real&comma; only that it has not been executed&period; Exactly&comma; that’s what happened&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>I didn’t wake up one morning and said&comma; oh&comma; Fadipe&comma; I want to plan a coup&comma; because I really know the implication&period; If a coup fails&comma; you know it’s death&period; So&comma; you should make up your mind in delving into this&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In fact&comma; when General Olusegun Obasanjo was arrested and was jailed&comma; I remember I was with Mohammed Abacha&comma; Captain Yahya&comma; and some of his friends who were discussing&period; They asked me a question&comma; Major&comma; please&comma; is it true that General Obasanjo actually took part in that coup&quest;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>And I said&comma; well&comma; I wouldn’t know&period; But the intelligence and the military police and the intelligence community that have investigated it should know better&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>I said&comma; but it is very dangerous when you are in a circle and they are discussing things pertaining to coup plots&period; I said&comma; if any of those people are arrested tomorrow&comma; they might trace it back to you because you were there when they were discussing it&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>If&comma; by accident&comma; somebody mentioned it to you&comma; whether you have agreed to take part or not&comma; if that person is arrested and you have been monitored&comma; then you can’t really wriggle out of it&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>One of them asked me a question&period; He said&comma; okay&comma; what about you&quest; If you are in a gathering and you feel that they are discussing something like that&comma; what would you do&quest; I would say&comma; gentlemen&comma; excuse me&comma; and I would just leave that gathering immediately&period; And since that time&comma; they have called me gentlemen&period; Once I sit around where they mentioned things like that&comma; I would just bolt away&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>But this particular 1997 coup&comma; I couldn’t do that&period; Like what the tribunal chairman told me&semi; Fadipe&comma; you are a Major and you are not a junior officer&comma; you are a middle level officer&period; You should know your right from your left&comma; and that what I should have done was to report my boss&period; And I told him that I wouldn’t betray my boss for anything&period; He confided in me&comma; so I wouldn’t betray him&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>On that morning&comma; that Tuesday&comma; 9th of December&comma; 1997&comma; Monday before then&comma; there was a Chief of Army Staff Conference in Enugu&period; And the Head of State&comma; Abacha&comma; was supposed to be there&period; At that time&comma; I didn’t know anything that transpired&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>But the only thing is that Oga &lpar;Diya&rpar; said I should be monitoring the Head of State if he left and when he got to Enugu&period; But the man had left&comma; and the advance party had gone to Enugu&period; The man truly left the office&comma; and after a while&comma; the man came back into the villa&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So&comma; I went to Oga&comma; I said&comma; well&comma; the C-in-C left already&comma; but he came back&period; He said&comma; what really happened&quest; I said&comma; I don’t know&period; I said&comma; maybe you should go to Oga and ask him&period; Then&comma; he said&comma; okay&comma; don’t worry&comma; I will find out what happened&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So&comma; around evening time&comma; Bamaiyi just entered the office&period; I said to myself&colon; Ah&comma; Bamaiyi is the Chief of Army Staff&period; He’s supposed to be in Enugu&period; So&comma; what is he doing here in Abuja&quest; He stayed with my boss for like 20 to 30 minutes and left&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Immediately after he left&comma; Oga called me&period; He said&comma; call me General Adisa&period; Then&comma; Adisa had been removed as the Minister of Works and Housing as at that time&period; Himself and General Olanrewaju&comma; but they had not been retired and they had not been given a new portfolio&period; They were just floating&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So&comma; I called Gen Adisa and he came in almost immediately&comma; wearing a mufti&period; He was with my oga for 10 to 20 minutes and came out&period; Then&comma; the man was just trying to ask me some questions that were alien to me&period; The man discovered that I was not in the know or whatever&period; So the man said&comma; okay&comma; Fadipe&comma; don’t worry&period; I will see you later&comma; or come and see me at home later&comma; and he left&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Then&comma; on Tuesday morning&comma; when we got to the office&comma; the C-in-C left and Oga &lpar;Diya&rpar; called me back and I gave him the normal briefing&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Then he said&comma; you Fadipe&comma; all you intelligence and security people&comma; you guys don’t know anything o&excl; I said&comma; I don’t understand&comma; sir&period; He said&comma; you said everything is okay&period; I said&comma; yes&comma; everything is well&comma; sir&period; He said&comma; do you know that if Oga&comma; that is the C-in-C&comma; had travelled to Enugu yesterday&comma; he would have been abducted and there would have been a change of power&quest;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Ah&excl; Immediately&comma; he told me that I knew I was in trouble&period; I just knew it&period; So&comma; I said&comma; sir&comma; by who&quest; He said&comma; by the service chiefs&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>I said&comma; who and who are involved in this&quest; He said&comma; all the service chiefs and the GOCs&period; Ah&excl; Then I asked him&comma; sir&comma; why&quest; He said he didn’t want the man to transmute himself into civilian president&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;Ah&excl; Oh my God&excl; Why did this man tell me this&quest; Because immediately&comma; I’m already complicit&excl;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Then&comma; I asked how that would have happened&quest; He said&comma; if the man had gone there&comma; the way they removed Chief Shonekan would have been the way it would have been done&period; In removing Shonekan&comma; they just got into the office&comma; and forced him to resign&period; He said&comma; that’s what they would have done to Abacha&period; They would have abducted him and forced him to resign&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>He said&comma; Fadipe&comma; listen here&period; He said&comma; we have been on this thing for some time&comma; it has not leaked&period; He said&comma; if it leaks now&comma; you are the one&comma; and I will not spare you&period; I will hold you responsible&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;So&comma; that now complicated my fear&period; Throughout that day&comma; I couldn’t work&comma; I couldn’t do anything&period; I was confused&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The good thing about me is that&comma; anything I want to do&comma; I will pray&period; I said&comma; this one is beyond me now&period; I have one lady evangelist&period; She has a prophetic ministry&period; The lady was in my church then&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So&comma; the moment I closed that day&comma; around 10&period;30pm or 11pm&comma; I drove straight to that woman’s house at Ado&comma; after Maraba&period; That’s where the lady lived at that time&comma; and the woman just got married&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>When she saw me in the middle of the night like that&comma; she said&comma; Baba&comma; I hope all is well&quest; I said&comma; all is well&period; But&comma; my boss discussed something with me this morning&comma; and I’ve never had time to rest&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So&comma; she took me to her prayer room&comma; and I told her what transpired between me and my boss before the evening&period; She said&comma; sir&comma; okay&comma; no problem&period; Let us pray&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So&comma; she held my hand and we were praying&period; Then the woman began to release the bombshell&period; She said&comma; sir&comma; I can’t see your boss on the throne&period; And at the same time&comma; Abacha is not on the throne too&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>That is a stalemate&period; I mean&comma; telling me that my boss was not going to be on the throne&comma; that showed that that coup would fail&period; That was the implication&period; And again&comma; God is telling her that this situation will end in the sixth month of next year &lpar;1998&rpar;&period; And that although nobody will die&comma; six of you will go down&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>She spoke Yoruba&comma; saying &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;Ko si eni to maa kuo&comma; sugbon eyin mefa maa lo si” What is this woman saying&quest; That is a failed one&period; She said nobody will die&period; That is a death sentence&period; I just said this woman just wanted me to leave her alone&comma; in order not to implicate her&period; So&comma; I left her place&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>But I just held on to the word that nobody will die&period; She said God is telling her that this thing is part of His plan for Nigeria&semi; that whether I take part or not&comma; this thing will happen&period; I left her more confused&period; But I just held on to the word that nobody will die&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>I got back home&period; Honestly&comma; I was not myself&period; Then&comma; the following day&comma; Oga asked me to set up a meeting in one of his guest houses&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So&comma; Bamaiyi&comma; the late Patrick Aziza&comma; then the two COs we had in the Brigade of Guards&comma; both in Keffi and inside Abuja&period; All these things are in my memoirs now&comma; which will be released by the middle of this year by the grace of God&period; The names and everything are in my memoir&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So&comma; we had that meeting&period; And that’s why I said&comma; when somebody said it was a phantom coup&comma; I don’t understand it&period; But we had that meeting there&period; And when Bamaiyi was briefing the house&comma; although I was just there as an observer&comma; I didn’t contribute anything&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>I was just sitting there&comma; listening to what he was saying&period; Then&comma; General Adisa stopped him&period; He said&comma; &OpenCurlyQuote;look&comma; Ishaya&comma; your plan is so watery&period; This is not the first time we are doing this thing&period; I didn’t see any substance in what you are saying&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Then&comma; my boss shut him down&period; He said in Yoruba&comma; &OpenCurlyQuote;A&period;K leave these boys alone&period; Are you the one planning it&quest; Are they not the ones planning it by themselves&quest; Leave them alone&excl;’ Gen&period; Adisa was trying to tell Oga &lpar;Diya&rpar; that what this man &lpar;Bamaiyi&rpar; was saying&comma; he did not see any substance in it&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Let’s take over this thing and plan it the right way&period; So&comma; my boss shut him down&period; He said&comma; &OpenCurlyQuote;you don’t have troops&period; You don’t have anybody&period; So&comma; why are you talking&quest; Just keep quiet&period;’<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>When we got to the office the next morning&comma; I told Oga that what General Adisa was saying yesterday was right&period; One&comma; the plan of these people is that they wanted to carry out that operation against the C-in-C&period; They are talking about using an RPG to blow up his car&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Do you know the casualties that will be there&quest; And that’s why Gen&period; Adisa was saying that the operation was faulty and would not work&period; At this time&comma; if there was a coup and people died&comma; Nigerians will not support it&period; Then&comma; we don’t need that level of destruction to remove General Abacha&period; Then&comma; the question he asked me&comma; he said&comma; you&comma; what do you think&quest; I said fine&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The only threat I see in this is Major Mustapha&period; If we can take Mustapha away&comma; in one way or the other&comma; then it will be simpler&comma; because General Adisa had already assured us&period; I will not want to mention the two officers’ names&comma; although it’s over now&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Two of them were in the villa&comma; and General Adisa had spoken to us that he had already brought them over to his side&period; I said&comma; okay&comma; if that is the case&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>But there was a kind of politics that people called &OpenCurlyQuote;Five Fingers of Leprosy’ or something like that then&period; My boss was even the chairman of the committee preparing for Abacha’s transmutation&period; And they were holding the meeting in my boss’ house&period; And most times&comma; my Oga would call Mustapha to the house&period; I’ve studied Major Mustapha&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In the night&comma; he drove alone&period; He would drive a bulletproof car alone with nobody around him&period; He had come to our house more than two times like that&period; He would drive in and drive out&period; I said&comma; sir&comma; you can send for Major Mustapha&period; From there&comma; leave it to me and my boys&period; There is a way we can pick him&period; And when we pick him then&comma; the infantry people will continue with their own&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>I told you&comma; the two COs who are supposed to be fully involved&period; So&comma; if that has happened&comma; the only problem is the strike force and the bodyguards&period; Then&comma; those two other officers&comma; we can use them to silence those ones&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;The infantry at the outer gate will block them in&period; He said it sounds logical&period; And that’s what actually made my involvement deeper in the same plot&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Unfortunately for me&comma; that plan could not hold&period; I already set in motion how to pick Mustapha&period; My closest boy&comma; out of all the boys&comma; was the only one that knew we were plotting something&period; The other ones did not know&period; But Mustapha is a smart person&period; He knew something was going on&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Let me now digress a bit&period; Why Gen&period; Diya said it was a phantom coup was that after their plan had failed&comma; up until that Monday&comma; Bamaiyi and his group now thought&comma; maybe something had happened&comma; especially maybe Gen&period; Diya had betrayed them&period; What they wanted to do was to take over from both Abacha and Diya at the same time&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So if they had actually gone to Diya&comma; they just wanted to use him as a decoy&period; That’s why Gen&period; Diya might call it a phantom coup&period; If God had not intervened&comma; they would have removed Diya&comma; they would have also removed Abacha&period; That was the plan of Bamaiyi&comma; Magashi&comma; and the late Aziza&period; Those three were the main brains behind the plots&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So&comma; Gen&period; Diya&comma; on his own&comma; as at that Monday&comma; I don’t think he had already betrayed him&period; It was after they went to meet Abacha&comma; that Diya asked them to plan a coup&period; So&comma; everything they were doing from the time I joined&comma; the government knew about it&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>What they wanted&comma; according to General Sabo&comma; he’s late now&comma; is that when Aziza told him about the plot&comma; he never believed him&comma; because they had been monitoring Bamaiyi and his group&comma; trying to take over power&period; But when that deep twist came&comma; I was out&period; I remembered that anytime I briefed my Oga about the movement that Bamaiyi was planning&comma; he was not excited&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>He was like&comma; &OpenCurlyQuote;this boy cannot do this thing without being caught&period;’ But this time around&comma; he didn’t know that they had gone to report him to the Head of State&period; Like Sabo said&comma; the Head of State&comma; General Abacha&comma; never believed them&period; But when they began to put pressure&comma; General Sabo said what he wanted to do&comma; that is Abacha&comma; was to retire Diya&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>They would call all the elders in Yorubaland and say&comma; &OpenCurlyQuote;I trusted your son&period; He was a friend&period; He betrayed me&period; Just carry him and go&period; Just take him away&period;’ According to Sabo&comma; the plan was to make Adisa the Chief of Army Staff&comma; Olanrewaju&comma; Chief of General Staff&comma; and Bamaiyi would be Chief of Defence Staff &lpar;CDS&rpar;&period; But they would make him redundant because&comma; at that time&comma; the Chief of Defence Staff&comma; General Abdulsalami&comma; was about to retire&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>If that was carried out&comma; Bamaiyi and his group would have lost out in the power play&period; But they didn’t give up easily&period; They put more pressure&period; They said if Abacha carried out what he wanted to do&comma; then the Yoruba people would not trust him&period; That was why they now brought me in&period; They didn’t bring me in directly&period; According to Sabo&comma; he told Omenka&comma; the Commander&comma; Security Group then&period; They were the ones to play along with Bamaiyi and the group&period; He said&comma; call Fadipe and brief him about the operation&comma; so that Fadipe will not jeopardise whatever they are doing around my boss&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>He said Omenka said something that sir&comma; if you tell Fadipe about this plot&comma; the plot will fail because Fadipe is blindly loyal to his boss&period; He will betray us for his boss&period; He said one thing about Fadipe&comma; Fadipe does not lie&period; That they should find a way of Fadipe joining that plot&comma; naturally&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So it was the same people that told Bamaiyi to tell Diya to involve Fadipe in this thing&comma; that Fadipe is the only member of his staff that he trusts&comma; and can operate with&period; And according to them&comma; Diya bought it&period; And that was what Diya told me&period; Like I told you&comma; they’ve been on this thing since around August&period; Although we occasionally saw funny moments&period; You know when things are going on&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>But if you are not called to it directly&comma; and like I said&comma; I was not ready to betray my boss for anything&comma; because there were some movements I saw in those days that it was enough for me to have reported&period; But I just pretended as if I didn’t see anything&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So&comma; the morning he &lpar;Diya&rpar; told me&comma; it was not really a surprise because I knew what they had been doing&period; But he’s just telling me now&comma; which was not good for me&period; So&comma; that was how the whole thing happened&period; So&comma; with what I’ve narrated now&comma; you should be able to deduce whether it was phantom or it was real&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong>You said Al-Mustapha is smart&period; What did you mean&comma; and what do you know about the bomb blast at the Presidential Wing of Abuja Airport in December 1997&quest;<&sol;strong><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Why I said Al-Mustapha is smart is this&period; He knew something was going on and he was not getting it&period; I think he just wanted to get rid of Gen&period; Diya&period; And that’s why the bomb incident on the 13th happened&period; He knew Bamaiyi and his group were being economical with the truth&period; And he knew that if the so-called head of the coup plot is out of the way&comma; let’s see how the others will continue the plot&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>On the 13th of December 1997&comma; there was a bomb attack against us&period; If not for providence&comma; although I would have been alive&comma; maybe I would be serving one long sentence in jail&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>I was not supposed to travel with my boss that morning&period; And imagine&comma; apart from when I went for my promotion exam for one month in 1994&comma; there was nowhere this man would go that I did not go with him&period; How come the only time I did not go with him now&comma; the plane was bombed&quest;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So&comma; how would I tell the whole world that I did not know about it&quest; So actually that day&comma; apart from Diya and other people dying&comma; I would have been deeply implicated&period; Nobody would believe me&period; Do you get what I’m saying now&quest; But God saved us&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>There was this flight sergeant&comma; he was in the intelligence&period; I think the boy is from Edo or Delta&period; I wanted to bring him to work for me&comma; but at that time&comma; my boss said I had put a lot of non-Yoruba people in my team&period; And I told him&comma; sir&comma; security work has nothing to do with where you come from&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>You can earn the loyalty of anybody&period; Yes&comma; it’s good&period; Sir&comma; we’ve been working for you&comma; I’ve been enjoying it&period; He said no&comma; what I know is that you should stop recruiting non-Yoruba again&period; Okay&comma; so I sent most of those boys away&comma; especially this flight sergeant&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>And I told him that look&comma; everybody&comma; on Friday come to the office&period; I’ll give you something for the weekend&period; And that boy comes on a regular basis and I’d give him something&period; Fortunately for me&comma; that boy was the one on duty that day&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>When the two boys that were involved in that bomb blast came in to take over the plane&comma; the boy did not release the plane to them because the plane was not assigned to the C-in-C or the First Lady&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The boy knew that the plane was attached to the Chief of General Staff&comma; and the two boys were not my boys&period; The boy knew almost all the boys working for me&period; So&comma; he did not release the plane to them&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Unfortunately for those boys&comma; the bomb had been primed&period; They sat down with the bomb in the car&period; That day&comma; the pilot that was supposed to fly us that morning was nowhere to be found&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>I called Oga Amosun&comma; who later became Chief of Air Staff&comma; whom I was relating with then as PAL – Presidential Air Lift&period; I called him&period; Sir&comma; we are already behind schedule&period; He said well&comma; he had assigned a pilot to us&period; I said Sir&comma; we couldn’t find the plot&period; They found another pilot for us around 8&colon;30am&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The man positioned the plane&period; We would not leave the house until the plane was ready for us&period; So&comma; as we drove into the presidential wing&comma; the bomb went off&period; There was no abuse that my boss did not heap on me on that day and how incompetent I was&period; I said sir&comma; this is not the first time that I am taking you out&period; But this is not my fault&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>When that thing happened&comma; he was still saying you are wasting my time&period; I have already told the Director of Protocol to get everybody ready&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>I asked my boys to get what was going on there&period; The boys came to me and said sir&comma; I think we should not travel again&period; I said what happened&quest; He said those two boys are from the House&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>I had to go there myself&period; One of them was blasted into pieces by the bomb&period; He was like mincemeat&period; The other boy was badly mutilated&period; He could not even cry&period; He was just writhing in pain&period; Then&comma; I ordered my military police to take that boy straight to Gwagwalada Hospital&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>At the back of the brand new 505 then&comma; were three cartons of money – Pounds&comma; Dollars and Naira&period; But the Abuja Police Command took the boy from them&period; I told my boys I did not care&comma; let them go with the money&comma; although part of the money was already burnt also&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The boy was taken to the Gwagwalada Hospital&period; I asked one of my operatives to stand with him&period; I called the GMD there&comma; I told him what had happened and the boy must not die&period; We need to hear from him&period; That was how God helped us to escape that plan then&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Now&comma; it couldn’t have been behind Major Mustapha&period; But what they told Abacha was that people were training with grenades&period; What kind of grenade is that&quest; When Abacha called my boss to commiserate with him about what happened&comma; he said he was briefed that they were training and it was a grenade that wrecked the havoc&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;The blast was not really investigated&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>This is why I believed that they just wanted to remove Gen&period; Diya&period; Once Gen&period; Diya was dead&comma; those who were planning the coup&comma; what else would they be planning&quest; Gen&period; Diya himself did not get justice because at the end of the day&comma; he manipulated the whole story&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>They have used your paper to attack me about three times in the past&comma; and one of the things they were telling them is that I was one of the people that planned that attack on Gen&period; Diya&comma; that I was not at the airport on that day&comma; that I had taken permission from my boss to travel&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>But I was the only one that has the record of what happened that day&period; If you say this man was not there&comma; how do you now want them to believe me&quest; You can see the irony of life&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>When I came out of detention&comma; I think the then Inspector-General of Police&comma; I did not know whether it was a directive from Gen Abdulsalami&comma; said that they should pick me and interrogate me about the bomb blast&comma; to tell them what I knew&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>I think Tunde Ogunsakin led the team that interviewed me at Alagbon Close&period; I was taken there&comma; not that I was arrested&period; I was invited&period; They asked me about it&comma; and I narrated everything that happened about that bomb blast&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>When the man that I was working for was now saying a different thing&comma; then who do we believe&quest; If you put one evil finger on one person&comma; the four other fingers will be pointing at you&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Some people have been asking me why Gen&period; Diya did not get justice in the bomb blast&period; I said&comma; yes he caused it&comma; because trying to run me down has deprived him of justice&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong>What has been your fate after the whole incident&quest; What did the military authorities do for you&quest; And what have you been doing since then&quest;<&sol;strong><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>May the soul of General Victor Malu &lpar;former Chief of Army Staff&rpar; continue to rest in peace&period; He was the president of the military tribunal&period; He told me&colon; &OpenCurlyQuote;Fadipe&comma; I will bring you back into service&period; Your mates are already Lt-Colonel&period; I will promote you and send you out for your Command and Staff College training&period; He said he would write for my reinstatement back into service&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In fact&comma; the day the Military Secretary showed me the write up&comma; on my own&comma; I cried&period; I said God&comma; it could only be you&period; He was supposed to take it to Army Council&comma; for the council to approve my being reinstated back into service&period; But fortunately and unfortunately&comma; God knows the best&comma; that Army council did not hold&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>It was the time General Malu and the then President&comma; Chief Olusegun Obasanjo were having some underground issues&period; And before we knew what was happening&comma; General Malu was removed&period; And that was why I couldn’t get back into the army&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So&comma; from the army point of view&comma; they actually tried for me&period; And for the nation also&comma; I am grateful for the pardon&period; It was not done under Obasanjo&period; The late former President Umar Yar’Adua&comma; who succeeded Obasanjo&comma; was on the verge of granting us presidential pardon when he died&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Then&comma; we continued the struggle with former President Goodluck Jonathan through the help of his ADC&comma; Col Ojogbane Adegbe&period; By 2015&comma; we were granted presidential pardon&period; I think he signed the presidential pardon in April&comma; shortly before he handed over&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So&comma; prior to that time&comma; I couldn’t do anything&period; I even ventured into politics&period; I was in PDP&comma; and I vied for the chairmanship position of Ibadan North East Local Government Area of Oyo State&period; Then&comma; one of my political leaders said I should go and queue up for my turn&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>And I said&comma; sir&comma; queue up&excl; Don’t you think I’m an asset to you&quest; Do you know what the man said&quest; He said&comma; remember you are an ex-convict&quest; They would have used that against me&period; So&comma; I realised that these people&comma; this is the way they are&period; I just left&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>then that election for that year was put on hold for about three years&period; So&comma; all those things discouraged me from going back into politics&period; So&comma; I’ve been doing my normal security consultancy&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>I do training&comma; I install security equipment&comma; access control&period; And if there’s any other legitimate business I see&comma; I do&period; There are some military men that really helped me&semi; the likes of General Tukur Buratai &lpar;former Chief of Army Staff&rpar;&comma; who was my immediate senior in NDA&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>One other important person&comma; who helped me a lot is Gen Lucky Irabor as the Chief of Defence Staff &lpar;CDS&rpar;&period; He was my junior in NDA&comma;&period;but he was so helpful to me&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>But the first person that actually stabilised my life’s Chief Mrs&period; Remi Olowu&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;As at the time I came out of detention&comma; I had no house&comma; I had nothing&comma; apart from the car given to us by IBB&period; That was the only car I had&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>My wife too would have lost her job because the military people were looking for her to pick her up&period; Once you are involved in a coup plot&comma; anything close to you&comma; they will pick it up&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In fact&comma; I knew what I was going into&period; So&comma; I sent my wife away from Abuja&period; She wanted to attend her younger sister’s graduation at Leeds University in the United Kingdom&period; Unfortunately&comma; the two of them have gone to be with the Lord right now&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So&comma; I didn’t want her to go initially because my three children were still young&period; I told you that my father died in December 1966 when my second sister was like eight months old&period; The same thing now&period; It was another December&comma; I was about to die now&period; And my own third child&comma; my second daughter too&comma; was about eight months old&period; It would have been a satanic cycle&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So&comma; I didn’t want that to happen&period; I wanted my wife to just go to London and remain there&period; Unfortunately&comma; before they got to the embassy&comma; the embassy had closed for the year&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So&comma; she wanted to come back to Abuja&period; I said&comma; no&comma; stay back in Ibadan&period; Don’t stay with my mum&comma; go to your dad’s place&period; My wife asked me if I was sure something was not wrong&quest; So&comma; when I was arrested&comma; they went after her&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Thank God&comma; she was able to escape and she was in hiding for six months until Abacha died&period; When she came out of hiding&comma; they already sacked her from the office at Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation &lpar;NDIC&rpar;&period; The MD of NDIC then&comma; Mr&period; John Ebhodaghe&comma; was picked&period; The old man was in Jos for interrogation for about two weeks&comma; before they realised that the man heard nothing about how my wife left&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>They thought my wife was outside the country&period; But she was right within&period; Thank God for her family&period; By the time the MD came back&comma; my wife had been sacked&period; When my wife came out of hiding&comma; she went to the office to pack her things and to just thank the MD and apologise for what he went through for her sake&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So&comma; after she had packed her personal effects from the office&comma; she went to the MD office and said&comma; &OpenCurlyQuote;I’m sorry about what you went through because of me&period; I’m leaving now&period;’ And the man asked her&comma; where are you going to&quest;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The woman said&colon; Sir&comma; I’ve been sacked&period; Sacked&quest; So&comma; he called the Director of Personnel&period; He said&comma; why would you punish this woman for the same offence her husband is being punished for&quest;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The husband is in jail&period; And for the same reason&comma; you want to sack this woman&quest; How do you want her to survive&quest; How do you want the children to survive&quest; Take your sack letter back&comma; reinstate her&comma; and pay her all her money since she has been away from work&period;” Providence&period; So&comma; apart from that&comma; at the time I came back&comma; there was nothing&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>But that Chief Mrs Olowu was the first person that stabilised me&period; She was the DG of NEMA then&period; It was through Mrs&period; Olowu that I was able to rent a house from the job she gave me&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>I went through hell that time&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;But later&comma; Chief James Ibori&comma; former governor of Delta State&comma; took over&period; After I came out of prison&comma; I did not meet him until 2001&period; He was looking for me and he couldn’t find me&period; Eventually&comma; he saw me&period; In fact&comma; God used him to actually stabilise me&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>I’m not saying I am a saint&period; But I try as much as possible to live a life of loyalty&period; I believe that if I work for someone&comma; at the end of the day&comma; that person should remunerate me one way or the other&period; So I was not looking right&comma; I was not looking left&period; All I was looking for was the safety of my boss&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So&comma; by the time I realised I was living in a fool’s paradise&comma; it was too late&period; I came out of detention&period; I had nothing&period; Up till now&comma; people never believed&period; At that period&comma; I had one small bungalow in Ibadan&period; It used to be my father’s place&period; I renovated the place&period; And that was the only place I lived with my mom and my siblings&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>But I thank God for my course mates&period; Majority of them were relating with me&comma; and my seniors&period; I know that I would not hold anybody guilty if they didn’t want to relate with me&period; Felony was still on my neck&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Still&comma; some people would still be doing eye service&period; Some people would be monitoring where they were not supposed to be monitoring&period; And people didn’t want to get caught that they saw them with Fadipe&period; I went through hell&comma; but I thank God for some of my course mates&period; May God bless them&period; They rallied round me&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong>If you have the opportunity to come back to this world&comma; will you still join the military&quest; Can you allow your children to join the military&quest;<&sol;strong><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>By the grace of <strong><a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;openlife&period;ng&sol;">God&comma;<&sol;a><&sol;strong> that will be the only service I will join&period; But this time around&comma; maybe I will be wiser&period; And I have not stopped my children from joining the military&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>I have only one son and I have two girls&period; The mother&comma; before she died&comma; when the boy was going to the university&comma; she said he should go to the NDA&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The boy said no&period; Even after his 200-Level&comma; she said&comma; look&comma; you can still go now&period; My son said&colon; &OpenCurlyQuote;No&period; Mummy&comma; stop disturbing me&period; I don’t want to go&period; Do you want me to join the army&comma; and they would now do what they did to my father to me&quest;’<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So&comma; I stopped him&period; I said nobody did anything to me&period; If I stayed where I was supposed to stay&comma; that would not happen to me&period; I said the army did not do anything to me&period; I caused it myself&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Up till now&comma; the majority of the junior ones that did not even meet me in NDA are still very good to me&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;When I was doing my master’s programme in NDA at that time&comma; one of my classmates then&comma; a young man said&comma; &OpenCurlyQuote;Sir&comma; are you O&period;O&period; Fadipe&quest; I said that is me&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>At that time&comma; the majority of them did not know I was a retired person in my postgraduate class&period; So he said&comma; sir&comma; I went to the library to look for a book and I saw everywhere&comma; O&period;O&period; Fadipe&period; I said&comma; yes&comma; this is me&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>He was a Brigadier-General then and he said he encountered my name first as a cadet&comma; and he had been eager to meet with me&period; He said since he left the academy&comma; he was using me as a measure to become what he became&period; Imagine&comma; he wanted to meet me as a cadet&period; I did not meet him&comma; he did not have the opportunity to meet me until he became a Brigadier-General&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So&comma; those in the military&comma; serving now&comma; I was already a very senior officer before most of them came out from NDA&period; But the way they still treat me is amazing&period; So&comma; would I say the military has done something wrong to me&quest; No&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The military has not done anything wrong to me&period; Most of them have seen that I was just a victim of circumstance and that it could have been anybody&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>They still treat me well up till today&period; One or two of them might say&comma; don’t mind the man&period; You cannot rule out things like that&period; But the Nigerian Army has not done anything against me&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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