Theophilus Danjuma @ 70
.Mistakes I made during Biafra war
By PATRICK ASONYE
Sunday,
December 2, 2007
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•General
Theophilus Yakubu Danjuma
Photo By: Sun News Publishing |
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Warming up for his 70th birthday bash, former Minister of
Defence, General Theophilus Yakubu Danjuma, has sensationally
revealed the most prized secret of his military adventures,
even as he prepares to hand over the baton of entrepreneurship
to his kids.
Danjuma, ranked among the richest retired Nigerian Army officers,
spoke at his Lagos residence Thursday, touching off a sore
point in his military career, which he categorizes as one
of his few mistakes.
Specifically, the incident was the blunder that his troops
committed in Enugu sector while prosecuting the Nigerian civil
war on the federal side.
Commanding a rampaging division of the Nigerian army, Danjuma
said his boys had no difficulty overrunning the then capital
of the fledgling republic, but lacked the intelligence to
forge ahead and secure surrender from their opponents. That
failure, the retired General acknowledges, prolonged the civil
war unnecessarily:
“We got to Enugu, but it was a mistake arising from
lack of Intelligence gathering. We had absolutely no source
of Intelligence information from the Biafran side. We were
totally blind, so we didn’t know that the front was
empty and in total disarray in the Biafran Army. We didn’t
know.”
He also gave insight into his failed bid to become a farmer
after retiring; and the fun lined up for his birthday next
weekend.
General, let’s start by wishing you happy birthday.
So, how does it feel turning 70?
Well, I don’t feel anything different from yesterday.
For me, it is like another birthday.
So, are you celebrating in a big way?
Yes, we are, because I have gone through a lot, seen a lot
of things in my lifetime – my military career, the business
sector in which I am now. I had twenty years of military service
and now over twenty-six years in the private sector. It was
rough in the military service; it’s been treacherous
in business. That I have gone through all those, it’s
time to thank God that I survived it all.
Does that signal retiring?
Amm, it signals the beginning of re-retiring. I retired from
the army. I have slowed down. I shall gradually wind down,
and then hand over my business to my wife and children.
Can you take us down memory lane, to your days as
a growing child?
I grew up during the Wolrd War 11 period, and the Colonial
times – when Nigeria was the British colony. The colonial
administrators were in charge of the country and there was
law and order. Yes, things were difficult, we were poor, but
we were happy. We didn’t know it at that time. Now looking
back, it was a very happy time.
What inspired you to join the army?
I joined the Nigerian Army by accident. The college –
Nigerian College of Arts, Science and Technology, Zaria branch,
we had a cadet corps, where students were trained in military
tactics. They wore uniforms, Nigerian army uniform. There
was one item of the Nigerian army uniform, which I liked -
the Jungle hat. And I wanted the outfit. The only way I could
get it was to join the cadet corps. That is how I joined the
cadet corps. There, I met a British Army officer who turned
out to be a National Service man, meaning that he was drafted
to the Army. He finished from the University, and had to serve
his military career in the army, and he was sent to Nigeria.
He was the one that advised me to become a professional soldier.
That is how I joined.
What were the challenges?
In fact, my first command was the beginning of the Nigerian
civil war. I was recalled from the Staff College (abroad)
to command One Division of the Nigerian Army. I led the troops
that captured Enugu, then capital of Biafra. After that, we
marched down to Umuahia. That was perhaps my most challenging
experience.
Would you say you have been lucky?
Yes, I have been a very lucky man.
Apart from luck, what else would you attribute your
success to?
Perhaps I have some native intelligence. Yes, because I am
not en expert in everything. But I never ventured into any
area without the use of experts. I never ventured into any
area of business without partners, people who have the expertise.
And so mistakes, which are inevitable, are few. To make serious
mistakes in business could be the end of that business. But
above all, I have been very lucky.
Still talking about mistakes, could you recall making
any mistakes while serving in the military?
A few, perhaps the most serious being that after the fall
of Enugu, we halted our advance for too long. We didn’t
know that there was nobody in our front. The collapse of the
enemy was so total. If we had followed through, the war would
probably have ended much earlier.
We got to Enugu, but it was a mistake arising from lack of
Intelligence gathering. We had absolutely no source of Intelligence
information from the Biafran side. We were totally blind,
so we didn’t know that the front was empty and in total
disarray in the Biafran Army. We didn’t know.
But we understand you had some saboteurs working for you;
supplying you useful information. Isn’t it?
That is not true! In any case, any Nigerian that suffers setback
blames saboteurs and everybody except himself. There were
no saboteurs. If anything, it was mayhem. Igbos were the most
homogenous tribe in Nigeria. And in times of difficulty, such
as it was that time, the cohesion within their society was
very formidable.
But quite a number of people in Biafra at that time felt,
well, they have made a point. After the fall of Enugu, perhaps
they should make a go. But again, there was the fear that
if they were surrounded, they would all be slaughtered. That
was the weapon that Biafran war propagandists used to their
advantage; to face the federal troops, that if they surrendered,
they’ll all be killed.
Now, can you attempt to assess your fortunes?
I would say I have been very lucky. I am very comfortable.
I have been successful in business. So, things have been very
positive for me.
General, how do you usually relax?
I listen to classical music. I also read.
Some other Generals, when they retired, ventured into farming.
How come you chose something different?
For your information, I am a failed farmer! I have in my hometown,
about 101 acres of farmland. At a certain stage, I bought
15 brand new Tractors, employed an expatriate farm manager.
In one year, I was the most productive maize farmer in former
Gongola State. And in another year, I was the most productive
Soya bean farmer in my State.
But my farm collapsed after about 10 years. All the cattle
died, I couldn’t replace them. I sent away my farm manager.
So I went into farming and failed.
Was it a consequence of corruption in the system?
The workers were stealing from the farm. They were also doing
P.P (Private Practice) with my Tractors. They were using my
Tractors to plough other people’s farms and collect
the money. And then, they also stole the Tractor parts and
sold to other people. They simply cannibalised my machines.
In fact, what I think killed my farm was low yield products.
We could spend about N2million purchasing seedlings, and only
harvest crops worth N200, 000. So the return was as low as
that. And we were paying wages.
We were selling our products in a hurry because we didn’t
have storage facilities. Of course, if we kept the crops for
too long, insects would eat them up.
But above all, what killed my farming project were incessant
changes in government policies. I went into farming at a time
that if you needed foreign exchange in business, you had to
be this or that. And all of a sudden government changes its
policy. That also destabilises you. That was how I abandoned
farming.
Can you give us a peep into the medals you won while in military
service?
I did not win any foreign medal. All the medals were awarded
me here in Nigeria. What I have are normal medals like anybody
who served in the military at the time I did. So it wasn’t
anything about gallantry.
Our government made a policy that the civil war was a family
dispute, that nobody should be awarded a medal for gallantry
in that war. However, I received medals that everybody in
uniform received at the time of our independence. So I have
Independence medal; long service medal because I served more
than 15 years in the army.
What are the things you cherish?
I guard my privacy very jealously. For instance, I don’t
bring work home. When I close from work, I come home to relax.
I don’t discuss business or bring work partners home.
Yet I travel a lot. In fact, as much as possible I travel
with my wife. But the problem is that when we travel, we don’t
fly the same plane. We fly separate airplanes.
Is that deliberate?
Yes, it is deliberate. My wife feels that at least there should
be someone left behind if anything untoward happened.
If you didn’t enlist in the army, what else would you
have wished to be?
A teacher! I wanted to be a History teacher. When I went to
school, I wanted to take a degree in History.
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