The Dimka's Coup Attempt of February 13, 1976
By
Dr. Nowa Omoigui
[SOUTH CAROLINA, U.S.A.]
Just
before 8:30 a.m. on February 13, 1976, the following curious announcement was
heard on Radio Nigeria:
"Good morning fellow
Nigerians,
This is Lt. Col. B. Dimka of
the Nigerian Army calling.
I bring you good tidings.
Murtala Muhammed's deficiency has been detected. His government is now overthrown
by the young revolutionaries. All the 19 military governors have no powers over
the states they now govern. The states affairs will be run by military brigade
commanders until further notice.
All commissioners are sacked,
except for the armed forces and police commissioners who will be redeployed.
All senior military officers
should remain calm in their respective spots. No divisional commanders will
issue orders or instructions until further notice.
Any attempt to foil these plans
from any quarters will be met with death.
You are warned, it is all over
the 19 states.
Any acts of looting or raids
will be death.
Everyone should be calm.
Please stay by your radio for
further announcements.
All borders, air and sea ports
are closed until further notice.
Curfew is imposed from 6am to
6pm.
Thank you. We are all
together."
Just prior to this broadcast,
then Head of State, General Murtala Ramat Muhammed, along with his ADC (Lt.
Akinsehinwa), Orderly and driver, had been assassinated on his way to work in a
thin skinned black Mercedes Benz car without escorts. The unprotected car had
slowed down at the junction in front of the Federal Secretariat in Ikoyi,
Lagos, when a hit team which allegedly included Lt. William Seri and others,
casually strolled up and riddled it with bullets.
Following confirmation of
Muhammed's death, Lt. Col. Buka
Suka Dimka, of the Army Physical Training Corps, who (along with some others)
had been up for most of the night drinking champagne, then made a quick trip to
the British High Commission at about 8 am where he demanded to be put in touch
with General Gowon in Britain. He allegedly left a message through Sir
Martin LeQuesne, saying Gowon should proceed to Togo and await further
instructions.
Then he returned, initially
accompanied by six others, to Ikoyi to seize the Radio Station. The
martial music played was allegedly specially selected by a civilian worker, Mr.
Abdulkarim Zakari, who had been alerted beforehand to do so.
Other hit teams simultaneously
went after other key functionaries of the regime's trioka, namely the Chief of
Staff, SHQ, Lt. Gen. Olusegun Obasanjo and the Army Chief, Lt. Gen. T. Y.
Danjuma. The Military Governors of Kwara and Oyo States, Colonels Ibrahim Taiwo
and David Jemibewon, respectively, were also targeted. Taiwo, who
had been the national coordinator of the July 1975 coup that brought Mohammed
to power, was abducted and killed by a team led by Major K. K. Gagara.
Jemibewon, whose name had been
added to the list of targets by Lt. Col T. K. Adamu, merely because Adamu
"did not like his face", escaped.
In response to a pro-coup
broadcast (and other activities) from Benin-City by the Brigade Commander,
Colonel Isa Bukar, counter-broadcasts dissociating other army units from the
coup were made, first from Calabar by the Brigade Commander, Colonel Mamman J.
Vatsa, and then from Kaduna on behalf of the GOC, Brigadier Alani Akinrinade.
As efforts were being made
within the military to crush the revolt, University students in Lagos and
Ibadan (among others) took to the streets to protest the coup. Later,
when it became known that Dimka had visited the British High Commission on the
day of the coup, some students attacked British and American facilities in
Lagos.
The coup attempt eventually
failed seven hours later, crushed by forces rallied and directed from a
temporary base at Bonny camp by Lt. General T. Y. Danjuma, Chief of Army Staff,
whose designated assassin (reportedly Lt. Lawrence Garba) had chosen at the
last moment to spare him at the Marina Jetty, allegedly in part to avoid
collateral casualties. When Danjuma got to the office and heard the radio
broadcast, he held a brief "war council" with Colonels Bali and
Babangida, then moved to Bonny camp to coordinate the resistance. Babangida was
sent on a motor cycle to Ikeja Cantonment to get armoured vehicles.
Supported by these vehicles he proceeded to Radio Nigeria, where he had a
conversation with his close friend Dimka.
Dimka's initial reaction to
Babangida's arrival was to ask him if he came to play "Chukwuma and
Nwawo" with him; drawing a historical parallel with the negotiations
between Colonel Conrad Nwawo (on behalf of Ironsi) and Major Patrick Nzeogwu in
Kaduna in January 1966. However, Dimka got concerned with the presence of
armored vehicles in the background and asked them to be withdrawn.
But it turns out that
Babangida's orders had not been to negotiate a surrender or other outcome, but
to stop the broadcast - by any means necessary - including destruction by
shelling. When he made contact with Bonny Camp to report his activities
at the radio station, this order was reiterated to him by General Danjuma,
incredulous that a conversation with Dimka had even occurred and that the radio
station was still playing Dimka's broadcast. A brief but fierce fire fight
(reportedly led by Major Chris Ugokwe) subsequently dislodged the coup plotters
from the station.
When shooting started Dimka
simply walked away, past all the soldiers surrounding the building as well as
driving through numerous checkpoints on his way, first to Jos and then
eventually to Abakaliki where he was captured by Police in the company of a
woman of easy virtue. At that time, public incredulity at his
"escape" from Radio Nigeria led to speculations that he was
assisted. But many years later, in April 1990, a similar 'escape' from a
siege of supposedly loyal troops was executed by Lt. Col. Gabriel Nyiam and
Major Saliba Mukoro.
General Olusegun Obasanjo (rtd)
has written that he was late in leaving home that day on account of a visit by
Brigadier Olu Bajowa to get a name for his new baby. When it became
apparent that there was trouble, Obasanjo executed an escape and evasion
maneuver, spent most of the day at the house of a civilian friend in Ikoyi
monitoring the situation by telephone, but later emerged to become the Head of
State. His would be assassins mistook then Colonel Dumuje for him along Awolowo
road in Lagos, seriously wounding that officer. The specifics of how that
happened remain a matter of conjecture particularly since the car of a Lt.
General would have had three stars mounted on the license plate. Whether Dumuje
was riding in Obasanjo's car is a curious possibility that has never been
clarified. Or perhaps the hit men were drunk and could not tell one flag from
another.
Subsequent evidence, allegedly
based on documents and tapes discovered at the station, suggests that Dimka had
actually planned a second broadcast which he never got to make. The
broadcast would have gone like this:
"Fellow Nigerians,
This is Lt. Col. BS
Dimka. I now explain why we the Young Revolutionaries of the Armed Forces
have found it necessary to overthrow the six month old government of
Murtala. On the 29th July 1975 the Government of General Gowon was
overthrown. Some of the reasons given for the change were:
a. Corruption
b. Indecision
c. Arrest and detention without trial
d. Weakness on the part of the Head of State
e. Maladministration in general and a host of other malpractice.
Every honest Nigerian will
agree with me that since the change over of government there has not been any
physical development in the whole country generally.
All we have is arbitrary
dismissal of innocent Nigerians who have contributed in no less amount to the
building of this great nation. A Professor was arrested, detained,
dismissed and later taken to court on an article which every honest Nigerian
will agree that all the points contained in that article were 100% truth.
The sad point about it all is that those who initiated the retirement or
dismissal exercise are the worst offenders. You will be informed about
the ill-gotten wealth in my next announcement.
The acting General Manager of
the Nigerian Airways was invited to the Dodan Barracks and detained without
trial. The people of this country have been living in a state of
fear. The Armed Forces promotion exercise is still fresh in your
minds. Whatever reasons they have for the promotion one can only say that
they are ambitious. They in fact took over power to enrich themselves.
We are convinced that some of
the programmes announced for a return to civilian rule are made to favor a
particular group. To mention only one. Maitama Sule is a
politician. But has been appointed Chief of Commissioners for
Complaints. This is to prepare him for the next political head at all
cost. How many of you know that Maitama Sule is on a salary of N17,000
p.a.?
In view of what I have just
said and a lot more which time will not permit me to mention, we the Young
Revolutionaries have once again taken over the Government to save Murtala from
total disgrace and prevent him from committing further blunders and totally
collapsing the country before he runs away in the name of retirement to enjoy
the huge fortune he got through bribe which he has now stored outside this
country. I believe that charity should begin at home.
Please stay by your radio for
further announcements.
We are all together."
The Obasanjo regime, however,
later issued a public statement proffering its own explanation for the Dimka
coup attempt. The four reasons given by the government were that :
1. The plotters felt the
Murtala government was abandoning Nigeria's traditional non-aligned posture and
going "communist".
2. The plotters were opposed to
recent Army promotions and the appointment of Danjuma as Army Chief.
3. The plotters intended to
restore General Gowon to office
4. The plotters intended to
restore all previous military governors to office, as well as restore all
retired public servants back to office. Any subsequent retirement was to
be based on legal due process. (As of that time about 11,000 civil
servants and over 200 army officers had been summarily retired across the
country)
Seven days of national mourning
were declared and flags flew at half mast.
Following up on the opinion of
the Obasanjo regime at the time, that General Gowon "knew and by
implication, approved" of the plot (based on Dimka's testimony regarding a
brief encounter during a trip he had earlier made to London), a formal request
for him to be extradited from Britain was made on March 24, 1976.
General Gowon himself strongly
denied the charge. The British government rejected the extradition
request and made it plain through back-channels that if the Nigerian government
insisted too strongly on getting Gowon back, Nigerian leaders should be
prepared to deal with British coldness if (as individuals) they one day found
themselves in exile. Publicly, diplomatic relations with Britain,
however, took a nose dive and Gowon, without trial, was dismissed as an officer
(albeit retired) in the Nigerian Armed Forces. (He was later reinstated
by President Shagari).
As expected, mass arrests were
made after the coup failed, not just of active duty and retired soldiers, but
also civilians. Major C.D. Dabang, an inner circle officer who had
pleaded with Dimka to delay the coup until he was well enough to take part, was
still undergoing treatment at the Military Hospital in Lagos when soldiers
arrived, disconnected his drip and took him away. Many important figures
of the Gowon era were arrested and quizzed. There is at least one, known
to this author, who is very lucky to be alive today.
At least two Boards of Inquiry
sat (including those chaired by Brigadiers Obada and Eromobor).
Death sentences passed by a separate Special Military Tribunal were confirmed
by the Supreme Military Council. However, it remains unclear to this day
to what extent certain individuals who were shot were actually involved in the
Dimka coup. Among others, Col A.D.S. Wya is frequently mentioned.
The first batch of executions
was announced by Brigadier Shehu Yar'Adua, who had just been double promoted
from the rank of Lt. Col. He went on television (Channel 10) to say
"They are being shot about now". This was followed the next
morning by a gleeful headline in the Daily Times that read: "Thirty-Two
shot in Round One". Another batch, including Dimka himself, was to
follow later.
However, two NCOs, Sergeant
Clement Yildar and Corporal Dauda Usman escaped and were never found.
They were declared
wanted. To this day, they have not (to my knowledge) surfaced.
Those executed included:
1. Major General I.D. Bisalla (Defence Commissioner)
2. Joseph Gomwalk (Ex-Governor of
Benue-Plateau)
3. Col. A.D.S. Wya
4. Col Isa
Bukar
5. Lt. Col. T.K. Adamu
6. Lt. Col A.B.
Umoru
7. Lt. Col B.S. Dimka
8. Lt. Col. Ayuba
Tense
9. Major C.D. Dabang
10. Major Ola
Ogunmekan
11. Major J.W. Kasai
12. Major J.K.
Afolabi
13. Major M.M. Mshelia
14. Major I.B.
Rabo
15. Major K.K. Gagara
16. Capt. M.R.
Gotip
17. Capt. M. Parvwang
18. Capt. J.F.
Idi
19. Capt. A.A. Aliyu
20. Capt. S.
Wakian
21. Capt. Austin Dawurang
22. Lt. A.R.
Aliyu
23. Lt. William Seril
24. Lt.
Mohammed
25. Lt. E.L.K. Shelleng
26. Lt. O.
Zagmi
27. Lt. S. Wayah
28. Lt. S.
Kwale
29. Lt. Peter Cigari
30. Lt. Lawrence Garba
31. Seven (7) non-commissioned officers
32. Mr. Abdulakarim Zakari (civilian broadcaster)
Others were retired or
dismissed or imprisoned.
General Gowon's relatives in
the armed forces were hounded out or jailed. But in 1981 a former member
of the SMC, Lt. Gen Alani Akinrinade (rtd) openly admitted in an interview with
the Punch newspaper that there wasn't a strong case against General
Gowon.
SOME SHORT AND LONG TERM
CONSEQUENCES
Although the new Obasanjo led
team that came to office (against Obasanjo's "personal wish and
desire") pledged to continue along the footsteps of Muhammed, the
so-called Dimka coup had lasting military and non-military, judicial, domestic
and foreign policy effects.
It was the first time since the
executions of Banjo, Ifeajuna, Alale and Agbam on September 25, 1967 in Enugu,
by Ojukwu, that anyone was being executed for that alleged offence within
Nigeria's colonial borders. It led to the promulgation
- by the Obasanjo regime - of certain retrospective decrees which made
'concealment of treason' an offence punishable with a life sentence and created
new "Special Military Tribunal" laws justifying mass executions for
coup participation which have remained with us until the recent initiative in
the Legislature. Indeed, when General Obasanjo (rtd) was tried in 1995 on
suspicion of concealment of treason by the Abacha regime, it was the law he
signed into effect just under 20 years before, which was pulled off the shelf
and used to charge him. It later emerged that the charge was frivolous
and he was lucky to survive the Abacha gulag. However, it did not escape
notice that others charged under that decree in the past may not have been so
lucky. Indeed notions of Treason and Treasonable felony in Nigerian Military
Tribunal Law and their consistency with the governing laws of Nigeria still
need to be revisited. And the complex intrigues of the coup investigative
process also need to be addressed. There are people who were officially
cleared of all charges relating to the Dimka coup in 1976 who still barely
escaped getting shot "on contract" at Kiri-Kiri prison.
The Dimka coup was a national
security embarrassment. Efforts by then Inspector General of Police, MD
Yusuf, to resign were rebuffed. But the coup led directly to the creation of
the National Security Organization (NSO), whose first Director, then Brigadier
Abdulai Mohammed was recalled from his post as a
Governor. However, the existence (since 1976) of the
NSO and its by-product, the SSS, has not stopped coups in Nigeria, as events
since then have demonstrated.
Except for the use of Peugeot
cars, the so called "low profile" policy of the Muhammed regime was
largely jettisoned. Key figures became better protected by accompanying
troops. The Brigade of Guards was disbanded and new troops rotated
in.
The leadership style of the
regime changed.
Muhammed's hard charging,
occasionally impulsive style was replaced by a steadier and level headed but
still dictatorial approach. Then Brigadier Shehu Yar'Adua's new role in
the Trioka as Chief of Staff, SHQ, launched him into his subsequent national
political career when he left office. Other relationships forged in the
trials and tribulations of the painful events surrounding the Dimka coup were
to last for many years after - such as that between President Olusegun
Obasanjo, his Defence Minister, Lt. Gen. TY Danjuma (rtd) and his Chief of
Staff, Major General Abdulai Mohammed (rtd).
Although already known for
toughness from his July 1966 and civil war days, General Danjuma's stature as
"the man in charge of the Army" was reinforced by his bold leadership
during the coup. Indeed, he could quite easily have taken
over the country if he wanted - assuming meanings would not have been read into
it by geopolitical pundits.
Then Colonel Ibrahim Babangida
became a pop hero for supposedly flushing Dimka out of Radio Nigeria, although
the exact nature of his 'negotiation' with Dimka at NBC was never
clarified. He was to emerge again on the national scene in 1983 and
1985. It was not until an interview in the Guardian with Lt. Col G.
Nyiam in April 2000, that the
unsung role of Col.
Chris Ugokwe (rtd) at the radio
station that day in 1976 became public knowledge.
The diplomatic effects,
particularly on Anglo-Nigerian relations, have been discussed. Both
countries recalled their ambassadors and it was not until 1979 that the
resident Nigerian High Commissioner in London was replaced.
Domestically, the coup
crystallized political tensions between the Moslem far north and the Christian
middle belt which were not altogether new, but have persisted in one form or
another. As can be recognized, most of those executed were of Plateau
State origin. But the curious notion of a 'Plateau group' in the Army
never did die. It resurrected many years later as the "Langtang
Mafia".
Lastly, it made the late
General Murtala Muhammed a hero. According to General James Oluleye who
was then Finance Commissioner, quite apart from a state burial, naming
monuments after him and fulfilling obligations for his pension and gratuity as
a Four Star General, the government infused a large amount of cash directly
into his estate to protect his family from future financial
embarrassment.
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