The
Nigerian Senate has made its position known on the condemned 12 soldiers
condemned by the Nigerian military, saying the soldiers deserve to die.
As
Nigerians continue to clamour and beg for pardon for the 12 Nigerian soldiers sentenced to death for their part in
the mutiny that took place in the Maimalari Military Cantonment in Maiduguri,
Borno State, in the heat of the Boko Haram insurgency, the Nigerian Senate has
declared that it would not plead with the Nigerian Army to spare the lives of
soldiers, because they deserve the death sentence passed on them by the
military court martial.
The
position of the Senate was made known by the Chairman, Senate Committee on
Defence, George Sekibo, in a closed-door meeting with the top military officers
led by the Chief of Defence Staff, Alex Badeh.
The
Senate went further to say that executing the soldiers is in the best interest
of the Nigerian military.
Briefing
journalists after the meeting, Mr. Sekibo said the senate was not under
pressure to intervene to save the lives of the soldiers:
No, we are not under pressure because the
Armed Forces is established by an Act of the National Assembly. The Act spelt
out categorically the conduct of soldiers and the way they are to behave
wherever they are. If you join the military that Act is to guide you and your
conduct.
If you go contrary to any of the prescribed
sections of the Act, the punishment prescribed for the Act you violated will
come on you.
So the military did not just wake up one day
and say that they are going to kill Mr A or Mr B. They (military) went through
the necessary processes and they found them guilty.
Recall
that 12 Nigerian soldiers, now famously called Maiduguri 12, were sentenced to
death by a military court martial on September 16, 2014, for an offence of
mutiny after firing shots at their commanding officer, Maj. Gen. Abubakar
Mohammed, in Maiduguri on May 14.
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