His
powers challenged by military commanders he believed he was appointed
to supervise, Nigeria’s Defence minister, Aliyu Gusau, on Tuesday sent a
letter to President Goodluck Jonathan threatening to quit if the
Commander-in-Chief failed to rein in chiefs of defence, army, navy and
airforce, according to new details of a row that climaxed Wednesday in a
dramatic resignation claim.
In the letter, Mr. Gusau
accused the chief of defence staff, Air Vice Marshal Alex Badeh, of
being “rude”, officials knowledgeable about the communication said.
Mr.
Gusau and the presidency have denied the minister was leaving office
barely a week after he was appointed as part of Mr. Jonathan’s new
effort at curbing a bloody insurgency by the extremist Boko Haram sect.
Earlier
reports said the minister submitted a resignation letter citing
insubordination after Air Chief Marshal Badeh disparaged Mr. Gusau and
the minister of state for defence, Musiliu Obanikoro, for criticizing
his failure to arrange a meeting between the new ministers and the
service chiefs.
But Government insiders said while the retired
general did not expressly submit a resignation letter, he made it clear
to the president he will not work with military officials he considered
“insubordinate”.
The officials said since his swearing-in, Mr.
Gusau made repeated efforts for a meeting with the service chiefs, but
failed to secure one.
When AVM Badeh met with Mr. Gusau on
Monday, he explained that the minister lacked the powers to summon the
service chiefs to meetings without his (Badeh’s) knowledge.
Mr.
Badeh also reportedly insisted that it was not the place of the defence
minister to directly issue directives to the heads of the army, navy and
air force, without routing same through the office of the defence
chief.
Under the Nigerian constitution, and the Armed Forces
Act, Mr. Badeh explained, only the president has the powers to so direct
the service chiefs as Mr. Gusau, a retired soldier, sought to do. Even
so, he added, the president, with all his powers, hardly breaches the
chain of command.
Largely, Mr. Badeh was right. Under Section
217 of the constitution, and Section 7 of the Armed Forces Act, only the
president has such powers. Were he to delegate them, the minister of
defence, is not included in the chain of command.
Still, a
potentially contentious subject, analysts also point to the
constitutional provision allowing the president to delegate his powers
to the ministers.
Officials said those were the explanations Mr. Badeh gave, which infuriated the minister.
After
sending a letter of complaint to the President on Tuesday, Mr. Gusau
failed to show up on Wednesday at the Federal Executive Council meeting,
triggering speculations he had quit the cabinet in anger.
Presidency
sources said Mr. Jonathan is working to resolve the crisis and has
tapped the National Security Adviser, Sambo Dasuki, President of the
Senate, David Mark and former Military President, Ibrahim Babangida, for
help.

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