Re: January 15,1966 Coup: Conversation Between Lt. Col Pam And His Murderers by Babacele: 1:25pm On Jan 15, 2017 |
hmmm, yes we have made huge mistakes. can't we just sincerely move on while carefully learning from yesterday? God bless Nigeria. 8 Likes |
Re: January 15,1966 Coup: Conversation Between Lt. Col Pam And His Murderers by project8(m): 1:26pm On Jan 15, 2017 |
Qelvin:
Aside from the thrash you just wrote, learn to punctuate your sentences cause all I see here is run-on's...I wouldn't call you a dunce in spite of yourself of course, reeking of sheer ignorance says much about you already. forget about the punctuations and focus on the points raised. Teens on nairaland always derailing topics. 28 Likes 1 Share |
Re: January 15,1966 Coup: Conversation Between Lt. Col Pam And His Murderers by Naija9090: 1:41pm On Jan 15, 2017 |
saintmark88: [s]These igbo guys wanted to dominate every other tribe in Nigeria, thts d reason they carried out this coup, they started this while tin, when it backfired they started crying marginalization, same tin during d war, after all d rubbish they did, when Fed hand meet dem they started shouting marginalization, same tin they r still doing today, wen GEJ was president, dey never complained of marginalization, immediately he lost, they started again with d cry.
So it's obvious they want to dominate and wen dey can't they will cry marginalization and biafra....
They carried out d coup and thought it was over, but they didn't know they had dug their own grave, dem no know say we're their craze stop Na I'm Hausa man own start[/s] Afonja and their useless propaganda. Every tribe in Nigeria know for a fact that Igbo want to be left alone to be on their own yet you refuse and cry...they want to dominate you? Where is your sense? SMH! Keep trying to paint Igbos bad; it will not work. Other tribes know that afonjas are the cause of every single problem in this country for their indecision to stand on the path of right and truth! Including the big problem we we have now...Buhari, you connived to elect, who has destroyed lives and economy. 20 Likes 2 Shares |
Re: January 15,1966 Coup: Conversation Between Lt. Col Pam And His Murderers by najoke: 1:50pm On Jan 15, 2017 |
26 Likes 3 Shares |
Re: January 15,1966 Coup: Conversation Between Lt. Col Pam And His Murderers by najoke: 1:53pm On Jan 15, 2017 |
26 Likes |
Re: January 15,1966 Coup: Conversation Between Lt. Col Pam And His Murderers by laudate: 2:20pm On Jan 15, 2017 |
Fedayeen02: What was Major Ademola doing there? Since you call it Igbo coup. Turning history on its head. I thought old age begets wisdom but you are no different from those i watch in a circus The names of the soldiers who shot Lt. Col Pam were clearly stated. Ademola was not there, even though he was one of the coup plotters. Those who abducted Pam were Major (HC) Humphrey Chukwuka, Major Anuforo, Lt G. Onyefuru, Sergeants NN Ugongene, H.Okibe, B.Anyanwu, L.Egbukichi and P.Iwueke. Read the OP's post again. Ddaji: ...The invading soldiers had come face-to-face with her husband, Lt Col Pam, led by a man very familiar to him, Major (HC) Humphrey Chukwuka, his second-in-command, and Deputy Adjutant General (DAG)1 whom Major Benjamin Adekunle who was DAG 2 had earlier warned him to beware of and Major Anuforo.
The rest of the party comprised 2nd Lt G. Onyefuru, Sergeants NN Ugongene, H.Okibe, B.Anyanwu, L.Egbukichi and P.Iwueke
Major Humphrey Chukwuka (HC): “Sir, we have come to take you with us.”
JY: “Why? What is the meaning of this?”
HC: “Sir, please come with us.”
JY: “Ok. Allow me to dress”
Lt. Col JY Pam at this point was joined by his heart-broken wife, Elizabeth as he retreated into the bedroom and changed swiftly into a pair of trousers, a vest and shirt and put on his watch. He returned to the waiting soldiers as Elizabeth pleaded with Major Chukwuka who was well known to her to spare her husband’s life.
Elizabeth pleads: “please don’t kill him, please don’t kill my husband”
HC: “No. We won’t Madam. Don’t worry. I will bring him back to you.”
Major Chukwuka, who had rather become impatient began to march Lt Col Pam out of his home but not without first advising him to put on a coat because it was the harmattan season and was cold outside.
As Pam was led out, Kaneng, his daughter, aware of the present danger, ran to her father and hugged him. Col Pam promptly turned to Elizabeth his wife and said in Hausa: “Liz, ki lura da yara,” which means “Liz, look after the children.”
These as it were, became the last words that she will hear her husband speak. And that was also the last glimpse he would have of his family that comprised Jummai, six years; Yusufu, four years; identical twins Ishaku and Ishaya, one year nine months and Ibrahim (Gambo), four months and two weeks.
The abduction party left the house, leaving behind the wailings from the Pam family. On the journey of a few kilometres from Ikoyi Crescent to the Federal Guards Officers Mess Ikoyi, Lt Col Pam sat in the back of a camouflage green Nigerian Army Land Rover under armed guard. They remain in the premises of the Officers Mess for less than an hour when Major Christian Anuforo arrived of from Apapa, where he had gone to execute Colonel Kur Mohammed. Upon discovery that it was Lt Col JY Pam who was under guard, Major Chukwuka expressed surprise that Lt Col Pam has not been eliminated.
Major Anuforo who had taken charge at the Federal Guards’ Officers Mess, ordered the driver to take the party to Ikoyi Golf Course. At a convenient point he ordered the driver to stop and for Lt Col Pam to disembark. Though not in operational command of troops, Col Pam was the most senior administrative officer in the Nigerian Army, in charge of institutional support and personnel; and for reasons best known to them, Major Anuforo and his co-conspirators had ordained that he was to die.
Major Christian Anuforo (CA): “You are to be shot Sir.”
JY: “Chris why?”
CA: “That is our decision”
JY: “I have a young family of six. This makes no sense.”
CA: “I have no choice. I am simply obeying orders.”
JY: “Allow me to say my prayers.”
CA: “Please do.”
Dawn has not broken, and Lt Col Pam, 32, knelt on the soft, cold grass. His last thoughts were obviously for his devoted wife Elizabeth and their children. “Lord save them. Lord bless them and Lord keep them.”
Anuforo’s gun cracked, two bullets flew out in the first volley, hitting his chest and jaw. Pam crumbled to the ground and then eleven more bullets pierced through from his the back. And life was over.... 16 Likes 1 Share |
Re: January 15,1966 Coup: Conversation Between Lt. Col Pam And His Murderers by Fedayeen02: 2:24pm On Jan 15, 2017 |
laudate:
The names of the soldiers who shot Lt. Col Pam were clearly stated. Ademola was not there, even though he was one of the coup plotters. Your brain is running on a low processor. Was Ademola a member of the Coup plotter? 1 Like |
Re: January 15,1966 Coup: Conversation Between Lt. Col Pam And His Murderers by Nobody: 2:25pm On Jan 15, 2017 |
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Re: January 15,1966 Coup: Conversation Between Lt. Col Pam And His Murderers by laudate: 2:26pm On Jan 15, 2017 |
Fedayeen02: Your brain is running on a low processor. Was Ademola a member of the Coup plotter? No.... your own brain is the one that needs to be rebooted. Ademola was a coup plotter, but NOT one of those who executed Pam. Get it? Or you still want me to break it down for you? 13 Likes 1 Share |
Re: January 15,1966 Coup: Conversation Between Lt. Col Pam And His Murderers by Fedayeen02: 2:29pm On Jan 15, 2017 |
laudate:
No.... your own brain is the one that needs to be rebooted. Ademola was a coup plotter, but NOT one of those who executed Pam. Get it? Or you still want me to break it down for you? Shut up go back to the poster i quoted and what he wrote. I don't do kids. Look for your mates 2 Likes |
Re: January 15,1966 Coup: Conversation Between Lt. Col Pam And His Murderers by Nobody: 2:33pm On Jan 15, 2017 |
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Re: January 15,1966 Coup: Conversation Between Lt. Col Pam And His Murderers by zendy: 2:37pm On Jan 15, 2017 |
I think it is really stupid for anyobe to say that what a few Igbo officers did on the 15th of July 1966 represents the entire Igbo nation. Where these officers acting on behalf of the Igbo nation? So why call it an Igbo coup? What ethnic group were Major Ademoyega, Captain Adeleke and Lt Oyewole who all participated in the coup? I will never support a coup plotter but people should stop distorting issues. It was not an Igbo coup because the the coupists had no mandate from the Igbo nation to conduct any coup. 7 Likes 1 Share |
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Re: January 15,1966 Coup: Conversation Between Lt. Col Pam And His Murderers by effty(m): 2:42pm On Jan 15, 2017 |
Who was counting the shots biko? Liars everywhere. The only truth is that he was shot. 2 Likes |
Re: January 15,1966 Coup: Conversation Between Lt. Col Pam And His Murderers by omofunaab(m): 2:53pm On Jan 15, 2017 |
If only these coup plotters had not executed that coup, maybe they won't have been retaliation by the northern soldiers and also those pogroms against the igbos in the north might have been avoided. There won't have been a biafran war and maybe we won't have heard of major adekunle.
Nigeria was better when we operated a regional system of government until ironsi changed it to unitary system, Now these politicians don't want to revert back to the regional system that Awolowo, azikwe agreed on, they can't share more powers with the states.
Maybe if ironsi had punished the coup plotters, maybe the northerners won't have retaliated 21 Likes 1 Share |
Re: January 15,1966 Coup: Conversation Between Lt. Col Pam And His Murderers by Dedetwo(m): 4:27pm On Jan 15, 2017 |
Ddaji:
By Tony Egbulefu
With a narrative from Dr Ishaku Chollom Pam FRCP, Consultant Physician, Tony Egbulefu captures the ghastly details of the conversations that preceded the cold-blooded execution of Lt Col James Pam, the Adjutant-general of the Nigerian Army in the hands of the January 15, 1966 mutineers.
As the guns cracked in the early hours of January 15, 1966 from the officers and men loyal to some mutineering middle rank officers of the Nigerian Army, led by Major Chukwuma Kaduna Nzeogwu, 11 prominent Nigerian politicians and some senior army officers met their fatal end in its trail.
Gone with the coup that spanned across the cities of Lagos (then federal capital ), Kaduna, (capital of Northern Region), and Ibadan, (capital of the Western Region) were the Nigerian Prime Minister, Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, Ahmadu Bello, Premier of the Northern Region, Chief Samuel Akintola, Premier of the Western Region, and minister of finance, Festus Okotie Eboh.
Ostensibly targeted at the ruling political class, whom the mutineers accused of bad governance and systemic destruction of the bonds of country’s unity, the coup which had other protagonist as Maj Timothy Onwuatuegwu, Maj Emmanuel Ifeajuna, Maj Don Okafor, Maj Ademola Ademoyega, Maj Chris Anuforo, Maj Humphrey Chukwuka and Capt Emmanuel Nwobosi, brought the country’s nascent democracy, which was just six years old to a screeching halt. Major-general JTU Aguiyi Ironsi, Commander of the Nigerian Army, GOC, who became the prime beneficiary of the coup as the Head of State sought to consolidate his hold on power, and on the country by enacting a decree that made the country turn to a unitary system of government. Though the Nigeria is still nominally designated as a federal entity, Ironsi’s unitary structure in effect, has been the operational model till date.
Army officers the coup claimed include Lt Col Abogo Largema, (the Commanding Officer of the 4th Battalion, Ibadan), Brig Zakariya Maimalari, (Commander 2nd Brigade, Lagos), Brig Ademulegun, Col Kur Mohammed, (Chief of Army Staff), Lt Col Arthur Unegbe (Quarter Master General Nigerian Army, and the only officer of Igbo extraction to be executed by the coup plotters) and Lt Col James Pam.
Lt Col Pam, however, stood out as the officer, who broke the news of the coup to Ironsi, the would-be Head of State.
In the dead of the night, Pam rather than being more concerned about the safety of his life, braced the odds and tipped off Ironsi, the army GOC on telephone about the mutiny. Shortly after ending the call to Ironsi, Pam’s apartment was invaded and he was abducted and later shot dead by Maj Anuforo.
It was on a grim Saturday night, about 2am, January 15, 1966. Pam, Adjutant-general of the Nigerian Army, his wife Elizabeth and all other members of his family have been asleep for several hours in their Nigerian Army residence at 8 Ikoyi Crescent, Ikoyi, Lagos, when they awoke to a start to behold the sight of soldiers, crouching decidedly towards their house. By a sense of duty, concern and loyalty, he picked up the telephone in the bedroom and called the Nigerian Army GOC, Major General Aguiyi Ironsi.
The following narrative is captured by Dr Ishaku Chollom Pam FRCP, Consultant Physician between Pam and Ironsi:
Lt. Col JY Pam: “Sir, there have been gunshots around my house and there is a party of armed soldiers making its way towards my home.”
GOC: sounding alert “Ummm. Don’t worry. I will do everything I can to help. Good bye.” Lt Col Pam dialled a second number. This time to Brigadier Maimalari, and repeated what he has just relayed to the GOC.
Back at 8 Ikoyi Crescent, the fully-armed soldiers were deployed with deadly efficiency at the gate, at the front entrance, to the kitchen door and to the Boys Quarters. Those approaching the kitchen chose to make their entrance by shooting through the door. A quick run up the stairs and the soldiers took over the bedrooms. By thisBy this time Elizabeth was no longer in doubt that something has badly gone wrong. As she ran to the children’s rooms in her distress and confusion, she screamed for her oldest child and daughter who was eight years old. “Kaneng ! Kaneng! Help me! Help me!” she called out.
The invading soldiers had come face-to-face with her husband, Lt Col Pam, led by a man very familiar to him, Major (HC) Humphrey Chukwuka, his second-in-command, and Deputy Adjutant General (DAG)1 whom Major Benjamin Adekunle who was DAG 2 had earlier warned him to beware of and Major Anuforo.
The rest of the party comprised 2nd Lt G. Onyefuru, Sergeants NN Ugongene, H.Okibe, B.Anyanwu, L.Egbukichi and P.Iwueke
Major Humphrey Chukwuka (HC): “Sir, we have come to take you with us.”
JY: “Why? What is the meaning of this?”
HC: “Sir, please come with us.”
JY: “Ok. Allow me to dress”
Lt. Col JY Pam at this point was joined by his heart-broken wife, Elizabeth as he retreated into the bedroom and changed swiftly into a pair of trousers, a vest and shirt and put on his watch. He returned to the waiting soldiers as Elizabeth pleaded with Major Chukwuka who was well known to her to spare her husband’s life.
Elizabeth pleads: “please don’t kill him, please don’t kill my husband”
HC: “No. We won’t Madam. Don’t worry. I will bring him back to you.”
Major Chukwuka, who had rather become impatient began to march Lt Col Pam out of his home but not without first advising him to put on a coat because it was the harmattan season and was cold outside.
As Pam was led out, Kaneng, his daughter, aware of the present danger, ran to her father and hugged him. Col Pam promptly turned to Elizabeth his wife and said in Hausa: “Liz, ki lura da yara,” which means “Liz, look after the children.”
These as it were, became the last words that she will hear her husband speak. And that was also the last glimpse he would have of his family that comprised Jummai, six years; Yusufu, four years; identical twins Ishaku and Ishaya, one year nine months and Ibrahim (Gambo), four months and two weeks.
The abduction party left the house, leaving behind the wailings from the Pam family. On the journey of a few kilometres from Ikoyi Crescent to the Federal Guards Officers Mess Ikoyi, Lt Col Pam sat in the back of a camouflage green Nigerian Army Land Rover under armed guard. They remain in the premises of the Officers Mess for less than an hour when Major Christian Anuforo arrived of from Apapa, where he had gone to execute Colonel Kur Mohammed. Upon discovery that it was Lt Col JY Pam who was under guard, Major Chukwuka expressed surprise that Lt Col Pam has not been eliminated.
Major Anuforo who had taken charge at the Federal Guards’ Officers Mess, ordered the driver to take the party to Ikoyi Golf Course. At a convenient point he ordered the driver to stop and for Lt Col Pam to disembark. Though not in operational command of troops, Col Pam was the most senior administrative officer in the Nigerian Army, in charge of institutional support and personnel; and for reasons best known to them, Major Anuforo and his co-conspirators had ordained that he was to die.
Major Christian Anuforo (CA): “You are to be shot Sir.”
JY: “Chris why?”
CA: “That is our decision”
JY: “I have a young family of six. This makes no sense.”
CA: “I have no choice. I am simply obeying orders.”
JY: “Allow me to say my prayers.”
CA: “Please do.”
Dawn has not broken, and Lt Col Pam, 32, knelt on the soft, cold grass. His last thoughts were obviously for his devoted wife Elizabeth and their children. “Lord save them. Lord bless them and Lord keep them.”
Anuforo’s gun cracked, two bullets flew out in the first volley, hitting his chest and jaw. Pam crumbled to the ground and then eleven more bullets pierced through from his the back. And life was over.
Major General Ironsi became the Head of State. Bloody retaliation followed in July same year, and over a million lives were lost in the orgy of violence that eruptedFifty-one years on and the country is still counting the cost,” notes Dr Pam.
Col Pam was part of the soldiers that quelled the Tiv Riots. Tasked with the duty of reorganising and training the fledgling Tanganyika (later Tanzanian) Army, he accomplished it with an outstanding efficiency, and returned with the gift of a leopard skin and shield from a grateful President Julius Nyerere. He was awarded MFR (Member of the Federal Republic of Nigeria) for his industry and professionalism. Most Nigerians are very good for wrong reasons. Even their narratives are as crooked and ill-motivated as the Nigerians. If Lt Col James Pam stood out as the officer that informed Gen. Ironsi about coup, it is safe to say he had prior knowledge of the military purge. Mere sounds of gun shots in a soldier's compound does warrant the soldier to ring up a GOC of army to inform him/her of a coup in progress. These goofy people find it hard to hide their insincerity. 5 Likes |
Re: January 15,1966 Coup: Conversation Between Lt. Col Pam And His Murderers by Dedetwo(m): 4:48pm On Jan 15, 2017 |
Ddaji:
By Tony Egbulefu
With a narrative from Dr Ishaku Chollom Pam FRCP, Consultant Physician, Tony Egbulefu captures the ghastly details of the conversations that preceded the cold-blooded execution of Lt Col James Pam, the Adjutant-general of the Nigerian Army in the hands of the January 15, 1966 mutineers.
As the guns cracked in the early hours of January 15, 1966 from the officers and men loyal to some mutineering middle rank officers of the Nigerian Army, led by Major Chukwuma Kaduna Nzeogwu, 11 prominent Nigerian politicians and some senior army officers met their fatal end in its trail.
Gone with the coup that spanned across the cities of Lagos (then federal capital ), Kaduna, (capital of Northern Region), and Ibadan, (capital of the Western Region) were the Nigerian Prime Minister, Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, Ahmadu Bello, Premier of the Northern Region, Chief Samuel Akintola, Premier of the Western Region, and minister of finance, Festus Okotie Eboh.
Ostensibly targeted at the ruling political class, whom the mutineers accused of bad governance and systemic destruction of the bonds of country’s unity, the coup which had other protagonist as Maj Timothy Onwuatuegwu, Maj Emmanuel Ifeajuna, Maj Don Okafor, Maj Ademola Ademoyega, Maj Chris Anuforo, Maj Humphrey Chukwuka and Capt Emmanuel Nwobosi, brought the country’s nascent democracy, which was just six years old to a screeching halt. Major-general JTU Aguiyi Ironsi, Commander of the Nigerian Army, GOC, who became the prime beneficiary of the coup as the Head of State sought to consolidate his hold on power, and on the country by enacting a decree that made the country turn to a unitary system of government. Though the Nigeria is still nominally designated as a federal entity, Ironsi’s unitary structure in effect, has been the operational model till date.
Army officers the coup claimed include Lt Col Abogo Largema, (the Commanding Officer of the 4th Battalion, Ibadan), Brig Zakariya Maimalari, (Commander 2nd Brigade, Lagos), Brig Ademulegun, Col Kur Mohammed, (Chief of Army Staff), Lt Col Arthur Unegbe (Quarter Master General Nigerian Army, and the only officer of Igbo extraction to be executed by the coup plotters) and Lt Col James Pam.
Lt Col Pam, however, stood out as the officer, who broke the news of the coup to Ironsi, the would-be Head of State.
In the dead of the night, Pam rather than being more concerned about the safety of his life, braced the odds and tipped off Ironsi, the army GOC on telephone about the mutiny. Shortly after ending the call to Ironsi, Pam’s apartment was invaded and he was abducted and later shot dead by Maj Anuforo.
It was on a grim Saturday night, about 2am, January 15, 1966. Pam, Adjutant-general of the Nigerian Army, his wife Elizabeth and all other members of his family have been asleep for several hours in their Nigerian Army residence at 8 Ikoyi Crescent, Ikoyi, Lagos, when they awoke to a start to behold the sight of soldiers, crouching decidedly towards their house. By a sense of duty, concern and loyalty, he picked up the telephone in the bedroom and called the Nigerian Army GOC, Major General Aguiyi Ironsi.
The following narrative is captured by Dr Ishaku Chollom Pam FRCP, Consultant Physician between Pam and Ironsi:
Lt. Col JY Pam: “Sir, there have been gunshots around my house and there is a party of armed soldiers making its way towards my home.”
GOC: sounding alert “Ummm. Don’t worry. I will do everything I can to help. Good bye.” Lt Col Pam dialled a second number. This time to Brigadier Maimalari, and repeated what he has just relayed to the GOC.
Back at 8 Ikoyi Crescent, the fully-armed soldiers were deployed with deadly efficiency at the gate, at the front entrance, to the kitchen door and to the Boys Quarters. Those approaching the kitchen chose to make their entrance by shooting through the door. A quick run up the stairs and the soldiers took over the bedrooms. By thisBy this time Elizabeth was no longer in doubt that something has badly gone wrong. As she ran to the children’s rooms in her distress and confusion, she screamed for her oldest child and daughter who was eight years old. “Kaneng ! Kaneng! Help me! Help me!” she called out.
The invading soldiers had come face-to-face with her husband, Lt Col Pam, led by a man very familiar to him, Major (HC) Humphrey Chukwuka, his second-in-command, and Deputy Adjutant General (DAG)1 whom Major Benjamin Adekunle who was DAG 2 had earlier warned him to beware of and Major Anuforo.
The rest of the party comprised 2nd Lt G. Onyefuru, Sergeants NN Ugongene, H.Okibe, B.Anyanwu, L.Egbukichi and P.Iwueke
Major Humphrey Chukwuka (HC): “Sir, we have come to take you with us.”
JY: “Why? What is the meaning of this?”
HC: “Sir, please come with us.”
JY: “Ok. Allow me to dress”
Lt. Col JY Pam at this point was joined by his heart-broken wife, Elizabeth as he retreated into the bedroom and changed swiftly into a pair of trousers, a vest and shirt and put on his watch. He returned to the waiting soldiers as Elizabeth pleaded with Major Chukwuka who was well known to her to spare her husband’s life.
Elizabeth pleads: “please don’t kill him, please don’t kill my husband”
HC: “No. We won’t Madam. Don’t worry. I will bring him back to you.”
Major Chukwuka, who had rather become impatient began to march Lt Col Pam out of his home but not without first advising him to put on a coat because it was the harmattan season and was cold outside.
As Pam was led out, Kaneng, his daughter, aware of the present danger, ran to her father and hugged him. Col Pam promptly turned to Elizabeth his wife and said in Hausa: “Liz, ki lura da yara,” which means “Liz, look after the children.”
These as it were, became the last words that she will hear her husband speak. And that was also the last glimpse he would have of his family that comprised Jummai, six years; Yusufu, four years; identical twins Ishaku and Ishaya, one year nine months and Ibrahim (Gambo), four months and two weeks.
The abduction party left the house, leaving behind the wailings from the Pam family. On the journey of a few kilometres from Ikoyi Crescent to the Federal Guards Officers Mess Ikoyi, Lt Col Pam sat in the back of a camouflage green Nigerian Army Land Rover under armed guard. They remain in the premises of the Officers Mess for less than an hour when Major Christian Anuforo arrived of from Apapa, where he had gone to execute Colonel Kur Mohammed. Upon discovery that it was Lt Col JY Pam who was under guard, Major Chukwuka expressed surprise that Lt Col Pam has not been eliminated.
Major Anuforo who had taken charge at the Federal Guards’ Officers Mess, ordered the driver to take the party to Ikoyi Golf Course. At a convenient point he ordered the driver to stop and for Lt Col Pam to disembark. Though not in operational command of troops, Col Pam was the most senior administrative officer in the Nigerian Army, in charge of institutional support and personnel; and for reasons best known to them, Major Anuforo and his co-conspirators had ordained that he was to die.
Major Christian Anuforo (CA): “You are to be shot Sir.”
JY: “Chris why?”
CA: “That is our decision”
JY: “I have a young family of six. This makes no sense.”
CA: “I have no choice. I am simply obeying orders.”
JY: “Allow me to say my prayers.”
CA: “Please do.”
Dawn has not broken, and Lt Col Pam, 32, knelt on the soft, cold grass. His last thoughts were obviously for his devoted wife Elizabeth and their children. “Lord save them. Lord bless them and Lord keep them.”
Anuforo’s gun cracked, two bullets flew out in the first volley, hitting his chest and jaw. Pam crumbled to the ground and then eleven more bullets pierced through from his the back. And life was over.
Major General Ironsi became the Head of State. Bloody retaliation followed in July same year, and over a million lives were lost in the orgy of violence that eruptedFifty-one years on and the country is still counting the cost,” notes Dr Pam.
Col Pam was part of the soldiers that quelled the Tiv Riots. Tasked with the duty of reorganising and training the fledgling Tanganyika (later Tanzanian) Army, he accomplished it with an outstanding efficiency, and returned with the gift of a leopard skin and shield from a grateful President Julius Nyerere. He was awarded MFR (Member of the Federal Republic of Nigeria) for his industry and professionalism. In most cases, the down fall of a man is usually traced to his deeds. It is unfortunate that the narrator of the above junk did not find the need to elaborate on Col Pam’s participation in the political crisis known as Tiv Riots. A soldier of Col Pam’s caliber should not have allowed himself to be drawn into tribal politics of northern region of Nigeria in particular and Nigeria in general. There was nothing about exemplary quality on the part of Lt Col James Pam when he commanded 5th Battalion whose units were tasked to quell Tiv riot of 1964. In practical terms, Lt Col James Pam was one of the willing tools Ahamdu Bello frequently referred in his hateful speeches of 1960 Nigeria. 4 Likes |
Re: January 15,1966 Coup: Conversation Between Lt. Col Pam And His Murderers by project8(m): 4:56pm On Jan 15, 2017 |
9 Likes |
Re: January 15,1966 Coup: Conversation Between Lt. Col Pam And His Murderers by BudeYahooCom: 5:02pm On Jan 15, 2017 |
Maj. Wale Ademoyega the killer of Col Unegbe (the Igbo officer) and other yoruba officers of the 'Igbo coup' hails from Aba according to yoruba zombie skulls. 4 Likes |
Re: January 15,1966 Coup: Conversation Between Lt. Col Pam And His Murderers by BudeYahooCom: 5:11pm On Jan 15, 2017 |
zendy: I think it is really stupid for anyobe to say that what a few Igbo officers did on the 15th of July 1966 represents the entire Igbo nation. Where these officers acting on behalf of the Igbo nation? So why call it an Igbo coup? What ethnic group were Major Ademoyega, Captain Adeleke and Lt Oyewole who all participated in the coup? I will never support a coup plotter but people should stop distorting issues. It was not an Igbo coup because the the coupists had no mandate from the Igbo nation to conduct any coup. According to yoruba zombie skulls, Maj Ademoyega, oyewole and Adeleke were Igbo officers who only took up yoruba names to tarnish yorubaland. They are all from Aba. 4 Likes |
Re: January 15,1966 Coup: Conversation Between Lt. Col Pam And His Murderers by raumdeuter: 5:20pm On Jan 15, 2017 |
BudeYahooCom:
According to yoruba zombie skulls, Maj Ademoyega, oyewole and Adeleke were Igbo officers who only took up yoruba names to tarnish yorubaland. They are all from Aba. Of all the people killed in the coup mention with evidence killed by the Yoruba soldiers 11 Likes 1 Share |
Re: January 15,1966 Coup: Conversation Between Lt. Col Pam And His Murderers by ImperialYoruba: 5:29pm On Jan 15, 2017 |
Fedayeen02: Your brain is running on a low processor.
Was Ademola a member of the Coup plotter? Banjo was a member of Biafra. Should we for that reason stop calling it an Ibo war? 6 Likes |
Re: January 15,1966 Coup: Conversation Between Lt. Col Pam And His Murderers by BudeYahooCom: 5:41pm On Jan 15, 2017 |
raumdeuter:
Of all the people killed in the coup mention with evidence killed by the Yoruba soldiers
No, Ademoyega, Adeleke and Oyewole never killed anybody, they never even carried guns. They were just cooks to Nzeogwu and other 'Ibo coup plotters' in yoruba skulls. 8 Likes |
Re: January 15,1966 Coup: Conversation Between Lt. Col Pam And His Murderers by raumdeuter: 5:43pm On Jan 15, 2017 |
BudeYahooCom:
No, Ademoyega, Adeleke and Oyewole never killed anybody, they never even carried guns. They were just cooks to Nzeogwu and other 'Ibo coup plotters' Mention the people killed by those Yoruba soldiers ANuforo, Nwatuegwu, Nzeogwu Ifeajuna we have records of who they killed with verifiable links Who did the Yoruba soldiers kill 13 Likes 1 Share |
Re: January 15,1966 Coup: Conversation Between Lt. Col Pam And His Murderers by BudeYahooCom: 5:50pm On Jan 15, 2017 |
The truth is if Maj. Ademoyega never wrote down his role as a coup plotter in his Book 'Why we struck'. yoruba scoundrels would have conveniently claimed that NO YORUBA TOOK PART in the 'Igbo coup'. Infact till today many of them are angry he wrote that book and mentioned the yoruba officers who were part and parcel of the so called 'Igbo coup'. That book remains a proof that his yoruba kinsmen are rabid detestful liars. Today, "Ademoyega and fola are from Aba, they only took up yoruba names" according to the wicked backstabbing tribe as they struggle to extricate themselves from the 'Igbo coup' albeit unseccesfully. That book has made their lies impossible to hold water. It's a lesson that whenever you doing anything with a yorubaman always document evidence because the shameless thing will swear by oduduwa and deny the truth tommorow. It's his nature 8 Likes |
Re: January 15,1966 Coup: Conversation Between Lt. Col Pam And His Murderers by BudeYahooCom: 5:56pm On Jan 15, 2017 |
raumdeuter:
Mention the people killed by those Yoruba soldiers
ANuforo, Nwatuegwu, Nzeogwu Ifeajuna we have records of who they killed with verifiable links
Who did the Yoruba soldiers kill And I am agreeing with you that yorubas were only recruited into the coup to become cooks for the 'Igbo officers'. See me see wahala. I'm sure that's Maj Ademoyega even confirmed his great cooking skills in his book that you yorubas have refused to read. 6 Likes |
Re: January 15,1966 Coup: Conversation Between Lt. Col Pam And His Murderers by Qelvin(m): 6:33pm On Jan 15, 2017 |
raumdeuter:
Mention the people killed by those Yoruba soldiers
ANuforo, Nwatuegwu, Nzeogwu Ifeajuna we have records of who they killed with verifiable links
Who did the Yoruba soldiers kill They were foot soldiers who were very much involved in the coup you amala infested cranial dunce, of course those yoruba soldiers won't just have been recruited to clean the boots of their colleagues would they? As long as they had guns with them, they were very much full participants of the coup SHIKENA. 6 Likes |
Re: January 15,1966 Coup: Conversation Between Lt. Col Pam And His Murderers by laudate: 7:12pm On Jan 15, 2017 |
Fedayeen02: Shut up go back to the poster i quoted and what he wrote. I don't do kids. Look for your mates And I don't do irrational 'toddlers' like you. You need to snap out of your ignorance. 6 Likes |
Re: January 15,1966 Coup: Conversation Between Lt. Col Pam And His Murderers by ImperialYoruba: 7:27pm On Jan 15, 2017 |
Qelvin:
They were foot soldiers who were very much involved in the coup you amala infested cranial dunce, of course those yoruba soldiers won't just have been recruited to clean the boots of their colleagues would they? As long as they had guns with them, they were very much full participants of the coup SHIKENA. So what Yorubas were in the coup. It still remains an Ibo coup,for the same reason Biafra is an Ibo war even though Banjo was one of its officers. What does it prove that three Yorubas are in the coup,does that justify why Ibos killed Ekoti Eboh,Maimalari,Largema, Pam, Akintola, Balewa, Ademulegun, Bello and many others? We are yet to see anyone killed by these Yorubas in the coup. In fact you forgot to mention that Nzeogwu also recruited Hausa soldiers and the mortar used to shell Bello's residence were indeed fired by the Hausas. It is Ibo coup and you all got wiped out for it. Learn your lesson and dont repeat. Ok? 19 Likes 1 Share |
Re: January 15,1966 Coup: Conversation Between Lt. Col Pam And His Murderers by ceejay80s(m): 7:45pm On Jan 15, 2017 |
No be today nigerians start to hate demselves, this thing na curse to us 3 Likes 1 Share |
Re: January 15,1966 Coup: Conversation Between Lt. Col Pam And His Murderers by wickyyolo: 7:47pm On Jan 15, 2017 |
waledeji: Truly, Ibos are the root cause of Nigeria problems ABi Awolowo ? Read History. Yoruba are betrayals 4 Likes |
Re: January 15,1966 Coup: Conversation Between Lt. Col Pam And His Murderers by Fedayeen02: 7:48pm On Jan 15, 2017 |
Paretomaster:
you dey mind them?.....like someone is holding a gun to their head to stay...
funny thing, they call it a Zoo. yet they want to remain in d Zoo, and benefit from it...they say as Foreigners...ah ah ah ah
ask them to ball leave today, they will start crying... When they say Biafra your tribesmen leave the hot amala in the pot and run to Nairaland to tell us a thousand reasons why a United Nigeria is the best. Ndi yoruba o gini na afio |