- Theophilus Danjuma
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Theophilus Yakubu Danjuma Theophilus Danjuma Chief of Army Staff In office
October 1979 – April 1980Preceded by David Ejoor Succeeded by Ipoola Alani Akinrinade Federal Minister of Defence In office
June 1999 – May 2003Succeeded by Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso Personal details Born 9 December 1938
Takum, Taraba, NigeriaGeneral Theophilus Yakubu Danjuma GCON FSS psc (Rtd.) is a Nigerian Jukun soldier, politician, and businessman. He was Nigerian Army Chief of Army Staff from July 1975 to October 1979. He was formerly Minister of Defence under Olusegun Obasanjo.[1] Danjuma is chairman of South Atlantic Petroleum (SAPETRO).[2]
Contents
Early life
Danjuma was born in Takum, Taraba State (formally Gongola), Nigeria to Kuru Danjuma and Rufkatu Asibi. Takum was mainly a farming community when Danjuma was young, the crops grown there such as yams, rice, cassava and beniseed were cultivated largely by families and clans. His father was a hardworking peasant, whose ancestors were all highly respected members of the community. Kuru Danjuma was a farmer who also traded in metal parts for farming implements and tools.
Theophilus Danjuma started his education at St Bartholomew’s Primary School in Wusasa and moved onto the Benue Provincial Secondary School in Katsina-Ala where he was the captain of the school cricket 1st XI team, he received his Higher School Certificate in 1958. In 1959 Danjuma enrolled at the Nigerian College of Arts Science and Technology in Zaria (Ahmadu Bello University) to study History on a Northern Nigeria Scholarship. However by the end of 1960, Danjuma had left University in order to enroll with the Nigerian Army.
Military career
Danjuma was commissioned into the Nigerian Army as second lieutenant and platoon commander in the Congo and in 1963 joined a UN Peace-keeping force in Sante, Kataga Province in Congo when he was promoted to captain three years later. In 1966 Captain Danjuma was involved in a counter-coup with the 4th Battalion in Mokola, Ibadan. On July 29, 1966, Ironsi spent the night at the Government House Ibadan as part of a nation-wide tour. His host, Lieutenant Colonel Adekunle Fajuyi, Military Governor of Western Nigeria, alerted him to a possible mutiny within the army. Ironsi desperately tried to contact his Army Chief of Staff, Yakubu Gowon, but he was unreachable. In the early hours of the morning, the Government House Ibadan was surrounded by soldiers led by Theophilus Danjuma. Danjuma arrested Ironsi and questioned him about his alleged complicity in the coup which saw the demise of the Sardauna of Sokoto, Ahmadu Bello. Although some have argued that Fajuyi was not a target in this counter-coup, Danjuma, Walbe and others have gone on record to say that they probably wanted him "for questioning" as much as they did his boss, Aguiyi-Ironsi. Fajuyi was seen as a so-called progressive, who had supported the Nzeogwu coup in January of that year. The bullet-riddled bodies of Ironsi and Fajuyi were later found in a nearby forest, and Yakubu Gowon became the new Military Head of State. A year later, in 1967, he was promoted to lieutenant colonel at the start of the campaign towards Enugu, which was captured later in that year.
In 1970 Danjuma attended the International Court Martial in Trinidad and Tobago as Nigeria's representative, when he was appointed President of the Tribunal in a case brought against members of a failed coup attempt in Trinidad and Tobago. Following his promotion to Colonel in 1971 he spent next two years with responsibility for court-martialling Army officers proven guilty of corruption and indiscipline. In 1975 he was promoted to Brigadier and the position of General Officer Commanding (GOC) and in the following year he became the Chief of Army Staff to the Head of State Olusegun Obasanjo. He played a prominent role in supporting the president in resisting the Dimka Coup in 1976.[3][4]
He retired from the Nigerian army in 1979
Business career
Nigeria America Line (NAL) Formed in 1979 by General TY Danjuma (Rtd), Nigeria American Line (NAL) began business and initially leased a ship called 'Hannatu' which traded between Lagos and Santos in Brazil when Nigeria's bilateral trade agreement had opened the sea routes to economies in the South American markets. NAL went on to win patronage from Nigeria's National Supply Company (NNSC) to bring in government goods from. NAL's list of growing clients included DICON Salt (Nigeria) and project cargoes for Iwopin Paper Mill, ANNAMCO and Volkswagen Nigeria. NAL became a member of AWAFC (American West African Freight Conference), Brazil-Nigeria Freight Conference and the Mediterranean Line (MEWAC). With the formation of the National Maritime Authority (NMA) IN 1987/88, the profile of NAL increased as NMA encouraged indigenous operators to claim their share of internationally traded cargo involving Nigeria. NAL began with a core indigenous staff of about 12 in 1979. In 2009 staff in NAL-COMET is closer to 250 including approximately 12 expatriate staff members. From the Lagos office the NAL-COMET Group has opened branch offices in Port Harcourt which serves Onne, Warri and Calabar seaports.[5]
COMET Shipping Agencies Nigeria Ltd COMET Shipping Agencies Nigeria Limited was established in 1984 by Danjuma, primarily to act as an agent for Nigeria American Line (NAL). COMET has grown and by the late nineties became one of the largest independent agents operating in Nigeria with experience in handling many types of vessels and cargo. In 2009 Comet handled over 200 vessels at the ports of Lagos, Port Harcourt, Calabar and Warri. In 2005 NAL-COMET acquired a roll-in-roll-out port (RORO) in Lagos which makes it the largest independent port operators in Africa.
South Atlantic Petroleum Limited (SAPETRO) South Atlantic Petroleum (SAPETRO) is a Nigerian Oil Exploration and Production Company that was created in 1995 by General T. Y. Danjuma. The ministry of Petroleum Resources in Nigeria awarded the Oil Prospecting License (OPL) 246 to SAPETRO in February 1998. The block covers a total area of 2,590km2 (1,000 sq. miles). SAPETRO partnered with Total Upstream Nigeria Ltd (TUPNI) and Brasoil Oil Services Company Nigeria Ltd (Petrobras) to start prospecting on OPL246. Akpo, a condensate field was discovered in April 2000 with the drilling of the first exploration well (Akpo 1) on the block. Other discoveries made on OPL 246 include the Egina Main, Egina South, Preowei and Kuro (Kuro was suspended as a dry gas/minor oil discovery). In 2004, SAPETRO’s subsidiary in Benin won through a competitive tender process an oil exploration contract covering 550 square kilometers offshore from the Republic of Benin. In February 2005, SAPETRO was granted Oil Mining Lease (OML) 130 and thereafter the Federal government backed in through the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC). In June 2006, SAPETRO divested part of its contractor rights and obligations to China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC). SAPETRO produced its ‘first oil’ (condensate) on the 4th March 2009. In December 2009 SAPETRO donated a new state of the art medical centre to the Nasarawa State University. The medical centre, to be known as South Atlantic Petroleum Medical Centre would be available to serve the University, the local and neighbouring communities.[6]
Politics
Since 1999 Danjuma has played an active role in Nigerian politics, some of his key appointments have been:
- 1999 Appointed as Minister of Defence to President Olusegun Obasanjo's Cabinet
- 2003 Appointed as Chairperson for investigative committee on the Warri conflict
- 2010 Nominated as Chairman of the Presidential Advisory Council by Acting President Goodluck Jonathan
While in Office, Gen TY Danjuma sought to curb the politicisation of the military, and was an firm supporter of democracy and the Rule of Law. He also oversaw the renaming of all Nigerian Barracks and Cantons, from those of civilian or living persons. He was also widely known to be an avid opponent of President Obasanjo's attempts in 2006 to engineer a way that would enable himself and state governors to serve more than two consecutive terms.
TY Danjuma Foundation
In December 2008, the TY Danjuma Foundation was created in Nigeria.
The Foundation's principal aims are to provide durable advantages through the implementation of development programs. The Foundation plans to operate more as a philanthropic organisation rather than simply as a charity. This would allow for the foundation to seek out other deserving causes and Non Governmental Organizations (NGOs) to partner with and make grants available.
The TY Danjuma Foundation seeks to alleviate poverty in communities by providing basic amenities, education for children and young adults while also providing free medical care for indigent people. Currently, USD500,000 has been given out as grants to NGOs working to relieve suffering in Danjuma’s home state of Taraba. Taraba is historically one of Nigeria's most impoverished states, compounded by the absence of a health service which catered for the masses. Furthermore, the state has the highest case of river blindness and other debilitating illnesses.[7]
The TY Danjuma Foundation is currently partnering with over 50 NGOs throughout Nigeria, and with the support and cooperation of 36 state governors. One of the many NGOs which is being supported by the Foundation is CASVI working in Takum, Wukari and Donga. CASVI's main area of expertise is on the provision of free eye care services such as the treatment of river blindness in Wukari, Ibi and Donga.[8]
References
- ^ "Military revenge in Benue". HRW.org. Human Rights Watch. http://hrw.org/reports/2002/nigeria/Nigeria0402-06.htm. Retrieved 2007-06-09.
- ^ "South Atlantic Petroleum Limited". MBendi website. MBendi Information Services (Pty) Ltd. http://www.mbendi.co.za/orgs/cib4.htm. Retrieved 2007-04-06.
- ^ "The Dimka Coup of 1976". http://www.dawodu.com/dimka.htm/. Retrieved 2010-11-16.
- ^ "Nigeria Exchange News: General TY Danjuma's Mea Culpa". http://www.ngex.com/news/public/article.php?ArticleID=334. Retrieved 2010-11-16.
- ^ "Nalcomet Website". http://www.nalcomet.com/. Retrieved 2010-11-16.
- ^ "The South Atlantic Petroleum Website". http://www.sapetro.com/. Retrieved 2010-11-16.
- ^ "All Africa News: Ty Danjuma Foundation - Inside Africa's Biggest Foundation...". http://allafrica.com/stories/201002221184.html. Retrieved 2010-11-16.
- ^ "Danjuma Foundation Website". http://www.tydanjumafoundation.org. Retrieved 2010-11-16.
Chiefs Of Army Staff (COAS) Nigeria Johnson Aguiyi-Ironsi (1965-1966)
Yakubu Gowon (1966)
Joseph Akahan (1967-1968)
Hassan Katsina (1968-1971)
David Ejoor (1971-1975)
Theophilus Danjuma (1975-1979)Ipoola Alani Akinrinade (1979-1980)
Gibson Jalo (1980-1981)
Mohammed Inuwa Wushishi (1981-1983)
Ibrahim Babangida (1984-1985)
Sani Abacha (1985-1990)
Salihu Ibrahim (1990-1993)Aliyu Mohammed Gusau (1993)
Chris Alli (1993-1994)
Alwali Kazir (1994-1996)
Victor Malu (1999-2001)
Alexander Ogomudia (2001-2003)
Martin Luther Agwai (2003-2006)Owoye Andrew Azazi (2006-2007)
Luka Nyeh Yusuf (2007-2008)
Abdulrahman Bello Dambazau (2008-)Vice President Atiku Abubakar (1999–2007)Agriculture Sani Daura (June 1999–2000) • Hassan Adamu (2000–January 2001) • Adamu Bello (February 2001–2007)Aviation Olusegun Agagu (May 1999–February 2001) • Kema Chikwe (February 2001–May 2003)Commerce Mustapha Bello (June 1999–2002) • Precious Ngelale (–May 2003)Communications Mohammed Arzika (June 1999–June 2001) • Haliru Mohammed Bello • (June 2001–May 2003)Co-operation and Integration in Africa Jerry Gana (May 1999–)Defence Theophilus Danjuma (June 1999–2003)Education Tunde Adeniran (June 1999–February 2001) • Babalola Borishade (February 2001–)Environment (Later + Housing) Hassan Adamu (June 1999–2000) • Sani Daura (2000–January 2001) • Mohammed Kabir Said (February 2001–)FCT Administration Ibrahim Bunu (June 1999–February 2001) • Mohammed Abba Gana (February 2001–)Finance Adamu Ciroma (June 1999–2003)Foreign Affairs Sule Lamido (June 1999–2003)Health Tim Menakaya (June 1999–February 2001) • ABC Nwosu (February 2001–2003)Industries Iyorchia Ayu (Jun 1999–2000) • Stephen Akiga (2000–January 2001) • Kolawole Babalola Jamodu (February 2001–May 2003)Information and National Orientation Dapo Sarumi (June 1999–January 2001) • Jerry Gana (February 2001–)Internal Affairs Sunday Afolabi (June 1999 -) • Mohammed Shata (–May 2003)Justice (Attorney General) Kanu Agabi (Jun 1999–Jan 2000) • Bola Ige (Jan 2000–2002) • Kanu Agabi (2002–2003)Labour, Employment and Productivity Alabo Graham-Douglas (June 1999–July 2000) • Musa GwadabeMines and Steel Development (Solid Minerals) Musa Gwadabe (June 1999–) • Kanu AgabiPolice Affairs David Jemibewon (June 1999–2000) • Stephen Akiga (February 2001–)Power and Steel Bola Ige (June 1999–Jan 2000) • Segun AgaguScience and Technology Ebitimi Banijo (June 1999–) • Turner IsounSports and Social Development Damishi Sango (June 1999–February 2001) • Ishaya Mark Aku (February 2001–May 2002) • Stephen Akiga (May 2002–May 2003)Tourism, Culture and National Orientation Ojo Maduekwe (June 1999–July 2000) • Alabo Graham-Douglas (July 2000–January 2001) • Boma Jack (February 2001–)Transport Kema Chikwe (June 1999–February 2001) • Ojo Maduekwe (February 2001–2003)Water Resources Mohammed Kaliel (June 1999–June 2001) • Muktar Shagari (June 2001–May 2003)Women and Youth Development Aishat IsmailWorks and Housing Tony Anenih (June 1999–2003)Categories:- Living people
- 1938 births
- Defence ministers of Nigeria
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