Thursday, September 11, 2025 - A former Senate Leader, Senator Ali Ndume, has urged President Bola Tinubu to disregard recent calls for the removal of his Service Chiefs, warning that such moves could demoralise the Armed Forces at a critical time in Nigeria’s fight against insecurity.
Ndume, who currently represents Borno South Senatorial
District and once chaired the Senate Committee on Army, made the appeal in a
statement issued on Thursday.
His intervention followed mounting pressure from the
Northern Ethnic Nationalities Forum, which earlier in the week demanded the
immediate sack of the Service Chiefs.
The Forum, led by Dominic Alancha, had argued that the
present crop of military leaders lacked the professional capacity to tackle the
nation’s worsening security challenges, particularly insurgency and banditry.
According to the group, despite heavy budgetary allocations
to the defence sector, the Armed Forces have failed to deliver meaningful
results.
“We angrily and unequivocally demand the immediate dismissal
and replacement of all Service Chiefs. The President must appoint fresh and
innovative military leaders with a clear mandate and timeline for results,” the
Forum had said in a statement on Thursday.
But Ndume dismissed the agitation as misplaced, insisting
that Nigeria’s security crisis was more about inadequate funding, poor
logistics, and welfare gaps than a failure of leadership at the top.
He said “Those pushing for the sacking of the present crop
of Service Chiefs have ulterior motives and they do not mean well for the
present administration and Nigerians.
“It is outlandish and uncharitable for any group of
individuals to accuse the present Service Chiefs of professional incompetence.
All of them have the requisite training and experience in Theatre operations.”
Continuing, the former Senate chief whip called for a
proactive TEAM (Training, Equipment, Ammunition and Motivation) approach.
According to him, the combination would go a long way to
counter terrorism, banditry and insurgency.
“All they need is adequate ammunition and motivation. The
salary of a private army in Nigeria is about N100,000 ($67.00) per month. Their
daily allowance (N5,000) is unconscionable and nothing to write home about.
“People should desist from pronouncements that could dampen
the morale of our Soldiers and Officers on the field of operation,” he argued.
The senator, whose state has borne the brunt of Boko Haram
insurgency for over a decade, argued that boosting troop morale and providing
modern equipment were more urgent than leadership changes.
He further commended Tinubu for what he described as a sense of “ethno-religious balancing” in the current security appointments, contrasting it with the perceived lopsidedness of previous administrations.

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