Buhari is at home in UK to rest, says wife , as calls for his prosecution for kidnapping Umaru Dikko in 1983 increases
“He’s just come here to rest. He’s just here
to have a rest, at least a few days rest before he goes back to business.”
Those were the
words of Hajia Aishat, the wife of Major General Muhammadu Buhari, in which she
denied insinuations that her husband is in the United Kingdom to attend to a
grave illness.
There was
widespread controversy at the weekend that the UK trip of Gen. Buhari, the
presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), was on health
grounds although his campaign organization said it was for political business.
The health of
72-year-old Gen. Buhari has been an issue in the country’s presidential
campaign, with a group expressing fears that he may be unable to perform
optimally if he emerges president. Buhari has, however, consistently
pooh-poohed the claim that he is physically unfit"
Umaru
Dikko, the man who was nearly spirited away in a diplomatic bag
By Ngozi Okafor
& Gbenga Sodeinde
On 31 December,
1983, the elected government of Nigeria was overthrown in a military coup by
the country's army. The new military government jailed several government
ministers for corruption and embezzlement while in office. However, the
powerful former Transport Minister, Umaru Dikko, fled to London. The military
claimed that Dikko used his position as Transport Minister to enrich himself in
a series of racketeering scandals. It regarded Dikko as its most wanted
fugitive from justice and wanted to bring him back to Nigeria to face trial.
To bring this
about, they hatched a plot to kidnap him off the streets of London. Nigerian
intelligence services and undercover agents (with the help of several Israelis
who were alleged to be members of Israel's intelligence agency, Mossad) tracked
Dikko to a house in west London. After placing the house under surveillance,
the agents decided to strike on 5 July, 1984.
Moments after
Dikko emerged from the house, two men burst out from a van parked outside the
house. They grabbed Dikko and bundled him into the back of the van. The team
inside the van included a doctor who injected Dikko to render him unconscious.
Dikko's kidnappers
locked him in a large crate labelled "diplomatic baggage" and
addressed to the Nigerian Ministry of External Affairs in the then capital
city, Lagos. They claimed diplomatic immunity for the crate's contents, and
drove him to Stansted airport to place him on a waiting Nigerian cargo plane.
Unbeknown to the
kidnappers, Dikko's secretary had glanced out of her window just in time to see
her boss being bundled into the van outside his house, and she dialled 999.
The kidnap was
initially thought to be the work of criminals and was referred to Scotland
Yard's anti-terrorist squad. The Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher was also
informed.
The British
government ordered customs officials at airports, ports and border crossings to
be vigilant when inspecting Nigeria-bound vessels. One customs officer at
Stansted airport was especially vigilant. Although the Nigerian cargo plane was
minutes from taking off with Dikko on board, he ordered the crate to be opened.
Nigerian intelligence officials and diplomatic staff protested that the crate
could not be opened as it was protected by diplomatic immunity.
The customs
officer called anti-terrorist police. They cordoned off the area and evacuated
airport staff. Customs then opened the crate with armed police watching. Inside
the crate, they found Dikko unconscious, next to the doctor who had injected
him. The doctor had accompanied Dikko in the box to top up his anaesthetics and
ensure he did not die during transit.
Armed police
surrounded the Nigerian cargo plane on the runway, arrested its crew and
refused to allow the plane to take off. They also arrested the Nigerian
officials and Israelis who drove the crate to Stansted, and several members of
Nigeria's High Commission in London.
The Nigerian and
Israeli governments always denied any involvement in the affair. Foreign
intelligence involvement became apparent only when the sophistication and
daring of the Dikko kidnap was revealed.
The kidnap caused
one of the worst-ever diplomatic crises between Britain and Nigeria. The
Nigerian High Commissioner was declared persona non grata in London, and the head
of Nigeria Airways narrowly escaped being arrested by British police.
Diplomatic relations between Nigeria and Britain were suspended for two years.
The controversy also weakened Nigeria's war on corruption, as Britain rejected
a subsequent formal request from Nigeria to extradite Dikko and other Nigerian
politicians in the UK who were wanted in Nigeria on charges of corruption.
Four men were
convicted of kidnapping Dikko (three Israelis and a Nigerian) in a trial at the
Old Bailey, and were jailed. All were released and returned to their countries
after serving their sentences. After regaining consciousness in hospital, Dikko
remained in Britain for over a decade.
Max
Siollun is a historian and the author of "Soldiers of Fortune: Nigerian
Politics Under Buhari and Babangida".
Buhari is at home in UK to rest, says wife , as calls for his prosecution for kidnapping Umaru Dikko in 1983 increases
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Thursday, February 26, 2015
Rating:
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Thursday, February 26, 2015
Rating:



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