Oct. 19, 2013
No official reason was given for the cut.
Nigerian soldiers who were recently deployed to Borno after partaking in an African mission in Mali have accused Nigerian military authorities of shortchanging them of their rightly earned allowance.
PREMIUM TIMES was told that about 100 soldiers that returned from Mali and were immediately deployed to Maiduguri, Borno State, and were shortchanged of at least $2, 000 (N320, 000) each.
Some of the soldiers, who could not bear the alleged flagrant theft of their hard earned allowances by their superiors, approached journalists in Maiduguri to narrate their ordeal.
“When we were being deployed to Mali on the 17 January, this year, we were told that our monthly allowances approved by the UN would be $1, 028, which would have been equivalent to N164, 480 in our local currency. And for the 7 months we were in Mali, we expected to be paid a total of N1,151,360 which is the value of the total $7, 196 due to us,” said a sergeant who sought anonymity for fear of being victimized by military authorities.
“But when we arrived here in Maiduguri, we were paid between $5,000 and $5,420 (N800, 000 and N870, 000). We later on gathered that only a few members of the rank and file who went to (Mali) with their bosses (officers), as well as those who have god-fathers managed to receive full payments.”
He added that no official explanation was given for the reduction in their earned allowances.
“When we asked what happened to the balance of over $2,000, the pay officers simply said that was what they were instructed to pay us.
“It is sad that our ogas (superiors) are treating us like this and feeding fat on those of us in the field,” the soldier lamented.
Over 1000 Nigerian soldiers were deployed to northern Mali in January to work with the Malian army, other African soldiers, and French forces to reduce threats posed by Islamic insurgents that rose up against the government and had taken over major Malian cities.
The peacekeeping mission was backed by the United Nations’ Multidimensional Integrated Stabilization Mission in Mali, MINUSMA and Africa Union, with Nigerian troops placed under ECOWAS’ African International Mission in Mali, AFISMA.
Nigeria later withdrew a large number of its soldiers from Mali so as to strengthen the efforts against insurgents in Northern Nigeria.
The aggrieved soldiers, whose claims were verified by military sources, said they were appealing to journalists because the nature of military rules meant they could not embark on protests.
“They know we cannot protest because of the rules of engagement and they cheated us after we have risked our lives, left our families for seven months,” an aggrieved soldier added.
Soldiers accuse Nigeria Military of shortchanging them of N320, 000 each after Mali operation