Buhari quietly appoints new NIA DG, as conflict of interests emerges in Agency
Ambassador Mohammed Dawuda has been appointed as the Acting-Director General of the National Intelligence Agency.
The appointment was said to have been quietly approved by President Muhammadu Buhari over the weekend.
Beyond the appointment, fresh facts have emerged of the deepening intrigues within the innermost recesses of the Aso Rock Presidential Villa.
The result is that those who understand how national security works are seriously alarmed that unless something is done urgently to rein in the debilitating factionalisation on matters concerning the NIA, Nigeria’s elite intelligence arm, and the country’s equivalent of the American Central Intelligence Agency or the British M16 or Israel’s Mossad, the agency may be handicapped by unnecessary government in-fighting to give its best service to Nigeria.
Already, Dawuda, formerly Nigeria’s immediate past Ambassador to Chad, has been handicapped by the decision of the Chief of Staff to the President, Mallam Abba Kyari, to limit the DG’s role and powers only to operational matters.
The other roles that have in the past been within the purview of the DG have been set aside for a new group personally put together by the Chief of Staff.
This group comprises Ambassadors Babagana Kingibe, Zakari Ibrahim, and Niyi Oladeji – NIA’s DG from 2009 to 2013.
The three Ambassadors were originally called in by the Vice President Yemi Osinbajo panel to make expert input into the report of the investigation concerning the tenure of a former NIA DG, Ambassador Ayo Oke, which went up in a heavy smoke with the discovery of huge sums of money stashed in an IKoyi, Lagos State flat.
Oke was suspended and was recently relieved of his duties, but the nation has yet to see the result of the investigation into his tenure and especially about the $43.4 million operations cash found by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission at apartment 7B in Osborne Towers, Ikoyi, Lagos.
NIA insiders suspect that the report may never come to light as the investigation may deliberately be deadlocked or made inconclusive.
This is because it is public knowledge that Kingibe has been a long-time mentor and uncle-figure to Ambassador Oke.
For instance, Oke served as Kingibe’s First Secretary when Kingibe was Nigeria’s Ambassador to Pakistan over three decades ago.
Another matter that is worsening the security in-fighting within the government concerns Ambassador Ibrahim.
Although Ibrahim is from Katsina State, just like President Buhari, he is widely known to be not only a close-confidante of the immediate past President, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan, he has been said to be a card-carrying member of the opposition Peoples Democratic Party.
So many Villa staff are actually suspicious of his presence there, doubting where his loyalty lies, and owing to his intelligence background, may easily mislead President Buhari.
Worse still, in certain circles, Ambassador Oladeji, Oke’s immediate predecessor, is derisively referred to as Dame Patience Jonathan’s personal cashier.
There is a strong belief that the decision to terminate the appointment of the Acting DG of NIA, Ambassador Arap Yadam, whose tenure actually ends November 7, 2017, actually runs against the National Security Act, which stipulates that a three-month period of grace be given to every departing head of NIA to allow for seamless handover of office and adequate briefing of a new DG from a departing one.
Many suspects that this development may bring about the curious case whereby Ambassador Oke of the cash-in-Ikoyi-flat scandal would be the person to actually hand over to Dawuda to facilitate a planned cover-up of the Ikoyigate scandal.
Also, many suspect that apart from the Ikoyigate, a worse cover-up may be in the offing over another $250 million belonging to the NIA, said by inside sources to have been discovered and the three musketeers now in control of the NIA affairs through their closeness and support from the Chief of Staff may gain support of that slush fund.
That is why they are said to want the new Director-General to play no role beyond operational issues.
Kyari is said to be particularly happy with Kingibe who has emerged the unofficial Foreign Affairs Policy Chief for President Buhari.
Aso Rock insiders said one of Yedam’s greatest sins is that he so believed in the transparency policy of the Buhari presidency that he refused to promote Buhari’s present Director of Protocol, Lawal Kazaure, to the position of a Director in the NIA.
The protocol man was said to have failed his promotion examinations to the grade of a Director.
“The last one was held last month and he still flunked it,” our source said.
Yedam also refused to bow the pressure some Aso Rock insiders put on him to embark on a massive purchase of motor vehicles for Ambassadors.