Mrs. Kaneng Daze is the first
daughter of Lt.-Col Yakubu Pam, who was killed in the January 15, 1966
coup. In this interview with JUDE OWUAMANAM, she relieves the event of that day and the family’s only regret
You are the first daughter of late Lt. Col. Yakubu Pam, who was killed in that sad episode in 1966. How old were you then?
I was eight years old. I just turned eight and about three months.
Did you, as an eight-year-old, have an idea of what transpired on that day?
Yes, I can to this day. It is not just a
faint idea of what happened; it is indelible in my mind. It is a memory
that has not gone at all and is imprinted in my mind. So, I will tell
you what happened as an eight-year-old then. We went to bed that night,
but our dad had gone to Brigadier (Zakaria) Maimalari’s house to attend a
party. He was invited too, I think, with other top military officers.
But what I know was that he had gone to the party. My mother did not
follow him; she usually did, but why she did not follow him, I don’t
know. She was at home and we went to bed, not knowing what time he got
back. I have twin brothers, Ishaku and Ishaya, and I usually slept with
one twin and my sister, Jummai, would sleep with the second twin. At an
ungodly time of the night — of course I wouldn’t know what time it was
as a child — I just woke up and my mother grabbed me and yanked the
mosquito net, took a hold of me and was screaming, ‘Kaneng, help me!
Help me! Get up! Get up!!’ As she was screaming, as a child, I just lost
it and was screaming as well. I was screaming until I opened my eyes
and saw my mother holding me. I thought they were thieves. She wanted me
to help her. Can you imagine an eight-year-old? I believe it was so
because I was the eldest. And that was my immediate reaction. I got out
of the bed and ran with her to her bedroom, which was adjoining ours.
There, I saw my dad trying to calm her down. He held her and she was
also calling the name of the steward, a soldier. She said ‘Corporal
Yakubu, come out.’ In that confusion, I was screaming and the other
children also woke up and everybody was screaming. He was trying to calm
all of us down. And then, four soldiers came in and my mother started
calling their names one by one. She identified all the officers by name.
I remember the name Chukwuka. She said, ‘You, you Chukwuka.’ She was
screaming. My dad yelled at them, ‘What do you want, why are you coming
to my house at this ungodly hour?’ One of them was at attention and
said, ‘Sir, you are needed at the office.’ That was what I heard. He
said, ‘Very well, walk out and allow me to dress up. I will come out and
be with you.’ They walked out and he started dressing up.
Of course, my mother was still screaming
and did not want him to go out. He kept telling her to control herself;
that he was going to dress up and follow them; that she should not
worry. In fact, in that confusion, something cut my sister’s leg; either
a sword or bayonet, I don’t know. So, my father dressed up and got out
of the room and started following them down the stairs. Before then, he
made some few calls while he was with our mother and I think it was at
that time they cut the phone lines. The first was to Maimalari. Our
mother who saw the numbers told us that she could recognise the numbers
because, then, it was four digits. I think it was that call that alerted
Maimalari that made him to escape. The second call was to General
(Aguiyi) Ironsi. Ironsi appeared not to have shown any surprise as he
kept saying, ‘I see! I see!! Okay!!!’ He dropped the phone and went down
the first stairs. We were all following him as well. It was then that
they cut the telephone lines. We went down to the second flight of
stairs and outside. My father got into the Land Rover and said to my
mother, ‘Liz, take care of the children.’ So they all went in and drove
off with him.
We were all running after the Land
Rover, screaming and crying and running. Apparently, what we later found
out downstairs was that they shot their way through the front door and
they shot all the four tyres of his car, which was parked in front of
the house. And apparently, they had overpowered the guards at the gate
and stationed four soldiers there. They must have been about 12. Some of
them moved into the boys’ quarters. The Corporal Yakubu my mother was
calling had actually dressed up and stepped. And as he did, they just
put a gun to his chest and told him that any wrong move, they would blow
him up. They held him and all the other workers and all soldiers at
gunpoint. Some again entered through the kitchen door. There were more
shots at the kitchen; they shattered the cake my mother had baked for my
sister’s birthday, coming up the next day — the 16th. The bullet
scattered the cake. I remember that very well. Of course, the other four
were the ones that came upstairs.
At that point, as a kid, what was going on in your mind?
I knew nothing about soldiers and coups.
I was just eight. I just felt that it was robbers that had invaded the
house. It was very traumatic and when I saw the soldiers, I was
confused. My father was a military officer and we were used to having
soldiers around us. It was strange, but the strange thing was: Why would
soldiers barge into the house, shoot their way through and come right
up to the bedroom. I had never envisaged that kind of scene in my life.
So, it was very traumatic and after that I had nightmares. I kept
dreaming it. I would wake up in the middle of the night and start
screaming. People would have to shake me to wake me up. That went on for
months, even after I went back to the boarding primary school, then in
Kaduna.
As the events unfolded, when and how did you learn of your father’s death?
While we were in the house at that state
(of confusion), when daylight broke, at the wee hours of the morning,
Uncle Jack (General Yakubu Gowon) drove in and immediately ran out of
the car. As soon as he saw my mother, he said, ‘Liz, Liz, where is
James?’ My mother was just crying. She managed to say, ‘They have taken
him away; they have taken him away.’ Gowon’s eyes were red. He just
tried to comfort my mum and he said to her, ‘Don’t worry, we will find
him.’ Those were his words and he jumped into his car, the soldiers
following, and he left.
Your mother was calling Chukwuka because he was his second in command. Did he tell her why they came?
He just said he (Dad) was wanted in the office and he promised her he would bring him back.
So after then, when your mother finally learnt of your father’s murder, how did she feel?
She felt a sense of betrayal. This was
his constituency; the Army in those days was a close-knit family. Some
of them would come and relax in our house, ate from her pot and she was a
good cook. They were free to eat; they came into her kitchen, even
those he was superior to. Definitely, the feeling was that of complete
betrayal and shock.
Putting aside all those
events, how did you feel growing up without a father figure and what was
the impact of the role your mother played in your life and lives of
your siblings?
It was tough growing up without our dad,
honestly, because he was a complete family man and he was involved in
our upbringing. Even though he was a military officer, he was deeply
involved and his family was his priority. On weekends, he would say,
‘Look, we are going on a picnic.’ ‘Where should we go?’ he would ask my
mum. They would just put us in the car and my mum would pack foods and
mats and things like that. I remember one very good example that has
stayed to my head: When we were living in Kaduna, he took us to Zaria
Road. The twins were in the pushcars because they were quite young. He
would go and look for rocks. I think being a Plateau man, he was used to
the rocks. We would go on top of the rocks, spread the mats and they
would put the kids on the pushcars and take us to the mountain. My
mother would bring the snacks and foods and my father would bring out
his small music box. He would play the music to us and the food would be
provided by our mother. We were just a happy family. When we were in
Lagos, virtually every weekend, we would go to the swimming pools and he
would teach us how to swim. So, we missed that a lot.
My mum missed her best friend, her
partner. They were very close. The words he left behind — ‘look after
the children’ — were what she held on to in her life and right up to the
end. She never remarried and because of that instruction he gave her,
she took care of us and her life revolved around us. She was not just a
mother to us; she was a mother to all. People she came across, she went
out of her way to solve their problems or help them in any way she
could. She did not only have us as her biological children but many
other children all over. Many people would come after she passed on to
say, ‘I am mama’s firstborn.’
One would have thought that
having married one of the finest and well-loved officers, Mama would
have exploited that position to take you abroad considering the
circumstances of his death, but she chose to raise you up in Jos. Why
was this so?
First of all, after the events of
January 15, 1966, General Gowon had sent a signal to her family in Kano
because she was of Fulani extraction. And her mum, a Fulani lady, was
alive and her siblings were in Kano. He (Gowon) told them that he was
sending my mum and the children to Kano. Even in that condition, she
quickly said to him, no. She told him she was going to Jos and not Kano.
Automatically, his mind was that she would go to her husband’s place,
Jos, and be with his family. That was one target she had in life; to
bring up her children in their father’s place so that they could grow
up, knowing who they were and where they came from. She wouldn’t want
any disconnection from my father’s roots. She came to Jos and went
straight to the village in Kwang and to her husband’s parents and
siblings. And there, she stayed until she got a job many months after
with the civil service in the then Benue Plateau State. This is where
she worked and lived and spent her whole lifetime. Apart from her stint
in Lagos, after General Gowon became Head of State, he invited her to
come and stay with him when he was about to get married. He pleaded with
her to join him in Lagos and work. She moved to Lagos with us and we
lived there until December 1975 when we moved back to Jos. She had to
come back to Jos and disengage herself from her job with Dodan Barracks
in Lagos, and she had been in Jos all this while.
Would you say the military
establishment that your father served in has been fair to your family in
terms of honouring and recognising him after his death?
I will say: Is there any fairness in
this world. If you are looking for fairness, I will say General Gowon,
who was very close to my dad and the officers that were killed, did his
best to take care of all the families whose father’s were murdered. He
did his best at that time. Indeed, and subsequently, like any other
organisation, there are gaps and areas where they need to improve upon
with respect to their soldiers who died in the course of serving their
country. I was very happy to hear recently that the military has
established an insurance scheme to take care of their men who died in
the course of their duties so that they can have some benefits. They did
their best at that time.
All the civilians that were
killed during the coup were given decent burial. Even Maj. Nzeogwu’s
body was exhumed from Asaba and buried with full military honours in
Kaduna. But we never heard of such for the officers that were killed in
that coup. Do you know where your father was buried?
You hit the nail on the head. Like I
said, is there any fairness in the world? That’s what I meant. We’ve
never known where our father was buried till this day. We don’t know
where he lies. Even my mum did not know until she died. That is one
question we all carried in our minds — all the six children. This is an
opportunity for me, on behalf of all my siblings, to say to the Army and
to plead with the Army, 50 years since these people were killed. They
were the crème de la crème of the Army. We plead (with the Army) to tell
us where our father was buried. That is the only way they can put to
rest the pains that we all carried to this day. It is not easy,
especially when you think of all the opportunities we missed growing up
without a father. All we knew that was that they were exhumed from where
they were hastily buried and the corpse taken to Yaba Military
Hospital. The post-mortem result we had showed that his body was
actually recovered. His body was identified by Col. A. O. Peters, then,
Lt.-Col. Henry Adefowope, Maj. E. W.O. Thomas and other medical officers
of Yaba Military Hospital. The report showed that he was shot
repeatedly in the chest and jaws. That is all we knew. Up till now, we
do not know where he was buried.
If all the civilians could be given
proper burial, why not these officers? Even Nzeogwu, as you mentioned,
was re-buried with full military honours. We don’t know why Gen. Ironsi
did not deem it fit to accord his officers the respect and dignity they
deserved. We are using this opportunity to say we should be shown where
our father was buried and he should be re-buried with full military
honours as Nigeria’s first artillery officer and the adjutant general of
the Nigerian Army. He did not plan the coup; he was a victim of the
coup and so should be properly honoured. Then, we will have peace in our
hearts. Our mother never knew until she died. My heart even yearns for
my younger ones who never knew their father. I had the privilege of
knowing — at least the first three of us. But the last three — the twins
and Gambo — never knew their father. Is it not fair for all of us to
know? ‘This is where your father was buried.’ What is wrong with that?
It is 50 years on. The ghost of the deceased will still be hovering
around. Unless we know where he was buried, then, we will have peace in
our hearts.
Mama once narrated one
incident she had with Maj. Chukwuka before the Oputa panel. Did she tell
you what transpired between them and the excuse Chukwuka might have
given her for not returning your father as he promised her?
Yes, what I know she said was that she
asked to see Maj. Chukwuka in Enugu and he went to see her in the hotel.
She asked everybody to excuse them. She was in the room alone with Maj.
Chukwuka. What I know she said was, ‘I have forgiven you for your role
in the 15th of January, 1966. I have let go. I ask that you also forgive
yourself and move on.’ I think she had heard something about his life.
And she said to him, ‘I have released you; I have forgiven you for
everything that happened. So you find it in your heart and move on in
life.’ That was all I know she told him.
And she did not tell you about Maj. Chukwuka’s response?
No, she did not.
There was expectation that
Mama would write about her experiences in the episode. Why do you think
she did not want to pen down her experiences until she died?
I think there are a lot of things she
knew that she would not want to reveal for the sake of peace in Nigeria,
because she was a lover of peace and would do anything for peace. She
symbolised peace here on the Plateau because she was once made the
chairperson of the peace conference. And she used to be called Mama
Peace. Long before then, she had been known as a lover of peace and she
would not reveal anything that would contribute to controversy or that
would wake up the death of 1966. She would rather die with it and she
died with it. Even with us her children, she would not discuss anything
that would cause us pain or trauma or reveal to us anything that she
knew. It’s unfortunate but I believe that God will reward her because
her intentions were pure to maintain the peace in this country at all
cost.
With your dad’s standing in
the military, one would have thought that one of you would have joined
the Army. Did any of you try and what was your mother’s response?
Not only did one of us show interest but
he attempted. The first person to show interest was my brother, Yusufu
Pam. He is the first and, of course, he had the fervour for the
military. At the back of his mind was that his father was a military
officer. He took the examinations and came out tops. I think three of
them did. But my mother put her foot down and said no way and it really
elicited negative reactions from Yusufu. But he got over it afterwards.
To add to that, even the first grandchild in the family, Manji Daze,
went to Air Force Military School and upon graduation had the option of
going into the Nigerian Defence Academy. But I tell you, I did not have
the nerve. I must reveal that I discouraged him because I don’t think I
have the liver to take the trauma again, not in my lifetime; maybe after
this generation, the next may consider it.
Looking at all that had happened, do you still hold grudges against the military?
It was not the military that caused the
assassination of my father; it was a few individuals in the military. It
happened several times after 1966. I love the military and I always say
the military is my constituency. We grew up in the military.
There is this perception
that the military did not do anything to protect its officers and that
General Ironsi allegedly knew about the coup and did nothing? Did you in
any way meet with any of the dramatis personae to explain to you why
they acted the way they did?
As a child, I bottled up everything that
happened. It was from my mum that I would have asked but it was too
painful for her to say anything. Since my mother wouldn’t talk about it,
I couldn’t ask questions. That was the first person. I just respected
that I bottled it up. But there was one encounter she told me. There was
a time Ironsi was on tour and he came to Jos and sent for my mother.
That was the first encounter she had with him after the coup. My mother
asked him some questions, especially about the phone call. In fact, she
accused Ironsi of knowing about the coup. Unfortunately, he could not
defend himself. All he did was to give my mother a wrapper his wife
asked that he give to her. My mother looked at him in the face and said,
‘Tell your wife, the rains that had beaten me will someday beat her
also, take her cloth back to her.’ Few months later, Ironsi was killed
in a counter-coup. Years after, we have learnt to forgive but the gap in
the whole story, which we still need answers to, is where he was
buried. There are people who are still alive and who were in the Army
then and who have not come out to say something.
Don’t you regret that?
I do regret it. I and my siblings do
regret that and we feel that they are obliged to tell us where they were
buried. It is okay for them to keep the details of what happened to
themselves but the details about his burial should not be a secret. I
use this medium to appeal to them: ‘Before I die, I want to know where
my father was buried.
Your father has been
honoured elsewhere but not on the Plateau where he came from. The
officers’ mess in Kaduna was named after him. Why has he not been
honoured at home?
Quite honestly, this is a question I
want somebody on the Plateau to answer. It is unfortunate that even in
Abuja, places were named after him and the other officers that were
killed. In Plateau, we have military officers who have been honoured by
having streets named after them. Lt. Col. Yakubu Pam is the first
officer from the Middle Belt, not even Plateau. And yet, there is no
honour for him from the Middle Belt. We talk about the Middle belt so
much and we have not honoured our past heroes. As long as we have not
started from history to give honour to whom it is due, I think we will
certainly have a problem going into the future. When you go abroad, they
did not joke with their heroes. Martin Luther was celebrated and he
would continue to be celebrated. They have been celebrated because they
died for something. If people died for something, the best that could be
done is to keep their memory alive. There is a road here in Rayfield
that was supposedly named after him but no mark at all. Meanwhile, when
you go to Maiduguri, you will see Maimalari Barracks. Other people know
the importance of history. It is a tragedy when you do not celebrate
your heroes.
Punch
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