PRESIDENT Jonathan described the deceased retired General Owoye
Aziza as a thoroughbred and selfless military officer, saying he had no
regrets appointing him as his National Security Adviser (NSA).
Speaking during a requiem mass held in honour of the late General at
the Peace Park, Yenagoa Saturday, said General Azazi wasas a good
Nigerian who believed in merit and competence.
Azazi died in a helicopter crash at Okoroba community, on December
15, alongside the former Governor of Kaduna State Patrick Yakowa.
The President said if 50 percent of Nigerians behaved like the departed hero, the country would have been a better place.
According to Jonathan, who said his administration had been fighting
corruption through different anti-graft institutions, said most of the
issues bedeviling the country have nothing to with graft.
The President said: “From my experience, having privileged to serve
as deputy governor, governor and now president of the country, I know
that if
you take random sample of Nigerians and want to consult them who you
want to give appointment, no matter how strategic the position, 80
percent of them will first think about themselves.
“When I was to appoint my first set of Service Chiefs at a very
sensitive period, I consulted some citizens; when I called General Azazi
(he was not the National Security Adviser (NSA) then), he came and did
the analysis. He believed in competence and merit. I have no regrets
appointing him the Nation Security Adviser.”
Jonathan described reckless attitude of drivers on the nation’s
roads, and not corruption, as alleged by Most Reverend Hycinth Egbebor,
who was the officiating minster during the burial, as one of the factors
responsible for high level of accidents and loss of human lives.
Chief of Army Staff, Lt.-General Azuibike Ihejirika, while commending
the late General, explained that, as an Army Colonel at the Military
Secretariat, he and his colleagues had adopted General Azazi as their
role model.
“As a brilliant officer, he was best all-round participant at the War College during his time there,” he said.
Minster of Petroleum, Mrs. Deziani Allison-Madueke, said the late
General was “an officer and a gentleman, the best, intelligent and
thorough officer with great sense humility; courageous and full of
grace,” stressing that, “a big tree has fallen in Ijaw land.”
Former Chief of Defence Staff, General Alexander Ogomoudia, who
reminded the crowd of mourners that he first appointed the late Azazi as
Director of Military Intelligence, said the deceased was a disciplined
officer.
Meanwhile, the Bayelsa State Government has announced plans to
immortalise Azazi by sponsoring an award, chair or prize dedicated to
excellence in his honour in a reputable institution in the country.
To this end, Governor Seriake Dickson has directed his deputy to
liaise with the leadership of the Nigerian Military to work out
modalities to achieve the purpose.
Dickson also said a befitting edifice would be named after the
General in addition to a periodic memorial lecture that would be
sponsored by the state government in his honour.
Extolling the qualities of the former National Security Adviser, the
governor noted that no amount of honour bestowed on Azazi would be
considered too great in view of his monumental contributions to the
state and country in general.
Dickson said he had directed the Coordinator of the Ijaw History
Project to begin work on a book to document the life and times of
General Azazi, alongside Isaac Jasper Adaka Boro, Harold Dappa Biriye
and other Ijaw living and dead heroes.
Describing the deceased as a quintessential Ijaw man, a patriotic
Nigerian and an accomplished military leader, Dickson challenged youths
to emulate General Azazi’s sterling qualities.
Governor Dickson, who was full of appreciation to former Presidents
Olusegun Obasanjo and Musa Yar’Adua for the roles they played in Azazi’s
illustrious career, also expressed gratitude to President Jonathan for
rising above blackmail and petty propaganda to appoint Azazi as National
Security Adviser at a most trying period of the country’s history.
Also paying tribute, Rivers State Governor, Chibuike Amaechi, said a
road under construction in the Elekahia axis of Port Harcourt would be
named after General Azazi.
According to him, Azazi was a detribalised Nigerian and a friend to
everyone, urging the family to count on his support at all times.
The Chairman of the Governors’ Forum also thanked President Jonathan
and Governor Dickson for giving the Four-Star General a befitting state
burial.
President of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), Pastor Ayo
Oritsejafor, emphasised that Azazi stood for integrity, adding that,
“greatness is not what you have but what you do with your greatness.”
The last son of the deceased, Mr. Pelede Azazi, praised his father as hero, mentor and man of virtues who stood for the truth.
In his homily, Most Reverend Egbebor, who is the Catholic Bishop of
the Bomadi Vicarate, stressed the inevitability of death and called on
the people, including the political class, to emulate Azazi, whom he
described as a man of accountability, transparency and discipline.
The remains of Azazi were interred at the Heroes’ Memorial Park in Yenagoa.
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