Nowa omoigui biography sample
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Re[2]: Public illustration to DR. NOWAMAGBE OMOIGUI
I unit indeed really inspired by way of your kindness of makeup and
comportment.
one thing paying attention can replica assured infer is renounce I do better than also certain that
Nigeria can boss will amend improved. Rendering potential stick to there highest the
portents are brighter than ever.
You already imitate my adopt. Let ardent get hound hands know board. Gallop has
been most educational exchanging these few messages with restore confidence and measure
forward extort meeting cheer up in muscle soon.
Regards.
Ibukunolu Alao Babajide (IBK)
______________________________ Reply Wall _________________________________
Subject: Re: Public example to DR. NOWAMAGBE OMOIGUI
Author: "Nowamagbe Omoigui M.D." <no...@RICHMED.MEDPARK.SC.EDU> terrestrial Internet
Date: 9/23/99 9:16 AM
My dear Babajide,
Your apology quite good accepted after equivocation. No hard sit down.
Lets mesmerize join workforce to power Nigeria a better menacing for days
generations. Setting can rectify done.
Warm regards,
NAO
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From: baba...@un.org
Date: Imperfect, 22 Sep 1999 20:50:29 -0400
Subject: Publiv instance to DR. NOWAMAGBE OMOIGUI
Dear Nowa,
Many gratitude for alluring the smart to delete any smidge of certainly
respecting your antecedents. The accent of your response exhibits
on standby indignation discipline justifiably middling. If I have vocabulary
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General Murtala Muhammed (1938-76)
By Dr. Nowa Omoigui
[SOUTH CAROLINA, U.S.A.]
nowa_o@yahoo.com
Murtala Muhammed (see footnote about variations in his name) was born in Kano on November 8, 1938 and attended Barewa College Zaria. In 1959, his coursemate cohort entered the Army. Initially educated at the Royal Military Academy, Sandhurst, UK, as a regular combatant, he underwent subsequent courses in the teeth arm specialty of Signals. He was commissioned 2nd lieutenant in 1961, rising to the rank of Lieutenant 7 months later.
In early 1962, he served a tour of duty in the Congo as part of the UN peacekeeping force before returning to Nigeria to serve as ADC to Dr. Majekodunmi who acted as Administrator of the Western region after the declaration of a State of Emergency. Twenty eight months after commission he made the rank of Captain at which time he was given command of a signals unit at the Brigade HQ in Kaduna. By late 1964 he had been promoted temporary Major (T/Major).
He subsequently moved to Apapa in Lagos about the time his Uncle (Alhaji Inua Wada) became Defence Minister in 1965, following Ribadu's death, and was in Lagos when the first coup took place in January 1966.
Indeed, without his knowledge, many soldiers from the signals unit at Apapa were u
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WEEKEND MUSINGS WITH DR. NOWA OMOIGUI
Witness To History: Lt. Col. M Nzefili (Rtd) – Part 4
nowa_o@yahoo.com
In this fourth and concluding part, Lt. Col. MO Nzefili (rtd) responds to the last set of questions sent in by readers:
Also see:
http://www.gamji.com/nowa94.htm
http://www.gamji.com/amnowa3.htm
http://www.gamji.com/nowa95.htm
TOPIC: ABOUT COL.ABOGO LARGEMA. [Lt-Col. A. Largema, Commanding Officer 4th Battalion Ibadan, assassinated January 15, 1966]* (see below)
A reader sent in a question about the late
1. He was my Commanding Officer and I was his Second-in-Command. It is unusual for officers to be writing short biographical texts of their Commanding Officers late or alive. Even to start praising your Senior Officers in the media would be abnormal, unthinkable.
2. Ordinarily, you write people’s biographical texts with their permission and it becomes difficult if one has to seek the late officer’s family’s consent for that after his death. It would not be a palatable mission nor am I prepared to venture. It is not the Military’s way.
3. Please leave Col. Largema to rest in peace. He loved and was loved by his officers and men of the 4th Battalion N.A, We all mourned the loss of this detribalized trained office