It was the scum intro halloween 2013 album part 1 rockefeller\rothschild\arms dealers nwo diss
************DISCLAIMER: NO THREATS ARE MADE IN ANY OF THE VIDEOS THEY ARE ARTISTIC EXPRESSION*********
2013 DISCLAIMER
Scum nigeria biafra freestyle flow bob marley hip hop instrumental type flow *WARNING* this
album will cause you to see the truth do not get caught slippin singing it in front of the police and get taken to a psych ward for being angry and righteous!
Adekunle was born in
Kaduna. His father was a native of
Ogbomosho, while his mother was a member of the Bachama tribe. He underwent secondary education at the government college,
Okene (in present day
Kogi State). He enlisted in the
Nigerian Army in
1958 shortly after completing his school certificate examinations. He passed the army selection examinations and thereafter was despatched to the
Royal Military Academy Sandhurst in the UK, the
British Army's initial officer entry academy. He was commissioned
2nd Lieutenant on
December 15, 1960. As a platoon commander, he served in
Kasai Province of
Congo with the
1st Battalion,
Queen's Own Nigeria Regiment during his first
ONUC UN
peace keeping tour of duty. In 1962, Lt. Adekunle became Aide-de-Camp to the governor of the eastern region, Sir
Akanu Ibiam.
The following year, as a
Captain, he was posted back to the Congo as Staff Captain (A) to the
Nigerian Brigade HQ at Luluabourg - under
Brigadier B. Ogundipe. In 1964,
Major Adekunle attended the
Defence Services Staff College at
Wellington, in
India. When he returned he was briefly appointed
Adjutant General at the
Army Headquarters in May
1965 to replace
Lt. Col. Yakubu Gowon, who was proceeding on a course outside the country. However, he later handed over the position to Lt. Col.
James Pam and was posted back to his old
Battalion (1st Bn) in
Enugu as a
Company Commander.
Nigerian Civil War
Adekunle later assumed command of the
Lagos Garrison as a substantive Lt. Col. When the Nigerian Civil War erupted in July
1967, Adekunle was tasked to lead elements which included two new battalions (7th and 8th) - to conduct the historic sea borne assault on
Bonny in the
Bight of Benin on 26 July
1968 (carried out by
Major Isaac Adaka Boro's unit). This happened after the federal government gained confidence of most south western ethnic groups as a direct result of
Biafran push to mid-west state and probe into
Western region. Adekunle was promoted to
Colonel after the Bonny landing.
The 6th (under Major
Jalo) and 8th (under Major Ochefu) battalions of the Lagos Garrison subsequently took part in operations to liberate the
Midwest following the Biafran invasion of
August 1967.
The 7th (under Major Abubakar) stayed behind to hold Bonny. Because Major Jalo's outfit was seconded to Lt. Col.
Murtala Mohammed's
2nd Division, Adekunle was left with only the
8th Battalion at Escravos. He, therefore, protested to
Army HQ and got the Lagos garrison upgraded to Brigade status through
the creation of the 31 and 32 Battalions (under Majors Aliyu and Hamman, respectively). This formation, combined with elements of the Lagos garrison along the eastern seaboard, was officially designated the 3
Infantry Division.[1] However, Colonel Adekunle did not think the name "3 Infantry Division" was sensational enough nor did it project the nature of the unique terrain in which his men had to fight. Therefore, without formal approval from Army HQ, he renamed it the " 3
Marine Commando (3MCDO)."
The "Black Scorpion" as he came to be known, was easily the most controversial, celebrated and mythologized figure[citation needed] in the war of attrition that laid the foundations for
Nigeria's contemporary crisis; and threw a wedge into the national fabric.
Benjamin "Adekunle's boys in the Midwest seized Escravos,
Burutu, Urhonigbe, Owa and Aladima. They captured
Bomadi and
Patani, Youngtown,
Koko,
Sapele, Ajagbodudu,
Warri,
Ughelli,
Orerokpe, Umutu and Itagba".[2]