Category: BOLA IGE: 20 YEARS AFTER

  • 11 things you probably didn’t know about Bola Ige

    11 things you probably didn’t know about Bola Ige

    Chief James Ajibola Idowu Ige (SAN) was the Attorney-General and Minister of Justice renowned for his oratorial prowess and advocacy work on civil rights and democracy.

    He was murdered 20 years ago in his Ibadan, Oyo State home.

    Here are 11 things you probably did not know about the late Ige

    1. Bola Ige was born in Esa Oke, Osun State in September 13, 1930.

    2. He was murdered on December 23, 2001.

    3. He was a Nigerian lawyer and politician, who served as Attorney-General and Minister of Justice under former President Olusegun Obasanjo.

    Read Also: Still, who killed Bola Ige?

    4. He had his secondary education at Ibadan Grammar School from 1943 to 1948.

    5. He obtained his first degree from the University of Ibadan after which migrated to the University College London, where he graduated with a law degree in 1959.

    6. He was called to the bar in London’s Inner Temple in 1961.

    7. Ige established Bola Ige & Co in 1961 and later became a Senior Advocate of Nigeria.

    8. He was Minister of Power and Steel from 1999 – 2000 and Minister of Justice from 2000 – 2001.

    9. On 23 December 2001, Ige was shot dead at his home in the south-western city of Ibadan.

    10. He was buried in Ibadan.

    11. He was nicknamed Cicero, after Marcus Tullius Cicero, a Roman statesman, lawyer, scholar, philosopher and academic skeptic, who tried to uphold optimate principles during the political crises that led to the establishment of the Roman Empire.

  • ‘I became an orphan again with Ige’s death’

    ‘I became an orphan again with Ige’s death’

    Elder statesman and former Osun State Governor Bisi Akande was on his way to Osogbo after a trip to the United Kingdom when Muyiwa Ige broke the news of his father’s death.

    Chief Bola Ige was killed on December 23, 2001.

    Akande, in his book, ‘My Participations’, recalled that he was received at the Murtala Mohammed International Airport by a team of top officials from Osun State, including his Attorney-General, Dr Yemi Adedeji and Sola Akinwumi, the Secretary to the State Government.

    He drove in his car with Akinwumi and they headed for Osogbo via the old road from Ibadan, passing Iwo.

    They had passed Iwo and were getting close to Osogbo when Akinwumi’s phone rang.

    It was Muyiwa Ige that was on the other end.

    “Akinwumi was just shouting Ah! Ah! Ah!! Then, the line went off,” Akande recalled.

    He continued: “’Uncle Bola has been killed!’ Akinwumi announced flatly when he finally gathered himself.

    Read Also: Ige’s many enemies, by Akande

    “I was in shock! I did not know what to do. For the second time in my life, I had suddenly become an orphan again.

    “Ige was more than a political mentor to me. He was my uncle, my friend, my confidant.

    “His loyalty was total and his love was deep and profound. For me, he was irreplaceable.”

    When they arrived at the Government House, Akande gathered his team and broke the tragic news to them.

    Members of the team started groaning and moaning and there was general confusion.

    “Someone suggested we should pray. We bowed down our heads and prayed.

    “By the time the prayer ended, I noticed that the Commissioner of Police was now with us.

    “He had walked into the centre gingerly and was now standing close to me.

    “Before we greeted, his phone started ringing. He gave me the phone.

    “It was President Obasanjo on the other end,” Akande recalled.

  • Ige’s many enemies, by Akande

    Ige’s many enemies, by Akande

    Chief Bola Ige was in the eye of the storm before he was killed on December 23, 2001.

    Ex-Osun State Governor Bisi Akande, in his book, ‘My Participations’, recalled the travails of the late Ige with the leadership of the Afenifere, his deputy as governor of Oyo State, Chief Sunday Afolabi, and Alliance for Democracy (AD) members in Osun State.

    He also relived the memory of Ige’s harassment in Ife, where his cap was removed by a group of miscreants he said were led by his ex-deputy, Iyiola Omisore.

    He said Ige had been led into the inner palace where they would be entertained and was still greeting some of the guests when thugs surrounded him, seized his cap and subjected him to a series of humiliations.

    “For a Yoruba elder, removing his cap was the unkindest cut of all. Omisore presided with glee over that episode,” he alleged.

    Akande said it took the security detail of Chief Bode George, the then National Vice-Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to rescue Ige from the miscreants and chaperon him into the inner palace.

    Ige, Akande wrote, came to Ile-Ife without his security detail as a serving minister.

    He came with only his State Security Service (SSS) detail.

    The cap was later released to him after the then Ooni threatened to invoke traditional curses on the perpetrators.

    In the evening of the same day, Akande recalled, the member representing Ife at the House of Assembly was also killed at a drinking joint in Ile-Ife for allegedly holding onto the money meant for the boys who removed Ige’s cap.

    Ige also had issues with some members of the AD in Osun State.

    Read Also: Ige wanted to resign from Obasanjo’s govt before murder, says Akande

    Akande believed the crisis in the party was engineered by the PDP.

    Akande recalled: “He (Ige) was, therefore, facing a rear-guard challenge from his colleagues in the leadership of Afenifere who continued to oppose his participation in the government of Chief Obasanjo.

    “Uncle Bola had made it known that he was thinking of resigning from the government because the regime was not implementing agenda that could benefit the generality of the people.

    “His former Deputy-Governor and then the Minister of Internal Affairs, Chief Sunday Afolabi, chided Chief Ige that he should not forget that he was only invited to ‘come and eat.’

    “Ige was also having problems with some of the leaders in Osun State.

    “Though we spoke every day, the last time we met was when he tried to resolve the disagreement between Akinfenwa and Lere Adebayo over the leadership of Ijesaland.

    “It was a time around when Professor Tunde Adeniran, the then Minister of Education, was burying his father in Orin-Ekiti and uncle used the opportunity to give me the assignment to restore peace between Akinfenwa and Lere Adebayo because of Akinfenwa’s disagreement with Ijesha leaders.

    “He said he knew I was also not in good terms with Akinfenwa but he wanted me to resolve the matter between him and Lere Adebayo so that there would be peace within Afenifere in Ijeshaland.

    “Then I said it was an order and that I would do it.

    “I went to my friend, Chief Tunji Abolade, in Ikirun. He was our mutual friend.

    “I didn’t know Akinfenwa was not happy with me, I told Abolade. I implored him to intervene.

    “I said, ‘Please, meet Akinfenwa, whatever he wants me to do, I will do it. This matter must be resolved.’

    “Initially, Akinfenwa was proving difficult but in the end, we met him in Abuja.

    “Akinfenwa confessed that among other matters he was not happy with me because since I chose Omisore as my deputy governor I had sidelined him.

    “The truth was that Akinfenwa preferred Niyi Owolade and he was very unhappy,” Akande said.

  • Ige wanted to resign from Obasanjo’s govt before murder, says Akande

    Ige wanted to resign from Obasanjo’s govt before murder, says Akande

    Chief Bola Ige intended to resign from the government of Chief Olusegun Obasanjo before he was killed on December 23, 2001, former Osun State Governor Chief Bisi Akande has said.

    Akande, in his book, ‘My Participations’, recalled that the late Ige confided in him about his plan to leave as the Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice.

    Read Also: Ige’s many enemies, by Akande

    His reason was that the government was not implementing programmes that could benefit the people.

    Before being posted to the Ministry of Justice, Ige was Minister of Power and had vowed to ensure a stable electricity supply within six months.

    The author also added that Ige’s former deputy governor, who was then the Minister of Internal Affairs, Chief Sunday Afolabi, chided Chief Ige that he should not forget that he was only invited to ‘come and eat.’

  • Akande: How ex-minister Bola Ige was killed

    Akande: How ex-minister Bola Ige was killed

    Elder statesman Chief Bisi Akande has recounted how Chief Bola Ige was killed.

    The late Ige was the Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice under former President Olusegun Obasanjo.

    Ige was shot dead in his Ibadan, Oyo State capital, residence on December 23, 2001.

    Akande, who was Osun State governor at the time, recalled in his book ‘My Participations’ the circumstances in which Ige was killed.

    He wrote: “As was his custom, Ige was preparing to spend the Christmas with his people in Esa-Oke where he held the traditional title of Asiwaju (leader).

    “He would normally hold a feast on Boxing Day, December 26, and all of us his friends would join him to celebrate.

    “That day would be an open house and all members of the Esa-Oke community would troop to Ige’s expansive compound.

    “So, by the time Ige entered Ibadan, preparation for Christmas at Esa-Oke was in top gear.

    “Most of his personal staff, especially those in the kitchen, had moved to Esa-Oke to await his arrival.

    “Instead of going to Esa-Oke, Uncle Bola decided to spend the night in Ibadan.

    Read Also: Bola Ige: My altercation with Obasanjo, by Akande

    “He went to his junior brother, Sir Dele Ige, to have dinner and then, retired home.

    “His wife, Atinuke was waiting for him. As soon as he got home, his security details and personal staff, learning that they would not be travelling to Esa-Oke again, went out to look for dinner at a nearby restaurant as soon as they dropped their boss.

    “Shortly after they left, some gunmen invaded the Ige residence.

    “The house was at the end of the street. Behind it was a swamp of an undeveloped bush that terminated in a dead-end.

    “They overpowered the only gateman who had been working with Uncle Bola before he took up the ministerial appointment with Obasanjo and marched him upstairs.

    “All the doors were opened and they soon accosted their quarry in his bedroom.

    “There, they shot him and fled. His wife, who was with him, was locked up in the toilet.

    “Muyiwa came in shortly and discovered the horror.”

  • Ige: Unsolved crimes lead to culture of impunity, says Soyinka

    Ige: Unsolved crimes lead to culture of impunity, says Soyinka

    Nobel laureate Prof Wole Soyinka has said that unsolved crimes result in a culture of impunity.

    He urged President Muhammadu Buhari to disclose investigative findings on the murder of former Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Chief Bola Ige (SAN).

    He stated these in a message to the family of the late Ige during an event to mark the 20th anniversary of the former minister’s murder.

    Ige, popularly known as Cicero, was shot dead at his home in Ibadan, the Oyo State capital, on December 23, 2001.

    The event, which was held in Lagos on Tuesday, had the theme: 20th year of Bola Ige memorial symposium, two decades of injustice: what are the implications on Nigerian democracy?

    It was organised by the Bola Ige For Justice Centre.

    Soyinka wrote: “My dear Funso, an eleventh-hour, sadly insurmountable impediment, alas, prevents my joining you on this bitter-sweet occasion.

    Read Also: ‘Bola Ige embodied Awolowo School of Politics’

    “Bitter for obvious reasons, but also a source of joy, since it provides yet another opportunity for celebrating the passage of a remarkable individual – your late father — through the lives of the rest of us yet living. Let us be unstinting in our sustaining reminiscences.

    “I particularly regret my absence, as it provides a mandatory, inescapable occasion for directing a question at the nation’s current leader, President Buhari, a DEMAND that the entire nation, no matter the political inclination of her citizens, is morally obliged to make.

    “MY message proceeds: President Muhammadu Buhari, what has become of your robust pledge to open an enquiry into the spate of political murders that the nation has undergone in recent years?

    “Does it all amount to yet another instance of political bravado?

    “While we all accept that all lives should be valued equally, some impose a special responsibility on those in governance.

    “Bola Ige, as the nation’s minister of justice, and United Nations’ civil servant designate, was unarguably one such.

    “A nation’s honour is in question and remains so until the hour of closure.

    “Thus, she must never relent in demanding an explanation for his brutal murder, expose the perpetrators, identify the conspirators and reinstate the broken lines of justice.

    “At the very least, we need a formal declaration regarding those who displayed an abnormal interest in the fates of those accused, to a level of proven, documented interference both in the investigative process and within the judiciary.

    “I am not alone in having written and lectured on these sordid aspects that fuelled the subversion of justice. There are surviving witnesses.

    “Unsolved crimes only lead to a culture of impunity. This puts the entire nation at risk, no matter the privilege of high-level protection.

    “This is a lesson that Nigerian leadership has yet to learn.

    “President Buhari, share the rewards of your investigations – if any!!!”

  • ‘Bola Ige embodied Awolowo School of Politics’

    ‘Bola Ige embodied Awolowo School of Politics’

    The late Chief Bola Ige embodied the humanist ideals of the Awolowo School of Politics, his protégé, Chief Bisi Akande has said.

    Akande, in his book, ‘My Participations’, said he was not sure of what would have happened to Oyo State if another person had been the governor in 1979.

    Ige, he said, fitted the role because he was a leader and a hero who was courageous in the face of adversities.

    “Since Awolowo left the saddle in 1959, no one had served the people of the old Oyo State as Bola Ige did.

    Read Also: ‘For Ige, free education was not debatable’

    “He bathed in the adulation of the people. He loved them with uncommon passion and guileless devotion.

    “It is a poignant irony that in the end, he met his ultimate fate in the hands of his cowardly assassins in the same Ibadan, the city of his glory,” Akande said.

    He went on: “Ige was one of the young radical intellectuals who followed Awolowo to the historic Jos convention of the Action Group where the schism of the party burst into the open.

    “It was there he was elected the National Publicity Secretary of the party at the young age of 32.

    “By the time he was elected the governor in 1979, he had passed through the furnace to emerge one of the leading lights of our society.

    “Persecuted and hunted during the turbulent sixties, he had become an established leader by the time of the first coup in January 1966 and served as a commissioner in the military government of Colonel Adeyinka Adebayo.

    “By the time we were coming to power, he was a vigorous man at the height of his game.

    “He would not suffer fools gladly and would not hesitate to give anyone the length of his tongue.

    “In our cabinet, he was our colleague as well as our big uncle and guide. How much we loved him!”

  • ‘For Ige, free education was not debatable’

    ‘For Ige, free education was not debatable’

    Elder statesman and former Osun State Governor, Chief Bisi Akande, has said the free education policy of the Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN) was not debatable.

    Akande, in his book ‘My Participations’, said the late Chief Bola Ige insisted that the administration should be guided by the UPN’s four cardinal programmes: free education at all levels, free health services, integrated rural development and full employment.

    The late Ige was governor of the old Oyo State under the UPN.
    The party’s leader, Chief Obafemi Awolowo, failed to become the President and in Oyo State, limited resources were threatening the free education programme.

    Read Also: Akande: How ex-minister Bola Ige was killed

    “Right from the Liberty Stadium where he took his oath of office, he proclaimed his programmes to the people and declared free education to all our children of school age,” Akande said.

    He said the administration inherited 132 secondary schools of which 43 were in the Ibadan metropolis.

    “Many children and their parents were ready to take advantage of the new policy and embrace the dawn of a new age.

    “The eighth meeting of the Oyo State Executive Council of Wednesday, March 26, 1980, directed the State’s Tenders Board, of which I was the chairman, to award contracts for the blocks of new classrooms for the deluge of pupils expected to take advantage of our free education programme.

    “At the meeting, we also learnt that an optimum classroom should consist of a minimum of 30 pupils and a maximum of 35.

    “It was also proposed that any community with a minimum of 70 post-primary pupils would be allocated a secondary school and that an optimum school would have a four-arm stream of student intakes, making a total of (35 by 4) 140 pupils per class and 840 pupils per school.

    “By that calculation, about 100,000 pupils were expected to be registered in the old Oyo State for the 1980/81 session.

    “In fact, 132,500 were eventually admitted.

    “Things only began to stabilise at about 126,000 pupils for 1982/83,” he recalled.

  • Bola Ige: My altercation with Obasanjo, by Akande

    Bola Ige: My altercation with Obasanjo, by Akande

    Elder statesman, Chief Bisi Akande, has recounted the conversations between him and Chief Olusegun Obasanjo moments after Chief Bola Ige was killed in 2001.

    Obasanjo was the President and Akande governor of Osun State.

    Ige was the Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice.

    He was appointed by Obasanjo.

    In his autobiography, titled: “My Participations,” Akande said he was blamed by Obasanjo for what the then President saw as security lapses in Osun.

    “Now, you see the lapses in your security! Look at what happened to Bola lge,” Obasanjo was quoted as saying.

    Read Also: Again, who killed Bola Ige? 

    He said Obasanjo “was shouting at the other end,” in a telephone conversation.

    Akande said he was enraged.

    He told Obasanjo: “You must be out of your mind Mr President!

    “How can you say lapses in my security when Bola lge was killed in lbadan?

    “I rule in Oyo state! I am not the Governor of Oyo State!

    “When his (lge’s) cap was removed at the Ife Palace during your wife’s chieftaincy ceremony, what did you do about it?”

    Akande said Obasanjo cut the line.

    Ige was shot dead at his home in Ibadan, the Oyo State capital, on 23 December 2001.