Tag: Abiola

  • Nigerians react to presidential honour for Abiola, Fawehinmi

    Olusegun Osoba

    Two-time Governor of Ogun State Aremo Olusegun Osoba said: “I am very happy and highly elated. It is a major thing to accept Abiola as the president of Nigeria that was not sworn in. The honour of GCFR is reserved for presidents. Chief Obafemi Awolowo, who was the best president we never had, got it also without being president. I salute the President for the honour given to Alhaji Baba Gana Kingibe. The GCON is always given to vice presidents.

    “The acceptance of June 12 as the ‘Democracy day’ is in recognition of the supreme price that Abiola paid. It has elevated Abiola to the status of an international figure like Martin Luther King, who fought for justice and liberation in the United States.”

    Balarabe Musa

    “The decision is commendable and proper. I hope Nigerians will learn from it. June 12 was a watershed. We were united as a country to end the military rule. We shunned our differences to vote for Abiola. The election was peaceful. Buhari has the courage to do the right thing, which some thought was difficult. June 12 is the proper “Democracy Day” in Nigeria when people put their differences away.

    “MKO Abiola sacrificed himself for the country. The chairman of the electoral commission at that time admitted that Abiola actually won the election. Therefore, I support the president on this. It is commendable because June 12 was a watershed.”

    Mr. Wale Oshun

    A former Chief Whip of the House of Representatives Mr. Olawale Oshun applauded the president, saying he had succeeded where former President Olusegun Obasanjo failed.

    Oshun, a former Secretary of the National Democratic Coalition (NADECO) and Afenifere: “It is a great day for democracy. Giving Chief MKO Abiola and Chief Gani Fawehinmi the highest honours is in appreciation of the sacrifices made by the members of the civil society groups. It is a honour for the people who were shot along Ikorodu Road, Lagos by the military during the protests against the annulment. It has been late in coming. The first civilian president in this dispensation ought to have taken the decision. But, we are grateful that Buahri has done it.”

    Chief Deju Fasuan

    To the Chairman of the Committee for the Creation of Ekiti State, Chief Deji Fasua, the president had wormed himself into the hearts of democracy-loving people, who had anticipated the immortalisation for a long time.

    He said Abiola should now be properly recognised as a president-elect, adding that his portrait should be accorded its proper place among past Nigerian leaders.

    Fasua said: ”At last, President Muhammadu Buhari has become a politician. He has caught the nation completely unawares. Declaring June 12 as a ‘Democracy day’ is a monumental breakthrough in the history of Nigeria. It means that everything that was done to abort the wishes of the people have been erased from our political lexicon and history.

    “I urge Nigerians to observe, gratify and reward Buhari for his position in Nigeria’s politics. Considering the present circumstances, Buhari’s name should be written in gold.”

    Joe Okei-Odumakin

    Pro-democracy activist and leader of ‘Women Arise’ Dr. Joe Okei-Odumakin said: “The decision is accepted, 24 years after the annulment. We have always clamoured that June 12 should be the ‘Democracy Day.’ We have been marking it every year. The honours to Abiola and Fawehinmi are good.

    “The greatest post-humus recognition is that Abiola should be treated as a past president and we want his portrait to be included among past presidents. Also, in memory of June 12, the president make a commitment to free and fair elections in 2019.

    Chief Ayo Adebanjo

    “It is a welcome development, but belated. It does not put food on the table now. He should go and restructure the country. What he has done now is a palliative. It cannot erase the problem in the country.”

    It’s ironic Buhari is doing this, says Yakassai

    Former Second Republic Specail Adviser Alhaji Tanko Yakasai, said it is ironic that President Muhammadu Buhari who did not at any point speak against the annulment of the June 12, 1993 election would suddenly declare it as the freest and fairest in Nigerian democratic history.

    Yakasai described what President Buhari did as “his power of incumbency to seek for support of the electorate

    “The implication of his action today is that the election was free, fair and credible and therefore the annulment of the election was unjustifiable and illegal. Since he has gone to the extent of rewarding the late Abiola and his running mate for not being allowed to enjoy their mandate, it is an open admission that the annulment was illegal.

    “The honest thing Buhari could have done was to revalidate the result of that election, by asking the electoral commission to officially announce the result and declare the winner. The fact that Abiola is dead does not make any difference, because his running mate is still alive.

    “So, the election can still be made valid and since Abiola is not alive, his running mate can take over the reins of government, having been declared the winner of that election. Therefore, Buhari should have handed over power to Babagana Kingibe, who was the running mate of Abiola.”

    It’s welcome , says Afenifare

    Afenifere leader Pa Rueben Fasoranti said: “It is a welcome development. But, it is too late. The president ought to have done it before. Abiola deserves it. It is a welcome news.

    Second Republic Senator Ayo Fasanmi thanked the president for immortalizing Abiola, urging the political class to emulate the symbol of June 12.

    Fasanmi said: “The election of June 12, 1993 was the fairest election ever. Abiola won convincely. But, Babangida did not allow it to materialise. Democracy was murdered by Babangida. Democracy was crucified through the annulment of June 12, 19993 poll. Therefore, what the president has done is a right step in the right direction.

    “On June 12, 1993, it was a Muslim/Muslim ticket. It was a clean and clear election. It is better to make June 12 the ‘Democracy Day;’ the day democracy was murdered. Things were orderly when I was in the House of Representatives in the First Republic and when I was in the Senate in the Second Republic. Some people have made the Federal Republic of Nigeria to a Republic of corruption. This is what Buhari is trying to end. I support Buhari’s decision to honour Abiola.”

    Olorunimbe Mamora

    Former Senate Deputy Minority Leader Senator Olorunimbe Mamora hailed President Muhammadu Buhari for recognising Abiola and the honour done him.

    Mamora said the President has done something his predecessors failed to do by righting the wrong of the past. According to him, this singular act of President Buhari is commendable. Though Abiola is no more but his legacy lives on. I join millions of lovers of democracy in commending President Buhari for that singular act.

    “One of the greatest acts of leadership is recognising what is good in others, that is what Buhari has done. He had written his name in gold in the political history of Nigeria”.

    Joe Igbokwe

    The Publicity Secretary of the All Progressives Congress (APC) Mr Joe Igbokwe was excited by President Buhari  decision to adopt June 12 as Democracy Day and the post humous award of Grand Commander of the Federal Republic for Abiola.

    Igbokwe said Buhari had healed the wound that has been hunting Nigeria since 1993. “Abiola won the election but he was denied victory by Ibrahim Babangida, Sani Abacha and Olusegun Obasanjo. This great injustice is what has been holding Nigeria down. Buhari has achieved what the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) failed to do while in power for 16 years. With this act, PDP has been buried.

    “I want President Buhari to go a step further by paying compensation to Abiola‘s family because the June 12 saga had ruined Abiola’s chain of business. Abiola died in the struggle for his mandate, the Concord newspapers, the bookshop, Concord Airline and many others have gone under.

    Monday Ubani

    Lawyer and human rights activist Monday Ubani, said this is what he expected from President Buhari immediately he assumed power in 2015. It is better than never, he said.

    Ubani said President Buhari deserved commendation for having courage to revert the manifest injustice meted to Abiola.

    Niyi Akintola

    A senior advocate Chief Niyi Akintola, described the declaration of June 12 as Democracy Day and the post humous award for Abiola as a welcome development. “It is a good way of immortalising the winner of the June 12poll. We have been clamouring for it in the South West”.

    Femi Okurounmu

    “It is a good one, though it is belated. We appreciate it that it is coming from him. The conferment of GCFR on Abiola is also welcome, it is commendable.

    “Having said that, I think these are all desperate moves to woo the votes of the Southwest. It is like someone setting a trap and placing some very delicious food on the trap so that you swallow it and get caught.

    “He wants to catch us once again in 2019. We have always demanded for the recognition of June 12, he has given them to us now, so that he can catch us again by the neck in 2019.

    “What I will say is that we should play smart, we should thank him for it and show appreciation. These are things that Abiola deserved, so we appreciate it for doing him the honour.

    Chief Chekwas Okorie

    The National Chairman of the United Progressives Party (UPP), Chief Chekwas Okorie, said President Buhari’s action is nothing but high wire politics. He said: “I must tell you that this is high wire politics. Our president is waxing stronger politically. It has been a long time that many discerning Nigerians, including my humble self, had thought that the late Chief M.K.O Abiola, who died to uphold democracy should be honoured. He had opportunity to sellout; he had the opportunity to avoid the discomfort of incarceration, if only he could renounce the mandate. He did not yield to that rather he defended the mandate.

    “I want to say June 12 will be an appropriate day to mark democracy. That argument has been put up for a long time. If by this time, President Buhari has decided to do the right thing, he should be commended. Though I said it was high wired politics, but it is politics in the right direction. It is politics that is induced in political savvy, it is a welcome development. There is nothing sacrosanct about May 29. It was the creation of Obasanjo and because of Obasanjo’s hostilities the man acted this way.”

  • June 12 now Democracy Day – Buhari

    Confers GCFR, GCON on Abiola, Kingibe Fawehinmi

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Wednesday directed that effective from next year, Nigerian Democracy Day would be marked every June 12 in honor of the acclaimed winner of the June 12, 1993 presidential election, late Chief Moshood Abiola.

    Nigeria returned to democratic rule on May 29, 1999 and the day has been recognized as National Day by successive governments in the country.

    A statement issued by the Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity to the President, Garba Shehu, reads: “To honor an illustrious son of Nigeria, Chief Moshood Kashimawo Abiola, who won a presidential election but was prevented from taking office when the results were annulled.

    “The late Abiola died while struggling to actualize the mandate.

    “Consequently, the late M.K.O Abiola will be conferred with nation’s highest honour, the Grand Commander of the Federal Republic, (GCFR) exclusively conferred on the holders of the highest office in the country, the President.

    “In the same vein, Chief Abiola’s running mate in that election, Amb. Babagana Kingibe, is to be conferred with the second highest honor of the Grand Commander of the Niger (GCON).

    Also to receive a GCON is the foremost pro-democracy activist, late Chief Gani Fawehinmi.

    “In a statement signed he personally signed on Wednesday evening, President Buhari said:

    “For the past 18 years, Nigerians have been celebrating May 29th, as Democracy Day. That was the date when for the second time in our history, an elected civilian administration took over from a military government. The first time this happened was on October 21st, 1979. But in the view of Nigerians, as shared by this administration, June 12, 1993, was far more symbolic of democracy in the Nigerian context than May 29 or even the October 1.

    “June 12, 1993 was the day when Nigerians in millions expressed their democratic will in what was undisputedly the freest, fairest and most peaceful election since our Independence. The fact that the outcome of that election was not upheld by the then military government does not distract from the democratic credentials of that process.

    “Accordingly, after due consultations, the Federal Government has decided that henceforth, June 12 will be celebrated as Democracy Day. Therefore, Government has decided to award posthumously the highest honour of the land, GCFR, to late Chief MKO Abiola, the presumed winner of the June 12, 1993 cancelled elections. His running mate as Vice President, Amb. Baba Gana Kingibe, is also to be invested with a GCON. Furthermore, the tireless fighter for human rights and the actualization of the June 12 elections and indeed for democracy in general, the late Chief Gani Fawehinmi (SAN) is to be awarded the GCON.

    “The investiture will take place on Tuesday, June 12, 2018, a date which in future years will replace May 29 as a National Public Holiday in celebration of Nigeria Democracy Day.”

    END

  • Abiola: Filial dishonour

    Abiola: Filial dishonour

    Chief Moshood Kashimawo Olawale Abiola, or MKO for short, was known for his amazing prosperity as well as his amazing generosity.  Indeed, the late businessman and politician was a generous soul with a generous spirit.  This is why it is amazing that his children are ironically divided over his assets, which is a sad sign that perhaps they did not inherit MKO’s legendary generosity of spirit.

    A January 12 statement by one of MKO’s children, AbdulMumuni Abiola, painted a thought-provoking picture of sibling conflict:  “My brothers, sisters and I, totalling 40 children of Abiola, are not fighting with them…But we need to step out of the past and of our father’s shadow. Kola, Deji and Agboola have been peddling lies in the media about my efforts to bring about changes to the dwindling fortunes of the Abiola family.”

    AbdulMumuni added: “I am ashamed just like my other brothers and sisters that after MKO Abiola’s death, many of his legacies appear to be in a shambles. It shouldn’t be like that. That is not what MKO Abiola stood for while he was alive. I want the good people of Nigeria to prevail on Kola and his cohorts to stop using the police to harass me or those who are working with me to restore the lost glory of the Abiola family.”

    It is noteworthy that this revealing statement came a few days after four men were reportedly arraigned for allegedly entering the late MKO’s bulk purchase bookshop in Oshodi, Lagos, to steal properties valued at N1bn.

    AbdulMumuni said: “Why should some people be sending thugs and miscreants after me and those working with me to renovate MKO Abiola’s properties? Why should that be? … Why should only a select few of Abiola’s children sit on our father’s properties? I am not even asking them to give me and my other siblings a share of the money-spinning companies of my father that they sit on. Our humble request is that they should allow me and my other siblings who are interested in renovating Abiola’s derelict properties. They should allow us to revive MKO Abiola’s abandoned projects.”

    Another voice reinforced AbdulMumuni’s voice. Aliu, also one of MKO’s children, spoke against his older siblings who were allegedly shortchanging the others.  Aliu was quoted as saying:  “The truth of the matter is, when things of this nature happen — 20 years go by, and a certain group of people sit on the commonwealth of others — then definitely those who have been disenfranchised, like my brother, Abdul, and many of us as he mentioned, have to seek redress by any means available. So, the assets in question are assets that everyone knows were owned by our late father. Such assets should be used for the benefit of all his children, rather than a small group of people.”

    Aliu provided concrete examples: “There is a warehousing complex in Isolo, for instance, which is currently being leased out. Monies are being paid on annual basis for the property in question and no member of the family is taking any money from the money that is being paid. He (MKO Abiola) has the hangars at the airport that are being leased out — two of them are being leased out. Monies are being paid; nobody is taking a dime from that.”

    It is curious that no voice from the opposing camp has publicly countered AbdulMumuni and Aliu. What could this mean?   Those who have been accused of bad conduct in this matter should know that their silence does not help matters.

    MKO’s life and times should serve as a lesson to his offspring.  He was born poor. A profile of MKO says: “At the age of nine he started his first business selling firewood gathered in the forest at dawn before school, to support his father and siblings. He founded a band at the age of fifteen and would perform at various ceremonies in exchange for food. He was eventually able to require payment for his performances, and used the money to support his family and his secondary education at the Baptist Boys High School, Abeokuta.”

    In a striking story of progress, MKO later attended Glasgow University, Scotland, where earned a first class degree in Accountancy; he also “gained a distinction from the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Scotland.” His business interests included: Abiola Farms, Abiola Bookshops, Radio Communications Nigeria, Wonder Bakeries, Concord Press, Concord Airlines, Summit Oil International Ltd, Africa Ocean Lines, Habib Bank and Decca W.A. Ltd.

    MKO reportedly received 197 traditional titles from 68 different communities across Nigeria. These titles were reportedly conferred on him “in response to his having provided financial assistance in the construction of 63 secondary schools, 121 mosques and churches, 41 libraries, 21 water projects in 24 states of Nigeria.”

    MKO was a phenomenal philanthropist whose giving spirit caught the world’s attention. This is what the Congressional Black Caucus of the United States of America said in a tribute to him: “Because of this man, there is both cause for hope and certainty that the agony and protests of those who suffer injustice shall give way to peace and human dignity. The children of the world shall know the great work of this extraordinary leader and his fervent mission to right wrong, to do justice, and to serve mankind. The enemies which imperil the future of generations to come: poverty, ignorance, disease, hunger, and racism have each seen effects of the valiant work of Chief Abiola.”

    There is no doubt that when MKO died in detention under a military regime on July 7, 1998, after the unjust annulment of the June 12, 1993, presidential election which he won, millions of Nigerians were shattered. His magical life inspired a popular belief in his capacity to turn things around in a country that needed transformational leadership.

    It is food for thought that his inheritors who are reaping where they didn’t sow won’t reflect on the sower. Eating the fruits of MKO’s labour can be done without the noisy infighting that dishonours the great man.

  • Abiola airport in Osun gets local concession pact

    The Osun State government has entered into an agreement with All Works of Life Development Organisation (AWOL International Limited) for the completion of Moshood Kashimawo Olawale (M. K. O) Abiola International Airport at Ido-Osun under a build, operate and transfer (BOT) arrangement.

    The signing of the concession agreement on the completion of the airport will hasten the take-off of its operation =in the next eight months.

    Speaking after signing the agreement, the Chairman of AWOL International Limited, Ambassador Nurudeený James Ogunlade said the company would shoulder 100 per cent funding of the project.

    The company chief said the project will begin on November 9, while the first phase will be completed within eight months.

    He said the project would be completed in 2019.

    Ogunlade said the airport would serve local and international passengers as well as cargo services.

    The company chief said this would complement the legacies of the present administration.

    He said: “ýWe are entering into an agreement with the Osun State government to fast-track the completion of the MKO Abiola International Airport, having realised the zeal and effort being put into it by Governor Rauf Aregbesola.

    “We have seen that MKO Abiola International Airport is designed to facilitate a smooth movement of people and goods from one point to the other and serve as a channel or gateway for tourism, hanger/maintenance and cargo hub.ý

    “AWOL International Limited will fund the project 100 per cent through our financial partner, like Turkish Exim Bank and Biray Group of Companies from Turkey.

    “We will Build, Operate and Transfer the first phase of the airport with an ultra-modern commercial complex (terminal building, control tower, among others), standard infrastructure (offices, duty-free shops, among others), construction of maintenance building and power house, workers’ training centre, fire fighter station, security infrastructure and services, apron and taxiway parking, dual carriage road from Oba Adesoji Aderemi to the airport and completion of the fence and surveillance road within the perimeter of the airport and completion of 3.5-kilometre of standard runway.

    “The first phase of the Airport will be completed within eight months and it will take off with five aircraft, three passenger plane (B767-200ER, MD73 Helicopter (1) and B727 (1) cargo by AWOL International Limited.

    “Also, the completion will be done within two years. By then, we must have had in place the establishment of the airport with five star hotels, including amenities, such as a cultural centre, water park, recreation centre and garden, butterfly museum, casinos, among others.

    “To us, Osun is a major state in our country with tourism and historical linkages for the international market. We have seen spectacular economic development with the present and future administration.

    “MKO Abiola International Airport will serve as a point of entry to tourists, opening doors for businesses and other trade-related opportunities among the Southwest states as well as foreign investors.”

    The Managing Director of Biray Construction Nigeria Limited Mr Kartal Arikan said the company firmed up the agreement with the Turkish EximBank on the provision of funding for the project through the Turkish Ambassador to Nigeria.

    He said 85 per cent of materials and services will come from Turkey Construction Company to boost the quality of work during the construction work.

    Arikan said: “During the last visit of Governor Rauf Aregbesola to Turkish Ambassador Hakan Cakil, the ambassador promised to facilitate $350 million for the project’s development from Turkey Investment Group and effort for that is ongoing.

    “Let me assure the good people of Osun and government that Biray Group will support the project, bring to bear the best international professional standard in airport construction and development.”

    Aregbesola noted that despite paucity of fund, his administration had spent over N3 billion on the project.

    The governor said the idea to have a standard airport was conceptualised before he became governor, having realised the need for the state to develop economically, commercially and industrially.

    He said with the concession agreement with AWOL International Limited, Osun would live to its potentialities.

    According to him, Osun State is on the right track of having a standard airport.

  • If only Abiola had known

    SIR: That members of the international community would have betrayed him when it mattered most, that traditional rulers(some) who goaded him in jail not to renounce his mandate would haul coals over his head before the military Junta of General Sani Abacha for not doing so, would run with the hare and hunt with the hound, that efforts in his memory would only be confined to the South-west as if he is a regional and not a national figure, that the democracy for which he paid the deathly-price for, would short-change Nigerians because politicians only enjoy the roles but not duties of office, pleasure instead of politics, maybe he might not have ventured into politics.

    Abiola’s dream to liberate us from the plantation of lassitude doesn’t seem to be coming true – only because the players do not work towards it in the real sense. They come with no plans, only with good intentions, best wishes, and ask us to pray success for the country. Rome was not built in a day, we are told, good things are worth waiting for, but they have successfully built their own Rome for their children up till the fourth generation. Good intentions don’t bring about change. The will to do, brings change. * Would Abiola have preferred Nigerians to have to wait for years to achieve their goals? It’s beginning to look like our time has passed, and we are groping for stones to cross the democratic river even when there are no stones within reach to make these goals come to fruition?,

    * We are stuck at the Jordan, pursued by hunger, unsafe neighbourhood but can’t say “never say die.” because there is no Moses with the rod to sally out, take charge and lead us through the Jordan., ,

    * Many have lost the edge to live, quit from being patriotic because there is no Joshua and Caleb to give them soothing reports needed to keep hope alive. ,

    Why are these politicians passive about kidnapping, herdsmen attacks, bigotry, militancy, ritualists with human parts caught daily, man-eating communities, cult wars, hate speeches and more?

    They are passive about the economy dominated by crude oil; Nigeria depends heavily upon members of the international community to buy from us. Despite measured progress in agriculture we still can’t feed ourselves.

    , * Politicians build on the adversity of Nigerians to ride to fame, good at stirring hatred in many guises, religion and otherwise, they are driven by the personal grievances against certain people. What we have here is anarchy rather than democracy. And this benefits them, because anarchy backtracks and stilts the consciousness of people from life affecting under-development all around Nigeria.,

    * We are in the Fourth Republic, in the 21st century but our democracy seem to be one played in 16 century medieval Europe when tolerance was not a public virtue.,

    * The inability to x-ray our shortcomings is one of our greatest burdens.,

    Nigerians are harried as an unpatriotic lot for squirming in the face of hunger and for refusing to be in league with under- performers in the democratic shop. If Abiola had known that the force of his personality would be hijacked by his kinsmen in the South-west to celebrate his memory by the declaration of public holidays on June 12, without plans by them to make it a national event, he might have renounced his mandate. Abiola was not a regionalist but a nationalist. It is their duty to campaign that he becomes a national not a regional hero.,

    , If he knew that the attribute of democratic leadership provided in Nigeria would be translated into cipher so that Nigerians would be so inert not to decipher what’s going on, he might have renounced his mandate. If MKO Abiola knew that politicians would be excited only in power but not in government, he might have not ventured into politics when he did.

    We have all been finagled out of what was termed a government for all. Was this what MKO Abiola stood and died for? What with thugs invading a house of assembly to beat people mercilessly? And with governors embarking on staff verification exercises, two years into their tenure leading to almost two years backlog of salary arrears for civil servants? Let’s not even discuss the plights of pensioners. Thanks to Kemi Adeosun (Minister of Finance) we know that “55% of Nigeria’s VAT is collected in Lagos State, 20% in FCT, 6% in Rivers, 5% in Kano, 1% in Kaduna”

    Proponents of true fiscal federalism do not bring this revelation to the discussion table. We’re not ready. Even in a democracy, our leaders have gone to sleep during the day instead of at night.

     

    • Simon Abah,

    Port Harcourt, Rivers State.

  • Erudite scholar Abiola Irele dies at 81

    Renowned scholar and literary critic Prof. Francis Abiola Irele is dead. He died at 81 yesterday in the United States (U.S.).

    Irele, who was widely celebrated as the doyen of Africanist literary scholars, was a Provost of Kwara State University in Ilorin, Kwara State. He is revered for his contributions to the understanding of Négritude.

    Born on May 22, 1936 in Ora in present-day Edo State, held teaching positions at the University of Ghana, University of Ife (now Obafemi Awolowo University) and University of Ibadan.

    He was Visiting Professor of African and African American Studies and of Romance Languages and Literatures at Harvard University, before moving back to Nigeria.

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • An Evening with President Abiola

    IT was a scene out of the Roman Empire in all its glory and grandeur. The din was impossible, yet there was something sedulous and magical about this display of power at its awesome summit. It was medieval pageantry in Technicolor; a brilliant fusion of the traditional and the modern. A very important man was traversing the highway between mortality and immortality.

    Horses and horsemen collide with outriders and state of the art limousines. State spooks mingled with traditional enforcers dressed like local hunters. An empty gold chariot blasted its way through, heralding the imminent arrival of his imperial majesty, even as a remarkably ugly masquerade which reminded one of an ill-tempered hippopotamus began to press its luck with the crowd. He was Pakaleke, a.k.a the devil of Apataganga.

    From the distance, a dancing procession was approaching. The law enforcement agents were beginning to have problems with the rowdy crowd. As they surged forward, they were beaten back with batons and horsewhips. Everybody was trying to catch a glimpse of the royal carnival. This was not a scene to miss. In his youth and penurious prime, his majesty was known as a dancer and drummer of exceptional endowments. And judging from the royal harem, his prodigious appetite for ravishing beauties remained undimmed by time and tribulation.

    As the dancing procession drew nearer, you could swear that you knew the king somewhere. There was something faintly familiar and yet oddly distant about him; an otherworldly aura of perfect self-control and inner tranquillity. But by now, the lead drummer was getting in the way of the cognitive senses. A brilliant purveyor of social acrimony, he was panning out litigious lyrics with savage delight and with his face permanently contorted in subversive exertion.

    Omo agbon jeje bi eniti o r’obinrin ri

    Beni aya nbe nile; omo nbe nile

    Sugbon obinrin dudu obinrin pupa

    Olorun maje o kuku obinrin.

    And later in response to the din:

    Dami dami dami, Ologundudu

    Dami, dami dami, ariwo majesin

    Kii pa alakara, dami dami dami.

    And much later:

    Gbedogbedo kan o le gb’agogo

    Akanbata o le kan lekun

    Alagbede o le r’ojugun

    Pejapeja o le p’olorun oba

    Oro t’eso pe sobe, pe sobe

    Eyin le so, eyin leso.

    By now as this riotous carnival came into full view, the ever joyous visage, the kind compassionate features, the in your face, devil may care bravura of an Alpha male in full menace, had become unmistakable. He was even more noble of carriage and majestic of mien. Yet like all artists, he had a remarkable sense of rhythm and cadence and was responding to the inner music with a feline suppleness and glorious flair that drew rapturous applause from the crowd. The jaw dropped in awe and astonishment and before you could pronounce the name, the riotous crowd had beaten you to it.

    It is President Abiola in triumphal procession”, they chanted in unison. The good people of Nigeria, irrespective of race, region and religion, spoke twenty four years ago. And now power is concurring. History shall vindicate the just indeed.

    It has taken a tectonic shift from the template of governance to acknowledge the obvious truth that whatever his personal failings and the objective contradictions of the circumstances, Abiola is a hero of democracy in Nigeria. It is not how you begin that matters but how you end up. The fallen hero may yet be forgiven, but it does not vitiate the claim of the emergent hero.

    Twenty four years ago in June 1993, Nigerians spoke in unison against the barbarity of military rule. Fourteen million of them voted, nine of these for MKO Abiola, charismatic mogul and candidate of the Social Democratic Party. The victory in itself was a political odyssey whose story has never been told in full. Abiola outgunned and outfoxed the military High Command who were expecting a different outcome which would have made their job easier.

    In the event, the military still went ahead to annul the freest and fairest election so far in the history of the nation. It led to a five-year low intensity civil war in which many perished and the Nigerian military junta anathematised by the civilised world. Till date, many still carry the traumatic wounds of that encounter.  There were many, this writer included, who were not Abiola’s fans and who never met him on a one to one basis but who chose to fight on the side of truth and freedom. We chose to lose all, rather than be ruled by primitive predators. A nation-state is not a military or feudal fiefdom.

    By now, the din had died down. All the revellers had disappeared. A celestial calm enveloped the universe. In the distance, a few female praise singers could be heard chanting the heroic panegyrics of the first posthumous president of Nigeria and the last Aare onakakanfo of his people. But the late tycoon was nowhere to be found. Even the mad drummer, Ayanlere, with his droopy and dolorous visage, had disappeared. The wild drumming had now been replaced by an Ebenezer Obey classic in honour of the late tycoon.

    Balogun Ojoo, baba Bada, badabarawu

    Ti nbari balogun lehin mi

     Inu mi a dun, ara mi a ya gaga

    Odede lowa tabi yara logbe wa

    T’oba ti gb’ohun mi o

    Masun mawo maa bo, Ologundudu

    Masun mawo maa bo, oko Atinuke….

    Baba Kolawole mi o ire.

    Snooper had slept, joyous but exhausted, with a crushing pile of newspapers . In the last stages of consciousness, this avalanche of printed matter began crushing the neck as it made its way to the bare floor. This was a sure recipe for political hallucination. A mobile handset was beginning to slide down towards the buccal cavity now made more cavernous by sheer exhaustion. Suddenly, there was a door from nowhere and as it opened lo it was the late tycoon resplendent and well-rested smiling his famous cherubic smile. The chief was obviously in a bantering mood as he opened up with his famous fusillade of native wisecracks and witticism.

    “Chief, congrats on your posthumous apotheosis”, snooper opened cautiously.

    “Ah, apoti osi ko, apoti ogun ni.  Oyinbo ti poju .(Haba grammar is too much)  Agboyinbo ki ku le”, the chief replied with devastating wit and local brio.

    “I mean a serving Nigerian president has conceded that you are a hero”, snooper pressed as he suppressed an urge to laugh.

    “Ah you see, I told them you cannot abort a full pregnancy. Ti o  bape titi akalolo a pe baba” the great chief retorted.

    “We must now await the formal proclamation”, snooper continued.

    “Ah leave them. Adie tosu ti o to, ara e lowa”, the chief observed with fortitude.

    “Even Babangida has joined the chorus”, snooper noted with a hint of disapproval.

    “Ah leave Ibrahim out of it. Omo buruku n’ijo tie. Besides, as our people say, makanmakan loye. A man that is being pursued by a masquerade should take heart, because as people of this world get tired, so do people of the other world.”, the chief noted with a deadpan demeanour.

    “Sir, please explain,” snooper pleaded.

    “You see, Ibrahim is not alone in this thing. When a man says he is Dodondawa, you must know that there is a problem, because Dodo o dawa. Enia lowa lehin dodo to fi ni ohun ni Dodondawa” the chief explained with an even more recondite Yoruba saying.

    “Ah chief, how do you mean?” snooper pressed.

    Wo iwo omokunrin yi ma fitina mi. (Youngman, don’t trouble me) You see, it is like the case of a masquerade who is killed by a lorry and the people are saying that he has to Lagos. Very soon, the mother of the missing will ask for her son”, the chief concluded with wit and calm forbearance.

    Snooper decided to change the topic.

    “Chief, is that not an empty bottle of Stout I am looking at under your bed?” snooper queried in a mischievous tone.

    “Ah, some people came and I entertained them. In any case, when you recite the Qumran up to the point of rabana, omi amala loku.”, he replied with a boyish grin.

    By now snooper could not resist a wild laugh of relish at the great man’s native wisdom and traditional savvy. He was eyeing me with the poker-faced perspicuity of a traditional savant. Here was the Griot-president Nigeria never had.

    “Chief, by the way, have you seen Alhaji Abubakar Rimi?” snooper asked MKO.

    “Ah, is he here? O ntan lo na niyen. You see, it is like the case of the man who was caught in bed with his own daughter in- law. When he was asked what he thought he was doing, the old man replied, well, gentlemen, e ti gbo? Then it is almost over, it will soon be over”.

    At this point, the bed lamp, dragged by the cord of the mobile set, hit snooper on the ridge of the nose, sending him awake with a crushing pain. It was midnight and it was raining heavily in Lagos.

    (A longer version of this was published in 2011)

  • Who killed Abiola?

    Who killed Abiola?

    Almost 19 years after, the controversy over the sudden death of the winner of the June 12, 1993 presidential election, Chief Moshood Abiola, in detention has not resolved. The recent remark by former Chief of Staff Lt-Gen. Ishaya Bamaiyi that the eminent politician did not die of natural causes has further fueled the suspicion that he was murdered by unknown assassins. Group Political Editor EMMANUEL OLADESU reports.

    Who killed Moshood Abiola? What killed the winner of the historic June 12, 1993 presidential election in detention? Was an autopsy actually carried out? What was the outcome? Nineteen years after the death of the eminent politician and business mogul, his demise is still a riddle. The recent allusion to the tragedy by former Chief of Army Staff Lt-Gen. Ishaya Bamaiyi has once again aroused public consciousness to the suspected murder.

    Few weeks before his death was announced, the nation was hopeful about his release from incarceration. His was sighted in a group photograph taken when he was visited in prison by Susan Rice, former Assistant Secretary of State. Also sighted in the photograph was the late Admiral Mike Akhigbe, former Chief of General Staff. It appears that Abiola was in high spirit and full of expectation. He was hale and hearty. He had hoped to regain his freedom. But, few days after, a bewildered nation was jolted out of its illusion that the chief would return alive.

    Abiola died in the hand of his military tormentors. On the same day, the struggle for the validation of the annulled poll results ended. While many credible political leaders, who were heroes of the epic struggle were reluctant to participate in the post-Abiola transition programme, the Generals had seized the initiative, regrouped immediately and anoint one of their own for the succession battle.

    In his book, the  Vindication of a General, Bamaiyi attributed Abiola’s death to a sort of inexplicable conspiracy within the military government that succeeded the Abacha regime. Abiola did not die under Abacha’s watch. Bamaiyi emphasized that he died when Gen. Abdulsalami Abubakar was in the saddle.

    “I believe only Gen. Abubakar and those he used to handle Abiola’s death can tell Nigerians how Chief M.K.O Abiola died. Abiola could not have died the way he reportedly died,” he said.

    However, the former Army chief had harsh words for the pro-democracy movement, which, in his opinion, failed to give the banned Social Democratic Party (SDP) candidate an objective advice. Put succinctly, Bamaiyi attributed Abiola’s death to his rejection of the bail conditions reeled out his captor, the late Gen. Abacha, which he rejected, following the National Democratic Coalition (NADECO)’s advice. A key player in the bail saga was the strongman of Ibadan politics, the late Alhaji Lamidi Adedibu, who approached Abiola and his family with the military gesture.

    The bail conditions were to tie Abiola’s hands and sentence him to self-liquidation. According to the terms, the symbol of the struggle, who had declared himself president, was expected to eat his words, recant and give the military regime an assurance that he will abandon the struggle. Predictably, the bail was turned down by Abiola’s compatriots in NADECO, not only because Adedibu was a wrong envoy, but because a conditional bail at that stage of the struggle was considered illogical.

    For five years, Abiola did not relent in his bid to reclaim his mandate. He knew that his life was in danger. During his incarceration, he wrote several notes to the prodemocracy crusaders. In one of the letters, he stated that “Abacha has dug a grave for me and all that is left is for him to cover it.” NADECO and NALICON were the civilian armies that defiled the military bullets. Many human rights activists, arrowhead of student groups and leaders of Afenifere, the pan-Yoruba socio-political group, were casualties of the military onslaught. They were unjustly detained, maimed and killed. Some were framed up in the phantom coup. Among those who lost their lives during the titanic battle were Pa Alfred Rewane and Abiola’s wife, Kudirat, who had assumed a leadership responsibility within the pro-democracy movement, following his detention.

    At the height of the face-off between the military and NADECO, many June 12 co-travelers had to leave the country to continue the struggle abroad. They included Pa Anthony Enahoro, Prof. Wole Soyinka, Senator Bola Tinubu, Hon. Olawale Oshun, Commodore Dan Suleiman, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, Chief Ralph Obiora, Dr. Amos Akingba, Lt-Gen. Alani Akinrinade and Prof. Bolaji Akinyemi.

    Many Nigerians had expressed fears for Abiola’s safety, especially when the Abacha’s self-succession agenda was unfolded. Gen. Musa Yar’Adua, who had opposed the elongation of the military regime through whatever means had been arrested and jailed. Although he did not support Abiola’s struggle, he had influenced the 2004 National Conference to set a terminal date for the military regime, a move that upset Abacha.He was later allegedly injected in the prison where he died. There were startling revelations at the Oputa Panel on the circumstances surrounding Abiola’s death. His death was preceded by Abacha’s death. There are puzzles: Why did Abacha’s successor refused to release Abiola? Was the great politician poisoned? Did he developed an illness that led to his sudden death?

    However, some NADECO elements had a premonition that an ugly incident was about to occur. In his book, ‘Clapping with one hand: June 12 and the crisis of a nation state,’Oshun, Third Republic House of Representatives Chief Whip and one-time NADECO secretary, said: “It was on June 28, 1998 exactly that information reached some key elements within the democratic movement that the president-elect, Bashorun M.K.O. Abiola would be murdered soon, and in any case, not later than September 1998. The information came via a document from a source we knew, respected and trusted. “

    Despite the receipt of the report that Abiola’s life was in danger, certain elements in the movement did not believe it. Although the Radio Kudirat had been previously used to disseminate information about the planned attempts on Senator Abraham Adesanya’s and Gen. Yar’Adua’s lives, the handlers of the station dismissed the planned attempt on Abiola’s life as a wild rumour.

    On page 268 of the book, the sensitive document available to the pro-democracy movement reads as follows: “Abdulsalam Abubakar: He is an active member of the “die hard” Northern oligarchy. Well respected in the military circle and a bridge between the military cultic group groomed and nurtured by the late Gen. Sani Abacha and the liberals in the army.

    “He was chosen to be the head of state, not because he was the next high ranking officer, but because the way had been pre-paved for him-remember “The plot against Diya?” He is still not acceptable to Buhari, Gumei and Gwarzo, who together asked the “Dare Devil Cultic Group” to obtain written pledge from him to “consolidate Northern domination of political power,” which unfortunately, he wrote and signed before he was approved.

    “He asked to be surrounded by new “Yoruba” friends, which unfortunately would include some of the recently released political detainees. The new regime is working tirelessly to secure the friendship of this new group.

    “The only ADENDUM the new regime and its collaborators has is to: Ensure that Chief M.K.O. Abiola does not become the president of Nigeria in whatever form and Hausa/Fulani domination of the presidency is not compromised.

    “The new regime is: Totally against Chief M.K.O. Abiola’s mandate; Proposing a new transition to democracy by 2000-18 months programme to be announced on October1, 1998; Although would include some released detainees in his cabinet, it would still be intolerant of opposing political views and hence, be as repressive as ever before; The regime is thinking of compensating the families of the slain Ogoni activists and granting amnesty for the 19 Ogoni youths as a way of placating the Ogoni people; NECON would be dissolved and a new electoral commission formed; New parties to be registered; Negotiated amnesty for Diya and co likely, but not soon.

    “According to the reliable source, this regime would fight the press with all its power. An impeccable source said that all proposed elections are to be postponed. New election dates would be announced by the newly formed electoral commission.

    “Let me state here categorically that this is not a prediction at all. It is the pre-conceived plan of the new regime, exposed by an insider. What is absolutely necessary now is to mount relentless and forceful pressure on the regime and drum it to its ears that anything less than the immediate restoration of a democratic government would not be acceptable to Nigerians and the international community and that the opposition is battle ready to take the bull by the horn this time around and would be ready to give all it takes to drive the military out. Another very important thing is that Abiola’s mandate should not be compromised at all. NALICON and NADECO should rally rou d pro-democracy forces so as to reach a common goal.

    “The important report sent to me today: A notorious gang in the Nigerian Army has completed their plan to assassinate Chief Moshood Abiola as a “final settlement of the Abacha/Abiola war in a “no victor, no vanquished way.” Believe it or not, if the report given to me is anything to go by, Chief Abiola’s death would be a matter of days or before the end of September. This may look ridiculous, unthinkable or like an outright fabrication. But, believe it or not, it is true. Tell other pro-democracy groups, both abroad and home, to mount very intensive pressure on Abdulsalam Abubakar to release Chief M.K.O. Abiola now.

    “The new regime will fail to protect Chief Abiola from assassins because it has not ben able to persuade them to rethink the Nigerian national question. They might even seize power from Abdulsalam in order to achieve their destructive ….People are hell  bent (on) destroying the corporate existence of Nigeria than see Abiola become president

    “NOTE: Please, take immediate action on this report….”

    Oshun recalled that Soyinka was among the earliest recipients of the message. The Nobel Laureate was said to have risen to the occasion because he wanted to save Abiola’s life from the hands of murderers in Abuja. “Prof. Soyinka indeed, alerted the Secretary-General of the United Nations, Kofi Annan, who at the time was planning a trouble shooting trip to Nigeria, on the impending infamy,” he added.

    The former Whip lamented that “fate however, dealt us a fatal blow because, unlike in the past when such pieces of in formation would have been broadcast repeatedly on Radio Kudirat, some efficient, but not so politically astute members of the production team held the information to be unreliable.”

    Oshun added: “In the past, when the information on the lethal poisoning of Yar’Adua and of the intent to murder Senator Abraham Adesanya were received, and passed on to the production team of Radio Kudirat, there was no necessity for anyone to check back on the team as to dissemination. The major objective was carried out immediately. In the case of the attack on Senator Adesanya, the broadcast was on as soon as the information was obtained. It was based on that established tradition therefore, that it was assumed that the Abiola story would be treated with the normal and possibly greater urgency.

    “The assumption was to prove fatal for, u known to many of us, the otherwise wonderfully efficient head of production at Radio Kudirat, concluded that the information on Abiola’s immediate murder could not have been genuine. Having reached that conclusion, the head of production did not nother to inform anyone. This was how it happened that not a single reference was made to the alert on the impending murder of M.K.O Abiola. It was after MKO’s death was announced that we realized what had happened.”

    But, why was the alert on the impending murder of Abiola ignored, despite the fact that the alert on Yar’Adua’s and Adesanya’s lives were given due attention? Oshun suggested fatigue on the part of the pro-democracy crusaders, adding that they were carried away by emergence of Gen. Abubakar, “with his smooth, but deceptively humble style.”

    “With him promising the democratic el-Dorado after the unlamented demise of Sani Abacha, views held a few days back were all suddenly made to look or sound unreasonable. It is often said that the most gentle of men are also the most lethal in some relationships. It was Abdulsalami Abubakar’s gentility that made many to forget on the spot and as soon as he began to make his promises, that he was a prominent and I dispensable member of the Abacha machine of cruelty, “ he stressed.

  • Court declares Abiola Supreme Head C&S unification

    The Lagos State High Court in Ikeja has declared Most Elder Apostle Adebayo Abiola as the Supreme Head of the Cherubim and Seraphim Unification Church.

    Justice Lateef Lawal-Akapo held that he (the second applicant) was validly selected and presented by the Registered Trustees of the Sacred Cherubim and Seraphim Church of Nigeria (first applicant) in accordance with the church’s constitution.

    The judge granted an order of perpetual injunction restraining Elder Apostle Solomon Alao from occupying the office of the church’s Supreme Head or performing the duties and functions of the head.

    “An order of perpetual injunction is hereby made restraining the fourth defendant (Alao) from releasing or parting with the staff of office of the Supreme Head of Cherubim & Seraphim Unification Church to the first to third defendants, their agents or servants except the duly elected nominee of the first claimant,” the judge held.

    The defendants are the Registered Trustees of the Sacred Cherumbim Unification Church of Nigeria, Special Apostle Akin Owolabi (Secretary-General of Cherubim and Seraphim Unification Church of Nigeria), Alao and Eder Apostle David Salako.

    The claimants sued in 2015 to challenge Alao’s nomination and leadership.

    Justice Lawal-Akapo held that the it was the Sacred Cherubim and Seraphim Church of Nigeria that was registered under the Companies and Allied Matters Act, adding that the word “Overseas” never appeared in the church’s constitution or other documents.

    “I find as a fact and I hold that the Sacred Cherubim and Seraphim Church of Nigeria is indeed a registered corporate organisation as clearly reflected in the certificate of incorporation,” the judge said.

  • Anenih, Abiola and the untold stories of June 12

    TWENTY-THREE years after the annulment of an election that has become a watershed in the nation’s history, the stories of June 12, 1993 are still being relayed in flashes of tragic interjections – coloured now and then, with subjective biases. For those who lived through the drama of that period, the intrigues, maiming, exile experiences, murders and suspicious deaths, June 12 cast a pall of gloom on Nigeria’s socio-political development.

    Today, scholars have not relented in their efforts to interrogate that era with the sole aim of unravelling the mystery that puts an abrupt end to the inspiring life of one of Africa’s greatest philanthropists, industrialist and publisher, Moshood Kashimawo Olawale Abiola, the presidential candidate of the then Social Democratic Party and undeclared winner of an election steeped in the most benign treachery plotted and executed by three jolly good friends.

    As a friend or associate, Judas couldn’t have done worse. At the centre of the whole shenanigan and tomfoolery of a national election that was designed to fail, was General Ibrahim Badamosi Babangida, the self-styled evil genius who, with ‘Maradonic’ infectiousness allegedly took Abiola on a rigmarole that saw him ending up six feet deep in the bowels of mother earth, with unquantifiable collateral damage to his family and business empire.

    For now, none of the volumes of literature on the June 12 saga has been definitive about how Abiola died mysteriously in detention at an advanced stage of his anticipated release following the death of General Sani Abacha. What we do know is that he was the ultimate victim of a high-wired conspiracy that flushed him out of the way after sipping a cup of tea in the presence of a delegation from the United States of America who had come to broker peace.

    Was the tea laden with a lethal substance? Was his death a secret collaborative effort between the then General Abdulsalami Abubakar government and the USA to put an end to the standoff? Well, Abiola’s death didn’t put the final nail on the shady secrets surrounding the election. Instead, it reawakens the urge in Nigerians to know what truly went wrong. People not only raised questions.

    They point accusing fingers at some notable personalities, nudging them to offer answers. It wasn’t just because so many innocent lives were sacrificed in a bid to undo the injustice of the annulment; they also wanted to know why Kudirat Abiola and Pa Rewane were murdered in cold blood. What exactly did we gain from the harvest of bloodletting? Why should a man, who was unjustly robbed of his mandate on the basis of tendentious excuses, be unfairly murdered? While answers to those questions hang precariously in the sky, there is a ray of hope that the full story would be told one day.

    Chief Tony Anenih, who was the chairman of the SDP at the time, ignited that belief with the public presentation of the book, ‘My Life and Nigerian Politics’. The 221-paged biography throws fresh, even if unpalatable, insight into the Abiola personae. Written in prose couched in benevolent anger, Anenih suggests that Abiola’s inordinate ambition to become president by all means possible, sounded his death knell. In spite of his well-known native intelligence, wisdom and craftiness, Abiola was said to have been dining with the devil with the shortest of spoons. According to the writer, he was prepared to do anything to reclaim his mandate, including trading off some of the politicians who stood by him through thick and thin.

    Tried as he could to dab the seething rage with tempered language, the author couldn’t help painting a shocking picture outside the image of a dogged fighter that was etched in our psyche when Abiola passed on. In our collective memories, too, is the not-so-faint public suspicion that the SDP leadership, ably led by Anenih sold away an iconic victory in exchange for God knows what. But there no scintilla of a selloff in that book. Instead, Abiola got all the flak. Anenih’s revelations were truly shocking in a sense. Okay, maybe some parts were not that difficult to understand.

    At least, we were all conversant with Abiola’s legendary stubbornness, wit and ability to deploy local proverbs to aptly capture his feelings at every point in time. What we did not know, according to Anenih, was that Abiola’s populist posturing was remarkably different from his condemnable dalliances with the military authorities that were out to leave him in the sun to dry.

    From Anenih’s accounts, while the military announced the obituary of June 12, Abiola was the undertaker. His action and inaction culminated in the final burial of June 12 with a wreath of infamy ferociously dancing on the graveyard. Conversely, Anenih had no such ugly commentary in the military regime that annulled Abiola’s electoral victory in the freest election Nigeria ever had.

    He presented himself as the Voltron that looked eyeball to eyeball with the military, insisting that Abiola must be crowned president! Listen to Anenih in bits and pieces. “Abiola was not only dining with the devil with reckless abandon, his analogy of getting to ‘Kano’ by air instead of experiencing the painful agonies of road travel symbolized the haste with which he sought to reclaim his mandate”.

    In that blind pursuit, Anenih said he went behind the decision of the party leadership to “hold discussions with General Sani Abacha who had promised him that if Chief Abiola supported, and if he, General Abacha, took over from Chief Shonekan today, he would hand over the reins of government to Chief Abiola the next day.” That naivety, coupled with several other factors bordering on untamed ambition, did Abiola in, Anenih stated.

    In fact, Anenih recalled how Abiola worked against Chief Ernest Shonekan’s Interim National Government and helped Abacha to realise his ambition to become Head of State. Continuing, he said: “The ING fell due to the adroit maneuvers of Chief Abiola, orchestrated attacks from his supporters, as well as the lack of political base and support for Chief Shonekan who had good intentions for the country…..It is a pity, indeed, that Chief Abiola kept the leadership away from his arrangement with General Abacha to take over from Shonekan.

    If he had brought it to the leadership of the party, he would have been well advised. The ‘agreement’ was phony and hollow. It was an agreement which was inexplicable and inexcusable in its folly and terrible in its consequences”. Of course, the metaphor became clearer when the former Minister of Works, popularly known as “Mr. Fix It”, said Abiola was truly airborne to Kano but he never landed. He was crated back to Lagos from Abuja in a body bag.

    Nothing could be fixed. Anenih said Abiola trod not just a “self-destructive, but also ruinous” path. Do we then conclude that this celebrated icon of the historic June 12 election was a tragic villain with a voracious lust for power? Did Abiola blindly follow a path that destroyed him or was he betrayed by trusted friends whom Anenih said never wanted Abiola in the Presidency because of the discovery of several cases of inflated contracts in his favour? Was that an indictment that Abiola corruptly enriched himself? Like I said, the June 12 saga remains an unfolding drama. In a recent interaction with

    ‘The Interview’ magazine, Babangida’s view on why the contraption called ING failed was remarkably different from the blame-it-all-on-Abiola perspective in Anenih’s book. Justifying the annulment on the presumption that the military had a premonition that the democratic process was going to be short lived based on what was available to the authorities, Babangida said the ING collapsed because the media never wanted and worked against it. For him, the media created a fertile environment for Abacha to strike and, therefore, denied the Anenih-led SDP the opportunity to win a fresh election with Abiola out of the equation.

    He sounded as if Abiola was stopped to save him from a tragic end. Asked if he believed Abiola died of natural causes, Babangida quipped: “I should know? I didn’t serve the tea”. And, after all the merry go round, we are right back to where it all started: who or what killed Abiola on July 7, 1998? All those who have written books on the issue, including those privileged to watch him sip the tea and probably writhe agonizingly to the very last, have cleverly dodged that question. How convenient is it for the living to blame it all on the dead? Unfortunately, Abiola is not here to tell his story.

    He would never have the opportunity to tell us why he took some of those actions that his party leadership felt was against the general interest. If there was any agreement with Abacha, it would have been interesting to know the details beyond what we could glimpse from Anenih’s book. How depressing can it be when an important key to unravelling a mystery has been silenced with a fatal sip of tea in a cup offered by friendly hands? Is that what they call friendly fire? Who will tell Abiola’s own undiluted story with his usual wittiness, who?