Tag: Mko Abiola

  • MKO Abiola’s wife, others grace Oladele’s vision presentation for Oyo in Abuja

    MKO Abiola’s wife, others grace Oladele’s vision presentation for Oyo in Abuja

    Oyo APC governorship aspirant and Baàmẹ̀kọ́ of Ibadanland, Oloye Saheed Oladele, has declared that Nigerian youths are supposed to be today’s leaders.

    Oladele made the remark during a Meet and Greet session held in his honour at Barcelona Hotel, Wuse 2, Abuja. 

    The event served as an interactive platform to discuss good governance and youth participation in politics.

    He emphasised that young Nigerians must rise to become agents of positive change by contesting for various elective positions in the 2027 general elections, stressing that the long-held narrative describing youths as future leaders is misleading.

    “The idea that youths are leaders of tomorrow is a scam,” he said, urging young people to take charge of leadership roles now rather than wait for the future.

    Also speaking at the event, the Abuja coordinator of the Saheed Oladele Support Foundation, Shams Olatunbosun, called on Oyo youths to support Oladele’s ambition to govern Oyo State in 2027, describing him as a champion of good governance and accountability.

    He reiterated that it is the turn of youths to be in the saddle of governance as the youths should see Baàmẹ̀kọ́’s aspiration as a collective aspiration.

    A consultant ENT surgeon with the State House Clinic, Abuja, Dr Shareefah Bolanle Hassan, narrated how she met Baàmẹ̀kọ́ inside a plane on his way to the holy land in 2021. 

    She said she was indisposed inside the plane and Baàmẹ̀kọ́ exchanged his more comfortable seat with hers. 

    She stated that such a commendable gesture is the hallmark of a compassionate leader, and it was the reason she felt compelled to attend the Meet and Greet.

    The event was well attended by a cross section of Nigerians and some dignitaries, including a wife of late chief MKO Abiola, Mrs Hadiza Abiola.

  • Kashimawo goes on UK stage

    Kashimawo goes on UK stage

    Kashimawo, a play which depicts the life and times of the winner of the June 12 elections Chief MKO Abiola, will make its international debut at the iconic Shaw Theatre in London, UK between October 4th and 5th according to  a statement by DOSF-UK, its main promoter.

    The play, which is being produced by influential actress and producer Tayo Elesin under her Elesin Productions platform would see the play which depicts the life and times of the winner of the June 12 elections and giant personality of Chief MKO Abiola displayed Kashimawo which already has the backing of Mr Kola Abiola, son of the late business mogul and immortal leader Kashimawo played to uproarious reception at its debut showing at the Agip Recital Hall of the Muson Centre, Lagos  with the larger Abiola family in attendance.

    According to DOSF-UK, the beauty of Kashimawo is it’s wild pull out from the life of MKO who inspired the play to the confusing mischief of the gods as they seemed to play a different kind of game with the life of this ‘poor ophan’

    Read Also: Keep praying for Nigeria – Babangida tells Nigerians

    The statement added that all previous ticket holders to DOSF plays can also use same tickets for Kashimawo if they so wished as they would all be contacted by the theatre in such regards. Kashimawo follows the very successful showing of Awo, which also played the same venue to massive crowds and huge critical acclaim

    Kashimawo would be the second after the aforementioned Awo in a series of historical expositions designed to bring these historical productions into Europe and the diaspora.

    The Duke of Shomolu Foundation, an associate firm of DOSF-UK is Africa’s leading theatre production house with one of the richest theatrical portfolios on the continent.

    With 33 huge stage plays and over 200,000 physical attendees in productions that have been have seen it run in local cities like Lagos, Abeokuta, Uyo, Abuja, Ekiti, Benin, Arochukwu, Ikenne, Warri to mention a few, the franchise is today one of Nigeria’s biggest.

    Already such iconic Nigerian and international brands like First Bank Nigeria, LEMFI. Datamellon, Cruxstone, Unified Payments to mention a few have lined up as sponsors.

    Prof Rasaki Ojo Bakare who will be finishing as Festival Director of the Ekiti International Theatre Festival is expected to direct the play, which will feature veteran theatre personality Biodun Abbey in the lead role leading a robust international cast.

  • ‘Recognise June 12 activists, martyrs’

    ‘Recognise June 12 activists, martyrs’

    Defend Nigeria Movement (DNM) and Nigeria Unite for Democracy (NUD) have demanded recognition of the coalition of June 12 activists and matyrs as the nation marks 32nd anniversary of June 12, 1993 presidential election, won by the late Chief MKO Abiola, which was annulled by former Military President, Gen. Ibrahim Babangida.

    Addressing the media at Lagos Airport Hotel, Ikeja, Razaq Olokoba, convener of the groups, said they “recollect with nostalgia how Nigerians on the historic day went to the polls in a peaceful and cordial atmosphere, jettisoning ethnic, religious and other primordial sentiments, which have always divided us, to speak with one voice as a people with a common destiny for the peace, progress and prosperity of fatherland.”

    Olokoba stressed that “the historic election which has been adjudged as the freeest and fairest election in Nigeria’s history, was sadly and treasonable annulled by General Ibrahim Babangida military junta for his interest of self perpetuation in power.

    “However, Nigerians rose in defiance of the guns and bullets to insist on the de-annulment at great cost of loss of human livesand freedom, which culminated in the forced retreat of the military and birth of the democratic dispensation on May 29, 1999.”

    He said June 12 is a symbol of unity and consciousness, showcasing our ability to unite for an ideology despite the differences.

    The activist noted that the annulment is a turning point in our democratic journey and a symbol of resilience and self awareness.

    He said: “This event has inspired a bibliography of its own, highlighting its significance in Nigeria’s history.“Declaration of June 12 as a national holiday by Muhammadu Buhari has given the epoch its pride of place in Nigeria’s socio-political calendar…’’

     This move has helped to promote the value and symbolism of June 12. However, we need to deepen the gains of the lessons of June 12. 

    Read Also: Tinubu orders security chiefs to restore peace in Benue

    “The June 12, 1993 struggle was a pivotal moment in Nigeria’s democratic journey, symbolizing the fight against military tyranny and the quest for good governance. Thirty-two years after the annulment of the June 12, 1993 presidential election, the inspiration from the courage and determination of our struggle still motivates us.

    “We must use this medium to congratulate Nigerians for keeping faith with democracy despite the challenges that confront us as a people with 26 years of unprecedented and unbroken democratic system and like the saying goes, a people united, can never be defeated.”

    He added that no matter the antics and provocation, “the human dignity that democracy confers on human beings is our lot as we make our laws in a civilian parliament and not by decree as witnessed under military despotism. We are consolidating our democracy no doubt with its own glaring challenges and improvements is imminent and possible.”

    Olokoba emphasised that “acknowledging the initial pains and inconvenience, we congratulate and commend President Bola Tinubu for his bold and daring economic reforms which has extinguished the hemorrhaging of our economy through the termination of the fuel subsidy regime and the unification of the foreign exchange system.

    “By these two critical policies, the President Tinubu administration has saved the country the loss of about $10bn annually in the last two years and the result is that the three tiers of government now receive almost triple their allocations from the federation account to enable them provide the dividends of democracy to the citizenry.”

    He explained that Nigerians can all see the gains of the economic re-engineering of the President Bola Tinubu administration, which he said have begun to manifest in infrastructural renewal as well as other policies which he said are making positive impacts in every other sectors of the Nigerian economy, eg. Lagos Calabar Coastal highway, Lagos Sokoto highway, naira for crude, NELFUND, tax reforms bills, etc.

    “However, as much as we are holding the federal government accountable for its stewardship in the last two years of the President Bola Tinubu administration, it is very important for us to demand same from our states and local government councils administration who are beneficiaries of this unprecedented largesse from the federation account now.

    “Under the President Bola Ahmed Tinubu administration, things are getting gradually into shape and it is not by accident or luck, but rather a product of our collective struggle for a better society even as we recognize President Tinubu as then Lagos State governor provided succour by making Lagos State conducive for the struggle and which makes Lagos State as the epi center and this atmosphere has been sustained by subsequent Lagos State governments till date. It is our belief that to who much is given, much is expected hence we should continue to give our unreserved support to the present administration of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu,” he said.

  • An evening with President Abiola

    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 mingle 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 seventeen years ago. And now power is concurring. History shall vindicate the just indeed.

        It has taken a tectonic shift from the template of evil misgovernance 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.

    Read Also: MKO Abiola: The untold story of a metaphor

       Seventeen 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 on 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.

    As the carnival drew nearer, snooper thought that Goodluck Jonathan ought to be commended for finding the inner strength and resolve to acknowledge the obvious, unlike his mentor and benefactor who, consumed by hatred, irrational envy and petty venom, could not even bring himself to pronounce the name of Abiola. The greatest beneficiary of the June 12 struggle could not abide its greatest martyr and casualty even in death. But as it has been noted, a man may make for himself a throne of bayonets, whether he will be able to sit on it is the question.

    Now that he has taken the tentative step, snooper wondered, Jonathan should be encouraged to go the whole hog in order to bring the necessary closure to this open sore of the modern Nigerian nation. Abiola should be declared a posthumous president of Nigeria with commensurate edification. Truth is constant and steady and no matter how fast a lie travels ahead, it will eventually be overtaken by the truth.

    But judging from the mood of the crowd, If Jonathan does not immortalise Abiola, a future government will after the current farce must have run its course. This is a historic wager which will come to pass soon, no matter what anybody does or fails to do. Jonathan should ask himself why the sudden and vociferous cries for electoral reforms even after his principal had famously and characteristically pooh-poohed the idea. Electoral chicanery, just like annulment, leads to a breakdown of government and governance, not to talk of international derision and opprobrium.

        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. 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 containing President Jonathan’s proclamation about Abiola’s heroic stature. 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 gone back to heaven. 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 Quran 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 in Lagos.

    • First published in June, 2010. Now being republished by popular demand.
  • MKO Abiola: The untold story of a metaphor

    MKO Abiola: The untold story of a metaphor

    Moshood Kashimawo Olawale Abiola (GCFR) has earned the axiomatic ‘good name’ that is better than silver and gold. Even though he died decades ago, he remains immortal not because he won the 1993 presidential election that was annulled by the former military president, Gen.  Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida (Rtd.) but because of the human he was. Politics did not bring him into prominence. His foray into business, sports, entertainment and philanthropy preceded June 12, 1993.

    As Nigeria celebrated Democracy day on June 12th the focus seemed to have been on the election and the outcome.  It has become the metaphor for the freest, fairest and most credible election in Nigeria’s political history. An M.K.O Abiola won the election. He broke records. He ran with Alhaji Babagana Kingibe, a fellow Muslim from the North. There was no problem with that for Nigerians. He defeated the late Bashir Tofa of the National Republican Convention (NRC) in his home state of Kano.

    Nigerian politics has been and continues to be plagued by tribal and religious intrigues fired by manipulative politicians across the country. They often fan the embers of hatred amongst the lower rungs of the society often too naïve to understand that religion and tribe have nothing to do with good governance. Manipulative politicians often mask their incompetence and lack of merit to earn the votes of the people by playing the religious and ethnic cards.

    But an M.K.O Abiola emerged in the scene in 1993 and erased totally the clichés and semantic manipulation by politicians in Nigeria. He won the election by a 58% majority. He was of the Social Democratic Party (SDP). While the annulment of the election continues to be debated in the public domain, former President IBB in his recent memoir tried to play with words and somewhat pass the buck.

    However, the electoral umpire, late Prof. Humphrey Nwosu had in many interviews explained that he was not confused about the winner of the June 12, 1993 presidential elections. The result of the annulment of the election was chaos across the country. There were protests and some people were killed, others displaced, many arrested, tortured and jailed while many ran into exile to save their lives.

    As Nigeria marked this year’s June 12 democracy day with speeches and awards of National honours to some of the heroes of democracy owing to their fates or actions about the annulment of the election, the Roundtable Conversation just noted that not much of the personality of the late MKO Abiola was reiterated for the records. Not that the day ought to be about him alone but his persona brought about the victory and the democracy day we celebrate.

    Read Also: Aiyedatiwa to disburse Tinubu’s N1.2B ‘Renewed Hope’ cash conditional transfer for over 16,000 households

    Historians and Biographers might have documented the life of an Abiola. The event of June 12, 1993 has immortalized him but we have to look at an Abiola pre-June 12, 1993. He was an exceptional human being. He was the true metaphor of grass to grace. He rose from poverty to wealth, used his wealth to empower and nurture  and became a global citizen. His personality was larger than life. He was as versatile as he was humble and humane. His humanity was as enduring as it was endearing. He was not perfect but he was human.

    He was grounded and versatile. He was at home with business as he was with entertainment, politics and international politics. His passion for humanity was expressed through his practical expression of his love for and support for various sports not just in Nigeria but across the continent. When people say that sportsmanship exemplifies large heartedness, that saying had full expression in an M.K.O Abiola. He was a sportsman who loved and supported sports across board. He invested in football, athletics, boxing, table tennis and many others.

    The Roundtable Conversation has noticed that many Nigerian politicians assume politics is a sport and they tend to play it to the hilt. Most have no second addresses. They are neither interested in people nor in sports except for political expedience in some instances. An Abiola was different. He loved and invested in sports and humans. Most Nigerian politicians are so bare of any affecting quality that they earn only skepticism from the people. This is reason there is huge trust deficit in the political class. This in turn gives birth to apathy during elections and the rejection of most politicians by the people which impacts on the flawed electoral processes that have made Nigerian elections the most litigious in the world.

    We decided to talk to two veteran sports journalists that had close interactions with late M.K.O Abiola about their assessment of the person they conferred with the highest sports award not just in Nigeria but Africa as a continent. The African Sports Journalists Union (ASJU) had awarded an M.K.O Abiola the ‘Pillar of Sports in Africa’ in 1980. He remains the sole awardee till date. On January 11, 1992, the African Football Hall of Fame had his name etched by CAF with the Order of Merit in Gold.

    Mr. Kunle Solaja, ace sports journalist that holds the enviable achievement and honour of covering about nine World Cup tournaments, who not only worked in Abiola’s Concord newspaper but has been in the business of sports (especially football reporting) ever since traversing the Sun Newspaper as Sports Editor and now the Vice President/Editor in Chief at Extra Time Communications LTD./Sports Village Square.  He says he was honoured to have been in vantage position to have seen firsthand the passion that the late Pillar of Sports in Africa expressed for sports in general across Africa.

     Solaja said that not only was the late MKO a sports enthusiast, he was as versatile in business, politics, entertainment as he was in philanthropy.  He was not just interested in sports in Nigeria alone,  he was a regional and intercontinental lover and investor in sports not for any profit or political expediency but just as a global communication tool. He was at home investing in Zambia as he was enthusiastic about Algeria, Ghana etc. To an MKO, sports is a universal language of love and entertainment. He invested with no anticipation of returns. To Solaja, unlike most politicians that saw invitations to sports events as ego trips, an Abiola, initiated, sponsored and participated in sports activities that spurred others to attend. He founded the defunct Abiola Babes and Concorde  football clubs that made waves in Africa and nurtured some of the best names in football at the time. 

    As a journalist at the time, sometimes editors had a hard time casting headlines because an Abiola often made headlines in business, Sports, national and global politics. He was one of the pioneer advocates for the payment of reparations by the colonial and trans-Atlantic slave trade proponents.  He was as much a patriot as he was a Pan Africanist. His humanity was evident in his extensive philanthropy across Africa.There was no doubt that his passion for sports was a product of his inner sense of sportsmanship not just as a social rhetoric but as a choice. 

    Onochie Anibeze is an award-winning veteran sports journalist who is presently the Vanguard Newspaper Saturday Editor . To an Onochie, there is no African living or dead that matches the late M.K.O Abiola’s interest and investment in football, boxing, athletics and table tennis. He was a great sportsman who put money and time in sports promotions. He didn’t just throw money into sports, he was present in the real sense. He loved and lived sports and it was no surprise when in 1980, long before he thought of contesting for the Presidency, he was crowned the Pillar of Spirts in Africa, an honour yet to be bestowed on any other individual living or dead.

    His humanity shone like a million stars through his sponsorship and presence in the support of various sports across the continent and even beyond. He recalls an incident in 1987 when they were travelling together to Tunisia with Abiola Babes team. Suddenly the team doctor  fell ill on air and the late MKO joked that the doctor was now at the mercy of journalists’ healing hands if they had any.  That was how hilarious and human an Abiola was. He was a hands on human whose large heart touched many in and out of sports.  His humility knew no bounds as he could travel in the same plane or bus with players and other individuals covering any sport he was interested in. his sponsorship of sports was across regional lines as he was as present in Senegal as he was in Algeria. He was very close to most players and journalists and related to them as a father.

    Onochie recalls that an Abiola showed unique qualities that were endearing.  He was always travelling for and sponsoring sports events with his late wife Simbiat who equally had her own Simbiat Babes football club. In fact, journalists nicknamed the amiable couple Papa and Mama Sports respectively due to their parental-like involvement in sponsoring and supporting sportsmen and women across board. An M.K.O almost knew most sports journalists on first name basis and related closely with them. Not many billionaires with his stature was that magnanimous and charitable.

    So an Abiola to us was more than the winner of an annulled election. his image and humanity were rare. He easily won the election because he earned the love of the people. He did not win because he used thugs or shared money. He was loved across tribes and religions. His personality was very endearing and people rewarded him with their votes in an option A4 Open secret ballot that defied rigging. He earned the love that won him the election. That should be celebrated and copied  by politicians in Nigeria beyond the commemorative June 12  Democracy Day celebrations.

    •The dialogue continues…

  • Nigeria would be better if my father ruled as President – Abiola’s son

    Nigeria would be better if my father ruled as President – Abiola’s son

    Jamiu, son of the late Chief MKO Abiola, has asserted that Nigeria would have experienced far greater economic progress had his father been allowed to assume the presidency following the annulled 1993 election.

    Speaking during Channels Television’s June 12 Special Forum commemorating 26 years of uninterrupted democratic governance, Jamiu reflected on the global economic climate of that period and Nigeria’s missed opportunity.

    “Nigeria would have been better because, at that time, it was a very special time in global times; that 1993 period was a time when the world itself was having an international economic boom,” he said. 

    “So, we could have tapped into that. But what did we get in return? We got a kleptomaniac as head of state. I am not going to talk about (Sani) Abacha because he has his problems wherever he has found himself.”

    Jamiu, who serves as Senior Special Adviser to President Bola Tinubu on Linguistics and Foreign Affairs, also lamented what he described as attempts to erase his father’s legacy from Nigeria’s political history.

    “I wrote a book in 2015 because I came to realise that my father’s name was becoming like a memory that was becoming distant and people were hellbent on rewriting the history of Nigeria without him,” he said.

    “People would come from abroad, foreign presidents, they would mention Yar’Adua and others and they would not mention Chief MKO Abiola. Some people wanted to bury his name. Like my father would say: they wanted to shave his head in his absence.”

    Read Also: MKO Abiola Sports Complex to host Super Falcons, Indomitable Lionesses  

    Jamiu’s book, The President who never ruled, was written to preserve MKO Abiola’s legacy and ensure future generations remember his historic role.

    In 2018, former President Muhammadu Buhari posthumously awarded MKO Abiola the Grand Commander of the Order of the Federal Republic (GCFR) and officially declared June 12 as Democracy Day—a gesture widely seen as long overdue.

  • MKO Abiola’s ally Su-Kazeem knocks Tinubu’s critics

    MKO Abiola’s ally Su-Kazeem knocks Tinubu’s critics

    An elder statesman and ally to winner of June 12, 1993 presidential election, MKO Abiola, Alhaji Sufianu Kazeem, otherwise known as Su-Kazeem, has knocked some past leaders criticising President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s administration.

    A statement by Su-Kazeem stated that he has been vindicated going by recent comment by former Minister, Professor Bolaji Akinyemi.

    Akinyemi in a viral video called on former ex- President Olusegun Obasanjo, former Vice President Atiku Abubakar, former Anambra Governor, Peter Obi and others to stop making unnecessary comments against Tinubu’s administration and allow him to concentrate.

    Su-Kazeem said this has been what he has been clamouring for since Tinubu became President.

    He expressed surprise at what he described as unneeded and unsolicited advice for Tinubu by the past leaders.

    Read Also: MKO Abiola Sports Complex to host Super Falcons, Indomitable Lionesses  

    He urged them like in the words of Professor Bolaji Akinyemi to go and take their deserved rest and observe like former Heads of State General Yakubu Gowon and Abdul Salam Abubakar.

    Like Akinyemi, Kazeem condemned Obasanjo’s continuous attacks on the person and office of Tinubu, urging on him to henceforth desist from such action.

    He said: “Atiku Abubakar has continued to show his desperation even at the detriment of the progress and development of Nigeria.

    “He behaves as if he has all Nigerians in his pocket with the way he talks and address national issues which ordinarily should be done with selfless and not with selfish interest.”

  • IBB under fire over new position on June 12

    IBB under fire over new position on June 12

    • Falae, Agbakoba, Okurounmu, Oshun, Hafsat Abiola: new stance belated, revisionist
    • Akinyemi: leaders should always take responsibility
    • God doesn’t sleep, says Abacha’s daughter Gumsu in cryptic post

    Former military ruler, General Ibrahim Babangida, drew more fire yesterday from across the country over his public admission that the late Chief Moshood Abiola won the June 12, 1993 election.

    Several key actors in the National Democratic Coalition (NADECO), including Oba Olu Falae, Dr. Amos Akingba and Olawale Oshun, dismissed Babangida’s latest stance as belated.

    Former Foreign Affairs Minister Prof. Bolaji Akinyemi said leaders should learn from the scenario, adding that the onus is always on them to take responsibility for their good and bad decisions.

    Abiola’s daughter, Hafsat Abiola- Costello, said there was nothing new in what the former ruler said about the true winner of the election, although his brother AbdulMumini seemed satisfied that at long last Babangida “expressed remorse about the decision he made.”

    Gumsu Sani Abacha, daughter of the late military ruler General Sani Abacha, chose to respond with cryptic messages on X apparently over the indictment of her father by Babangida for allegedly engineering the annulment of the election results.

    Babangida also claims in his memoirs that Abacha plotted to violently overthrow his administration and had hatred for the late Chief Moshood Abiola.

    In one of the messages on her X handle G_sparking, yesterday Gumsu wrote in Hausa: Allah baya bacci fa!! Muyi hattara da duniya wallahi (God does not sleep. We should be careful with this world, I swear).

    Babangida, speaking at the launch of the book “A Journey in Service” in Abuja on Thursday, had described the annulment of the election as most regrettable.

    “The nation is entitled to expect my impression of regret,” he said.

    He added: “As the leader of the military administration, I accept full responsibility for all decisions taken under my watch, and June 12 happened under my watch.

    “Mistakes, oversight and missteps happened in quick succession, but as I state in my book, in all matters, we acted in the supreme national interest so that Nigeria could survive.”

    He acknowledged that his administration’s actions disrupted the nation’s transition to civilian rule but claimed that the country overcame the setback.

    One of the sons of the late Chief Abiola, AbdulMunini, said on Arise TV yesterday that I think it’s important that we understand that we’re human and it’s in humans to err and what we need to do is to acknowledge when we make those mistakes and seek forgiveness.

    “So, for me, I think that was more important to me: the fact that he expressed that remorse towards the decision that he had made.”

    Falae: NADECO knew that IBB committed error

    Falae, who served as Secretary to the Federal Government and Finance Minister under Babangida, said pro-democracy forces knew that the former military president committed a blunder long before the Thursday confession.

    Falae, who is now the Olu of Ilu Aabo, Akure, said he had no further reaction to IBB’s admittance of error beyond the reaction NADECO made 32 years ago.

    Falae said the annulment led to a chain of events, including the persecution of activists, bombings and loss of lives.

    He said: “What reaction again? We, members of NADECO, reacted 32 years ago when Abiola’s election was annulled.

    “We formed NADECO in Gen. Adeyinka Adebayo’s house at Ikeja; 52 of us signed a memo demanding the de-annulment.

    “It was the first time civilians would give a military government an ultimatum.”

    Falae added: “The government started harassing us. I spent two years in detention.

    “We made our comments 32 years ago. We rejected the annulment and we gave an ultimatum. We have nothing to add to that.

    “Some of us paid the supreme price. We were detained. Some lost their lives. Some were exiled. Gen. Akinrinade’s house was bombed.

    “We made our reactions 32 years ago. I have nothing to add to that.”

    Leaders should not shun responsibility, says Akinyemi

    Akinyemi, who was among NADECO chieftains who fled the country, said “the facts have spoken for themselves.”

    “You take responsibility for decisions taken under you when you are the one on the seat of power,” he said.

    “The decisions could be yours or taken by your lieutenants. You are the one who will sign it or refuse to sign it. If you don’t decline, it is your responsibility.”

    Akingba: IBB messed up Nigeria

    Eighty-seven-year-old  Akingba said history will not forgive Babangida because he “messed up the country.”

    He said whether he took responsibility or not, it is true that he annulled the poll and threw Nigeria into a nightmare.

    Akingba added: “History will record that it was his own making. He has to live with it. The annulment led to the killing of Abiola, his wife and other people. That cannot be recovered.

    “Abiola died. His wife died and many others who are not remembered again. If I had gone, nobody would remember me, except my family.”

    Akingba said the reflection on the annulment should lead to the debate on the unresolved national question.

    His words: “Nigeria should agree on a loose federation. But they wanted a unitary government.  People are different. We are not one. We need to go back to the regions. They said they unified us. It cannot work.

    “We are just roaming about the bush. Let’s have our Southwest Region, Midwest Region, Eastern Region, South-South Region, Northeast Region, Northcentral Region or Middlebelt Region, and Northwest Region, made up of people who have been together from time immemorial.”

    Current leaders should learn lessons, says Oshun

    Oshun, who was NADECO Secretary abroad, said no leader will escape from the demand for accountability.

    He urged the current crop of leaders to be mindful of the decisions they take in power.

    He said IBB cannot attribute that important decision to other subordinates because he was the leader.

    Oshun, however, lamented that despite the confession, the damage has already been done.

    He said: “We thank God that he has now owned up. Almost every Nigerian knows that the responsibility for that annulment was his own as the Head of State, irrespective of what Abacha and David Mark asked him to do.

    “It is okay that he has owned up. The truth is that a lot of collateral damage, a deep one, took place. People lost their lives on Ikorodu/Lagos road and in various demonstrations that took place across the country.

    “Even those of us who went on exile, the damage cannot be quantified. We must thank him for having the courage to take full responsibility. Nobody doubted he was responsible. But he was cowardly for not owing up.

    “Writing the book is significant to him. All occupants of office – local government chairmen, governors, senators, ministers – one day would be called to account. It is a significant lesson.

    Read Also: Abacha plotted to overthrow me, kill Abiola -IBB

    “Nobody can escape the day of accountability when they will account for their actions and inactions. Those in government should behave well so that they will not come back to apologise in 20 years time.”

    Okurounmu: Babangida is worried by conscience

    Okunrounmu said the ghost of June 12 had hunted Babangida for 32 years, stressing that the former leader is troubled by his legacy.

    Noting his decision to take responsibility, he said Nigerians who knew that he annulled the poll are no fools.

    Okunrounmu stressed: “We knew all the time that he annulled it. May be he is being worried by his conscience now that he is close to his grave. He is worried about his legacy.

    “I don’t think he is bearing full responsibility. He was saying the Emirs and Northern rulers then pushed him to do it. Then, he is still not bearing responsibility.

    “Before, it was a different story. He said young military officers like David Mark said if he allowed MKO Abiola to be president, they would shoot him. Which is the true story? David Mark who insisted that Abiola should not be president or Northern emirs? He needs to clarify that.

    “As president, the buck stopped at his desk. He should bear full responsibility. “

    IBB’s annulment damage now history, says Agbakoba

    A former President of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), Dr Olisa Agbakoba (SAN), yesterday said he was not interested in General Babangida’s apology.

    Agbakoba, a civil rights activist who fought the military as a leader of the Civil Liberties Organisation (CLO), said what matters is for the country to move forward.

    He said: “I am frankly not interested in IBB’s apologies as the damage is now part of Nigerian history.

    “My focus is on how Nigeria can learn lessons and become a truly great nation.

    “My policy therefore is to get behind anyone who is President of Nigeria to encourage him or her to place this great country where it truly belongs – one of the world’s great.”

    Peterside: Are we supposed to clap for Babangida?

    Founder of Stanbic Bank, Mr.Atedo Peterside, dismissed the IBB admission as a non-issue.

    “IBB admitting, in 2025, that MKO Abiola won the June 12 Presidential elections in 1993 is as significant as him admitting that night follows the day,” he said on X.

    Continuing, he said: “Are we supposed to clap because he told the truth after three decades?

    “Am I missing something?”

    We always knew my father won, says Hafsat Abiola

    Hafsat in a statement yesterday said Babangida’s public admission that her father won the 1993 election does not change the pain and injustice suffered by her family and Nigerians.

    She said: “When anyone mentions June 12, my mind always goes to MKO and Kudi. But June 12’s staying power was because the vote that Nigerians expressed that day was a vote for a better future and for unity.

    “MKO may have been the symbol of the Hope ’93 campaign but June 12 was about more than one man; it was about the promise of Nigeria that would deliver for Nigerians.

    “For those that kept expressing doubt that Nigerians had spoken so decisively on that day, I’m glad that General IBB’s admission that MKO won the election can now lay the matter to rest.

    “It’s sad that such a galvanising statement as the breakthrough vote for MKO should have been truncated by an unjust annulment.

    “But I will be forever grateful to both MKO and Kudi for not allowing their fears for their personal safety to stand in the way of the people’s desire for a better Nigeria.

    “May such commitment endure.”

     It’s healing to see IBB express regret – Abdulmumuni

    Abdulmumuni Abiola, like his sister, said he already knew that his late father won the election.

    “Even from the young age of eight when the elections were held, I knew my father had won the elections even before they were announced,” he said.

    “I think the second part was more important for me: the acknowledgement that he felt remorse for the actions that he had taken at the time and also his expression that if he had the opportunity to do it again, he would have taken a different path.

    “I think it’s important that we understand that we’re human and it’s in humans to err and what we need to do is to acknowledge when we make those mistakes and seek forgiveness.

    “So, for me, I think that was more important to me, the fact that he expressed that remorse towards the decision that he had made.

     “We now basically know that Abiola did win, and he won across Nigeria. We can talk about Abiola as the figurehead of the June 12th struggle, but what we need to understand is that the Nigerian people were the ones who gave him that mandate and they were the ones who believed in his vision. So, this is also healing for the Nigerian people as well to hear the head of state at the time say those words.”

    Abdulmumuni reflected on how the annulled election impacted his life.

    He said: “When we look at the events of June 12 1993, it brings up a lot of emotions for me. I remember after the election was annulled, I remember my father struggling to get his mandate, struggling to get justice for what he assumed was the wrongful annulment of the election.

    “It proceeded for him to get arrested. He eventually lost his life. At the time when he had gotten arrested, my mom had come out and tried to get him released, and ended up losing her life.

    “So, I know what was lost. I lost a companion in my mother, I lost a guardian, I lost a protector.

    “I basically became an orphan based on that event or that era. You see, I’ve always lived a life, my father was one to always turn your other cheek, in my religion it talks about forgiveness.

    “It talks about forgiving not necessarily for the perpetrator’s sake, but for your sake so you can actually move on.

    “And I think that this was traumatic for the Abiola family, but it was also traumatic for the Nigerian people as well.

    “You mentioned some of your colleagues, their experiences around that time and how they were so afraid. It was uncertain, the future was uncertain for a bunch of Nigerians.

    “We lost a lot of great Nigerian people who felt that Nigeria was not redeemable and they left the country. There was a lot of brain drain in that period as well.

    “So I know that there’s a lot of trauma that has come out, and I don’t think that there will be anything that can be said or done to alleviate that stress.

    “What I’ve tried to do in my life and in moving forward, especially as you can’t change the past, but we can only focus on the future.

    “I’ve tried to not dwell on it, I’ve acknowledged what had happened in the past, but not dwell on it and just try to see how I can use this anger, hurt, and frustration in a way that is productive and moves the nation forward.

    “I think that we can all sit here and talk about all the things that have gone wrong, but we have a nation to run. And we have issues that are pertinent at this time.”

    Gumsu Sani Abacha: God does not sleep

     Gumsu, in a series of posting on her X handle @G_sparking,between Thursday and yesterday said: Allah baya bacci fa!! Muyi hattara da duniya wallahi (God does not sleep. We should be careful with this world, I swear).

    In another, she just wrote ‘Weakling’, and in yet another one, she wrote ‘ABACHA’ with the emoji .

    How Abacha plotted to overthrow my govt, kill MKO —IBB

    Babangida in his memoirs also alleged that the late Abacha plotted to overthrow his administration and that the late military ruler had hatred for Abiola.

    He labelled Abacha one of his biggest headaches during his unending transition programme to civil rule.

    Admitting that though Abacha once saved his life and risked his life to ensure that he (Babangida) took over in1985, Babangida said the Kano born general was a complex character whose intention could not be easily understood.

    He wrote: “Without question, one of my biggest headaches at this time was Sani Abacha. I knew that Abacha was ambivalent about a return to civil rule. But I thought, in retrospect now, naively, that he would support our transition to civil rule programme.

    “As I said earlier, Abacha and I had come a long way. We were good friends, and he had indeed been nice to me. As I have said elsewhere, he saved my life once and also risked his life to ensure that I took over in 1985. I could never forget those details.

    “But it’s also correct that he was a complex character. He was capable of bottling up a lot inside without giving a hint of where he was. And then, suddenly, the bottle bursts, and we begin to see a different person.”

    He further said: “I obviously didn’t know everything about him! For instance, I was alarmed to discover that he and a handful of others mobilised negative opinions against me within the military, portraying me as the problem.

    “That campaign was geared towards a violent military coup to remove me as President forcefully.

    “But even more bizarre for me was my discovery of the loathing that Abacha had for the person of Abiola, whom I thought had a good relationship with him.”

  • MKO Abiola’s ally Su-Kazeem knocks Obasanjo over corruption comment

    MKO Abiola’s ally Su-Kazeem knocks Obasanjo over corruption comment

    A close associate of winner of June 12 Presidential election, Chief MKO Abiola, Alhaji Sufianu Kazeem, has knocked former President Olusegun Obasanjo over his comments on state of corruption.

    Obasanjo, while speaking at Chinua Achebe leadership forum at Yale University, America, said misery and corruption in Nigeria were there for every honest person to see, saying pervasive corruption and leadership failure havd characterised today’s Nigeria which he described as a failing state.

    The elder statesman dismissed Obasanjo’s comments as reckless and unstateman.

    He said since the nation got independence in 1960, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu remains the best President who is better prepared and understands many problems confronting the nation.

    Read Also: Reforms: Stay patient, hopeful in Tinubu administration, Renewed Hope GVTHC urges Nigerians

    He said no leaders, either civilian or military, have ever come close to being so bold and courageous to tackle problems facing the nation particularly corruption like Tinubu, wondering how Obasanjo, whom every Nigerians known his kind of leadership can call Tinubu a failure.

    He stated Tinubu had put the nation on the pedestrian of greatness that even the international community and the World Bank attest to. 

    He said despite not been a politician, he believes in renewed hope of the Federal Government under President Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

    He however urged Nigerians to be patient with Tinubu as things will be getting better, saying the nation’s needs the current sacrifices to survive.

  • How we can honour MKO Abiola – Adeleke

    How we can honour MKO Abiola – Adeleke

    Gov. Ademola Adeleke of Osun says conducting free and fair elections is the best way to honour the memory of the late Chief MKO Abiola and other heroes of democracy.

    Adeleke said this in a statement by his spokesperson, Mr Olawale Rasheed, to commemorate Democracy Day on Wednesday, in Osogbo.

    Abiola, the presumed winner of the annuled June 12, 1993 Presidential election, was arrested while trying to insist on his victory and died in custody in 1998.

    The 1993 election, though annuled by the then military government, is adjudged to be the freest and fairest so far in the nation’s history.

    This prompted the change in the celebration of Nigeria’s Democracy Day from May 29 to June 12, which the former President Muhammadu Buhari administration did in 2018.

    Adeleke said that free and fair elections remained the lifeline of any virile democracy.

    He acknowledged the sacrifices and struggles that paved the way for the return to civil rule in 1999.

    The governor called on politicians in the country to submit themselves to upholding the tenets of democracy, by respecting the will of the people.

    According to him, the political class must recommit to strengthening the country’s electoral system, to deliver credible elections and ensure that the will of the people is not subverted.

    ”Our best homage to our democratic heroes is our continued upholding of the basic tenets of democracy,” he said.

    The governor said that such tenets include free and fair elections and observance of rule of law.

    “We cannot at one hand celebrate Democracy Day and on the other hand undermine the democratic machine.

    “You cannot be applauding the great memories of the late Bashorun Abiola and at the same time be working against free and fair elections.

    “I call on leaders locally and nationally to rededicate ourselves to democratic ideals; the will of the people freely expressed must be accepted by genuine democrats.

    “Our electoral system must be strengthened to deliver credible elections,” he said.

    The governor said that under no circumstances should the will of the people be subverted.

    “Politicians must grow to know and accept that power flows from the people.

    “Rigging elections is an act of war against democracy. Genuine democrats accept electoral verdicts as a mark of respect for the voters, the ultimate holder of sovereignty.

    That’s what I did in 2018 when I was denied victory.

    “If there is any lesson June 12 every year is to teach us, it is that democracy thrives when electoral candidates bow to people’s will.

    “We must stop being autocratic in democratic garb,” he said.
    (NAN)