Tag: Mko Abiola

  • Remembering MKO Abiola’s transformer semiotics

    Remembering MKO Abiola’s transformer semiotics

    • By Banji Ojewale

    One of the captivating political campaign lines of MKO Abiola has been immortalized in a seminal work by Professor Tunde Ope-Davies (Tunde Opeibi) of the University of Lagos. Titled Discourse, Politics and the 1993 Presidential Election Campaign in Nigeria, the book documents the drive of the gladiators to secure the mandate of the electorate. Ope-Davies’ uncanny nose for hidden details smokes out Abiola’s rush for virtually every trick in the advertising books to outwit his main challenger, Bashir Tofa, of the National Republican Convention, NRC, leading Abiola to create the famous punchline on the transformer as a metaphor for abiding leadership. MKO, as he was fondly called, was of the Social Democratic Party, SDP. He is quoted by Ope-Davies (then known as Tunde Opeibi) as saying during his search for votes that all Nigeria needed to overcome its age-old statehood concerns was ‘one transformer’, one singular and enduring personality in the saddle whose beam of integrity would permeate all of society for salutary ripples in his days and beyond.

    So, Abiola had an ad with the kicker, Endless Power Interruptions, followed by the rider, All Nigeria needs is one transformer! In between, you have the semiotic message of a lit lantern in the midst of darkness ‘depicting poor power supply or the failure of … government to guarantee steady and regular power…to Nigerian homes.’

    Ope-Davies recalls how the subject of failed and flawed leadership is then broached in the body copy: ‘This country has the resources to ensure stable power supply. All it takes is one achiever who can transform what seems impossible to be possible. M.K.O. Abiola has the courage and honesty of purpose to unite us in a bold move to solve our problems… All Nigeria needs is one transformer… A transformer is the equipment that generates electricity in every neighbourhood. Without a transformer, there cannot be power supply. Often, officials of the company responsible for power supply blame lack of good or ageing transformer for their inability to ensure good and steady power. While suggesting that he would address the problem by providing the leadership that would ensure regular energy supply, he presents himself as the one transformer who would ‘transform’ the society. One could see the creativity in the use of social amenities to promote political candidate’s campaign messages. Instead of making promises in plain language, he appeals to the visual senses of the people.’

    This book on the June 12, 1993 poll was written in 2009 to chronicle the trajectory of a politician’s victory through ‘effective campaign strategies’. It salutes the people’s overwhelming trust in Abiola as their freely chosen leader.  But alas, Abiola’s triumph was aborted by the conspiracy and infighting among the military authorities and their civilian co-travellers. He wasn’t allowed to transform into the transformer he promised us. We’ve had to continuously mourn a doleful political leadership underhandedness that has followed Abiola’s loss. Instead of a ‘transformer’, we’ve have had pall-bearers giving us abyss darkness. Each departing gloom always gave birth to a blacker dimness, until finally, in Muhammadu Buhari, we were hit with a somnolent blindness that sent all the nation of 200 million plus to sleep for eight years. He reminded us of Rip Van Winkle, the character in Irving Washington’s short story who slept for 20 years and missed the American Revolution in 1776.

    Still, sitting at Abiola’s feet wasn’t a wasted time. We received the lesson of all time: a nation that slips at the leadership level is bound to trip and fall. You must get it right at the point where you’re choosing who to lead you. He’s the transformer who gives you and the entire society the light that leads you away from the pit of perdition.

    You don’t have him or her, you don’t have light. You may have all the resources of this world as our beloved Nigeria has; they would all come to zero if there’s no hero of a ‘transformer’ to show the way to exploit these assets for mass benefit. But if you have ‘zero’ or limited resources, a hardworking, innovative and selfless leader would bond with his or her people to readily create a mass of wealth surpassing the so-termed riches or minerals of an endowed nation bereft of a good leader, a transformer. It was the point Nigeria’s late novelist, Chinua Achebe, made in the book he published in 1983, The Trouble with Nigeria.

    We must begin to work harder at choosing our leaders, whether at the centre or at the wings, outposts or grassroots, seeing that’s the make-or-mar stage of the process of efficiently administering a society, its people and resources. That’s what also decides if that society would be a success or failure, if it would march into a prosperous and stable future or if it would just be taking unsteady baby steps with fears that it would be a matter of a few years for the legs to collapse and prevent further movement altogether.

    More than 60 years after so-called independence, Nigeria is still shady about its status: to stay together or break up, to shred its constitution or retain it, to run a presidential or parliamentary system, to be under an arrangement in which the majority become poorer and destitute while a minuscule steal state wealth with impunity or work for a truly just order, to create more states or not, to bring back the regional system or let it remain in the past?

    The weak and indifferent leaders we’ve had over the decades have been defeated by these demons, such that they’re recurring little devils that feature under every administration and in every age. Lay hold on the newspapers of the 70s through the 80s, 90s and the current century and you’d find the imps everywhere. No strong leader has emerged to rock the boat and change the order. Warped religion, corruption cronyism (nepotism), ethnic considerations, compromised (stained) leadership etc. combine to block such attempts. 

    Read Also: MKO Abiola’s ally, Su-Kazeem hails Tinubu’s democratic credentials

    We need leaders with character that emerge from a crucible of fire. They should pass the unbending integrity test. In their 2011 book, Segun Osoba, The Newspaper Years, Mike Awoyinfa and Dimgba Igwe, relate how late Babatunde Jose, a giant of Nigeria’s newspaper journalism, recruited his reporters who went on, not only to become the greatest in the industry, but also outside their discipline. Jose was unsparing and disruptive in his search for those who would mould the society through their reports.

    At an interview session, Jose wanted to know what a young potential reporter would do if, while he was making love with his wife, he heard a bang outside followed by a scream. One fellow said he’d disengage and shower before going to cover the event. Another said: ‘I won’t shower. I would just put on my pants and trousers and go.’ That’s the answer that made Jose’s day: Forsaking personal pleasure to serve the public. The book also records the case of the one who has an urgent journalistic assignment. But then here comes his pregnant wife; she is groaning, needing to be taken to the hospital. What’s the poor journalist going to do? Our fellow says he’d take his woman to the health facility and leave for the assignment after his wife delivers. He missed it, according to Jose. He said he’d tell the young man since he wasn’t a nurse, why would he wait at the hospital after taking her there? Jose said: ‘I was that harsh in my assessment of people’s attitude to work… (I looked for) those who were impersonal, who showed that the love for work transcends personal conveniences.’

    Nigerians must be harsher than Babatunde Jose. For, our task is to choose one who, having been seen to have transformed himself would be entrusted the task of exuding light to some 200m+ compatriots. Surely, much more of Spartan discipline and impersonal propensity would be required of him and his government than of journalists.

    Nigeria hasn’t had such leaders. It’s the reason challenges of decades past are still here in the 21st Century. Nations that started the race with us have left us far behind. We were destined to have a shot at the moon. But our leaders failed to envision a dream and a future as a John Kennedy had for the United States. Some of my compatriots say that it’s late to dream again of a transformer waking the giant, that there are no new territories to conquer.

    As an invincible optimist, I disagree.

    • Ojewale is a writer at Ota, Ogun State.  
  • Osinbajo: why we’re celebrating Democracy Day on June 12

    Vice President Yemi Osinbajo  on Tuesday spoke on the importance of the June 12 Democracy Day.

    He said the celebration of the day has attested to the President Muhammadu-led administration’s commitment to progressive ideals, “especially as it relates to the political history of the country”.

    Prof Osinbajo gave the explanation when he received at the Presidential Villa, Venezuelan Vice President, Aristobulo Isturiz, who is leading his country’s delegation to Nigeria’s Democracy Day.

    Mr. Isturiz is among world leaders at the head of their countries’ delegation attending the maiden June 12 Democracy Day activities in Abuja.

    Explaining Buhari administration’s beliefs in resolving some of the issues around the annulled June 12, 1993 presidential election, Osinbajo added: “One of the principal issues, politically, was the recognition of that election in 1993 which was won by, now late, Chief MKO Abiola, an important progressive opposition leader.

    “That is why we are celebrating June 12 as our new Democracy Day. So, we are really very happy that you are able to share with us a very special event – the celebration of our new democracy day.”

    On deepening ties between Nigeria and Venezuela, Prof. Osinbajo said: “We believe that the collaboration between our countries in the economy, culture and science, amongst others, will be useful to our people. We need to do a lot as there are many areas for potential cooperation including in agriculture, oil and gas and mining.”

    Read Also: Nigeria set for breakthrough, says Osinbajo

    Isturiz spoke on the need for improved cooperation between both countries, including the auspices of the non-aligned movement, describing Nigeria as an important mobiliser on the African continent.

    Receiving North Korean Vice Premier of North Korea, Mr Ri Ryong Nam, said the potentials for an enhanced cooperation between both countries were enormous.

    Osinbajo said: “I agree that we can work out a more dynamic model of cooperation, especially in agriculture and technology.

    “Food processing is one major area that we can look into. I hope we will be able to advance discussions on cooperation in the identified areas, and there are many other areas where we can deepen this cooperation.”

    The vice premier congratulated Nigeria on the occasion of the country’s Democracy Day.

    He said that his country acknowledged the efforts of the Federal Government under President Buhari to improve the economy and ensure socio-economic stability.

    Mr Ryong Nam said: “I am moved by the efforts made by your government to ensure social stability and unity. Your country has also achieved eye-catching successes, through reforms, in the economy, making Nigeria a leading economy in the region.”

  • June 12: Activists to honour Abiola

    Conveners of the ‘June 12 Democracy Movement of Nigeria’ an umbrella body for pro-democracy leaders, activists and stakeholders associated with the June 12 struggles yesterday unfolded their plan for the Democracy Day celebrations. The ceremony will be chaired by Prof. Wole Soyinka in Lagos.

    This followed the Federal Government’s recognition of June 12 as Nigeria’s Democracy Day and the late Chief Moshood Abiola as the winner of the presidential election conducted on that day in 1993.

    The Federal Government Intervention, according to President Muhammadu Buhari, was in endorsement of the democratic struggles for the revalidation of the free, fair, credible democratic elections, but annulled by former Military President Ibrahim Babangida.

    A statement by the conveners in Lagos said: “In appreciation of the endorsement and honour done to the struggles of the June 12 pro Democracy Movement by the Federal Government, the historic significance and wider embrace of this year’s commemoration, the June 12 Democracy Movement of Nigeria has designed the 2019 nationwide celebrations to be preceded by a major Breakfast Session of Prayers, Tributes and Honours slated for MKO Abiola’s Residence in Lagos.

    “The breakfast event, which is being planned to affirm and honour MKO Abiola posthoumously as President Elect of Nigeria, has been scheduled to hold between 8am and 12noon to allow majority of our pro democracy stakeholders and allies join other government planned ceremonies afterwards. To this end the Breafast ceremony has been slated to hold as follows:

    “The date is Wednesday, June 12, 2019. The venue is MKO Abiola Democracy Centre, 46/48 MKO Abiola Crescent, off Toyin Street, Ikeja, Lagos

    Read Also: Hoodlums invade MKO Abiola’s property

    “The theme of this year’s anniversary, which is to be chaired by Nobel Laureate, Prof Wole Soyinka, Chairman of National Liberation Council of Nigeria, NALICON is: MKO Abiola, Hope ’93 and the prospects of a prosperous Democracy in Nigeria: How far? How well?

    Speakers include; Chief Emeka Anyaoku, Chief Ayo Adebanjo, Admiral Ndubuisi Kanu, Gen Alani Akinriade, Commodre Dan Suleiman, Bishop Mathew Kuka, Prof Pat Utomi, Col Umar Abubarkar Dangiwa, Dr. Olisa Agbakoba (SAN), Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, Dr. Orji Uzor Kalu, Comrade Frank Kokori, Senator Shehu Sani, Pastor Tunde Bakare, Mrs Ayo Obe, Dr. Mrs. Oby Ezekwesili, Mr. Femi Falana, Madam Ganiat Fawehinmi, Bashorun Dele Momodu, Comrade Olusegun Mayegun, Festus Keyamo, Alhaji Shetimma Yerima and Comrade Josef Eva.”

  • Breaking:Late MKO Abiola’s family moves to reclaim Ayobo land

    Members of the Late MKO Abiola family are set to enforce a court judgement that confers ownership of the over 400 acres of land in Ayobo, Lagos, on the late business mogul cum politician, MKO Abiola.

    The family members say they are willing to compensate people who had wrongly bought the land from the wrong people.

    The family is presently addressing the press in Iyalla street, Ikeja, Lagos.

    Details shortly.

  • Abiola’s son, others testify on Buhari’s strides

    Jamiu Abiola, a son to late Chief MKO Abiola, has slammed former President Olusegun Obasanjo for “benefitting on his father’s blood” but neglecting to recognise his contribution to Nigeria’ democracy.

    MKO Abiola, the presumed winner of the June 12, 1993 presidential election that was annulled, died fighting for his mandate while Obasanjo was elected President in 1999 upon the country’s return to democracy.

    The deceased son spoke on Sunday in Abuja at an event tagged “Testimonies of Change”, designed to showcase the achievements of President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports the event, organised by the Ministry of Information and Culture, witnessed personal testimonies by beneficiaries of government programmes.

    Abiola, who was among the testifiers, said for over two decades, Nigerians gave mandate to his father who he was “denied and killed”, the family suffered emotional and psychological torture.

    He said his mother, Kudirat Abiola, who also fought for his father’s mandate, was also killed in the process leaving seven children behind.

    Jamiu said that Obasanjo benefitted from the democracy struggle by his late father and mother when he was elected as Executive President in 1999.

    He said in spite of coming from the same region and state as his late father and mother, Obasanjo declined to recognise their contribution to the enthronement of democracy.

    He, therefore, commended President Muhammad Buhari, who after over two decades, recognised his father and declared June 12, national Democracy Day.

    “What President Buhari has done, despite not being a Yoruba man, has ended the emotional and psychological trauma my family has gone through all these years,” he said.

    Jamiu also testified to Buhari’s giant strides in reaching out to the poor people and improving on infrastructure like power, roads, rails.

    He said June 12 which his parents paid the supreme sacrifice for, was about the poor and the masses and Buhari had become a replica of the mantra.

    He said Buhari deserved a second term, therefore Nigerians should come out to vote for him in the forthcoming election.

    Another testifier, who represented the 564 hitherto abandoned pensioners of the Aladja Steel Rolling Mills in Delta, described the President as “God sent”.

    Quoting from the Holy Bible, Proverb 29: 2, he said, “When the righteous are in authority, the people rejoice, but when the wicked beareth rule, the people mourn”.

    The testifiers said that for decades of previous administrations, they had wallowed in abject poverty and suffered but the Buhari administration wiped away their tears by paying the pensions owed them for decades.

    The representative of the ex-workers of the Nigeria Airways, liquidated in 2004, said 800 of their members died waiting for their pensions.

    He said Buhari promised to pay them in 2015 and had fulfilled his promise, thereby bringing succour, life and hope to them.

    The testifier disclosed that the ex-Nigeria Airways workers would organise solidarity rally in support of Buhari’s reelection in Lagos and Kano.

    Mrs Regina, who had been frying Akara (beans cake) in Nyanyan, a suburb of FCT for 30 years, said she benefitted from the Federal Government’s Traders Money programme.

    She said it was the first time any government had supported her petty trade and commended the Buhari administration for the intervention.

    The elderly woman spoke in Igbo language with her son, a graduate of University of Benin, who interpreted in English.

    The woman disclosed that she trained her three children to university level with her trade and urged the administration to provide employment for them.

    Mr Livinus Okoh, the Chairman of Rice Growers Farmers Association in Ebonyi, said the Anchor Borrower Programme of the administration recorded tremendous achievements on local production of the staples towards self-sufficiency.

    He declared the support of rice farmers nationwide for the re-election of the president.

    Mr Aruwawa Johnson from Warri said “opposition must stay clear of Buhari’s reelection” because Nigerians are behind him.

    Johnson said the completed rail project in Aladja in Delta to Itakpe in Kogi had impacted positively on the lives of the people who were predominantly farmers.

    Monarchs, including Oba of Sao, Bamidele Alabi, Oba of Jebba, Abdulkadir Adebara and the Baale of Bodesaadu, Bolakale Yusuff, all in Kwara, commended the Buhari government for the rehabilitation of Ilorin-Jebba-Mokwa road.

    They said that the road had taken many lives and goods in carnage when it was abandoned by previous administrations.

    They thanked the President for coming to the rescue of their people and the road users.

    Mrs Oloyede, and Wasiu Oriade, beneficiaries of Bank of Industry social welfare scheme; Dike Charles, Abubakar Haruna, Aliyu Hassan and Olalekan Ayodele who are NPOWER beneficiaries in various vocations,  testified to the success of government programmed through its intervention.

     

  • ‘Atiku’s restructuring is deceitful’

    A Southwest group comprising all political party supporters under the platform of Southwest Frontiers Group for Buhari 2019 in Thursday said the restructuring being canvassed  by the People’s Democratic Party(PDP) Alhaji Atiku Abubakar was a ruse aimed at garnering votes from unsuspecting Nigerians.

    Besides, the group criticized the pan-Yoruba socio-political organisation, Afenifere for declaring support for Atiku.

    According to the group, the Afenifere was not speaking for the people of the South-West on their choice for the next month poll.

    The group hailed President Muhammadu Buhari for his excellent performance,stressing that he deserved re-election.

    Speaking to reporters in Akure, the Ondo state capital, the spokesman of the group, Omowumi Adebayo said the restructuring planned to carry out by Atiku was deceitful.

    Adebayo said the people of the South-West would not be part of the such ‘arrangee’ restructuring.

    Read Also: Atiku blames APC for joblessness, insecurity

    He said Afenifere was not speaking for the interest of the South-West people, but only fighting for their pockets.

    His words “We in Yorubaland are always in the progressives’ camp since the days of Awolowo. These people are deceiving us that they are progressives but they are not.

    Also speaking, the coordinator of the group, Joseph Ayodele said those behind the restructuring compromised the June 12 election, won by late Chief MKO Abiola.

    He said If Atiku could work with Obasanjo for eight years and described as being corrupt by the former President, Afenifere ought to distance themselves from such an individual.

    Ayodele pointed out that ” If the PDP ruled for 16 years and Atiku was the vice president for eight years out of the 16 years and could not restructured the country then,he asked what type of restructuring does he (Atiku) want to give the country now

    The group urged the people in the South-West to vote for Buhari, alleging that Atiku would draw Nigeria backward with his flair for corruption.

    Members came from Ondo, Oyo, Osun, Ekiti, Lagos and Ogun state in solidarity with Buhari’s reelection bid.

  • ‘Spill the ink, not the blood’ – Bakare

    Renowned preacher, Pastor Tunde Bakare, has urged Nigerians to toe the path of peace and shun violence as the 2019 polls draws closer, saying: “spill the ink, not the blood”.

    He made the observations at the formal presentation of three books by the Ovation Publisher and Chief Executive Officer of Ovation Media Group, Bashorun Dele Momodu, in honour of the late Chief MKO Abiola.

    While commending the media for its role in aiding the victory of President Muhammadu Buhari at the 2015, Bakare, who gave the keynote address, entitled: “The pen is mightier than the sword”, urged Nigerians, especially the press and the intelligentsia, to play a pivotal role in setting the agenda for the polity in 2019.

    “To a nation in the throes of violent agitations, to the people of our nation who want their fair share, and to young people running out of patience, the lesson from Dele Momodu is very clear and simple: spill the ink, not the blood; paint an indelible picture of the nation you desire, and work tirelessly to ensure its realization, knowing that the greatness of our nation depends on it,” he stated.

    Bakare observed succinctly that media has a critical role to play in driving the peace of the nation, urging that they “intensify efforts to ensure that the welfare and security of our people, as well as the overall development of our nation, become the main discourse at this pivotal moment. This is the purpose of any government worthy of the name”.

    Read Also: Bakare: Nigeria must restructure

    Stating the efforts of Momodu in immortalizing the memory of the late Abiola were noteworthy, he praised the posthumous the conferment of Nigeria’s highest national honour on Abiola, saying: “It is an honour first to the man who paid the supreme price to pave the way for Nigeria’s democracy, and then to the heroes and heroines who stood up behind him, including those in the Fourth Estate of the Realm who marshaled the written and spoken word against tyranny”.

    In attendance were members of family of martyr, led by Dr Doyin Abiola, who urged Nigerians not to allow a repeat of the June 12 saga, stating that: “This must not happen again. It depends on you”.

    On his part, Momodu observed that: “Nigeria died the day we killed June 12”.

    Dignitaries at the event included the Ooni of Ife, Oba Okunade Sijuwade, Olori Ladun Sijuade; the All Progressive Congress (APC) National Leader, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, who was represented Prof Adebayo Williams; former Vice President Atiku Abubakar former Lagos State Governorship candidate, Mr Jimi Agbaje; former Anambra Governor Peter Obi; Finance Minister, Mrs Kemi Adeosun represented by Mrs Oluyemi Akintunde; Sen. Tokunbo Afikuyomi; the Orangun of Oke-Ila, Oba Adedokun Abolarin, and former Minister of State for Defence, Senator Musiliu Obanikoro.

    Others were top industrialist and Chairman of the Eleganza Group of companies, Chief Rasaq Akanni Okoya; oil magnate Femi Otedola; billionaire chairman of Globacom, Otunba Mike Adenuga Jr; renowned businesswoman, Hajia Bola Shagaya (the managing director of Practiol Limited, the founder of Fotofair); National Chairman of the National Conscience Party (NCP), Dr. Yunusa Tanko; National Publicity Secretary of All Progressive Congress (APC), Mallam Bolaji Abdullahi; Otunba Bimbo Ashiru; a onetime Executive Director of NITEL, Chief Ezekiel Fatoye; former beauty queen, Nike Oshinowo, and Knight International Journalism Fellow Declan Okpalaeke.

  • MKO Abiola remembered 

    There have been several comments on the recent recognition by President Muhammadu Buhari of the victory of Chief MKO Abiola in the presidential election of 1993. I congratulate our president and the Abiola family for the appropriate though belated recognition of what happened in history.

    Some have suggested that the action did not go far enough and that the man should be declared president-elect posthumously and the details and tallies of the votes declared. I say to those who say this that half a loaf is better than none. Sule Lamido, former governor of Jigawa and foreign minister has re-echoed what Babangida said was one of the reasons for cancelling the election which was that the federal government owed Abiola’s company N45 billion for telecommunications job and that if Abiola was sworn in, he would have had to pay himself that humongous debt owed his company. He made a valid point about paying Abiola’s family the debt owed their father. It is only fair.

    In the struggle for exercising the mandate freely given to him by millions of Nigerians, Abiola’s businesses employing hundreds of thousands of Nigerians were deliberately destroyed. These businesses ranged from book and news paper publishing, agriculture, shipping, oil and gas, bakery, estate development and so on with tentacles spread across Africa, Middle East, Europe and America. The federal government should look into how it can ameliorate the hardship of the Abiola’s family by liquidating the debt owed him. Never in the history of this country has a single man done so much in the areas of religion, sports and journalism to bring the country together as Abiola did. At a time he was funding the training of the national soccer team and he had his own football club and was supporting athletes to the extent that he was named the greatest backer of sports in Africa and not just in Nigeria. He was also building mosques and churches all over Nigeria. He was the largest financier of the Jama’atu Nasril Islam (JNI), a body which brought all Nigerian Muslims together.

    I remember him asking me to explain to him in 1991 the problem between Yemen and Somalian refugees who were being sunk in the Red Sea by Yemeni navy because they were not wanted in their country. Abiola was  much pained by the fact that Muslims were doing this to fellow Muslims that he travelled to Saudi Arabia to put pressure on the Yemenis. He was to be shocked later in 1993 when his Muslim brothers put ethnicity over religion by withdrawing support from him after he had won the presidential election because of the accident of his birth in southern Nigeria.

    I first met Abiola in 1977 in Lagos. I was a senior lecturer then in the University of Lagos and I wanted to start on the side so to say, a publishing company to augment my miserable salary as an academic. Since I was a writer myself, I thought I could edit other people’s manuscripts and publish them under my company’s name. I was introduced to Abiola as somebody who could help. His answer was that I should come and work for him full time. That put paid to my plan because I was not ready to abort my academic career. The next time I met him was 1988. I was special adviser to General Ike Nwachukwu, then minister of Foreign Affairs. Abiola had the idea that we should campaign for reparations from the West for centuries of slave trade and slavery for the black man and decades of western colonialism. We bought the idea which Abiola said he was ready to bankroll. This was at a period of so-called Structural Adjustment Programme (SAP) forced on us by the IMF and the World Bank because of the debt overhang in our country and in Africa generally. We felt we should fight back with cry for reparations and that rather than owing western creditor countries and their financial institutions, they were the ones who needed to pay historic debt of mans inhumanity to man and genocide of the cruel deaths during the trans Atlantic transportation of Africans to the Americans and the white man’s introduction of guns and fuelling of inter-tribal wars in Africa to aid the supply of slaves to their ships waiting on the coast. In this way, we argued, they ruined Africa, weakened us for eventual defeat and military subjugation and colonial rule and planted the seed of racism in which Africans were traded as chattels.

    The late professors JF Ade Ajayi and Ali Mazrui were recruited to the cause to provide unassailable academic backing for the project. The reparations struggle became a continental project supported by the Organisation of African Unity (OAU/ AU).

    In 1991 while I was ambassador in Germany, Abiola phoned me that he needed to see Aliyu Mohammed, then secretary to the federal government who was on admission in a hospital in Wiesbaden, Germany but that he had no visa. He was flying in his private jet en route to London and wondered if I could arrange for a visa waiver for a few hours.  It was a difficult request but we pulled strings and it was agreed with the German Auswartiges Amt (foreign ministry) that I could pick Abiola in my representational car, take him to the hospital to visit his friend return him to the airport and that was what I did. Needless to say he was immensely grateful. That same year, he called me that I should contact Mercedes-Benz in Stuttgart for the price of an armoured car.  I asked him what he wanted to do with it he said General Obasanjo was attacked by robbers on his way to Ilorin inside a Peugeot 404.  He said it would have been a national humiliation for Nigeria’s former head of state to be killed just like that. I sent him the details of what he asked me but I am not in a position to say if the car was purchased and given to his friend Obasanjo.

    I was not surprised that he was elected president in 1993 because this was a man who genuinely cared for others. When I was forced out of my job in a hurry in 1995 as a NADECO ambassador and returned to Nigeria in 1995, Abiola was already in military detention without trial for treason for declaring himself president according to the will of Nigeria’s people. Question of my seeing him in prison did not arise and I had given interviews about how the policy of the then Abacha government would lead to isolation and alienation of our nation from the international community. I did not know I was a marked man. I travelled abroad in December 1997 and on my way back in 1998 was picked up at the airport and separated from my late wife and confined in military detention on Child Street in Apapa, Lagos. I stayed with eight other people in small office meant for one person during working hours but where we slept on the floor at night. There was no provision for food and since I was not prepared for my ordeal, I had no money on me. I would have died of hunger but for the generosity of Brigadier Oviawe, a fellow detainee who shared the food brought daily for him by his wife. Fellow detainees included Chief Durojaiye and one Moshood Fayemiwo, who I understood was a journalist. There were many young army officers ranging from lieutenant to colonel and some businessmen. At a point I started hallucinating that could I have been in a coup plot without my being conscious of it? One day, the camp commandant Lieutenant – Colonel Omenka presented us to his boss, Brigadier Sabo Ibrahim and when he was asked who I was, he casually said I was one of the professors throwing bombs in Lagos. I screamed that if that was true I should be tried and executed immediately. They both laughed because they knew they were lying.

    I was subsequently released – I heard – because of the intervention of people like Chief Shonekan, late Ambassador Hamza Ahmadu and General Ike Nwachukwu.

    Fayemiwo my young fellow detainee who was in underground detention who we were told had turned grey because of lack of sunlight and had converted to Christianity from Islam had prophesied that Abacha would die before October 1998. I was still being visited by sympathizers when the news of Abacha’s death was announced. I thought Abiola would be speedily released to go home to be with his family but alas it was not to be and he continued to be kept until his suspicious death in front of an American delegation a month after Abacha. One hopes the action taken by President Buhari would lead to national healing. Some of us are still alive by the grace of God and for me this grace is sufficient.

  • There’ll never be another MKO Abiola, says Akerele

    He said that you can convey anything, any information, the moment you know what you want to talk about, you just scribble it and you can pass it on. In journalism parlance, when you use bullet points, codes. So, I would do this coding thing. I will now squeeze the paper in my palm. So, all I needed to do was just handshake with MKO. He would then stretch and put it in his pocket. So, he will now reply through our insiders. So, that was how I was able to get letters to so many people, Gani Fawehinmi, Chief Osoba, his wife. You know, some letters came out. That was the channel we were using.

    When the letters were coming out, were they firing some people, were they asking questions?

    They were mad but then we kept doing it. But eventually, we got caught. My driver got careless one morning. He was coming from the run, the normal run. He was going to see our man. So, they had a meeting point. Unfortunately that morning, Abacha was leaving his secret rest house. So, the cars passed by my driver. They knew my own car, the wagon. So, one of them was smart enough to spot, this is Olu’s car. So, the big man had gone so, they call them ‘Road Open, Road Close’. So it one of those ‘Road Open Road Close’ people saw the car. The boy (driver) ought to have just driven off. I think he got scared, so, he parked. So, they now went to him and they saw him, ‘oh, na you. What are you doing here? ’ He got jittery. So, they searched the car and they saw my notes. When they got the notes, they captured the boy, they carried the car, got to the house. Then, one of our friends in the house called me and said, ‘Olu, your time is up. Oya move. ’  So, the choice for me was to either run or stay. So, I considered many things. I decided to wait because MKO was still there. So if ran to America, I had two visas anyway. I had British, I had American. Too many things were involved for me to now leave. That would be like leaving the man because nobody could get that kind of network we had. So, I had to stay back. So, I was waiting for them. The commissioner called and said, ‘Olu, where are you?’ I said, ‘I’m in my house now.’ He said, ‘we want you to come and see some people. Where is your place?’ He now sent that Abba.

    Did he not know your place?

    Where they park two cars every night.

    Just to tell the viewers. He is the one that alerted me to the fact that two cars, two SSS vehicles  were trailing me around town when I was Managing Editor of Concord in Abuja. I will always thank you for that

    It’s one of those things. Here we are today. If they had captured you or maimed you, would you be here today? Would I be here? No. So, let’s thank God for that. So, the Abba that later became IG came. He was the one who arrested me. Then, he arrested all the cars in the house. So, they took me there. I thought it was a joke. I didn’t know that was the beginning of the end. That was the last time I spent in freedom.

    So, once they held you, there was no access to MKO

    Yes.

    You couldn’t access him because you were also incarcerated

    First of all, I spent some days at the Villa. Then, they transferred me to SSS. Then from SSS, I started building network again. So, from there, they took me to Yakubu Gowon barracks where I had field day. They were a bit careless. In fact, I got to know the barber.

    Who was working on MKO

    Yes, I said that is good. Then, as providence would have it, the driver to Abacha happened to know me. He too had problem with Mustapha, so Mustapha locked him up in the same place. So, the fellow was biter. So, he told me so many things. He didn’t know he was giving me information. So, I now built more network and through that barber, I was able to reach out to MKO. So, MKO now asked the fellow to ask that man the name he calls me to be sure it’s me. The fellow came and I told him and he told him (MKO). Then we linked up again.

    So, from detention, you were also connecting and working with people outside.

    Yes.

    What was the nature of your network?

    Well, to get what people were doing outside, the NADECO people, the things people were doing, just to encourage him. Because without information, you know that kind of man. So, we were able to buoy up his confidence. So, all the harassment they were given him to either truncate the thing or leave it, the thing did not jell with him.

    Now, when you were seeing him in detention, how would you describe the state in which he was?

    You know he had heart problem, BP, which has been his ailment for years. And he has been managing it. So Falomo was always around to give him the medication. So, he was in good spirit because, at least he knew more than some of them knew. The question now was Abiola had goodwill. Some big men were even getting across to him. So, he was hopeful that something would happen. So, while that one was going on, I made runs to IBB to let him know that his friend was expecting him to call this thing off, tell Nigerians that we’re sorry. And then the thing would be off. And I met with IBB 16 times in Minna and he knew I had access. In fact, there was a time they had one-on-one. So, I took IBB’s number, gave it to someone to give to him (Abiola). So, we thought with that, IBB would come down and do the right thing. But he procrastinated till the very end.

    What was the nature of your interaction with him? You visited with him, you had conversation. What was the spirit of that conversation with IBB?

    He was trying to… you know him now.

    He was charming as ever, warm

    He was saying, ‘it’s not me. You see, this country is big. I’ve been everywhere.’ Of course, he kept saying the same thing. And I knew he was under pressure. The IBB we knew before the crisis was not the man I was seeing.

    Now, people forget that IBB and Abiola were very chummy. In fact, when the Orkar coup happened, Abiola took his family, I don’t know if you followed him that day, to go and meet IBB to show solidarity. This was how close they were.

    Yes, that was what I tried to do, that follow-up that I was doing. People know you to be friends. Why can’t you just do something, just own up, I made a mistake. But he said, ‘Generals don’t own up.’

    That’s what he said

    He said ‘Generals don’t own up’ and then he’s not alone in this thing. It’s a massive thing and there are patriots. You know, he would regale you with all these highfalutin.

    Abiola was very human and when you’re in pressure like this, historically, sometimes, you’re afflicted with self-doubts an say, ‘do you think I should sit with these people and find a way out.’ Did you see such moments with him?

    Yes, Abiola said he wrote letters to Abdulsalam Abubakar and made representations to other Generals; Mark, and visited him later. That it’s a question of sitting down to work this thing out, that they were not ready. You know they were enjoying the something now. So, they didn’t want to leave it. Then, this brings me to one we did and it’s a pity that it didn’t work out.

    Okay, I was going to ask that question.

    At a stage when nothing was moving on again, the Supreme Court was not sitting, it’s like the man (Abiola) had been abandoned there. Then some of his friends approached me, both in the military, retired and then civilians. They sent someone to me to meet them somewhere. Getting there, I saw an American diplomat that I knew had been coming to court. So, they now raised the issue of spiriting Abiola out of that place. And they thought it could be done.

    Which was a kind of jailbreak

    Yes, something like that if they could get the man. But then we need the support of then Big (Uncle) Sam, Abiola’s friends in America. So, we parleyed over it and it was decided that I should get in touch with his PA (Personal Assistant) in the US. There’s one Randy Echols. He was my opposite number in Washington. They now suggested that the man should get in touch with Abiola’s friends at the Capitol so they would work out the thing. So, they took me to a secret house (in Abuja), gave me a secure phone. Surprisingly, I was on to Randy Echols.

    Where were you then? Was it the time you were still in jail?

    No, it was when I came out. I was still working then. They didn’t know how serious we were. So, we got Randy and the idea was that Randy should link up with his friends over there, that’s Abiola’s friends and then with the military. There’s one ship mooring somewhere in the ocean. So, a small plane would come and land in a neighbouring town or even in Abuja. It’s a question of taking Abiola from that jail, four, five hours, he’s into the plane and then, the plane flies out. So, that was the idea. But when the thing was discussed with the late MKO through the window as usual, he said, ‘it’s a dangerous thing to do ooo.’ And that if his friends or my friends insisted, we should leave out his children and members of his family out of it because the Abacha he knew would not hesitate to wipe out his family and then the families of those people guarding him.

    But we thought it is fool-proof. We thought we could do it because they were not so popular, except for those who were making money from them. So, we thought Randy Echols would do the right thing. Then, just for him to ensure he was talking to the right person, me – I had met him twice when he came with MKO to Abuja when things were going (okay) – So, I spoke to the man. I now said, for him to confirm my identity with Doyin (Abiola), our MD (Concord Press) and then Alhaji Akinteye, that’s the PA to MKO at his office.

    This thing I’m going to say would embarrass some people but they just have to take it like that. Instead of talking to Doyin or Akinteye, Randy now called Wuraola Abiola, that is Kola’s youngest sibling to ask about me, ‘who is this Olu?’ Then Wura now called Agbo, the MD of RCN, ‘who is this Olu?’ Then Agbo now called Kola. Then Kola now called, ‘Olu, what’s going on? They said there is one Olu making enquiries about some things.’ I said, ‘Oh, is that so? I don’t know anything about it.’ So, I denied it. So, that was the end of the thing.

    So, the word has gone out.

    Maybe he (Randy) thought it’s a family thing. He should have known with experience that it’s not a tea party that we were planning. So, I went back to Oga, saying ‘so,so,so and so.’ He said he said it. He said ‘Alhamdulillah’, thank God. Because if we had spirited him out, there would have been blood because Abacha would react violently and then more people would die.

    He didn’t want his family members to know about the plan so that their innocence would keep Abacha away from them.

    Yes, because the plan then was that if were able to get MKO out, those staffers around him would go with us, me too I follow. It had to be a clean sweep.

    That means you would have just gone too because if you were around, you’d be gone

    So, when the thing now failed, then we said ‘it’s from God.’ So we dropped the idea.

    You were also fortunate that nobody knew that that plan ever happened at that time because even if the family…

    They (family) didn’t even know the details. The details, I’m saying it now. Nobody knew the details.

    But they knew that something was going on with Olu

    Randy called Wura. Wura called Agbo. Agbo called Kola. Kola asked me and I said nothing. So, I went back to the big man and he said, ‘thank God, it didn’t work out.’

    He didn’t even let even a scintilla of the idea to go out because that would have been fatal

    You know the man (Abacha.) So, that was how far we got.

    But, you give the impression that Abiola was not too sure that he wanted it or not

    No, he didn’t want to go.

    He didn’t want to go?

    Yes.

    But, if you guys insisted

    It was we who, I think, they were asking me to pressurise him. And I thought I was doing my job to get him out of that place. But now, he now opened my eyes to the larger picture – my family and the family of those people around him – their villages, their men. That man (Abacha) would roll the tank all over the place. So, if he now comes out as president, over the dead body of his own children? So, when we say the thing has flopped, he was happy.

    That was interesting. Now, tell us, many people talk about Abiola. Abiola grew up a poor man. He was dirt poor. He used to talk about dancing in order to get balls of eba and amala to feed his family. What kind of person was the Abiola you interacted with?

    Well I should put the question back to you because you interacted with him.

    Not as much as you did

    Yes, but for me, that was like there was never an Abiola before I knew him. And there would never be anyone like that. The only person close to him, you know him. I won’t mention his name. So, the question now is a good man would come once in a while. God sent him here and he did what he had to do and he left. He affected lives and he made things happen. For him, there is no problem. When they said he was not going to win, he said, what are they talking about? He said, ‘let’s start the game joor, you will see.’ He said he’s going to beat Tofa in his village.  And he did.  That’s the kind of spirit he had. For me personally, I met him as a chief correspondent.

    A chief correspondent in Sokoto

    In Sokoto, yes. I did something innocuous and he took it big.

    I always tell a story which I put in my column of a story I did about a Lebanese family in Apapa who were displaced, they were suffering and I wrote it in African Concord. And two weeks later, somebody from the family came to thank me for bringing the story to the attention of Abiola. I said, I never brought the story to the attention of Abiola because they were rehabilitated. Everybody of the family was taken care of and they were thanking me. Abiola never called me. He just read the story and found out where the family was and rehabilitated.

    That’s why I said you’re in the position to describe him. I was a bloody chief correspondent when the NPN (National Party of Nigeria) people were to hold their convention in faraway Argungu village. So, they were all there. He was there as chairman of Ogun NPN, I think. And then, I think the late Alhaja Simbiat, that’s Kola’s mum, was the vice chairman. So, they were there together with the secretary, one Lawal. So, they gave us a press village. So, we were there and then you know, for Concord people then, we were the only reporters with cars. And I had a brand new Beetle. So, I drove my car to his place to go and greet the big MKO, my publisher. So, I met him discussing with the late (Shawu), minister for communications. So, immediately he saw me, I said I’m so, so and so. He said, ‘oh, my friend.’ I said, ‘who is your friend? Your employee.’ He embraced me. Then, I said, what kind of thing is this? Who is your friend? Can you see the connection.

  • Lagos Assembly commends Buhari for honouring MKO Abiola

    To host Osinbajo, Naa’ba for 3rd anniversary

    Lawmakers at the Lagos State House of Assembly have commended President Muhammadu Buhari for honouring the  winner of the June 12, 1993 Presidential Elections, the late Chief MKO Abiola.

    Raising the issue as a matter of urgent public importance, Majority Leader, Hon. Sanai Agunbiade said it was gratifying that President Buhari recognised Abiola as a hero of democracy with an award of Grand Commander of the Federal Republic (GCFR) reserved for presidents of the country.

    According to him, “President Buhari has crowned the agitations of the Lagos State House of Assembly over the years that the late Chief MKO Abiola should be recognized.

    “We are glad with what President Buhari did on June 4, 2018. The President did what the presidents that have ruled Nigeria since 1999 failed to do, so we are glad that our dreams have finally been realised,” he said.

    The Speaker, Hon. Mudashiru Obasa while supporting the issue on behalf of other members of the Assembly, stated that the House had always been canvassing the recognition of Chief MKO Abiola and other unsung heroes of democracy.

    Read Also: Lagos Assembly to review pension law

    He said that it was worthy of note to commend President Muhammadu Buhari for the action, adding that he never expected Buhari to make such move as a former military president, who later became civilian president.

    Obasa added that by recognising the winner of the June 12,1993 presidential election,  Buhari has advanced the nation’s national value and promoted her national unity.

    The Speaker then directed the Clerk of the House,  Mr. Azeez Sanni to write a letter to President Muhammad Buhari to commend him for the action.

    Moreover, the Chief Whip, Hon. Rotimi Abiru gave a report on the National Convention of the All Progressives Congress (APC), which held in Abuja on Saturday 23 and Sunday 24, June,  2018.

    Abiru stated that most members of the Lagos State House of Assembly were at the convention and commended the leaders for its success.

    Obasa then directed the Clerk of the House, Mr. Azeez Sanni to write letters of congratulation to all the leaders of the party, while he commended it’s National Leader, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

    The House then adjourned to Friday 29, June 2018 by 2:00pm, when it would be marking it’s third anniversary with the nation’s Vice President, Professor Yemi Osinbajo and former speaker of the Federal House of Representatives, Hon. Ghali Umar Naa’ba as guests speakers.