Tag: ordeal

  • My June 12 ordeal, by Kanu

    My June 12 ordeal, by Kanu

    A National Democratic Coalition (NADECO) chieftain, Air Marshal Ndubusi Kanu, has reflected on the annulment of the June 12, 1993 presidential election by former Military President Ibrahim Babangida, stressing that the military betrayed Nigerians.

    The former military governor of Imo and Lagos states, who participated in the anti-military protests, said the annulment drew the country back in the march to democracy.

    He spoke with reporters in Lagos on his ordeals under the Abacha government, following the intensification of the call for the de-annulment of the historic poll.

    NADECO’s National Secretary, Mr. Ayo Opadokun, said members of the pro-democracy group would storm Epetedo on Lagos Island tomorrow for the annulment’s 20th anniversary and the 19th anniversary of the June 11, 1994 Epetedo Declaration by the business mogul and Social Democratic Party (SDP) presidential candidate, the late Chief MKO Abiola, who was believed to have won the historic election.

    He said NADECO would bounce back to resume its unfinished business of clamouring for a Sovereign National Conference (SNC) to discuss the issues germane to peaceful co-existence and national unity.

    Said he: “We want to save Nigeria from this imminent Mutual Assured Destruction (MAD). Asari Dokubo is saying if Dr. Goodluck Jonathan does not continue as the President in 2015, there will be problem. The North is saying there will be problem if power does not return to them. We must do the needful. This system is unsustainable, because of the lopsidedness of the structure.”

    Kanu recalled that the military had subscribed to a transition programme, which he lamented, was truncated by Gen. Babangida. He also recounted that after the late Gen. Sani Abacha sacked the Interim National Government (ING) headed by Chief Ernest Shonekan and pronounced himself as the Head of State, he started to harass, oppress and repress the pro-democracy forces for their clamour for the restoration of Abiola’s mandate.

    Kanu, who was reluctant to disclose the details of the bruises he suffered under the despotic military regime, said: “They came to my house in the morning for a search, led by someone, who ended up in the long run to become a DIG in this country before he died in a crash. Also, there was a CSP, who I still relate with. They took me to the Force Headquarters. They asked whether I was carrying arms and ammunition. I said no. Then, they brought out a sheet for me to write a statement. They brought out a document, which they said contained the massive importation of arms and ammunition by the NADECO and elimination of anybody, who was against June 12. I told them that if I had prepared they would not see it because I am a security man.

    “They said they were looking for vehicles. I said for what? They said we were driving to my town to search me well. We were four. I said no way, I wouldn’t drive. I said with that condition of the road, I would not drive. I would fly. They said I should stay there till the next day before we flew. I said no, I would go home and if they liked, they should surround my home.

    “The next morning, we took off to the airport. One policeman was going before me, one was behind me, one was by my right side, one was by my left side. We flew to Port Harcourt and left for my home town by road. When we got home, I asked them to go and search. They said that we should go together, I said no, go and search and if you put anything there, I left you with your conscience.

    “They came back to compile their report. I didn’t have an expert to confirm how they tried to sign my signature. Other harassments happened, but I don’t want to go into them. I sent a message to Abacha through Akhigbe, who was the Navy chief. I said that for somebody to have come and searched me in that way and manner, the instruction would have come from the top. I didn’t like it and I was angry.”

  • Kidnap victim narrates ordeal

    An octogenarian that was abducted in Ondo State, Pa. Akinyele Akerele, has narrated his ordeal in the hands of the kidnappers.

    Akerele, a former President of the Bread Bakers’ Association in the state, was abducted near his home in Igbobini by gunmen.

    Narrating his ordeal to reporters, Akerele said his abductors blindfolded him and took him by sea to Sapele in Delta State.

    He said: “As soon as we got to Sapele, they removed the blindfold because it was useless then. They fed me just gari for the whole month. I was beaten mercilessly, especially when money was not forthcoming.

    “I did not know I would survive it. I had never suffered as much as I did in the last one month in the kidnappers den. I was kept in a dirty place on the water. They changed positions every two weeks.

    “The police rescued me. I was shocked when the police identified me and told me it was over.”

    The police have arrested seven suspected kidnappers in connection with the abduction.

    Police spokesman Wole Ogodo gave the names of the suspects as David Iteli, a.k.a Police; Meetin Ebi; Omosola Olorujuwon, a.k.a Jarule; Owei Yanboh; Toyin Asuluwon Emisa, a.k.a Minister; Oluwafemi Asogbon and Austin Shbija.

  • My ordeal, by Chime

    My ordeal, by Chime

    Enugu State Governor Sullivan Chime spoke with reporters at the Government House, Enugu on his his health condition and long absence from the state. CHRIS OJI was there.

     

    What was your experience like when you were abroad for medical treatment?

    While I was away, I read so many embarrassing publications from the print media; most of them conflicting, almost all of them false and it was so embarrassing. You can write anything, provided it does not bother on defamation. I decided to call this meeting for me to clear the air. I noticed that that generated a lot of interest. Many people became interested and even, people who did not know about my existence. I came back. I got some texts messages from strange people, thanking God for my return. So, because of the interest, I felt there is need for us to come together in the hope that after today, we will put to to rest everything that bothered on rumour regarding my leave.

    Why were you absent from the state for a long time?

    In August or thereabout, I was privileged to be one of those nominated by the Nigeria Governors Forum to go to Germany to under study their federal system; a governor was picked from each of the six geo-political zones. I was nominated from the Southeast and we were led by our chairman, Rotimi Amaechi. I decided to go a little bit earlier through London to do my medicals because of what I will call lack of time. We don’t have time here. Got to London, did my medicals and was certified fit, was given a clean bill of health. I had a little growth on my neck that was not visible to anybody. I am a very observant person. I noticed it, showed it to my doctor. He touched it and said he did not think it was anything serious, but I should investigate it. I thought they would have seen it when they were doing the general scanning and screening, but nothing was found. So, I just singled it out and asked them to investigate it. I was referred to a doctor who after investigating it and asking me questions, of course, I told him, no pains, no symptoms, no disturbance from anywhere, said as far as he was concerned, there was nothing wrong with it, but he would also as a professional ask me to investigate it further, because I was almost running short of time. I made arrangements with them to help me get an appointment for closer examination of the growth. So, the following day, I left for Germany to join my colleagues. On that trip was my Commissioner for Commerce and Industry, Dr Jude Akubuilo, and my SSA Investment; they were already in Germany waiting for me. So, I joined them.

    After about a week, when they had set up the arrangement, I left Germany, went back to London and did the proper screening of that particular growth. They did biopsy and all that. So, in the process, it was discovered that the growth was cancerous. So, after further examination, it was discovered that the main tumour was behind my nose; it actually turned out to be what they called, nasopharyngeal cancer (cancer of the nose). At that stage, you know when people hear the word cancer, the first thing is to declare yourself dead before any assistance could come. They subjected me to further scanning to know if it had spread. Luckily, it hadn’t spread; it was just in those two areas – my nose and neck. They said the good news was that it was curable. That was when I became interested and they said, as soon as I was ready, they would commence treatment. Originally, we had planned to go from Germany to Lebanon on our way back to Nigeria, but I cancelled that trip, went back to Germany, informed my people I went with, came down to London with the commissioner. The SSA hadn’t the UK Visa then. He traveled back to Nigeria from Germany. In London, we made arrangement and agreed on when to come. So, we came back to Nigeria and within two weeks, I was able to make arrangements for transition. I wrote a letter to the Speaker of the House of Assembly, in accordance with the constitution, informing him of my decision to proceed on leave and, of course, sought his cooperation to work very well with the deputy governor, who would work as governor in my absence. Within the two weeks, we held two exco meetings; the last was held on Tuesday, the week I left. After the exco meeting, I told my exco members that I was proceeding on long vacation, which I wouldn’t know how long it would last to treat myself. That was the information they got and, of course, I told them to cooperate with the acting governor. The following day, I left for Abuja, which was a Wednesday and again attended the meeting of the governor’s forum, that night. Then ,Thursday morning, we had the National Economic Council meeting and the deputy governor was there to represent me. Got to London and settled in and the following day, Friday, I went to see the oncologist who had already made arrangements for treatments to begin and on Monday, I started treatment. I don’t think any of you has had such an experience.

    Cancer is a deadly disease and the cure is also deadly. The cure for cancer is not Panadol. the cure for cancer are not these drugs you buy off the counter. By the time you go through chemotherapy and radiotherapy, you will be a changed person. So, I started treatment; the treatment altogether lasted for 12 weeks. Throughout the period of my treatment, I was an out patient. I was never admitted in any hospital. All my treatments, I took as an out patient. During the period of treatment, I personally had challenges with the treatment because, like I said, except you see somebody that has taken that kind of treatment, it is not easy to imagine. So, when I started reading in the papers, how I went to India, how I died at so- so place, to us it was a kind of entertainment. Anytime we felt like being entertained, we called up the Nigerian papers and we will be laughing. So, it was a lot of entertainment to us, but what became worrisome was the deliberate and sustained attempt to undermine the government of Enugu State. Over the years, if you people have been following events, especially when we addressed our people, yes, we have invested a lot of money in infrastructure and other spheres of life, but I have always said that one thing we would like to leave behind is a workable system. That has always been topmost on our agenda because when we came in, yes, I was part of the last administration, but unfortunately, when we came in, there was no system in place, not even a bad one. So, we felt there was this need to have a system in place because that is the only way you can encourage continuity because in this place, a governor comes and he will want to chart his own course. But if you have a system in place, if a governor comes in, he will build on what is existing. This was a kind of opportunity to put to test the system we have put in. Everything kept on happening as if the governor was not on leave, nobody talked about strike, nobody talked about non- payment of salaries, no contractor agitated over payment of fees, everything and life continued to be normal. It was like we had increased activities in my absence and I can say that I can beat my chest to thank the deputy governor who led the team and who ensured that the system worked in my absence. I am happy that we have almost attained that height and when we will be leaving in a few years time, we will be glad we have built a system and it is a good thing to notice that we didn’t have problems, inspite of all attempts made by our brothers and sisters to undermine us. The government of Enugu State has come to stay, the system put in place by us has come to stay. The treatment officially ended on December 10 and, of course, when treatment ends, that is when the real thing starts. When I had commenced treatment, what my doctors said was that I should stay off office for six months; that was their recommendation. But by the first week of January, when we went to review my state, they were shocked at the recovery rate, they were happy with the recovery. The scan they did showed that the tumour and nose fluid had disappeared completely, not even a scar was left behind and I won’t like to use the expression that they have declared me cancer free, but that was exactly what happened. Cancer is cancer and one will be required to go there from time to time for check up to make sure it does not raise its ugly head again. But as things are now, they have succeeded in curing that disease that was detected in September last year. Coming to my staff, all attacks on them that they were hoarding information and all that was an unfair attack on them. First and foremost, they didn’t have all the information. All they knew was that I was going on vacation and I didn’t know it was the business of people to know what my activities will be when I am going on vacation. So, I decide to use the period of my vacation to take care of myself. I don’t see how it should concern anybody, I don’t see why we should owe anybody any apology. The important thing is complying with the law, making sure that, as governor of the state, you ensured that the ship of governance remained on course and not abandoning your people. So, all those unfair attacks I found a little bit mischievous and actually exposed ignorance of some of our people. I was officially discharged; not on admission, and I am still in the process of recovering. You wont expect to see me tomorrow running, but I am fitter now to resume duties. I am fit enough to ensure that government is on course with the assistance of my co-pilots.

    How come you did not let the people around you know you were traveling knowing that you are a public officer?

    The truth was that these people actually knew. I don’t think there is any public officer who goes on leave abroad to take care of health challenges. You are trying to compare it with Yar’Adua situation. It is unfortunate and wrong. Yar’Adua traveled sick, I didn’t travel sick. Cancer is something that you may have, and you look normal and act normal. I wasn’t grounded because of the sickness. I was the person that decided on when to attack it. I actually choose the period because I looked at the time table between now and the end of my tenure and I said that was the only window I had because, at the end of this year, we will be talking about local government elections. I decided on when to attack it. It was not easy for me spending Christmas in London. I was telling somebody the other day that, since I was born, except during the Nigerian war when everybody was forced out, that was the first time that I was spending four months outside Enugu. It never happened. Even when I was in school, even when I did my service. So, it wasn’t an easy thing to be away for four and half months, but it was in the interest of the people of Enugu State and also myself as well as the system we are trying to put in place to seek treatment at a time that will not adversely affect that system. It would have been more challenging to the system, if I had been away at the time of the local government elections. You can imagine what it could have looked like. That was actually what informed my decision to seek medical attention immediately. It was not an emergency at all. I decided to do it and thank God it is now past.

    The attacks against me started two weeks after I left. Some people had started writing nonsense; they were not interested in the truth. Going on vacation had nothing to do with my going to India and dying there. Why tell the nation that I was hurried into the plane and that I collapsed. I went to London as somebody fit and proper and unfortunately, they decided to handle the information the way they chose.

     

     

    Based on your experience, do you have any plan of establishing a cancer clinic at the government hospital? What is your message to the people of the state?

    Like I said earlier, this government is not about my person but what will be right and what will benefit Enugu people. Right from day one when we came in, I think it is in our four point agenda, we set out to build an ultra modern diagnostic centre. Unfortunately almost three years to the contract period, we were very badly disappointed by our contractor, I don’t like remembering that but happily we have been able to engage new contractors who are working day and night to ensure that we have such a diagnostic centre that will make provision for all these scanning machines. If we had it in place by the time I traveled, probably, I would have discovered the cancer in Enugu and not in London. So the important thing is to have this thing in place to know what your problem is. If you are properly diagnosed, you start looking for how to cure yourself. It is not just something Enugu state can do alone, but we want to provide the basic things. The entire infrastructure we are building is to attract investors and once they see a fertile ground they go there. We are praying that we will se an investor who can come here and establish a merger hospital. We will encourage such a venture. Enugu state as a government will not be ale to provide all that. For now we are providing Medicare, something that can sustain our people and we pray that someday we will get there.

    I will like to thank the people of Enugu state for their patient, their prayers and belief in the system and for being able to rebuff all attempts by enemies to drag the state down and cause trouble. I have to thank the people for being there for us. We will try to provide as much goodies as we are able to afford, we will continue to serve our people to the best of our ability, we will continue to use our resources the best way we can the best way it can serve our people, so that no matter where you are, you will feel the impact of governance. We will not like to leave this place and we will hear that community A or B did not benefit. By the time we leave government we will like to be having testimonies from even the remotest village in the state that it was this government that gave us light, it was this government that gave us road, it was this government that gave us water, there must be something you must be thankful to government for. That is our aim. So we are here to serve our people. We have two years to round off and the two years, we will use fully. We will work until 29th of May 2015 and we expect that whoever is coming in will be part of the PDP family.

    There were stories making the round like you said, people confused here and there. People expected you to speak when you came back. So why did you not speak on the day you came back, was it deliberate or part of the strategy?

    If you were at the airport you would not have asked the question. When the aircraft stopped, looking out through the window, I saw the acting governor with his wife, I saw our own local service chiefs, the commander Garrison, the police commissioner and all that. Everything looked orderly, immediately I alighted from the plane, those people disappeared. I had to stop that I won’t move an inch here until I see the acting governor and they made way for him, every where was chaos. That was how I saw him. So you expected me in that madness to start addressing press? Of course I entered my car and we came here and relaxed. There is no urgency. I am just doing this in the interest of people who have been misled. There was no opportunity to address the press.

    Now that you are back, have you written to the House of Assembly to tell them your back and when are you resuming duties?

    The problem we have is that it is like you prying into the affairs of your neighbour’s family. That was exactly what happened. It was a case of people trying to come into Enugu to find out how we run our domestic affairs. We were watching NTA from Uk, there was one person who felt agitated and doubted if the letter was written. He said if the letter was written, there will be record of it in the record of proceedings of the House of Assembly and how the approval was given and I laughed my head. Read your constitution, I don’t need the approval of the House of Assembly to go on leave. You are not required to write to the House of Assembly, you are required to write to the Speaker for his information, that you are proceeding on leave and once you are on leave, the Deputy automatically starts acting so that when he approaches the House of Assembly for the budget presentation, they don’t turn him back to say we don’t know you. That is the essence of the letter and I am expected that once I came back, I will write to him [speaker] for his information. The constitution is so clear. I am not seeking his approval to resume duties, the constitution is clear. And that is to say, I am back, incase anybody comes to you to ask of the governor. The simple answer to your question is yes, I have transmitted a letter to the House of Assembly, that I am back so that you wont have a situation where you will say we have two captains in one ship. So like you just come here now, you will notice that I did not address the deputy governor as acting governor. So we don’t have two captains in one ship so that my orderly will know whom to take instructions from. It is one ticket and once one person is away, the other person takes over. When the Deputy governor is away, I take over his duties, if he comes back, he resumes. To again answer part of your question, it is not true that governors don’t stay away for two weeks. The governor of Abia state stays at least one month every year outside. Infact under Obasanjo, there was one governor who was ruling from abroad. Some even ascribed the period to say I have stayed over 140 days and where this is from, I do not know. Some even said I have over stayed a time limit, it was not so in my letter. There was no question of time frame. I am back and I am back. But I will tell you frankly, may be not for any ailment or cancer but if I have the opportunity of doing this again, I will like to repeat it. I have no regret whatsoever, I believe I did the right thing and the comments you people dished out were based on either ignorance or people being just mischievous. I have no business telling you my story; it is not your business. The first colleague of ours that we lost in our first term, the governor of Yobe state, he died in the USA. Who knew about his problem until he died? You don’t make it so unattractive, the office of the governor. They are human beings who are entitled to some level of privacy. When I traveled to London in September, I did not travel with anybody, I went alone at least to tell you how stable and fit I was. I didn’t go even with my three year old son. My SSA on Investment joined me one week later. I didn’t travel with any human being; I was able to take care of myself. I don’t need security abroad. What you people did, I am sure will scare a lot of people who would want to be governor in the future. What ailment was not ascribed to me? There was a time they left ailment and said my son was arrested for money laundry and that when I went to bail him, I was arrested in place of my son.. so it is really sad but thank God all that is over.

     

     

     

  • Our ordeal in the hands of rebels, by Malians

    Our ordeal in the hands of rebels, by Malians

    IN troubled Mali, there’s no shortage of harrowing stories of life under Islamist militants in Northern Mali – public floggings for smoking a cigarette; brutal beatings for working as a radio journalist; broken limbs and broken hearts. – all in full glare of aghast residents.

    The Islamists compiled a list of unmarried mothers, saying Sharia law condemns relationships outside marriage.

    A mayor, his people

    displaced

    Mayor Sadou Diallo misses residents of his desert town of Gao, most of whom fled to Bamako when militants took over.

    About 229,000 Malians have been displaced — mainly from Kidal, Timbuktu and Gao, according to the United Nations (UN).

    Diallo is one of the displaced. A former respected community leader, trying to rebuild, just like his people.

    Residents of the North, once proud of the vibrant desert communities near River Niger, say the region is a shadow of what it used to be.

    “Home is not sweet anymore,” said Fadimata Alainchar, a charity worker and native of nearby Timbuktu.

    A recent visit to her hometown left her shaken.

    “When entering the city, the signboard which was: ‘Welcome to Timbuktu the City of 333 Saints’ is now ‘Welcome to Timbuktu, the gate to the application of the Shariya (Sharia),” she told the Cable Network News (CNN).

    The fabled city includes ancient tombs and wooden structures dating to the 15th century, a major part of its cultural heritage.

    Those are not the only

    changes

    Women who don’t cover their bodies in accordance to the militants’ Sharia law, are imprisoned or raped, she said.

    Their husbands, terrified of killings and amputations, don’t utter a word.

    And gunshots are a common sound.

    Alainchar said: “If not to disperse women marching, it is to kill dogs that are barking and preventing the insurgents from sleeping.”

    “Home has changed. Before it was peace, joy and love, now it is shame, terror and abuse. I prefer dying.”

    Tales of cruel

    treatments abound

    Radio journalist Malik Maiga faced the militants’ wrath when he used his show to warn residents of public stoning or floggings.

    Islamists singled him out, beat him up and left him in a cemetery. He survived and he is among the refugees in Bamako.

    Maiga is not the only journalist targeted. Last week, another radio journalist was reportedly killed, leading Gao residents to retaliate by killing a militant leader.

    Then there’s Suleyman and Muktar, former truck drivers, accused of stealing. Their limbs were hacked off. They are jobless and wander around the capital.

    “I prefer dying to being like this,” Muktar said, adding “my hand hurts; my heart aches; I only have God to ask for help.”

    “For the Islamists, a human being is like an ant you squash, like an animal you slaughter,” said Sedou Sangare, a resident of Gao.

    Gao used to be a vibrant community filled with colorful camel caravans lazily strolling down the streets. Bearded men and beaded women mingled freely.

    Then the Islamists rode in on rundown pickup trucks, armed to the teeth.

    They banned smoking, television, sports and music — a major setback for the northern region known for its “Festival au Desert.”

    They forbade unmarried men and women from mixing in public.

    Everybody panicky

    Though Gao has a majority Muslim population, most residents practice a more relaxed form of the religion.

    After militants started imposing a stricter form of Islamic law, or Sharia, throngs took to the streets in protest.

    “When they declared Sharia, everybody panicked,” Sangare said. “Christians, Muslims, everybody fled.”

    But the protests did not deter the militants, who publicly punished anyone who defied their teachings.

    In August last year, they forced a couple allegedly having an affair into two holes and stoned them to death as terrified residents quietly watched.

    Mali descended into chaos last year, when junior military members seized power in a coup. Outraged soldiers accused the government of not providing adequate equipment to battle ethnic Tuareg rebels roaming the vast desert in the North.

    Tuareg rebels took advantage of the power vacuum after the coup and seized some parts of the North. A power struggle erupted between the rebels and local Islamists, leading the latter to topple the tribe and seize control of two-thirds of Northern Mali, an area the size of France.

  • ‘Detractors behind my ordeal’

    The Bayelsa State House of Assembly has passed a vote of confidence in the Speaker, Kombowei Benson.

    Benson was implicated in the misappropriation of N78million being the money for a parliamentary conference in South Africa

    Benson said some members of the House were behind his ordeal.

    He wondered how he could have embezzled money approved by the governor.

    “There was no ill motive for spending the money. N78million was approved for 24 members, how much should have come to each member after travel expenses?

    “I know some of my colleagues are behind my travail. They are desperate to take over my seat.

    “Yes, we went to South Africa late, we are not disputing that fact. But those investigating the matter over exaggerated it.

    “There was no intention of enriching ourselves with the money.

    “There is no fire without smoke,there must be fire before smoke.

    “This seat is an enviable seat,there are people scrambling to take over power every now and then.

    “Some aggrieved former local government chairmen may be partnering some members on the issue.

    “This is because during the investigations by the Assembly on some former chairmen, they wrote a petition on the N78 million issue.

    “I can always resign and apologise if I have made any mistake.”

  • PDP behind my wife’s ordeal, says Ajimobi

    PDP behind my wife’s ordeal, says Ajimobi

    Oyo State Governor Abiola Ajimobi yesterday blamed the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) for the “malicious allegations against his wife, Florence.

    Ajimobi said the report that his wife was arrested in London for alleged money laundering was the handiwork of failed politicians in the state.

    Speak with reporters in Abuja after the National Economic Council (NEC) meeting. He said those behind the report lost out in previous elections.

    Ajimobi said: “We know those behind it. Infact, they are political jobbers, who lost out in the last election. Three of them are from the PDP. They have never achieved anything in their lives. They are coming back with the old system of maligning people.”

    The governor said those behind the report were out to taint his reputation.

    He said: “We have built our reputation over the years. I did not come from nowhere. I worked with the oil industry. I did not work with Wero Enterprises; I worked with National Oil and Shell. I was the Managing Director of National Oil and the MD of Shell STSL in Togo. I have made my name.

    “When you are doing well as a politician, some mischief makers, who want to pull you down, would concoct stories like this particular one.”

    The governor said it was unreasonable to expect that anyone would carry the amount of money the report claimed was found on his wife.

    He said: “In this modern age, will anybody be stupid enough to carry money around in boxes? If you travel with more than $10,000, you will be arrested. Even if you hide it, when you get to some of these countries, their dogs will sniff you out.

    “So how will somebody travel with N500 million? It’s a lot of money. How will you carry it? The people who wrote that thing are illiterates, amateurs. We need more quality people in politics.

    “We are trying to rid Oyo of wicked, malicious miscreants and political jobbers. Oyo State has been noted for jungle politics. We are working to change that, but the dark forces always try to stop us.

    “That report was very malicious. My youngest child was attacked during the electioneering campaign in 2007. She panicked so much that she could not sleep and the doctors advised us to change her location. That is why she has been schooling in England since 2007. So, it is nothing new.

    “It is wicked for people to be writing such things. Those behind the report are junk Internet outfits with one room sites. The moment we discovered them, they closed up and we did not see them again.

    “The damage has been done. Fortunately for me, another media house published it and I sued them. No amount of pleading will make me stop. I will make sure I stop people from damaging others’ reputation.”

    The Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) in Oyo State condemned the report.

    In a statement by its Publicity Secretary, Mr. Dauda Kolawole, ACN said Mrs. Ajimobi could not have been in possession of huge cash because she has no access to the state’s treasury.

    The party said the governor is known for prudence, adding that he has put mechanism in place to guard against financial recklessnazess.

    ACN urged rumour peddlers to desist and support the government.

    It said: “Journalist are advised to be alive to their responsibilities and avoid mischievous and untrue stories.”

  • Justice Salami’s long-running ordeal

    Justice Salami’s long-running ordeal

    It has been more than one year since the National Judicial Council (NJC) under the leadership of former Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN), Justice Aloysius Katsina-Alu, recommended to President Goodluck Jonathan the suspension of the President of the Court of Appeal (PCA), Justice Ayo Salami. The recommendation, it will be recalled, was swiftly endorsed. Salami was said to have lied against Katsina-Alu and refused to apologise to him and the NJC. Nine months after the suspension was endorsed, the next CJN, Justice Dahiru Musdapher, led the NJC to reverse itself in May 2012 by recommending the reinstatement of Salami. This time the Presidency baulked, citing court cases standing in the way of the president and disallowing him from riding roughshod over the courts. The nuisance was therefore passed on to the current CJN, Justice Maryam Aloma-Mukhtar, who was sworn in some three months ago, and who, like her predecessor, has sworn to remove the blot on the judiciary’s escutcheon, which the Salami case had become.

    No one is sure the current CJN will succeed in bringing a just and sensible closure to the unseemly affair. One of the new options being considered to settle the case is for Salami to withdraw the suits he filed against the Federal Government and the NJC, be reinstated, and then gracefully retire. This option, according to a report by The Nation a few days ago, would be discussed by the CJN with both the president in order to avoid a conflict with the Executive branch and with Salami after the Sallah break to secure an amicable resolution. Neither the apex court nor the NJC has confirmed the story. While it is feared that a few anti-Salami conspirators are poised to file fresh suits to stall the reinstatement bid until the PCA attains retirement age next year, it is not even certain that the presidency would buy into this option, nor is anyone sure the PCA himself would be amenable to the deal.

    What is however sure is that the stalemate has weighed heavily on the conscience of the CJNs and the NJC. Apart from Katsina-Alu who triggered the stalemate, and who couldn’t care less, the other CJNs have made strenuous efforts to bring closure to the case and restore the judiciary’s independence and reputation. There is probably some near unanimity in the NJC concerning the Salami case; but the Presidency has hardly disguised what it thought should be the only outcome of the rigmaroles: it wants Salami out, whether disgraced or with soft landing. As determined as the CJN and the NJC are, it is also obvious that they are reluctant to confront the government.

    Justice Salami must resist the temptation to make it easy for the troubled conscience of the president, the CJN and the NJC, which agreeing to the cheap and ignoble terms of disengagement will imply. While the altruism of the CJN and the NJC cannot be doubted, only one outcome appears depressingly inevitable in this sordid affair: reinstatement as a prelude to retirement. The Presidency has immobilised its own conscience. But every man of honour, except political partisans, knows that the odds are stacked against Salami in a country that has lost its moral compass and provoked its people into sundry rebellions and lawlessness. Given the disposition of the Presidency and the fanaticism of his enemies, Salami will be forced out one way or the other. Let him choose to depart in a blaze of glory by daring them to retire him themselves and completing the circle of infamy. No other honourable compromise exists.

     

  • My ordeal at the hands of Abacha —Aborisade

    My ordeal at the hands of Abacha —Aborisade

    Dr. Bunmi Aborisade, a journalist and academic, came into limelight during the June 12 struggle, when, as the editor and co-publisher of June 12 magazine, he was arrested severally and detained. He later fled Nigeria to Ghana in 1997 but was arrested by the Rawlings government, ready to be deported back to Nigeria before the American Embassy in Ghana intervened and relocated him to the USA in 1999. Bunmi, who has lived in exile in the United States since then and only returned to Nigeria last month to take up appointment as a Senior Lecturer at Afe Babalola University, Ado Ekiti, relives his experience in this interview with Sam Egburonu. Excerpts

     

    our incarceration in Nigeria and Ghana during the 1990s is part of the story of June I2 struggle. But Nigerians may not have known all that happened. Can you tell them more?

    The story of my arrest here in Nigeria during the June 12 struggle and while in exile in Ghana is a long one which I have reserved for my book coming out soon. Although my ordeals during the June 12 struggle in Nigeria and while in exile in Ghana have been widely reported in the local and international media, there are still some untold stories in the book.

    As you may have known, it all started with the June 12 Magazine (which I published with some friends) which gave a hard time to the Abacha Junta. I was arrested and detained at three different locations-Ikeja Millitary Cantonment, Directorate of Military Intelligence and the office of State Security Service (SSS). After my release, the military boys descended on the newspapers that carried the story of my ordeal while in prison. So, with the assistance of friends, I left Nigeria for Ghana on October 15, 1996.

    While in Ghana, I worked for the Independent newspaper owned by the President of West African Journalists Association, Ambassador Kabral Blay-Amihere, who ensured that Nigerian journalists seeking refuge in Ghana had a voice in their local media and internationally. Then, we formed the Nigerian Journalists in Exile to continue the struggle back home and I was made the President. Many Nigerian journalists then saw Ghana as a safe route to travel overseas and sneak back into Nigeria.

    It was a little difficult to continue the struggle while in Ghana, but we were encouraged by our comrades in the struggle in Nigeria and London who were in touch with us to boost our morals. For example, Senator Femi Ojudu and Wale Adeoye were always around to update us about the struggle back home since the use of the Internet was not that popular. Dr. Kayode Fayemi (Now Governor of Ekiti State) who was then wanted by the Abacha regime and Makin Soyinka whose father was on Abacha’s hit list, visited us from London a number of times. However, my story changed when I was arrested by the Rawlings regime on May 27, 1998 and was given ultimatum to leave the country. So, with the intervention of the American Embassy in Ghana and the US-based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), I was relocated to the United States.

    You were arrested in Nigeria, you fled to Ghana and you were arrested again before you left for the United States. While in the US, your mother, who was in politics in Ekiti State, was bathed with acid and she died. How were you able to cope with the pains?

    If I tell you I know how I was able to cope, I must be lying. But I believe the Lord is my strength. Remember everything did not happen at the same time, it happened over a period of about 10 years. So, I took every situation as it came. The most painful of them all was the incidence of my mother which happened on December 10, 2002 during the regime of Governor Niyi Adebayo in Ekiti State. Because of my mother’s support for Governor Adebayo when she was the woman leader of AD in Ekiti State, some wicked politicians attacked her with acid and she died some months after. That was an incidence I will never forget. I first read it on the internet and I later confirmed it from the Guardian correspondence in North America, Pastor Laolu Akande. She died on March 2, 2003 and I was devastated when Governor Adebayo broke the news to me over the phone. I had to leave the USA for Nigeria for the burial. Since then, we (family and friends) have set up a foundation in her memory and we have been giving scholarships to indigent students of Ado Ekiti and we also hold an annual memorial lecture just to show that we still love her. We are preparing for the 9th anniversary this year and we have not missed any despite the fact that we have not collected any money from any one to fund the programme.

    Given your passion in the newsroom in those days, one is somehow curious that on your return from exile, you chose to lecture at Afe Babalola University instead of practicing core journalism or politics?

    Since I will be teaching media and communication, I am not totally out of journalism. The only thing I will be missing is the hustling and bustling of news reporting and the fun of the newsroom. But I hope to be as active as possible in journalism if not as a reporter, but as a trainer. As a political journalist, I still hope to be relevant politically without running for any political office.

    More importantly, I want to be part of the history in my home town-Ado Ekiti with the fastest growing private university in the country and a standard university that is ready to match any university in the world. So, I see Afe Babalola University as a place to build a carrier in academics rather than working for the government.

    What do you think the government can do to bring Nigerian professionals back from the Diaspora?

    If our government creates the enabling environment for people to operate, our professionals scattered all over the world will surely return. Remember this is their country, they have no other country, and they are even more passionate about the country than those living in the country. In all my years abroad, I did not see any Nigerian who wants to live and die abroad. It is the prayer of every Nigerian in the Diaspora to return home one day.

    As I said, it is very simple to get our professionals to return to the country if the government can create an enabling environment for them to return. Some private universities like Afe Babalola University, Elizade Universities and others have been able to bring back many academics from Europe and America, which shows the same thing can be done in other sectors of our economy.

    President Obasanjo started very well by asking Nigerians to return when he became president, but Nigerians in the Diasporas lost interest when he started abusing them all over the place. The governor of Ekiti State, Dr. Kayode Feyemi also tried by rallying round the Ekitis in the Diasporas about a year ago when he visited them in London, America and Canada. He was able to convince them with his plans for the state and many of them were willing to return, but there was no follow-up since then.

    I also read in the news that Professor Wole Soyinka encouraged some professionals to return to Nigeria. There was a case of a Medical Doctor whom he persuaded to establish a medical practice in the country and the doctor was frustrated by the system and he returned to the US some years later.

    At the political level, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu equally helped some of our comrades who went into exile during the June 12 struggle to return to the country when he was governor; he still helps some Nigerians in the Diaspora to relocate to the country.

    Others that can help bring back Nigerians in the Diaspora are state governors. They are in touch with the indigenes of their states outside. They meet with them anytime they travel outside the country. All they need to do is to work with them and provide the necessary logistics to enable them return to the country. I know most of our professionals outside the country will listen to their state governors rather than listening to the president.

    With Boko Haram, kidnapping, poor condition of living, corruption, general insecurity of life and property, do you think Nigerians abroad will want to return?

    These problems are equally present in developed countries. So, they are not peculiar to Nigeria alone. It is the response of our government to the problems that makes the difference. We have kidnapping in America, worst groups than Boko Haram, poverty of unimaginable proportion, corruption, etc. But the government is at alert 24/7 to deal with people who engage in such acts. If you engage in any of these acts, the government will hunt you to your grave. But the same cannot be said of our government. Here in Nigeria, if you are kidnapped, you are on your own. If you steal public money, you are allowed to go scot free.

    Look at the role of the government in the fuel subsidy scandal in the country. If it were to be America, those implicated will be investigated, arrested and charged to court immediately and the media will update the public on every step being taken to ensure justice is done. But the reverse is the case in our own situation. Our government will be dilly-dallying on the case and the culprits will go scot free at the end. That is our problem.

    After 15 years in exile, you are returning when there seems to be no serious human rights activism going on; no NADECO or such like. So, can it be said that for you, the struggle is over?

    My primary concern for now is the students that I will be teaching. As you know, teaching is not a lazy man’s job; you have to read as if you are a student, conduct research and attend seminars. So, there is no time for extracurricular activity at all. But that is not to say that one will not speak out against injustices in the society or keep quiet while people in government loot the country’s treasury with impunity.

    It may be very difficult to be as active as one would have loved to in the absence of any serious organisation, but that is not enough for any serious minded person to give up the struggle. Otherwise, it is going to be a free day for the looters of our economy and oppressors of our people.