Former Secretary of the pan-Yoruba socio-political group, Afenifere, and Publicity Secretary of the National Democratic Coalition, Chief Ayo Opadokun, in this interview with LEKE BAIYEWU, explains the national mistakes in June 12 and the danger ex-military chiefs pose to Nigeria’s democratic system
Have you ever been worried that June 12, is being celebrated annually only in the South-West?
A significant number of those who have
succeeded in capturing power – those who were military apologists,
con-federates, sympathisers and friends – will not understand where the
shoe is pinching ordinary Nigerians, since they did not participate in
the various campaigns that the National Democratic Coalition
established. They got into political offices through influence peddling
and commercialisation of the Nigerian political landscape. They have
failed to show a modicum of etiquette and attitude to those who made it
possible for the restoration that took place in 1999.
Each time some of those characters tell
you that June 12 is just one of those days and there’s nothing more to
it, it is not difficult for you to understand where they are coming
from. Some of them got into public office too cheaply; they neither
bargained nor worked for it. June 12 was a unique day, when Nigerians of
all shades of opinion decided to unify their ranks by establishing a
pan-Nigerian mandate for Chief Moshood Abiola. Not only that he won
massively, he got at least 25 per cent in 28 or 29 states. That was a
mandate that would have, for the first time, established a pan-Nigeria.
The military, however, struck and took a
very dangerous, unreasonable and criminal action by ignoring the
constitutional right of all Nigerians to vote for persons or group of
persons to govern them at every point in time. They exhibited the
highest form of contempt for the Nigerian people. They stole our money
and killed many people in their penchant to capture power. The election
was held by the mercy of God because at that time, the immediate
constituency of (the then military ruler) Gen. Ibrahim Babangida did not
want the election to hold. The election was held and it produced the
June 12 phenomenon. If the military had not subverted the completion of
that process and Abiola had governed, it would have established a
united Nigeria. By doing what they did, they denied Nigeria and
Nigerians a very unique opportunity to create a nation out of the
country called Nigeria. You will remember that what Nigeria did on June
12, 1993, was to bury the various dubious national divides –
North/South, Christian/Muslim, haves and have-nots. We were united to
establish a modicum of decency for ourselves. But the military did what
they did under the leadership of Babangida. It was very unfortunate and
we are still suffering the consequence of the annulment of the election.
Today, there’s no cohesion in our
country. There’s mutual suspicion all over the land. How do you
reconcile a situation where 12 states in the North are now being
governed under Sharia law? The Sharia law totally opposes the 1999
Constitution. Former President Olusegun Obasanjo did not do anything
about it. So, Boko Haram that you now find to be objectionable is an
enhancement of what Shariah was established for. People should stop
shedding crocodile tears. If in early 2001, when those states
established Shariah, Obasanjo ensured that the Nigerian constitution
prevailed, the chances are that we won’t have Boko Haram.
Would you agree with those who believe the annulment was influenced by the Western World?
I don’t know of any external force that
could ask him (Babangida) to frustrate the popular will of the people.
In their environment, it is the popular will of the people that
prevails. Every government in Western hemisphere has to comply with the
public and popular will of the people. That is why they conduct opinion
polls regularly to test the popularity of government, persons and
policies. In fact, a popular policy must be relevant and satisfy the
demands of the people. When that is not done, they know they have lost
their popularity and democratic forces will bring them down. We have
seen similar things happen in the Arab Spring.
I don’t know of any pressure from any
Western power to deny the people the grace of democratic dividends,
which is a legitimate right of everybody. In the United States, they say
‘We hold this truth to be sacrosanct.’ Government is form for the
greater glory of man and when such government becomes tyrannical, the
people have a duty to ensure that it is put down. People are not being
honest when they put the blame on external forces. Which external
forces? It was clear: First, IBB knew from the first day he came in 1985
that he wanted to remain in power in perpetuity. Not up to one year
after he got into office, he dispatched a number of his immediate
constituency to visit Middle East and Latin American countries where
military despots were governing to get recommendations on how they had
sustained themselves in office for a long period of time. He was not
prepared or ready to go. He used all the transition processes to fill
the time, while he continued with what he was doing.
When the election was held and result
was against their expectation, they had to first utilise the judiciary.
One Justice Ikpeme, a lady, sat at 9:30pm. You know that was
extraordinarily illegal, professionally destructive and morally
unfortunate. She wanted to give an exparte order and the
defendant was not there, the people to be served were sleeping in their
homes. To make the matter much more revealing, the then Director of
Legal Services, Buhari Bello, filed an appeal to get Justice Ikpeme’s
order discharged. It was right there in the court, the following
morning, when the Federal Court of Appeal in Abuja had already acceded
to the request of the electoral commission that the order was treated.
It was when Bello left the court room that he heard the announcement at
4pm that the entire electoral commission had been suspended. This is to
show the kind of wickedness that took place.
The then Attorney-General of the country, Clement Akpamgbo, was the one who took the exparte order
to the National Electoral Commission’s office. The fellow that the
government institution ought to report to and who should provide legal
cover for the commission was the one who brought the exparte order,
and he reportedly told some members of the NEC directorate that ‘you’re
on your own if you disobey this order.’ He was not totally in control
as of that time. The regime had split into two parallel constituencies.
Gen. Sani Abacha and Gen. Oladipo Diya–his immediate lieutenants – were
in Lagos stripping him of all his myths. He had to cave in.
What they did to Nigeria was very dangerous and unpleasant, and we are still grappling with the consequences till today.
Now that there’s democracy, can Nigerians bury their hatchets over June 12 and look forward?
Forgiveness is of God. But God says, “He
who covers his sin shall not prosper. But he who confesses his sins and
turns away from them will obtain mercy from God.” Has Babangida and his
constituencies confessed? We have not seen them do so. What they did
was for Babangida to say he took responsibility. Which responsibility?
‘Don’t punish my lieutenants, punish me.’ They have not really sought
for forgiveness from Nigerians.
One of the greatest errors our people
have committed is that we allowed the military men to go back to the
barracks on their own terms. Once a country does that, it will continue
to suffer the consequence of the military Shenanigans for a long time.
Allowing them to go on their own terms has resulted in our inability to
establish a well-ordered society. We have not been able to structure
what a modern state ought to do for its citizens, in spite of the great
resources – human and material – that God has endowed Nigeria with.
In the Latin American states, where
military despots governed for between three and four decades, most of
the military leaders have been prosecuted and sentenced. One of them,
who was the military ruler in Argentina, died not long ago. Many of them
have been convicted because they were forced to account for the evils
they did in office – killing of people and stealing of public resources.
In our case, the military went on their terms and retained their loot,
and they are dangling it on our faces. I’m not sure that it’s possible
for Nigeria to get out of the woods we are today, because this military
clique and their cohorts have acquired too much wealth through military
contracts, inflated contracts that they did not do but which funds had
been withdrawn. They are the ones who can take part in monetised and
commercialised politics.
The guard of the house forces out the
landlord and sends him out. That is the experience we are going through.
I restate that since they have done so on their own terms, we have
allowed them to take a significant mileage in our national political
journey.
As a result of the fact that the
military left on their own terms, they have dominated the political
landscape since then. You remember that Obasanjo was a military
president. His Chief of Staff was Gen. Abdullahi. It didn’t take much
time to sack Solomon Lar, who was the founding chairman of the Peoples
Democratic Party. They also sacked Audu Ogbeh and brought a military
man, Ahmadu Ali. His deputy in South-West, Bode George, was a naval
officer. If you are not part of that conclave and circle, you’ll
probably have problems emerging to win any significant office. They are
still in control and that’s the truth. We had (a former governor of
Osun State) Olagunsoye Oyinlola.
It was a costly error on the part of the
populace to have allowed the military to go on their own terms. The
consequences are what we are bearing today. I hope Nigerians will
realise their wrongs and do the right thing.
When Obasanjo got into office in 1999,
till today – about 14 years ago – there was no day that Nigeria did not
export an average of two million barrels of crude oil at an average of
N75 per barrel. Where is the evidence of such earnings in the Federal
Government’s coffers? Where is it? Is it not irreconcilable that a
country among the largest exporters of crude oil and with huge sums has
over three-quarter of its people that cannot feed well, have sound
education and its infrastructure totally decayed? How can you reconcile
the fact that a country of this nature, with all its endowments, cannot
provide power supply to its over 160 million people? We are still
grappling to get 3,500 megawatts.
Can you recall your personal experience in the June 12 struggle?
It enabled me to understand and
appreciate the power of resilience and commitment towards a particular
goal. Nigerians united in several parts of the country to reject the
annulment. The then Governor of the Central Bank, Adamu Ciroma, and a
former minister, Mamman Daura, said Abiola won squarely and should be
given the mandate Nigerians gave to him. The Eastern Mandate Union, led
by a Vice-Chancellor, Dr. Arthur Nwankwo, spoke. The Council for Unity
and Understanding under the leadership of Commodore Ebitu Ukiwe, Rear
Admiral Ndubuisi Kanu, all of them rose up that the majority of
Nigerians voted and their wish should be respected.
For my experience, I saw man in his
elements. Some, in obedience to God’s injunction, fought for justice,
equity and fairness. Some, for their selfish reasons, became
hypocritical as if it never happened. Some of these people have gone
beyond this terrestrial divide. Some said the totality of participants
in Abacha’s constitution conference – who were less than 300,000 – were
superior to Abiola’s victory, in which over 14 million voted. I saw
human beings in their natural elements – selfish, wicked, unreasonable,
pleasure-lovers, fun-seekers. These were elements who were concerned
with only their daily bread and their stomach. They have no regards for
any values provided they dominate the atmosphere, ply their trade with
useful and formidable instruments in the hand of the military
oligarchies.
While I was in detention at the annex
office of the State Security Service in Ikoyi, where I spent 24 months, I
heard the officials saying, “If they capture power, he would be the
secretary to the Federal Government.” They wanted to use oppression to
make me cave in. Whatever I suffered is insignificant to me. What
Nigerians are going through today is saddening. It is not because we
don’t have the resources. Since Obasanjo came into power we have been
spending between 75 and 82 per cent of our earnings to run bureaucracy. I
read the report that they’re going to collapse about 280 agencies.
The distinguished Chief Obafemi Awolowo,
as first Premier of Western Region – now eight states – governed the
region with 14 ministers and 14 parliamentary secretaries. Look at the
eight states today, how many commissioners, special advisers and special
assistants do they have? The allowance of these public office holders
is too huge. We spend the valuable resources we have to serve political
bureaucracy. That is why there’s no development. Tell me, in the last 14
years, which new road has been built. Before international flights
depart, go to the First Class section and see the kind of people you’ll
see there; military’s friends, colleagues, associates, loyalists and
sympathisers. They stole too much money out of Nigeria and they can
afford to waste it.
How true is it that some of Abiola’s kinsmen betrayed him during the struggle and why did they do so?
Betrayal, yes some did. I wasn’t in
their minds; I cannot know why they did so except to figure out that
they couldn’t have done what they did without selfish advantage. Some of
them were hypocritical in their discourse on the matter. The military
strongmen – Babangida and Abacha – were able to capture their longings
for various positions, offices and money. Look at the characters in
Abacha’s government, some of them pretended and lied that it was
Afenifere or Abiola that submitted their names to Abacha. They knew they
were lying.
Those who became ministers were ready as
soon as Abacha declared his leadership, working as civilian
counterparts of the military jackboots. I’m not sure any of them is
happy with himself today. I don’t want to speak more than that for now.
Insiders in Aso Rock then have
accused some prominent Nigerians and the West of knowing what Killed
Abiola? What do you think led to his death?
My information is limited. I know it was
not accidental that Abacha died the way he died. The implication of
that is that there were too many ‘irresolvables.’
What were the ‘irresolvables?’
The key actors will never tell the true
story. And because it was a matter that took place in a much hidden
place – not open to the general public – it would be difficult for one
to be authoritative. Like my earlier explanation, it was not accidental
that Abacha died the way he died neither was it accidental that a month
thereafter, Abiola equally died the way he died. Some people must have
choreographed and perfected what they wanted to do – very wickedly and
maddening – to resolve the national question.
Are you saying the two were killed to balance the scale?
I do not know but it is possible. Honestly, we have limited information.
Many people have criticised
Obasanjo for not recognising Abiola, being his kinsman, while in power.
Do you think the ex-president has a personal grievance against the June
12 election winner?
I would imagine so; otherwise there
should be no reason for him not to do so. The little we know of Obasanjo
is that he is essentially selfish and uncharitably ungrateful. With the
price that MKO paid, the Nigerian political configuration decided to
nominate him (Obasanjo), the undeserved beneficiary. Yet, he failed to
say anything about Abiola. It should not surprise us. As soon as Abacha
took over power, Obasanjo was outside the country attending the
inauguration of Nelson Mandela as South African President. He said
Abiola was not the kind of Messiah Nigeria needed. Here was a man from
same Egba and they knew each other in high school in Abeokuta, and he
could not recognise Abiola’s role and sacrifice. He died a democratic
martyr and you benefitted, and you did not say a word. It is
unbelievable. That is part of the explanation of the humanity in us.
You once described June 12 as a nemesis to this country. Are you saying the wound has not healed since 20 years?
Certainly not! How can you heal the
wound when you have locked up the truth in a cage? And truth, no matter
what you do, will one day be exposed. All the strength of falsehood will
ultimately be crushed. This country is suffering from national
mistrust, non-cohesion, centrifugal forces and the opposites are at the
peak since then. That is why we have come into this irreconcilable
position. It is difficult to understand that a country that exports this
volume of crude yet have three-quarter of its citizens living below $1;
living below the poverty line. You earn very huge resources but your
social services are the worst.
What Nigeria offers today as education
is a deception; it is a very criminal neglect. Any country that finds it
difficult to train its younger generation, who are supposed to be the
leaders of tomorrow, is subjecting itself to destruction. It will have
to go under.
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GOD bless you for all your statement Sir.
ReplyDeleteLook at the honest Military leaders are still Honest to this nation till date (Gowon,Oseni,) But those of them who started looting from this Nation (IBB,OBJ,Abudusalam,etc) are still there destroying the nation.
When Azazi (RIP) said Boko haram is as a result of grievances in PDP,, he is still talking of this same Military Men from Northern zone who believe that they are going against the agreement they made before giving OBJ by supporting GEJ,, and that has led to over 5,000 people dead today.
Most Nigerians feel that Buhari is behind Boko H, but he is not,if he is they will not call him to dialogue for them(they just wanted to rope him in because he talks carelessly). The man behind Boko Haram is the Evil genius,the one they call Maradona.