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The Day Abiola Died

07 Jul 2012

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The Pendolum, By Dele Momodu, Email:delemomodu@thisdaylive.com


Fellow Nigerians, exactly 14 years ago Nigeria lost a rare and priceless gem, Chief Moshood Abiola, a proud son of Africa. What you are about to read may appear, momentarily, as being stranger than fiction but trust me, it is absolutely factual. Nigeria has indeed come a long way since that dark season when a handful of influential Nigerians chose to play God by collaborating to annul a process that would definitely have brought our nation closer to its glorious destination. Fourteen years after the symbol of that struggle Chief Moshood Abiola died in mysterious circumstances, it is only pertinent to remind ourselves of the salient stages that we’ve crossed since then. It is a tale full of twists and turns and one that would keep you spellbound by its superlative revelations.


In the early hours of July 5, 1998, Tokunbo Afikuyomi and I left Nduka Obaigbena’s apartment on Park Street, by Park Lane, and trekked all the way to Marble Arch, where we boarded a Black Cab. We had spent the whole night virtually discussing the intractable problems of Nigeria. The three of us were united by one thing, exile. We had served our various stints as refugees on the run from the draconian military regime in Nigeria. Nduka was the first to regain freedom after the sudden death of the maximum ruler, General Sani Abacha, and the take-over of power by the gentleman General, Abdulsalami Abubakar. Nduka had always succeeded as a journalist because of the impeccable sources at his beck and call. His position that night was to warn us about the dangers of not getting Abiola out as soon as possible. Even when you disagree with him on issues, Nduka’s one whose opinion must always be considered. He was not a member of NADECO but he was an Abiola sympathiser. Nduka would readily acknowledge his long-standing friendship with the man Nigerians freely handed their mandate despite occasional disagreements. 


There were dozens of freedom fighters scattered around Europe, United States of America and Canada. Most of us operated under the aegis of National Democratic Coalition (NADECO) while others hid under different formations and organisations. The principal operatives of the war against the military adventurers included Pa Anthony Enahoro, Commodore Dan Suleman, Lt General Alani Ipoola Akinrinade, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, Professor Bolaji Akinyemi, Chief Amos Akingba, Chief Tunde Obadan, Senator Bola Ahmed Tinubu, Hon. Wale Osun, Chief Cornelius Adebayo, Chief Ralph Obioha, and so many others forced to flee the land of their birth. Some of those who chose to stay back at home to slug it out with the military were languishing in various improvised gulags and archipelagos all over Nigeria. Chief among the detainees was Basorun Moshood Abiola who had undoubtedly won the Presidential election held on June 12, 1993, and adjudged the best and fairest ever witnessed in our country.


Many other political gladiators who chose to stay back suffered various degrees of punishment including threats, harassments, mass arrests, detention without trial, torture, and outright murder. Such personalities include Pa Alfred Rewane, Prof Wole Soyinka, Pa Adekunle Ajasin, Chief Bola Ige, Alhaja Kudirat Abiola, Commodore Ebitu Ukiwe, Rear-Admiral Ndubuisi Kanu, Chief Abdul-Ganiyu Oyesola Fawehinmi, Pa Abraham Adesanya, Chief Olabiyi Durojaiye, Aremo Olusegun Osoba, Chief Ayo Adebanjo, Chief Olanihun Ajayi, Mr Femi Falana, Mr Beekololari Ransome-Kuti, Mr Olisa Agbakoba, Pa Solanke Onasanya, Chief Ayo Opadokun, Comrade Frank Kokori Dr Kayode Fayemi, Mr Richie Dayo Johnson, Mr George Noah, Senator Babafemi Ojudu, Mr Kunle Ajibade, and many of those opposed to military dictatorship in Nigeria.


What started as a poor joke on June 16, 1993, when we got hints that the election might be annulled would, sooner than later, snowball into a major conflagration and haunt Nigeria till this day. For those who reasoned like me, we had assumed that Abiola was coasting home to victory from all accounts available immediately after the elections closed on June 12, 1993. I was in Vienna, Austria, to represent Chief Abiola at the Bruno Kreisky Award presented to Chief Gani Fawehinmi on June 11, 1993 and could not make it back in time for the election. I left Austria on Sunday, June 13 to London where I started monitoring the results that appeared in Abiola’s favour. Unknown to most Nigerians what’s after six is always more than seven.


On Monday June 14, I got through to Nduka Obaigbena in Lagos who had some high-level information that Abiola was going to win the election but that it would be cancelled. In a powerful voice, Nduka told me to get Chief Abiola urgently and persuade him to reach out to General Ibrahim Babangida who was, apparently, under intense pressure, possibly, from some malevolent forces, to truncate the elections and declare them null and void. I argued with Nduka (in utter naiveté, retrospectively) that it was impossible for anyone to attempt such a dastardly act. I later confirmed that Nduka actually passed the same information to Dr Doyinsola Hamidat Abiola who, like me, found such contemplation too cruel and contemptible to be attempted by anyone. Little did we appreciate the sheer determination of those who could not be bothered if Nigeria burnt down to ashes as a result of their most reckless action. They had convinced themselves, like all Nigerian leaders, past and present that Nigerians were too docile and divided to unite and fight for any worthy cause.


They were right and wrong. They were right that they could abort a pregnancy in its ninth month but they were wrong in not calculating the risks involved. The world would later feel the vibrations of such a kamikaze plunge that threw Nigeria from the pinnacle of the temple all the way down the abyss of hell.


The plots and intrigues occurred at different locations and settings at the velocity of wildfire in harmattan. Chief Abiola was kept in solitary confinement, and incommunicado from the society at large. All efforts to liberate him from his kidnappers failed. A fierce but controversial legal battle raged in the courts. Offers of bail with conditions, and were offered to Chief Abiola but studiously rebuffed, willy-nilly, by those who did not realise how far the enemies of June 12 were ready to go. We’ll later realise that Chief Abiola was totally oblivious to the deadly chess game going on outside from the condition in which he found himself. At the height of our frustration and desperation in exile, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu and I had surreptitiously met with some Germans who boasted they could enter Nigeria, locate Abiola and set him free but the risks involved were just too gargantuan to undertake, personally or collectively. We soon perished such thoughts.


Abiola’s whereabouts and state of mind remained unknown even to members of his family. What was certain was that the military authorities were working hard on breaking his hard resolve.  This much was later confirmed in a Sunday Times of London publication of July 5, 1998. Tokunbo Afikuyomi and I had picked up the first edition of the famous newspaper at Marble Arch just before we boarded the cab that drove us to our homes in Hampstead Heath and Southgate respectively. A story inside the paper caught our instant attention. A Sunday Times reporter had followed the United Nations Secretary-General, Mr Kofi Annan on his peace-mission to Nigeria. According to the news report, Abiola was met in high spirits in detention but he was not aware of many things going on outside. The reporter claimed Abiola was allowed to watch a television but the volume had been disabled. This was contrary to the rosy picture painted by Nigerian media about Abiola’s newfound comfort and cosiness with the Abdulsalami regime. The spin doctors had regaled us with how Abiola was already negotiating his imminent release from detention when he should be at his desk in Aso Rock sorting out the many problems of Nigeria.


Anyway, both Kofi Annan and Chief Emeka Anyaoku (who was the Commonwealth Secretary-General at that time) had met separately with Abiola and neither of them could extract a commitment from him that he would honour agreements worked out for his bail conditions. The detained man had confessed to being in the clouds and did not know what went on outside. His case was actually more miserable than we had imagined. I was deeply troubled by this news report.


A few hours later, I got a call from Wura Abiola to review and exchange latest development. I immediately told her about the report in Sunday Times. She became emotional and started asking, rhetorically, if there was nothing that could be done to get their dad freed. She said she was on her way to Cambridge and would come back to discuss further with me. I became very apprehensive myself and was engulfed by a premonition that Abiola was going to die in detention.


The feeling was so palpable that I decided to call a friend of mine at LTV8 to share my fears on Abiola’s precarious condition. I remember my friend saying it was impossible for Abiola to die in prison. I wished I was that confident.


On Tuesday morning of July 7, 1998, I received a strident call from Mr Yinka Ibidunni, a famous blind broadcaster at Spectrum Radio in London. I had reluctantly picked the call as I barely went to bed a few hours earlier. As soon as he heard my croaky voice, he queried why I was asleep when my adopted father, Abiola, was about to be killed. He was unequivocal and brusquely emphatic. “Who wants to kill my father?” I asked in a manner that suggested incredulity. It was difficult to imagine anyone would want to harm a man as genuinely caring as Abiola.


This encounter happened just after 7a.m that fateful morning. Mr Ibidunnu pursued his argument to its logical conclusion. He asked if I had not listened to the BBC interviews of America’s emissaries, Thomas Pickering and Susan Rice, who were in Abuja ostensibly to persuade Abiola to forget his mandate and give room for political stability in Nigeria. According to Mr Ibidunni, the Americans were asked about their mission after both Annan and Anyaoku (though Chief Anyaoku told me many years later that he never asked Abiola to forget his mandate) who knew the African terrain better could not persuade Abiola to drop his mandate, and their response startled him, when they said if Abiola fails to agree to a deal, he would have become a danger to Nigeria.  This was what started and nurtured the conspiracy theory that the Americans had a hand in his death. But my question was this: why would America send senior officials to kill Abiola in Nigeria? I will never buy such preposterous theory.


At any rate, I pulled myself out of bed after Mr Ibidunni had managed to annul my sleep. I called Wuraola to tell her of Mr Ibidunni’s doomsday prophecy. We became frantic and decided to issue a press release pleading with the pro-democracy activists to understand the dangers Abiola was being exposed to by refusing to agree to bail conditions. Wuraola composed the release, and we faxed back and forth to fine-tune it. The final copy came through to me at 4.03pm and I was going to forward it to a few media houses when I got the most shocking news of my life. Wuraola was screaming some inaudible things at the other end… Something like “they said they have killed Daddy o” but to me it sounded like “they have released Daddy o” because that’s what we were expecting. Abiola was said to have died at about 4pm that day. Unknown to us our press release was a waste of efforts as the man we want released was already on a journey back to his Creator.


Within a twinkle of an eye, my phone was inundated with calls from all over the world with international journalists asking all manner of questions I could not answer. I was so devastated that I didn’t know when I started querying God. Why would Chief Abiola die in such a manner, after languishing in various cells for four years? Why should Abiola die on the second birthday of my second son, Enitanyole? The coincidence was too painful to bear. One of his last prayers before his arrest was for my wife to conceive and bear children as activism and advocacy had combined to make it impossible for me to spend enough time at home with my young wife. His prayers were answered but we had all our children in his absence.


As my mind raced through this stream of consciousness, I just knew Nigeria was in big trouble. It was only a matter of time before our country would begin to pay a heavy price for this thoughtlessness… We have continued to wobble and fumble from one crisis to another ever since. And it is not known how it would all end.


The more we try to run away from June 12, the more the defiant child continues to humiliate us. Those who think Abiola and June 12 are long dead and buried have missed the point. 
The prodigy just won’t go away. Believe me. 

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  • June 12 could have been a watershed in the Nigeria's politics, but the power play between MKO Abiola and his bosom friend, General Ibrahim Babangida robbed the country of that oppotunity. Why hasn't Nduka Obaigbena broken the news of the knowledge he has about possibility of the election annulment before now? The fact that he has held to the story several years after the annulment makes it hard, very hard to believe no matter how factful it sounds in the story. The real problem may have been between Abiola and Babangida. Even if it was true that some powerful interest groups wanted the election annulled, why didn't the military president who was a benefiaciary of his friend's largesse (who sponsored and financed the coup that brought Babangida to power) that he betrayed him at most needed time? Babangida, aside from the military intelligence officers, some of who were in Abiola's pay list, was the most powerful guy in the country, and his words and actions could have helped Abiola. It is why he remains the guy who holds the ace for his action against his bosom friend. Abiola died without being allowed to actualize the presidency he won, and nor was the party he represented allowed to rule. It is myopic to say June 12 is not dead. Not for lack of love for Abiola to say the truth that his presidency denied and buried with him by his own friends with whom he had shared power and good times. The politics of June 12 has only been kept alive by politicians who want to benefit from Abiola's travail and death, aka President Goodluck Jonathan, who should have given attention to genuine public issues but chooses to play politics of benefitting from an issue that doesn't benefit millions of unemployed and suffering Nigerians. I feel it is time that the gargantuan problems of the country be given attention in public discourse rather than allow the issue of a dead political game and part of the country's past political problem from the NPN's day continued to bother us.

    From: ABIODUN GIWA

    Posted: 10 months ago

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  • Egbon Bobdee. why would you think the americans sending top officials to liquidate abiola is 'preposterous'? Have they not done so before, and even after abiola? Also, dont you think abiola was too close to those crazy guys and they sent him packing perhaps for proving too smart? do you really think that abiola's murder was entire a Nigerian - or even northern Nigerian affair? why do we intellectuals seek to abort knowledge and reason by situating all our problems on a tribal plane, when they are obviously international? did the same Americans not say that yaradua 'had become a danger to Nigeria" when he returned to his own country to die? did you not lead protests in that era? where you unaware or unable to draw the correlations? are we better since the 'yaradua danger' was removed and a 'physically strong' president, was installed? and hey bros, what kind of asylum seeker were you and toks, riding black cabs around London, when the tube was right there at Marble Arch? Marble Arch to Hampstead Heath, and on to freaking Southgate? na wa o. and pls bros, i thought the Duke himself was an NRC stalwart? when did he become such a sympathizer to MKO? These are the real questions still bogging our minds today. be true to your conscience and answer them. then you will perhaps have some sleep over this abiola issue

    From: TWEEZERS

    Posted: 10 months ago

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  • Mr Dele,this story turned my blood a cold one.I wish they were in their right senses not annulled that election,Nigeria would not have been this aback today.

    From: Pally

    Posted: 10 months ago

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  • Again Dele Momodu has written another brilliant piece. The people that put Nigeria 20 years behind in development through the denial of Abiolas mandate have not known peace since then. Problem is we are all suffering for it. What with messed up policies and implementation by mediocre people in government. Very sad indeed.

    From: chris Oshai

    Posted: 10 months ago

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  • Hmm. Speechless.

    From: Clifford

    Posted: 10 months ago

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  • Hmm. Speechless.

    From: Clifford

    Posted: 10 months ago

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  • Mr Dele , I think you have an exaggerated idea of your ( NADECO) contribution to June 12. What freedom fighters are you talking about? Fighting from the streets of London? Fighting in the best houses and neighbourhoods in the world! I as a student with my friends stood on Fadeyi in Lagos! With armoured tanks rolled out by Abcaha himself! Some of us died , some lost all they worked for and they never get mentioned.

    You folks that were in London , American having a 'vacation' are claiming the glory! Freedom fighter , indeed!

    From: MD

    Posted: 10 months ago

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  • Dele's combination of prose and facts is always a delight any day. I eargerly await your book on Chief Abiola and the June 12 debacle. Great one Dele.

    From: olufemi ogunjobi

    Posted: 10 months ago

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  • You people baffle me. You eulogise your friends and benefactors as democrats, activists and all that and think you can fool us, but you are part of the problem and will never be part of the solution. Was it not the same Nduka Obaigbena who went to CNN to declare that Abiola wore agbada with SDP emblazoned on it that he was going to court or ask NEC to nulify the election. Verify this claim from nduka and don't think because you have free column to yourself every weekend you give us trash and think the reading public are fools. Don't feed us with falsehood, we are not dumb. You cannot run with the hare and hunt with the hyena it is suicidal and thats what you are doing even with your ovation.

    From: ndubisi

    Posted: 10 months ago

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  • Who gave Abiola the 'Abuja tea?' Where did the tea come from? Who prepared it? Mustapha said at Oputa Panel that the flask used to serve teas at such occasions had two compartments - one for normal tea and one for poisoned tea.

    I guess we have to wait until the day the actors/actersses in the script decide to confess to the world

    From: Prieye

    Posted: 10 months ago

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  • Thank you

    From: Habba

    Posted: 10 months ago

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  • Well, Mr. Momodu much as I respect and admire your intellect you still do not understand your country Nigeria. June 12 and Abiola are long forgotten by your docile and passive people ravaged by poverty to their bone marrow. But in a glance if I may I ask, where were Goodluck Jonathan and his Ijaw brothers during these struggles. Well we know who the real enemy of Nigeria's progress is.

    From: Bobby

    Posted: 10 months ago

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  • I never met him but I felt him. I did not benefit from his generosity but I love him till tomorrow. Thanks Bob Dee for your write up. When I heard on NTA Network news that he declared his interest to run for presidency, i jumped for joy and screamed - "there is hope for my unborn child!". His Hope '93 slogan was thus apt! When the election was annulled, i lost faith in the country, when he died i wept uncontrollably! What a country. He was a role model and he strengthened my giving spirit. I am a chartered accountant like he once was. Today, I wish I can serve my people by seeking elective position but i am scared stiff of the dark sides of politics. I remember what happened to Abiola and it was made worse by the reaction of mortals to the renaming of UNILAG (where I got my MBA) after him. What a people! MKO, I am an Isoko man, but you will live forever in my heart! - fawomano@gmail.com

    From: fawomano@gmail.com

    Posted: 10 months ago

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  • Abiola was a bold man, bolder than IBB, Sanni Abacha and Abdulsalami Abubakar put together. He defended his mandate to the point of death. He was a bold commander-in- chief. They elevated Abiola to a martyr status. Wikileads we expose all of them some day. Those who could not stand June 12 are also those who are behind Boko Haram. Nigeria does not belong to them. The blood of June 12 and all those who lost their lives in the struggle will hunt and annul the lives of those who afflicted Nigeria with such incalculable damage to the future of Nigeria.

    From: Chris Ogbekhiulu

    Posted: 10 months ago

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  • Thank you Dele, l was there when you came to Vienna with some friends, but the question still lingers that why did Chief Abiola die after the American visit?Can someone really die from drinking tea ?

    From: Olkayode Akanbi

    Posted: 10 months ago

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  • Evil that men do lives after them, every politician in Nigeria, both old and new are all criminals and deserves death by hanging. Abiola is one of them

    From: Chibuike

    Posted: 10 months ago

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  • Bob dee, the problem with nigeria, is that, nigeria is a country of many nations. She is not a nation. So nigeria goes to the highest bidder in politics. It is sad but come December 21st 2012, they all will pay for their atrocities. The world will not come to an end but evil people will get heavy evil reward and good people will get elevated to next level of good spiritual conciousness.

    From: Solomon

    Posted: 10 months ago

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  • Whatever anybody likes to say, one thing is certain and that is; OUR SO CALLED LEADERS HAVE MURDERED SLEEP....................may God in His infinite mercy deliver us from destruction that we have invited on ourselves as a nation.After Abiola, how many people have died in cold blood? I weep for our so called leaders because there is no problem with Nigeria BUT our so called Leaders if we have any and not rulers.

    From: Commander

    Posted: 10 months ago

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  • thanks otunba,for revealing some hidden stories

    From: oladapo olajide

    Posted: 10 months ago

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  • nice piece brother Dele,..but am not the more wiser reading through it all,..many conspiracy theories abound concerning the death of MKO, maybe the world would be exposed to the real truth sometime....
    why was MKO a danger to the West?
    Why is Babangida, Abdusalam, David Mark and other principal actors culpable in MKO,s death not talking??
    An exp�se on MKO,s murder in the like of such comprehensive documentary films and books detailing the role of the CIA and the Belgians in the murder of Patrice Lumumba would be really great.
    your brother
    tope

    From: yomi akintobi

    Posted: 10 months ago

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  • Those that kill by sword shall die by sword.

    From: darlington

    Posted: 10 months ago

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  • In a country like ours where we lack true heros we choose to celebrate thief and criminals who enriched themselves from our commonwealth.If i may ask, How can this writer say that our problem started with june 12?? since the civil war this country lost its foundation and injustice is everywhere the writer forgot to tell us that there was election that was won and was annulled by the same military who annulled june 12, he also forgot that so many politicians were disqualified by the same military before abiola was allowed to contest.

    From: artmmon 15,62

    Posted: 10 months ago

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  • I am still at lost why 000-5 of the population will be causing confusion in Nigeria. They had perpetrated evil by aborting June 12, we will never have peace until we do restitution and ensure that equity and justices prevail in our land. Abiola attributes will continue to live in me and i pray to Almighty God grant him paradise. Ameen

    From: Bolaji Kazeem

    Posted: 10 months ago

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  • Dele Mamodu how is Abiola, a dead man 14yrs ago is still Nigeria's problem? Can you write about some other burning national issues this guy? Every fucking week, Abiolas! What a weekly trash! If you don't know what to write again, you better relinquish this page for another person! Enough, this is becoming irritating!

    From: Nwatah.com

    Posted: 10 months ago

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  • day abiola died, i think this space should be given to writers that have important issues.It is either the day abiola gave him money or the day abiola died,pls we have more burning issues than all this.Chief Abiola has done his part for this country bobdee should do his own

    From: unimi

    Posted: 10 months ago

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  • Bob Dee I've for long been expecting your detailed insider story chronicled into a book about all that happened during that period, which I know will sell even more that the Yar'Adua book. Stop serving us the tiny bits or snacks and serve us a full course meal. lol. It's long overdue

    From: Uche Ndubuisi-Agwu

    Posted: 10 months ago

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