AN OPEN LETTER TO PRESIDENT TINUBU

 OLUSEGUN OLORUNTOBA writes for the

 reparation, recognition and restoration of dignity of victimised Officers

We extend our warm regards to you and hope that this letter finds you in good health.

We, the victims of the alleged coups of 1995 and 1997, write to you with a mix of trepidation and hope. For some 30 years, we have waited for justice, our hopes raised and dashed with each change of administration.

We are convinced that your presidency marks a new chapter in our quest for justice.

In 1993, Nigeria was on the cusp of democracy, but the military dictatorship crushed our hopes. Many of us were accused of coup plotting, tortured, and detained without trial.

The Oputa Panel, established by President Olusegun Obasanjo in 1999, investigated human rights violations during the military rule and recommended compensation for victims like us. However, successive governments have ignored these recommendations, leaving us in a state of limbo.

While demanding justice, we are appealing to find favour from your gracious and generous presence, Mr President. We seek the implementation of the Oputa Panel’s recommendations, including promotion to our rightful ranks, a letter of apology, and comprehensive rehabilitation. We also request that you endorse the reliefs and compensation recommended by the Oputa Panel.

We are aware that time is running out, and many of our colleagues have passed away without seeing justice. We are aware that several of our colleagues are languishing in untold hardship and indignity. We appeal to you, one more time, Mr President, to act promptly and right the wrongs of the past.

We trust in your magnanimity, Mr President, and believe that you will bring an end to our long wait for justice. We cannot stop hoping and are convinced that your administration will bring us the reprieve we so desperately seek.

We are more buoyed than ever before that we can renew our strength and hope in your ‘Renewed Hope Agenda’.

In the history of Nigeria, certain years stand as stark reminders of the nation’s aspirations and its darkest hours. The year 1993 is etched in the collective memory as a period of immense hope, a time when civilians dared to envision a future free from the shackles of military dictatorship. Within the ranks of the army, whispers of a return to democratic governance echoed with growing fervour.

Yet, as many would later realise, the boundary between hope and despair is perilously thin. For those who dared to dream, their aspirations were brutally extinguished when a new regime of tyranny seized power, plunging the nation into an abyss of uncertainty and fear. Accusations of coups and “phantom coup plotters” became the chilling refrain of the regime, leading to the imprisonment of countless civilian and military figures.

Mr President, while some, like ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo, would later find their path to power paved by the very suffering they endured under the despot, others were left to languish in obscurity, their pleas for justice unanswered, their lives irrevocably scarred. Now, three decades later, since Your Excellency assumed the mantle of leadership, a flicker of hope ignites once more in our hearts.

The Weight of Unresolved Grievances: The wounds inflicted during the General Sani Abacha regime run deep, leaving scars that tortuous times have left open and untended that we only hope God, using you, Mr President can tenderly heal and close. For all of us “phantom coup” plotters, the years since our unjust imprisonment have been a relentless cycle of hope and disappointment, of promises made and broken. We have witnessed successive administrations come and go, each offering a glimmer of hope, only to ultimately fail to deliver the justice we desperately and rightly seek.

Mr President, we earnestly appeal to you to expedite action and order the immediate implementation of all reliefs.

Former President Buhari’s recognition of MKO Abiola as a national hero and the declaration of June 12 as a nationwide public holiday further fuelled these hopes. Yet, despite these promising signs, the wheels of justice turned slowly, leaving the Oputa recommendations unfulfilled.

A New Dawn, Renewed Hope

Mr President, with your glorious ascension, a new chapter begins in the saga of our seeming helplessness and hopelessness. Your Excellency has always stood for justice and genuine and immediate recompense. It is with absolute trust that you will finally break the cycle of disappointment and provide us with the needed relief that we are writing you this open letter. Our beloved President, we do not want to be forgotten, to be written as a footnote in the story of reparation.

Mr President, with you, we do not hope with uncertainty, nor are we completely broken by the failure of past democratically elected presidents. You are different. You are Asiwaju. You always carry a badge of honour. We trust in your speedy resolution of our 30-year wait for justice and reparation.

Mr President, we are convinced that our hope in your magnanimity can set us free from the shackles of the unjust past.

Mr President, we are making a renewed plea for action. We urge you to review the findings of the Oputa panel, acknowledge our innocence, and provide us with the compensation and recognition we deserve.

The Oputa panel made several recommendations regarding the phantom coup plotters, including:

A formal apology from the government,

compensation for their suffering,

restoration of their ranks and benefits,

promotion to the ranks they would have attained, and comprehensive rehabilitation

Mr President, the time has come to right the wrongs of the past, to heal the wounds that have festered for far too long. By implementing the recommendations of the Oputa panel, you have the power to bring closure to our long-suffering souls, restore our faith in justice, and reaffirm your administration’s commitment to the rule of law.

Thank you for your attention to our plea.

Yours Sincerely, Col Lawan Gwadabe, Col Emmanuel Ndubueze, Col Gabriel Ajayi (late), Col Roland Emokpae, Col Edwin Jando,

Col Babatunde Bello-Fadile, Col Olusegun Oloruntoba, Cdr Dennis Omesa

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