Remembering MKO And June 12 By Reuben Abati

Remembering MKO And June 12 By Reuben Abati

by Joseph Anthony
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Read his article below…

This day, June 12 will always be remembered by those who have defied the
culture of silence and conspiracy against a significant moment in  Nigerian history, to remind us of how today, 23 years ago, the battle
against the exit of the military from power was fought at the ballot by a
determined Nigerian people.

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It is indeed sad that apart from the South West states of Oyo, Ogun,
Lagos and Osun which have doggedly continued to celebrate the hero, and
later martyr of that battle, Chief Moshood Kashimawo Olawale (MKO)
Abiola, there has been studied indifference to the June 12 phenomenon by
the Federal Government and remarkably, the rest of Nigeria.
This is sadder still because MKO Abiola was not an ethnic champion: he
was a man of pan-Nigerian vision and ambition, who went into politics to
give the people hope, to unite them and lead them out of poverty. His
campaign manifesto was instructively titled โ€œHope 93- Farewell to
Poverty: How to make Nigeria a better place for all.

โ€When Nigerians voted in the presidential election of June 12, 1993,
they chose the Muslim-Muslim ticket of MKO Abiola and Baba Gana Kingibe
under the platform of the Social Democratic Party (SDP). MKO Abiola not
only defeated the Presidential candidate of the National Republican
Convention (NRC), Bashir Tofa in his home state of Kano, he also
defeated him โ€œfairly and squarelyโ€ with โ€œ58.4% of the popular vote and a
majority in 20 out of 30 states and the FCT.โ€

That election was adjudged to be free and fair, and peaceful. But the
Ibrahim Babangida-led military government had been playing games with
the transition-to-civilian rule, and so it chose not to announce the
final results of the election, and later on June 23, 1993, the
Presidential election was annulled.

This was a coup against the Nigerian people, and an act of brazen
injustice, but June 12 will go down in history as the birthday of the
revolution that swept the Nigerian military back to the barracks. The
media began to refer to MKO Abiola as โ€œthe man widely believed to have
won the June 12, 1993 electionโ€, or perhaps, โ€œthe undeclared winnerโ€ but
those who played key roles at the time, including Humphrey Nwosu, the
chief electoral umpire, have since confessed that โ€œtheir hands were
tiedโ€, and that indeed MKO Abiola won the election. General Ibrahim
Babangida, then Head of State, has not been able to live down that error
of judgement. It was the final error that also consumed his government,
forcing him to โ€œstep asideโ€, and as it turned out โ€œstep awayโ€.

He left behind an Interim National Government (ING) led by Chief Ernest
Shonekan who was handpicked for the assignment, but the ING contrivance
only survived for 83 days; in November 1993, General Sani Abacha, who
was in the ING as Minister of Defence, seized power. It was obvious that
the military never wanted to relinquish power.

June 12 brought out the worst and the best in the people: the worst in
the military and its hungry agents definitely, but the injustice of its
annulment released the peopleโ€™s energy and capacity for protest.
Progressive Nigerians spoke in unison against military tyranny and the
violation of their right to choose. The Abacha government, which had
initially deceived the progressives about its intentions, unleashed a
reign of terror on the country: media houses were attacked, journalists
were jailed, bombed, beaten, civil society activists were hauled into
detention. But the repression was met with stiff resistance.

The people insisted on the election of June 12, the militaryโ€™s exit and
Abiolaโ€™s declaration as winner of the election. On June 11, 1994, in
what is now known as the Epetedo declaration, Chief MKO Abiola declared a
Government of National Unity and asked for his mandate to be duly
recognized. He was subsequently arrested for treasonable felony, but
that only added fuel to the protests. Abiola later died in custody on
July 7, 1998, a month to the day, after General Sani Abacha himself
died.

But the real outcome was that the military had been branded evil, and
the people would accept nothing but the end of military rule. This was
the scenario that led to the return to democratic rule on May 29, 1999,
and the specific choice of a political figure from the South West to
assuage the expressed fears of the South West that the denial of MKO
Abiolaโ€™s mandate was an assault on the right of the South West.

The ethnicization of the June 12 protest was unfortunate because indeed
the struggle against tyranny recruited foot soldiers from virtually
every part of the country, international support also gave the struggle
higher relevance; those were the days when serving foreign diplomats
joined pro-democracy protesters to wave placards on the streets. Many
died, and they were all from across Nigeria, businesses were affected,
but the people were determined to make the sacrifice. It was that
revolution that made May 29, 1999 possible, and if any date is deserving
of celebration, it is June 12.

The irony is that those who benefited most from MKO Abiolaโ€™s martyrdom
do not want to be reminded of him. And those who used to talk about
injustice have since, given the opportunity, inflicted their own
injustice on the people. Those who used to swear by Abiolaโ€™s name have
since found new political patrons. Those who proclaimed Abiola as the
symbol of democracy and the rallying point for the peopleโ€™s hopes have
since been dancing on his grave. Successive federal administrations
since 1999, have also failed to redress the injustice of 1993, by doing
the minimum of declaring June 12 a national holiday.

There have been suggestions along this line, including the possibility
of a post-humous national honour (the only constraint here is that the
national honour is not awarded post-humously although there is nothing
that expressly forbids this in the enabling Act), or the naming of a
major national monument after MKO, or the official admission that the
June 12, 1993 election was indeed won and lost and was not in any way
inconclusive.

Truth: Nigeria forgets too soon, too easily. For, when indeed the
Jonathan administration tried to address this injustice by naming a
significant national institution after MKO Abiola, the attempt resulted
in controversy and a storm. The last paragraph of then President
Goodluck Jonathanโ€™s 2012 Democracy Day speech had renamed the University
of Lagos after MKO Abiola. Both the students and staff trooped to the
streets in protest. They rejected the name-change and declared that
their universityโ€™s name is a brand that nobody, not even the Federal
Government of Nigeria could tamper with, in honour of anybody, living or
dead.

They said they were not consulted and the University Act had not been
amended. Politics and opportunism was read into the gesture, and the
government had to eat the humble pie. Would the reaction be different if
another government were to take the same step, the same way the
reaction to the increase in the pump price of petroleum products has
been different this year, under a different dispensation?

MKO Abiola was a victim of military politics and conspiracy, now his
martyrdom and legacy seem lost in the intricate web of conditioned
amnesia and the ego of those who continue to compete with his memory. In
a country where history is no longer taught, and there are no
well-managed museums and monuments to make history part of the public
landscape, a generation is already emerging, like the generation of
UNILAG students in 2012, who may someday ask: who is MKO Abiola? Those
who refuse to teach history run the risk of producing children who may
lack the capacity to remember and the wisdom to appreciate historyโ€™s
many lessons.

Those who insist speculatively that MKO Abiola could not have been a
good President also miss the point about his example and legacy: his
martyrdom shaped the architecture of much that happened subsequently in
Nigerian history, and it is not the militaryโ€™s duty to veto the people
of Nigeria. The military have been shipped out of power for good, they
can only return as they have been doing as retired soldiers, and
whatever happens with our democracy, the people are resolved that nobody
can annul their right to choose, and it is part of their right to
choose, to sometimes make mistakes and learn. The various state
governments and civil groups that remember and celebrate MKO Abiola
every year deserve a pat on the back for defying amnesia. June 12 is
ultimately not just about one man who became a symbol; it is also about
the collective struggle against military tyranny, a reminder of people
power and the value of civil society; it is that historical moment when
Nigerians voted for change and stood by it.

On this occasion of the 23rd anniversary, may the words of MKO Abiola at
Epetedo on June 11, 1994 prick our conscience: โ€œPeople of Nigeria,
exactly one year ago, you turned out in your millions to vote for me,
Chief MKO Abiola as the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
But politicians in uniform, who call themselves soldiers but are more
devious than any civilian would want to be, deprived you of your
God-given right to be ruled by the President you had yourselves elected.
These soldier-politicians introduced into our body politic, a concept
hitherto unknown to our political lexicography, something strangely
called the โ€œannulmentโ€ of an election perceived by all to have been the
fairest, cleanest and most peaceful ever held in our nation.

โ€œโ€ฆMy hope has always been to arouse whatever remnants of patriotism are
left in the hearts of these thieves of your mandate, and to persuade
them that they should not allow their personal desire to rule to usher
our beloved country into an ear of political instability and ruinโ€ฆ

โ€œInstead they have resorted to the tactics of divide and rule, bribery,
and political perfidy, misinformation and (vile) propaganda. How much
longer can we tolerate all this? There is no humiliation I have not
endured, no snare that has not been put in my path, no โ€œsetupโ€ that has
not been designed for me in my endeavor to use the path of peace to
enforce the mandate that you bestowed on me one year ago. It has been a
long night. But the dawn is here. Today people of Nigeria, I join you
all in saying, โ€œEnough is Enough!โ€โ€ฆEnough of military rule…Enough of
square pegs in round holesโ€ฆโ€

I recommend a reading of the entire declaration by all patriots in remembrance of Chief MKO Abiola. Google it. Read it.

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