

Sani noted that when
Nigeria finally attained democratic rule in 1999, none of those who suffered in
the hands of the military while struggling to entrench democracy in the country
got any political position.
The senator representing
Kaduna-Central senatorial district, Shehu Sani, says the refusal of former
President Olusegun Obasanjo to recognise and honour the acclaimed winner of the
June 12, 1993 presidential election, the late MKO Abiola, is a reflection of
Nigeria’s institutional failure.
He said it was, therefore,
not surprising that the present crop of democrats in the country, who did not
sacrifice anything for the nation’s democracy, were only interested in amassing
wealth for themselves at the expense of the masses.
Sani delivered a keynote
address on Monday at the 2017 National Breakfast Prayers and Tribute Session in
honour of Abiola.
The event with the theme,
“June 12 movement and the hope of equitable restructuring for Nigeria,” was
also to commemorate the 24th anniversary of June 12, 1993 and it held at the
late Abiola’s house in Ikeja, Lagos.
Sani argued that despite the
Federal Government’s failure to honour the late Abiola, the June 12, 1993
presidential election that the late businessman won, but which the military
junta of General Ibrahim Babangida annulled, laid the foundation for the
current democratic rule in the country.
He said, “Without the
struggle of June 12, there could not have been democracy in Nigeria today. The
change and the experience in the 2015 election was part of the seed of June 12,
it was the same forces that forced the military out power that rallied
Nigerians to eject the PDP out of power.”
He said Obansanjo’s failure
to honour the late Abiola reflected the effort of the political class to
suppress the sacrifice of those who went to jail and those who paid the supreme
price for the democracy that Nigeria has today.
Sani said, “It is not
simply about Chief MKO Abiola not being recongnised by Chief Olusegun Obasanjo,
it is about an institutional decision of the political class, who continues to
suppress the role played by the free press bringing about democracy…17 years
down democratic lane, hardly will you see any of those that were on the streets
of Lagos protesting for democracy ever being recognised with even an award of
OON, which is the lowest. As they share oil blocks to themselves, share positions
to themselves, so they share national honour to themselves.”
Also speaking, a former
Speaker of the Lagos State House of Assembly, Adeyemi Ikuforiji, said had the
late Abiola been allowed to enjoy the mandate given to him by Nigerians, there
might not have been the different sectional agitations in the country.
Ikuforiji said, “The man
who paid the supreme sacrifice, he had nothing to do with poverty as of the
time he put down his life for Nigeria; our then President-elect had made many
Nigerians from all walks of life millionaires on his own. He had contributed to
the growth of many communities across Nigeria and it had nothing to do with
tribe or religion.
“Perhaps, if our
President-elect had been given the opportunity to run his term of office, there
would have been no Niger Delta militants; perhaps if MKO had been given the
opportunity to run the mandate that was given to him by Nigerians, today, there
wouldn’t have been any movement by Nnamdi Kanu; perhaps, if he had been given
the opportunity to serve in the leadership role that Nigerians gave to him on
June 12, 1993, today there wouldn’t have been any declaration from the Arewa
youths asking the Igbo to vacate.”
Speaking at the late
Abiola’s graveside, popular poet, Odia Ofeimum, said ‘all the problems that
made the annulment of the June 12, 1993 presidential election possible are
still with us’.
Also speaking at a June 12
anniversary event organised by the Oodua People Congress and chaired by a
former Governor of Abia State, Chief Uzor Kalu, OPC leader, Gani Adams,
lamented that those who benefitted most from Abiola’s martyrdom, did not want
to remember his memories today.
Adams stated, “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 Abiola’s name
have since found new political patrons. Those who proclaimed Abiola as the
symbol of democracy and the rallying point for the people’s hopes have since
been dancing on his grave.”
The OPC leader regretted
the protest that greeted the renaming of the University of Lagos after Abiola
by ex-President Goodluck Jonathan’s administration.
Also speaking, Kalu said
the country’s Democracy Day should be June 12 and not May 29, adding that May
29 was wrongly chosen because those who did not participate in the struggle for
democracy chose it.
The guest speaker at the
OPC event and a lecturer in the Department of Philosophy, University of Lagos,
Dr. Chiedozie Okoro, who spoke on the topic, ‘MKO: A symbol of freedom in the
history of Nigerian democracy’, said the annulment of the June 12 election
brutally raped the downtrodden of the hope for a new dawn of freedom.
“But freedom denied is
freedom delayed. True, when a messiah or hero is cut down, the flock (the
people) are in disarray, only for some period. Time heals all wounds. It does
not take long for the people to regroup,’’ the lecturer said.
He further called for the
restructuring of the country along political and economic lines, taking into
cognisance the country’s ethnic and religious differences.
Okoro stated, “The
restructuring of Nigeria should be vehemently and persistently pursued. This,
ultimately, will be good for Nigeria. The restructuring of Nigeria should not
be delayed. Delay is dangerous because ethnic consciousness is rife and it is
not about to subside.

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