Gumsu, who may have cut short her sleep early Saturday morning, took to Twitter at 3:16 am to pay tribute to her father, saying, "I miss you so much."
Abacha became the 10th military Head of
State of Nigeria on November 17, 1993 but died in office on June 8, 1998.
"May Allah grant my father Aljanna
Firdaus. I miss you so much. Fifteen years already. Allah ya jikan ka da
rhama 'Baba,'" she stated in a tweet.
Sani Abacha |
A few hours Gumsu posted the tweet,
former Minister of Aviation, Femi Fani-Kayode, replied her, saying,
"Ameen." However, Fani-Kayode's move to share in her grief on the
15th anniversary of the death of Abacha made a handful of his followers on
Twitter to raise an eyebrow.
When Fani-Kayode's gesture was noticed
by Gumsu, she replied his tweet, saying, "Thank you,'' while Fani-Kayode
responded, "My pleasure, dear.''
But Fani-Kayode's followers on the
social service wondered if he was one of the Nigerians who subtly benefited
from the Abacha regime.
"Fani-Kayode, sir, were you
pro-Abacha?" one of his followers, Dolapo Bello, queried in a tweet. But
realising what damage that could do to his reputation online, Fani-Kayode
responded swiftly by dissociating himself from the Abacha regime.
He stated, "Of course not. I was
not pro-Abacha government. I was one of those who fought his government."
But as the day broke on Saturday, the
Nigerian Twitter space was soon turned into a podium for debate with some
arguing that Abacha was a hero, while others vehemently disagreed on the social
network.
A Nigerian with the name, Ikhide, who
tweets via @ikhide argued, "Nigeria's democracy has seen more
extrajudicial murders, state-sponsored looting, incompetence and insecurity
than two reigns of Gen. Abacha. If I had to choose among Goodluck Jonathan,
Olusegun Obasanjo and Abacha, I would choose Oga Jonathan, followed by Abacha,
before OBJ. My father Papalolo was happier, safer and more prosperous under
Abacha.''
Segun Bamidele said, "With due
respect 'Mr. & Mrs. Death' you have been unfair to Nigeria. You took Abacha
and Abiola 15 years ago and left us with more wicked charlatans.''
Meanwhile, some Nigerians used the
picture of the late President as their Display Picture on their BlackBerry
Messenger. One of such persons, who is a contact on our correspondent's BBM, with
the name Engr L.G. Adinoyi, wrote on his BBM, "Nigeria needs another Gen.
Abacha.''
Reacting to the way Gumsu mourned the
death of her father on Twitter, a prolific user of the social service, Tolu
Ogunlesi, said, "That's the lesson: That even the cruellest of dictators
have families. And are often loving and caring daddies.''
Though Ogunlesi was silent on the
"Abacha hero debate" he painstakingly equated the Abacha regime with
that of the Goodluck Jonathan administration. He explained that some of the
achievements the Jonathan administration was laying claim to were also there
during the Abacha regime.
He said, "Truth is, many
'achievements' Jonathan Government is claiming, Abacha too claimed. African Cup
of Nations win; Petroleum Trust Fund (for Abacha) – Subsidy Reinvestment and
Empowerment Programme (for Jonathan); Failed Banks Tribunal (for Abacha) and
Fuel Subsidy trial (Jonathan).
"Give Abacha's list of
achievements to Doyin Okupe (presidential assistant on public affairs) and
Labaran Maku (minister of information), you won't recognise the dictator again o.
Bottomline is that there are no heroes anywhere, are there? Only varying
degrees of non-heroism. Nigerians celebrated Abacha's death. There were parties
in Britain celebrating Margaret Thatcher's Death. Therefore, the summary of the
matter is this: All leaders are evil but some are (much) less evil than
others."
For Adelola Edema, many Nigerians
praising Abacha as a hero on social media are youths who need to take some
history lessons. "It's really sad to see young Nigerians praise Abacha. It
makes me fear for this country. Should the youths not be our hope for a better
tomorrow," Edema noted.
One Kunle, tweeting via @kunledee,
laments, "June 4, you celebrated Kudirat Abiola as a fighter for democracy.
June 8, you now wake up to hail Abacha? Seriously? See the disconnect?"
Nedu, tweeting via @nedunaija,
lamented, "If you tell me Nigeria was better under Abacha than it is now,
that'll be because you don't know about the time value of corruption.
"Our inability to think is our
real problem. How Abacha became a hero overnight beats me! I remember vividly,
by this time 15 years ago, our street in Ijeshatedo (Lagos) erupted in
jubilation, with people shouting Abacha ti ku o (Abacha has died o!"
When one Abiodun, tweeting via
@biodunonline, confronted Gumsu, saying, "You and your family, return
stolen wealth of the nation," she replied, "That's your opinion. Allah
kareem."
Sani Abacha was a tyranny,a terro!!!!
ReplyDeleteI think people that re celebrating Abacha are dis-illusioned. But the positive thing is that there is a need for change;in order words desperation took over for a new and better Nigeria so anything outside what we have now is good.
ReplyDelete