Gen Sani Abacha’s wife
claimed the betrayal is responsible for the spate of allegations of financial
impropriety being made against her husband, insisting he was not a thief.
Twenty-two years after the
death of Nigeria’s former dictator, Gen Sani Abacha, his wife Maryam is
writhing under the pang of abandonment by former friends and relations,
especially in Kano.
She wondered why it took
more than two decades for the said loots to be coming out, noting that they
were all lies and that time would bring out the truth.
The former first lady
stated this in an interview with Kano Focus to mark the 22th anniversary of the
death of the former military ruler.
She did not hide her
disappointment with Kano people.
“I hope Kano people will
realise that Sani was their son. And this man was born in Kano in Sabon Gari
and later he came to Fagge and grew up, but his name is Abacha – a Kanuri name from
Borno.
“He has marks, Kanuri marks
on his face, but he chose to be a Kano man. And he worked for Kano and he
planted Kano people.
“There are people that he
helped a lot, but they are not even greeting me now for no reason.
“They just hate us! But why?
This is a very bad attitude. It is Haram and Allah is watching us.”
She insisted that her
husband did not steal from the country as being claimed, saying he was being
framed.
“How come this man was not
a thief until he died? What is this amount of money after 22 years?
“You say oh we have found
this amount of money and we’re bringing it back.
“It is a shame to tell lies
on a dead man! It is a shame to tell lies on your leader.
“If he had done wrong, God
knows. If other people are putting the wrong on him, it is a matter of time,”
she added.
She has harsh words for
those behind her travails.
“They will kneel down like
America is kneeling down now.
“Anybody that is evil will kneel
down just like this corona has come to shut this world.”
Abacha has been the most
vilified among Nigeria’s former military rulers.
He incarcerated Moshood
Abiola, the winner of the June 12 1993 Presidential election and sat on his
mandate until death forced him off the throne on June 8 1998.
His killer squad
assassinated Abiola’s wife Kudirat in 1996.
He forced many pro-democracy
activists into exile and put many others in jail.
His government also shut
down newspapers, not caring about the livelihood of the workers there.
On top of that, he wanted
to succeed himself as a civilian leader, in an orchestrated political move, with
five million March.
But death took him away on
8 June 1998.
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