As Nigerians
mark the 22nd anniversary of the June 12, 1993 presidential election, won by
the late Chief Moshood Abiola, MBACHU GODWIN NNANNA and andrew essien asks if
any lesson has been learnt from the incidence for which he gave his
life
Exactly 22 years ago,
Nigerians took part in what political analysts described as the most credible
and transparent presidential election in the nation’s political history.
June 12 perhaps remains
one of the remarkable date in Nigeria’s political history as the events of that
day remain evergreen in the minds of Nigerians. The events of that day,
political pundits say would have shaped Nigeria’s successive elections and
democracy, but has it?
The controversial June 12, 1993 presidential election which was
widely acclaimed free and fair and won by the late business mogul, Chief
Moshood Abiola was annulled by the then Babaginda led military regime after
several efforts to stop the election had failed.
No sooner than the electoral body commenced a state-by-state
announcement of election results that Babangida announced the annulment of the
election.
In a speech on June 26, 1993, Babaginda cited electoral
malpractices such as rigging and vote buying as reasons for his action.
Nigerians were enraged and the subsequent protest set the stage
for the forced exit of IBB, the self-styled maradona from power. Street
protests and organised civil disobedience became a daily routine. Babangida
eventually “stepped aside” on August 26 and set up the Chief Ernest
Shonekan-led Interim National Government with a mandate to run government and
organise fresh elections. The protests continued; the late General Sani Abacha,
who was left behind to ‘stabilise’ Shonekan’s administration, shoved it aside
on November 17 and took over the reins of government.
The struggle for the actualisation of the people’s mandate
continued unabated. Scores of Nigerians were killed as the military cracked
down on protesters, several went on exile, and more were jailed for daring to
stand up to the military.
Activists, civil servants, students and the media literally shut
the nation down with daily street protests and prolonged strikes by workers in
critical sectors of the economy. The presumed winner of the election, Chief MKO
Abiola, erroneously believing that Abacha would do the right thing by restoring
his mandate, encouraged some of his lieutenants to participate in the Abacha
administration. When it became obvious that Abacha was as unwilling to honour
the people’s will, Abiola took his destiny in his hands and stepped forward to
claim his mandate.
On June 11, 1994, Abiola declared a Government of National Unity
at Epetedo in Lagos. In a speech titled ‘Enough is Enough’, he said, “As of
now, from this moment, a new Government of National Unity is in power
throughout the length and breath of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, led by me,
Bashorun M.K.O. Abiola, as President and Commander-in-Chief. The National
Assembly is hereby reconvened. All dismissed governors are reinstated. The
State Assemblies are reconstituted, as are all local government councils. I
urge them to adopt a bi-partisan approach to all the issues that come before
them. At the national level, a bi-partisan approach will be our guiding
principle. I call upon the usurper, General Sani Abacha, to announce his
resignation forthwith, together with the rest of his illegal ruling council.
“We are prepared to enter into negotiations with them to work
out the mechanics for a smooth transfer of power. I pledge that if they hand
over quietIy, they will be retired with all their entitlements, and their
positions will be accorded all the respect due to them. For our objective is
neither recrimination nor witch-hunting, but an enforcement of the will of the
Nigerian people, as expressed in free elections conducted by the duly
constituted authority of the time.
“I hereby invoke the mandate bestowed upon me by my victory in
the said election, to call on all members of the Armed Forces and the Police,
the Civil and Public Services throughout the Federal Republic of Nigeria , to
obey only the Government of National Unity that is headed by me, your only
elected President. My Government of National Unity is the only legitimate,
constituted authority in the Federal Republic of Nigeria, as of now.”
Abiola had famously declared, “I cannot surrender (my mandate)
unless the people so demand and it is by virtue of this mandate that I say that
the decision of the Federal Military Government to cancel the results (of the
elections) is unpatriotic and capable of causing undue and unnecessary
confusion in the country.”
This courageous move led to the arrest and subsequent death of
MKO in detention on June 24 .
Gen. Abdulsalami Abubakar took over the reign of power and
initiated a transition programme which ushered in the current political
dispensation in 1999. His transition programme was taken with a pinch of salt
as very few Nigerians believed he was going to hand over power to a
democratically elected civilian president.
A lot has happened in the political scene since 1993. The
results of other elections, except from that of 1999, have been subjects of
litigation. The idea of several amendments to the Electoral Act was unable to
re-ignite the general feeling of being a Nigerian, which the June 12, 1993
election represents.
Osita okechukwu , a chieftain of All Progressives Congress (APC)
while assessing Nigerian democracy since 1993 and whether any lesson has been
learnt from the june 12 episode said “ democracy has evolved and I believe it’s
a gradual process, democracy is not a revolution, I think that peoples will are
beginning to count in elections in Nigeria and the peoples will are being
respected and no longer subverted as it was in the old. We just had the general
election and the that of national Assembly presiding officers and you saw how
it went , so I think that we are making progress”
Although he wavered that they were efforts to force Nigeria back
to the days of ethnic and religious politics but insist that Nigeria democracy
is evolving.
However, there are opinions that nothing has been learnt from
the june 12 episode by the political class as the political scene is dominated
by hatred, winner takes all, imposition of candidates , political motivated
killing and thuggery as a result of armed youth by politicians who use them for
their selfish interest..
Apart from the declaration of June 12 as public holiday as is
being observed in some states of the Federation ,especially in the South-West
and the naming of monuments after the acclaimed winner of the election,
political analysts opined that our political leaders need to take a cue from
the exemplary sacrifice made by the late business mogul and winner of the
famous June 12, 1993 presidential election, Chief MKO Abiola, and ensure his
sacrifice is not in vain by providing the necessary dividends of democracy to
the masses.
Source: www.leadership.ng
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