JUNE 12 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS: AUTHENTIC NIGERIAS DEMOCRACY DAY


By Comrade Kayode O. Adedeji,
National President, Network of Civil Society Group (NOCSG)

Monday 12th June 2017 marks the 23rd anniversary of the evergreen annulled presidential election held on Saturday, June 12, 1993. It was an election widely adjudged to be the freest and fairest in Nigeria chequered political history.The eventual annulment of the election and the agitations which snowballed from the Nigerian masses against the dictatorial tendency of the military remains a watershed in the Nigerian history.
LATE CJIEF M.K.O ABIOLA, WINNER OF JUNE 12 ELECTIONS
However as a result of General Ibrahim Badamosi Babangidas decision to relinquish power, he puts in place a transition to civil rule programme to return the nation to democratic governance.
Gen. Babangida had in 1987 announced a transition programme which was scheduled to begin in the third quarter of 1987. The timetable included local government elections on a zero-party basis, the lifting of the ban on politics and the registration of political parties as well as the inauguration of elected state governments and the inauguration of a new president in 1990.However, Babangida later shifted the hand-over date to 1993. In December 1987, the regime successfully organized the local government elections on a zero-party basis and in 1989, Babangida legalised the formation of political parties. In pursuit of Babangidas promise of making a clean break with the political past, the regime prohibited certain categories of former political office holders from contesting for elective office during the transition programme.These included persons who had held political offices at the federal or state levels in the civilian governments between 1960 and 1966, and 1979 and 1983, as well as former or serving state military governors or administrators, service chiefs in the armed forces and the police, including former military heads of state and the serving president.
LATE CHIEF M.K.O ABIOLA WITH IBB 
In justifying these measures in 1988, Babangida would tell his countrymen that we have not chosen and have not sought to choose those who will succeed us. We have only decided on those who will not. We also have no vested interest in who succeeds our successors. This would serve as his watchword throughout the transition period.However, Babangida would later ban all the six registered political parties and formed two political parties: the left-of-centre Social Democratic Party (SDP) and the right-of-centre National Republican Convention (NRC), which represented popular political views and ideological sentiments of majority of Nigerians. And he would later unban the earlier banned categories of politicians.
The state and federal legislative elections duly took place in December 1991 and the newly elected officials were inaugurated on 2 January 1992, setting the stage for the last phase of the transition programme: the presidential election. But the presidential primaries of both parties were cancelled due to widespread allegations of irregularities. Babangida then dissolved all party structures in the country, and appointed caretaker committees to run the parties instead. He also disqualified all aspirants who had participated in the previous primaries from contesting any further elections during the transition programme.
GENERAL I.B.B, EVIL GENIUS
Chief M.K.O Abiola won the ticket of the Social Democratic Party SDP as the Presidential flag bearer of the party prior to the general elections. After keenly contested presidential primaries, celebrated businessman and publisher, Chief Moshood Kashimawo Olawale Abiola (MKO) and little-known Kano-based businessman, Alhaji Bashir Othman Tofa emerged presidential candidates of SDP and NRC respectively.
Then the final battle, the presidential election, was set for June 12, 1993. Abiola Highly loved and admired, Chief MKO Abiola had distinguished himself as a successful businessman who however had made much of his wealth through government patronage. Chief Abiola had also indicated interest for the presidency in 1979 and 1983 under the defunct National Party of Nigeria (NPN). Very generous and flamboyant, Chief Abiola donated to countless number of people and causes, and received numerous awards and chieftaincy titles within and outside Nigeria. 
Securing the presidential ticket of the SDP was a major step towards achieving his dream. YarAdua A political juggernaut, Gen. Shehu Musa YarAdua, who was the deputy to then Gen. Olusegun Obasanjo from 1976 to 1979, had gone into business after retirement, but emerged a political force during the Babangida transition period. Though among the categories of politicians banned, he was the brain behind the Peoples Front of Nigeria (PFN), one of the six political parties Babangida registered and later banned. With the establishment of the two government-founded political parties, the PFN moved into the SDP, where the group won majority of the elective posts within SDP.
Following the unbanning of some categories of politicians, YarAdua indicated his interest in the presidential race, and he convincingly won the first round of the SDP primaries. However, his victory, like that of Alhaji Adamu Ciroma, was followed by protests by other aspirants, which led to the cancellation of the primaries in both parties, and the banning of all the aspirants from further participation in the presidential election. Abacha Gen. Sani Abacha is noted for not holding any non-military position before his emergence as the Head of State in November 1993.
A die-hard loyalist of Babangida, Abacha played a major role in the success of Babangidas coup as well as the failure of the 1990 coup attempt against Babangida. He was made the Chief of Army Staff and later became Minister of Defence at the time Babangida stepped aside in 1993.Not many Nigerians understood his role in the June 12 saga until much later. Nzeribe Maverick businessman and politician, Chief Arthur Francis Nzeribe was and has remained controversial. Very successful in business as in politics, he became a senator in the Second Republic and was one of the 23 presidential aspirants banned in 1992. Ironically, while he was vying to replace Babangida, he was also promoting the Association for Better Nigeria (ABN), whose primary objective was to keep Babangida in power for four more years because the political class was not ready for governance and that its members were corrupt. ABNs activities largely enhanced the eventual annulment of the June 12 election.Intrigues Babangidas sly and Machiavellian nature played a major role in the intrigues that came to characterise the June 12 saga. Obsessed with power, this Machiavellian nature therefore came to use in manipulating every opportunity to remain in power. The failure of many committed members of his government to understand this reluctance to relinquish power is attributable to his subterfuge, which made him successfully extend the termination date from 1990 to 1992 and later to 1993. For example, while Babangida openly dissociated his government from the activities of Nzeribe and his ABN, Nzeribe would later reveal that he met with Babangida regularly in Aso Rock.However, to loyalists like Colonel Abubakar Umar, Babangida was anxious to leave office. Umar was often ready to prove his trust, recalling, among many, how happy he met Babangida in his office after the successful primaries of both parties in 1993. The media, dominated by the South-West also played into Babangidas hands with the arguments that it was incongruous for the presidential candidates of both SDP and NRC to come from the North, considering the fractious nature of Nigerian politics, where ethnicity and regionalism play a vital role.A major national newspaper even wrote an editorial calling for the cancellation of both primaries based on these arguments, which gave Babangida the second and final extension. Meanwhile, it was a known fact that if YarAdua had not been banned, Abiola would not have won the SDP ticket, especially with YarAduas well established structure in the party. YarAdua also realised early enough that after four years in power, Abiola would be too powerful to dethrone.Therefore denying Abiola the party ticket was a task that must be achieved. Alhaji Babagana Kingibe, first chairman of the party, and Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, both members of the PFN in SDP, were used to frustrate Chief Abiolas ambition.
However, Chief Abiola brought his business acumen to play, by not only deploying his enormous wealth to maximum use, but by allegedly sending his private jet to bring YarAduas ailing father from Kaduna to Jos, venue of the final stage of the primaries, to plead with his son. Even with these manoeuvrings, the primary went to a second round as Chief Abiola could not garner the required number of votes, only beating Kingibe with a slim margin.
CHIEF ABIOLA, UNSUNG HERO OF NIGERIA'S DEMOCRACY
Atiku Abubakar needed to step down and declare his support for one of the two leading candidates, which would have made delegates who had voted for him to shift their loyalty to that candidate. But Atiku only announced that he was stepping down without openly declaring his support for either candidate.How Chief Abiola still won has variously been described by political historians as the Chief Abiola magic. Carrying on with his activities, Nzeribe had gone to court with a petition that he claimed had the signatures of 25 million Nigerians who did not want the election to hold because they wanted General Babangida to continue as president for four more years.Meanwhile, while the primaries were going on, Gen. Abacha was scheming, as was later revealed by many insiders, especially Col. Umar and Prof. Omo Omoruyi, former Director-General of the Centre for Democratic Studies, and a close confidant of Babangida. Abachas well-hidden ambition and loyalty made his moves unsuspicious. A successful transition would be the end of his ambition. He was therefore set to derail it. Nzeribes ABN activities were not only convenient for Babangida but for Abacha as well.Therefore, when the ABN secured a court order restraining the National Electoral Commission (NEC) from conducting the election, Abacha, with his loyalists within the government had insisted that the election should not to hold due to the court order. But Babangida reluctantly heeded the advice of Omoruyi and the election went ahead. Abiolas clear lead gave Abacha his weapon: the military did not want Abiola. Due to Babangidas trust in Abacha, when theAbacha-orchestrated over-blown intelligence on Chief Abiola, military revolts and coups reached him, he believed them, not knowing that the reticent and dark-goggled general had his scheme. Umar who had worked with Abacha to see an end to the June 12 impasse in the heat of the crisis, would later admit that one needed to possess the power of clairvoyance to have been able to judge Abacha otherwise because Abacha displayed so much patriotism that he did not arouse suspicion.
AFTERMATH OF ELECTION ANNULMENT,  
With intrigues unknown to majority of Nigerians going on within and outside the confines of Aso Rock, the June 12 presidential election was held, where Abiola defeated Tofa in what Ciroma, the leading aspirant in the botched NRC primaries would describe as fairly and squarely, as he not only defeated Tofa in Kano State but even in Tofas local government area. From the officially and unofficially announced results, it was analysed then that even if the elections were cancelled in any of the then four major regions, Abiola would still have won with votes from the remaining three regions.However, while the results were being announced state by state, ABN, on June 15, returned to court with a petition to stop further announcements, which was granted by Justice Dahiru Saleh of an Abuja court. Justice Saleh would later declare the election null and void and of no effect whatsoever, on the ground that it had been conducted in violation of a restraining order.
Finally, on June 23, the Federal Government cnnounced the cancellátion of thu presidential election, suspended NEC, an$ repealed the law governijg the final 0hase of the`political transition qsogramme. B!nned politicians in the previous primaries were unbanned aîd ,egible to contest in a new presidential elecdion. BabaNgida clearly dribbled till he scoråd an own gnal. He therefore had no mïre reason to stay"back.He would, in a live broadcast,(eventuallyprovile reasons for the cancellatéon,"that it was yn the énterest$of law and order, pohkvical stability and peece as the courts had become intimidated and suàzected to the`mani`ulation`of the poliTical process and vested interests. Babangidas brkadcast received world-wade #ondemnathons, and led to riots, most|y in Abiolas South-West Vegion.`He would later ste` asiDe on August 26.a day eaRlier thaî his promised date, and named an Interim Lational Government (ING), headed!by Chief Er~dst Adekunle Shonekan, ÷xo wac then Head of Transiôionãl Council.However, Shonekans government lasted only 83 days when he was forced to resign by Abacha. Victims, beneficiaries Chief Abiola Ironically, Chief Abiola, the presumed winner of the election remains the major victim of the annulment. On the first anniversary of the election in 1994, Chief Abiola declared himself winner and announced a Government of National Unity at the Epetedo Square in Lagos.However, he was declared wanted by the Nigerian Police for treason. After over one months manhunt for Chief Abiola, he re-surfaced at his Ikeja residence and voluntarily turned himself to the Police. He was arrested and was put on trial for treasonable felony until he died in detention five years later. Even some Federal Government contracts he had maintained for decades were terminated by Abacha. Abacha Although he was initially a beneficiary of the June 12 annulment, going by his scheming and eventual emergence as Head of State, he himself became a victim as he was consumed by the June 12 conflagration with his death. YarAdua Gen. YarAdua, who had quickly jumped at Babangidas unbanning of banned politicians like himself, instantly jettisoned June 12 and embraced the ING, hoping to contest another presidential election.
Several protests and civil disobedience followed the criminal annulment of the June 12 Presidential polls throughout the nation, most especially in South West. Activists, NANS, and Student Union governments in Nigerian institutions continued to call for the recognition of Chief Abiola as the elected President of Nigeria. In the wake of these calls, Chief Abiola's erudite wife late Kudirat Abiola was assassinated in yet to be unravelled circumstance by Strike Force loyal to General Sanni Abacha.
LATE KUDIRAT ABIOLA
However, following the emergence of Abacha, who in 1994, organised his own National Constitutional Conference, YarAdua won a seat to represent Katsina State, where he was an outspoken delegate against military rule in continuation of his quest for the presidency by trying to constitutionally secure a brief stay for General Sani Abacha (rtd). He, alongside Gen. Obasanjo and others were however framed up for coup-plotting by Abacha, found guilty and sentenced by a military tribunal in 1995, to life imprisonment.
He later died in prison on December 8, 1997. Obasanjo Gen. Obasanjo had earned the disrespect of Abacha since the Babangida regime, and Abacha was well known to have considered his criticisms of that government as a product of pseudo-statesmanship. Following an interview in the early 1990s, in which Obasanjo had referred to Babangidas government as a fraud, Abacha was alleged to have advised Babangida to arrest Obasanjo, an advice Babangida allegedly turned down. But when Abacha came to power and Obasanjo failed to realise that there was a different man at the helm of affairs, Abacha had to jail him on a trumped-up charge of coup-plotting to silence him.Obasanjo was believed to have been destined the way of YarAdua but for mysterious death of Abacha in 1998. However, from a victim, Obasanjo ironically became a beneficiary of June 12 following his release from prison by Gen. Abdulsalami Abubakar, who succeeded Abacha.
General Abdulsalami with Babangida and other retired generals allegedly recruited Obasanjo for the presidential job. Obasanjo emerged the major beneficiary of the June 12 election annulment, because if there had not been annulment, there would not have been May 29, the date Obasanjo was sworn in, and which is today, Nigerias Democracy Day. Unfortunately, Chief Obasanjo maybe out of personal disdain for late Chief M.K.O Abiola as old old school mate in Baptist High School Abeokuta, refused to immortalize the National Hero.  
Some of us as students Union Leader in University of Ibadan sustained gunshot wounds, we were imprisoned by the Generals Babangida/Abacha dictatorial regimes and were expelled and later recalled by our various Universities.It is therefore imperative for the Nigerian government to recognize June 12 as the authentic Democracy Day in Nigeria. The sustenance of the struggle for the actualization of June 12 Presidential mandate freely given to Chief M.K.O Abiola led to the deaths of many Nigerians who are the martyrs of the current Nigerian Democracy.
ACTIVISTS MOBILIZE FOR THE RECOGNITION OF JUNE 12
Till we meet on Judgement Day, we remain Committed and Resolute on the reclamation of the June 12 Mandate.. Adieu Chief M.K.O Abiola, the Symbol of Nigerian Democracy
Adieu Baba Kolawole, Olowo tii Fowo Saanu (The rich that helps the poor)
Adieu the Aare Ona Kakanfo of Yorubaland.
Culled from Vanguard Newspapers Nigeria with contributions from Oghene Omonisa and Kayode O. Adedeji for National Scorecard News Magazine

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