Afenifere

Showing posts with label Afenifere. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Afenifere. Show all posts

YORUBALAND UNDER SIEGE: THE TASK OF SELF-DETERMINATION, SELF-DEFENCE AND NATIONAL SURVIVAL — WALE BALOGUN

YORUBALAND UNDER SIEGE: THE TASK OF SELF-DETERMINATION, SELF-DEFENCE AND NATIONAL SURVIVAL — WALE BALOGUN

Press Statement 


Mr. M. O. Oyedokun,
Abducted with some
 students by bandits 

The worsening insecurity across Yorubaland has once again exposed the harsh reality that no people can survive without the capacity and collective will to defend their land, civilisation, culture and future. What was once dismissed as isolated attacks and rural criminality has now evolved into a dangerous and coordinated assault on the peace, territorial integrity and indigenous identity of the Yoruba nation.


From Owo in Ondo State to the forests and farming settlements of Oyo, Ogun, Kwara and Kogi States, armed terrorists, bandits and criminal herders have continued to invade communities, sack villages, kidnap citizens and destroy livelihoods with alarming boldness. Our people are increasingly becoming refugees in their ancestral homeland while those entrusted with the responsibility of governance continue to play politics with the lives of innocent citizens.


Many continue to ask how we arrived at this dangerous point. Without unnecessary historical excursion, the present crisis cannot be divorced from the structural imbalance and political betrayal that followed the annulment of the June 12, 1993 presidential election. That annulment was not merely an attack on democracy; it was an attack on the political future and collective dignity of the Yoruba people.


The years that followed witnessed the steady consolidation of a political and ideological agenda that sought to weaken regional autonomy while centralising power in a deeply compromised federal structure. Under successive administrations, particularly after the return to civil rule in 1999, extremist tendencies gained confidence while constitutional contradictions surrounding religion, security and governance were deliberately ignored for political convenience.


It was during this era that the aggressive expansion of Sharia across several Northern states was normalised despite the constitutional controversies surrounding it. Many dismissed the implications at the time, but what we are witnessing today is the dangerous consequence of years of appeasement, silence and elite compromise.


The bitter truth is that Yorubaland has been politically betrayed not only by external forces but also by some internal actors whose personal ambitions took precedence over the collective survival of the Yoruba nation. The establishment of Amotekun, which should have emerged much earlier as a formidable regional security architecture, was weakened by political calculations and the desperation of certain power blocs seeking Northern political support for presidential ambitions.


It is on record that the Lagos State Government was reluctance towards, reject and refuse regional security vision behind Amotekun because of fears that robust regional self-defence structures might jeopardise strategic alliances ahead of national elections. That hesitation weakened the urgency required at a critical moment when Yorubaland needed unity, courage and decisive leadership.


The tragedy is further compounded by the conduct and utterances of certain influential figures whose actions continue to undermine Yoruba historical consciousness and collective resistance. One cannot ignore the symbolic implications of the Alaafin of Oyo paying homage and pledging allegiance to the Sultan of Sokoto shortly after his coronation while simultaneously attacking the Ọọni of Ifẹ̀ and questioning aspects of Yoruba history and civilisation.


Similarly, the self-styled Emir posture adopted by the Oluwo of Iwo, including statements portraying Iwo as a natural settlement space for displaced Fulani populations, raises serious concerns about the gradual cultural and political erosion of Yoruba identity through elite collaboration and internal sabotage.


The political class at the federal level has also demonstrated troubling insensitivity. Senate President Godswill Akpabio’s controversial remarks suggesting that insecurity may persist until after the 2027 elections created the disturbing impression that political elites already understand the scale of the crisis but lack either the will or sincerity to confront it decisively.


Likewise, statements attributed to the Chief of Army Staff advocating negotiations with terrorists because “they are Nigerians too” continue to demoralise citizens whose communities remain under siege. While dialogue may have strategic value in certain conflicts, no nation can normalise terrorism or reward violent criminality without undermining justice and national security.


At this stage, over-analysis without action will only produce collective paralysis. Yorubaland must now begin to embrace a realistic and organised self-determination consciousness anchored on self-preservation, regional unity, security coordination, economic independence and cultural rebirth.


Self-determination does not merely mean agitation or emotional rhetoric. It means building the institutional, political, cultural and security capacity necessary for a people to protect their existence and determine their future. It means developing strong regional consensus beyond partisan politics and rejecting every form of divide-and-rule manipulation.


To save Yorubaland from further deterioration, the following urgent steps have become necessary:


 *Immediate Community Defence Structures:* 

* Every Yoruba community must establish coordinated and lawful COMMUNITY DEFENCE COMMITTEES (CDC), vigilance networks and local intelligence structures working in synergy with Amotekun and other legitimate security outfits.


 *Strengthening Amotekun:* 

* Amotekun must be transformed into a fully funded, technologically equipped and operationally independent regional security institution with modern intelligence capabilities and forest surveillance systems.


 *Regional Security Summit:* 

* All Yoruba stakeholders, traditional rulers, youth organisations, civil society groups, hunters, farmers, professionals and self-determination groups, should convene an emergency Yoruba Security and Survival Summit to develop a unified regional security strategy.


 *Economic and Political Self-Reliance:* 

* Yorubaland must reduce dependency on the dysfunctional federal structure by strengthening regional economic integration, food security, local industries and internal cooperation among Southwest states.


 *Cultural Reawakening* :

* The Yoruba people must consciously defend and preserve their history, language, traditional institutions and civilisational identity against both external domination and internal distortion.


 *Demand for True Federalism and Restructuring* :

* The current over-centralised Nigerian structure has failed. The Yoruba nation must intensify constitutional advocacy for genuine federalism, regional autonomy and resource control as minimum conditions for peaceful coexistence.


 *Reject Political Opportunism:* 

* Those seeking political offices ahead of 2027 must clearly state their positions on regional security, restructuring and Yoruba self-preservation. Empty slogans and transactional politics can no longer guarantee public trust.


The time has come for the Yoruba people to stop outsourcing their destiny to external powers, foreign governments, political merchants or opportunistic actors masquerading as freedom fighters. No foreign government will save Yorubaland. No messiah is coming from abroad. The survival of our people depends ultimately on our collective consciousness, organisation, courage and readiness to act.


History has placed before this generation a difficult but unavoidable responsibility: either we rise to defend our land, identity and future, or we continue the dangerous path of complacency, disunity and gradual displacement.


The choice is ours. Fatherland or death ! 


Comrade Wale Balogun

Afenifere Chieftain and Convener, Mẹkunnu Koya.

Writes from Lagos.

20/05/2026

Press Statement 


Mr. M. O. Oyedokun,
Abducted with some
 students by bandits 

The worsening insecurity across Yorubaland has once again exposed the harsh reality that no people can survive without the capacity and collective will to defend their land, civilisation, culture and future. What was once dismissed as isolated attacks and rural criminality has now evolved into a dangerous and coordinated assault on the peace, territorial integrity and indigenous identity of the Yoruba nation.


From Owo in Ondo State to the forests and farming settlements of Oyo, Ogun, Kwara and Kogi States, armed terrorists, bandits and criminal herders have continued to invade communities, sack villages, kidnap citizens and destroy livelihoods with alarming boldness. Our people are increasingly becoming refugees in their ancestral homeland while those entrusted with the responsibility of governance continue to play politics with the lives of innocent citizens.


Many continue to ask how we arrived at this dangerous point. Without unnecessary historical excursion, the present crisis cannot be divorced from the structural imbalance and political betrayal that followed the annulment of the June 12, 1993 presidential election. That annulment was not merely an attack on democracy; it was an attack on the political future and collective dignity of the Yoruba people.


The years that followed witnessed the steady consolidation of a political and ideological agenda that sought to weaken regional autonomy while centralising power in a deeply compromised federal structure. Under successive administrations, particularly after the return to civil rule in 1999, extremist tendencies gained confidence while constitutional contradictions surrounding religion, security and governance were deliberately ignored for political convenience.


It was during this era that the aggressive expansion of Sharia across several Northern states was normalised despite the constitutional controversies surrounding it. Many dismissed the implications at the time, but what we are witnessing today is the dangerous consequence of years of appeasement, silence and elite compromise.


The bitter truth is that Yorubaland has been politically betrayed not only by external forces but also by some internal actors whose personal ambitions took precedence over the collective survival of the Yoruba nation. The establishment of Amotekun, which should have emerged much earlier as a formidable regional security architecture, was weakened by political calculations and the desperation of certain power blocs seeking Northern political support for presidential ambitions.


It is on record that the Lagos State Government was reluctance towards, reject and refuse regional security vision behind Amotekun because of fears that robust regional self-defence structures might jeopardise strategic alliances ahead of national elections. That hesitation weakened the urgency required at a critical moment when Yorubaland needed unity, courage and decisive leadership.


The tragedy is further compounded by the conduct and utterances of certain influential figures whose actions continue to undermine Yoruba historical consciousness and collective resistance. One cannot ignore the symbolic implications of the Alaafin of Oyo paying homage and pledging allegiance to the Sultan of Sokoto shortly after his coronation while simultaneously attacking the Ọọni of Ifẹ̀ and questioning aspects of Yoruba history and civilisation.


Similarly, the self-styled Emir posture adopted by the Oluwo of Iwo, including statements portraying Iwo as a natural settlement space for displaced Fulani populations, raises serious concerns about the gradual cultural and political erosion of Yoruba identity through elite collaboration and internal sabotage.


The political class at the federal level has also demonstrated troubling insensitivity. Senate President Godswill Akpabio’s controversial remarks suggesting that insecurity may persist until after the 2027 elections created the disturbing impression that political elites already understand the scale of the crisis but lack either the will or sincerity to confront it decisively.


Likewise, statements attributed to the Chief of Army Staff advocating negotiations with terrorists because “they are Nigerians too” continue to demoralise citizens whose communities remain under siege. While dialogue may have strategic value in certain conflicts, no nation can normalise terrorism or reward violent criminality without undermining justice and national security.


At this stage, over-analysis without action will only produce collective paralysis. Yorubaland must now begin to embrace a realistic and organised self-determination consciousness anchored on self-preservation, regional unity, security coordination, economic independence and cultural rebirth.


Self-determination does not merely mean agitation or emotional rhetoric. It means building the institutional, political, cultural and security capacity necessary for a people to protect their existence and determine their future. It means developing strong regional consensus beyond partisan politics and rejecting every form of divide-and-rule manipulation.


To save Yorubaland from further deterioration, the following urgent steps have become necessary:


 *Immediate Community Defence Structures:* 

* Every Yoruba community must establish coordinated and lawful COMMUNITY DEFENCE COMMITTEES (CDC), vigilance networks and local intelligence structures working in synergy with Amotekun and other legitimate security outfits.


 *Strengthening Amotekun:* 

* Amotekun must be transformed into a fully funded, technologically equipped and operationally independent regional security institution with modern intelligence capabilities and forest surveillance systems.


 *Regional Security Summit:* 

* All Yoruba stakeholders, traditional rulers, youth organisations, civil society groups, hunters, farmers, professionals and self-determination groups, should convene an emergency Yoruba Security and Survival Summit to develop a unified regional security strategy.


 *Economic and Political Self-Reliance:* 

* Yorubaland must reduce dependency on the dysfunctional federal structure by strengthening regional economic integration, food security, local industries and internal cooperation among Southwest states.


 *Cultural Reawakening* :

* The Yoruba people must consciously defend and preserve their history, language, traditional institutions and civilisational identity against both external domination and internal distortion.


 *Demand for True Federalism and Restructuring* :

* The current over-centralised Nigerian structure has failed. The Yoruba nation must intensify constitutional advocacy for genuine federalism, regional autonomy and resource control as minimum conditions for peaceful coexistence.


 *Reject Political Opportunism:* 

* Those seeking political offices ahead of 2027 must clearly state their positions on regional security, restructuring and Yoruba self-preservation. Empty slogans and transactional politics can no longer guarantee public trust.


The time has come for the Yoruba people to stop outsourcing their destiny to external powers, foreign governments, political merchants or opportunistic actors masquerading as freedom fighters. No foreign government will save Yorubaland. No messiah is coming from abroad. The survival of our people depends ultimately on our collective consciousness, organisation, courage and readiness to act.


History has placed before this generation a difficult but unavoidable responsibility: either we rise to defend our land, identity and future, or we continue the dangerous path of complacency, disunity and gradual displacement.


The choice is ours. Fatherland or death ! 


Comrade Wale Balogun

Afenifere Chieftain and Convener, Mẹkunnu Koya.

Writes from Lagos.

20/05/2026

Akure Jamborees: Tinubu’s political machinery again attempted to take over Afenifere, but failed — Wale Balogun

Akure Jamborees: Tinubu’s political machinery again attempted to take over Afenifere, but failed — Wale Balogun

 *Afenifere: The True Heir to Awolowo’s Welfarist Legacy — Pa Fasoranti’s Group as Shadow-Chasing Dissidents* 



Afenifere, as a sociopolitical and economic organisation, is as old as the Action Group (AG), the political party founded by the late sage, Chief Obafemi Awolowo, and his associates in 1951. From inception, the party had a national outlook, though its core membership was drawn largely from the defunct Ẹgbẹ Ọmọ Odùduwà.


The leadership of the Action Group translated its vision into what became known as Afenifere, built around Awolowo’s cardinal programmes of free education, free healthcare, rural electrification and development, and life more abundant for all. Supporters and the Yoruba electorate affectionately referred to the party as Ẹgbẹ ọlọpẹ, “the palm frond group”, after the palm frond logo of the party.


Contrary to distorted narratives, the Action Group/Afenifere was never a tribal party. Among its notable non-Yoruba members were Pa Anthony Enahoro, Ernest Okoli, Samuel Ikoku and others. It was the deliberate distortion and falsification of historical facts by political detractors that falsely painted the AG/Afenifere as an ethnic Yoruba organisation. In reality, the Action Group was a welfarist party, whose ideology of social democracy was formally adopted at its Jos Convention of 1962.


However, this convention also witnessed the first major crack within the party, leading to the Premier of Western Region, Chief Ladoke Akintola’s faction breaking away to form the Nigerian National Democratic Party (NNDP), which later allied with the Northern People’s Congress (NPC) to form the Nigerian National Alliance (NNA) for the 1964/1965 general elections. Meanwhile, the Action Group joined forces with the NCNC to form the United Progressive Grand Alliance (UPGA).


The Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN) emerged later as the political offshoot of the Action Group, just as the Alliance for Democracy (AD) and the Democratic Peoples Alliance (DPA) would later spring from the same ideological root.


During General Ibrahim Babangida’s prolonged military transition to civil rule, Afenifere members participated in the Social Democratic Party (SDP) — one of the two political parties imposed by the regime after proscribing the political formations earlier established by the people.


Under the SDP, Chief M.K.O. Abiola won the historic June 12, 1993 Presidential Election, which was subsequently annulled by Babangida. In the ensuing struggle to reclaim Abiola’s mandate, Afenifere joined forces with other progressive platforms, civil society groups, and individuals to form the National Democratic Coalition (NADECO), under the leadership of Pa Adekunle Ajasin, then the leader of Afenifere.


Pa Ajasin did not live to see the dawn of civil rule, and leadership passed to Pa Abraham Adesanya, under whose stewardship Afenifere and the Alliance for Democracy (AD) swept the six southwestern states in the 1999 elections. It was under the AD platform that Bola Ahmed Tinubu, now Nigeria’s President, became Governor of Lagos State.


However, internal crises soon engulfed the AD and, by extension, Afenifere. The “No more Baba sọpe” rebellion against Afenifere leadership led to a splinter group, the Afenifere Renewal Group (ARG), led by Hon. Wale Osun, who continues to head the faction to this day. Tinubu was widely believed to have masterminded this split.


When Pa Reuben Fasoranti succeeded Pa Abraham Adesanya as leader of Afenifere, Tinubu continued to bankroll the splinter faction. As age and health challenges set in, Pa Fasoranti voluntarily stepped aside, handing leadership to Pa Ayo Adebanjo, while Oba Oladipo Olaitan was appointed as Deputy Leader.


The renewed attempt to polarise Afenifere began when the group, in line with its long-standing advocacy for justice, fairness, and equity, supported an Igbo presidential candidate, arguing that it was the turn of the Southeast (Ndigbo) to produce Nigeria’s president. Having realised the potential political weight of Pa Adebanjo’s principled stance, one capable of swaying Yoruba votes away from him, Bola Tinubu, whose splinter faction lacked grassroots legitimacy, sought to undermine Afenifere’s unity.


Tinubu’s visit to Akure, the home of the voluntarily retired Pa Fasoranti, was widely seen as an attempt to either secure endorsement or sow further division within the Yoruba political fold.


Ironically, Tinubu returned to the very structure he once sought to weaken. Yet, like Amalinze the Cat in Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart, Afenifere refused to die.


The secretive meeting between Pa Fasoranti and Tinubu marked an unprecedented reversal of Afenifere’s leadership principles, with the former leader appearing to stage a Tinubu-sponsored comeback to challenge his own chosen successor, Pa Adebanjo.


Nevertheless, Afenifere under Pa Adebanjo stood firm in its support for Peter Obi, the Labour Party candidate, as a matter of conscience and fairness. Following Pa Adebanjo’s passing early last year, Tinubu’s political machinery again attempted to take over Afenifere, but failed. The National Caucus of Afenifere unanimously endorsed Oba Oladipo Olaitan as its new National Leader.


Frustrated by this outcome, Senator Femi Okunrounmu and others loyal to Tinubu retreated to Akure, continuing their manipulation of the aged Pa Fasoranti. The so-called Afenifere stakeholders’ jamboree held in Akure represents, in the words of the late Professor Eskor Toyo, “starting from a repeated start.”


While the Akure faction has every right to assemble and endorse Bola Ahmed Tinubu and his neoliberal, anti-poor policies, it is grossly misleading to claim to speak for or represent Afenifere. That faction long abandoned the ideals and philosophy of social welfarism, the principles Chief Obafemi Awolowo lived and died for.


Today, the Awoist philosophy remains alive and steadfast under the legitimate leadership of Oba Oladipo Olaitan, the National Leader of Afenifere. Any other group parading itself as Afenifere is nothing but a band of pretenders and impostors, shadow-chasing dissidents estranged from the true welfarist spirit of Awolowo’s Afenifere.


Comrade Wale Balogun 

Convener, Mekunnu Koya

Writes from Lagos.

 *Afenifere: The True Heir to Awolowo’s Welfarist Legacy — Pa Fasoranti’s Group as Shadow-Chasing Dissidents* 



Afenifere, as a sociopolitical and economic organisation, is as old as the Action Group (AG), the political party founded by the late sage, Chief Obafemi Awolowo, and his associates in 1951. From inception, the party had a national outlook, though its core membership was drawn largely from the defunct Ẹgbẹ Ọmọ Odùduwà.


The leadership of the Action Group translated its vision into what became known as Afenifere, built around Awolowo’s cardinal programmes of free education, free healthcare, rural electrification and development, and life more abundant for all. Supporters and the Yoruba electorate affectionately referred to the party as Ẹgbẹ ọlọpẹ, “the palm frond group”, after the palm frond logo of the party.


Contrary to distorted narratives, the Action Group/Afenifere was never a tribal party. Among its notable non-Yoruba members were Pa Anthony Enahoro, Ernest Okoli, Samuel Ikoku and others. It was the deliberate distortion and falsification of historical facts by political detractors that falsely painted the AG/Afenifere as an ethnic Yoruba organisation. In reality, the Action Group was a welfarist party, whose ideology of social democracy was formally adopted at its Jos Convention of 1962.


However, this convention also witnessed the first major crack within the party, leading to the Premier of Western Region, Chief Ladoke Akintola’s faction breaking away to form the Nigerian National Democratic Party (NNDP), which later allied with the Northern People’s Congress (NPC) to form the Nigerian National Alliance (NNA) for the 1964/1965 general elections. Meanwhile, the Action Group joined forces with the NCNC to form the United Progressive Grand Alliance (UPGA).


The Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN) emerged later as the political offshoot of the Action Group, just as the Alliance for Democracy (AD) and the Democratic Peoples Alliance (DPA) would later spring from the same ideological root.


During General Ibrahim Babangida’s prolonged military transition to civil rule, Afenifere members participated in the Social Democratic Party (SDP) — one of the two political parties imposed by the regime after proscribing the political formations earlier established by the people.


Under the SDP, Chief M.K.O. Abiola won the historic June 12, 1993 Presidential Election, which was subsequently annulled by Babangida. In the ensuing struggle to reclaim Abiola’s mandate, Afenifere joined forces with other progressive platforms, civil society groups, and individuals to form the National Democratic Coalition (NADECO), under the leadership of Pa Adekunle Ajasin, then the leader of Afenifere.


Pa Ajasin did not live to see the dawn of civil rule, and leadership passed to Pa Abraham Adesanya, under whose stewardship Afenifere and the Alliance for Democracy (AD) swept the six southwestern states in the 1999 elections. It was under the AD platform that Bola Ahmed Tinubu, now Nigeria’s President, became Governor of Lagos State.


However, internal crises soon engulfed the AD and, by extension, Afenifere. The “No more Baba sọpe” rebellion against Afenifere leadership led to a splinter group, the Afenifere Renewal Group (ARG), led by Hon. Wale Osun, who continues to head the faction to this day. Tinubu was widely believed to have masterminded this split.


When Pa Reuben Fasoranti succeeded Pa Abraham Adesanya as leader of Afenifere, Tinubu continued to bankroll the splinter faction. As age and health challenges set in, Pa Fasoranti voluntarily stepped aside, handing leadership to Pa Ayo Adebanjo, while Oba Oladipo Olaitan was appointed as Deputy Leader.


The renewed attempt to polarise Afenifere began when the group, in line with its long-standing advocacy for justice, fairness, and equity, supported an Igbo presidential candidate, arguing that it was the turn of the Southeast (Ndigbo) to produce Nigeria’s president. Having realised the potential political weight of Pa Adebanjo’s principled stance, one capable of swaying Yoruba votes away from him, Bola Tinubu, whose splinter faction lacked grassroots legitimacy, sought to undermine Afenifere’s unity.


Tinubu’s visit to Akure, the home of the voluntarily retired Pa Fasoranti, was widely seen as an attempt to either secure endorsement or sow further division within the Yoruba political fold.


Ironically, Tinubu returned to the very structure he once sought to weaken. Yet, like Amalinze the Cat in Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart, Afenifere refused to die.


The secretive meeting between Pa Fasoranti and Tinubu marked an unprecedented reversal of Afenifere’s leadership principles, with the former leader appearing to stage a Tinubu-sponsored comeback to challenge his own chosen successor, Pa Adebanjo.


Nevertheless, Afenifere under Pa Adebanjo stood firm in its support for Peter Obi, the Labour Party candidate, as a matter of conscience and fairness. Following Pa Adebanjo’s passing early last year, Tinubu’s political machinery again attempted to take over Afenifere, but failed. The National Caucus of Afenifere unanimously endorsed Oba Oladipo Olaitan as its new National Leader.


Frustrated by this outcome, Senator Femi Okunrounmu and others loyal to Tinubu retreated to Akure, continuing their manipulation of the aged Pa Fasoranti. The so-called Afenifere stakeholders’ jamboree held in Akure represents, in the words of the late Professor Eskor Toyo, “starting from a repeated start.”


While the Akure faction has every right to assemble and endorse Bola Ahmed Tinubu and his neoliberal, anti-poor policies, it is grossly misleading to claim to speak for or represent Afenifere. That faction long abandoned the ideals and philosophy of social welfarism, the principles Chief Obafemi Awolowo lived and died for.


Today, the Awoist philosophy remains alive and steadfast under the legitimate leadership of Oba Oladipo Olaitan, the National Leader of Afenifere. Any other group parading itself as Afenifere is nothing but a band of pretenders and impostors, shadow-chasing dissidents estranged from the true welfarist spirit of Awolowo’s Afenifere.


Comrade Wale Balogun 

Convener, Mekunnu Koya

Writes from Lagos.

NIGERIA AND HER ILLEGITIMATE RULERS - Ẹ́gbọdọ̀fọ̀

NIGERIA AND HER ILLEGITIMATE RULERS - Ẹ́gbọdọ̀fọ̀

 *


Ideally, sovereign territories and their governments exist for the best good of the greatest number of the citizens. We have never had a country in the geographical territory recognised globally as Nigeria. Nigeria is an artificial nation created by the forced marriage of several independent tribal mini--nations by the British Colonial Masters purely for their own selfish reasons. The experimental project has always failed the people of Nigeria, except those in power and their cronies from onset. It did benefit only the civilian rulers and their cohorts 1960 - 1966. 1966 - 1979, it satisfied the interests of the military rulers and their partners-in-crime. In the four years of civilian rule by Alhaji Shehu Shagari, the country only took care of the needs of the corrupt politicians and their associates. The masses only bore the consequences of their maladministration, corruption and profligacy.


In the same vein, the military regimes of Muhammadu Buhari, Ibrahim Badamosi Babangida, Sani Abacha and Abdusalaami Abubakar from 31 December 1983 to 29 May 1999 benefited only the military rulers and their cohorts in and outside the military circles. Nigeria has been a country where criminals have been exercising sovereign power for most time. There has hardly been a legitimate government, freely elected by the people of the country since 1960.


The election that restored the country to Civilian Rule on 29 May 1999 was a charade as it was manipulated by the military rulers and the power brokers to ensure Chief Olusegun Obasanjo became the "elected" President of the Republic as he was believed by them to be a "moderate" Southerner of Yorùbá extraction. Note that the country was only returned to the government by civilians, and never to a democratic rule. We are very far from meeting the minimum threshold of a truly democratic nation. We have the institutions in place, but practicing something else. Ours is an Hypocritical Democracy!


The 2003 and 2007 Federal and State Elections conducted by Chief Olusegun Obasanjo's Administration were deliberately comprised to ensure preferred candidates emerged as winners. Also, the 2011 and 2015 Federal and State Elections organised by Dr. Goodluck Jonathan were anything, but free and fair. He was outsmarted by a powerful conglomerate of power brokers in the 2015 General Elections in which he was a candidate.


Elections conducted by Major General Muhammadu Buhari (Retd) too in 2019 and 2023 are a mockery of democratic elections. In summary, Nigeria is about to be governed by a set of criminals who willingly broke all the rules and regulations put in place to guarantee free and fair elections in their desperation to have access to the resources of the land. I make bold to say that Nigeria had never been governed by rulers with true legitimacy. Even the Independence Elections were manipulated in favour of a particular tribe in Nigeria by the outgoing Colonial Masters then.


We have never had a country!


- Adéwọlé Ọmọ́sébí Ẹ́gbọdọ̀fọ̀

+2348037199056

(A Gubernatorial Hopeful for Ondo State 2024 on the platform of Labour Party)

Sunday 19 March 2023

 *


Ideally, sovereign territories and their governments exist for the best good of the greatest number of the citizens. We have never had a country in the geographical territory recognised globally as Nigeria. Nigeria is an artificial nation created by the forced marriage of several independent tribal mini--nations by the British Colonial Masters purely for their own selfish reasons. The experimental project has always failed the people of Nigeria, except those in power and their cronies from onset. It did benefit only the civilian rulers and their cohorts 1960 - 1966. 1966 - 1979, it satisfied the interests of the military rulers and their partners-in-crime. In the four years of civilian rule by Alhaji Shehu Shagari, the country only took care of the needs of the corrupt politicians and their associates. The masses only bore the consequences of their maladministration, corruption and profligacy.


In the same vein, the military regimes of Muhammadu Buhari, Ibrahim Badamosi Babangida, Sani Abacha and Abdusalaami Abubakar from 31 December 1983 to 29 May 1999 benefited only the military rulers and their cohorts in and outside the military circles. Nigeria has been a country where criminals have been exercising sovereign power for most time. There has hardly been a legitimate government, freely elected by the people of the country since 1960.


The election that restored the country to Civilian Rule on 29 May 1999 was a charade as it was manipulated by the military rulers and the power brokers to ensure Chief Olusegun Obasanjo became the "elected" President of the Republic as he was believed by them to be a "moderate" Southerner of Yorùbá extraction. Note that the country was only returned to the government by civilians, and never to a democratic rule. We are very far from meeting the minimum threshold of a truly democratic nation. We have the institutions in place, but practicing something else. Ours is an Hypocritical Democracy!


The 2003 and 2007 Federal and State Elections conducted by Chief Olusegun Obasanjo's Administration were deliberately comprised to ensure preferred candidates emerged as winners. Also, the 2011 and 2015 Federal and State Elections organised by Dr. Goodluck Jonathan were anything, but free and fair. He was outsmarted by a powerful conglomerate of power brokers in the 2015 General Elections in which he was a candidate.


Elections conducted by Major General Muhammadu Buhari (Retd) too in 2019 and 2023 are a mockery of democratic elections. In summary, Nigeria is about to be governed by a set of criminals who willingly broke all the rules and regulations put in place to guarantee free and fair elections in their desperation to have access to the resources of the land. I make bold to say that Nigeria had never been governed by rulers with true legitimacy. Even the Independence Elections were manipulated in favour of a particular tribe in Nigeria by the outgoing Colonial Masters then.


We have never had a country!


- Adéwọlé Ọmọ́sébí Ẹ́gbọdọ̀fọ̀

+2348037199056

(A Gubernatorial Hopeful for Ondo State 2024 on the platform of Labour Party)

Sunday 19 March 2023

YOU WILL SUFFER THE CONSEQUENCES IF OBI IS NOT THE NEXT PRESIDENT OF NIGERIA - AFENIFERE LEADER

YOU WILL SUFFER THE CONSEQUENCES IF OBI IS NOT THE NEXT PRESIDENT OF NIGERIA - AFENIFERE LEADER









"As you already know, I am already 94 years old. I will be enjoying in my grave soon and you will suffer, particularly the youths of this nation if you fail to vote for peter Obi. We know what we are saying. It is not everything we can talk about in the public" 


Like a thief, in the night, Tinubu made attempts to bribe some for endorsement. But he failed 


The Obi-Datti choice has no money to spend, but they will spend ideas. 


Let Nigerians take up their thinking cap, forget ethnicity and vote for the Labour Party. Obi is the right man for the country.”


-Pa Ayo Adebanjo.


(Afenifere leader warns, Nigerians, especially the youths)




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"As you already know, I am already 94 years old. I will be enjoying in my grave soon and you will suffer, particularly the youths of this nation if you fail to vote for peter Obi. We know what we are saying. It is not everything we can talk about in the public" 


Like a thief, in the night, Tinubu made attempts to bribe some for endorsement. But he failed 


The Obi-Datti choice has no money to spend, but they will spend ideas. 


Let Nigerians take up their thinking cap, forget ethnicity and vote for the Labour Party. Obi is the right man for the country.”


-Pa Ayo Adebanjo.


(Afenifere leader warns, Nigerians, especially the youths)




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