Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida

Showing posts with label Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida. Show all posts

Opinion: Nigeria did not survive June 12 Annulment, We are still bleeding, still crawling through the rubble of the destruction

Opinion: Nigeria did not survive June 12 Annulment, We are still bleeding, still crawling through the rubble of the destruction


Ibrahim Babangida’s recent confession, finally admitting that Chief M.K.O. Abiola won the 1993 presidential election has reopened an old wound, a wound that never truly healed.


With a boldness only those unburdened by consequence can possess, he claims that "democracy was interrupted, but Nigeria survived." But the question that burns in the heart of every true patriot is this: How did Nigeria survive?


Did Nigeria survive in the blood of those who were gunned down during the protests for June 12?


Did Nigeria survive in the cries of mothers who lost their children to bullets while demanding the return of their mandate?


Did Nigeria survive in the agony of a nation forced into the shadows of military tyranny while the will of the people was mocked and discarded?


When Babangida and his circle of power annulled the freest and fairest election in our nation’s history, they did not interrupt democracy, they killed it.


They did not merely pause the democratic journey, they derailed it into a pit of authoritarian darkness. And in that darkness, we lost more than an election; we lost trust, we lost hope, and we lost countless lives.


Who survived when our democracy was strangled? Was it the average Nigerian struggling under the weight of economic hardship? Was it the families who were thrown into deeper poverty as corruption became the order of the day? 


Was it the voices silenced, the press muzzled, and the hopes shattered in the years that followed? 


No, they did not survive.


What Babangida and his cohorts fail to admit is that their actions did not just "interrupt" democracy, they plunged Nigeria into a cycle of political instability, poverty, and institutional decay from which we are yet to recover.


That single act of injustice in 1993 birthed a monster, a monster that still haunts our democracy today, where elections are a game for the elite while the masses remain pawns in their ruthless ambition.


And what of Chief M.K.O. Abiola? A man who stood for Hope, Democracy, and Freedom, a man who won the people’s mandate, only to be robbed of it. He died a prisoner of conscience, his dream of a better Nigeria buried with him. Tell me, Babangida did Abiola survive?


Nigeria did not survive. We are still bleeding. We are still crawling through the rubble of the destruction you caused.


We are still paying the price for your greed, your power hunger, and your contempt for the will of the people.


So, spare us your riddles, your justifications, your carefully crafted lines. Nigeria did not survive, you killed something precious in us. And until justice is done, until truth is fully spoken, until those responsible acknowledge the true scale of their crimes, this nation will remain haunted by the ghost of June 12, a ghost that refuses to be silenced.


How did Nigeria survive? The answer is simple: IT DIDN'T.


Credit: Khaleed Yazeedu


Ibrahim Babangida’s recent confession, finally admitting that Chief M.K.O. Abiola won the 1993 presidential election has reopened an old wound, a wound that never truly healed.


With a boldness only those unburdened by consequence can possess, he claims that "democracy was interrupted, but Nigeria survived." But the question that burns in the heart of every true patriot is this: How did Nigeria survive?


Did Nigeria survive in the blood of those who were gunned down during the protests for June 12?


Did Nigeria survive in the cries of mothers who lost their children to bullets while demanding the return of their mandate?


Did Nigeria survive in the agony of a nation forced into the shadows of military tyranny while the will of the people was mocked and discarded?


When Babangida and his circle of power annulled the freest and fairest election in our nation’s history, they did not interrupt democracy, they killed it.


They did not merely pause the democratic journey, they derailed it into a pit of authoritarian darkness. And in that darkness, we lost more than an election; we lost trust, we lost hope, and we lost countless lives.


Who survived when our democracy was strangled? Was it the average Nigerian struggling under the weight of economic hardship? Was it the families who were thrown into deeper poverty as corruption became the order of the day? 


Was it the voices silenced, the press muzzled, and the hopes shattered in the years that followed? 


No, they did not survive.


What Babangida and his cohorts fail to admit is that their actions did not just "interrupt" democracy, they plunged Nigeria into a cycle of political instability, poverty, and institutional decay from which we are yet to recover.


That single act of injustice in 1993 birthed a monster, a monster that still haunts our democracy today, where elections are a game for the elite while the masses remain pawns in their ruthless ambition.


And what of Chief M.K.O. Abiola? A man who stood for Hope, Democracy, and Freedom, a man who won the people’s mandate, only to be robbed of it. He died a prisoner of conscience, his dream of a better Nigeria buried with him. Tell me, Babangida did Abiola survive?


Nigeria did not survive. We are still bleeding. We are still crawling through the rubble of the destruction you caused.


We are still paying the price for your greed, your power hunger, and your contempt for the will of the people.


So, spare us your riddles, your justifications, your carefully crafted lines. Nigeria did not survive, you killed something precious in us. And until justice is done, until truth is fully spoken, until those responsible acknowledge the true scale of their crimes, this nation will remain haunted by the ghost of June 12, a ghost that refuses to be silenced.


How did Nigeria survive? The answer is simple: IT DIDN'T.


Credit: Khaleed Yazeedu

Former Military President Babangida Finally Admits MKO Abiola Won June 12, 1993, Presidential Election

Former Military President Babangida Finally Admits MKO Abiola Won June 12, 1993, Presidential Election

Says Northern Emirs, Rulers Forced Me To Annul June 12, Implicates David Mark, Abacha, Dogoyaro



Nigerian Former military President, General Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida, has confirmed that the late Chief Moshood Abiola won the annulled June 12, 1993, presidential election. 


Trying to rewrite the history after most of the actors are gone to the world beyond, Babangida made the revelation in his autobiography, A Journey in Service, launched in Abuja on Thursday.


Through the book’s reviewer, former Vice President Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, he acknowledged that Abiola, who contested under the Social Democratic Party (SDP), secured the majority of votes and the required geographical spread to emerge as president. 


Describing the annulment as the most challenging decision of his life, Babangida stated: “There was no doubt in my mind; MKO Abiola won the election. He satisfied all the requirements.”


He, however, expressed satisfaction that former President Muhammadu Buhari posthumously honoured Abiola with the Grand Commander of the Federal Republic (GCFR), a title reserved for presidents.


They will kill me; they will kill the President Elect, Chief MKO Abiola if I went ahead with the election and announced the winner of the elections which we all know to be Bashorun, Chief MKO Abiola.


''I know so; I am not daft. He won; he tried. I feel bad about the whole matter. Professor, I do not see how they will spare you because they know you are my principal confidant. You think they do not know you? They know; they know you are with me now. They saw you coming in and they know you are with me now I cannot kill myself for the sake of what the country wants. I am sorry,'' IBB lamented. It was astonishing to hear a General stating that he could not lay down his life for his country.


It was clear that General Babangida was in a fix as of June 21st 1993. I then proceeded to deal with the questions of who were these “they” and for what reasons would they want to kill the President and the President Elect if the June 12 election were allowed to go forward. He named them in military and in ethnic categories:


''Sani (meaning General Sani Abacha) is opposed to a return to civilian rule. Sani cannot stand the idea of Chief Abiola, a Yoruba becoming his Commander- in- Chief; Sani seems to have the ears of the Norhern leaders that no Southerner especially from the South West should become the President of the country. Sani seems to rally the Northern elders to confront me on the matter. He is winning; the Sultan and the Northern leaders are of this frame of mind.''


''Where do I go from here? They do not trust me. Without Sani, I will not be alive today; without the North, I would not have become an officer in the Nigerian Army and now the President of Nigeria I don’t want to appear ungrateful to Sani; he may not be bright upstairs but he knows how to overthrow governments and overpower coup plotters. He saw to my coming to office in 1985 and to my protection in the many coups I faced in the past, especially the Orkar coup of 1990 where he saved me and my family including my infant daughter.”


''Sani risked his life to get me into office in 1983 and 1985; if he says he does not want Chief Abiola, I will not force Chief Abiola on him.'' 


He also named Lt General Dongoyaro and Brigadier General David Mark as those who were against Chief Abiola. In fact, he quoted David Mark as saying: I’d shoot Chief Abiola the day NEC( National Electoral Commission) pronounces him the elected President!


Says Northern Emirs, Rulers Forced Me To Annul June 12, Implicates David Mark, Abacha, Dogoyaro



Nigerian Former military President, General Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida, has confirmed that the late Chief Moshood Abiola won the annulled June 12, 1993, presidential election. 


Trying to rewrite the history after most of the actors are gone to the world beyond, Babangida made the revelation in his autobiography, A Journey in Service, launched in Abuja on Thursday.


Through the book’s reviewer, former Vice President Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, he acknowledged that Abiola, who contested under the Social Democratic Party (SDP), secured the majority of votes and the required geographical spread to emerge as president. 


Describing the annulment as the most challenging decision of his life, Babangida stated: “There was no doubt in my mind; MKO Abiola won the election. He satisfied all the requirements.”


He, however, expressed satisfaction that former President Muhammadu Buhari posthumously honoured Abiola with the Grand Commander of the Federal Republic (GCFR), a title reserved for presidents.


They will kill me; they will kill the President Elect, Chief MKO Abiola if I went ahead with the election and announced the winner of the elections which we all know to be Bashorun, Chief MKO Abiola.


''I know so; I am not daft. He won; he tried. I feel bad about the whole matter. Professor, I do not see how they will spare you because they know you are my principal confidant. You think they do not know you? They know; they know you are with me now. They saw you coming in and they know you are with me now I cannot kill myself for the sake of what the country wants. I am sorry,'' IBB lamented. It was astonishing to hear a General stating that he could not lay down his life for his country.


It was clear that General Babangida was in a fix as of June 21st 1993. I then proceeded to deal with the questions of who were these “they” and for what reasons would they want to kill the President and the President Elect if the June 12 election were allowed to go forward. He named them in military and in ethnic categories:


''Sani (meaning General Sani Abacha) is opposed to a return to civilian rule. Sani cannot stand the idea of Chief Abiola, a Yoruba becoming his Commander- in- Chief; Sani seems to have the ears of the Norhern leaders that no Southerner especially from the South West should become the President of the country. Sani seems to rally the Northern elders to confront me on the matter. He is winning; the Sultan and the Northern leaders are of this frame of mind.''


''Where do I go from here? They do not trust me. Without Sani, I will not be alive today; without the North, I would not have become an officer in the Nigerian Army and now the President of Nigeria I don’t want to appear ungrateful to Sani; he may not be bright upstairs but he knows how to overthrow governments and overpower coup plotters. He saw to my coming to office in 1985 and to my protection in the many coups I faced in the past, especially the Orkar coup of 1990 where he saved me and my family including my infant daughter.”


''Sani risked his life to get me into office in 1983 and 1985; if he says he does not want Chief Abiola, I will not force Chief Abiola on him.'' 


He also named Lt General Dongoyaro and Brigadier General David Mark as those who were against Chief Abiola. In fact, he quoted David Mark as saying: I’d shoot Chief Abiola the day NEC( National Electoral Commission) pronounces him the elected President!


As Evil Genius Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida sets to Release A Book — A Journey In Service"

As Evil Genius Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida sets to Release A Book — A Journey In Service"

 There are lots of expectations as the Nigeria's former military president Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida planned to release a book titled, "A Journey In Service."

Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida is central to Nigeria's political and economic fortune and misfortune post civil war, plunging the country into untold political torment especially pre-June 12 till date.

IBB

According to Comrade Dele Abiola, if IBB will be honest in his account, his book should sheds more lights to the socio-political and economic problems facing the country, leadership conspiracy against the country's citizens, June 12th 1993 election annulment among other evils perpetrated under his military leadership.


Omoyele Sowore said had IBB is planning to release a book titled "A Journey In Service." To be taken seriously, this book must provide a candid account of several significant events, including his assassination of foremost journalist Dele Giwa, the murder of Mamman Vatsa using a phantom coup as an excuse, the June 12, 1993, election annulment the worst democratic crime against Nigeria’s humanity, the Ejigbo plane crash that wiped out middle-level Nigerian Army officers, $12.5 billion Gulf oil windfall theft, unexplained deaths during his tenure, and unprecedented Nigeria's economic decline as a result of unbridled corruption.


Additionally, it is essential Babangida disclose the identities of co-conspirators within the Nigerian armed forces and beyond. Failing to address these issues would render the book A Journey in Mega Falsehoods!



Leadership is the main and major problem of the world most populous black Nation.

 There are lots of expectations as the Nigeria's former military president Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida planned to release a book titled, "A Journey In Service."

Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida is central to Nigeria's political and economic fortune and misfortune post civil war, plunging the country into untold political torment especially pre-June 12 till date.

IBB

According to Comrade Dele Abiola, if IBB will be honest in his account, his book should sheds more lights to the socio-political and economic problems facing the country, leadership conspiracy against the country's citizens, June 12th 1993 election annulment among other evils perpetrated under his military leadership.


Omoyele Sowore said had IBB is planning to release a book titled "A Journey In Service." To be taken seriously, this book must provide a candid account of several significant events, including his assassination of foremost journalist Dele Giwa, the murder of Mamman Vatsa using a phantom coup as an excuse, the June 12, 1993, election annulment the worst democratic crime against Nigeria’s humanity, the Ejigbo plane crash that wiped out middle-level Nigerian Army officers, $12.5 billion Gulf oil windfall theft, unexplained deaths during his tenure, and unprecedented Nigeria's economic decline as a result of unbridled corruption.


Additionally, it is essential Babangida disclose the identities of co-conspirators within the Nigerian armed forces and beyond. Failing to address these issues would render the book A Journey in Mega Falsehoods!



Leadership is the main and major problem of the world most populous black Nation.

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