Not too long ago, a picture over twenty years old went viral
on the internet. It was shot right in Dodan Barracks, Lagos in 1994, and in it,
a usurper military dictator, the late General Sani Abacha, in his military
attire – though not uncommonly un-bereted yet quite unusually un-bespectacled –
welcomes to the famous seat of power, the late Chief MKO Abiola who is clad
resplendently in his usual embroidered agbada, buba and sokoto, with his long
famous cap to match. For one who had just won the freest and fairest election
in the political history of Nigeria, the irony is more than cruelly etched in
the loudly-silent question: “who between the de facto despot and the demure
democrat should be the welcomer to the seat of power and who should be the
guest to it?”
Yet, it is clear that whereas one was an opportunistic
upstart crow beautified with the feathers of our democratic martyrs, the other
was a selfless visioner prepared to sacrifice his all to reclaim the stolen
mandate of his people.
Right behind this fiercely contrasting duo in this frozen
past, no less laden with the history of days gone and the prophecy of things
yet to come, are two of the most trusted personal aides of the usurper-despot
and the unyielding democrat: one is the notorious man of infamy, the Chief
Security Officer to the late Abacha, Major Hamza Al-Mustapha – the de-facto to
the de-facto – walking behind Chief MKO; and the other, a young, unassuming,
bespectacled Bola Ahmed Tinubu, majestically walking behind Abacha as if to
tactfully close-mark the untrustworthy General the way Al-Mustapha digs the
heels of his innocent principal.
Whoever posted this picture on the internet has saved
himself a thousand words because the picture is its own thousand words; it
speaks loudly of our not-too distant political past, even as it eloquently
foreshadows a future we never had the gift of prophecy to apprehend: that the
man trusted by the late MKO Abiola to watch his back when he went to the lions’
den to insist on his mandate is, after all, our democracy’s future avenging
angel, the sword of Damocles one day to fall on the fattened vultures of our
captive political aspirations. Who would also have thought that in the little obscure,
unassumingly harmless character, Major Hamza Al-Mustapha, tucked behind Abiola
in the picture, would be the most notorious “butcher of Aguda House”, the de
facto Head of State who would torture, maim and kill to keep an aberrant junta
in place.
This is the picture that speaks a thousand words; the
picture that proves both time and history are the greatest conspirators, as
they both have a way of playing on the psyche of short sighted man. We are
optically illusioned always to look one way, but the blurred and the dimly lit
objects that time and history choose not to magnify often are the veritable
mustard seeds of a future full of marvel. Watch again in the picture as young
Tinubu walks behind Abacha with the solemnity of a golden child that has an
uncanny foreknowledge of his future role both as the man chosen to right
political wrongs yet in the womb of time, and as the anointed angel to give
final rest to the troubled political spirit of his fallen liege and godfather.
Tinubu has proven himself a worthy son of his proud
political lineage. He had been with MKO long before the days of NPN and he was
there when the Aare Ona Kakanfo threw his hat into the political ring at the
Jos convention of the SDP. He was one of the brains behind the famous Epe declaration,
after which he fled abroad to avoid Abacha’s murderous rage.
Tinubu, with the late Enahoro, Wole Soyinka, General Alani
Akinrinade (Rtd.), Dr. Kayode Fayemi and others, sustained NADECO abroad after
its virtual demise at home under the asphyxiating disposition of Abacha’s
junta. He, with Kokori and others, led the oil-workers strike that crippled
Lagos to keep the spirit of June 12 alive. Tinubu was the first person MKO
would ask for from me when he had his first day in court on a charge of treason.
Tinubu, ironically, was also the first person to call me from London when he
heard Abiola was assassinated.
I remember even in the heat of the pandemonium of MKO’s
sudden death, Tinubu still had the equanimity of mind to instruct that I tell
Kola Abiola and MKO’s physician, Ore Falomo, to insist on a UN-backed
post-mortem to confirm alleged poisoning of his late political mentor; nor did
he, thereafter, leave to stray uncatered-for the biological and political
orphans of the late MKO – he has nurtured many to abundant life. Now that the
prophesy has come to pass and the son has, at last, exacted the political pound
of flesh to avenge the spirit of his late father, let the son proceed to do the
other needful; namely, restore late Chief MKO Abiola to his rightful place in
the political history of Nigeria. Let June 12 as a date be recognised as a
veritable political watershed in the democratic learning process of this
country; let the late icon have to his name an enduring monument of history as
his memorial and let the corrective regime of Muhammadu Buhari elevate Abiola
post-humously to the highest honour in the land, i.e. the Grand Commander of
the Federal Republic (GCFR). He deserves it!
The journey depicted in this picture of a thousand words may
have ended tragically – justifiably for the usurper-despot and undeservedly for
the ill-fated, heroic democrat, nonetheless, they both have their distinctive
places in history; whereas Abacha’s name lives in infamy, Abiola’s lives in the
memory of lovers of duty, honour and country.
Thus away from the thousand words that this picture
manifestly evokes, are yet many more that only those who saw it all and have a
sense of history can give flesh to. Even as society seems to move and carry on
as if nothing momentous happened years ago, history appears to tap us on the
shoulder, urging that we do not forget “it” so that “it” too – when our due
season comes – will not forget us. Let us lift the memory of our forebears who
selflessly gave their yesterday so that we would have this promising today. Let
the last few syllables of the one thousand words contained in this picture be
given their full vent. Let Abiola take his rightful place in the history of our
democratic odyssey. Tinubu alone was in the right spot in that history; only he
can write it.
– Lisa Olu Akerele, a veteran journalist and former
Political Assistant to the late MKO Abiola, is the Atunwase of Ijesaland.

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