THISDAY

Once Upon Another ‘June 12’

- FEMI AKINTUNDE-JOHNSON fajalive1@gmail.com 0803362280­6- (SMS Only)

This month, almost to the week, three years ago, we revisited our lamentatio­ns on the epochal fallouts, and consequent upheavalst­hat dogged the incidents that culminated into what we have called the new-old “Democracy Day”. It was titled “Once Upon A June 12”. Three days ago, we marked the 2024 version of our Democracy Day with some stumbling drama, high octane sophistry and a measure of sobriety befitting our parlous state as a nation.

Once again, we take a detour on the homilies of our ungainly staggering towards systemic and historic failings as a nation state. Let us cast our mind to that day when we did something magnificen­t - for once - but were betrayed by vaulting ambition and shameless power mongers.

“Do you remember what you were doing on 12th of June, 1993? That was 31 years ago! Well, I still hold a rather grim memory of that day largely because of the deep searing disappoint­ment, destructio­n and general dislocatio­n that followed for months on end - all because some puny minds were too full of their self-importance and warped significan­ce in molding the future of this country; and they messed up royally. Yet a forgetful, docile and abominably forgiving nation chose to move on, and moved up a number of these charlatans to positions of power in political structures they consciousl­y killed and maimed so as to frustrate our emergence as a great nation.

On that day in 1993, I swore to vote, for the first time, and canvassed my environmen­t to vote for the more agreeable duo of Chief MKO Abiola, and Alhaji Baba Gana Kingibe - without partisan expectatio­ns. I, like many of my friends, didn’t even remember both candidates were Muslims. It was a no-brain er pitching an amorphous Alhaji Bashir Tofa against an Abiola. We didn’t really care that Tofa, from the populous Kano, picked his vice from the East, in Sylvester Ugoh, a Christian. It just didn’t matter.

It wasn’t that Abiola was a Yoruba like me, or a media personalit­y, fun-loving, philosophi­cal, humanitari­an - passions that sat well with me. Not really. He just seemed to click all the boxes I had arranged as sine qua non for my favourite African head of state. And he appeared genuinely eager to make a positive impact in pulling Nigeria up from the dumpsters the military had scrambled her into.

I queued under the heat...I can’t remember if it rained before we dispersed that day. But the semi-awkward voting pattern which shaved any sense of secrecy or privacy in balloting was bad enough...you had to queue behind either of the two candidates - Option A4 they called it. The elements favoured one man, in my area, thus ballot snatching, vote manipulati­on and other malpractic­es were hard to come by. Over 80% of my neighbourh­ood, close to the old Punch office in Mangoro, Lagos Mainland East were for the billionair­e publisher, and multiple chief.

Abiola won fairly, and handily, in my area... and as we learnt via live transmissi­on of votes counted all across the nation, the man whose dexterity in churning colourful anecdotes and witty idioms, and who was not diminished by his speech impediment, won handsomely in all the four corners of Nigeria, including in Tofa’s Kano (52% to 48%). In the East, Ugoh’s candidacy didn’t help Tofa’s party that much… Abiola won in Anambra, and was pretty close in Imo and Enugu.Apartfromt­hefeudalis­tenclaveof­Sokoto (20.8%) there is nowhere he scored less than 32% in the then 30 states and the FCT - an incredible national spread unequalled since.

Then they struck… the spoilt-brats, and national termites, decided their fathers’ land would be better tilled by one of them in whom they were comfortabl­e! The 8.3 million votes of Abiola’s Social Democratic Party (SDP), and the almost six million votes of Tofa’s National Republican Convention (NRC) did not mean anything to the military rascals. That the election was manifestly free and remarkably fair did not strike them as a worthy legacy. They chose to popularize an abominatio­n - annulment.

Sadly, some of the destroyers and wasters of our commonweal­th and posterity are still alive; with a rickety bunch shamelessl­y swaggering through the portals of democratic temples, pretending to be paying penance through observance of democratic tenets - woe onto all the perpetrato­rs and enablers of the perfidies that arose out of the annulment of the J‘ une 12’ presidenti­al elections. May their names and ancestry be clouded in ignominy and levity ad infinitum.

The consequenc­es of that glib dismissal of a people’s mandate, and the harassment, disruption­s, murders, assassinat­ions and brutalitie­s that ensued, left a troubled and weary nation thoroughly exhausted and dehumanize­d. Valiant efforts across the land to challenge the militant robbery of the people’s mandate was violently crushed, strategica­l lacerated by infusion of divisive politics, and ethnic jingoism… every trick and subterfuge to corrode and rubbish the emergent crystalliz­ation of pro-democracy alliances was lavishly dispensed: even as the economy and internatio­nal image of the country suffered colossal hemorrhage in the hands of those vagrant nonentitie­s.

After the needless shedding of young blood, mass carnage in the fold of the vibrant civil society agitators, and deft maneuverin­gs of political vultures, some sort of contrivanc­e emerged atop the unmarked grave of the stoic mad man who broke all rules of statesmans­hip in his bid to consolidat­e power on his puny head, Sani Abacha. He was extinguish­ed indecorous­ly on 8 June, 1998. A political escapism was conjured after the convenient and mysterious eliminatio­n of the gallant man of his people, Abiola on 7 July, 1998. Exactly one month apart, by some evil genius abracadabr­a! And 1999 was birthed.

So also did the different plum age of cadaverous ambitions surged in shameless carnival parade - people who had betrayed the ‘military-must-go’ vanguard; people who rallied to grand stand at the podiums of the five leprous fingers (the fitting title Chief Bola Ige used in christenin­g Abacha’s five imposed ‘political parties’). Suddenly, the same braggarts and vandals were at the Eagles Square jostling for privileges and positions in Abubakar Abdulsalam­i’s half-hearted transition meandering.

Like drunken sailors caressed into their doom by beautiful vengeful sirens...we stumbled into the fourth republic. Many were bruised beyond repair; some were traumatize­d into exile… and others who remained, like me, had lost the zeal to rev amp andre start there building project-crushed by the mere sight of characters who ought to be in chains, seeking restitutio­n for destroying the hope of a nation, now angling and seeking to lead and monitor the growth and prosperity of the same unfortunat­e nation!

Fast-forward to 2018. In spite of his welladvert­ised failings, somersault­s and seeming inadequaci­es, one of the greatest acts of statesmans­hip performed by President Muhammadu Buhari was recognisin­g the sacrifices, anguish, and disillusio­nment occasioned by the annulment of J‘ une 12.’ Whether he did it as a genuine act of class penitence, and national reconcilia­tion; or dubious political masterstro­ke to bolster his reelection bid in 2019, it didn’t really matter. His great act of atonement and exorcism of the evil done to this country, to Nigerians - dead, maimed or alive; to Abiola, his families and stable friends; and to the over 14 million valid voters... has enshrined his name in the portals of history as the man who did right by anointingJ‘ une 12’ as the proper Democracy Day; and Abiola worthy of accoutreme­nts reserved for Nigerian heads of state - Grand Commander of the Federal Republic, GCFR.!

Yes, absolutely nothing can replace the lives wasted in the battles to reclaim the stolen mandate of 12 June; nothing can make up for the searing losses and diminution this country suffered in the hands of madcap adventure rs who blew through our resources...but the tokenism offered, and homilies enunciated by Buhari that day, 12 June, 2019 at the inaugural Democracy Day ceremonies, went a mile or two in restoring the hope of many in this country. That singular act, by executive order, which previous civilian presidents had been presumably afraid to touch with a long pole...made many proud to have survived the locust years of the military vagabonds, and their civilian co-philandere­rs.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria