June 12:Full text of MKO's address after 1993 presidential poll was annulled
Abiola vowed to reclaim his mandate after Banbangida annulled the June 12, 1993 presidential election. After the then military govern...
https://triment.blogspot.com/2016/06/june-12full-text-of-mkos-address-after.html
Abiola vowed to reclaim his mandate after Banbangida annulled the June 12, 1993 presidential election.
After the then military government headed by Ibrahim Babangida (IBB) annulled the June 12, 1993 election, presidential election, MKO Abiola, who was the acclaimed winner of the election, rejected the annulment at a press conference, and vowed to reclaim his mandate.
Read the full text of Abiola's address below:
on
Wednesday, June 23 1993, the Federal Military Government issued a short
statement terminating, by fiat, the entire transition programme. The
very manner in which the statement was made public indicated a
de-liberate intention to insult and ridicule the entire Nigerian people.
The statement was undated, unsigned, un-authorised, and made on a plane
sheet of paper. But for the fact that it was distributed to the press
by the Chief Press Secretary to the Vice-President, it could very well
have been issued by the Association for Better Nigeria.
The
effect of this statement was to render everything done in the last six
years in promotion of the transition programme an absolute nullity.
There have been amendments before. There have been disqualifications,
postponements and cancellations before. But never before has there been
such a cynical and contemptuous abrogation of solemn commitments and
fixed programmes. In the three previous abortions of the transition
programme, the whipping boy was the political class, who were derided
and reviled as corrupt and selfish. But this time around, this same
political class conducted itself, in the campaign leading to the June 12
election, and on June 12 itself, with unprecedented dignity and
restraint, to avoid offering the authorities any excuse that could once
again be used to abort the transition process.
Most
reasonable observers concluded that the election of June 12 was the
freest and fairest in Nigerian history The international community
unanimously confirmed this verdict. But because the purported ineptitude
of the political class could not be blamed, this time, we are now being
told that n is the judiciary that must be held responsible for the
termination of the transition programme. Before making the personal
decision to vie for the presidency, knowing fully well the misfortune of
other distinguished Nigerians in the recent past, I consulted widely,
and sought assurances that I would not be chasing shadows. These
assurances were given, in some cases from the highest levels of
government including the president him self. I was therefore convinced
that the commitment to civilian rule, come August 27 this year, was
firm, settled and irrevocable. 1 could not imagine that the purported
transgressions of the judiciary could possibly be used as the excuse for
cancelling the election of June 12.
I never went
to court. Alhaji Tofa never did. The two political parties never
initiated any litigation on any matter relating to the election. The
only person who went to court was Arthur Nzeribe, in the guise of a
1egally banned organisation called ABN. Nzeribe was not a candidate. He
did not even vote. His association is not even registered. And yet
the Abuja courts granted him injunctions at the unprecedented hour of
9.30pm which, in retrospect, now seem contrived and deliberately
intended to cause the greatest possible confusion. And NEC too was
suspended and all its actions to date cancelled. But you do not take the
extreme measure of killing a new born child just because the midwife
is a bad woman. The judiciary was peripheral to the election process.
Assuming that there was good faith on the part of government, all
matters relating the election should have gone to the tribunals set up
by law for such cases, and should only have been initiated by persons or
bodies that had a genuine interest in the election.
READ: 'MKO's death paved way for our democracy,' Atiku says
Instead,
we are being told that the judiciary behaved so badly that Moshood
Kashimawo Olawale Abiola should be penalised for its conduct. It is
incredible In view of all this, I find the conclusion unfortunate but
inescapably that the Federal Military Government is guilty of bad faith,
pure and simple. No one has accused me of any offence against any known
electoral law or regulation. The people of this country went to the
polls on Saturday, June 12, 1993, and, without let or hinderance, chose
me as their president. The figures say so. The agencies of government:
MAMSER, CDS and the Presidential Election Monitoring Group say so. The
International Observer Group say so. NEC knows so and says so. In its
affidavit to the Court of Appeal, NEC said that results were ready and
known. I won. Yet the Federal Military Government, on the most
unconvincing and disingenuous premise, that the judiciary caught itself
in a web of ludicrous contradictions, has decided to cancel the election
and its results. I say, categorically, that this decision is unfair,
unjust, and consequently unacceptable.
Prior to
June 12, 1993, it was possible for the Federal Military Government to
claim that those who spoke their minds and opposed its policies
represented none but themselves, and were self-appointed critics who had
no mandate from the people of this country. That situation changed on
June 12. As I speak today, I am, by the infinite grace of God, and the
wishes of the people of this country, the president elect of the Federal
Republic of Nigeria. I am the custodian of a sacred mandate, freely
given, which I cannot surrender unless the people so demand, and it is
by virtue of this mandate that I say that the decision of the Federal
Military Government to cancel the election of June 12, 1993 is
invidious, unpatriotic and capable of causing undue and unnecessary
confusion in the country.
I therefore call on all
our people who have yearned and worked for a speedy return of our
beloved country to civilian democracy to reject any act by anybody
which takes away their inalienable and fundamental human right to
decide who governs them. No other institution or group can confer
legitimacy on the presidency except through a free and fair election
throughout Nigeria based on universal adult suffrage such as the one in
which I was elected president.
I also call on the
international community and all democratic forces to stand by the
Nigerian people in our just struggle for democracy, freedom and justice
in our fatherland.
From now on, the struggle in
Nigeria is between the people and a small clique in the military
determined to cling to power at all costs. We are fully convinced that a
majority of the Armed Forces are law abiding and wish for Nigeria to
become a democratic nation.
READ: 'Release results of June 12, 1993 Presidential election,' Afenifere tells Buhari
It
is inconceivable that a few people in government should claim to know
so much better about politics and government than the 14 million
Nigerians who actually went to the polls on June 12. It is gratuitous
insult to suppose that any government, no matter how impressed it is by
its own knowledge and wisdom, should, against the people’s will,
continue to make laws and regulations whose only permanent
characteristic is inconsistency. The people of Nigeria have spoken. They
have loudly and firmly proclaimed their preference for democracy. They
have chosen me as their president for the next four years. They have
determined that August 27, 1993 shall be the terminal date of military
dictatorship in Nigeria. On that date, the people of Nigeria, through
their democratic decision of June 12, 1993, expect me to assume the
reins of government.