BABANGIDA’S CONFESSION AND ATONEMENT: QUO VADIS?

By Professor Mike Ozekhome, SAN, CON, OFR, LL.D.

I have carefully read and listened to former Nigerian military president, General Ibrahim

Badamosi Babagida’s public remorse and regrets over the atrocious annulment of the June

12,1993 presidential elections. He did this 32 whopping years later. I want to very quickly say

that it takes a man with strong guts and balls and a man who has become repentant, born

again and has seen the face of God to publicly recant his earlier wrongful deeds and offer

public apology to the entire nation. This was no doubt meant to heal gapinng wounds and

balm wounded and bruised hearts.

The polls, the best, most transparent and credible elections, ever held in Nigeria till date,

were meant to end decades of military d The annulment threw Nigeria into turmoil and

widespread unreast, protests, maimings and killings. This forced Babagida to “step aside”;

the enthronenent of the Enest Shonekan’s Interim Government; and the arrest and detention

of Chief Moshood Abiola, the presumed winner who later died in Aso Villa in questionable

and suspicious circumstances. Of course, General Sani Abacha who was his second in

command later sacked Shonekan in a bloodless coup. For years, IBB prevaricated on the

annulment, claiming he did it in the best national interest. But on Thursday the 21st of

February, 2025,Babangida during the presentation of his memoirs, “A journey In Service”,

pointedly regretted in the public: “I regret June 12. I accept full responsibility for the

decisions taken and June 12 happened under my watch. Mistakes, missteps happened

in quick succession. That accident of history is most regrettable. The nation is entitled

to expect my expression of regret “. And wait for it:: he acknowledged for the first time that

Abiola won the elections fair and square, trouncing his major opponent, Alhaji Bashir Tofa.

I want to salute Babagida for having the courage and humility to own up like a man; that

everything that happened during the June 12 crisis took place under him as the head of state

and the president who was also the Commander- in-Chief of the Armed Forces of the Federal

Republic of Nigeria. I salute him for acknowledging that his government which actually

organised unarguably the freest, fairest and most credible elections in the electoral history

of Nigeria when it introduced option A4 from electoral books that were hithenlrto unknown

to Nigeria or to the world. But unfortunately, regrettably like he now admits, he again turned

around to annul the same elections in a way that was most bizarre, curious and unnatural.To me, that he has come out to open up to doing something wrong and egregious to a

bleeding nation should be appreciated. I believe that Nigerians should forgive him because

to err is human and to forgive is divine ( Eph 4:32 ). I personally have now forgiven him

because I was also a victim of the June12 crisis. It threw up all manners of challenges to me

as a person, where in my very youthful age; in my thirties, I found myself marching on the

streets of Lagos every day- from Ikeja bus stop roundabout, to Ikorodu road; up to Tejuosho

market; from there to Ojuelegba, Surulere; to Mushin; to Shomolu and Igando, Alimosho.

Everyday, we were on the streets, protesting the mindless annulment. Some of us were killed

in process; some were lucky enough to escape abroad on self exile. But some of us- very few

indeed- refused to flee our dear country; we stayed back. We stared at the military eyeball to

eyeball. We challenge authority and spoke truth to power. We challenged impunity and

repression. I suffered several detentions across different detention centres. I virtually could

not find means of livelihood for my youthful family because I was profiled, my phones bugged

and no briefs were coming in. But I personally forgive him because it takes tons of guts to

make public confession of having erred and atone for same as he has now done.

It is confession that leads to penance and penance leads to restitution and then forgiveness.

If Babagida were to die today, I believe that he will see the face of God because he has prayed

God to forgive him; and he has prayed Nigerians to forgive him. Beyond that historic and

epochal mistake of the annulment of the June 12 election which constitutes his original sin,

let me place it on record that Babagida is one of the greatest presidents that Nigeria ever had

in terms of his ingenuity, rulership mantra; ideas for national resurgimento; ideas that

contributed greatly to nation-building. These were aside the IMF-induced loans and pills

which he introduced and which we again valiantly fought against successfully.

Babagida it was who gave birth to the Federal Capital Territory and laid the solid foundation

for virtually everything you see there today. His government was peopled by intellectuals and

not by half illiterates and quacks. He recognized and used intellects. He was luminous and

he built bridges of understanding, friendship and brotherhood across Nigeria. Nigerians,

please, accept IBB’s confession and forgive him his sin of annuling the June 12,1993

elections. Let the wounds heal; let the heart melt; and let the spirit of national triumphalism

prevail.

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