The resting place of General Sani Abacha. CREDITS: DELE MOMODU.
-AFTERMATH AND LEGACIES:
-A lot has happened after Abacha’s unexpected demise. From endless probes to court cases with the Federal Government, Nigerian people have been treated to a lot of drama. While General Abdusalami had his own probe of Abacha’s government (of which he was also part of), Olusegun Obasanjo came with the Human Rights Violations Investigation Committee (HRVIC) better known as the Oputa Panel.
Out of a total of 10,000 petitions submitted to the Oputa Panel, a staggering 80% were connected to the Abacha junta. Well, under the Yar’adua Presidency things calmed down a bit and under Goodluck Jonathan, the heat on the Abacha family is not the same as it was under OBJ, except for an occasional shout that some of Abacha’s ‘trillions’ have been discovered. Whatever happens, we live in a nation without accountability. Quite a number of places and structures have been named after Abacha within and outside Nigeria: -Sani Abacha Stadium, Kano: A multipurpose 25,000-seater stadium which also serves as the base for Kano Pillars FC. It served as the venue of several international competitions including the 2000 African Cup of Nations and the FIFA Under-17 World Cup in 2009.
General Sani Abacha Stadium, Kano.
-Sani Abacha Barracks, Abuja: Named after him. In December 2010, an explosion ripped through the Mammy Market inside the barracks killing people who gathered there to celebrate the New Year. Air Marshal Oluseyi Petinrin blamed ‘devilish people’ for the attack. Formerly called Mogadishu Cantonment, Sani Abacha Barracks has been renamed and is now Mogadishu Barracks.
-Sani Abacha Way, Old Kiyawa Road, Dutse, Jigawa State.
-Sani Abacha Way, Gusau, Zamfara State.
-Sani Abacha Expressway, Yenagoa, Bayelsa State
Sani Abacha Expressway, Bayelsa State.
-Sani Abacha Youth Center, Kano State.
-Sani Abacha Way, Abuja, Federal Capital Territory (for lovers of Yahuza Suya Spot…lol!).
-Sani Abacha Way (formerly Kano Road), Kano State, Nigeria.
-Sani Abacha Road (formerly Lagos Road). -Sani Abacha Junction, Robinson Street, Enugu State.
-Sani Abacha Way, GRA (Government Residential Area) Phase 3, Port Harcourt, Rivers State. -Sani Abacha Way, Sokoto State.
-General Sani Abatcha Specialist Hospital, Damaturu, Yobe State
The General Sani Abatcha Specialist Hospital, Damaturu, Yobe State.
-Sani Abacha Roundabout, Abakaliki, Ebonyi State.
-Sani Abacha Mosque, Maiduguri, Borno State.
Sani Abacha Mosque, Borno State.
-In Freetown, Sierra Leone, there is the Sani Abacha Street also named after him. This road lies between Wilberforce Street and Fourah Bay Road. Sani Abacha Street is one of the most densely-populated areas of Freetown, and is a major business area. There, Abacha is a folk hero, and held in much reverence as people do in Kano where sugarcane sellers plaster their wheelbarrows with Abacha stickers. In Kano, you can still see the maishayis (tea sellers) talking about Abacha in the most glowing terms. Surely, he is very well-loved in Kano, even in death.
Sani Abacha Street in Freetown, Sierra Leone as at May, 2007.
-Sani Abacha Housing Estate, Bayelsa State: Governor Seriake Dickson has laid the foundation of the 150-duplex estate named in his honour. -Nollywood actors produced a movie titled Stubborn Grasshopper (my Dad, Babanijigi, bought the video cassette, we watched it like hell and I think we still have it…lol!) Sam Obeakheme was the one who played the role of Abacha with marker ink all over his face to serve as Abacha’s tribal marks…lol!
The Abacha family during a celebration.
-CORRUPTION:
It is widely believed that General Abacha is one of the most corrupt leaders not only in Nigeria but in the history of mankind and the first allegations against him had to do with skimming from Army contracts in the 1980s when he became GOC, and continued over time. The amount he was alleged to have stolen is on such a massive scale that no definitive figure has been given yet. Today you hear $1 billion has been recovered, and tomorrow the Swiss government is talking about one tranche of 700 million pounds sterling.
But according to many sources, Abacha spirited an estimated $3-$5 billion from the Nigerian treasury shooting him into the same league as Muhammad Suharto of Indonesia, Mobutu Sese Seko of Zaire and Ferdinand Marcos of the Philippines. Interestingly, there are those who vehemently deny that Abacha was corrupt, and these include his widow, Maryam, who stated that he was just saving the money for Nigeria in overseas accounts and during the 10th year remembrance prayers for the soul of Abacha, former military heads of state, Generals Ibrahim Babangida and Muhammadu Buhari wanted Nigerians to believe that Abacha was closer to sainthood than cardinals of the Catholic Church. But that is an extremely difficult thing to do, to convince the world that Abacha never took a dime will be much more difficult than advanced nuclear physics. Why?
-Just days before General Abdusalami left power, one of the last things that he did was to issue the Forfeiture of Assets, Etc (certain Persons) Decree No. 53 of 26 May, 1999 which provided legal backing for the illegally acquired cash, properties and other cash seized from the Abacha family. The same General Abdusalami Alhaji Abubakar on the 23rd of July 1998 set up the Special Investigation Panel (SIP) whose sole purpose was to probe corrupt deals in the Abacha government (although he was also part and parcel of the cabal).
The report of the SIP was damning and by the time it released its preliminary report in November 1998, the whole nation was shocked at the ‘systematic pillage of the Central Bank of Nigeria.’ It submitted that the usual mode of operation was for Abacha to direct his National Security Adviser, Ismaila Gwarzo to present phony requests for security operations or equipment, of which the power of authorization was with him. Then the CBN would be ordered to remit the millions or billions to Gwarzo either in cash or travellers cheques which were then taken to the dictator for further laundering abroad by his sons, Mohammed and Abba and his younger brother, Abdulkadir. Other associates fingered in the money laundering include Abubakar Bagudu and the Aare Musulumi of Yorubaland, Alhaji Arisekola Alao, whose son was recently embroiled in the fuel subsidy corruption saga.
-However, it must be stated that the investigations done by the SIP also accused Abacha of collecting up to $50,000 before approving any contract, and the evidence of corruption unearthed were linked to financial transactions in offshore banks, and not in Nigeria. On the 18th of September 2000 under the Obasanjo presidency, the Attorney-General of the Federation slammed a 115-count charge suit against receiving stolen property against Mohammed Abacha and Abubakar Bagudu. Mohammed Abacha has been freed and made an attempt to become the governor of Kano State.
Whatever the case with the corruption deals involving the Abacha family, the Federal Government of Nigeria itself has been less than honest in its way of handling the whole matter. For example, Mohammed Abacha was released after agreeing to a deal with the FGN for the Abacha family to keep $100 million (as what would be earnings from legitimate businesses and according to Obasanjo, this was one of the hardest decisions of his presidency) and release $1.2 billion only for him to come out and deny that he released any $1.2 billion frozen by authorities in Luxembourg, Liechtenstein and Switzerland. The former Speaker of the House of Representatives and OBJ’s archenemy, Alhaji Ghali Umar Na’abba was one of the most vocal advocates of Mohammed’s release. Exactly how much has been recovered and what has been done with the funds, no one can transparently account for, and that defeats the whole purpose of the recovery drive. Others who also called for his release included the Emir of Kano, Alhaji Dr. Ado Bayero and the governor of Kano State, Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso.
-Meanwhile in May 2001, a Federal High Court in Abuja declared that Mohammed had no case to answer in the Kudirat Abiola charges and was roped in simply on circumstantial evidence. He was released and went to Kano where he was treated to a hero’s welcome by hordes of Abacha’s supporters. He would later refuse to sign the proposed settlement agreement with the FGN announced by the Swiss authorities in April 2001. At about the same time, he was paid a visit by General Muhammadu Buhari who announced he was going to run against Obasanjo come 2003. Assuming Buhari won, it is safe to assume that the Abacha family would have had a better deal but Buhari lost to Baba Iyabo. -Some have dismissed the Federal Government’s hounding of the Abacha family as a witch-hunting session. Former President Obasanjo was particularly accused of fabricating cases against the Abacha family so as to seek revenge for the shabby treatment he received at the hands of the goggled despot. Well, an interesting dimension to the case was that in August 2002, Obasanjo was on the verge of being impeached. Fifty eight (58) senators had already signed up to impeach him but in a very dramatic twist of events, they all backed out after the release of Mohammed Abacha from prison. Dearest Reader, honestly speaking, you will have to reach your own conclusion.
-According to the American writer, Jeffrey Robinson, in his bestseller, The Sink: Terror, Crime and Dirty Money in the Offshore World (2003), long before Abacha became the head of state, he was already stashing money abroad. When he was army chief in 1988, he sent two eldest sons, Ibrahim and Mohammed to International Personal Banking (IPB) CITIBANK in New York to open three coded accounts. According to the book too, IBB pilfered at least four times more than Abacha (of the $120 billion siphoned out of the Nigerian treasury into offshore accounts by dishonest politicians, $20 billion is allegedly traceable to IBB directly as president from 1985 to 1993). Here is an excerpt from the book:
It was business as usual for IPB when Nigeria’s General Abacha showed up with government funds in his pocket. A career soldier and civil servant all his life, in 1988 Abacha had dispatched his oldest sons, Ibrahim and Mohammed to begin a relationship with IPB New York. A shell was created, called Morgan Procurement, and three accounts were opened in code names. Among them were Gelsobella for the account in New York and Navarrio for the account in London. Oddly, the IPB “relationship manager” who handled the accounts later claimed that he didn’t have any idea that Ibrahim and Mohammed were related to General Abacha — a man recognized on the world stage for his audacious brutality — and wouldn’t become aware of that fact for nearly three years. It was only after the Abacha family relationship with IPB ended that documentation came to light suggesting that, at least, one IPB officer knew who his clients were. The bank’s paperwork read: “Father of Ibrahim and Mohammed, General Sani Abacha, is the current military ruler of Nigeria, where there is a lot of corruption.” Seizing power, Abacha dissolved all political parties in Nigeria, forbade demonstrations against the new regime, censored the media and locked up a people who opposed him. Instead of canceling the account then and there, IPB did business with the Abachas for 11 years and helped them move $110 million through accounts in New York, London and Jersey. It must be said that Citibank was not the Abachas only bank. Twenty different banks in Switzerland held more than 140 Abacha accounts. A substantial portion of the funds located there arrived after the 1998 Swiss money laundering codes were put into law. Those codes had been held up to the rest of the world by the Swiss themselves as proof positive that the bad old days of dirty money were over, that money stolen by dictators was no longer welcome in Switzerland.Sani Abacha died in June 1998, apparently of a heart attack. He was 54. A best-estimate has it that he stole $4.3 billion, some $2.3 billion of it directly from the national treasury. -The Sink: Terror, Crime and Dirty Money in the Offshore World (2003).
-As expected, the Abacha family has denied stealing a farthing from Nigeria and Mrs. Abacha stated emphatically that her husband was keeping the money in foreign accounts not for his own personal use but for the sake of Nigeria. -On 29th of May, 2003, the day Obasanjo was sworn in for his second term, Mohammed Abacha granted an interview to the Los Angeles Times in which he insisted that all the monies seized from the Abacha family were all proceeds from legitimate businesses. He was told to explain this but he said it would take him three days to do so. This is what Tim Daniel has to say on it: ‘Mohammed Abacha did have the equivalent of three full days to explain those legitimate business enterprises in the Ajaokuta proceedings. They could probably be summarized in three minutes. If there was a grain of truth in them, he would be in the Forbes 500 as one of the world’s most successful businessmen.’
-Interestingly, Professor Jerry Gana was the one briefing the nation as Obasanjo’s minister of information as to the amount of ‘recovery’ of the loot done so far. I find that quite interesting.
-There is also an interesting dimension to the whole saga when Wikileaks leaked documents revealing the following :“At a meeting with the US Ambassador Robin Sanders to discuss his removal from the EFCC, Ribadu told the US ambassador that Obasanjo was good at covering his tracks. He admitted that corruption was worse under Obasanjo. On former President Obasanjo, the Commissioner (Ribadu) said, he (Obasanjo) really knew how to play the game. “Although he created the EFCC and understood its importance for him with the international community, Ribadu explained, that by far and even more than the Abacha days where he (Abacha) was the sole thief, corruption under Obasanjo’s eight years was far worse, because everyone stole. “Oba was a political machine and knew how to play the game for the international community, cover his tracks and, for good or bad, and got it as regards to what the EFCC’s role was and should be.”
In 2009, Abacha, alongside Olusegun Obasanjo and Abdulsalami Abubakar were named as beneficiaries of bribes running into millions of dollars handed out by Halliburton in exchange for contracts to build Nigeria’s liquefied natural gas plant, with Abacha alone pocketing $40 million (former US Vice President and Halliburton chief Dick Cheney was also mentioned). Whatever the case, the fact is that Nigeria has not been blessed with blessed leaders, and that we are where are today is a reflection of their ‘leadership’.
-QUOTES:
-If an insurgency lasts for more than 24 hours, the government has a hand in it.
-This regime will be firm, humane, and decisive. We will not condone nor tolerate any act of indiscipline. Any attempt to test our will be decisively dealt with. For the International Community, we ask that you suspend judgment while we grapple with the onerous task of nation building, reconciliation and repairs. This government is a child of necessity with a strong determination to restore peace and stability to our country and on these foundations, enthrone a lasting and true democracy. Give us the chance to solve our problems in our own ways. -Maiden speech, November 17th, 1993.
‘The issue of peace in the West African subregion should supersede the economic interest of individual states as there cannot be economic progress without peace in the subregion.’ -While swearing in the new Nigerian Ambassador to Liberia, April 1995.
-Fellow Nigerians, sequel to the resignation of the former Head of the Interim National Government and Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces, Chief Ernest Shonekan and my subsequent appointment as Head of State and Commander-in-Chief, I have had extensive consultations within the armed forces hierarchy and other well meaning Nigerians in a bid to find solutions to the various political, economic and social problems which have engulfed our beloved country, and which have made life most difficult to the ordinary citizen of this nation. -Maiden speech, November 17th, 1993.
A much younger Sani Abacha beaming with smiles.
The end of kirakita. Carrying Abacha’s corpse in preparation for his burial.
When Abacha died, the condolence register opened for him in Ado-Ekiti, Ekiti State was so torn and rubbished that the State Military Administrator, Lt. Col. Mohammed Bawa had to come on TV to threaten any one who desecrated the register. A soldier had to be stationed with the register. Such was the level of hatred for a man even in the state he created. Abacha was despised and is still despised by many.
A very loving father and romantic husband, he made many fatherless, motherless and widowed even many more. But again, he made many happy and fantastically wealthy, and these people will be eternally grateful to him. Today, there are those who fondly remember him, pray for his soul, who miss him and remember with tears and recount all the nice memories they had together. I guess that sums of the life of mortals that we all are. When we are gone, there will be those who will talk of us glowingly, and those who will rain curses on our graves or spit on our corpses if given the chance. Your task, my dear Reader, is for you to make sure the scale between these two groups of people is not balanced, but grossly tipping to one side. The side to choose? That I leave to you. Thank you very much for your time.
Juju
REFERENCES:
Abacha: The Myth, The Man by Uche Ezechukwu, Sputnik Media Consult Ltd., 1997,
Amnesty International Appeals: http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/asset/AFR44/009/1995/es/041cf1f0-8697-4ce8-97a3-41279ddea029/afr440091995en.pdf, http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/info/AFR44/009/1995/es,
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TELL, 28th August, 1995, No 35.
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