Friday June 5, 1998, was a cool bright day. Before we left the
Villa, the Press Corps was informed that the leader of the Palestinian
Liberation Organisation, Yasser Arafat, would be making a brief
stop-over at the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja, enroute
Morocco. And he was expected to hold a brief discussion with the General
Sani Abacha. We were therefore expected to be at the airport to cover
the event on Sunday, June 7. It was a topical assignment in view of
Nigeria's neutral position in the Middle East conflict. Besides, the
rest of us were keen to meet Mr. Arafat, the man at the centre of the
storm.
That Sunday morning, the Press Corps headed for the
airport to await the arrival of Yasser Arafat. We did not have to wait
for too long before the Palestinian leader arrived, accompanied by a
very modest delegation. President Arafat and General Abacha immediately
went into private discussion at the VIP lounge of the Presidential wing
of the airport. The Press outside waited curiously for the possible
outcome of the talks between the two leaders, a kind of joint press
conference, on all issues involved in the Nigeria-Palestine relations.
After the meeting, which was very brief, there was no press
conference. Rather, Yasser Arafat inspected a guard of honour mounted by
a detachment of the 3 Guards Brigade of the Nigerian Army, and departed
for Morocco. The whole airport ceremony lasted about two hours and we
all returned to the Villa (Aso Rock).
Before
leaving the Villa, I decided to cross-check with protocol officials if
the Head of State would still be traveling to Burkina Faso to attend the
OAU Summit, which was already at the Ministerial Session in
Ouagadougou. The advance team of the Head of State's entourage had
already left on Friday night. I was to be in the main entourage expected
to leave for Burkina Faso on Monday morning, after Abacha would have
declared open an International Information Conference expected to begin
in Abuja Monday June 8. The Federal Ministry of Information organized
the conference. It was normal during General Abacha's regime, that his
movement was always kept topmost secret. As a matter of fact, those of
us who used to travel with him would not know until few hours to our
departure. So was our trip to Burkina Faso. They told me it was still on
course.
With that assurance, I drove straight to NICON
Hilton, Abuja where I had passed the previous night as a member of the
Organizing Committee of the Information Conference. Six o'clock in the
morning, Monday June 8, 1 1eft for the Villa, with my luggage to join
the delegation to Burkina Faso for the OAU Summit. General Abacha was to
head the Nigerian delegation. At the time I got to the Villa everything
appeared quite normal. I met some of my colleagues who were also to be
in the Head of State's entourage to Burkina Faso. At 7 a.m. that fateful
day, we all assembled at the Press Centre waiting for the necessary
directives. However, when it got to eight o'clock, and no signal was
forthcoming about our movement, we decided to go and have our breakfast
and reconvene in the next one hour. At that point everything in the
Villa still appeared normal. Various officials were seen in their duty
posts doing their routine jobs.
From the Villa, I drove
straight to my house, had a quick breakfast, and decided to go through
NICON Hilton hotel to inform my colleagues in the Organizing Committee
about the uncertainty of our trip. On getting to the hotel, I saw people
standing in groups, discussing. But I did not give a thought to their
attention. I imagined that some of them were delegates or participants
at the conference. So I quickly dashed into my room, returned
immediately to the Villa to join my colleagues, to wait for further
developments. On driving to the Villa gate, a new
atmosphere had taken over. The first gate had been taken over by new set
of security operatives. I was not familiar with virtually all of them,
except one Major whose name I could not remember immediately. The Major
knew me by name. He was fully in charge of the new security arrangement,
dishing out instructions in a very uncompromising manner. Initially, I
did not take it as anything very serious. As a well known person in the
Villa, I was confident that my entrance was just a matter of time moreso
when I was hanging my State House identity card around my neck. All my
expectations were wrong as I was bluntly ordered to go back. All
explanations and introductions on my mission to the Villa were helpless.
The instruction was clear go back! go back! they shouted at all
visitors. At that delay many cars had formed long queues. My immediate
reaction was to seek the assistance of the Major, whom I had identified
earlier, to save me from the tyranny of his men. Before I could approach
him he shouted, "Ogbonnaya go back!" While I was still battling to
wriggle out of what was seemingly a hopeless situation, I noticed a
woman right behind me, almost hysterically screaming, that she had an
early morning appointment with the First Lady, Mrs. Maryam Abacha. The
woman apparently must be coming from the National Council of Women
Societies from her dressing. My shock was the way she was instantly
assaulted by those stern looking security operatives. At that point, I
quickly got the message; I drove away from the scene as quickly as
possible. Though my mind was everywhere but my immediate conclusion was
that there was a coup because I could not imagine any other thing that
could have caused such a high level of security alert. I therefore
decided to drive straight to the International Conference Centre to
alert my Director General on the latest development. He was attending
the conference as a participant.
At the International
Conference Centre, I saw some Ministers standing at the lobby in
anticipation of the arrival of Abacha and his team. Immediately they saw
me, they became very agitated, and almost simultaneously asked me, "is
the C-ln-C already on his way?" I said, "no, I am not really sure he is
coming. But let us hope he will still make it". I knew, as a matter of
fact, that I had not really provided them with the desired answer, but
that was the much I could tell them. While they were still pondering on
the uncertainty of my reply, I left and quickly walked into the hall
where I met my Director-General, Alhaji Abdulrahaman Michika. He was
already seated with other participants. I called him aside. "Sir, I
don't really know what is happening in the Villa. I suggest that you
leave this place now!" Without betraying any emotion, he quickly asked
me what was the situation in the Villa like, I told him all that I saw. I
repeated my advice and that I had not been able to confirm what exactly
was happening. I then made it clear to him that it was no longer safe
for him to continue staying in the conference, and so should quietly
take his leave. Alhaji Michika immediately went back to his table, took
his pen and papers and followed me out of the hall.
The
moment we were outside, I asked him if he came with his car. He said
yes, but because of the extraordinary security arrangement put in place
in anticipation of the arrival of the Head of State, it was difficult
locating his driver. I then suggested that we should use my car which he
obliged. I drove him straight to his house instead of the office. Both
of us agreed that he should remain at home for the time being, while I
promised to keep him informed about the development. This panic measure
was as a result of the usual trauma which Radio Nigeria Management Staff
often pass through each time there was a military coup d'â€Å¡tat in
Nigeria. The first target usually is the FRCN Broadcasting House. The
management and staff on duty usually pass through hell in the hands of
the military boys in their desperate effort to gain entrance into the
studios at record time for the usual "Fellow Nigerians" broadcast.
From my Director-General's residence I decided to get to NICON Hilton
Hotel to assess the situation there before heading back to the Villa.
At the hotel the atmosphere was rather sombre. There were a few cluster
of people; some of them who recognized me, rushed and demanded to know
what was happening at the Villa. "Orji, is it true that there is a coup
at the Villa?", they asked. I said, "well I don't know". At that time,
the BBC, CNN and International Media had begun to speculate on the
confused situation.
From their countenance I could see they
were not satisfied with my answer. They thought probably that I was
withholding some information. But they never knew I had none. I felt
very uncomfortable. As a reporter covering the State House, I was
equally restless that I could not give a valid answer on what was
happening on my beat. I recognized too that it was utterly wrong to
depend on others for information about events unfolding in my beat. I
instantly felt challenged to get back to the Villa. I was equally aware
that such an adventure was fraught with a lot of risk. But that is the
other side of journalism as a profession.
On getting back to
the Villa, I decided to avoid the main gate because of the heavy
security presence there. Instead, I used the maintenance gate through
the Asokoro District. I was amazed that no single security man was there
at the time. There was therefore no difficulty in passing through into
Aso Rock. I drove my car to the Administrative Gate and parked there,
and decided to walk. Initially everything had appeared normal in some
parts of the Villa until I met a Body Guard (BG). I queried, "old boy
wetin happen? Why una boys full everywhere?" It is easier to obtain
information from other ranks with informal English. "Ah! Na wa oh! You
no know say Baba don quench?". The boy answered also in Pidgin English.
"Which Baba?" I shouted. "Baba don die, Baba don quench just like that.
Na so we see am," the boy concluded, clutching a cigarette in his left
hand. I still could not understand what he was saying. "Which Baba do
you mean?", I queried further. "Abacha don die! You no hear?" He shouted
at me angrily. It was a very funny way of announcing the passage of a
man who was feared and dreaded by all. I was nonetheless confused by its
reality. My immediate reaction was that if truly General Abacha was
dead, it meant the end of an era. What future does it hold for Nigeria? I
pondered over the development as I advanced further into Aso Rock. As I
moved down, the reality became evident. The environment was cold,
cloudy with uncertainties among the faces I met. They
confirmed it was a reality. General Abacha was truly dead. All were in
groups discussing it with fear and subdued silence.
I quickly
reached for a telephone to relay the sad story to my Director-General
who must be anxiously waiting to hear the latest. Moreso, I was still
far away from my news deadline at 4 p.m. But I was disappointed to
discover that all the telephone links to the Villa had been severed.
There was no call coming in or going out, the Villa at that critical
moment was almost totally isolated from the rest of humanity. It was a
deliberate measure. When I could not get through on telephone, I decided
to drive out fast to break the news. But on reaching the gate through
which I had earlier entered, I discovered that some fierce looking
soldiers who told me that nobody was allowed to go out or come in had
effectively barricaded it. This was happening at about 9.30 a.m. I was
helplessly trapped in the Villa from that time till about 5 p.m. when we
conveyed the remains of General Abacha to Kano for burial.
I
felt particularly disappointed that I could not break the news to
anxious Nigerians early enough. It was even more embarrassing and
certainly very disheartening to learn that some foreign broadcast
stations like the BBC and CNN, which had no accredited correspondents in
the Villa, were the first to break the news of General Abacha's death.
It did not entirely come to me as a surprise because the system we
operate in Nigeria respects the foreign media more than the local ones.
It is equally a well-known fact that most foreign media subscribe to
policy makers in our country, who always feed them with first-hand
information about any event or issue in the country. The foreign media
organizations are no magicians. They pay for news sources especially in
situations where they have no correspondents. The pay is usually so
attractive that the source is efficient. Thus, generally, access to
information in developing countries is fraught with discrimination
against local media in preference to foreign ones.
That morning, June 8, 1998, Major Hamza Al-Mustapha, the Chief
Security Officer to General Abacha, was said to have called key members
of the Provincial Ruling Council (PRC) including strategic military
commanders for an emergency meeting. We learnt he refused to disclose
that Abacha was dead. At about 11a.m., members of the PRC had begun to
arrive at Aso Rock for an emergency meeting. Most of the members were
informed only on arrival for the meeting except the very powerful ones.
That day, Major Al-Mustapha looked very sharp and smartly dressed in
his Army tracksuit and white canvas. The Major was simply too busy
running from pillar to post, looking confident but certainly confused
about the future without his boss. He was finally in charge,
distributing orders to the rank and file to get the Aso Council Chambers
ready for the meeting. We watched at a distance in utter disbelief of
the turn of events. For Mustapha, the situation was a bleak one. The
fear was a possible fall from grace to grass for a man who was dreaded
and respected by both the lowly and the mighty. But that morning, he
conjured such a pitiable image as he presided over the wreckage of a
collapsed regime.
Emotions took over the whole environment.
One of the female Ministers worsened the situation when she arrived the
Villa by shouting and weeping openly. Nobody looked her way to console
her as everybody was simply on his/her own. Cigarettes were a scarce
commodity that morning, the only immediate source of reducing tension
and grief. Most PRC members who were informed on arrival immediately
asked for cigarettes, but none was easily available. Those who had some
hoarded them jealously. Elsewhere in the Villa, a gloomy atmosphere,
mingled with subdued excitement and relief pervaded. Flurry of
activities were taking place at breathtaking speed two crucial meetings
were in progress simultaneously. One was a meeting of Principal Officers
in the Presidency and the venue was Aso Rock Wing of the Chief of
General Staff. The other meeting of members of the Provincial Ruling
Council (PRC) was shifted to Akinola Aguda House. The two meetings later
merged at Aso Council Chambers for another crucial session. The joint
session began at 2 p.m. and ended at 4.45 p.m. I imagined that the items
on the agenda of that meeting were:
_ Selection of a new Head of State and Commander-in-Chief.
_ Arrangements for the burial of General Abacha.
While the separate meetings were in progress, we in the Press Corps
were held hostage. We had all the information but no means of
communication. Hunger was also a problem. However, for the first time we
were free to assess the regime openly and objectively. The open
discussion and arguments centred on what Abacha did and did not do.
While the meeting at Aso Council Chambers was in session, Major
Al-Mustapha sat in the chair at the entrance, holding a newspaper in his
hands, which he occasionally glanced at. He looked rather relaxed after
ensuring that every necessary arrangement had been put in place. He
occasionally responded to our discussions with selected and reserved
comments. His aides quoted him as saying that nobody would leave the
Council Chambers unless a new Military Head of State was selected by the
meeting. His fear, I learnt, was that a vacuum was dangerous before
General Abacha's burial later the same day. Mustapha declined all
efforts by the few Pressmen around to narrate how General Abacha died.
All efforts to bring him fully into our discussion also failed. Insiders
at the "red carpet" revealed that shortly after Abacha died, Major
Al-Mustapha took some strategic decisions that were of national
significance. One of such decisions was the immediate evacuation of the
condemned coup plotters in Jos Prison to a more secured place. The
measure was probably to pre-empt any intention to summarily execute the
plotters by possible overzealous forces.
From morning till 5
p.m., no official press statement on the death of General Abacha from
any quarters was issued, even when the incident was already known all
over the world. It was difficult to reconcile how such a major sad event
could happen in the country and up till that time, nobody deemed it
necessary to issue an official statement. We then decided to mount
pressure on the then Minister of Information, Ikeobasi Mokelu, to make a
pronouncement. It was after much pressure that an official statement
was eventually issued. The press statement was five paragraphs in all,
issued at about 5.25 p.m.
The
atmosphere in the Villa then was overcast. On June 8 in Aso Rock,
hierarchy of command collapsed. It was a day everybody was free. Shortly
after the statement was issued, people began to troop towards the Red
Carpet area (official residence of the Head of State). I immediately
imagined that the body of the General might be Iying in state. I quickly
followed, not certain if it was going to be possible to be allowed to
have a glimpse of it.
However, on getting to the house, I
quietly walked in and saw the body of General Abacha wrapped in white
cloth and laid in a small private sitting room in the residence. And I
said to myself, "vanity upon vanity". His death to me was as dramatic as
his ascendancy to power, equally evoking tragic memories of a nation
that was unsafe of itself.
I returned to the Aso Council
Chambers to wait for the outcome of the special session of the
Provisional Ruling Council. The outcome of the meeting was all that the
media was awaiting. The meeting was to answer the question "who succeeds
Abacha?" But before long, the picture of who succeeds General Abacha
began to emerge. Shortly after the meeting at Aso Council Chambers had
ended, I saw General Abdulsalami Abubakar walk out of the meeting ahead
of other senior military officers. This immediately conveyed the message
that he had been chosen as the new leader. My conclusion was based on
the tradition in the military, there is much respect for hierarchy and
seniority. All other military officers and PRC members lined behind
Abdulsalami, confirming the saying in the military that appointment
supercedes rank. Besides, I watched and saw that he was dishing out
orders which all complied to, even his seniors. He took control of the
ad-hoc arrangement to convey the body of General Abacha to Kano for
burial. He was seen giving orders to both high and low to arrange
vehicles for movement to the airport. The journey to
Kano was already far behind schedule, given the fact that the burial
must take place that same day in keeping with the Islamic injunction. We
left Aso Rock for the airport at about 6 p.m.
It was indeed a
big tragedy for the members of former first family as they packed their
belongings to join the convoy which took the corpse of the once
powerful General home. I wept when I saw Madam, Mrs. Abacha being helped
into the waiting car. She stared at Aso Rock in tears, a most difficult
and tragic way to say good-bye. Tears rolled freely from all gathered
as Madam was driven out of the Villa with her husband's corpse in front
of her in a moving ambulance. The ambulance is normally one of the last
vehicles in the usually long Presidential convoy. But on June 8, 1998,
the ambulance was in the front with General Abacha's corpse. All other
vehicles lined behind in a day-light reversal of history. The ambulance
drove through the IBB bye-pass connecting the airport link road as the
entourage made its way to Nnamdi Azikiwe airport. I was surprised that
there was instant jubilation by passersby. Taxi drivers lined up at
major junctions shouting shame! shame!! as the convoy drove past. Men
and women ran after the convoy in utter disbelief of the turn of events.
Some other people formed queues in groups with green leaves in their
hands singing solidarity songs in a loud tone that suggested liberation
from bondage. It was a day in which my biro refused to write and the
lines in my jotter went blank. The journalist in me was overtaken by
emotions as most of us in the convoy found it difficult to speak to one
another. We simply lacked the words or the topic for discussion as our
minds went blank and our brains went asleep.
On our arrival
at the airport, the body of General Abacha, which was still wrapped in
white cloth was carried into the hold of the presidential aircraft,
zero-zero one. There was no particular arrangement on who should be in
the aircraft, except that members of the first family and some PRC
members were given priority. I however noticed that most PRC members at
the airport were not even keen in accompanying the corpse of the late
General to Kano.
While the
aircraft was being positioned, Madam and her children waited at the
Presidential lounge with a cluster of relatives and very few associates.
The usual crowd around the first family had begun to disappear. That
day, it was as though the Abacha family was for the first time in many
years on a lonely journey to an unknown destination, even though the
aircraft was heading for Kano. It was incredible to imagine the Abachas
without General Sani Abacha. As the saying goes, "when the big tree
falls, all the birds will fly away".
The aircraft ready,
Madam and her children left the lounge with the heavy burden of making
their last flight on the presidential jet, with the corpse of the former
Head of State on board. Mrs. Abacha climbed into the aircraft in tears
with measured steps. Her children joined too, then some few friends and
relations.
Inside, the plane was taken over by grief, tears
and open weeping. We had already boarded the aircraft and almost getting
set to take-off when General Abubakar curiously asked, "where is the
corpse?" He was told that it was kept in the hold. "No, no, no, bring it
inside!" the General commanded. And it was brought in and kept few
seats away from where I sat. As the journey progressed, whenever there
was turbulence, the body would shake, exposing the legs, which were
partially covered. I sat in that aircraft speechless. My reflections
were on life, death, power, influence and the vanity of human desires.
Our flight to Kano was barely thirty minutes, but I felt it was more
than two hours. The usual conversation and jokes in zero-zero one was
overtaken by subdued silence, grief, pain and weeping. Everybody on
board was on his own. I could imagine how other people's mind worked at
that sober period. But mine went into a comprehensive review of the
Abacha era beginning from the night of November 16, 1993 when the
General took over. Within my reflections, my mind was everywhere, the
good, the bad, the very bad and the ugly. My mood was interrupted by a
sudden announcement from the cockpit that we were few minutes away from
Aminu Kano International Airport.
The situation on our
arrival at Aminu Kano International Airport was rather chaotic. There
was no precise arrangement to receive the corpse on arrival. Apparently,
our arrival caught Kano and the people unaware. Apart from the first
family, and few officials, everybody was expected to sort out his/her
own transport arrangement out of the airport. Eventually I had to
arrange for an airport taxi to convey me and two others to the private
residence of the late Head of State. Unfortunately, there were few taxis
at the airport. While this arrangement was on, the main convoy had left
with the corpse. We therefore quickly hired a taxi at a high fare
dictated by the driver, who was very rude and uncooperative. We were
shocked that the driver showed little or no sympathy, but was rather
quick to explain that he never benefited anything from the Abacha
regime. In his view, his condition had even worsened. We discontinued
the discussion as it was becoming volatile.
The Abacha family
house on Gidado street, GRA, Kano is a modest twin duplex located in a
rather small compound. By the time we arrived there, the place was
already besieged by a large number of sympathizers struggling to gain
entry. As there was no time to start identifying who was who, we were
all being pushed by the security officials who had a very hectic time
trying to contain the rapidly surging crowd. In the midst of the
pushing. and kicking, I suddenly realised that the person who was being
pushed against me was the highly respected Governor of Lagos State, Col.
Buba Marwa. It therefore became clear to me that at that moment,
everybody was regarded as equal, courtesy of the security at the gate. I
was then encouraged to continue pushing, until I finally managed to
squeeze myself inside the compound.
Inside the compound, I observed scanty presence of newsmen, because
security was deadly. I also discovered that the grave was still being
prepared, an indication that no proper arrangement was made. Earlier,
the body of General Abacha was taken to Kano Central Mosque for prayers.
From the Central Mosque, the body was laid on the floor of his private
mosque just by the gate with two soldiers standing on guard. I peeped
several times to assure myself that it was actually the former powerful
Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces that was on the bare floor. One
was expecting a more dignified presidential burial, with due respect to
the modest way the Muslims conduct their burials. Even at a point, a
soldier asked, "Why is there no burial party here?" I immediately wanted
to know what burial party was all about. I was told that it was the
usual twenty-one gun salute line-up of soldiers will give to a fallen
officer as his last military respect. But before any of such arrangement
could be made, the body of General Abacha had been lowered into the
grave. There was certainly no fanfare in the burial, it was simple and
brisk. In simple comparison, I had accompanied General Abacha himself to
the burial of a top military officer and member of the Provisional
Ruling Councils who had died sometime ago and was buried in Minna during
his regime. I observed that all the procedures at that burial in all
consideration was better managed, more respectful and dignified than
that of the former Head of State, their difference in rank and position
notwithstanding.
There were quite a number of very important
personalities who witnessed the burial. But I particularly took notice
of former Military President, General Ibrahim Babangida and his wife
Mariam, who were seen talking with Mrs. Abacha, probably trying to
console her. There were also some Emirs and other top Northern leaders
who were able to make the trip at such short notice. At about 9.48 p.m.
when Abacha's grave was being covered with sand, a powerful businessman
from one of the South Eastern States who was very prominent in Abacha's
campaign for self succession arrived and broke down weeping and wailing
openly. Some faithful Muslims who dominated the burial reacted
negatively to such an un-lslamic approach to the dead. They threatened
to whisk the man out of the premises if he failed to comport himself.
The businessman was among those who threatened to proceed on exile or
commit suicide if General Abacha failed to become President.
As the burial ended at about 10.05p.m., we hurriedly left for Abuja. I
expected that there could probably be some other ceremonies. But I was
wrong as we left barely twenty minutes after the body had been interred.
We arrived Abuja a few minutes to twelve midnight and drove straight to
Aso Council Chambers in the Villa for the swearing-in of General
Abdulsalami Abubakar as the new Head of State, Commander-in-Chief of the
Nigeria Armed Forces. The swearing-in ceremony was
rather brief. It was preceded by a formal announcement by the Principal
Secretary to the former Head of State, that General Abubakar had been
appointed to succeed the late General Sani Abacha. General Abubakar was
then invited to step forward and take the oath of office and allegiance
at about 1.43 a.m. on June 9, 1998. That ceremony marked the end of the
Abacha era.
After the oath-taking, General Abubakar signed
the register to herald the beginning of the new era. That era ushered in
a new dawn, a brighter future and hope for a sustainable democracy in
Nigeria. The rest is now history. Back to the newsroom at 3 a.m., June
9, with series of events that had taken place in the past 24 hours, my
diary was full. It was difficult to decide a headline for the 7 a.m.
news bulletin. I do remember that, that morning, at the FRCN Network
News studio there was a problem over which of the two important stories
should come first; that Abacha was dead or Abubakar has been sworn-in as
the new Head of State. Coverage of the events of that day without food
and water was among my most challenging assignment.
*
Excerpts from the book, Inside Aso Rock, written by respected broadcast
journalist, Orji Ogbonnaya Orji who for seven years covered the State
House for Radio Nigeria. Published by Spectrum Books Ltd. It is
available in major bookshops.
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