Former University don, Prof Adesegun Banjo, the June 12 hero who led the
attempt to overthrow late General Sani Abacha through armed
insurrection passed on quietly penultimate week. In this report, Adewale
Adeoye reports on a life of war, intrigues and sacrifices that came to
an abrupt end.
He died with a bundle of untold history
The
reporter begins the story on a painful, personal note. I knew Prof
Adesegun Banjo. I met him around 1996. He was in exile in Ghana. My
first meeting with him was dramatic. The late Sanni Abacha’s government
had placed a bounty on his head. He was wanted dead or alive. His
offence was treason. Prof Adebanjo had truly planted to overthrow the
government of Sani Abacha following the ancient axiom that disobedience
to an illegitimate order is just. I can only remember a handful of
Nigerians that made the sacrifices this Professor of Human Anatomy made
to the campaign against totalitarian rule in Nigeria.
The crusade
started in the United States, (US) where he had worked as a surgeon. He
had saved some 4million dollars through dint of hard work, Spartan
discipline, self-denial of the good things of life and support from his
charming wife. He then went into the open market. He purchased 3000
rifles, several sub-machine guns, thousands of medical equipment and
kits. He even bought machines that could make several bullets. He bought
medical equipment for the soldiers he planned to recruit in case they
sustained injuries. How successfully beat the security operatives in
Europe and America where he may have sourced the weapons.
His
calculation followed three years of planning and several reconnaissance
home visits. He took his time to study the barracks and the locations of
the sentry. At Dodan Barracks, Ikeja and Ojo Cantonments, he took
special interests with the hope of seizing them and converting them to
his command posts.
He had a near perfect plan. He would bring in
the weapons through the sea and land, launch a blitzkrieg of military
assaults on important military installations. He would then launch a
grand attack beginning from a rural community. From his calculation, he
needed few men to start to be tripled after taking over the radio
stations and making announcements for more to join the rebellion.
He
kept his masterplan to his chest. With his calculation, he would take
Lagos in days, followed by Ibadan and then he would move to Abuja. He
already had field men in the Niger-Delta and in the Middle Belt and in
some parts of the North. The effort was to be coordinated by him. Prof
Banjo felt the military had to be overthrown by all means. He raised
personal funds, recruited American soldiers including a Vietnamese Major
who first trained him in Guerilla warfare. He wanted to build a small,
swift and mobile army that would, within the shortest time storm Nigeria
and destabilize the military high command.
He was a man of
martial intrigues. In the days of his campaign, he suspected everything
human; flying objects and creeping things. He was a man driven by
suspicion and he had the habit of looking at his quest from one corner
of his eyes as if suspecting you were holding a gun or that he had a
pistol hidden under his trademark French suit. In Ghana, I had an
extensive interview with him. A stocky and strongly built man by all
standards, he wore the fierce mien of a revolutionary and the daring
eyeballs of a prowling lion.
On that day I met him in Ghana at
the Teachers House, through another radical journalist, Bunmi Aborisade,
I had waited for about two hours before he stormed into the room,
sweating. I thought he was coming from Kumasi, some hundreds of miles
away. After the meeting, he left bile on my lips. Nothing can be as
devastating as a journalist holding on to an exclusive story but with
the instruction never to publish.
I was in The Guardian
Newspaper. His fears were genuine. The newspaper had just been closed
down and then reopened. He didn’t want the newspaper to be closed again,
he explained, adding that more importantly, he was not in a safe place
in Ghana. Later, I saw a tainted old Renault pulled up. The driver, a
short man with a chest the size of a little bulldozer opened the door
for him. He jumped inside. I watched the red, tail light disappeared
into the corner of Accra street, far away from the balcony where I stood
in awe. It took about 10 years later for me to know that he actually
came to meet me from the room next to where I had met him.
Prof
Banjo endured an extraordinary punishment for his rebellion against
injustice. The weapons he procured were, by accident, sighted by
Beninoise Gendarmes. Initially, the security operatives praised him,
promising that since the weapons were meant to fight Abacha, they would
assist him. At Benin Republic, he bribed the officials to the tune of
1.5million. He was almost entering Nigeria when he got a call from
Copenhagen asking him to pay some 5000 dollars. He left to raise the
money but felt he should offload the goods first. It was in the process
than one of the Benin Gendarmes noticed the protruding butt of a gun in
the container. He raised the alarm. Banjo was picked up. At first, the
officials said they would allow him to go. But information had reached
Abacha.
So, the second day, the country was flooded with Nigerian
top military echelon including Col Frank Omenka of the Directorate of
Military Intelligence, (DMI). Local authorities told him Abacha had
passed on 100 million dollars to some Beninese officials. That was how
he was detained at the Port Prison. He spent 10 days amidst diplomatic
manoeuvres by Nigeria to repatriate their most priced fugitive. He
planned to escape with a small knife with 26-hydra heads, cutting the
protective fence.
But somehow, a spy was in the midst who hinted
Abuja. Within the shortest time, top security officials later told Banjo
that the sum of 100million dollars was dispatched to the Benin Republic
to oil the hands of officials who had sold him. But it was not going to
be easy for Abacha as foreign countries were already alerted many of
who did not want him killed. Banjo was bundled into a toilet, his wife
separated from him. He spent 10 days in the septic tank relying on the
keyhole to sniff some fresh air. He made an attempt to escape, through a
jackknife he had kept in his kitty. An alarm was raised, he retreated.
Thus began his ordeal. He was taken to court in the Benin Republic. He
relied on the ECOWAS treaty that goods in transit must not be
questioned. The judge being a Yoruba was moved by his story, especially
the courage displayed by his Igbo wife who refused Amnesty offered by
President Nicephore Soglo, so that she could go, leaving her husband.
The Judge set them free. This was after more than one year in very harsh
and dehumanizing cells. But as he walked away from the Court, a call
came in from the Beninese President believed to have acted on Abacha’s
prompting that he should be detained again. He and his wife were locked
in a primitive toilet with constant heaps of faeces. His wife developed
pterygoid plexus, an infection of the base of the brain. They spent 14
months in detention before a compassionate female judge freed them
again. The two escaped to Ghana through the assistance of a Nigerian
journalist, Mr Moshood Fayemiwo who paid dearly for this. Abacha’s
agents later kidnapped Fayemiwo who was brought to Nigeria and detained
at the office of Directorate of Military Intelligence, (DMI).
When he died peacefully penultimate Wednesday, after protracted struggle
with cancer, a bundle of history untold, died with him. The family is
yet to make official announcements. Many of his friends and colleagues
are yet to be informed. He lay in the mortuary as at press time, but
family sources say he will be buried in May this year.
“I had 120
young men stationed at the Nigerian Ports Authority. They were waiting
for my weapons. My plan was that if the customs found the weapons by
chance, the battle would start right at the seaport”, he had told me in
Ghana before he left the country after Abacha had sent a chartered
aircraft to plead with him, pick him up and pay him off. When that
effort failed, the government of Abacha sent two Nigerian journalists
accompanied by one of Abacha’s own son. The assignment was to poison
him. They feigned media practitioners who had come to interview him.
Prof Banjo awed them when he stormed the venue of the interview with
some 15 armed men in Accra. “I was hinted of their plans. So, I prepared
for them. Throughout the interview, they were shaking like a lily,” he
had told me. He said after his escape from Ghana, the Nigerian military
had rounded up many of his local supporters-but some were innocent-and
dumped them in the high sea, stones on their necks, no fewer than 100 of
them.
One of the emissaries sent by Abacha died in mysterious
circumstances in Lagos a few years after Abacha himself had kicked the
bucket. History may find it difficult to record another Nigerian
academic who stood so fiercely for justice through armed struggle
against the military like Banjo. After consistent attempts to kill him
in Ghana he had escaped to Uganda. Luckily he knew President Yoweri
Museveni. They had met at Makerere University years back. But he could
not help him. This forced him to run to Zimbabwe. Abacha had also
secured the services of mercenaries, mostly from Saudi Arabia charged to
kill or kidnap and bring him to Nigeria. His network in the
international intelligence community, mostly of Yoruba stock hinted him
in advance.
Unfortunately, when he returned to Nigeria in 2001,
life and people became unkind to him, except the love and affection of
his immediate family. He tried, but never got a good job. The government
and politicians ignored him and treated him like a leper. His efforts
to sustain his cancer treatment through medications did not succeed
because of funds. He needed only 5 million naira to treat his kind of
blood cancer which had a cure, but he could not raise a penny. But one
thing is certain, Banjo, who was the immediate junior brother of the
late Col Victor Banjo of the Biafra fame, is now totally free from the
affliction of a society he tried so much to salvage but that never gave
him recognition, not even a wreath after his last breath. His efforts,
though aborted, also remain the most striking high-level radical
collaborative political efforts between two arch rivals, Yoruba and the
Igbo nation.
Before he died, he told me one of his regrets was
that the remains of his late brother, Col Banjo lay in an unknown
shallow grave, yet to be honoured, even though his covert investigations
had revealed the spot is somewhere in Enugu, known only to the late Dim
Odumegwu Ojukwu and his few lieutenants.
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