Political Struggles Through My Life – Tinubu
The former governor of the Lagos State and the National Leader of the All Progressives Congress, APC, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu tells his story of the political struggles through his life in this interview.
Q:When did you join politics?
A: I joined politics during the military regime, there were a lot of uncertainties. There were lots of struggles but my concern is about people and the future of my country.
My mother stood by me when I told her then that I was joining politics. She told me to be ready to take all sorts of insults whenever they cross my way. May her soul rest in peace.
We decide to support Sarumi Gradually, I moved from raising funds to getting involved. I brought some money to Nigeria out of my dividends. I was comfortable because my investments in America and London were already yielding dividends. Then came the crisis leading to the ban of Professor Femi Agbalajobi and Chief Dapo Sarumi. I threw my weight behind Yomi Edu.
He lost the election and our group was devastated. I went to Ahmadu Abubakar and Ibrahim Babangida, IBB. I wrote a report and I was strongly against the Structural Adjustment Programme introduced by the military government. The idea of the new generation banks came from those reports. Abubakar, from being a permanent secretary, became Minister of Finance.
IBB saw the significance of the advice as well as the short, medium and long term vision that were in the report. That man was great. He was a good listener. You could think with him. He is still alive. This probe of NNPC dates back to those periods. You can give the NNPC a bank draft for 120 days and you will still be using that money!
They started touting the idea that intelligent, brilliant and dynamic people like me should be in the Senate and must change Nigeria. The idea gradually started coming into my head. People like Kola Oseni, Alhaji Hamzat, Busurat Alebiosu, Demola Adeniji-Adele, Prince Olusi, who were members of the Primrose Group at that time, started persuading me to go to the Senate.
The Primrose Group was piling so much pressure on Alhaji Kola Oseni to persuade me.
The
MD of Mobil, Bob Parker, thought I was crazy when I told him I wanted
to join politics. I also told the Finance Director, Akinyelure, that I
wanted to join politics and use my brain for my country and that I
couldn’t continue to be an armchair critic.
The two of them could not
believe what I said. They said, given my career path in Mobil, if there
was any chance of anybody becoming something there, then I would be the
one. I stood my ground and said I would give it a try.
I told them
that people do it in America and Bob Parker agreed. They said they would
give me a leave of absence for four years, during which they would not
fill my position. They later said that they would not stop me because it
would rub off positively on them if I became successful in politics.
They
told me to come back and take my position if I found it uninteresting
and unchallenging. So I contested the Lagos West Senatorial district
election.
Q: Why not Lagos Central?
A: Lagos West was
where our weakness was apparent. The political leaders in the Social
Democratic Party just assigned Lagos West, which was the most
challenging district, to me and said I had the money, personality and
the wherewithal. Lagos Central was preparing for me and they wanted me.
In our group, we wanted to help Wahab Dosunmu to stay in Central, so I went to the West. It was a big battle, but I won the
nomination for Lagos West.
Wahab
Dosunmu got nomination for Lagos Central, but they got him
disqualified. The battle was then left to Shitta-Bey, Towry-Coker and
Bucknor-Akerele. Whatever happened in the primaries is history. It was a
crude primary election, but a most transparent one. That was how I got
into politics, which nonetheless was an adventure for me.
Q: What role did you play in the emergence of Michael Otedola of NRC?
A:
I didn’t play any role. I was politically naïve, though a strategist in
my own right. Those at the forefront weren’t paying attention and there
were a lot of intrigues, which I had never seen before. We could have
been flexible and compromised when Sarumi and the late Femi Agbalajobi
were disqualified, leaving Yomi Edu. There were two groups then. Baba
Kekere (Alhaji Lateef Jakande) would call them “ase”. I recommended that
we should have given them the deputy governorship slot.
Democracy is
about conflict and conflict resolution. Otedola would not have emerged
if each side had yielded. We found out later that some people who didn’t
mean well didn’t want Yomi Edu to get there. If they wanted, they would
have allowed flexibility and compromise.
The late Prince Adeniyi
tried so hard to resolve the impasse up till the night before the
election. The impasse was unresolved and the party ended up giving
Otedola a chance. I learnt a lot from that experience.
Q: What role did you play in the presidential election of MKO Abiola?
A:
We worked hard for Yar’Adua. The SDP platform and the Yar’Adua machine
were a phenomenon at that particular time. We had won the majority in
the National Assembly. I wanted to become the Senate President because
we secured all the seats in the West and we had 15 senators and Alhaji
Kashim Ibrahim, a brilliant politician, mobilised some of the senators
in the North; Chuba Okadigbo in the East and Albert Legogie in the
so-called South-South. Iyorchia Ayu of the Middle-Belt was very active
at that particular time. We had good leaders. Olu Falae was in
contention, Biyi Durojaiye also.
We had Olusegun Osoba and the rest
of them as governors then. We didn’t pay attention to Lagos and didn’t
miss anything. We were not looking at any governor to be politically
involved. I was just running my vision. I put my talents into being a
strategist and I had got the endorsement of 38 out of the 56 senators
belonging to the SDP to become the Senate President. So when the
leadership caucus of the party met, the problem of the late Yar’Adua and
others had crystallised.
It was then believed that Falae or
anyone else among the presidential contenders would be the party’s flag
bearer after the disqualification of Yar’Adua. They banned the old
politicians and asked that the new breed should come forward. Falae,
Olabiyi Durojaiye and others were clamouring that the opportunity should
be given to the West. Yar’Adua was very consistent about the South-West
and the North-West working together. I was confronted in Abuja, because
I was already prepared to be the Senate President. I had 15 senators
with me and had gotten the endorsement of the majority of other
senators. Senators Kanti Bello (he was my partner in the struggle),
Kazaure, Kashim Ibrahim, Lawan Buba, Mogaji Abdullahi and a host of
others had already formed a caucus that would work for my emergence as
the Senate President.
When we met at the leadership level, the late
M.S Buhari asked us if we could honestly say that we must take the
senate presidency? Okadigbo might be interested and would rather have
the East produce the Senate President; the North, the Vice-President;
and the presidency in the South-West because they had blocked Yar’Adua.
My
position was that a bird in hand cannot fly away; you have to tie it
properly. As if it was a prediction that I had seen, that thing was a
banner headline on The Punch’s front page at that time. I was adamant.
Falae, Durojaiye and the rest of them came to me and said that the
leadership of South-West would want the presidency and we could not take
the two positions. We had to make a sacrifice. My position was then
that if your child would go to the class and come first among 30
students, to whom do you give the best prize in the house?
At the
stage, I said I wanted to become Senate President, they said I should
review my ambition. I made them realise that out of our 15 senators, the
North-Central contributed 12 senators, so I said there must be a reward
system for the support and loyalty. I told them that if I were to give
up the ambition, the position must go to the zone that contributed the
highest number of senators to my support base.
Ayu was among the 38.
Meanwhile, A.T Ahmed was on the other side. We had internal caucuses and
out of 56, 38 of us bonded together. A.T Ahmed and Okadigbo wanted to
be senate president. But it was being rumoured in the newspapers that
Babangida wanted to remain in power and that Bola Tinubu – because of
IBB’s closeness to our family – would be one of those that would be used
for IBB to stay. They didn’t know what I stood for. I was laughing. We
were saying the military must exit and we were angry because Yar’Adua
had been disqualified. We didn’t even want IBB to stay.
While
that was on, Abiola came onto the scene and showed interest in the
presidency. Suddenly, I found him in my hotel room with Jubril
Martins-Kuye. I realised he was an accountant like myself and I told him
he had been severally abused for being anti-Awolowo. He said no, and
that he would go to Ikenne. I told him that he should forget it if he
was anti-Awolowo. When you talked to MKO about the country, you saw his
vision and everything. If you were well educated and serious about the
country, you would be convinced that he meant well. If you were to do an
analysis about who was likely to be less corrupt and whose vision would
be consistent for the nation, then you would agree with MKO.
We made
Ayu the Senate President. Yar’Adua and Atiku got along with us on the
choice of Ayu, while Kingibe was very flexible on it. We warned them
that we would concede it to the NRC if they refused to let us choose our
candidate since they would not be there with us. That was how Ayu won
and I became one of the most powerful and influential senators. I was
the chairman of the Appropriation, Finance, Banking and two other
committees in the Senate.
We started working for MKO to emerge the
candidate and we worked hard for him. My corporate experience and the
strategic planning I had was brought to bear on what I was doing at the
time.
Q: Babangida wanted to use the Senate to stay. How did the Senate respond to that?
A:
Ayu, myself and some others knew what the military was up to. The
military is politically smart. Don’t underestimate any military officer
when it comes to gathering information on any activity. We got wind of
their plan and we took a very strong position that the military had to
hand over. Equally, the pressure from the media against the continued
stay of the military in power was strong. The wind of change was blowing
in the direction of a civilian government.
Bagangida made several
promises and even declared in a broadcast that the military would
disengage from politics in August 1993 and would hand over to a
democratically elected president.
So, we strategised and organised a
successful joint session of the National Assembly to reach a resolution
against military stay. It was very auspicious at the time, because no
president had emerged. The NRC and the SDP agreed that they wanted the
military to go and, with no apparent successor, the political situation
was fluid. In a motion moved by a House of Representatives member and
supported by a senator, at the joint session of the National Assembly,
it was resolved that the military must hand over to a democratically
elected civilian president by August.
The Senate President allowed robust contributions from members at the session, which was devoid of party sentiments and affiliations, and we all jointly agreed to the resolution. That was in 1992, before the presidential election in 1993. Both SDP and NRC were expecting victory. We just wanted a civilian government in place. The resolution was seriously binding because the Babangida administration would have no moral authority to stay, though there were talks about diarchy. It just had to go. So when eventually they brought no-go areas and restricted legislators from discussing certain issues, we went to court. We were determined that democracy must be instituted in the country and that it could not be headed by any military man.
To be honest with you, Ayu was a good leader. I believe I was the only person with computer literacy and I had a big Toshiba laptop and I was churning out all sort of media releases against the continuation of military administration. It was a challenging period for this country and the international community held on to that resolution.
Q: Babangida came to address a joint session of the National Assembly. Was that resolution passed before or after that?
A:
Babangida addressed us during the inauguration, where I spoke on behalf
of the SDP. I frontally told him that he should not miss the
opportunity to leave the legacy of handing over to a democratically
elected government. My speech resonated with Babangida and after we
finished the inauguration, he walked up to me and gave me a firm
handshake. He said I exhibited courage; we had a chat and he left. I did
not know what he said after that o! After that incident, I became a
persona non grata to the military administration.
We worked hard for
the emergence of Abiola. Though there were lot of intrigues, we
succeeded in seeing that he emerged as the candidate. I went to 22
states to campaign and the campaigns were very interesting. The election
came and we were all celebrating because the election was free and
fair. The electoral system was amended and the chairman of the electoral
commission, Humphrey Nwosu, was very careful and sincere because of the
method employed.
The Option A4 was effective. So was the Open Secret Ballot System. It was well monitored. Voters were accredited, allowed to vote and votes counted right on the spot. There was no room for manipulation and the number of ballot papers could not be greater than the number of registered voters and vice versa. It could be lower because some people could get accredited and not vote. Everybody would vote at the same time. It was the Open Secret ballot system. The two-party system would have been the greatest legacy left behind by IBB. We had that election and Abiola won.
Q: Where were you when it was announced that the election had been annulled?
A: I was with Chief MKO Abiola. A few nights before then, we, including Professor Borisade, were collating the results of the election across the country. Suddenly the crisis started and they stopped the collation. We were waiting for result from Taraba State to make the final run. We had gotten figures from all states, but they banned the announcement until they got to Abuja. Suddenly they stopped. Crisis started. We all did what we were to do. Abiola was using his connections. Then we started hearing that there might be a possibility of a cancellation of the election. The political parties had been divided, with the NRC fearing its loss in the election and starting to talk from both sides of its mouth.
Suddenly, General Yar’Adua’s father passed on. I was
in Abuja when MKO called in the dead of the night to say that he was
sending an aircraft to Abuja and that he had made moves to ensure that
the Abuja and Katsina airports operated at that late hour for the
purpose of conveying people. He directed that I went with Shehu Yar’Adua
to Katsina to represent him and that he would join us the following
morning.
He said he needed to talk to the governors and wanted them
to accompany him to Katsina for the burial. We spent the night before
the burial in Katsina because Shehu wanted to be with his mother.
We
were in Shehu Yar’Adua’s compound when General Babangida arrived; he was
still the president. Immediately he came, they had to bury the dead.
Abiola had not arrived. He was blocked because the airspace had been
closed for Babangida’s flight to Katsina. All I knew was that Shehu and
Babangida went inside the house for some time. We thought what was going
on inside was the military president condoling with the family, that
all of them were praying for the mum.
They emerged eventually and
IBB immediately left for Abuja. After he arrived Abuja, the air space
was opened and Abiola could fly in a chartered Okada Airlines aircraft,
alongside other people who came with him to Katsina. We were full of
anxiety. Abiola met us in Katsina and after the visit to the family, the
emirs and other key indigenes of the place, we all returned to Lagos.
Then we heard the announcement annulling the election.
I was in the
panel van of National Concord newspapers because my car was in Abuja. I
did not know I was returning to Lagos. Some of my vehicles were in
Lagos, but nobody knew that I was in town. We went straight to Abiola’s
house and we were locked out because there was chaos in front his gate.
What followed was the biggest crisis I have ever been confronted with in
my life.
Q: Did IBB explain to you personally, given your closeness to him?
A: No. In fact, at that time, the military had declared me persona non grata! Everybody, except me, got up when he arrived at Yar’Adua’s compound. He touched my head and said ‘you’! I know Mogaji Abdullai walked after him and said: ‘Senator Tinubu, will you not see off the President?’ I did not stand up. I said he was not my president! I did not know about the annulment then. That was how the crisis started.
Q: You spoke about the greatest crisis after the annulment…
A:
After the annulment, everything became hot. The crisis began to offer
the possibility of an interim administration coming into place. Prior to
that, they started the idea that should there be a constitutional
crisis, it would be Ayu that would head the interim government. I wasn’t
sure if Ayu would start a debate on that or reject it outright.
But I
told him: ‘Don’t ever think it would be you.’ Eventually, he agreed.
There was suspicion in the public space that he and Shehu Yar’Adua had
consented to the annulment. The suspicion pervaded the party. The public
was fed all sorts of information. I knew that I approached Ayu that
there was no way they would have made him the interim head of
government. We knew for sure that Yar’Adua was angry because Atiku
Abubakar was not made Abiola’s running mate. It became clear to Ayu that
there was deception.
Shonekan was eventually announced as the Head
of the Interim National Government. We also learnt that the military had
promised Shehu Yar’Adua that they would unban the old politicians and
that he would have the opportunity to run six months after Shonekan.
They were also touting Obasanjo’s name, but suddenly Shonekan’s name was
announced. I remember that I went to Ayu and he said he had been
invited and I said: ‘Didn’t I tell you that they would not make you the
interim head of government?’ I advised him that the best thing was to
challenge them. We were in his house playing and I told Yar’Adua that
there was no way the military would make him anything. I advised him
that he would have built a great structure to succeed Abiola after his
four-year term, and that he would only be 54 years then. I pleaded with
Yar’Adua not to abandon the ship. I took my mother, Alhaja Abibat
Mogaji, to Abuja to appeal to IBB and there is a picture where she
removed her head-tie, using her grey hair to plead with IBB to restore
Abiola’s mandate.
It was on the front cover of Newswatch. I
mobilised them to go and appeal to IBB. On the day Shonekan was to be
sworn in, I was in Ayu’s house to pin him down, so as to prevent him
from attending the ceremony. They left the chair reserved for him for a
while, before inviting Joseph Wayas to sit. They claimed he was Senate
President, whether past or present.
There was a disagreement within
our group. They offered me a ministerial position, which I rejected.
They offered Sarumi a ministerial position and he said he would accept.
We were in the hotel room on the day he said so. He is still alive to
confirm or deny what I have said. I begged him and told him point-blank
that it would be the end of our relationship because we should not
betray the cause we started. I told him I gave up the senate presidency
for Abiola to contest as president.
I told him that was not
acceptable and I begged Yar’Adua, too. I fell out with Shehu on the
matter and I told them that none of us could predict the end of the
game. I pleaded with him to be consistent and stand firm. He said I had
no guns and tanks and that I was incapable of facing the military.
The floor of the Senate was very hot. There was a sharp division in the National Assembly. Thereafter, Ayu was removed as Senate President; I was almost killed. There was a plan to assassinate me, but luckily, Akintola Benson and my late driver, Mustapha, walked into a discussion where the plot was being hatched to terminate my life. That was unknown to the people planning the assassination. I was to be taken out of the hotel. The assistant head of security at the hotel brought a chef uniform to dress me up as a chef, while he asked a driver to wait for me. I escaped and headed for Lagos in the chef uniform.
Abiola travelled to the United Kingdom to start the campaign for the de-annulment of the election and restoration of his mandate and Kingibe was there as deputy to continue to coordinate the rest of us at home. I had a choice to go back to my job, because I was on a leave of absence. People advised me to abandon the struggle because of the risk involved. They advised me to go back to my work.
Q: When were you arrested?
A: I said we would continue to
struggle until we had democracy. We had a group of 30 senators called
the G-30. The G-30 was determined to actualise the mandate on the floor
of the Senate. Suddenly, Abacha came and General Oladipupo Diya and
Babagana Kingibe were also running around. Diya was one of the most
respected and credible military officers then, and he later approached
us that there might be change in government. Abiola was around. General
Chris Alli met us and said there would be a change of government, which
would be in favour of June 12, because they were tired of the
shenanigans of the ING. That night, Abacha changed the government. He
outsmarted everybody. They met with me, Dele Alake, Segun Babatope and
Doyin Abiola. We were asked to write the terms and conditions, which
they would broadcast after a change of government. We wrote it and gave
it to Diya. They are all alive.
On the night the government was to be
changed, Abacha outsmarted everyone and installed himself. These people
I mentioned are all alive to testify to what I have said. I can say
categorically that I was even called to leave my office because, as they
claimed, that night was a dangerous night for them and that everyone’s
life might be in danger. Abiola was told not sleep at home until the
broadcast had been made. We were all fooled! Big time deception.
When
we heard the broadcast the next day, there was no mention of June 12
and no proclamation of Abiola. I was mad, but was still determined. I
rushed to Diya and he was still saying that there was no problem and
that they were planning to announce the cabinet containing eminent June
12 people. Abiola said what? I said no, announce Abiola’s victory.
Diya
told me that I didn’t know the military and that things were not done
like that in the military. But I insisted that it was deception. I said I
know the military.
I called Okadigbo to my office in Lagos and I put
the plan before him that we had to confront the military and we had to
declare Abacha himself illegal. I got members of our group together; we
wrote the script declaring Abacha’s government illegal. Since we could
not get to the National Assembly, we opted to hold our session at the
Tafawa Balewa Square. We had gotten Dele Alake to be the media
coordinator. We told him to get the CNN and other foreign media ready. I
put the coat of arms on a rod! That was the mace. We created our own
mace.
We reconvened the Senate here in Lagos and declared Abacha
illegal before the international media and others. My colleagues had
scattered. After we assembled, and having drafted the resolution, they
still didn’t know where we would hold the session. I told them to relax,
this is Lagos. After the broadcast, everybody took off, because the SSS
and other security agents were combing everywhere for us. I went
underground, using the 090 mobile phone. I was still granting press
interviews to foreign media. The military people were mad. I became a
thorn in their flesh and they arrested some of my colleagues, including
Abu Ibrahim, the late Polycarp Nwite, Ameh Ebute and Okoroafor. I was
still underground, holding press conferences. The military declared me
wanted.
Suddenly they granted bail to the arrested senators. I thought I would be a beneficiary, but I was not.
Then,
there was a manhunt for me by the police and the SSS. Meanwhile, my
late uncle, K.O Tinubu and the present Oba of Lagos, Oba Akiolu, who was
then a police officer, were pressuring me to disclose where I was. My
uncle called to ask where exactly I was. I did not disclose my
whereabouts. I told Akiolu that even though he is my relative, I would
still not tell him where I was since he was a police officer! He said:
‘Ha!’
My uncle advised that the military would kill me if they found
me underground and no one would be able to locate my whereabouts. He
said it was better I surrendered myself because he wanted me to be
alive. I told him that I would call him back, that I was to hold a press
conference at the time. And he shouted in amazement: ‘You are holding
press conference when your life is in danger.’ I told him I would
surrender, but would not tell him when.
I disguised perfectly,
dressed like a malam, and went to the police at Alagbon. The officers
didn’t even know me when they saw me. I went in, deposited my phone and
my charger. Senator Abu Ibrahim was with us. The officers were wondering
why I, a Mallam, could not speak Hausa! I removed my turban, showed up
at the front desk and declared that I had come to surrender.
And there was pandemonium among the officers, as to how I got there.
The
AIG then was very nice and they put me in the cell. They poured water
into the cell room and said, ‘sleep there’. That was the nastiest
experience I had within first 48 hours that I was there. It was on a
weekend. I told them I would embark on a hunger strike.
The late
Anthony Enahoro was on the stairway and Beko Ransome-Kuti was at another
angle on the stairway. They brought me out repeatedly for
interrogation. They asked me to renounce but I said no, I would not
recognise Abacha. They took me and my colleagues to court. People who
were supposed to meet their bail conditions were stopped from doing so
immediately they saw me. They cancelled everybody’s bail because they
could not isolate me.
They gave an order that we should be taken
out of court, but kept in the police custody at Alagbon. They kept about
eight of us in a photocopying room, an eight-by-eight room. We were
sleeping across one another. It was a matter of the first to sleep would
maintain the position. If your head was this way, your leg would be
there and so on. It was a nasty experience.
There were a lot of
interrogations, with a lot of carrot and stick. I can never forget the
role and determination and sincerity of a compatriot at that particular
time. They made an exception to uphold the earlier bail granted to
Senator Abu Ibrahim. He was asked to go. He was the only Hausa-Fulani
man with us. The late Hassan Katsina had intervened. But Senator Ibrahim
said he would rather stay, except every one of us was granted the same
bail conditions. He said he would not leave his colleagues behind.
He
is a courageous and a detribalised Nigerian, who had a vision of what
Nigeria should be. He refused to accept an isolated bail. They started
sending emissaries to us in detention, offering us all sorts of
appointments and opportunities to renounce our positions, but we
refused. The judiciary was still very courageous then. We went to the
Court of Appeal. An incident occurred at the lower court. Market women
turned out hugely to support us when we were brought to the court. The
day they refused my bail, some of the market women appeared Unclad and
so they stopped taking us to the court. The court sessions were usually
interesting for us because of the scenes. At Alagbon, we bathed in the
open between 4 and 5 a.m.
The condition started improving when
they began to bring officials of the failed banks. Those ones
contributed money to repair the generating set at Alagbon and we started
enjoying electricity a little longer than we used to. It was during the
time that the protest became intense. Nigeria was playing at the World
Cup then. Italy defeated Nigeria and the security people lied to us that
it was otherwise. Eventually, the Court of Appeal courageously granted
us bail in enforcement of our fundamental human rights. Our passports
were confiscated and deposited with the court.
Later, the High Court
ruled that our passports be released to us. That night, they finally
announced our bail and conditions attached to it. The presiding judge
then is today the Emir of Ilorin, Sulu Gambari. We heard that they put
so much pressure on him (Clement Akpamgbo was the Attorney-General) not
to release us, but he ordered our release. They were going to re-arrest
me and I suddenly went underground to continue my protest.
They
would throw bombs and say it was us. Mobil called me to come back to my
job, but I refused. They bombed my house, but luckily, my wife and
children had been evacuated. I would not want to reveal how they were
evacuated because there was a diplomatic involvement. They told me that
my life and those of my family were in clear danger.
Suddenly, they
announced that I was wanted again. They alleged that I was going to bomb
the NNPC depot at Ejigbo. Ah! I was still being tried for treason,
which carries a sentence of life imprisonment, and I was again accused
of trying to bomb an NNPC depot. I couldn’t go back because my
photograph was all over the place that I was wanted. A diplomatic source
advised me that I should leave the country if I wanted to continue the
struggle. Dan Suleiman, Alani Akinrinade were in danger. We asked Bolaji
Akinyemi to leave the country and promote the struggle at the
international level.
Q: That was the National Democratic Coalition then…
A:
Yes. I was at the forefront of the struggle at that level. When I went
to see my uncle, K.O Tinubu, at home, he shed tears that night. He said
he didn’t want to lose me and that I was about to be killed. He begged
me to leave Nigeria and affirmed that, being a former police officer, he
was sure I would be killed.
He said that I couldn’t return to my
house since they had bombed it. I went to a friend’s house. Before then,
there was an incident that made them believe that I was at Ore Falomo’s
hospital. They went to the hospital to look for me. Eventually, I left
Nigeria for Benin Republic by NADECO route.
Q: How did you make it across the border?
A:
I disguised with a huge turban and babanriga and escaped into Benin
Republic on a motorbike. My old Hausa friend gave the clothes to me. In
fact, when I appeared to Kudirat Abiola, she didn’t know that I was the
one! I gave her some information and some briefing. I left at 1 a.m.
While in Benin Republic, I was still coming to Badagry to ferry people,
organise and coordinate the struggle with others on ground. We put a
group together, ferrying NADECO people across. It was a very challenging
time. I can’t forget people like Segun Maiyegun and other young guys in
the struggle. I would come from Benin to hold meetings with them and
sneak back.
The military created a whole lot of momentum around me.
They took over my house, guest house and carted away all my vehicles and
property to Alagbon. That is why today, I don’t have old photographs.
They took eight of my cars away.
My wife and my two toddlers were
dropped in a bush; nowhere to go. Beko and the diplomatic missions came
to our aid and ferried my wife and kids to the United States. I was
still in Benin Republic. Besides, I didn’t have a passport and couldn’t
have been able to travel. At a stage, they discovered our routes,
because they had spies all over, including Benin Republic. Twice I was
caught and I fortuitously escaped. They traced me to one dingy hotel I
was hiding.
The day they came for me at the hotel, I had gone out on
an Okada to buy amala at a market, where Yorubas are dominant. I was
also to meet Akinrinade and the rest of them. The spies went to the
hotel and as I was approaching, I saw two people wearing tajia (skull
caps) at the front desk, asking questions. The man attending to them at
the reception (I had been very nice to the receptionist) winked to me
and I turned back.
I contacted a friend in Benin Republic, who was an architect, and had very strong sympathy for us. Professor Wole Soyinka and Alani Akinrinade, who lodged in a better hotel, were fortunate to have escaped that night, too. The people on their trail pursued them to the hotel, but fortunately missed them.
Then the British High Commission got proper information through the Consular-General that my life was in danger. He stamped a visa on a sheet of paper and did a letter, authorising the airline to pick me from Benin Republic to any port of entry in Britain.
I didn’t know how they got to me. A lady just walked up to me and handed me an envelope. She said I had been granted an entry into the United Kingdom. She said I could be killed if I failed to leave in the next 48 hours. It was Air Afrique that took me from Benin Republic to London.
Meanwhile, my wife was still in the United States. I landed in Britain and worked my way back to Benin Republic. I picked up my passport from somewhere. I went to an African country and through their connections, they gave me a diplomatic passport as a cultural ambassador.
Q: What country was that?
A: No, please! The African country that
helped us with the diplomatic passport was showing gratitude for the
help Abiola had done to its president before. So, you can make your
deduction. Then, I was shuffling and coordinating our activities in the
UK, Benin Republic and Cote d’Ivoire. I used the passport to travel to
Cote d’Ivoire to hold meetings at the Hotel Continental, because we were
planning to make another broadcast that would be aired in Nigeria. By
the time I returned to the hotel, the military assailants had broken
into my hotel room and taken away my briefcase and diplomatic passport.
They dropped a note, saying: ‘You cannot be twice lucky.’ I was taken
over by panic. Fortunately, in my back pocket, I had the photocopy of
the sheet of paper on which the British had stamped a visa for me to
travel out of Benin previously. I took that to the British High
Commission in Abidjan. They listened to my story and asked me to come
back at night. They did all their verification and found my story to be
true. I returned to them and they gave me another sheet of paper and
wrote the number of the flight that would take me out of that country.
But
I had no money. Somebody suddenly drove in. The person is a well-known
name I don’t want to mention. I met him and explained my condition. He
had a traveller’s cheque, but the money was not enough. I went back to
the British High Commission and the woman said she could assist me with
her own personal money to bridge the shortfall in cash.
We founded and coordinated Radio Kudirat and Radio Freedom and we continued to organise. I didn’t see my family for two good years. They were in America. Bayo Onanuga, who also was part of the struggle, joined us there in December 1997. The law of political asylum stipulates that your first country of landing and acceptance is the safe haven, so it’s not transferable. That was how Cornelius Adebayo was stuck in a United Nations camp. My wife had to invoke a family clause that exists in America to fight for her husband to join her before they granted me a special privilege to leave UK to join my family in the United States.
Q: Where were you on 8 June 1998 when Abacha died?
A:
I was shuttling between the United States and UK. We were working
really hard as NADECO. We went to our NADECO meeting in the UK to
finalise the second leg of the strategy to make a broadcast and enforce
certain actions. Before then I was reading Jubril Aminu’s interview in
The Punch, where he said Nigerians should not worry about Abacha’s
transmutation into a civilian president; but they should be worried
about what followed.
We were persuaded during a brainstorming session
that we should get nearer to Nigeria to do something about it. It was
agreed that we should stop him, even if we would have to start guerrilla
warfare to achieve that.
Tunde Olowu had been with me in my flat for
a couple of weeks and on the night Abacha died, we were just eating
when a phone call came through that Abacha had died. We could not
believe it until we saw on TV his body being taken out in a van.
And
that changed the texture of the struggle. Suddenly, there was this news,
announcing General Abdulsalami Abubakar as the head of state. We
started analysing General Abubakar.
I wish to state that out of
all the military generals I met through Abiola while he was lobbying for
the restoration of his mandate, Abubakar was the most sincere and
straightforward. He pointedly told Abiola that no military officer would
want to help him to realise his mandate, unless the military general
wanted to get himself into trouble. While other generals we had met
lied, Abdusalami was different. He simply said: ‘Look, I am a
professional soldier and I want to retire a general. I don’t want to be
involved in politics. I cannot help you. I don’t want to be involved.’
When
we heard that he was the head of state, I challenged the rest of us to
interrogate Abubakar’s sincerity. Good enough, he was straight-forward.
When we met him, he told us that he wasn’t going to spend more than nine
months because he was not interested. He promised he was going to
pardon us and urged us to return to the country. That was the situation
of things before the death of Abiola.
So, we were coordinating with Abraham Adesanya and the rest of them, who were on ground here. They sought and we granted them our permission to meet with and size up Abubakar. So, they honoured his invitation. He sent people to us and there was a strong debate, which nearly divided the group, whether or not we should return. The suspicion around Abubakar arose because of the manner of people they saw around him, including Major Hamza al-Mustapha. Some people within our group felt that we should evaluate the situation carefully and not look at isolated occurrences. A big debate ensued after his announcement that he had granted pardon to those of us who had been declared wanted. There were a lot of intervening incidents that I cannot publicly discuss.
Q: When you returned from exile, how did the idea of Lagos governorship arise?
A: Myself, Beko, Fasehun and others met. The death of Abiola was quite devastating for us and we debated whether or not to return. We also examined whether or not there was a conspiracy surrounding Abiola’s death. There were so many questions being asked at the same time. The previous elections contested by Abacha’s five political parties got me seriously worried. After giving it serious thought, we decided that we were not going to declare war against our people, but that we should believe Abubukar by returning home to participate. At a meeting presided over by Enahoro, I told them that I would want to return to my mother because I missed her badly. He said no one could stop me if that was the case. The military, in my absence, broke her soak-away, believing that I kept guns there; carted away the generating set and cut our land (telephone) line.
I came home with three pairs of trousers and three jackets. But because I gave her notice and some other people noticed that I was arriving, unknown to me, they had mobilised people to welcome me. I was shocked at the huge crowd when I got to the airport. I was carried shoulder-high. That was the day I was totally convinced that Nigerians could be very honest, if they care about you. Because as they carried me, my ticket, passport and 2,000 pounds sterling fell from my inner jacket. I didn’t know they had fallen off because I was carried away by the euphoria of the crowd. I didn’t know how they got to Sunday Adigun. At night, they told me someone was looking for me, but because the people around me didn’t believe that danger had finally cleared, they prevented the person. But he insisted that he would not give it to anybody and showed them my passport. So they allowed him and he handed everything to me.
Meanwhile, I had no Victoria Island
home to return to. It had been taken over by Abacha. They dispossessed
me of the house, as well as my office on Saka Tinubu Street. My vehicles
and everything else I owned. They claimed they found bombs in it and
dispossessed me of it. I was totally cleaned out. I had only five
shirts, the 2000 pounds and the jackets. Before then, Akinyelure came to
America, looking for me, with one briefcase. He was detained for four
hours by the immigration because they were wondering how someone could
come to America with one briefcase. They didn’t let him off until they
contacted Mobil and Mobil confirmed him as an ex-employee.
He didn’t
get to my house till about 3 O’clock. He told me I had to come to
Nigeria even if I wouldn’t participate. But he said I should
participate. I got back home and each time I moved out, people would
shout ‘Governor’.
The day I went to our group’s meeting, they
were to decide who to endorse among Wahab Dosunmu, Shitta-Bey and
others. They asked me if I was interested and I asked them to give me
two weeks to go round since I was just returning.
Alhaji Hamzat was
there. The chairman at our group’s meeting on that day said they would
grant me the two weeks. So I started moving round. My late sister got me
some clothes to wear, whether they fitted me or not. I went to Mushin,
Agege and other places and people were hailing me as ‘Governor’ and
urging me to run. On my first tour of my senatorial district, people
were saying governor. Even people who had gone to another party started
coming back into the Alliance for Democracy, AD, and that was how I
decided I would run. People in Lagos West, East and Central said: ‘You
must run for governorship.’
Q: You spent eight years in government, what will you consider your best legacy?
A: My best legacy is the financial engineering of Lagos State, especially to bring financial autonomy to Lagos State and eliminate wastage and mismanagement. That was just one aspect of it. My greatest legacy is Governor Babatunde Fashola. I identified and endorsed him. That was when my corporate background as a recruiter and talent seeker for Deloitte came to play. Part of the training when you go on operational audit is that the first thing you evaluate are the personnel and the questionnaire given to them and how they answer it. You look at the ability of individuals to really take and develop others. There is nothing unique about any leadership. Everybody can come up with different ideas. You can take different routes and arrive at the same answer. No matter how much steel and metal you put together, the greatest achievement and legacy is the ability to develop other leaders who can succeed you, otherwise your legacy will be in shambles. It was a very difficult and challenging period for me. I thank God I stuck to my guns.
Q: You waged several battles against Obasanjo on issues like fiscal federalism, seizure of local council funds etc. Which of these wars did you consider the hottest?
A: If I have to rank
them, I think the creation of the local governments was my favourite
because the processes are clearly stated and well articulated in the
constitution. And if you do all of that and comply with the
constitutional requirements, then you should not be denied. I believe in
true federalism. I believe in local government administration, which I
think is a service centre for the state. The constitution is clear. It
is a misnomer to even think that there are three tiers of government in a
federal system of government.
There are only two – the state and the
federal. It is because the constitution was put together by a group of
military people, who believe in command and control that we have this
kind of anomaly.
They tinkered with it and they tailored it in a way
that would suit a unitary system and I believe that was the problem. We
still don’t have a constitution of ‘we the people’. The battle was not
personally directed at Obasanjo.
Q: Let’s move to matters personal. How did you meet your wife?
A.Through a dating agency! On a serious note, it was through a family connection.
Q: How many hearts did you break?
A:
I don’t know, because I don’t look back and I am not a psychologist or
medical expert to test for broken hearts and emotional instability. You
pray for luck. Sincerely, you don’t know whether my own heart was
broken, too. I am a very lucky person and it was through family
connection that I met my wife. It is true that I had many dates. Until I
met her, I didn’t even want to be married because I loved my freedom.
I
had also been disappointed along the line, my expectations dashed. I
was going to be totally free before I met Remi. She was innocent, homely
and very quiet. I was surprised by her manners and I was hooked.
I
was a DJ to my friends. I love music and my house was a boys’
rendezvous. Remi used to cook for all of us. She is the best woman I
ever met and fully endorsed by all my friends. They were very close. My
friends said: ‘Bola, you now have a woman and you have to settle down.’
I
was a successful corporate person. She is totally urbane and seriously
committed to my professionalism and career. I met somebody who enhanced
the value of my life.
Q: Who was your favourite musician then, and now?
A:
I was interested in music. I enjoy music, from the days of James Brown.
I told you I followed Roy Chicago to Ado-Ekiti, without knowing. I was
just lucky. God just made me a professional because I could have ended
up with the late Dr. Sikiru Ayinde Barrister! We used to follow him
about for were during the Ramadan, to the extent that I would be locked
out.
Whenever there was competition around Lagos Island or anywhere,
we were always there. There was always the possibility of violence
because of the competition. But when I was an in-house DJ, not
commercial DJ. Teddy Pendergrass was my favourite and I kept myself
updated on the music scene in America. You don’t have music now. You now
have O foka sibe, O gbona feli feli. I love listening to jazz a lot.
Q: What is your favourite food?
A: Amala and ewedu. But to be honest with you, I love rice. Rice first, amala second. I don’t like eba that much. In any form at all, I can eat rice three times a day.
Q: People say Asiwaju is the richest Yoruba man. How rich are you?
A.If you are talking in monetary terms, it is a lie. But I want them to continue to believe that I am rich. The fact is that I cannot prepare for my death. I want to live long and I believe in people and I believe in sharing. So, whatever you ascribe to me in terms of wealth is your own imagination. I will not do two cheques – one to the Central Bank of Heaven and the other one to the Central Bank of Hell – cashable when I am dead. The money will remain here.
I don’t want to be greedy,
but frugal with the little I have and be contented. There are certain
things they can’t dispute and one of these is that I wasn’t a poor man
when I joined politics. I financed the struggle during the NADECO days.
Before the NADECO days, I financed political goals and aspirations. I
financed political groups and individuals.
No matter how you dream,
it is empty without financial success. If you have no concrete financial
progress for a state or an entity, it will not endure. I have not taken
Lagos to bankruptcy. It was bankrupt before I took over, I turned it
into a success within my two-terms as governor. It had existed for so
long before I became governor.
During my tenure, former President Olusegun Obasanjo described Lagos as an urban jungle and uninhabitable.
But
he chose to celebrate his 75th birthday in Lagos! There was a dispute
on the Bar Beach during my tenure, but if I didn’t rigidly follow my
vision and my belief in Lagos State, Victoria Island would have been
submerged.
Adapted from an interview published in Asiwaju: Untold Story of “The Leader,” a special publication of The NEWS dated March 29, 2016