The Abiola family believes their late patriarch deserves more than a centenary award.
The family of the late M.K.O Abiola has rejected the posthumous
Centenary award to the winner of the 1993 Nigeria’s presidential
election.
Kola Abiola, the eldest son of the late politician and businessman,
told PREMIUM TIMES on Friday that the award was “not appropriate.”
“For us, what the government is doing is laudable. But our family
will only accept what is appropriate. If what they are trying to give
him is a gold award for the centenary, we don’t consider that to be
appropriate,” Mr. Abiola said.
“With a gold centenary award, it means we have not left where we were
when they tried to rename the University of Lagos after him. We said
then that it was inappropriate,” he added.
The Federal Government had shortlisted 100 persons to be honoured
with Centenary awards as part of Nigeria’s Centenary celebration.
By turning down the award, the Abiola family joins the families of
late activist, Gani Fawehinmi, and late afrobeat maestro, Fela Anikulapo
Kuti, who had also rejected the posthumous awards on their patriarch.
Nobel Laureate Wole Soyinka is also considering rejecting the award, which is said to take place in Abuja on Friday.
“I would have preferred that the entire day of infamy be ignored
altogether. I’m even thinking favourably of just ignoring the obscenity,
then turning up at the counter-event,” Professor Soyinka is quoted as
saying.
On Thursday, the family of the late human rights activist, Gani
Fawehinmi, said that it would be “inexpedient” for them to receive the
award in the face of the latest killing spree by the militant group Boko
Haram as well as the “putrid odour of corruption” in the alleged mission
US20 billion in the NNPC.
Mohammed Fawehinmi, the late lawyer’s eldest son, also said that it
would be morally incongruous and psychologically debilitating for the
family to stand on the same podium with General Ibrahim Babangida to
receive awards.
“In the list of the awards recipients published by the Federal
Government, was the name of former military dictator, General Ibrahim
Babangida, who as military president, severally detained and tortured
our late father,” Mr. Fawehinmi, a lawyer, said.
“In the course of one of such illegal and inhuman detentions, our
late father’s cell was sprayed with toxic substances while in Gashua
prison in 1987. The cumulative effect of that dastardly action led to
our father, a non- smoker, contracting lung cancer which eventually led
to his death on September 5, 2009,” he added.
Femi Kuti, the first son of the late afrobeat king, Fela Anikulapo
Kuti, said it was unlikely that his family would receive the award from
the Nigerian government.
“We have not heard such (of the award) but I can speak for myself,
Federal Government should first apologise for the killing of our
grandmother and the burning of Kalakuta,” he wrote on his Twitter
account.
M.K.O Abiola, the acclaimed winner of the 1993 presidential poll,
arguably one of the most free and fair election in Nigeria’s history,
died in detention five years later.
An attempt by President Goodluck Jonathan to rename the University of
Lagos after the late philanthropist in 2012 resulted in a massive
protest by students and lecturers of the institution.
Asked what the family would consider an appropriate honour, Mr. Kola Abiola said, “We leave government to figure that out.”
A source close to the Abiola’s, however, said the family believed the
elder Abiola deserve the nation’s highest honour, GCFR (Grand Commander
of the Federal Republic), having won the 1993 presidential elections,
and laid down his life to usher in democracy in Nigeria.
The family, our source said, is also angry that the government had
failed to pay the huge debt it’s owing the late politician’s businesses.
They believe the debt is responsible for the collapse of the
businesses.
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