There are many ‘ifs’ 20 years after the annulment of the 
June 12, 1993 presidential election – that is still considered Nigeria’s
 freest and fairest.  If then military president, General Ibrahim 
Badamasi Babangida, had known that the decision to annul the election 
would lead to the plethora of crises that Nigeria is yet to come over, 
he may not have acted in that manner.  Indeed if he had known that the  
electoral process today would be much worse and replete with serial 
instances of the reasons he gave for the annulment, he may not have done
 so.  If  Bashorun Moshood Kashimawo Olawale Abiola (aka, MKO) had known
 that events would spiral to a fatal end for him, he may not have sought
 the presidency of Nigeria.  If some of the elected public officers who 
supported the annulment knew that Sani Abacha would restore full 
military rule for another five years, they may have stood firmly on June
 12 and continued in office.  Using the behavior of some members of the 
Nigeria Governors’ Forum, NGF, regarding their election where they voted
 but lost but are refusing to accept defeat, the question should be 
asked:  When would Nigerians learn from mistakes of the past?
In this package, we present the reasons Babangida gave for annulling the election, the response of MKO Abiola immediately after the annulment was announced as well as the concluding part of Tonnie Iredia’s interview – he served as the spokesman for the electoral commission at the time of the annulment.
In this package, we present the reasons Babangida gave for annulling the election, the response of MKO Abiola immediately after the annulment was announced as well as the concluding part of Tonnie Iredia’s interview – he served as the spokesman for the electoral commission at the time of the annulment.
Fellow Nigerians, I address you today with a deep sense of world 
history  and particularly of the history of our great country. In the 
aftermath of the recently annulled presidential election, I feel, as I 
believe you yourself feel, a profound sense of disappointment at the 
outcome of our last efforts at laying the foundation of a viable 
democratic system of government in Nigeria .
I therefore wish, on behalf of myself and members of the National 
Defence and Security Council and indeed of my entire administration, to 
feel with my fellow countrymen and women for the cancellation of the 
election. It was a rather disappointing experience in the course of 
carrying through the last election of the transition to civil rule 
programme.
Nigeria has come a long way since this administration assumed power 
and leadership about eight years ago. In the attempt to grapple with the
 critical and monumental problems and challenges of national existence 
and social progress, this administration inaugurated and pursued sound 
and justifiable policies and programmes of reform.
These policies and programmes have touched virtually all aspects of 
our national life – the economy, political process, social structures, 
external relations, bureaucracy and even the family system. I believe 
strongly that in understanding, conception, formulation and 
articulation, these policies and programmes are not only sound but also 
comparatively unassailable. I believe too that history, with the passage
 of time, would certainly score the administration high in its 
governance of our country.
Let me also express my deep conviction that the core strategy and 
structures of our reform policies and programmes, as enunciated in 
1986/87, would, for a very long time, remain relevant and durable in the
 course of changing our country positively. I believe that at the exit 
of the administration from power, we would leave behind for prosperity a
 country with an economy, the structures of which have been turned 
around for good. The average Nigerian person has come to reconcile 
himself with the fact that his or her social progress remains 
essentially in his or her hands in collaboration with other fellow 
Nigerians and not merely relying on what government alone could provide 
for him or her. The days are gone for good, when men and women trooped 
to government establishments for employment and for benevolence. This 
administration has built the foundation that would take Nigerians away 
from their previous colonially-induced motivations and the encumbrances 
of colonialism. We have laid the foundation for self-reliant economic 
development and social justice. We have established a new basis in our 
country in which economic liberalization would continue to flourish 
alongside democratic forces and deregulated power structure. In all 
these, the average Nigerian person has more than ever before this 
administration imbibed and assimilated the values of hard work, 
resilience and self-confidence.
Ibrahim Babangida
It is true that in the course of implementing our reform policies and
 programmes and especially because of the visionary zeal with which we 
approached the assignment and responded to incidental pressures of 
governance, we engendered a number of social forces in the country.
This is so because we sought to challenge and transform extant social
 forces which had in the past impeded growth and development of our 
country. We also sought to deal with the new forces to which our 
programmes of action gave rise. Thus in dealing with the dynamics of 
both the old and new social forces, we ran into certain difficulties.
In particular, during the course of handling the interlocking 
relationships between the old and new political forces and institutions,
 some problems had arisen leading us into a number of difficulties and 
thereby necessitating our having to tamper with the rules and 
regulations laid down in the political programme. As a result, the 
administration unwittingly attracted enormous public suspicions of its 
intentions and objectives. Accordingly, we have experienced certain 
shortfalls and conflicting responses to the pulls and pushes of 
governance in the course of policy implementation.
I believe that areas of difficulties with the transition programme, 
especially from the last quarter of 1992 to the recent cancelled 
presidential election, derived primarily from the shortfalls in 
implementing the programmes of actions which, though objectively taken, 
may have caused a deviation from the original framework and structure of
 the programme.
Fellow Nigerians, it is true   that by the cancelled presidential 
election, we all found the nation at a peculiar bar of history which was
 neither bargained for, nor was it envisaged in the reform programmes of
 transition as enunciated in 1986/87. In the circumstance, the 
administration had no option than to respond appropriately to the 
unfortunate experience of terminating the presidential election. Our 
actions are in full conformity with the original objectives of the 
transition to civil programme. It was also in conformity with the avowed
 commitment of the administration to advance the cause of national 
unity, stability, and democracy. In annulling the presidential election,
 this administration was keenly aware of its promise in November 1992 
that it would disengage and institute a return to democracy on August 
27, 1993. We are determined to keep the promise. Since this transition, 
and indeed any transition, must have an end, I believe that our 
transition programme should and must come to an end, honestly and 
honourably.
History will bear witness that as an administration we have always 
striven, in all our policy decisions, to build the foundation of lasting
 democracy. Lasting democracy is not a temporary show of excitement and 
manipulation by an over-articulate section of the elite and its captive 
audience; lasting democracy is a permanent diet to nurture the soul of 
the whole nation and the political process.
Therefore, it is logical, as we have always insisted upon, that lasting democracy must be equated with political stability.
Informed by our sad experience of history, we require nothing short of a foundation for lasting democracy. As an administration, we cannot afford to leave Nigerian into a Third Republic with epileptic convulsions in its democratic health. Nigeria must therefore confront her own reality; she must solve her problems notwithstanding other existing models of democracy in other parts of the world.
Informed by our sad experience of history, we require nothing short of a foundation for lasting democracy. As an administration, we cannot afford to leave Nigerian into a Third Republic with epileptic convulsions in its democratic health. Nigeria must therefore confront her own reality; she must solve her problems notwithstanding other existing models of democracy in other parts of the world.
In my address to the nation in October 1992, when the first 
presidential primaries were cancelled, I had cause to remind our country
 men and women that there is nowhere in the world in which the practice 
of democracy is the same, even if the principles are similar and even 
for countries sharing the same intellectual tradition and cultural 
foundation. The history of our country is not the history of any other 
country in the world which is either practising advanced democracy or 
struggling to lay the foundation for democracy. Yet, in spite of the 
uniqueness and peculiarities of Nigeria, there are certain prerequisites
 which constitute an irreducible minimum for democracy. Such essential 
factors include: A. Free and fair elections; B. Uncoerced expression of 
voters preference in election; C. Respect for electorate as unfettered 
final arbiter on elections; D. Decorum and fairness on the part of the 
electoral umpires; E. Absolute respect for the rule of law. Fellow 
Nigerians, you would recall that it was precisely because the 
presidential primaries of last year did not meet the basic requirements 
of free and fair election that the Armed Forces Ruling Council had good 
reason to cancel those primaries. The recently annulled presidential 
election was similarly afflicted by these problems.
Even before the presidential election, and indeed at the party 
conventions, we had full knowledge of the bad signals pertaining to the 
enormous breach of the rules and regulations of democratic elections. 
But because we were determined to keep faith with the deadline of 27th 
August, 1993 for the return to civil rule, we overlooked the reported 
breaches. Unfortunately, these breaches continued into the presidential 
election of June 12, 1993, on an even greater proportion. There were 
allegations of irregularities and other acts of bad conduct leveled 
against the presidential candidates but NEC went ahead and cleared them.
 There were proofs as well as documented evidence of widespread use of 
money during the party primaries as well as the presidential election. 
These were the same bad conduct for which the party presidential 
primaries of 1992 were cancelled.
Evidence available to gov ernment put the total amount of money spent
 by the presidential candidates at over two billion , one hundred 
million naira (N2.1 billion). The use of money was again the major 
source of undermining the electoral process.
Both these allegations and evidence were known to the National 
Defence and Security Council before the holding of the June 12, 1993 
election, the National Defence and Security Council overlooked these 
areas of problems in its determination to fulfill the promise to hand 
over to an elected president on due date.
Apart from the tremendous negative use of money during the party 
primaries and presidential election, there were moral issues which were 
also overlooked by the Defence and National Security Council. There were
 cases of documented and confirmed conflict of interest between the 
government and both presidential candidates which would compromise their
 positions and responsibilities were they to become president. We 
believe that politics and government are not ends in themselves. Rather,
 service and effective amelioration of the condition of our people must 
remain the true purpose of politics.
It is true that the presidential election was generally seen to be 
free, fair and peaceful. However, there was in fact a huge array of 
electoral malpractices virtually in all the states of the federation 
before the actual voting began. There were authenticated reports of the 
electoral malpractices against party agents, officials of the National 
Electoral Commission and also some members of the electorate.
If all of these were clear violations of the electoral law, there 
were proofs of manipulations through offer and acceptance of money and 
other forms of inducement against officials of the National Electoral 
Commission and members of the electorate. There were also evidence of 
conflict in the process of authentication and clearance of credentials 
of the presidential candidates. Indeed, up to the last few hours of the 
election, we continued, in our earnest steadfastness with our transition
 deadline, to overlook vital facts.
For example, following the Council’s deliberation which followed the 
court injunction suspending the election, majority of members of the 
National Defence and Security Council supported postponement of the 
election by one week. This was to allow NEC enough time to reach all the
 voters, especially in the rural areas, about the postponement. But 
persuaded by NEC that it was capable of relaying the information to the 
entire electorate within the few hours left before the election, the 
Council, unfortunately, dropped the idea of shifting the voting day. 
Now, we know better. The conduct of the election, the behaviour of the 
candidates and post-election responses continued to elicit signals which
 the nation can only ignore at its peril. It is against the foregoing 
background that the administration became highly concerned when these 
political conflicts and breaches were carried to the court. It must be 
acknowledged that the performance of the judiciary on this occasion was 
less than satisfactory. The judiciary has been the bastion of the hopes 
and liberties of our citizens.
Therefore, when it became clear that the courts had become 
intimidated and subjected to the manipulation of the political process, 
and vested interests, then the entire political system was in clear 
dangers. This administration could not continue to watch the various 
high courts carry on their long drawn out processes and contradictory 
decisions while the nation slides into chaos.
It was under this circumstance that the National Defence and Security
 Council decided that it is in the supreme interest of law and order, 
political stability and peace that the presidential election be 
annulled. As an administration, we have had special interest and concern
 not only for the immediate needs of our society, but also in laying the
 foundation for generations to come.
To continue action on the basis of the June 12, 1993 election, and to
 proclaim and swear in a president who encouraged a campaign of divide 
and rule among our ethnic groups would have been detrimental to the 
survival of the Third Republic. Our need is for peace, stability and 
continuity of politics in the interest of all our people.
Fellow countrymen and women, although the National Electoral 
Commission and the Centre for Democratic Studies officially invited 
foreign observers for the presidential election, the administration also
 considered it, as important as a democratic society, that our 
activities and electoral conduct must be open not only to the citizenry 
of our country but also to the rest of the world. In spite of this 
commitment, the administration did not and cannot accept that foreign 
countries should interfere in our internal affairs and undermine our 
sovereignty.
The presidential election was not an exercise imposed on Nigerians by
 the United Nations or by the wishes of some global policemen of 
democracy. It was a decision embarked upon independently by the 
government of our country and for the interest of our country. This is 
because we believe, just like other countries, that democracy and 
democratization are primary values which Nigerians should cultivate, 
sustain and consolidate so as to enhance freedom, liberties and social 
development of the citizenry.
The actions of these foreign countries are most unfortunate and 
highly regrettable. There is nowhere in the history of our country or 
indeed of the third world where these countries can be said to love 
Nigeria or Nigerians any more than the love we have for ourselves and 
for our country. Neither can they claim to love Nigeria any more than 
this administration loves our country.
Accordingly, I wish to state that this administration will take 
necessary action against any interest groups that seek to interfere in 
our internal affairs. In this vein, I wish to place on record the 
appreciation of this administration for the patience and understanding 
of Nigerians, the French, the Germans, the Russians and Irish 
governments in the current situation. I appeal to our fellow countrymen 
and women and indeed our foreign detractors that they should cultivate 
proper understanding and appreciation of the peculiar historic 
circumstances in the development of our country and the determination 
not only of this administration but indeed of all Nigerians to resolve 
the current crises.
Fellow Nigerians, the National Security and Defence Council has met 
several times since the June 12, 1993 election. The council has fully 
deliberated not only on our avowed commitment but also to bequeathing to
 posterity a sound economic and political base in our country and we 
shall do so with honour. In our deliberations, we have also taken note 
of several extensive consultations with other members of this 
administration, with officers and men of the Armed Forces and with 
well-meaning Nigerian leaders of thought. We are committed to handing 
over power on 27th August, 1993. Accordingly, the National Defence and 
Security Council has decided that, by the end of July 1993, the two 
political parties, under the supervision of a recomposed National 
Electoral Commission, will put in place the necessary process for the 
emergence of two presidential candidates.
This shall be conducted according to the rules and regulations 
governing the election of the president of the country. In this 
connection, government will, in consultation with the two political 
parties and National Electoral Commission, agree as to the best and 
quickest process of conducting the election.
In the light of our recent experience and, given the mood of the 
nation, the National Defence and Security Council has imposed additional
 conditions as a way of widening and deepening the base of electing the 
president and sanitizing the electoral process. Accordingly, the 
candidates for the coming election must: (1) Not be less than 50 years 
old; (2) Have not been convicted of any crime;
(3) Believe, by act of faith and practice, in the corporate existence of Nigeria; (4) Possess records of personal, corporate and business interests which do not conflict with national interests; (5) Have been registered members of either of the two political parties for at least one year to this election. All those previously banned from participating in the transition process, other than those with criminal records, are hereby unbanned. They can all henceforth participate in the electoral process. This is with a view to enriching the quality of candidature for the election and at the same time tap the leadership resources of our country to the fullest. The decree to this effect will be promulgated.
(3) Believe, by act of faith and practice, in the corporate existence of Nigeria; (4) Possess records of personal, corporate and business interests which do not conflict with national interests; (5) Have been registered members of either of the two political parties for at least one year to this election. All those previously banned from participating in the transition process, other than those with criminal records, are hereby unbanned. They can all henceforth participate in the electoral process. This is with a view to enriching the quality of candidature for the election and at the same time tap the leadership resources of our country to the fullest. The decree to this effect will be promulgated.
Fellow Nigerians, I wish to finally acknowledge the tremendous value 
of your patience and understanding, especially in the face of national 
provocation.
I urge you to keep faith with the commitment of this administration. I
 enjoin you to keep faith with the unity, peace and stability of our 
country for this is the only country that you and I can call our own. 
Nowhere in the world, no matter the prompting and inducements of foreign
 countries, can Nigerians ever be regarded as first class citizens. 
Nigeria is the only country that we have. We must therefore renew our 
hope in Nigeria, and faith and confidence in ourselves for continued 
growth, development and progress
No comments:
Post a Comment