Alaba Johnson
"My Boss, General Sani Muhammad Abacha, died at the early
hours of Monday, 8th June, 1998. I had prepared him for a workshop organized
by the Federal Ministry of Information for that day as he was expected to
deliver an address as the Special Guest of Honour.
His speech was drafted and fine tuned by the Chief Press
Secretary, Chief David Attah who had submitted it to the Aide-De Camp for
vetting and necessary amendments by the Commander-in-Chief.
When I got to the bedside of the Head of State, he was already
gasping. Ordinarily, I could not just touch him. It was not allowed in our
job. But under the situation on ground, I knelt close to him and shouted, General
Sani Abacha, Sir, please grant me permission to touch and carry you.
"Contrary to insinuations, speculations and sad rumours
initiated by some sections of the society, I maintain that the sudden
collapse of the health system of the late Head of State started previous day
(Sunday, 7th June, 1998) right from the Abuja International Airport
immediately after one of the white security operatives or personnel who accompanied
President Yasser Arafat of Palestine shook hands with him (General Abacha) I
had noticed the change in the countenance of the late Commander-in-Chief and
informed the Aide-de-Camp, Lt. Col. Abdallah, accordingly.
He, however, advised that we keep a close watch on the Head of
State. Later in the evening of 8th June, 1998, around 6p.m; his doctor came
around, administered an injection to stabilize him. He was advised to have a
short rest.
Happily, enough, by 9p.m; the Head of State was bouncing and receiving
visitors until much later when General Jeremiah Timbut Useni, the then
Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, came calling. He was fond of the
Head of State. They were very good friends. They stayed and chatted together
till about 3.35a.m. A friend of the house was with me in my office and as he
was bidding me farewell, he came back to inform me that the FCT Minister,
General Useni was out of the Head of State’s Guest House within the
Villa."
"I then decided to inform the ADC and other security boys
that I would be on my way home to prepare for the early morning event at the
International Conference Centre. At about 5a.m; the security guards ran to my
quarters to inform me that the Head of State was very unstable.
At first, I thought it was a coup attempt. Immediately, I
prepared myself fully for any eventuality. As an intelligence officer and the
Chief Security Officer to the Head of State for that matter, I devised a
means of diverting the attention of the security boys from my escape route by
asking my wife to continue chatting with them at the door “she was in the
house while the boys were outside. From there, I got to the Guest House of
the Head of State before them. When I got to the bedside of the Head of
State, he was already gasping. Ordinarily, I could not just touch him. It was
not allowed in our job.
But under the situation on ground, I knelt close to him and
shouted, General Sani Abacha, Sir, please grant me permission to touch and carry
you. I again knocked at the stool beside the bed
and shouted in the same manner, yet he did not respond. I then realized there
was a serious danger. I immediately called the Head of State’s personal
physician, Dr. Wali, who arrived the place under eight minutes from his house.
He immediately gave Oga “ General Abacha “ two doses of injection, one at the
heart and another close to his neck."
"This did not work apparently as the Head of State had
turned very cold. He then told me that the Head of State was dead and nothing
could be done after all. I there and then asked the personal physician to
remain with the dead body while I dashed home to be fully prepared for the
problems that might arise from the incident. As soon as I informed my wife,
she collapsed and burst into tears. I secured my house and then ran back. At
that point, the Aide-de-Camp had been contacted by me and we decided that
great caution must be taken in handling the grave situation.
Again, I must reiterate that the issue of my Boss dying on top
of women was a great lie just as the insinuation that General Sani Abacha ate
and died of poisoned apples was equally a wicked lie. My question is: did
Chief M.K.O Abiola die of poisoned apples or did he die on top of women?
As I had stated at the Oputa Panel, their deaths were organized.
Pure and simple! It was at this point that I used our special communication
gadgets to diplomatically invite the Service Chiefs, Military Governors and
some few elements purportedly to a meeting with the Head of State by 9a.m. at
the Council Chamber. That completed, I also decided to talk to some former
leaders of the nation to inform them that General Sani Abacha would like to
meet them by 9a.m. Situation became charged however, when one of the Service
Chiefs, Lieutenant General Ishaya Rizi Bamaiyi, who pretended to be with us,
suggested he be made the new Head of State after we had quietly informed him
of the death of General Sani Abacha. He even suggested we should allow him
access to Chief Abiola. We smelt a rat and other heads of security agencies,
on hearing this, advised I move Chief Abiola to a safer destination."
"I managed to do this in spite of the fact that I had been
terribly overwhelmed with the crisis at hand. But then, when some junior officers
over-heard the suggestion of one of the Service Chiefs earlier mentioned, it
was suggested to me that we should finish all the members of the Provisional
Ruling Council and give the general public an excuse that there was a meeting
of the PRC during which a shoot-out occurred between some members of the
Provisional Ruling Council and the Body Guards to the Head of State When I
sensed that we would be contending with far more delicate issues than the one
on ground, I talked to Generals Buba Marwa and Ibrahim Sabo who both promptly
advised us the junior officers “
against any bloodshed.
They advised we contact General Ibrahim Babangida (former
Military President) who equally advised against any bloodshed but that we
should support the most senior officer in the Provisional Ruling Council
(PRC) to be the new Head of State. Since the words of our elders are words of
wisdom, we agreed to support General Jeremiah Useni.
Along the line, General Bamaiyi lampooned me saying, Can’t you
put two and two together to be four?
Has it not occurred to you that General Useni who was the last
man with the Head of State might have poisoned him, knowing full well that he
was the most senior officer in the PRC?
"Naturally, I became furious with General Useni since
General Abacha’s family had earlier on complained severally about the
closeness of the two Generals; at that, a decision was taken to storm General
Useni’s house with almost a battalion of soldiers to effect his arrest.
Again, some heads of security units and agencies, including my
wife, advised against the move. The next most senior person and officer in
government was General Abdulsalami Abubakar, who was then the Chief of
Defence Staff. We rejected the other Service Chief, who, we believed, was too
ambitious and destructive. We settled for General Abubakar and about six of
us called him inside a room in the Head of State’s residence to break the
news of the death of General Abacha to him.
As a General with vast experience, Abdulsalami Abubakar, humbly
requested to see and pray for the soul of General Abacha which we allowed. Do
we consider this a mistake?
Because right there, he “ Abubakar “ went and sat on the seat of
the late Head of State. Again, I was very furious. Like I said at the Oputa
Panel, if caution was not applied, I would have gunned him down. The
revolution the boys were yearning for would have started right there. The
assumption that we could not have succeeded in the revolution was a blatant
lie. We were in full control of the State House and the Brigade of Guards. We
had loyal troops in Keffi and in some other areas surrounding the seat of
government “ Abuja.
But I allowed peace to reign because we believed it would create
further crises in the country."
"We followed the advice of General Ibrahim Badamasi
Babangida and the wise counsel of some loyal senior officers and jointly
agreed that General Abdulsalami Abubakar be installed Head of State,
Commander-in-Chief of the Nigerian Armed Forces immediately after the burial
of General Sani Abacha in Kano. It is an irony of history that the same
Service Chief who wanted to be Head of State through bloodshed, later
instigated the new members of the Provisional Ruling Council against us and
branded us killers, termites and all sorts of hopeless names. They planned,
arranged our arrest, intimidation and subsequent jungle trial in 1998 and
1999. These, of course, led to our terrible condition in several prisons and
places of confinement."
TO BE CONTINUED
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Monday, July 30, 2012
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