JUNE 12: An albatross in Nigeria’s democracy

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By Charles   Adingupu
IN less than three days, pro-democracy activists and apostles of June 12 will again march to the streets of Lagos and Nigeria at large. For them, this show of solidarity for June 12 annulled election has become a ritual. Almost nineteen years after, the ghost of June 12 still haunts Nigerians.

This institutionalised festival has become  an option for the activists and their allies to ventilate their ideals on what democracy should be.

However, the immediate cause of June 12 centred on the then military government of General Ibrahim Babangida, who braved the consequence of his  action to stop and annul an election widely believed to have been won by Chief Moshood Abiola of the defunct Social Democratic Party (SDP) without satisfactory explanations.

 

However, subsequent interim national government (ING) of Chief Earnest Shonekan who played the messianic role of delivering Nigeria from the catastrophic effects of the annulment failed as the late General Sani Abacha took over the reign of government. Admittedly, the constitutional conference by Abacha’s government equally failed in its quest for solution to the political imbroglio  that Nigeria was enmeshed in…

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