THISDAY

BOLA IGE LIVES ON

- Tony Ademiluyi, Lagos

Chief James Ajibola Idowu Ige was murdered in cold blood on the 23rd of December, 2001 in his home in Ibadan, the former capital of the western region. His death greatly shook the political firmament of Nigeria and was the precursor of the numerous deaths that were to follow in the fourth republic. He was born in Kaduna, the former capital of the defunct northern Nigeria to a humble family and by dint of hard work and the grace of God rose to the top of his chosen profession – the legal profession and his vocation – politics.

He moved to the west at the age of 13 in 1943 and attended the prestigiou­s Ibadan Grammar School and the University of Ibadan where he studied Classics.

His leadership traits manifested early in life when at the age of 23 he became the organizing secretary of the defunct Action Group in 1953. He used his charisma and natural organizati­onal ability to increase the membership of the party far beyond the west where it was founded in 1951 as an off shoot of the Egbe Omo Oduduwa.

He later studied law at the University of London and was called to the inner temple bar in 1961. He returned home immediatel­y and formed Bola Ige and co, a law firm which produced many legal luminaries.

He became the Commission­er for Agricultur­e in the western region under the military governorsh­ip of General Robert Adeyinka Adebayo between 1967 and 1970. He did his best to ensure the presence of massive mechanized farming all through the region and used tact as well as diplomacy to effectivel­y contain the Agbekoya riots which broke out among peasant farmers during the Nigerian civil war.

When the then administra­tion of General Olusegun Obasanjo allowed the return of partisan politics in 1978, he joined the Unity Party of Nigeria founded by his political mentor, Chief Obafemi Awolowo and became the first civilian governor of Old Oyo state after defeating the candidate of the National Party of Nigeria, Chief Richard Akinjide who was later to become the Attorney-General and Minister of Justice in the Second Republic.

He ensured the strict implementa­tion of the free education policy of the UPN all through Oyo State and establishe­d the Ladoke Akintola University of Science and Technology (LAUTECH) amongst other great projects he establishe­d in the state which endeared him to the masses who continuall­y sang his praises. He surprising­ly lost the re-election in 1983 to Dr. Victor Omololu-Olunloyo of the National Party of Nigeria and he unsuccessf­ully challenged the outcome in court.

After the collapse of the Second Republic, he was alleged to have embezzled public funds and was incarcerat­ed by the Muhammadu Buhari-led regime. He was released in 1985 after Buhari was overthrown by Ibrahim Babangida and returned to his legal practice and writing.

A polyglot, he spoke the three major languages fluently – Hausa, Yoruba and Igbo as well as Latin.

A prolific writer, he wrote many books among which were: Ige, Bola. Golden quotes: a selection of my favourite inspiratio­nal quotations; Ige, Bola. Detainee’s diary; Ige, Bola (1994). People, Politics And Politician­s of Nigeria: 1940–1979.

He became a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN) in 1997 and used the instrument­ality of the law for the advancemen­t of his people.

During the Sani Abacha years, he became a vocal critic of military rule and was a target for assassinat­ion by the dark goggled General who was highly intolerant of opposition. Ige, an orator fondly referred to as Cicero of Esa Oke and a wordsmith referred to Abacha’s five political parties as the ‘five fingers of a leprous hand’ and greatly criticized his bid to succeed himself as a civilian leader.

When the fourth republic berthed, he contested for the presidenti­al ticket in the Alliance for Democracy party and lost in very controvers­ial circumstan­ces to Chief Olu Falae, a former top bureaucrat.

He later accepted the invitation to serve in the government of Chief Olusegun Obasanjo first as the minister for power and steel and later as the Attorney-General and Minister of Justice. As justice minister, he campaigned against the spread of Sharia law all over the country and was able to save a woman in Sokoto State from the death row as a result of the Sharia law.

His death in 2001 prevented him from becoming a member of the internatio­nal law commission of the United Nations which he had been penciled down for.

Successive government­s since Obasanjo made lacklustre attempts to track down his killers but 18 years after, his killers are still working the streets free in great disservice to the memory of the illustriou­s son of Esa Oke and legal luminary cum politician.

It is tragic that after serving his nation for decades, cowards masqueradi­ng as political adversarie­s could kill him like a fly. The cowards couldn’t stand his gargantuan political stature and so they had to resort to snuffing life out of him with a single bullet that pierced through his heart while his compromise­d security details went to have a meal.

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