The Guardian (Nigeria)

… Olujimi, Bamidele Preach Unity

- From Ayodele Afolabi, Ado Ekiti

EKITI State Governor, Dr. Kayode Fayemi, has said that the annulment of the June 12, 1993, presidenti­al election was the second most significan­t national crisis after the civil war of 1967- 1970 because of the reverberat­ing effect it had on the polity.

The governor said President Muhammadu Buhari would be respected for recognisin­g the June 12 election and institutin­g the date as the country’s rightful Democracy Day.

Fayemi said Buhari’s acknowledg­ment of Chief MKO Abiola as the undisputab­le winner of the election was even more rewarding.

In his Democracy Day broadcast yesterday, Fayemi said: “He ( Buhari) did not stop there, he also awarded, posthumous­ly, the highest honour in the land, generally conferred on presidents, the award of the Grand Commander of the Federal Republic ( GCFR), on him.

“This symbolic gesture has provided a psycho- social healing for the people who sacrificed, including their lives, for the enthroneme­nt of democracy.

“The declaratio­n of June 12 as our National Democracy Day therefore, means for me, a significan­t and courageous move to further enculturat­e accountabi­lity even about knotty and unresolved historical issues of national importance. One therefore has to commend the president for this historical righting of a wrong past.”

Meanwhile, the former

Senate Minority leader, Chief Biodun Olujimi, has called on Nigerians to use the significan­ce of June 12 to pursue and promote issues that foster national cohesion.

Olujimi, in a statement she personally signed yesterday in Ado- Ekiti, said Nigerians needed a united front as exemplifie­d by June 12, 1993, election when Nigerians shunned ethnicity and religion to vote for Abiola.

The Chairman, Senate

Committee on Judiciary, Human Rights and Legal Matters, Senator Opeyemi Bamidele, said the lingering crisis that trailed the annulment of Nigeria’s freest and fairest presidenti­al election was devoid of religious and tribal sentiments, noting that it signposted that Nigerians were united in thought and spirit.

Bamidele described Abiola and other pro- democracy Nigerians who lost their lives during the struggle to validate the June 12 mandate as the real pillars of the country’s democracy. He cautioned against tribal and ethnic politics in the country, saying: “An average Nigerian cares less about tribe. All they quest for is improved standard of living from any leader, wherever he may have come from.

“The task now for our leader is to devise ways of healing the wound inflicted on our nation by politician­s, who looked for ethnic and religious faultiness to rip the country apart.”

 ??  ?? Son of the late Chief MKO Abiola, presumed winner of the June 12, 1993 presidenti­al election, Jamiu Abiola ( left); his first daughter, Lola Abiola- Edewor; Deputy Governor of Lagos State, Dr. Obafemi Hamzat; wives of the late politician, Dr. Doyin Abiola and Mrs. Bisi Abiola during the laying of wreath to mark this year’s Democracy Day at Abiola’s House in Lagos... yesterday PHOTO: FEMI ADEBESIN- KUTI
Son of the late Chief MKO Abiola, presumed winner of the June 12, 1993 presidenti­al election, Jamiu Abiola ( left); his first daughter, Lola Abiola- Edewor; Deputy Governor of Lagos State, Dr. Obafemi Hamzat; wives of the late politician, Dr. Doyin Abiola and Mrs. Bisi Abiola during the laying of wreath to mark this year’s Democracy Day at Abiola’s House in Lagos... yesterday PHOTO: FEMI ADEBESIN- KUTI

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