Dele Giwa was a founder and editor of Newswatch magazine. Twenty-three
years ago today, on October 19 1986, he was killed by a letter bomb sent
by agents of the former dictator, Ibrahim Badamosi Babangida.
On
October 17 1986, Mr. Giwa, who was Nigeria’s most feared editor, had
been summoned by two notorious officials of the Babangida regime: Halilu
Akilu, former Director of Military Intelligence (DMI), and Lt.-Col.
jibola Kunle Togun, former Deputy Director, State Security Service
(SSS).
Ayodele Dele-Giwa, his last daughter never knew her dad
Forty-eight
hours later, he was killed via a bomb with a parcel bearing the coat of
arms of the Nigerian state. He recognized it so well, and just before
the bomb went off as he opened it, had exclaimed, “this must be from the
President,” referring to Babangida.
Babangida ruled Nigeria
from 1985 to 1993, when popular protests forced him to leave office
unceremoniously as he engaged in one of the most grievous acts of
political infamy in annulling the nation's freest and fairest election
in history.
Throughout his tenure, Babangida jailed or repressed
his political opponents, real or imagined, or sponsored assassinations
against them. Also in 1986, one of Babangida's closest childhood
friends, General Mamman Vatsa, who was the Minister of the Federal
Capital Territory, was accused of involvement in a coup plan. Despite a
clear lack of evidence, Babangida ensure he was summarily tried and
quickly executed.
Babangida stole billions of dollars in
Nigerian state resources and mismanaged the rest. His children and
cronies became rich overnight. But most importantly, Babangida, who is
so insecure he lives in a fortress, is yet to answer to his crimes
against humanity and the Nigerian people, including the killing of Dele
Giwa.
To show his disdain for the dead journalist and the
constitution, Babangida refused to testify before the hapless National
Human Rights Panel, also known as the Oputa Panel, about Dele Giwa’s
murder.
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