Introduction: It is not surprising to have this
discourse at this time, when our dear country is in dire need of
leadership. The heroes gone by, in times past, had helped to guide
Nigeria right, with their struggles of commitment, selfless sacrifices
and nation building.
I do humbly urge that we maintain a minute silence in honour of Chief Gani Fawehinmi and all other heroes of our nation.
When I was approached to be the Guest Speaker for this occasion, I
felt some sense of unease, arising mainly from my personal
disenchantment with the community of activists and pro-democracy
campaigners, in regard to all the recent ugly developments in our
nation, to which they have either directly acquiesced or indirectly
encouraged.
It is now seven years that Chief Gani Fawehinmi (Gani) passed away and I believe that myself and other Nigerians miss him a lot.
WHO WAS GANI?
To be able to understand or speculate on how a person would react in
any given situation, one must at least know that person, to some extent.
So, the question then is: Who was Gani?
Gani was born as Ganiyu Oyesola Fawehinmi, on Friday, April 22, 1938,
into the family of Chief Saheed Tugbogbo Fawehinmi, the Seriki Musulumi
of Ondo and Alhaja Muniratu Fawehinmi. He was married in his lifetime
to Mrs. Ganiat Ibukun Fawehinmi and Mrs. Abike Fawehinmi, with many
children and grand children.
Gani had his early education at Ansar-Ud-Deen Primary School,
Iyemaja, Ondo, from 1947-1953 and his secondary school at Victory
College, Ikare, from 1954 to 1958. Whilst in the College, he was
popularly known as ‘Nation’ because of his passionate interest in
national, legal and political affairs of Nigeria.
In January 1959, Gani headed for Lagos and worked as a Clerk in the
High Court, Lagos. On 29th of April, 1961, Gani travelled out of Nigeria
by Sea to the United Kingdom, where he enrolled in the Holborn College
of Law for the LL.B degree of University of London (External) in 1961.
He was forced, by the circumstance of the death of his father in 1963,
to drop out of the College as a full time student and had to be engaged
as Toilet Cleaner in Russell Square Hotel in Southampton Row, London. He
also combined this with the job of Sweeper in the old Gatwick Airport,
managing to complete his training.
Gani came back to Nigeria in September, 1964 and enrolled at the
Nigerian Law School, Lagos. He was called to the Nigerian Bar on 15th of
January, 1965.
He practiced briefly with his elder brother, Hon. Justice Rasheed
Fawehinmi in Ebute-Metta, before establishing his own Chambers in 1965.
In 1974, he moved his Chambers to his house in Surulere. In 1978, he
finally moved the Chambers to its permanent site in Anthony Village.
As of 2002, Gani had over 290,000 collection of law and law-related
books on various subjects, in his Chambers and had a staff strength of
about 201. The notable characteristics of his Chambers include a high
sense of responsibility to professional duties, professional ethics,
dedication to research, hardwork, truth, honesty, obedience to the rule
of law and due process, protection, defence and advancement of
fundamental rights.
Between 1965 and 2002, Gani had handled about 5,700 briefs,
traversing all courts in virtually all the states of the federation. He
was in deep love with the poor and the less privileged, whose cases he
handled free of legal charges and whose causes he fought tirelessly.
Gani changed the course of legal practice in Nigeria, with the
establishment of the Nigerian Weekly Law Reports, NWLR, IN 1985. He has
also published several cases.
Gani used his knowledge and skill of law to fight societal injustice
and oppression, following which he filed and prosecuted so many cases in
court, amongst which is the famous Fawehinmi v Akilu cases, Fawehinmi v
Abacha, Fawehinmi v IGP, Fawehinmi v INEC, etc.
Gani established the National Conscience Party in 1994, principally
to rally nationwide support for the activation of the June 12, 1993
election mandate, for the entrenchment of democracy in Nigeria, to
provide a platform for genuine change in Nigeria and for the
emancipation of the masses from political, economic and socio-cultural
enslavement. The NCP had the unique motto of: Abolition of Poverty. He
declared his intention to contest election as the presidential candidate
of the NCP in April 2002.
His love for the masses and less privileged led him to set up a
scholarship scheme since 1971. Every year, scholarships are awarded to
brilliant children all over Nigeria, to support their education in
various schools.
Gani suffered in the hands of the powers that be, having been
arrested and detained not less than 32 times in various police stations
and prisons across Nigeria. His passport was seized several times, his
houses and chambers searched at random and without notice, his books
were confiscated and several trumped up criminal charges were filed
against him, as a way of silencing him. He was physically assaulted on
several occasions, one of which was on Wednesday, October 20, 1999, at
the Federal High Court, Lagos, when rented political thugs attempted to
kill him, but could only smash the glass of his Pajero Jeep, on account
of the case he instituted in court to compel the Inspector-General of
Police to investigate allegations of certificate forgery and false
declaration, against the former Governor of Lagos State, Senator Bola
Ahmed Tinubu.
Gani won several laurels and awards, in recognition of his struggle
for the masses, amongst which was membership of the Ghandi Foundation in
1971, Senior Advocate of the Masses, 1988, Bruno Kriesky Award for the
defence of human rights in 1993, American Bar Association Award for
human rights in 1996 and the prestigious Bernard Simons Memorial Award
by the International Bar Association in1998. He was voted Man of the
Year by several newspapers and organisations. He was elevated to the
Inner Bar as Senior Advocate of Nigeria in September, 2001.
GANI’S PRINCIPLES:
Now that we know a bit of Gani, the next thing is to know his
principles, as bench mark for determining his likely reaction to events
in Nigeria presently.
When Gani declared his presidential bid in April 2002, he lauched THE 10-CARE Programme, which essential deals with:
1. Employment 2. Food Care
3. Health Care 4. Housing Care
5. Education Care 6. Water Care
7. Electricity Care 8. Transportation Care
9. Telecoms Care 10. Security Care
On the platform of the NCP, Gani promised four fundamental action points, to sanitise the Nigerian society.
1. Corruption 2. Unemployment
3. Cost of Funds 4. Exchange Rate Mechanism
STATE OF THE NATION: To be able to discern what Gani would have done
in any given situation, it is important to examine and x-ray that
situation critically. And this necessarily leads us to the state of the
Nigerian nation.
Without any doubt whatsoever, I believe that Nigerians are now united
in their opinion that the General Muhammadu Buhari regime is the worst
that Nigeria has ever experienced in its national life.
There is palpable hunger, suffering, poverty, inflation and
hopelessness, in the land, across Nigeria. It has never been this bad.
Let us look at a few examples.
In Ilorin, Kwara State, it was reported that a housewife lamented her
situation when she was cooking and went out to fetch some things and
her pot of soup had been stolen before she returned.
In Ilesha, Osun State, it was reported that a man used his daughter
to deceive a shop owner to release a bag of garri to him and abandoned
the child in the process.
In Akwa Ibom State, it was reported that a father of two committed
suicide on account of poverty and economic frustration, leaving a
suicide note, for Gen Buhari as the cause of his death.
In Lagos last week, a middle-aged man jumped into the Lagos Lagoon,
shouting Buhari, Buhari, as the reason for his attempted suicide. The
list is almost endless.
In many states of the federation presently, workers are not paid, for
months, some are being forced to combine working with farming, by their
governors, as a means of short changing them of their legitimate
salaries. As a result of this, children are being withdrawn from
schools, since their parents cannot pay their school fees, marriages are
facing challenges for lack of basic amenities.
The President does not seem to care, truly, given his utterances and
actions. He has expressed a preference for the 1984/85 period of doom,
whereby Nigerians will be forced to queue for essential commodities,
whereby dictatorship and totalitarianism will become the style of
governance. In most states presently, democratic governance in the local
government system is suspended for caretaker committees, who are
nominees and stooges of the governors. Even in Lagos State where the NCP
won a court judgment compelling the conduct of local government
elections, the government has blatantly refused to obey the judgment of
the court, even where there is no order for a stay of execution pending
appeal. In the case of Lagos State, executive lawlessness took a new
dimension when the Governor, not only dared the court by disobeying the
judgment on local government elections but proceeded to appoint new sole
administrators, after the judgment of the court, clearly in
contravention of section 7 of the 1999 Constitution.
It took the President over six months to constitute his cabinet, as
he preferred to be a lone ranger, and this eventually trickled down to
the states. In Osun State, Governor Rauf Aregbesola has been a sole
administrator for the past two years, ruling the state without a single
commissioner, no special advisers, in contravention of section 192 of
the 1999 Constitution, that there must be regular meetings of the State
Executive Council, consisting of the Governor and his Commissioners.
Worst still in Osun, the Osun State House of Assembly has been romancing
with the Governor as a dictator, approving yearly budgets prepared and
submitted by the Governor as a single individual without commissioners.
The Assembly in Osun even approved the creation of LCDAs, in a state
without commissioners!
This dictatorship is replicated in Oyo State and indeed in many other
States. Only last week, it was reported that the Governor of Rivers
State, sacked four of his commissioners, including the State Accountant
General, for alleged indiscipline. They all follow the body language of
dictatorship.
The present administration has great hatred and contempt for the
judiciary, whose orders and judgments are never obeyed. Since March
2014, the Federal High Court in Lagos, declared the collection of toll
fees illegal, but the Lagos State Government has continued to collect
the tolls; in 2015, the same Federal High Court declared the restriction
of movement for the monthly environmental sanitation in Lagos State as
illegal, but the government has continued to force people indoors,
despite the judgment. The same Federal High Court had restrained the
federal government from implementing the callous electricity tariff
increase, but the government has wantonly disobeyed the order of the
court and has continued to force consumers to pay the new tariff.
The judiciary generally, is under some form of siege from the Buhari
administration, as so many judges have been sacked in very controversial
circumstances, including Justice Oloyede, in Osun State, who was booted
out of office for allegedly confronting the Governor of the State.
Judges are being intimidated directly, through the agencies of
government, like the EFCC and the ICPC. It is worse for lawyers and
activists alike, all of whose life are now in great danger. Just last
week, human rights lawyer, Ken Atsuwete, was murdered in cold blood.
Telephone lines of most defence lawyers have been hacked into and bugged
by the agencies of government, denying them of any privacy, as
guaranteed by the Constitution. The intolerance of the Buhari regime
climbed to the roof last month, when a young man, Fortunatus Chinakwe,
was arrested, locked up and eventually arraigned in court, for daring to
give a name to his dog, that resembled the name of the President. He
ended up in prison custody, and his life has been in danger, ever since.
CORRUPTION: Yes, Gen Buhari claims to be fighting corruption, as his
main programme of action. Yes again, Gani hated corruption with all his
veins. So he promised to set up a Ministry of Anti-Corruption, MAC,
which will compile the names of all past leaders, their assets and
publish them publicly. So, without any doubt, Gani would have supported
the anti-corruption war of the Major-General Muhammadu Buhari (Retd.)
administration, in all its ramifications. He held on tightly, to section
15 (5) of the 1999 Constitution which enjoins the State to “abolish all
corrupt practices and abuse of powers”.
However, Gani being a stickler for the rule of law and due process
would have disagreed with the operational methodology of the
anti-corruption campaign, which is presently lopsided and selective. He
would have put pressure on Gen Buhari first to probe his campaign funds
and all members of his own political party who have held power in the
past. By now, Gani would have filed several cases in court to compel all
public officers to declare their assets publicly, in line with the
campaign promises of the President.
And we know that the so-called fight against corruption by the
General Buhari regime, is part and parcel of the hidden agenda, to
perpetuate himself in power, beyond 2019, even in the face of his
dwindling popularity. Opponents of government, members of the opposition
party, and even business rivals of those in government, indigenes of
ethnic groups different from the ones preferred by those who are in
power, are the ones that end up in court or in the custody of the
agencies of government. The anti-corruption war is simply a game of
giving a dog a bad name to hang it, solely for the purpose of
frustrating the electoral fortunes of opposition candidates, who may
likely stand against those candidates of the ruling party.
The dictatorship is then extended to the Legislature, where the
leaders of parliament, who emerged contrary to the preferred candidates
of the President and his party, have been the subject of criminal
trials, all in an attempt to remove them from office. The latest one is
that of the Speaker of the House of Representatives, whom we are told
will now be arraigned in court, in consequence of the incompetence of
the President, who signed the Appropriation Bill into law, after months
of his acclaimed scrutiny and then turn around to claim that it was
padded. So, with the judiciary and the legislature under lock and key,
with watchers breathing down on them daily, the atmosphere of
dictatorship has finally ripened.
Let us now examine other possible ways that Gani would have reacted
to the state of our nation presently, were he to be alive today.
ECONOMY: Gani believed in a liberal transparent exchange rate policy
that is consistent. He believed that the exchange rate is determined by a
combination of corruption in the banks and in the corridors of power.
He would have kicked against the present system whereby only a few
people determine the destiny of the economy of Nigeria.
FUEL PRICE INCREASE: Without any doubt, Gani would have opposed and
mobilized Nigerians to resist the recent increase in fuel prices. He did
so on all previous occasions.
The two things that seem to determine the economy of Nigeria are the
price of petroleum products and the exchange rate of our currency. So
Gani always wanted a system that would guaranty a friendly package for
all the masses of our people. These two items determine the rate of
inflation, and now that they are both out of reach of the ordinary
people, Nigerians have been thrown into unprecedented suffering, whilst
our leaders go about in luxury and opulence, in their jets and convoys.
Whether we like it or not, with this sliding exchange rate, the price of
petroleum products will be increased soon.
THE POLITY: The present administration has wrecked the political
landscape of Nigeria. The electoral umpire is now INCONCLUSIVE National
Electoral Commission (INEC), as most elections are inconclusive, due
mainly to the overbearing influence of the ruling party on the agency.
It has been stated by Dr. Junaid that most of the senior officers of
INEC are relatives and adopted children of the President, over whom he
has tremendous influence. Most of the key members of the staff working
in the Presidency are said to be related to the President in one way or
the other. The level of nepotism in appointments is so great, against
section 14 of the 1999 Constitution on federal character.
Unofficially, we are in a one party state presently, with only APC as
the ruling party and at the same time the opposition. The party that
should play the role of the opposition, PDP, has been bugged with
sponsored internal crisis and most of its prominent officers have been
harassed into silence by the government, the hidden agenda being to give
a soft landing to all the candidates of the APC in all coming
elections.
This can only explain the reason why the government has been ruling
as if the people do not matter. Except it has perfected the process of
its transition to power, to perpetuate itself, no reasonable government
that seeks to win a free and fair election, can proceed to be
implementing the anti-people policies of this government.
TRANSPORTATION: The manifesto of the APC talks about constructing at
least 3,500 kilometres of national highways every year, but no single
road has been commissioned so far. Our people die daily in avoidable
road crashes.
The Kaduna-Abuja rail that was recently commissioned was a project started by the previous administration.
Air transportation has more or less collapsed, presently, with local
airlines such as AERO, 1st Nation, etc. , packing up. Flights are
cancelled abruptly or delayed unduly, due to the absence of aviation
fue, and the exchange rate has forced many foreign airlines to close
shop and relocate to other countries. The same goes for admiralty as
most shipping companies have since wound up their businesses.
EDUCATION: This is topmost priority for Gani as he devoted his life
and resources to promote education. The President had promised to feed
school children during his campaign but after the election, he has
denied the helpless pupils.
Admission into unity schools has been highly politicised, making the
expensive private schools the best option for education at that level.
University admission has become elusive, with inconsistent policies of
the government. Government interference in the autonomy of the
universities has stagnated the progress of these institutions, whose
governing councils are dissolved at will, contrary to law. The
universities are not funded to achieve research and academic excellence,
resulting mostly in the exodus of students to neighbouring countries
such as Ghana, Kenya, South Africa.
And when students eventually graduate in the face of these hiccups,
they are confronted with unemployment, inflation and violence.
GOVERNMENT OF NATIONAL UNITY: Without any doubt, Gani would have
called for a broad-based government of national unity, wherein all
talented and experienced Nigerians would be encouraged to contribute to
our national development, given that the APC-led government has more or
less loss its sense of direction, thereby running the economy aground.
Gani would have mobilized the human rights community and civil
society and labour to embark upon peaceful protests, all over the land,
to reject the poverty and suffering that this government has imposed
upon the people of Nigeria.
We can no longer leave our national destinies in the hands of the
politicians alone; we must all come together and rescue our land from
predators, promise breakers and clueless leaders.
RESTRUCTURING: Upon the establishment of the Government of National
Unity, Gani would have advocated for a proper restructuring of Nigeria,
into a proper federation, with the devolution of power to the regions
and the local governments. With Gani, the courts would have been agog
with a myriad of cases on the countless acts of impunity that we have
been forced to put up with in this country.
Adieu, Gani, for Nigeria can never have another gadfly, another stormy petrel, another enigma, like you.
Gani’s personal motto, which he published boldly in his chambers, was:
“Stand up for what is right, even if you stand alone.”
Adieu Gani, and all our past heroes.
Ebun-Olu Adegboruwa, Esq.
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