MUST READ---Hours After Sani Abacha’s Son Wrote Wole Soyinka An Open Letter Ayo Sogunro Replies Him

This afternoon Sani Abacha's son wrote an open letter to the prof himself, Wole Soyinke, he kept mute, but someone else replied it on his behave, should in case you missed out, this is the open letter Abacha's son wrote-- CLICK HERE
Now lets go there!!!
Dear Sadiq Abacha,
I do not know you personally, but I admire your filial
bravery—however misguided— in defending your father, the late General Sani
Abacha. This in itself is not a problem; it is an obligation—in this cultural
construct of ours—for children to rise to the defence of their parents, no matter
what infamy or perfidy the
said parent might have dabbled in. Continue after the cut....
The problem I have with your letter, however, arises from
two issues: (i) your disparaging of Wole Soyinka, who—despite your referral to
an anecdotal opinion that calls him as “a common writer”—is a great father
figure, and a source of inspiration, to a fair number of us young Nigerians;
and (ii) your attempt to revise Nigerian history and substitute our national
experience with your personal opinions.
Therefore, it is necessary that we who are either Wole
Soyinka’s “socio-political” children, or who are ordinary Nigerians who
experienced life under your father’s reign speak out urgently against your
amnesiac article, lest some future historian stumble across the misguided
missive, and confuse the self-aggrandized opinions of your family for the
perceptions of Nigerians in general.
Your letter started with logical principles, which is a
splendid common ground for us. So let us go with the facts: General Sani Abacha
was a dictator. He came into power and wielded it for 8 years in a manner
hitherto unprecedented in Nigerian history. Facts: uncomfortable for your
family, but true all the same.
Now, for my personal interpretations: between 1993 and 1998
inclusive, when your dada was in power, I was a boy of 9 to 14 years and quite
capable of making observations about my political and cultural environment.
Those years have been the worst years of my material life as a Nigerian
citizen. Here are a few recollections: I recollect waking up several mornings
to scrape sawdust from carpentry mills, lugging the bags a long distance home,
just to fuel our “Abacha stoves” because kerosene was not affordable—under your
father. I recollect cowering under the cover of darkness, with family and
neighbours, listening to radio stations—banned by your father. I recollect my
government teacher apologetically and fearfully explaining constitutional
government to us—because free speech was a crime under your father’s
government. Most of all, I remember how the news of your father’s death drove
me—and my colleagues at school—to a wild excitement, and we burst into the
street in delirious celebration. Nobody prompted us, but even as 13 and 14 year
olds, we understood the link between the death of Abacha and the hope of
freedom for the ordinary man.
These are all sorry tales, of course. Such interpretations
would not have occured to the wealthy and the privileged under your father’s
government, but they were a part of the everyday life of a common teenager
under that government. The economics were bad, but the politics were worse. And
I am not referring to Alfred Rewane, Kudirat Abiola and the scores killed by
the order of your father. Political killings are almost a part of every
political system, and most of those were just newspaper stories to us. In fact,
I didn’t get to read most of the atrocities until long after your father died.
So, these stories did not inform the dread I personally felt under your
father’s regime. And this was true for my entire family and our neighbours.
Instead, the worry over our own existence was a more
pressing issue. Your father, Sani Abacha was in Aso Rock, but his brutality was
felt right in our sitting room. We were not into politics and we didn’t vocally
oppose Abacha, yet we just knew we were not safe from him. You see, unlike any
dictatorship before or after it—your father’s government personally and
directly threatened the life and freedoms of the average Nigerian. Your father
threatened me. And if your father had not died, I am confident that I would not
be alive or free today.
Think of that for a while.
Now, let’s come to Wole Soyinka. First: you can never
eradicate the infamy of your father’s legacy by trying to point out the
failings of another Nigerian. Remember what you said: A is A. Abacha is Abacha. And no length of finger
pointing will wash away the odious feeling the name of Abacha strikes up in the
mind of the average Nigerian. Second: Don’t—as they musician said—get it
twisted: Wole Soyinka did not antagonize your father just because he was a
military man—Wole Soyinka was against your father’s inhumanity. Your father was
intolerant of criticism beyond belief. Your father made military men look bad.
Your father’s behaviour was so bad it went back in time and soiled the
reputation of every military man before him. Your father, finally, made
Nigerians swear never—ever—to tolerate the military again. Soyinka may have
worked with the military before—but your father ensured that he will never work
with the military again. Do you see? Three: Evil comes in many forms: there is
no qualification by degree. There is no “good” evil thing. Sani Abacha, Boko
Haram, Hitler, slavery—they all fit into the same category of misfortunes.
Soyinka is right: Abacha was just as bad as Boko Haram is—deal with it. Four:
Soyinka has been kind enough to limit his criticism to the unenviable awards this
inept government has given your father. But, you see, in a saner political
system, we wouldn’t just ignore your father, we would have gone one step
further and expunged the Abacha name from all public records. Wiped without a
trace. Abacha would forever be a cautionary tale against the excesses of
political power. In a saner political system.
Abacha was brutal—and Soyinka was one of those individuals
who gave us inspiration in those dark days. He was part of the team that
founded the underground radio station to counter your father’s activities. Let
me rephrase in pop culture language: Wole Soyinka was the James Bond to your
father’s KGB. Most of the influential people either kept quiet or sang the
praises of your father to stave his wrath. But a few like Soyinka spoke, wrote
and even went militant against Abacha. But at the end, even Soyinka who never
ran from a fight had to run from your father. That was how terrible things
were. And now you want Soyinka to join the praise singers of your father? I’m not
certain Soyinka has grown old enough to forget how he escaped your
father,slipping across the border in disguise. You will have to wait awhile to
get that praise from him.
Now, back to you. You have a deluded sense of your father’s
role in the progress of Nigeria’s history. Nigeria has managed to be where it
is today, not because of leaders like your father—but in spite of leaders like
your father. This is a testament to the Nigerian spirit of resilience, and our
unwavering optimism in a better future. You owe every Nigerian an apology for
daring to attribute this to the leadership of Abacha. Those “achievements” you
believe were accomplished under your father were simply all the things he had
to do to keep milking the economy, and thereby perpetuate himself in power—they
benefited Nigeria only if, by Nigeria, you meant your family and your cronies.
Your tone is that of a white master who justifies his
oppression because he clothed and fed his black slaves. That is what your
father did. The fact that we choose not to regurgitate, and reflect on that
socially traumatic period doesn’t mean we accept it as your entitlement. We
have not forgotten, and we will never forget. Sani Abacha raped Nigeria. Your
father raped us. Your father raped us and then pressed some change into our
hands. And he then tried to marry us forcefully, too. You may think all this is
well and good—but then you’ve never been raped before.
But we now live under a democracy—the kind your father
denied us—and so you are free to talk. And so you are free to insult the people
who ensured that your father had sleepless nights. Had the revolution your
father rightly deserved happened, you—and the rest of your family—would have
been lined against a wall, before you could pen one article, and shot.
And we would probably have cheered.
But we live under a democracy now—a system of government
where even the scions of former oppressors can talk, and write freely, about
the benefits of dictatorship. That’s a democracy. A concept your father
wouldn’t have understood.
Regards,
Ayo Sogunro



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