Sadiq Abacha responds to Wole Soyinka: Attacking my father is an act of cowardice

by Sadiq Abacha

Wole-Soyinka2

 I have grown and watched you criticize regime after regime and at that young and naive age I was thinking why wouldn’t this man just contest to be president so that Nigeria can be saved, I would have defiantly voted for Mr Soyinka if it would have brought an end to Nigeria’s woes. To my utter surprise, I heard about your FRSC leadership and how funds were misused and a great deal of it unaccounted for.

If you want to think, speak and act logically then you should know all three.

1. The law of identity
2. The law of excluded middle
3. The law of non contradiction.

Now let’s look at each one of these and see what they mean in practice.

1. The law of identity
The law of identity means that things are what they are, which at first doesn’t seem very illuminating, but wait; it implies also the following, that things are what they are, whether you like them or not, it implies that things are what they are whether you know them or not, it implies that things are what they are whether you agree with them or not. However, if you don’t like the facts as they are you are going to have to put up with them, because facts are what they are, if it’s raining on your golf day, get used to it! Because the facts are what they are and are often not what you want them to be, like if the traffic lights turn red when you approach, stop complaining! The law of identity means that you must adapt yourself to the facts and start your work from there, it implies that the facts will not bend to meet your expectations. You must first adapt yourself to what life is and then get to work changing and improving things in your life, be brave to meet reality as it really is and not how you would wish it to be.

2. The law of excluded middle
The law of excluded middle means that you should give a straight yes or no answer always and there is no middle ground. The law means that there is no kinda yes and kinda no, there is no ‘sort of’ being married because you are either married or you are not, you are either a thief or you are not, you are either on time or not, you are either living in Nigeria or you are not. The law is the idea that you should not try to keep all of your options open by staying in the middle or hedging, when it suits you, like when you accepted an appointment during IBB’s regime as chairman of FRSC. I bet that was a military regime you partook in. Please pick one wife and state your claim 100% to her, pick one idea and go for it 100%! Decide and commit Sir! There you might find great power and self satisfaction in the doctrine of decide and commit. No half way measures, no middle ground, exclude the middle! Here! The law of excluded middle Sir.

3. The law of non contradiction
The law of non contradiction says don’t contradict yourself simple. If you say you will be there then be there. If you say you will do it then do it. Don’t say or fight for one thing and then do the opposite. Don’t say one thing and then later deny that you said it. Don’t say one thing and then later contradict it. Be consistent in your thoughts and actions. Observing someone who was a socialist in the morning but then became a capitalist in the evening is a textbook on contradiction, these are two polar opposites, such a person is clearly inconsistent and is therefore considered a flip flop, confused, easily led or misled or at best a lunatic who has no clear understanding of the basis of either doctrine.

Apply these three logics to others with consistency and then you can ask for the same or expect the same from others, and then you can also ask for others to deal with facts not fantasy, which is the law of identity. Ask others to make up their mind to decide and commit. The law of excluded middle.Then ask others to follow through on the things that they say they would do. The law of non contradiction.

Sir, I believe brilliance is not perfection. I have grown and watched you criticize regime after regime and at that young and naive age I was thinking why wouldn’t this man just contest to be president so that Nigeria can be saved, I would have defiantly voted for Mr Soyinka if it would have brought an end to Nigeria’s woes. To my utter surprise, I heard about your FRSC leadership and how funds were misused and a great deal of it unaccounted for. “Oh my God! In the end he turned out to be just the same as everybody else” were my next thoughts. My hopes for you, all ended up in great disappointment.

Here I find myself defending my father 15 years after his death because some of you have no one else to pounce on, or rather, you have chosen a dead person to keep pouncing on over and over again when you have more than an array of contestants.  A coward’s act I believe.  “A common writer” is what I have heard you being referred to lately, and I believe a mature mind would now agree to such referrals. With all due respect, there is a great challenge that faces the country, we have to put our heads together, rather than clashing, our collective ships must sail in the same direction, let us leave the ghosts of past contention and face the future bravely as one, criticizing the past does not help the present or define a path to the future.

You say, with the weight of your sense of history and the authority you possess on national issues that ” a vicious usurper under whose authority the lives of an elected president and his wife were snuffed out” referring to my late father, you must be growing old, or you would rightly recall that that president elect you refer to did not die while my father was alive. Did you slyly change your facts to fit a history that would better serve your narrative, or are you just plain forgetful? Either way, it shows you are losing your grasp of reality.

Comparing my father’s leadership to Boko Haram’s current reign of terror,  is a rather cheap shot, you are in no position to examine, judge and sentence an entire regime based on the information you think you have, you are privy to almost none of the true facts, what is at your disposal is at best, hearsay, or were you ever minister of defence? Did you ever sit in during security meetings, evaluate the facts and subtleties of national security? You remind me of Obama criticizing the Republicans before he became a sitting president himself, vouching to put an end to all American occupation, this all came to an abrupt end once he had access to the briefs and security issues, economic and political, facing his nation. Surely he did what he could, and history will judge him. To lead is not to be a rock star, and to be a Nobel Laureate is not to be an antagonist of this country’s legacy. We are Africa’s leader, whether we like it or not, we cannot trivialize the centenary celebration, it happens only once, let us come together, if only for this one occasion and agree to disagree.

Open rebellion against the current government at this time, on the manner of the centenary celebrations, for whatever reason, is tactless, it is not about you, it is about our nation, our beloved country. There is a time and place for everything. My late father was a Nigerian, lived in Nigeria and died protecting our interests to the best of his ability, critiquing placing him on the honor roll, along with many deserving dignitaries is your right, you have the right to your own opinions, but you do not have the right to your own facts. Facts stand alone, regardless of who espouses them, let posterity judge, but you are clearly politicizing a dead issue, how could you not be? Having an issue with the naming of a hospital after the late General and leader? Really? Now?

It almost seems as if you want to turn back the hands of time, what else would you like to undo besides the naming of the hospital, would you like to unmake Bayelsa state, Zamfara state or the others?  What about the advances we made in commerce, reducing the inflation rate, what about security and welfare, how many projects, hospitals and schools were created? inflation went from 54% to 8.5%! my father oversaw an increase in our foreign currency reserves from 494 million dollars in 1993 to 9.6 billion dollars by the middle of 1997, that is unprecedented , 15 years after the PTF the benefits are still being reaped today in Nigeria, What of peace keeping and nation building, not just in West Africa but the entire continent, restoring democracy in Liberia and Sierra Leone, all these under my father’s leadership, are all these not laudable? Or would you like to undo them all. All this on 8$ per barrel of oil! You have to be kidding me.

You are a learned man, you would have to undo all your learning to knowingly wish to undo all these achievements! I will be the first to proclaim that my fathers leadership was not pitch perfect or spot free, that does not exist, maybe in utopia but not here on this earth, so let us keep our discourse set in the sphere of reality please, he deserves the award, and he did not campaign for it, let it go, Sir…and allow Nigeria to at least bask in our survival and endurance in our growing prosperity and development in these trying times. I have been accused of being an optimist, hence, I am optimistic that you will come around and accept that we can all come together and face the future together, forgive each other our wrongs while celebrating our rights, I am still an admirer of your works after all, however, I cannot and will not attempt to answer your every charge, this is not the time or place, this is a time for solidarity, if only you were wise enough to grasp this.

I applaud the patience of President Goodluck Jonathan and his composure and restraint in not having a knee jerk reaction at such a pivotal moment in our nations history, but you would mar the occasion, Sir, in the future, please pick your battles, and do better to safeguard your relevance,  Enough Sir!

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Op-ed pieces and contributions are the opinions of the writers only and do not represent the opinions of Y!/YNaija.

Comments (26)

  1. Thank you Sadiq! Fantastic response. Soyinka should hide his head in shame! Mthceeeeeeeeeeewww! Nobel laureate my foot!

  2. Hope you are referring this piece to drowning Prof…

  3. Shame we are so liberal someone can come out to sing Abacha’s praise. We definitely still have a long way to go in dis country. No one is perfect doesn’t mean a murderer’s daughter should be bold enough to come forward without timidity and feel she has the words…… smh

  4. This article is an embarrassment. The late Gen. Abacha’s children should be happy that they live in a country that celebrates kleptomaniacs, idolises corrupt people and exults anybody who can throw their ill – gotten wealth around. In most countries, they would have been swinging from a rope, dealt with by firing squad or rotting in a jail cell.

    What were Gen. Abacha’s assets before he got to power? Where did all the wealth attributed to him and his family members come from? What is the source of all the funds seized by various international governments? Instead of hiding in the shadows in shame, this person tries to act intelligent by spouting some half – baked mumbo jumbo about 3 principles that nobody sensible gives a damn about. Your father does not deserve any honours from Nigeria at this time or any other time. Your father deserves an unmarked grave just like the one Sao – Wi want got (in case you think your father’s plethora of sins have been forgotten). You have no honour and no integrity for the possession of an ounce of moral fibre would have been enough for you to admit that your father does not deserve to be honoured for being one of the worst mishaps to ever befall Nigeria. We respect the elderly and the dead to a fault and yet we celebrated when your father died because it took his death to give us hope for a better future. I add my voice to that of Wolf Soyinka’s. Your father deserves no award and this article pathetically attempting to whitewash his memory is an insult to decency, our intelligence and common sense.

  5. This is quite an interesting read… Of a truth, no one has a monopoly of the facts… the facts stand alone!!!

  6. Bullshit. What is the merit criteria for getting the centenary award? Whatever it is, I doubt that Abacha qualifies based on the established fact that he looted the nation’s funds incessantly. In fact, this single point alone should disqualify him as a recipient of the award. There is no middle ground – as clearly suggested by the law excluded middle – a thief is a thief. Honoring such a person certainly sends the wrong message fundamentally.

  7. But the young man is saying that Soyinka had his opportunity to prove his mettle in leadership (in money matters) at FRSC and he didn’t fare better. Monies were missing. And unaccounted for.

    Is that not one of Abacha’s many sins? The man is asking the question our journalists forget to ask 20 years after.

  8. But….how time blurs reason. Thankfully, this is why there are records. For where memory is subjective and transient, records (ought to be) cast in stone.

    Historical
    precedent exists for Sadiq’s tunnel vision. It is said that Hitler’s
    children found him a wonderful & caring father. Not so the 6 million
    Jews who were gruesomely murdered in the Holocaust. Schizoid men are
    nothing new, who nurture their families
    with one hand while crushing their dissenters with the other, or who
    oppress their families while benevolently nurturing strangers. It
    suffices to say the Abacha that Sadiq knew is not the one Soyinka and
    millions of others experienced. It also speaks volumes about the
    insulation of the rulers from the ruled. Inside Aso Rock, the view is so
    much different than it is outside. On the streets of Kano today, Abacha
    is venerated as a hero, much the same as Gaddhafi in Libya and Bin
    Laden in Afghanistan. I have been in Kano and seen stickers of Abacha on
    public buses, like some kind of Mother Teresa. That kind of homage in
    Lagos would be considered a sign of madness.

    Nigerians are also
    sectional people. All that matters is that Abacha is a Northern Muslim
    hero. Southern Christians’ views are irrelevant. When Marcos the
    Filipino leader was toppled by the masses, they marveled at the opulence
    inside his palace. That was sadiq’s life too, and he imagines his
    father did the same for the rest of Nigeria. He has no moral compass,
    and wonders why ‘common writers’ like Soyinka are not eternally grateful
    to his father.

    Back to the present, nothing has changed. Those who
    currently occupy Aso Rock have a different perception of daily life than
    you or I. They are shocked we are not all rushing to the Villa to pay
    homage and worship them for giving us excess electricity, excess fuel
    and saving our 49.5 billion dollars through the world class NNPC. That
    is why the Dame and her husband are more comfortable around sycophants
    than around people who tell them the truth.
    Until
    this institution of leadership insulation and political sycophancy is
    removed permanently, there will be many more Sadiqs who will write
    scathing rebukes to ‘common writers’ like Soyinka. Meanwhile, a few have written on behalf of the
    Nobel laureate. Something tells me WS will fire back when the drum roll
    quietens, and when he writes, as only he can, all the sadiqs in this
    world will look for holes in the ground to bury themselves for their
    fleeting impudence and futile temerity.

  9. One jet is 9 billion naira. Where these jets not available in the abacha regime? Where there not similar jets then of even 2 billion naira.

    Abacha has done his part but our current situation in 2014 is far mor disgraceful. We/Soyinka is referring to the past because the present honoured the past.

    What is wrong with fighting our present needs? He sees a dead man’s name and he felt it’s the time to be in the news again.

    We/Soyinka have shamed ourselves over the yrs with this cowardly attitude to our present needs.

    We are in 2014 and we critise 1992.

    If I were in his position I will only reject saying the present situation in the country is far worse than we’ve ever been.Corruption has increased. We have not cleared ourselves off corruption hence I do not see alive in this current struggle deserves receiving an award.

  10. I agree with Abacha’s son. They are attacking a dead man. That’s the past. Was IBB’s name not on the list?

    Soyinka is a big coward!!

    Who doesn’t see this is blind. We need to move forward not backwards.

    Were our politicians flying in private jets in the time of Abacha?
    It’s a shame we/soyinka cannot talk of the present.

  11. I really wonder how people reason… U should hide ur head in shame. (Sadiq) so much for a terrible legacy.

  12. The truth is constant, and forever holds a place in the anals of history. I have said this elsewhere and I will aver same here… Anyone who belittles or ridicules a national award or a day celebrating a nations achievement insults and dishonours that country! Any individual who believes his personal opinions supercede that of the president of his country is truly delusional. Such sanctimonious hypocritical hogwosh should not be coming from the mouth of a respected elder and Nobel laurete…. So sad!

  13. ..this is brave response from a Brave Sadiq,to a…………… Prof.

  14. Even Book Haram can give 10 reasons why their resurgence is good for “Nigeria’s economy, inflation and foreign reserves” like Mr Abacha pointed out about his father’s dismal leadership. If God was a man, Gen. abacha should have died with his entire household. PS much did he pay the cunt that came up with the above piece?

    1. Femi, the last sentence showed why some consider the Yoruba’s as egomaniac…

    2. Femi you should be ashamed of yourself. So obescene and base in your thinking. And you imagine as your that Sadiq ‘paid’ for the above? How acutely ignorant and disgraceful. if you have done such in the past, please don’t imagine that is what every one else does

  15. Great write up Sadiq. I respect Soyinka a lot but Sadiq now makes me thinks otherwise

  16. Every body is entitle to his or her opinion.

  17. Sadiq Abacha's letter is a typical example of how a terrible legacy continues to affect ones children long after one is gone.

  18. Good to hear the other side of the story. Leadership has never been easy for anyone really. A nation deserves different type of leaders at any point in time. If only we are God, to see and know all things, then we can be a perfect Judge in our own right. Here is my conclusion to all this…….God bless people who contributed genuinely to the greatness of this Nation, I also plead with him to have mercy on those who have taken this country 100 years backward…..my case I rest!

  19. Well considered argument. The three laws are worthy of note. Our scholars should learn to correct our situation instead of condemning it.

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