Adedibu, Abacha, and the Adisa syndrome Print E-mail
Written by Okey Ndibe   
Monday, 16 June 2008

Adedibu, Abacha, and the Adisa syndrome 
By Okey Ndibe 

Let me start by describing what I mean by the Adisa syndrome. 

The syndrome is named for the late General Abdulkarim Adisa, a former military governor of Oyo, former Minister of Works and Housing, and former conspirator in a coup plot who died in a London hospital in February, 2005, six days after an accident in Nigeria. Adisa was, among other things, a colorful man, combining his rudimentary skill in the English language with a gift for illogic. He was given to pomposity, often describing himself and his ilk in superlatives.  

Adisa was one of the dim “stars” of the Sani Abacha regime, a close confidante of the dark-goggled general who dreamed of ruling Nigeria maximally. But things began to fall apart when Adisa allowed himself to be roped into a plot to depose Abacha, his erstwhile benefactor.  

One by one, Abacha—who apparently had a hand in designing the bizarre plot—summoned its ringleaders to personally confront them. Abacha arranged to videotape the sessions with his would-be traitors, especially his then second-in-command, Oladipo Diya, and Adisa.  

Adisa’s “performance” could have won him five stars in any acting contest. He collapsed in tears, a portrait of self-debased penitence. He blamed the devil for tempting him with illicit dreams. He wheedled and cajoled and implored Abacha’s forgiveness. He did not try to maintain a general’s poise or to project a sense of stoic dignity. A man previously known for loquaciousness and a hectoring manner, Adisa became, before our very eyes, an effeminate wimp. 

Thanks to the hands of fate, Adisa survived the trap. His reputation was in tatters, but he outlived Abacha who died rather suddenly, and in a manner that accorded with his famed appetite for sex. Part of the Abacha legend is that he died in the company of three young women, one or two of them of Indian ancestry, and perhaps prostitutes.  

Several years before his own death, Adisa gave an interview to a Nigerian weekly magazine. The question of his weeping before Abacha came up. Adisa said he had no apologies to offer; that he had thousands of his “people” who depended on him to feed them, and who would feed them if he weren’t around to do it. The interviewers then reminded him that his unmanly reaction had tarnished his image as a military officer. Again, Adisa was unrepentant.  

Reaching for an intriguing metaphor, he told the interviewers that the white man who invented the pencil also invented the eraser. His point: that whatever was written about a person’s wretched reputation could be amended—revised—in time.    

Such quaint reasoning appears to shape the conduct of public officials in Nigeria. Many of them believe that, whatever their measure of reprehensible behavior, their wealth would always buy the erasure or “revision” of their perfidious actions.  

To take Adisa’s example: as Minister of Works, he did little to rehabilitate roads in the country. He was content to amass great wealth at the expense of Nigerians who daily plied—and died on—the roads Adisa neglected. He felt it was enough to throw crumbs from his lavish table down to the emaciated hordes that daily thronged his gate, begging bowls in hand. He relished the idea of playing “big man,” a provider for the masses whose commonwealth he stole to begin with.  

Adisa’s shortsightedness became his ultimate undoing. As if the roads he neglected as minister wished to make a macabre point, he was seriously injured in a road accident. Even though he was quickly flown to England for treatment—a trip paid for from public funds—he died several days later. Prior to his death, Adisa had crisscrossed Nigeria to forewarn us that he and other “prominent stakeholders” had decided to hand Nigeria to Ibrahim Babangida in 2007, and there was nothing we could do about it.  

In the end, despite his haughtiness, Adisa could no more realize his Babangida project than he succeeded in his pet dream to rewrite—or erase—history. The verdict of history—that Adisa was a failed public figure, a net contributor to his nation’s misery index, a man short on vision but long on greed and self-aggrandizement—remains entrenched.  

At a time like this, Nigerians have a lot to learn from the false postulates of the Adisa syndrome. In the wake of the death of Mr. Lamidi Adedibu, the scourge of Oyo, and the tenth anniversary of Sani Abacha’s passing, a lot of “powerful” people seem desperate to use their erasers to wipe clean our memories. With as much insistence and resolve, “ordinary” Nigerians are resisting the effort to falsify well-known data in order to burnish the image of men who were knaves or worse. 

Adedibu represented the worst in Nigerian politics. He exemplified the politics of thuggery, extortion and blackmail. Adedibu’s notion of “moving a state forward” was to have the state government wire hundreds of millions of public funds into his private pocket. With that illicit haul, he then set himself up, Adisa-style, as a grand patrician whose office it was to give paltry handouts to the wretched of the earth who haunted his Molete residence. Never mind that the pittance he doled out merely degraded the beneficiaries. It never occurred to him—for he was a rustic of the worst order—that the largesse belonged, in the first place, to the same people he presumed to be helping.  

In a decent society, Mr. Adedibu would long have languished in jail. Instead, he was enthroned as the “strongman” of Ibadan, his Olympian fantasies fed by the mischievous indulgence of people like Ahmadu Ali who approvingly tagged him “garrison commander,” and former President Olusegun Obasanjo who proclaimed a thug “a leader.” Yet, when news spread that Adedibu had died, the verdict of history appeared in the streets of Ibadan (and elsewhere in Oyo) in the form of spontaneous jubilation. It must be the worst possible damnation when a man’s death elicits a paroxysm of celebration.  

In that regard, Adedibu joined a company of two; in my recollection, only Abacha’s death provoked a superior outbreak of jollification. At his death, Abacha was on the cusp of emasculating the will of the Nigerian people. His vile goal of transforming from a military dictator into an indispensable “democratic” leader was on auto-cruise.  

He was a ruler straight out of hell. His volcanic ire consumed Ken Saro-Wiwa, Kudirat Abiola, and Pa Alfred Rewane, and also sent Wole Soyinka and many pro-democracy activists into exile. He and his small circle of minions plundered the nation’s treasury, including direct raids on the Central Bank where caches of cash were lifted. He commissioned a grand document styled Vision 2010, a purported blueprint for the nation’s development, but his body language and action oozed visionlessness. As the journalist Karl Maier has stated, in his excellent book, This House Has Fallen, Nigerians regarded his death as “a coup from heaven.” As news of his death filtered to the streets, there was at first a momentary air of disbelief, soon followed by a spontaneous fiesta of dancing and beer-guzzling merrymaking. Whatever Abacha and his small band of flatterers thought, the implacable judgment of history was writ large on the streets. 

Ten years later, Abacha’s widow, and the trio of Babangida, Muhammadu Buhari and Abdulsalami Abubakar, all former military dictators, have set up a choir whose sole purpose is to sing the rest of us to amnesia. Mariam Abacha, affecting a “generosity” that her late husband never showed to his foes, said she had forgiven Obasanjo and other traducers of Sani Abacha. 

Perhaps Obasanjo needs her forgiveness, since he proceeded to behave in office with a greed, hypocrisy and craving for self-perpetuation that might have been adapted from Abacha’s manual of style. But Obasanjo’s tragic statecraft did not mitigate Abacha’s rapaciousness and treachery.  

The revisionist agenda continued with the bizarre claims by Babangida, Abubakar and Buhari that Abacha was no thief. Buhari said: “All the allegations leveled against the personality of the late Gen. Sani Abacha will remain allegations. It is 10 years now, things should be over by now.” From Babangida: “It is not true that he looted public treasury, I knew who Abacha was because I was close to him.” And this entry from Abubakar: “It is quite unfortunate and unfair to accuse the family of the late Sani Abacha of looting public funds.” 

As Americans would say, go tell that to the marines! It is a matter of public record, attested to by the Swiss government, the Nigerian government, the World Bank, and the American government that the Abacha family returned close to one billion dollars of stolen funds to the Nigerian coffers. Why then would any sane person deny that Abacha stole?  

Perhaps the answer is that, like Mobutu Sese Seko, Nigerian rulers believe themselves entitled to take freely from the public treasury. After all, Babangida and Abubakar—as well as Obasanjo and former governors—are reputed to be stupendously wealthy beyond their legitimate means of income. The three musketeers of Babangida, Abubakar and Buhari must have judged Abacha by their own standards and found him scrupulous. The Adisa syndrome is at play. But thank God, history is not easily deceived.




RobotRobot is offline 
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 # 1

The syndrome is named for the late General Abdulkarim Adisa, who died in a London hospital in Feb...Read the full article.

Posted by Robot| 16.06.2008 14:51

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Omowa2Omowa2 is offline 
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 # 2

Dear sir,
I do not pretend to hold brief for General Abdulsalami Abubakar but did he not say that the Abacha family did not steal as opposed to General Abacha did not steal? Maybe there is no difference....
In the case of IBB and Buhari, I think they need to be joined together to fight Obasanjo and they need to sing from the same page. Buhari has every right to 'hate' Nigerians for not voting for him. This is a man who we all think is Mr. Clean and we have not thought it fit to 'reward' him with our rulership. If I were him I will throw mud in the face of Nigerians any time I have the opportunity. I keep telling anyone who cares to listen that something grand is about to happen. IBB+Buhari= 'See real trouble'. You see Buhari has a right to be bitter, he tried to show Nigerians that you can live a simple life and not be a theif but they rejected him and his running mate in the last (s)election is running around the presidency. If you were Buhari what will you do? Sit and fold your arms? Honesty does not pay anyone in Nigeria. You cannot be a clean person and win an election. Recall Awo, recall Gani, recall Pat Obama- Utomi, the long English speaking Nigerian White Boy.
As for me oooo, I have learned lessons from Nigerian leaders, dishonesty is all that pays, play it but just do not be caught by Ribadu of those days. If you ask me I will say Adisa and the Akisa sindrum...opps syndrome is a disease that starts from the fingers and ends up in your mouth. If you notice any politician running fever in the mouth please report to the nearest Dr. ON


Akisa is rag in Yoruba

omowa2

Posted by Omowa2| 16.06.2008 15:38

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only1integrityonly1integrity is offline 
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 # 3

This could not have been written any better. Thank you.


Hi Omowa 2

which of the Buharis are you painting as honest?, the Buhari as former head of state or the Buhari as former PTF chirman? . Food for thought.

Posted by only1integrity| 16.06.2008 17:34

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Omowa2Omowa2 is offline 
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 # 4


=only1integrity;4295056233>
Hi Omowa 2

which of the Buharis are you painting as honest?, the Buhari as former head of state or the Buhari as former PTF chirman? . Food for thought.



If you line up these guys...Olusegun Obasanjo, Danjuma, IBB, Abacha, Buhari, Adisa, Diya... Who of these Generals will you choose as a poster child of Mr Clean, if you must choose one. Image is everything ooo, in the minds of most Nigerians Buhari is cleaner than the general pigs and major goats in Nigeria. Honest is relative in our jungle. We are not a nation of saints but of hard working chop and clean mouth as if nothing happen lot
Omowa2

Posted by Omowa2| 16.06.2008 19:05

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tonsoyotonsoyo is offline 
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=Omowa2;4295056199>Dear sir,
I do not pretend to hold brief for General Abdulsalami Abubakar but did he not say that the Abacha family did not steal as opposed to General Abacha did not steal? Maybe there is no difference....
In the case of IBB and Buhari, I think they need to be joined together to fight Obasanjo and they need to sing from the same page. Buhari has every right to 'hate' Nigerians for not voting for him. This is a man who we all think is Mr. Clean and we have not thought it fit to 'reward' him with our rulership. If I were him I will throw mud in the face of Nigerians any time I have the opportunity. I keep telling anyone who cares to listen that something grand is about to happen. IBB+Buhari= 'See real trouble'. You see Buhari has a right to be bitter, he tried to show Nigerians that you can live a simple life and not be a theif but they rejected him and his running mate in the last (s)election is running around the presidency. If you were Buhari what will you do? Sit and fold your arms? Honesty does not pay anyone in Nigeria. You cannot be a clean person and win an election. Recall Awo, recall Gani, recall Pat Obama- Utomi, the long English speaking Nigerian White Boy.
As for me oooo, I have learned lessons from Nigerian leaders, dishonesty is all that pays, play it but just do not be caught by Ribadu of those days. If you ask me I will say Adisa and the Akisa sindrum...opps syndrome is a disease that starts from the fingers and ends up in your mouth. If you notice any politician running fever in the mouth please report to the nearest Dr. ON


Akisa is rag in Yoruba

omowa2



How did you come about your information that Buhari is "Mr. Clean?" He is a rogue just like his co-travelers. Who was the Federal Commissioner for Pertroleum when the famed 2.8 Billion Naira got missing in the ministry?

Why did he have problem with Abacha at PTF and Abacha tried to remove him when he appointed his in-law company Afro Consult as the sole agent for PTF?

A rogue is a rogue.

All of dem na barawo!

Posted by tonsoyo| 16.06.2008 19:47

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Omowa2Omowa2 is offline 
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 # 6

I hope you all know that Nigeria does not have a stock of saints to work with. Ok take a look at Good boy Pat Utomi, when it came to defending his school mate he rose to the occasion. I still maintain that of all the bad eggs we have Buhari is a lot better than the rest. He is in a class of his own. There are other threads on NVS saying the same thing I am expressing. Is there anyone who cannot see how IBB lives big? Can you say the same of Buhari? Where is his mansion? Where are his cars? Ok maybe he is hiding them somewhere BUT where and for how long?
Omowa2

Posted by Omowa2| 16.06.2008 21:39

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fxofxo is offline 
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 # 7


=Omowa2;4295056290>I hope you all know that Nigeria does not have a stock of saints to work with. Ok take a look at Good boy Pat Utomi, when it came to defending his school mate he rose to the occasion. I still maintain that of all the bad eggs we have Buhari is a lot better than the rest. He is in a class of his own. There are other threads on NVS saying the same thing I am expressing. Is there anyone who cannot see how IBB lives big? Can you say the same of Buhari? Where is his mansion? Where are his cars? Ok maybe he is hiding them somewhere BUT where and for how long?
Omowa2



****In 1983 when in the employ of the Nigerian Army an agency of the Nigerian tax payer, Muhammed Buhari violently overthrew the government of Nigeria. An act of treason. He unconstitutionally perpetuated himself in power and forced his will on the country at gun point.
****Some years down the road he colluded with a certain Sani Abacha to further defraud Nigeria using a fraudulent organization called PTF .
****He variously made tribalistic, anti-semitic, religious bigoted and nepotic choices over the years of his existence in the public space.
****He has no clear source of income, but he is still able to raise humongous funds which he used in his many bids for an elected office.
****He variously display poor sportsmanship by clearly utilizing feudal means, forgery,religious bigotry, thuggery and et al in his various attempts at transforming into a politician.
****In recent times he has perpetuated sacrilege by denying past Nigerian dictators were fraudulent, which in Nigerian context is like denying the holocaust.


Maybe Nigeria does not have a stock of saints,
Buhari is certainly one of our many demons.

Posted by fxo| 17.06.2008 01:04

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mayitbedonemayitbedone is offline 
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 # 8

Mr. Lamidi Adedibu

How I love your smartly chosen title for such a man...:biggrin:

I still wish that we, Nigerians can come together as one and fight the remaining monsters till they quit or retire to their early graves...

Our major problem, if you ask me, is the lack of EDUCATION...or how else can you describe a people who choose to suffer debasement, by running to thieves for their daily bread?

Posted by mayitbedone| 17.06.2008 05:22

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Oguguo YakereOguguo Yakere is offline 
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 # 9

Omowa2,
You wrote "Buhari has every right to 'hate' Nigerians for not voting for him".......
My question to you is, what "voting" are you talking about.........in Nigeria?

Posted by Oguguo Yakere| 17.06.2008 23:01

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