Abraham Adesanya
Chief Abraham Aderibigbe Adesanya (24 July 1922 in Ijebu Igbo – 27 April
2008) was a Nigerian politician, lawyer, activist,
welfarist, and liberal progressive. He was the son of a famous and powerful
traditional healer, the late Oloye Ezekiel Adesanya (alias Baba
Obu’keagbo), who lived between the 19th and 20th centuries.
He was married to Rosannah Arinola Adesanya, née
Onafalujo, who died 2 years after the death of her husband. They were blessed
with four children: Adebayo Adesanya, Oluwasegunfunmi Adesanya, Modupeola
Adesanya Adelaja and Olufemi Adesanya. They have 10 grandchildren.
Education
Adesanya
attended Ijebu Ode Grammar School, after which he worked as a teacher prior to travelling to
the United Kingdom
to study law at the then Holborn College of Law, Greys Inn.
Early political life
In
1959, Adesanya returned to Nigeria as a qualified lawyer and joined the Action Group
led by Obafemi Awolowo.
The same year, he was nominated and eventually elected to the Western House of
Assembly to represent Ijebu Igbo
constituency in the 12 December 1959 House of Representatives Election.
Having
qualified as an exemplar of the Action Group's
core social democratic
ideals, he secured another nomination to the second republic Senate. He was
said to have preferred his senatorial appointment to the Governorship ticket
that was originally offered to him by the Unity Party of Nigeria, a successor
to the Action Group. This principle was to be further justified in the roles
played by him in the effort to re-define Nigerian politics and Nigerian
democracy.
He
was a dedicated Awoist (this being the term for a disciple of Awolowo's). He
led a team of lawyers that defended Chief Awolowo against the Nigerian Federal
Government's charges of treason in 1962.
As "a leader and activist"
In
the aftermath of the deaths of Obafemi
Awolowo and Adekunle Ajasin,
Adesanya assumed the honorific
title ' Asiwaju of Yorubaland '
and simultaneously became more active politically, allying with Bola
Ige, Ayo Adebanjo, Ganiyu
Dawodu, and Bola
Tinubu to fight their way to victory in
six states of the defunct Western region with their political party, the Alliance for
Democracy.
Later
Chief Adesanya, under the auspices of Afenifere and the Yoruba council of Elders, led a congress of Yoruba elder-statesmen
through an assembly that rose to pronounce that the convocation of a
constitutional conference, where new confederating terms would be determined
for the country, was necessary for the good of Nigerians.
Adesanya
was the deputy leader of National Democratic Coalition (NADECO), a
pro-democracy movement formed in 1994.
Turbulence and victory
At
the peak of military persecution, many of the then pro-democracy activists,
including his leader in the National Democratic Coalition (NADECO), Chief Anthony
Enahoro, fled the country and went into
exile. Abraham Adesanya remained at home, working for the cause of the Nigerian
masses alongside such figures as Gani
Fawehinmi, Femi Falana, Olisa Agbakoba and a
host of others. The Nigerian pro-democracy movement's victories were few and
far between at this period - first, the independent press was gagged, then a
number of people agitating for a return to civilian rule were arrested. Chief
Adesanya acted as the champion of the ordinary Nigerian regardless of the
danger to his person, persistently condemning General Ibrahim Babangida’s
annulment of the June the 12th Presidential election that had been won by Chief
MKO
Abiola. When General Sanni
Abacha, Babangida's successor, attempted
to transform from a military head of state to a civilian president, Adesanya
made certain that both he and NADECO remained a thorn in the General's side.
When democracy was finally restored in 1999, he joined other prominent
Nigerians in overseeing the transition from military rule. These feats saw both
him and his group come into the international limelight, featuring in reported
news and commentaries about Nigeria.
On
the 14th of January, 1997, Chief Adesanya's uncompromising stance in regards to
military misrule led to an attempt on his life at the behest of the then head
of state, General Sanni Abacha. Adesanya had just left his law chambers in his
chauffeur-driven car when a team of would-be assailants (later revealed to be
General Abacha's hit squad) struck. By the time that they were done, the
windscreens of the car were shattered and the seats were perforated by bullets.
Both he and his driver weren't injured.[1] The car, a Mercedes-Benz, was ultimately transferred to the
ownership of a Lagos museum.
Illness and death
In
his later years, Adesanya was decidedly frail due to illness. He was ultimately
incapacitated, leading to his confinement in his Apapa residence. Following this, his leadership of Afenifere adopted an advisory quality to accommodate his new
circumstances.
Since
his death, he has been immortalised in a number of ways, especially by the six
South-Western states of Lagos,
Oyo, Ogun,
Ondo, Osun
and Ekiti.
References
· Aigbogun, Frank (January 14, 1997).
"Anti-government activist attacked by gunmen". Associated Press
Worldstream.
· "Pa
Abraham Adesanya, His life and times". nm.onlinenigeria.com. 30
April 2008. Retrieved 2 December 2016.
1.
Igbokue, Joe. Heroes of Democracy: Clear Visions Limited, Nigeria. 1999.
2. This Day Editorial, Nigeria: Abraham Adesanya (1922 - 2008) This Day News Paper. 8 May 2008. Retrieved 13-11-2009.
3. The News Magazine, Adesanya's Death: The struggle for Yoruba Leadership. May 19, 2008. The News Retrieved. 13-11-2009.
2. This Day Editorial, Nigeria: Abraham Adesanya (1922 - 2008) This Day News Paper. 8 May 2008. Retrieved 13-11-2009.
3. The News Magazine, Adesanya's Death: The struggle for Yoruba Leadership. May 19, 2008. The News Retrieved. 13-11-2009.
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