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Abdulsalami: I told Obasanjo not to contest 1999 presidency

Former Head of State, General Abdulsalami Abubakar (retd.), has disclosed that he advised former President Olusegun Obasanjo not to contest the 1999 presidential election after Obasanjo's release from detention in 1998. When Obasanjo came to see Abdulsalami after his release, Abdulsalami advised him point-blank to abandon the idea of contesting the presidential race. Abdulsalami told him to go home, thank God he was still alive after four years of detention, and forget about becoming President. During the same meeting, Abdulsalami also talked Obasanjo out of filing a lawsuit against the Federal Government over his wrongful imprisonment, warning him that court processes are uncertain. Instead, Abdulsalami offered to explore compensation for the collapse of Obasanjo's business during his years in detention, and Obasanjo agreed not to pursue litigation. Abdulsalami described the encounter as forthright, stating that Obasanjo agreed to think about […]

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Diya and I didn’t know where Abiola was held, says Abdulsalami

Former Head of State, General Abdulsalami Abubakar (retd.), has revealed that before he assumed power in 1998, neither he nor General Oladipo Diya, the then Chief of General Staff and second‑in‑command to General Sani Abacha, knew the exact location where Chief Moshood Kashimawo Olawale (MKO) Abiola was being detained. Abdulsalami said that, despite occupying senior positions in the military hierarchy under Abacha, key details about Abiola’s incarceration were tightly controlled and kept away from them. He explained that it was only after Abacha’s sudden death on June 8, 1998, and his own emergence as Head of State, that he gained direct access to information regarding Abiola’s custody. In his account, Abdulsalami stressed that Abacha’s regime operated with a high level of secrecy, especially on sensitive political detainees like Abiola, the presumed winner of the June 12, 1993 presidential election. He […]

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Experts cast doubt over ‘foiled coup’ on Burkina Faso’s Traore

Burkina Faso’s military government says it recently foiled an assassination plot and coup attempt against junta leader Captain Ibrahim Traore, allegedly planned for early January and involving a plan to kill him and seize key state institutions. Security Minister Mahamadou Sana accused former transitional president Paul-Henri Sandaogo Damiba of masterminding the operation, claiming it was uncovered “in the final hours” by intelligence services.​ State media went on to broadcast days of televised “confessions” by alleged plotters, with authorities describing the incident as yet another attempt by “enemies” to destabilise the country. But regional analysts and Burkinabe observers say these repeated announcements of foiled coups are becoming harder to believe, given the lack of independently verifiable evidence and the increasingly dramatic official narratives.​ Some experts warn that the junta’s frequent claims of plots and assassination attempts risk looking like a strategy […]

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