TWO OLD SOLDIERS BOW OUT: A TRIBUTE TO PA AYO ADEBANJO AND CHIEF EDWIN CLARKE
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Late Chief Edwin Clarke, and Pa Ayo Adebanjo. |
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BY FRANKLIN BENJAMIN ONOBEN
If ever there were twins
who didn’t share the same parents, or even a village, it had to be the 96 and 97 Edition. The one, Pa Ayo
Adebanjo, a Yoruba elder from the Southwest, and the other, Chief Edwin Clarke,
an Ijaw titan from the South-South. But, let’s be honest, if Nigeria had a
school for stubborn elders who refused to keep quiet in the face of injustice,
these two would have been the head boys—one leading Afenifere, the other
commanding PANDEF.
Now, what do you call two
men who had been fighting for Nigeria even before Nigeria knew what it was
fighting for? 96 and 97 were already fighting the colonial masters before many
of us learned to spell “independence.” They lived through the military era,
watched democracy crawl like a baby learning to walk, and still had enough
energy in their 80s and 90s to remind political leaders that they weren’t doing
enough.
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96 was the Yoruba oracle,
forever reminding Nigeria about true federalism, restructuring, and why
democracy shouldn’t just be a word in the dictionary. Meanwhile, 97 was the
voice of the Niger Delta, constantly beating the drums for equity, resource
control, and the rights of his people. If the government thought it could rest,
these two made sure it never found sleep.
But alas, time has done
what no government could do—silence them. Not with arrests, or threats, or
blackmail, but with the gentle, unavoidable hand of nature. 96 and 97 have now
left the battlefield; their voices now echo in history. They have gone to rest,
leaving the microphone, the placards, and the open letters for the rest of us
to pick up.
So, what’s next? Nigeria
still needs fixing, and the struggle must continue. 96 and 97 have played their
parts, and if they could send a message from the great beyond, they’d probably
be saying: “You people should not slack! We didn’t shout all these years for
nothing!”
Rest well, legends. Even
in death, your voices will never be forgotten.
- Franklin Benjamin Onoben, wrote in from Lagos.
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