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Awolowo Writes To Ironsi From Prison Pressing for His Release (Date of Letter: 28th March, 1966)
In Posthumous Commemoration of Awo's 96th Birthday (Date of Birth: March 6, 1909)
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Taken from "Adventures in Power Book One: My March Through Prison", by Obafemi Awolowo, McMillan NIgeria, pp 296-302, 1985.
CONFIDENTIAL The Supreme
Commander and Sir:
2. Before I go
further, I would like to stress that the reasons which I advance in support of
this petition, in my own behalf, basically hold good for my said colleagues. For
they share the same political beliefs with me, and have intense and unquenchable
loyalty for the ideals espoused by the Party which I have the honour to lead. 3. There are
many grounds which could be submitted for your consideration in support of this
petition. But I venture to think that SEVEN of them are enough and it is to
these that I confine myself. (1) In the
course of my evidence during my trial, I stated that my Party favoured and was
actively working for alliance with the N.C.N.C. as a means, among other things,
of solving what I described as ‘the problem of Nigeria’, and strengthening the
unity of the Federation. In October 1963 (that is about a month after my
conviction and while my appeal to the Supreme Court was still pending), a Peace
Committee headed by the Chief Justice of the Federation, Sir Adetokunbo Ademola,
made overtures to me through my friend Alhaji W. A. Elias to the effect that if
I abandoned my intention to enter into alliance with the N.C.N.C. which,
according to the Committee, was an Ibo Organisation, and agreed to dissolve the
Action Group and, in co-operation with Chief Akintola (now deceased), form an
all-embracing Yoruba political party which I would lead and which would go into
alliance with the N.P.C., I would be released from prison before the end of that
year. I turned down these terms because I was of the considered opinion that
their acceptance would further widen and exacerbate inter-tribal differences,
and gravely undermine the unity of the Federation. TODAY, THE
MILITARY GOVERNMENT, OF WHICH YOU ARE THE HEAD, LEAVES NO ONE IN ANY DOUBT THAT
IT STANDS FOR NIGERIAN UNITY. BUT IT MUST BE EMPHASISED, IN THIS CONNECTION,
THAT IF I HAD PRIZED MY PERSONAL FREEDOM ABOVE THE UNITY OF NIGERIA, I WOULD
HAVE BEEN SET FREE IN 1963. IN THAT EVENT, THIS PETITION WOULD NOT HAVE BEEN
NECESSARY, AND THE WORK OF CONSOLIDATING THE UNITY OF THE COUNTRY TO WHICH YOU
AND YOUR COLLEAGUES NOW SET YOUR HANDS MIGHT HAVE BEEN MADE EXTREMELY MORE
INTRACTABLE AND IRKSOME. (2) One of the
monsters which menaced the public life of this country up to 14th January, this
year is OPPORTUNISM with its attendant evils of jobbery, venality, corruption,
and unabashed self-interest. From all accounts, you are inflexibly resolved to
destroy this monster. That was precisely what my colleagues and I had tried to
do before we were rendered hors de combat since 29th May, 1962. On two different occasions I was offered, first the post of Deputy Prime Minister (before May 1962), and second that of Deputy Governor-General (in August 1962), if I would agree to fold up the Opposition and join in a National Government. I declined the two offers because they were designed exclusively to gratify my self-interest, with no thought of fostering any political moral principle which could benefit the people of Nigeria. The learned Judge who presided over the Treasonable Felony Trial, commented unfavourably on my non-acceptance of one of these posts and held that my action lent weight to the case of the Prosecution against me. I must say, however, that in all conscience, I felt and still feel that a truly public-spirited person should accept public office not for what he can get for himself — such as the profit and glamour of office — but for the opportunity which it offers him of serving his people to the best of his ability, by promoting their welfare and happiness. To me, the two aforementioned posts were sinecures, and were intended to immobilise my talents and stultify the role of watch-dog which the people of Nigeria looked upon me to play on their behalf, at that juncture in our political evolution.
The work of
reconstruction on which you and your colleagues have embarked demands that all
the citizens of Nigeria in their respective callings should give of their
maximum best. A state of psychological tension, however much it may be brought
under control or repressed, does not and cannot conduce to maximum efficiency.
In spite of themselves, people labouring under emotions which this kind of
tension automatically generates are bound to make avoidable mistakes which in
their turn have adverse effects on national progress. It is, therefore, in the national interest that this tension should be relaxed, if possible, without further delay.
It is within
your power to restore my colleagues and me to a position where our fatherland
can again rejoice at the contributions which we are capable of making to its
progress, welfare and happiness. (6) Nigeria is
now SIXTY-SIX MONTHS old as an independent State. The final phase in the
struggle for Nigeria’s independence was initiated by my Party in the historic
Self-Government motion moved by Chief Anthony Enahoro and supported by me on
31st March, 1953. IT SHOULD BE REGARDED AS MORE THAN IRONICAL, AND AS PALPABLY
TRAGIC, THAT TWO OF THE ARCHITECTS OF THAT INDEPENDENCE AND, INDEED, THE
PACE-SETTERS AND ACCELERATORS OF ITS FINAL PHASE SHOULD BE UNFREE IN A FREE
NIGERIA. In precise terms, I have spent FORTY-SIX out of the SIXTY-SIX MONTHS of independence in one form of confinement or another. I happened to know that the leaders of the old civilian regime, in spite of themselves, did not feel quite easy in their conscience about the plight into which they had manoeuvred me in the scheme of things; and I dare to express the hope and belief that you, personally view my present confinement with concern and disapproval.
It would be
invidious to quote unspecific instances. But in the case of my colleagues and
myself, by courageously and adamantly opposing the evils which your regime now
denounces in the former civilian administration, I think we are perfectly
justified if we expect you to regard us as being in tune with your yearnings and
aspirations
(i) that I
have always and, under trying circumstances, steadfastly and unyieldingly (a) stood
for the UNITY OF NIGERIA, (ii) that my incarceration
(iii) that the
evils which my colleagues and I condemned and valiantly refused to compromise
with in the old civilian government are what you now quite rightly denounce, and
are taking active steps to remove in order to pave the way for national and
beneficial reconstruction, I most sincerely appeal to you to be good enough to exercise, in favour of myself and my colleagues, the prerogative of mercy vested in you by Section 10 (I) (i) (a) of the Constitution of the Federation Act 1963, by granting me as well as each of my colleagues A FREE PARDON. If you do, your action will be most warmly, heartily, and popularly applauded at home and abroad, and you will go down to history as soldier, statesmen, and humanitarian.
Yours truly, OBAFEMI
AWOLOWO _______
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