There was once a Roman statesman, lawyer, political theorist,
philosopher, widely considered one of Rome’s greatest orators and prose
stylists. His name was Marcus Tullius Cicero who lived between (January
3, 106 BC and December 7, 43 BC) Cicero is generally seen as one of the
most versatile minds of Roman culture and his writings, the paragon of
classical Latin. He introduced the Romans to the chief schools of Greek
philosophy and created a Latin vocabulary.
We learnt his childhood dream was "Always to be the best and far to
excel the others." No wonder when he started his career as a lawyer
around 83-81 BC, he successfully defended Sextus Roscius on a charge of
parricide, which of course, was an indirect challenge to the dictator,
Emperor Sulla, at that time and he had to travel to Athens with his
brother and cousin, perhaps due to the potential wrath of Emperor Sulla.
Why are we celebrating Marcus Cicero today? It is because he shared most
of the sterling qualities with our own Uncle Bola Ige, popularly called
“The Cicero” of Esa-Oke, considering his education background and
profession as an astute lawyer, elder statesman, administrator, seasoned
politician, educationist and undisputable leader of thought.
However, sad enough, both men were murdered...
Perhaps, the only difference is that the power that
be, that killed Marcus Cicero pride about it and even displayed his
decapitated body for the people to see in that part of the world at that
time taking a final revenge against Cicero’s power of speech while
those who planned and killed our own “Cicero” are still hiding. The big
question still, is who were those responsible for that cowardly act by
killing Bola Ige on December 23, 2001 in his home at Ibadan? Life could
indeed be an irony. This is the same Ibadan where he lived, served,
developed when the opportunity came having being popularly elected as
the first executive civilian Governor of the old Oyo State. This same
Ibadan happened to be the seat of power, being the capital of the old
Oyo State.
It was said that when the title “Cicero” was given to honour Bola Ige by
the people of Esa-Oke, his home town, because of the inherent traits he
shared with Marcus Tullius Cicero of Rome, Chief Obafemi Awolowo, the
late sage, was not too comfortable with the title because of the way the
power-that-be at that time killed Marcus Tullius Cicero. And most
disheartening he was killed on our own soil though far away from Rome.
Then, not only did political parties monitor governors elected under
their platforms, even the governed were given the opportunity to
evaluate the performances of their governors. Today, state parties
hardly tell you their mission and only busy themselves in how to rig
elections, crush any opposition and kill opponents depending on the
level of desperation.
Prior to the assassination, Ige was guest of His Royal Highness, Oba
Okunade Sijuwade, the reigning Ooni of Ife and it was widely reported
that some miscreants (apparently being sponsored by those who hated him)
reportedly removed his cap and hung it on a tree in the palace area.
One begins to wonder what has become of our society. What an irony!
Years back, and precisely in 1980 at the same venue, the man, Uncle Bola
Ige, was the centre of attraction as governor holding out the staff of
office to the king-elect then during the installation and coronation.
I think it is not too late for the police to start a thorough
investigation from that angle. This to me should be acceptable as a
careful thought with a view to unraveling the assassination and bring to
book the killers now that we seem to embrace the rule of law in the
country. It is only when the killers are caught that we can be talking
of prosecution. And with the zeal of the Inspector General of Police,
Suleiman Abba, he should be challenged to come out with something that
will cleanse the shame of a nation, that a sitting Attorney General of
the Federation was that murdered in his home and more than seven years
after, the nation is still groping in the dark. Most Nigerians share the
belief that the Nigerian Police is capable if it chooses to come out
with the expected result.
Of course, the Obasanjo administration did not help the police in that
at the tail end of its tenure, it was widely reported that the former
president at a gathering quickly admitted that one faceless drug baron
which the then Ministry of Justice was planning to probe was responsible
for the cowardly act. And because you cannot put something on nothing,
on October 24, 2007, the court ordered the release from the Agodi Prison
in Ibadan of the accused as advised by the state prosecution for want
of evidence as usual and one cannot blame the defence lawyer boasting to
even sue the Federal Government for damages while the real damage to
the nation still looms and crime committed still unravelled.
Some schools of thought believe that if Ige had remained in his
self-styled “siddon look” posture at that time and not joined the
Obasanjo government, he may still be alive or at worst, he may not have
been slaughtered the way they did. In any case, death could also have
come due to old age. Some of us also believe that his joining to serve
at all under Obasanjo’s regime was a silent revolution or protest from
the way and manner his party presidential primary at that time was
conducted. No political reasoning could really explain the “wedlock”
considering the events of the past and even in the present
circumstances. Could it be considered that he went too far to have opted
to serve under the Obasanjo’s regime? However, as patriotic as he was
to serve his fatherland when he was invited, should not in any way make
him one of the high profile political killings that will be swept under
the usual sealed marble forever.
Sometime ago, one high ranking police officer told the whole world that
investigation could begin on any case if there are new findings, clues
or trails but that it was “capital intensive”. This sounds comforting
but not encouraging because the Nigerian economy is still strong enough
to do more than unravelling this particular murder case with a view to
bringing the killers to book. The police should be told that Nigerians
deserve to know who killed “Uncle Bola Ige” as we used to call him then
and of course, a host of others killed in similar circumstances for the
sake of posterity and justice. More importantly, to prove to the world
that we are able not only to detect crime but to carry out justice in
the most civilised way as being done around the globe.
I hope the police understand very well that a murder case in every clime
is not statute-barred, which means the case cannot be closed at any
given time. Issues of note are many in this particular case and that is
why time cannot sweep it away so quickly. The idea is that this nation
must not allow the unborn generation to taunt us that a democratically
elected government was unable to find the murderers of a former
Attorney-General of the Federation. It is now 13 years after the murder
and the nation is still waiting and seems hopelessly counting.
In fact, there is not even any hope for the common man when notables and
nobles are being killed and nothing happens. My worry is that our
children would found it really difficult to comprehend. By all means,
Nigerians deserve to know who killed our own “Cicero”
Samuel, a logistics management expert, wrote to Punch from Victoria Island, Lagos

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