Disagreement with others in intelligent conversations should always be welcome. Intolerance, worse still arrogant intolerance of the opinion of others should never be.
I do not see how Toyin's opinion as expressed below is a "silly distraction". Even if one did, the one should not so describe it publicly.
Toyin raises pertinent issues. Ray Ekpu , a co-founder with Mr. Giwa of NewsWatch Magazine has publicly confirmed that the presidency had sent parcels to Mr. Giwa in the past. The parcel bomb that is believed to have caused Mr. Giwa's death was allegedly from the presidency. That was a trail worth exploring, even pursuing at the time. The presidency was and is still suspected by many Nigerians of complicity in Mr. Giwa's murder. He received and opened a parcel allegedly from the presidency. The magazine not too long after Mr. Giwa's death, named Babangida "Man of the Year". Could it be that the NewsWatch Editorial Board did so because it was satisfied that the presidency had no involvement in Mr. Giwa's death? Was the Board pressured to do so? It should not be forgotten that a manipulative, oppressive military dictatorship was the government at the time. It seems to me that there will be many pertinent questions seeking credible answers as long as the crime is not satisfactorily solved.
Mr. Giwa's murder is an unresolved shameful sore thumb of a crime. It is begging to be resolved. It may never not go away That anyone believes that Omoben should only be asked to "produce his findings on Akilu, Togun, and Babangida" should not mean that all should so believe, at the same time. Omoben himself was reported to state that his failure to resolve the crime was the low point of his career as a policeman. He seems to be troubled by this failure. Omoben must be presumed to know that making his findings public will enhance the credibility of his reported claims. Does he need prompting to make them public if could at this time? I am inclined to think that he does not.
I do not see how a disagreement with Toyin's opinion will be more persuasive when it is expressed insolently. We continue to be reminded to be respectful of others and their opinion. It is good advice that all in this forum should gracefully take to heart.
Interest and passion in my opinion, work better when they are not impulses.
oa
From: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com [mailto:usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Ibukunolu A Babajide
Sent: Friday, October 30, 2015 7:18 AM
To: USAAfricaDialogue
Cc: Ovaughan; Dejigiri; anthonyakinola@yahoo.co.uk
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Fw: More Allegations on the 1986 Murder of Dele Giwa, NEWSWATH MADAZINE Founding Editor
Toyin,
What reason or motion does your intervention add to the issue on hand.
Babangida through Akilu and Togun killed Dele Giwa. There was pressure mounted on his colleagues to let matters lie. An old man Omeben used by Babangida raised the issue again.
Instead of you to ask Omeben to produce his findings on Akilu Togun and Babangida, you throw a silly distraction in order to obfuscate the issue!
Cheers.
IBK
On 30 Oct 2015 15:00, "Oluwatoyin Adepoju" <toyinkaidara@gmail.com> wrote:
I followed the story closely and this is my first time of reading this-
'Ekpu said he recalled that before the incident of his death, Giwa had on a number occasions received parcels sent to him by the then Military Head of State, Gen. Ibrahim Babangida, who usually asked him to edit or draft his speech.
"I remember at least two incidents when Dele called me to say, 'I just got a letter from the President' and what did he normally send? He sent parcels. That is if he was going to deliver a speech; he will send an advance copy so that Dele can put it in the magazine to meet our production time. On another occasion, he requested Dele to draft his speech for him and Dele called me and we drafted his speech for him."
I am also puzzled as to why Newswatch was able to make Babangida its Man of the Year some time after's Giwa's death and the civil rights lawyer Gani Fawhenhimi was struggling unsuccessfully to charge Babangida to court on the case
thanks
toyin
On 29 October 2015 at 11:54, Assensoh, Akwasi B. <aassenso@indiana.edu> wrote:
NIGERIAWORLD | NIGERIAWEB | ANNOUNCE STORY | NAIJANET | STATE NEWS |
Wednesday, October 28, 2015 Omeben thwarted investigation into Giwa's murder –Ray Ekpu Ramon Oladimeji
The co-founder of Newswatch Magazine, Ray Ekpu, has accused a retired police chief, Chris Omeben, of being the one who frustrated investigations into the murder of the founding editor of the magazine, Dele Giwa. Giwa was killed by a parcel bomb at his Ikeja, Lagos residence, on October 19, 1986. Omoben, then a former Deputy Inspector General of Police in charge of the investigation into Giwa's murder, had on Monday said in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria that the investigation was frustrated by the interference from "high place." Omoben claimed that even when he had narrowed down on the principal suspect, who could have helped to unravel the mystery, the suspect was allowed to escape from Nigeria. The octogenarian, who described Giwa's case as the most frustrating in his career, regretted that he was not allowed to interrogate the then London correspondent of Newswatch Magazine, Kayode Soyinka, who he believed knew something about Giwa's assassination. But in an interview granted an online newspaper, The Cable, on Tuesday, the co-founder of Newswatch, Ekpu, accused Omeben of twisting the story, saying the event had not faded off people's memories that they would have forgotten who the real killer of Giwa was. Ekpu said he recalled that before the incident of his death, Giwa had on a number occasions received parcels sent to him by the then Military Head of State, Gen. Ibrahim Babangida, who usually asked him to edit or draft his speech. "I remember at least two incidents when Dele called me to say, 'I just got a letter from the President' and what did he normally send? He sent parcels. That is if he was going to deliver a speech; he will send an advance copy so that Dele can put it in the magazine to meet our production time. On another occasion, he requested Dele to draft his speech for him and Dele called me and we drafted his speech for him." Ekpu alleged that it was Omoben himself who frustrated the investigation into Giwa's assassination by stopping one of the officers directly in charge of the case, who later became a Commissioner of Police in Lagos State. He said Soyinka had nothing to gain from killing Giwa, wondering if the latter would have stayed with the deceased if he knew it was going to be a bomb explosion. "This man thinks that people's memories have faded, so he can twist and turn as he likes, but I don't think people's memories are that short. "Kayode Soyinka was in the country for more than two months, the police interviewed him and also interviewed us, so I don't know at what point we shielded him. "As our correspondent in London, Kayode only came for consultation a few days before this incident happened and stayed with Dele, just the same way we stayed with him anytime we went to London. So, there was nothing, absolutely nothing unusual about that. "Will a guy who wants to use a bomb and kill someone stay in the same room with him? Would he stay in the same room while the bomb explodes? Will he know the extent of the damage that the bomb will create? I'm not a security man but I doubt it, except you are a suicide bomber. "Besides, Kayode's ears were perforated and he couldn't hear for months. The bomb had an effect on him. You know he was seated opposite Dele as he opened the parcel. They were together; now tell me how it is possible for a man who knows something about bomb to sit inches away from the man who was opening the parcel? Does that sound credible? Doesn't that sound preposterous to you? Who knew anything about parcel bombs at that time? Who ever thought that a bomb could be sent through a letter in 1986 Nigeria?" |
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