Fighting Dictatorship

Tuesday
Mar 09th

Maryam, Wife of Former Dictator, has Passed

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Maryam Babangida, wife of Nigeria's former dictator is dead. She died Sunday morning after Christmas 2009 at the University of California Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center in Los Angeles over complications arising from terminal ovarian cancer.

She was born on November 1, 1948 in Asaba, the capital of Delta State, to an Igbo family. She later moved to Kaduna State and attended the Queen Amina College Kaduna where she got her secondary education. Then she proceeded to the Federal Training Centre, Kaduna, and graduated as a secretary. On September 6, 1969, she got married to Ibrahim Babangida, whom she dutifully helped to run Nigeria like a factory in a spate of murders, corruption and mismanagement of resources.

They had four children: two boys, and two girls. When her husband became Chief of Army Staff in 1983, Maryam Babangida became President of the Nigerian Army Officers Wives Association (NAOWA). She was active in this role; launching schools, clinics, women's training centres and child day care centres.

When her husband became Head of State in 1985, Maryam Babangida moved with her children into Dodan Barracks in Lagos. As first lady of Nigeria, from 1985-1993, she turned the ceremonial post into a potent force for women's rural development in Nigeria. She founded the Better Life Program for Rural Women in 1987 which launched many cooperatives, cottage industries, farms and gardens, shops and markets, women centres and social welfare programmes. She also empowered Nigerian women through programmes on adult education, primary health, agriculture, skill-acquisition and food processing.

She died this morning at the University of California Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center in Los Angeles over complications arising from terminal ovarian cancer.

 

 

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This should be a lesson to current and past serving leaders in nigeria. No condition in life is constant. Some years back first lady everywhere.
uche , January 07, 2010

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  • Drug Dealer

  • Murderer

  • Anti-Democrat

  • Corrupt to the Bone

Let's face it - we have all always suspected Ibrahim Babangida of being a drug dealer. The story of Gloria Okon, Dele Giwa's death, the burning of the Ministry of Defence and other stories are all allegedly tied to an official drug ring during IBB's regime. We researched the rumors, and this is what we found.

In an authoritative report still posted on the web site of the Canadian Parliament on the drug trade in Africa, Labrouse marks out Ibrahim Babangida, Nigeria's former self-appointed president, as one of the drug-dealing dictators in Africa. Read more

dele giwa

Dele Giwa, a journalist, was allegedly murdered on the 26 of October 1986 by the former military dictator Ibrahim Babaginda - following damning publications. Close observers of the Nigerian media feared then it was the beginning of harsh military dictatorship in the country. It was a true assessment.

Babangida refused to appear before the duly constituted Oputa panel, giving assorted reasons for his refusal. Ray Ekpu, Giwa's colleague, said: Well, the government may say that the killers have not been found but the killers are known. ...Many Nigerians agree that it was a state sponsored terrorism and that he was assassinated by the state. Read More

Nigeria's military dictatorship, led by General Ibrahim Babangida, annulled the Jun 12 presidential election and canceled plans to return the nation to civilian rule. Britain, the United States and France condemned the latest military takeover and threatened to toughen sanctions against NigeriaAbacha urged all Nigerians to forget the June 12 election.

Lagos lawyer, Gani Fawehinmi, however, said: "June 12 is a symbol of our democracy. It was a day Nigeria and Nigerians without any discrimination whatsoever united in voting Chief MKO Abiola in the freest election in the history of election in Nigeria. ... Read More

Most Nigerian leaders have been corrupt, but Ibrahim Babangida added new, historic elements to corruption. One prime example is what he did with the defunct BCCI Bank. BCCI's activities in Nigeria were so profoundly, overwhelmingly corrupt as to suggest a very significant level of corruption in Nigerian officialdom generally.

Whereas BCCI's activities in most countries merely involved corrupting a few, key people, in Nigeria the corruption was systemic and endemic, and touched nearly every operation of the bank in Nigeria. The bank was operated by Babangida and his friends, including a deposed powerful ruler in northern Nigeria. Read More

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