How I protected OBJ from Kirikiri inmates – Shehu Sani

Human rights activist and former Senator Shehu Sani has recounted his experience with former President Olusegun Obasanjo at Kirikiri prison in 1995.

Shehu who noted that he protected Obasanjo from being attacked by inmates of Kirikiri prison, said he told OBJ that he was a commander outside, whereas he (Shehu Sani) was a commander in prison.

He spoke in Abuja at the second edition of This Nigeria’s lecture and Award Event themed,“25 Years of Unbroken Democracy: Challenges, Prospects, and Possibilities.”

According to him: “In 1995, a team of soldiers, policemen and DSS visited my house in Kaduna. It was a journey that began and lasted for four years,” he said.

“I was picked up from Kaduna and brought to Lagos with the late General Shehu Musa Yar’Adua. From the airport, we were led to the DSS headquarters, where we met President Olusegun Obasanjo.

“Unfairly from the soldiers, they handcuffed me but did not do so for Obasanjo or Yar’Adua. Obasanjo looked at me and asked me who I was and if I had stolen something for them to have handcuffed me. I told him I was an activist.

“I was then the deputy chairman of the Campaign for Democracy. We were taken to Kirikiri Maximum Prison. We stayed there without anybody saying anything to us. When we arrived at Kirikiri, we were given a blanket and a plate of food.

“We were then allocated our cells. When the armed robbers there saw Obasanjo, they started shouting and insulting him. Naturally, for those of us who were human rights activists, we were popular with inmates. I told him, ‘You are a commander outside, but this is where I command’. I then talked to the inmates to calm down, that no matter their grievances with Obasanjo, he was now an inmate.

“I got 15 years, Obasanjo got 15 years, Yar’Adua got life imprisonment. Those of us from the north were sent to southern prisons and those from the south were sent to northern prisons. That was how I found myself in Port Harcourt prison.

“I was in Port Harcourt prison when Ken Saro-Wiwa was brought in and hanged. I could see them from the window.”

THIS ARTICLE ORIGINALLY APPEARED IN VANGUARD

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