Fire On The Mountain
By
T. O. Shobowale
Benson
tosbenson@yahoo.co.uk
culled from GUARDIAN of December 1, 2003
Fire On
The Mountain
was the signal chant for the political party war
that erupted on the floor of the Western House of
Assembly, one bright morning in May 1962. The
confusion and fracas in the House led the police to
teargas the chambers, which emptied within one
minute as Honourable Members fled for their lives.
That incident climaxed into the declaration of a
state of emergency, following a motion tabled in the
parliament by Prime Minister Abubaka Tafawa Balewa
on May 29, which was overwhelmingly adopted.
Consequently, the Government at the centre declared
a state of emergency in Western Nigeria for six
months and Chief M.A. Majekodunmi was appointed the
a.dministrator.
I was graphically reminded of that happening on
the floor of the Western House of Assembly by the
biography of Dr. Moses A. Majekodunmi titled "My
Lord, What A Morning", which the Maye of Lagos
autographed to me on August 30, 1998. This was after
a meeting of some honorary titled Chiefs held at
Chief Majekodunmi's No. 3, Kingsway Road Mansion.
Chapter 5 of the book from pages 140-180 dwelt on
the Western Nigeria emergency. Dr. Majekodunmi the
administrator of the region during the emergency
period also retained his post as Federal Minister of
Health.
I feel a compulsion to tell the story of that
political turmoil on the floor of the Western House
for posterity to know the truth of the event. I was
the party general who strategised the NNDP/NCNC plan
of action. All political parties played political
games and rascality in those days with the Action
Group blazing the trail for others to follow.
I was in the chair at the party conclave, which
took the decision to confront and foil the Action
Group in the House, should it be established through
numbers that the party had oiled the NNDP-NCNC out
of a majority in the House as it did in 1952. But
unfortunately, due to over zealousness on the part
of the executors of the action, things were not
carried out as originally planned.
In 1952, the Action Group propagated its
philosophy of East for the East, North for the North
and the West for the West and argued that if an
Hausa man could be leader of the government in the
North, an Igboman as leader of government in the
East, then an Igbo man should not lead the
government in the West. Of course the Action Group
philosophy gained ground. On its own part, the NCNC
philosophy focused on one Nigeria, one country and
one constitution. Therefore, the NCNC lost to the
Action Group in the West even in the appointment of
two of the five Lagos members to the Federal House,
the Action Group voted against Zik in the Western
House of Assembly irrespective of the fact that NCNC
won the five members in Lagos.
However, the man who led the East then (Eyo Ita)
whom the Action Group regarded as an Igbo man was an
Efik and not Igbo. In its political game and
rascality, the Action Group, through vote buying and
manipulation had vaporised the NCNC majority in the
House and this prevented Zik from being leader of
government in the Western Region or going on from
the West to the House of Representatives in Lagos.
The Lagos Metropolis was then part of the West. At
that time, members got to the Federal House from
their regional Houses through Electoral College
except in Lagos where general election was conducted
and the NCNC 'Five Men of Destiny' defeated the five
members of the Action Group.
The political imbroglio of 1962 centred on
appointing a premier for the region after the "sack
me I sack you" power play of the AG, which asked the
Governor of Western Nigeria, Sir Adesoji Aderemi to
sack the premier (Akintola). Adegbenro was nominated
by the Governor to replace Akintola and Akintola
fired back by sacking the Governor and later went to
the High Court of Western Nigeria in Ibidan on Suit
No. High Court (W.N) 1/16/62, claiming that he had
been wrongfully removed.
The High Court referred the constitutional
questions involved to the Federal Supreme Court for
decision and Akintola's claim was upheld by the
Supreme Court, presided over by Honourable Justice
Adetokunbo Ademola, then the CJN with Justices
Taylor and Bairamian, both Justices of the Supreme
Court. Akintola went back to the High Court, which
ruled in his favour, thereby upholding the dismissal
of the Governor and also upholding Akintola as the
Premier of Western Region. But Adegbenro appealed
the judgement to the Privy Council in London and
also brought an appeal to the Federal Supreme Court
on Suit No F.S.C. 187/1962 from the judgement of the
High Court. The Privy Council in London overruled
the Supreme Court and gave judgement in favour of
Adegbenro thus upholding the power of the Governor
to sack the Premier and the appointment of Adegbenro
as replacement for Akintola.
The region was thrown into deep turmoil as there
was no effective government and the parliament in
Lagos had to step in to resolve the impasse. The
parliament decided that as a Sovereign State the
decision of the Supreme Court of the land was
supreme and no further appeal in Nigeria would go to
the Privy Council in London. The Supreme Court had
ordered that the Premier be confirmed by a vote in
the House of Assembly to test the strength of the
claimant factions.
Both the rump of the Action Group and the NNDP
claimed to have majority of Assembly men, yet both
parties wanted an alliance with the NCNC. But
remembering how Zik was spited and done out of his
party's victory 10 years back, the NCNC decided to
team up with the Akintola and Ayo Rosiji's NNDP.
Meanwhile, Chief Rosiji had been expelled from the
AG for advocating an alliance with the North and the
late Samuel G. Ikoku replaced him as General
Secretary of the AG.
The NCNC strategy was to seize the opportunity of
the alliance to slap back the AG in the face to pay
it back in its own coin for what it did to the NCNC
in 1952 at the Western House of Assembly. When the
party learnt that the A.G. had enlisted an
expatriate Greek business magnate and the National
Bank to fund its vote-collecting operation, it fell
on the NCNC to devise a method of blocking the AG.
It was then imperative that the AG scheme for
victory through manipulation and financial
inducement be thwarted. Our counter political game
plan was to seize the mace at the Assembly in order
to nullify the day's session.
On the D-day in the Western House of Assembly, AG
and NNDP/NCNC alliance members each sat on opposite
sides and galleries and each on the side of the seat
where honourable members of their camp were to be
based as they trooped into the Assembly Chambers.
But the NNDP/NCNC alliance was ready with the
machinery it set up to stop and rubbish the AG. Riot
police with guns and teargas canisters strapped to
their waists were combat ready for any eventuality.
As honourable members entered the Chambers, the
Chief Whip of the NNDP/NCNC alliance counted them.
The two candidates for the office were Chief
Akintola for the NNDP/NCNCN alliance and Chief A.S.
Adegbenro for the Action Group. After the Speaker
had entered the Chambers, it became clear that
majority of members were on the side of the AG. To
kick-start the operations, party whips gave the
signal for action to Honourable Oke from Osun
Constituency as had been prearranged.
He got up from the back row where he sat and
jumping from one table to the other shouting
repeatedly "Fire on the Mountain, Run, Run, Run". He
kept up the chant and the jumping exercise. Thus
there was great confusion in the House as members
packed their bags and baggage out of the Assembly
chambers. The honourable member representing
Ajeromi-Ajegunle Constituency, Mr. Ebube Dike, an
Igbo settler from Okigwe, raced to the Speaker's
table and made for the mace to hit it on the
Speaker's head. The Speaker, Prince Adeleke Adedoyin
dodged it and the mace hit on the table and broke
into pieces.
At this point the confusion in the House knew no
bounds as people ran helter-sketer, some bleeding
from wounds. The police had thrown teargas canisters
through the windows and the main door hence people
scrambled to flee through the ventilation holes of
the Assembly. In the end everybody managed to
wriggle out of the chambers and the police sealed
off the Assembly. The state of emergency that
followed foreclosed the Western House of Assembly.
When Majekodunmi assumed duty as the
Administrator, his first assignment was to detain
parliamentarians; Awo in Lekki, Akintola in
Olokemeji and some others placed under house arrest.
When it reconvened six months later, Chief Akintola
was restored to the Premiership and Fani Kayode was
appointed the deputy Premier by Akintola. The office
of deputy Premier was not in the constitution and I
complained to Zik at the State House and also to
Okpara but they asked me to meet Akintola to resolve
the matter. Akintola's stand was to adopt any means
to win the battle and one of them was to make Fani
Kayode the Deputy Premier. All the people who
complained against Fani Kayode were regarded as
being jealous of him and we left the matter like
that thus Fani Kayode was called "Fani The Power".
That was the kata-kata that was going on in the
Western House of Assembly before the army struck in
January 1966.
In politics when you plan one thing, your
followers execute it wrongly. It was the assigned
role of Ebube Dike to remove the mace, being the
authority of the parliament but he attempted to hit
the mace on the head of the Speaker. It was not the
intention of NNDP/NCNC alliance that the mace be
broken but only to remove the mace and end the day's
session. Likewise the instruction to honourable Oke
was to tap the table to arouse the attention of
Ebube Dike and not to jump up and down and shouting
fire on the mountain. However, Ebube Dike in his
ulterior motive regarded this as a reprisal action
to pay back the AG on what they did to Zik in 1952,
so 1952 remains a remarkable year for Igbos.
So the NCNC decided to punish Awo in 1964 when it
reneged in a solid agreement to make Awo the Prime
Minister. The 1964 elections saw the NPC victorious
and Balewa was called upon to form the government at
the centre but instead of remaining with the UPGA
(AG-NCNC Alliance), the NCNC joined the NPC to form
the central government.
TOS Benson, CFR, SAN, is the first Nigerian
Federal Minister of Information, Culture and
Broadcasting