• Latest
  • Trending
  • All
MKO Abiola

Finally! How Abacha, MKO Abiola Died – Susan Rice Opens Up

April 28, 2021
Truecaller Lite Expands Caller ID, Anti Scam Features for Users

Truecaller Lite Expands Caller ID, Anti Scam Features for Users

June 10, 2026
5th Ecobank Adire Lagos Experience Kicks Off on Thursday With Intl Exhibitors

5th Ecobank Adire Lagos Experience Kicks Off on Thursday With Intl Exhibitors

June 10, 2026
Fidelity Bank Reaffirms Support for MSMEs, Drives Growth Agenda at SME Forum

Fidelity Bank Reaffirms Support for MSMEs, Drives Growth Agenda at SME Forum

June 10, 2026
Yemisi Shyllon Museum Announces Date for Free Public Access

Yemisi Shyllon Museum Announces Date for Free Public Access

June 10, 2026
AICFF 2026 Concludes Maiden Edition in Abuja, Urges Excellence in Christian Storytelling

AICFF 2026 Ends in Abuja, Urges Excellence in Christian Storytelling

June 10, 2026
Expert Makes Case for Healthcare Manufacturing in Nigeria 

Expert Makes Case for Healthcare Manufacturing in Nigeria 

June 10, 2026
Goodmus Learning Begins Global GCA Certification in Lagos

Goodmus Sets June 27 for UK-Based GCA Exam, Unveils Overseas Scholarship, Job Opportunities

June 9, 2026
NCC Hails Tijani’s Girls-in-ICT Drive as 185 Students Explore Nigeria’s Telecom History

NCC Hails Tijani’s Girls-in-ICT Drive as 185 Students Explore Nigeria’s Telecom History

June 8, 2026
Abuja Returns to Firewood as Cooking Gas Prices Soar

Abuja Returns to Firewood as Cooking Gas Prices Soar

June 8, 2026
Lagos State to commemorate the 2026 World Environment Day.

World Environment Day: Zenith Bank Partners LAWMA, LASWA on Sustainability 

June 7, 2026
Emirates Recycles 88,000kg of Plastic into New Inflight Dining Products

Emirates Recycles 88,000kg of Plastic into New Inflight Dining Products

June 7, 2026
The Abyss of Silence: Why We All Failed the Oyo Abductees, ​By Femi Oyewale

The Abyss of Silence: Why We All Failed the Oyo Abductees, ​By Femi Oyewale

June 7, 2026
TrafficMaster Pro Launches AI-Powered SEO, Digital Growth Platform

TrafficMaster Pro Launches AI-Powered SEO, Digital Growth Platform

June 7, 2026
Prophet TB Joshua, A Phenomena In The Mystery of the Universe, By Dare Adejumo

TB JOSHUA: MYSTERY OF DIVINE ENVOY THAT WILL CONTINUE TO ELUDE MANKIND 

June 5, 2026
Sanwo-Olu Applauds FidBank UK’s Drive to Deepen Investment Access

Sanwo-Olu Applauds FidBank UK’s Drive to Deepen Investment Access

May 30, 2026
Children's Day: Activist Raises Alarm Over Rising Threats to Children

Children’s Day: Activist Raises Alarm Over Rising Threats to Children

May 30, 2026
Friday, June 12, 2026
  • Login
  • News
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Crime
  • Entertainment
  • Featured
  • Icons
  • Opinion
  • World
  • Tech
No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Crime
  • Entertainment
  • Featured
  • Icons
  • Opinion
  • World
  • Tech
Home News

Finally! How Abacha, MKO Abiola Died – Susan Rice Opens Up

by TheConscience NG
April 28, 2021
in News, Featured
0
MKO Abiola
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
Share on Facebook Share
Share
Share on Twitter Share
Share
Share on Linkedin Share
Share

MKO Abiola

Finally! How Abacha, MKO Abiola Died – Susan Rice Opens Up

‘To this day, many people in Nigeria think I killed him.’

That was the opening line in the riveting account of the last hour of the late Bashorun Moshood Kashimawo Olawale MKO Abiola as told by Ambassador Susan Rice. She was one of the visiting American diplomats in whose presence the presumed winner of the 1993 presidential election died on 7th July 1998. More significantly, Rice was the one who served MKO Abiola the famous last tea. For the past 22 years, the former National Security Adviser to President Barack Obama has refrained from speaking on what exactly happened that day. But in her memoir, “TOUGH LOVE: My story of the things worth fighting for”, Rice recounts not only how MKO Abiola died but also confirmed the street gossip about the last hour of the late General Sani Abacha.

In the memoir, Rice also recounts how she was conceived in Lagos during the two years her parents spent in Nigeria at a time her father was helping in the establishment of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) after independence. As the American diplomat with Africa as her brief, Rice also recalls many of the crises on the continent, especially the one that eventually led to the death of Col Muammar Ghadafi in Libya and the encounters she had at different times with African leaders, including former President Olusegun Obasanjo who on one occasion was “nonchalantly hurling well-picked chicken bones—much to our amusement—backward over his shoulders across the presidential suite.” Now, let’s begin with the story of one of the most momentous periods in Nigeria’s political history from Rice, a former US Ambassador to the United Nations: The death of Abacha and MKO Abiola.

Popular Nigerian Pastor Assassinated In His Church

MKO Abiola

In early July 1998, I traveled to Nigeria with Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs Tom Pickering, who was then among the most senior career Foreign Service Officers. As assistant secretary of state for African Affairs, I had gotten to know Pickering, my immediate boss, as a wise, fast-talking, and deeply knowledgeable diplomat. Having served as ambassador to six major countries and the United Nations, Pickering had seen and heard almost everything. The purpose of our trip to Nigeria was to encourage a responsible political transition. The nasty former dictator, Sani Abacha, had died a month earlier in the company of prostitutes. Viagra was reportedly involved. His interim successor was a moderate leader, Abdulsalami Abubakar, who hoped to shepherd Nigeria through a democratic election to select its new leader.

READ MORE:  EFCC Arrests Popular TikTok Influencer Over Naira Abuse

Emirates Begins IATA Travel Pass Trials To Ease COVID-19 Travel Requirement

A primary objective of our visit was to meet the wrongfully imprisoned opposition leader, MKO Abiola. He was the presumed winner of Nigeria’s 1993 election, but the results were annulled, and he was later arrested. We hoped to negotiate his freedom so that he could participate in the upcoming election.

Along with Pickering and U.S ambassador to Nigeria Bill Twadell, I met Mr. Abiola in an austere government guesthouse on the vast presidential complex in the capital, Abuja. A large and imposing man, MKO Abiola came with his minder shortly after we arrived. Pickering, a former ambassador to Nigeria, knew MKO Abiola from years past and greeted him warmly. Abiola, robust and happy to see us, sat on the couch and began to tell us how poorly he had been treated during his four years in prison. He was wearing sandals and multilayered traditional Nigerian dress. I noted that his ankles were swollen.

Bitcoin: Why Nigerian Youths Are Crazy About Cryptocurrency

About five minutes into the conversation, MKO Abiola started to cough, at first mildly and intermittently, and then wrackingly with consistency. He said he was hot, so I asked his dutiful minder, “Please turn up the air-conditioning.” Noticing a tea service on the table between us, I offered MKO Abiola, “Would you like some tea to help calm your cough?”

“Yes,” he said, with appreciation, and I poured him a cup. He sipped it, but continued coughing. Increasingly uncomfortable, Abiola removed his outer layer, leaving one layer on top. I shot Pickering a worried glance.

The coughing became dramatic. I told the assembled men, “I think we better call for a doctor.” No one argued. The minder immediately placed the call. MKO Abiola asked to be excused and went into the bathroom of our meeting room. When he emerged, he was bare-chested and sweating profusely, barely able to talk. He lay down on the couch writhing and then rolled facedown onto the floor. The doctor arrived promptly, took a quick look at him, and declared that MKO Abiola was having a heart attack and must be transported to the hospital immediately. The men labored to lift the heavy MKO Abiola into a small car, and we rushed to the nearby, rudimentary presidential hospital. I grabbed his eye-glasses off of a side table where he left them, his only belonging, thinking of his daughter Hafsat in the U.S whom I’d met before we left. The doctors worked on him, furiously, but within an hour they pronounced him dead.

READ MORE:  Two Dead In Gombe Eid Stampede

We braced for violence. MKO Abiola’s sudden and mysterious death would hit like a bombshell in Nigeria’s political tinderbox. Conspiracy theories would spread like metastatic cancer. Serious unrest throughout Nigeria was possible. Washington would hyperventilate, since it’s not every day a major figure drops dead with senior U.S officials. His family would need to be told. And, urgently, Nigeria’s acting president would have to hear directly from us, even though his minister was present at the hospital and knew how it went down.

How Agbekoya Group Became Popular in Nigeria – Aare Okikiola

Ambassador Twadell panicked and urged me and Pickering to rush to the airport and leave the country immediately. “Hell no,” we said. This delicate situation required deft management, not a hurried exit in a cloud of suspicion.

Right away, I called National Security Advisor Sandy Berger, my former boss, briefed him, and dictated a White House press release. Then we went to the Nigerian presidential palace to relay the entire drama to the acting president. We urged him to issue a careful statement to announce the establishment of an autopsy by international experts, in order to quell rife speculation and limit the potential violence. The acting president did both.

Next, Pickering, Twadell, and I went with former Nigerian Foreign Minister Baba Kingibe to see MKO Abiola’s wives and daughters. All of us walked in together, but soon I realized that I was effectively alone in the room with these distraught women. The men had hung far back and left the job to me—just like the pouring of the tea. I proceeded to explain that their husband/father was dead. He had died of an apparent heart attack that began in our meeting. The doctors did all they could to save him but could not. The ladies’ wailing was so intense, it haunts me to this day.

3 Days After New IGP Resumes, Abuja Policemen Harass Workers, Seal Quarry Without Court Order

We briefed the press, and I returned to the U.S embassy to write the official cable to report what had happened. As a senior official, I almost never wrote up cables summarizing meetings but in this case there was no more efficient way to ensure we got this very important history straight.

MKO Abiola

As I was typing, I heard in the distance on the CNN a familiar voice of indignation. It was none other than the Reverend Jesse Jackson, then serving as President Clinton’s special envoy for the promotion of democracy in Africa. Reverend Jackson served capably in this role, and with good intentions, but on this occasion, I could have throttled him. He was riffling about how MKO Abiola died under suspicious circumstances in a meeting with U.S. officials. I could not believe my ears—our own guy implying we were killers! Immediately, I placed a call to his longtime aide Yuri and asked them to shut the Reverend down. “Please, just get him off the set.” That happened, even as I was still watching the segment.

READ MORE:  JYPA Hails President Tinubu On Victory At PEPT, Says Triumph For Democracy, Nigerians

Government Shuts 5 GTBank Branches Over N1 billion Tax Default 

We stayed overnight in Nigeria to try to calm things, offer any needed assistance to the government, and make an orderly departure. Fortunately, despite deep public upset, no significant violence occurred. The autopsy eventually confirmed the cause of death as a heart attack. Nonetheless, it was Nigeria where conspiracy theories abound. The most popular, which still has currency over twenty years later, is that I killed MKO Abiola by pouring him poisoned tea.

From that experience, I found that being a woman policymaker comes with unique hazards. The men would not have offered, much less thought, to pour the tea. They may have swiftly called for a doctor. They may not have been able to break the bad news to the wives. Not for the first time, it was I, not they, who took the public fall for a crime nobody committed.

NOTE: Rice also wrote a brief on her Nigerian connection:

Almost immediately after their wedding, my parents moved to Lagos, Nigeria, where Dad had been sent by the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) as a research advisor to help establish the Central Bank of Nigeria in the wake of the country’s independence. Mom took leave from the College Board and worked for the Ford Foundation as an educational specialist for West Africa. Their two years in Nigeria, punctuated by travel around West Africa and Europe, were, by all accounts, enjoyable. They amassed an impressive collection of Nigerian art, including valuable sculptures that were a visual fixture of my upbringing.
I was conceived in Nigeria. Toward the end of their stay, Mom became pregnant with me, and I have long amused myself with the hypothesis that my origins in Nigeria, combined with my Irish and Jamaican ancestors, explain a lot both about my temperament and attraction to all things international.

Credit: Oluwasegun Adeniyi

Share this:

  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp

Like this:

Like Loading...

Related

Tags: General Sanni AbachaMKO Abiola
ShareTweet
Previous Post

World Earth Day: Unity Bank Joins MEDIC to Mark Annual Event

Next Post

EFCC Chairman Attends NGIJ Workshop, Cautions Journalists on Media Trial

TheConscience NG

TheConscience NG

Related Posts

Truecaller Lite Expands Caller ID, Anti Scam Features for Users
Crime/General

Truecaller Lite Expands Caller ID, Anti Scam Features for Users

by TheConscience NG
June 10, 2026
5th Ecobank Adire Lagos Experience Kicks Off on Thursday With Intl Exhibitors
Business

5th Ecobank Adire Lagos Experience Kicks Off on Thursday With Intl Exhibitors

by TheConscience NG
June 10, 2026
Fidelity Bank Reaffirms Support for MSMEs, Drives Growth Agenda at SME Forum
Business

Fidelity Bank Reaffirms Support for MSMEs, Drives Growth Agenda at SME Forum

by TheConscience NG
June 10, 2026
Yemisi Shyllon Museum Announces Date for Free Public Access
News

Yemisi Shyllon Museum Announces Date for Free Public Access

by TheConscience NG
June 10, 2026
AICFF 2026 Concludes Maiden Edition in Abuja, Urges Excellence in Christian Storytelling
News

AICFF 2026 Ends in Abuja, Urges Excellence in Christian Storytelling

by TheConscience NG
June 10, 2026
Expert Makes Case for Healthcare Manufacturing in Nigeria 
Business

Expert Makes Case for Healthcare Manufacturing in Nigeria 

by TheConscience NG
June 10, 2026
Next Post
Anti-Corruption Groups Applaud Tinubu, Urge Him To Probe Malami, Sirika, Farouk, Others

EFCC Chairman Attends NGIJ Workshop, Cautions Journalists on Media Trial

No Result
View All Result

Recent Posts

  • Truecaller Lite Expands Caller ID, Anti Scam Features for Users
  • 5th Ecobank Adire Lagos Experience Kicks Off on Thursday With Intl Exhibitors
  • Fidelity Bank Reaffirms Support for MSMEs, Drives Growth Agenda at SME Forum
  • Yemisi Shyllon Museum Announces Date for Free Public Access
  • AICFF 2026 Ends in Abuja, Urges Excellence in Christian Storytelling

Get the latest news on the go!

Enter your email address

© 2025 TheConscience NG

TheConscience NG

  • About
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy-Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • TheConscienceNg.com | Breaking & Verified Nigerian News on the go!

Follow Us

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
X
Subject:
Message:
Ajax loader
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Crime
  • Entertainment
  • Featured
  • Icons
  • Opinion
  • World
  • Tech

© 2025 TheConscience NG

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.
Share with friends
Share on Facebook Share
Share
Share on Twitter Share
Share
Share on Linkedin Share
Share
%d