From Juliana Taiwo-Obalonye, Abuja
Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), George Akume, has disclosed that former vice president, Atiku Abubakar, was among the political leaders who agreed to adopt a rotational presidency after the annulment of the June 12,1993 presidential election.
He made the disclosure while answering questions at a World Press Conference in Abuja, part of events marking Nigeria’s 27th Democracy Day anniversary.
Recounting the political fallout from the annulment of the election widely regarded as the freest and fairest in Nigeria’s history and won by Chief MKO Abiola, the SGF said the crisis required far‑reaching political decisions aimed at preserving national unity and strengthening the country’s democratic foundation.
He said leaders of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) met in Kaduna under the late Chief Solomon Lar and Alhaji Adamu Ciroma to map a way forward, with power shift and the party’s presidential candidature high on the agenda. “It was a tough argument before the issue of rotational presidency was agreed on. At the end, we had to concede. We must do this. June 12 annulment had complicated the whole thing. It was finally agreed that we’ll be alternating between North and South.
“Atiku was one of the leaders at that meeting, which was convened by Chief Solomon Lar. He was part of that agreement.”
Senator Akume said the decision to alternate presidential power between the North and South aimed to address the political consequences of the June 12 annulment and to promote inclusiveness and national cohesion.
Reflecting on the significance of June 12, he described the annulment as “a painful setback to the democratic aspirations of Nigerians,” adding: “Abiola won that election round and square. That election was annulled by the military government. It was very painful because the people spoke and they spoke freely. They made their own choice.”
Other News
The SGF said one key lesson from 1993 is “that the voice of the people must always be supreme; it must be sacrosanct. That’s the beauty of democracy. We prefer the ballot to bullets.”
Akume also expressed confidence in Nigeria’s democratic institutions, particularly the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), saying the country has learned valuable lessons and would not allow a repeat of such an annulment.
“If an election is conducted very fairly, and one wins no problem. The actors at the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) are not young people, they were adults when this thing happened.
If we were to take a poll at that time, over two thirds of Nigerians would have condemned that act of annulment.
“Fortunately, for us, those at INEC are men of honour and integrity, they are well read, they’re patriotic Nigerians and determined to also make a difference. Never again would such happen in this country. You win, you win. When you lose, go back and prepare for another election. Look at the American example. President Trump lost to Joe Biden. He didn’t bring America down. He went back prepared and came back and won. That’s the beauty of democracy.
“We have decided to embrace democracy. That is why, for 27 broken years, we are enjoying this freedom in a democratic setting. We love the values and the morals of democracy, and there is no system that is as beautiful as democracy.
“It is under a democratic system that you can insult your president and insult anybody and still go to bed, and you don’t receive a midnight knock on your door. Try it under a totalitarian regime.”
Akume urged political actors to respect electoral outcomes, uphold democratic principles and continue to strengthen the nation’s democratic culture. Akume said Nigeria’s 27 years of uninterrupted democratic rule underscore commitment to democratic values, freedom of expression, the rule of law and peaceful political participation,

Follow Us on Google