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50 Years After Murtala Muhammed: Between the Ghost of Coups and the Crisis of Democracy

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<p><&excl;-- BEGIN THEIA POST SLIDER --><&sol;p>&NewLine;<&excl;-- WP QUADS Content Ad Plugin v&period; 2&period;0&period;98&period;1 -->&NewLine;<div class&equals;"quads-location quads-ad4" id&equals;"quads-ad4" style&equals;"float&colon;none&semi;margin&colon;0px&semi;">&NewLine;&NewLine;<&sol;div>&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p><div class&equals;"sHC6KyTV" style&equals;"clear&colon;both&semi;float&colon;left&semi;width&colon;100&percnt;&semi;margin&colon;0 0 20px 0&semi;"><script async src&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;pagead2&period;googlesyndication&period;com&sol;pagead&sol;js&sol;adsbygoogle&period;js"><&sol;script> &NewLine;<&excl;-- TV --> &NewLine;<ins class&equals;"adsbygoogle" &NewLine; style&equals;"display&colon;block" &NewLine; data-ad-client&equals;"ca-pub-4403533287178375" &NewLine; data-ad-slot&equals;"4399361195" &NewLine; data-ad-format&equals;"auto" &NewLine; data-full-width-responsive&equals;"true"><&sol;ins> &NewLine;<script> &NewLine; &lpar;adsbygoogle &equals; window&period;adsbygoogle &vert;&vert; &lbrack;&rsqb;&rpar;&period;push&lpar;&lbrace;&rcub;&rpar;&semi; &NewLine;<&sol;script><&sol;div>&NewLine;<p>By Yusuf Danjuma Yunusa &amp&semi; Abbas Yushau Yusuf<&sol;p><div class&equals;"7ms2mt3r" style&equals;"clear&colon;both&semi;float&colon;left&semi;width&colon;100&percnt;&semi;margin&colon;0 0 20px 0&semi;"><script async src&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;pagead2&period;googlesyndication&period;com&sol;pagead&sol;js&sol;adsbygoogle&period;js"><&sol;script> &NewLine;<&excl;-- TV --> &NewLine;<ins class&equals;"adsbygoogle" &NewLine; style&equals;"display&colon;block" &NewLine; data-ad-client&equals;"ca-pub-4403533287178375" &NewLine; data-ad-slot&equals;"4399361195" &NewLine; data-ad-format&equals;"auto" &NewLine; data-full-width-responsive&equals;"true"><&sol;ins> &NewLine;<script> &NewLine; &lpar;adsbygoogle &equals; window&period;adsbygoogle &vert;&vert; &lbrack;&rsqb;&rpar;&period;push&lpar;&lbrace;&rcub;&rpar;&semi; &NewLine;<&sol;script><&sol;div>&NewLine;<p>February 13 marks exactly 50 years since General Murtala Ramat Muhammed was assassinated in a failed coup attempt that shook Nigeria to its core&period; His death on that Friday morning in 1976 was not merely the killing of a Head of State&semi; it was a brutal reminder of how fragile political power can be when the barrel of a gun becomes the pathway to leadership&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Half a century later&comma; Nigeria stands under democratic rule&comma; yet the memory of coups still lingers like a warning siren in the nation’s political subconscious&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Muhammed himself came to power through a military coup in 1975&comma; toppling General Yakubu Gowon&period; His own assassination less than seven months later&comma; during an abortive coup led by dissident officers&comma; reinforced the inherent instability of governance born out of force&period; Coups promise swift correction&comma; but they often deliver cycles of uncertainty&comma; repression and further violence&period;<&sol;p><div class&equals;"Mck9jGXC" style&equals;"clear&colon;both&semi;float&colon;left&semi;width&colon;100&percnt;&semi;margin&colon;0 0 20px 0&semi;"><script async src&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;pagead2&period;googlesyndication&period;com&sol;pagead&sol;js&sol;adsbygoogle&period;js"><&sol;script> &NewLine;<ins class&equals;"adsbygoogle" &NewLine; style&equals;"display&colon;block&semi; text-align&colon;center&semi;" &NewLine; data-ad-layout&equals;"in-article" &NewLine; data-ad-format&equals;"fluid" &NewLine; data-ad-client&equals;"ca-pub-4403533287178375" &NewLine; data-ad-slot&equals;"6550225277"><&sol;ins> &NewLine;<script> &NewLine; &lpar;adsbygoogle &equals; window&period;adsbygoogle &vert;&vert; &lbrack;&rsqb;&rpar;&period;push&lpar;&lbrace;&rcub;&rpar;&semi; &NewLine;<&sol;script><&sol;div>&NewLine;<p>The danger of military coups to democracy is not theoretical&semi; it is historical fact&period; Military regimes centralise authority&comma; suspend constitutional order and weaken civilian institutions&period; Even when they promise reform&comma; they operate outside the consent of the governed&period; The culture they breed — command-and-control politics — can outlive their uniforms&comma; seeping into civilian administrations long after soldiers return to the barracks&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<&excl;-- WP QUADS Content Ad Plugin v&period; 2&period;0&period;98&period;1 -->&NewLine;<div class&equals;"quads-location quads-ad3" id&equals;"quads-ad3" style&equals;"float&colon;none&semi;margin&colon;0px&semi;">&NewLine;&NewLine;<&sol;div>&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>Nigeria’s post-independence history reads like a ledger of interrupted transitions&colon; 1966&comma; 1975&comma; 1983&comma; 1985&comma; 1993&period; Each intervention reset the political clock but deepened structural fragilities&period; Civil institutions were stunted&period; Political parties became vehicles of patronage rather than ideology&period; Trust between citizens and the state eroded&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Today&comma; the guns are silent&comma; and ballots have replaced bullets as instruments of power&period; Yet the shadow of military interruption remains instructive&comma; especially at a time when frustration with democratic governance is rising across the country&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The uncomfortable truth is that democracy&comma; while intact procedurally&comma; is struggling substantively&period; Elections are held regularly&comma; but economic hardship persists&period; Institutions exist&comma; but public confidence in them is thin&period; The Constitution guarantees rights&comma; yet citizens often feel unheard in matters of security&comma; employment and welfare&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<&excl;-- WP QUADS Content Ad Plugin v&period; 2&period;0&period;98&period;1 -->&NewLine;<div class&equals;"quads-location quads-ad1" id&equals;"quads-ad1" style&equals;"float&colon;none&semi;margin&colon;0px&semi;">&NewLine;&NewLine;<&sol;div>&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>This disconnect between democratic form and democratic outcome creates a dangerous vacuum&period; When people begin to question whether democracy delivers tangible improvement to their lives&comma; nostalgia for &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;strongman efficiency” can quietly resurface&period; It is a perilous sentiment&period; History shows that military rule may appear decisive&comma; but it rarely produces sustainable prosperity or inclusive governance&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The lesson from Murtala Muhammed’s assassination is not simply about the vulnerability of leaders&semi; it is about the vulnerability of systems built without deep institutional roots&period; Democracies collapse when institutions are hollowed out&comma; when the judiciary is weakened&comma; when legislatures lose independence and when accountability becomes selective&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Equally&comma; democracy fails when it becomes distant from the daily struggles of the masses&period; Nigeria today grapples with inflation&comma; unemployment&comma; insecurity and widening inequality&period; For many citizens&comma; the promise of 1999 — that civilian rule would bring stability and opportunity — feels deferred&period; This perception does not justify military intervention&comma; but it does expose the urgent need for democratic renewal&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>A coup does not cure governance failure&semi; it compounds it&period; It replaces flawed accountability with none at all&period; It silences dissent rather than addressing its root causes&period; The real antidote to democratic disappointment is not regression to authoritarian shortcuts but reform within constitutional boundaries&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Fifty years after Murtala Muhammed’s assassination&comma; Nigeria’s greatest safeguard against instability is not the strength of its armed forces but the credibility of its democratic institutions&period; The military must remain firmly subordinate to civilian authority&comma; while civilian leaders must govern in ways that justify that authority&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Democracy cannot survive on ritual alone&period; It must deliver justice&comma; equity and measurable improvement in citizens’ lives&period; When it does not&comma; cynicism grows&period; And when cynicism grows unchecked&comma; history’s darker chapters begin to look deceptively attractive&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The anniversary of 1976 should therefore serve as both memorial and mirror — a memorial to a turbulent past and a mirror reflecting present responsibilities&period; Nigeria has paid dearly for power seized by force&period; The challenge now is ensuring that democracy does not lose legitimacy through neglect&comma; inequity or arrogance&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The gun once interrupted Nigeria’s future&period; The ballot must not be allowed to lose its meaning&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>General Murtala Muhammad&&num;8217&semi;s legacy will continue to remain fresh in the memory of patriotic Nigerians&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The constitutional democracy Nigeria is enjoying today is the brainchild of the late General Murtala Muhammad&comma; who addressed the nation with vigour and instilled confidence&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>His phrase &&num;8220&semi;Immediate effect&&num;8221&semi; remains the phrase successive Nigerian leaders have used to command respect and to show Nigerians they are very serious about formulating and implementing policies for the progress of all&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Despite military rule being an aberration&comma; General Murtala Muhammad&&num;8217&semi;s assassination was backward and retrogressive to the development of Nigeria&comma; which many will continue to mourn for decades to come&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>As General Murtala Muhammad clocks five decades after passing to the great beyond&comma; the Nigerian Government should mandate a topic for Nigerian children in the country&&num;8217&semi;s civic education curriculum so that those yet unborn will feel the impact of Nigeria&&num;8217&semi;s great leader lost to the hands of retrogressive assassins on that fateful Friday&comma; February 13th&comma; 1976&comma; which is exactly five decades today&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Adieu&comma; great son of Nigeria and great son of Kano&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><&excl;-- END THEIA POST SLIDER -->&NewLine;<&excl;-- WP QUADS Content Ad Plugin v&period; 2&period;0&period;98&period;1 -->&NewLine;<div class&equals;"quads-location quads-ad5" id&equals;"quads-ad5" style&equals;"float&colon;none&semi;margin&colon;0px&semi;">&NewLine;&NewLine;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<script async src&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;pagead2&period;googlesyndication&period;com&sol;pagead&sol;js&sol;adsbygoogle&period;js"><&sol;script> &NewLine;<ins class&equals;"adsbygoogle" &NewLine; style&equals;"display&colon;block" &NewLine; data-ad-format&equals;"autorelaxed" &NewLine; data-ad-client&equals;"ca-pub-4403533287178375" &NewLine; data-ad-slot&equals;"1004305389"><&sol;ins> &NewLine;<script> &NewLine; &lpar;adsbygoogle &equals; window&period;adsbygoogle &vert;&vert; &lbrack;&rsqb;&rpar;&period;push&lpar;&lbrace;&rcub;&rpar;&semi; &NewLine;<&sol;script>&NewLine;<&excl;-- WP QUADS Content Ad Plugin v&period; 2&period;0&period;98&period;1 -->&NewLine;<div class&equals;"quads-location quads-ad4" id&equals;"quads-ad4" style&equals;"float&colon;none&semi;margin&colon;0px&semi;">&NewLine;&NewLine;<&sol;div>&NewLine;&NewLine;

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