Lagos declared June 12 as public holiday
*Late Chief M.K.O Abiola
(Nigeria) The Lagos State Government on Sunday declared
Monday public holiday to mark June 12 celebration in the State, saying that the
State remains committed to the ideals of the annulled 1993 Presidential
election.
In a statement by the Secretary to the State Government, Mr
Tunji Bello on behalf of the State Governor, Mr Akinwunmi Ambode, the
government said the holiday was in honour of the ideals which June 12, 1993
Presidential election represents being a day that the country experienced an
election that was adjudged as the freest and fairest in Nigeria’s history.
The Governor said 24 years after, the ideals of June 12
commemoration were worth celebrating, describing the day as one of the most
defining moments of the country’s political history which has positively shaped
its democratic rule.
Governor Ambode said the time has come for Nigerians to go
beyond the commemoration and entrench a viable democracy as a way to
immortalise the late presumed winner of June 12, 1993 Presidential election,
Chief M.K.O Abiola through the practice of true federalism and conduct of
credible and fair elections.
He said: "June 12, 1993 is a day we must not forget in
the annals of our democratic history. Our present democratic experience may
still be far from the ideal but we must all make concerted efforts to entrench
fiscal federalism which is the only way to achieve true nationhood.”
Continuing, Governor Ambode said part of the enduring
lessons of June 12 election is that it imbued the patriotic and nationalistic
zeal in all Nigerians to speak with one voice to make a political choice devoid
of ethnic, racial or social sentiments.
“On June 12, 1993, majority of Nigerians across all divides
demonstrated through the ballot box that irrespective of class or ethnic
sympathies, the Nigerian people are united and would always join hands to
promote our unifying values,” he said.
Governor Ambode said though the peoples’ hope was dashed
with the annulment of the elections by the military junta, the lessons of the
elections cannot be wished away despite subterranean efforts by many to do,
describing June 12 as the real Democracy Day in Nigeria.
“We owe it a duty to
genuinely immortalize the fallen heroes of the June 12 struggle nationally and
deepen our democratic values to ensure that never again will such anti-people
action be allowed to take place.”
He also assured that his administration remains committed to
the ideals of June 12 by carrying out people-oriented programmes across the
State and making life more comfortable for the people.
Meanwhile, the State Government, through the office of Civic
Engagement, has perfected arrangement for the annual public symposium which
will hold at the De Roof, LTV 8 in Ikeja, to celebrate June 12.
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