The outgoing permanent representative of the
United States of America to the United Nations (UN), Ambassador Susan Rice, has
said that she will not make any comment on what transpired during the last
moments of the acclaimed winner of the June 12, 1993, presidential election,
Chief MKO Abiola, for personal reasons.
Rice was the assistant secretary of state for
African affairs at the time Chief Abiola died on July 7, 1998.
Our correspondent had sought her comment over
what happened before the late business mogul started gasping for breath after
allegedly taking a cup of tea that was served by Rice. But after waiting for
another three hours and no response was forthcoming, our correspondent called
Rice’s number and her secretary said that the ambassador had said she would not
be making any comments on the matter owing to her personal reasons.
Also, a former United States ambassador to
Nigeria who was also with the former Social Democratic Party (SDP) presidential
candidate on the day he died, Thomas Pickering, declined to make comments when
our correspondent sent him an electronic mail.
Controversy had trailed the aftermath of the
political impasse that followed the annulled June 12 election by the then Gen
Ibrahim Babangida-led military junta as there were rumours that the late
Abiola died as a result of a poisoned cup of tea that was personally handed to
him by Rice in the presence of Pickering.
Information had it that the tea that Rice
served Abiola had already been poisoned by agents of the then federal
government of Nigeria.
Pickering’s aides stationed at his Woodrow
Institute office, who refused to mention his name to our correspondent during a
telephone conversation, initially promised to get a comment from him but later
said that the former US ambassador would not like to speak on the issue due to
security reasons.
The aide also refused to release Ambassador
Pickering’s direct mobile numbers when pressed by LEADERSHIP on Wednesday
morning.
Our correspondent also made several efforts to
get the reactions of Ambassador Rice who has just been named as the
incoming national security adviser to President Barack Obama but she did not
make any comment on the issue when telephone calls were placed on her office
lines at the United States Permanent Mission the the United Nations.
When our correspondent first called, the
secretary of the United States Mission in New York, Ms Harrera Kathleen, said
that the ambassador was not ready to partake in the telephone interview that
was earlier suggested by our correspondent.
She advised that our correspondent should send
an electronic mail consisting of the questions that Ambassador Rice was
expected to answer to her personal e-mail address. But after the e-mail was
sent, Ms Kathleen warned that our correspondent should not continue until a
response was given by Rice.
Source: Leadership
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