Aremson: The Tragic Exit of A Hero of Our Barricades
There is no death in recent times that has left me as
disconcerted as the tragic killing of Aremson by a hit-and-run driver on 12
October. I have tried to write, and each time got disoriented by the weight of
emotions, some of which I still grapple with naming.
This is not simply because of memories from over three and a
half decades of friendship. I recalled our collaboration, the heated debates
that continued late into the night before mobile phones, and the lengthy
WhatsApp calls of recent times. My mind went to the cell we shared at Ikoyi
prison during the June 12 struggle and the bed in a dingy hotel somewhere
between Ojuelegba and Yaba as we put mechanisms in motion for the burning of
tires to effect an NLC/TUC general strike that was called off at the last
moment. I reflected on how my respect for Aremson soared when I visited him at
home in August. Seeing the impact of a series of strokes on his health, and how
he remained unbowed and unrepentant, I saluted him as one of the most rugged never-say-die
fighters in the ring of life itself.
Over the last few days, as I stared at the blank page on my
computer, my mind kept going back to what Femi Obayori described as fate’s
trickery on humankind, and indeed on one of its finest species not because he
was perfect, but because he was consistent, tenacious and dogged in fighting.
Bullets, detention, stress and even stroke could not stop his heart from
beating with the passion of struggle for the working people he lived for. It
was a bloody hit-and-run that stilled the heart of one who lived such a
remarkable life, with such a rude finality!
The life of Aremson was, however, not merely a life.
It was deeply rooted in, mirrored and inspired the spirit of resistance for
generations. And whilst his breath has ceased, that life, like a seed buried,
will breathe life into the hearts of generations of fighters for generations to
come. Ours is to water it, with our stories in tribute, of the heroic struggle
at our barricades which defined the life of a people’s general: Abiodun “Aremson”
Aremu.
From Ilorin to Lagos: first contacts, PAYCO & the
embers of PLM
My first meeting with Aremson was sometime in 1989 at what
used to be the Triumph Motel in Ilorin. That apartment is one of those
revolutionary spaces that would have a lot to say if walls could talk. It
was the base of the People’s Liberation
Movement (PLM) comrades where lively debates would stretch into the nights,
even when there was little to eat or drink. Aremson’s expressed his passionate commitment to the
struggle and the inspiration of the Cuban revolution on his politics. Apart
from the Nigeria-Cuban Friendship and Cultural Association (NCFCA) which I
would serve as publicity secretary several years later, he made me aware of the
Friends of Abel Santamaria.
Two years later, I moved to Lagos, and we reconnected at one
of the activities organised by the trade unions to honour Wahab Goodluck after
his death on 10 September 1991. This would mark the beginning of closer
collaboration on some fronts. The first of these was the Pan-African Youth
Congress (PAYCO), where Aremson’s influence was always palpable even though he
did not occupy any leading official position. Richard Mamah was National
President and Femi Obayori the General Secretary. I was saddled with the task
of serving as PAYCO Lagos State Secretary, with Victor Imana as Chair. We were
also (along with Rasta Paul) the key officials of the League of Black
Nationalists (LBN) on campus at Unilag.
From the beginning of 1992, the PAYCO Lagos Chapter
organised a series of guest lectures and symposiums and the weekly “African
Discussion Forum” sessions at the All-Africa Peace and Solidarity Organisation
(AAPSO) office a building away from the NLC secretariat on Olajuwon street. We
also took political education to pupils in secondary schools, both on the
mainland (Mushin and Ebute Meta) and on the Island (especially Obalende). We
set up Pan-African Students Clubs (PASCs) in some of these schools. In others,
we spurred them (the students as well as progressive teachers whom we met in
the course of organising) to reshape some of the existing student societies
such as Press Clubs, literary & debating societies, and historical
societies, into theatres of radical discussions on African history and
Pan-African possibilities.
When Dr Mayirue Eyeniegi Kolagbodi died in July 1992, Aremson
was pivotal in the flurry of activities to honour the great trade unionist. This would lead to the formation of the Kolagbodi Memorial
Foundation (KMF). KMF’s annual guest lecture delivered by leading pro-working
class academics and trade union leaders have continued till date as leading
moments in the Nigerian labour movement’s calendar. KMF also publishes the Labour
Factsheet.
It is important to underscore the importance, in my view, of
the PLM (or WPLM: Working People’s Liberation Movement, as it initially was
called) in the evolution of Aremson’s
politics. It was the most worker-oriented Marxist-Leninist group in practice,
after the eclipse of the Socialist Working People’s Party (SWPP) of Wahab
Goodluck, Ibidapo Fatogun, S.U. Bassey & Co. in the 1980s. I hope comrades
like Sandinista, Longman Bamidele and Nameless will take up documenting its
history. Aremson’s politics reflected the finest dynamics of PLM’s ideological
orientation and approach to practise for the rest of his life.
June 12 struggle: radicalisation and its discontents
The June 12 democratic revolution was a defining moment. We threw
ourselves without reservation into organising and mobilising. Aremson’s place in
Mushin was one of those places that were havens for comrades. Earlier in 1991,
he had been arrested there with four student union leaders: Abdulmahmud Aminu,
NANS President; Abiodun “Revo” Ogunade a former NANS Vice-President in the
preceding leadership and; Olaitan Oyerinde, an Ex officio. Their “crime” was to
have organised an Academic Reform campaign: ACAREF, which would entail improved
funding of education and payment of bursaries to students.
What was a rivulet in the pre-June 12 period became a huge
river. It was not simply that Aremson’s place became much more significant as a
haven for resistance. His grassroots organising led to the identification and
winning over of many a diehard fighter in the neighbourhood. I was a man of
several homes and even more “drop-in & move next day” places. But, Mushin
was the one place where I had three places I could call underground homes. From
these, I worked closely with Aremson and other comrades in that axis to build
resistance. To unite our forces, we formed the Progressive Youth League Mushin
(PYLEM).
We organised a massive rally for the reversal of the
annulment of the June 12 election at Isolo Junction in the heart of Mushin in
September 1993. Police broke up the demonstration and arrested some youths in
the area. We, the PYLEM organisers, could very well have got away without being
arrested. But Aremson pointed out something that we all could not but agree
with.
He argued that we would lose the moral right to call for
another demonstration if we walked away, as the youths from the àdúgbò (area)
who had answered our call were arrested. So, we stepped forward as leaders of
the rally and demanded that the people arrested be released. The youths who had
just been arrested were released. Aremson, Femi Opeolu, Wasiu and I were
arrested instead. We were taken to Panti and pápàpá taken to the Yaba
magistrate court and from there straight to Ikoyi prison.
The next two years of the six-year ideological and political
contestation between revolution and counter-revolution that was the “June 12
struggle” threw up, amongst other things, an ethno-nationalist trend across
tendencies on the left, sometimes (particularly as the O’odua People’s
Congress, OPC), this was in collaboration with liberal elements. One of the
earliest of these was the O’odua Youth Movement (OYM) which Aremson and most
comrades from the earlier PLM project played key roles in. Those from that
project who were within Molobi’s orbit were central to establishing the O’odua
Liberation Movement (OLM).
In later years, as the June 12 struggle progressed, other
Yorùbá self-determination groups such as the Yorùbá Revolutionary Movement
(YOREM) led by Wálé Balógun, and united platforms such as the Àpapò led by Olá Òní,
and the Coalition of O’odua Self-Determination Groups (COSEG) emerged as
projects of some sections of the left in the South West.
I have always been of the view that for many on the left at
that period, particularly so in the Southwest, who took up the gauntlet of
self-determination, it was some shortcut calculus through the national question
to socialist revolution. In discussions, some would argue that it would be
easier to organise a struggle for socialist revolution in a largely mono-ethnic
nation state.
Whatever the reason for that turn though, many got caught in
the analytical primacy of ethnicity even within what could otherwise pass for
class analysis. Aremu was not one of them. You would hardly ever, if at all,
find him arguing from, or about, a Yorùbá standpoint, revolutionary or
otherwise. Though he was a founding leader of OYM, all his public arguments
showed working-class and anti-imperialist spirits, without any ambiguity
whatsoever.
The 21st Century & popular barricades:
UAD, ANSA, JAF/LASCO & ACIS-M
Born seven months before Nigeria’s independence, Aremu
became politically aware as a teenager. By his early twenties, he had become a
student leader and president of Kwara Tech, an institution which had a rich
history of resistance in the heydays of the students movement. Aremu had also
at the time set off on his path to being a lifelong anti-imperialist with undying
affection for the Cuban revolution. The furnace of the June 12 struggle forged
these elements of his politics into political steel.
Altogether, the 20th century prepared him for the
21st when we would have had to invent an Aremson if there had not
been one. Opportunity met preparedness in the most challenging circumstances
for the left, as Abiodun Aremu. These were within the rubric of the United
Action for Democracy, the All Nigeria Socialist Alliance, and the Joint Action
Front. Further, when the left movement had all but collapsed on campuses, with
only a few Trotskyist and International Socialist groups having a presence on
campuses, he helped build the only Marxist-Leninist youth movement ACIS-M
amongst youths within and outside campuses.
To put the foregoing in perspective, we start with his role
in the UAD. When we formed the UAD on 17 May 1997, the left largely dominated
it (and in a way that reflected cleavages in the movement at the time), with
Chima Ubani and Sylvester Odion-Akhaine as co-secretaries. But it was clear
that it was a united front of the left with reformist liberal forces. Olisa
Agbakoba as the pioneer National Convener reflected this fact.
Things appeared to change in 2002. The National Convention
held in 2002 at the Michael Imoudu Hall, Labour House, Yaba, elected Bamidele
Francis Aturu (BF) National Convener, leading a National Administrative
Committee including J. Gaskie, Ibrahim Zikirullahi and Aremson. We celebrated that
night: UAD was now unambiguously powered by the left. But as events would show,
that was not enough.
The following year, BF ran for Lagos State governor on the
Democratic Alternative platform. By UAD rules, he had to step aside for this
purpose temporarily. However, even when he came back, he no longer provided
leadership. When the tenure of that NAC expired, it was Aremson who provided
leadership to save the day, first in a caretaker role and then for two terms as
National Convener. No greater National Convener did UAD ever have than Aremson.
And I say this, not only as a founding member of UAD and former National
Convener myself, but also without prejudice to appreciating the fact that virtually
all the comrades who had taken up that role before now were comrades of note,
in their different ways.
The exemplar place of Aremson in UAD’s history relates both
to the internal workings of the coalition and its political influence
externally. The UAD’s regional and state structures were never as vibrant
before or after his tenure. National Coordinating Committee meetings and the
National Conventions were organised as and when due. And it was not just about form
and procedures. Discussions, though at times heated, were qualitative on “state
of the nation” as well as on how to build the UAD, resulting in well thought
out resolutions which were followed up with concrete action.
Externally, bulletins were regularly issued about the national
political situation. And it did not stop there. Aremson organised workshops, symposiums
and other avenues for national discourse as UAD or in collaboration with allies.
He brought together comrades with some of the best minds from across all shades
of the radical left to discuss at these forums. A particular case struck my
mind as it affected me.
Sometime in 2006, I got a call from Wale DonLesky that Aremson
wanted me to present a paper on NEPAD at a conference being anchored by UAD
with the Civil Liberties Organization (CLO) and the Justice, Development and
Peace Commission (JDPC). I said I wouldn’t be able to be there because of a
MHWUN assignment I was to go on with my union president. Ten minutes later, I
received a call from Aremson who said: Baba Aye, you cannot say that you will
not be there, please. Festus Iyayi and Segun Sango are the discussants of
your paper and they have both agreed to be there. Compañero, you must arrange
to be there. There was no way I could say no after that.
A series of fortuitous events led to him becoming the
Secretary of the Joint Action Front (JAF) in a way similar to how the UAD
leadership was thrust on him, albeit in a different manner. The nature of
labour struggles in Nigeria took on additional dimensions in the 2000s. A
combination of neoliberal transitions - political and economic – and the
resurgent fightback of a militant working-class started shaping how our class
fought. General strikes became an annual routine. They also went apace with
mass protests. The leadership of organised labour would call on the left civil
society movement to join it in organising mass protests, but never involved
them when it reached deals with the federal government to call off the strikes.
And these were massive strikes that made President Olusegun Obasanjo to recognise
their dual power potentials. He once said that the NLC was operating as a
parallel power in the country, amid a general strike.
After the trade unions called off successive mass strikes in
2000, 2002, 2003 & once more in 2004, the radical civil society insisted on
the need for a joint platform of labour and civil society. Thus was the Labour &
Civil Society Coalition (LASCO) formed. A few months later that same year, the
civil society formed the Joint Action Forum (JAF), which was the civil society
leg of the emergent LASCO tripod. The NLC and TUC were the other two legs.
Chima Ubani emerged as the JAF Secretary and LASCO Co-secretary (with Beko
Ransome-Kuti as Chair). Alas, on the way to Yola, Chima died in a car crash on
21 September 2005.
Again, Aremson would have to fill a crucial coalitional
leadership gap. However, even before he had to take on the JAF secretariat, he
became involved in another situation rooted in the same unfortunate event of
Chima’s death. This was a political project to rally core-left groups in an
alliance. The Abuja Socialist Collective (ASC) which was formed with the
convening of its first meeting on 12 October 2005 (that had been scheduled
before Chima’s death), resolved to canvass for a united front of core left
groups at Chima’s burial on 27-28 October. This laid the basis for the
All-Nigeria Socialist Alliance (ANSA).
A steering committee was constituted comprising Prof. Dung
Pam Sha, Ngozi Iwere, Baba Aye, and Aremson as secretary. ANSA started with
much promise. It adopted Working People’s Vanguard, the ASC’s paper
which I edited as its mass circulating paper whilst Mass Line which Baba
Omojola edited (as the Socialist Revolutionary Vanguard, SRV cadre paper, but on
a non-sectarian basis which had a few of us from other tendencies already on
its Editorial Board) was to serve as the theoretical organ of the Alliance.
For reasons beyond the scope of this tribute, ANSA had
atrophied by 2011. But JAF had become a force to reckon with in the labour
movement, even though LASCO had not been fully formalised. The NLC NEC adopted
it, but not the TUC NEC.
Aremson, as JAF secretary, often observed NLC/TUC NEC
meetings where they decided to strike and led on the streets at barricades. He
never allowed the close relationship that his role enabled him to have with the
trade union bureaucracy to stop him from telling the truth to labour leaders
and former labour leaders, like Adams Oshiomhole whom he called out just a few
weeks back, for his stance against the PENGASSAN strike in the faceoff with the
Dangote Refinery management.
Often people see Aremson at the barricades without
appreciating some intricacies behind that. A situation that comes to mind relates
to the July 2011 strike that was called off before it started. I and Aremson
evaded state security sleuths and crashed together on a single bed in a dingy
hotel somewhere at Ojuelegba to prepare for the strike.
We anticipated that it would be anything but normal, if it
happened at all. Working with some lumpen “area boy” youth in that area, we had
piles of used tires available for burning. We hardly slept. And by 4:30am
thereabouts, we learnt that the NLC and TUC had reached an agreement with the
government. As we both discussed what should be the next step, Aremson said we
had to go ahead with barricades of fire, to make our point for posterity and
make it clear to the masses, including the lumpen fighters awaiting directive
from us that we were not part of those selling them out. Six months later #OccupyNigeria
rocked Nigeria as the 2012 January Uprising. And Aremson was in the thick of
this with JAF right from the early days of that historic massquake.
Repeatedly under his watch, JAF took to the trenches in
struggle, standing up against the privatisation and commercialisation of public
healthcare delivery; defending lecturers in tertiary institutions and
particularly ASUU in their fight for better working conditions and the right to
education; adding its voice of support to strikes and protests of trade unions
across several sectors, and; raising the question of political alternatives,
including at a summit for that purpose. In recent years, JAF’s relevance declined.
A bold step was taken with a symposium in April this year. Despite the state of
his health, Aremson was there urging comrades to keep the flag of struggle
flying and calling for the formation of a JAF party.
Initiating the Amilcar Cabral Ideological School (now ACIS-M)
in July 2005 was one of the most important steps Aremson took in these last two
decades. This is because without regeneration of cadres, movements die. Today, it
is very obvious that the vast majority of Marxist-Leninists from twentieth
century Nigeria do not belong to any core organisation. And for the exceedingly
few that do, these organisations are clubs of handfuls of grey-haired men
(hardly any women, really).
This is without prejudice to the sincerity in their hearts
or knowledge in their heads. But educating and organising younger generations of
revolutionaries is crucial for sustaining revolutionary organisation,
traditions and praxis. That is the importance of a platform like ACIS-M. It is
also important to stress that Aremson's efforts in this direction extended
beyond ACIS-M. Since 2008, he had been one of the key figures associated with the
Social Action’s Anti-Imperialist camps. He also nurtured relationships with
several leftists in the student movement from other groups and tendencies. Aremson
also appreciated the role of the Take It Back movement and the African Action
Congress party and forged close relations with several of its young members,
who alongside ACIS-M comrades built the Alliance of Nigerian Students Against
Neoliberal Attacks (ANSA).
Sùn re o, compañero!
Hamba kahle!
It’s almost a week now, and I have come to accept that
Aremson, in flesh, is gone – ó di à’rìnàkò. But his spirit lives on. This is
not because he was a saint. Saints are myths. He was human and with flaws. My
heart goes out to his wife, a grassroots mobiliser in her own right, and that
made her home our home. I can hardly imagine what a blow this is to her, beyond
the impact we bear.
You fought a good fight, Aremson. History will be fair to
you. Farewell, dear friend and comrade.
Adiós compañero.
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