- Safiu Kehinde
President Bola Tinubu has mourned the demise of MKO Abiola’s widow, Doyin Abiola.
NPO Reported that the first female Managing Director of a newspaper in Nigeria passed away on Tuesday at the age of 82.
Tinubu in reaction in a statement issued on Wednesday his Special Adviser on Information and Strategy, Bayo Onanuga, expressed his sadness over the demise of the matriarch.
Reminiscing on the media career of the former Managing Director and Editor-in-Chief of the National Concord, the President hailed Doyin for her integrity, tenacity, hard work, commitment to excellence, and dedication to public good and democratic good governance.
He recalled her contribution during the June 12 struggle after her husband’s election was annulled in 1993.
Tinubu described Doyin as soldier of democracy who will never be forgotten by Nigerians.
He commiserated with the Abiola and Aboaba families, her daughter Doyinsola, as well as Lagos and Ogun States government.
The statement read in part; “I received with deep sadness the news early on Wednesday of the passing of Dr. Doyinsola Hamidat Abiola, a trailblazing journalist, editor, and former managing director of the defunct Concord Group of newspapers and wife of the late Bashorun MKO Abiola.
“Doyin Abiola, 82, was an Amazon and an icon in Nigerian journalism.
“She stayed in the journalism course since starting as a reporter with the defunct Daily Sketch after graduating from the University of Ibadan in 1969, majoring in English and Drama.
“She broke the gender barrier, becoming the first woman to edit a national newspaper and the first managing director of a daily newspaper.
“Her immense contributions to journalism and gender equity laid a foundation for generations of women. Her impact on our democracy was even more profound.
“Doyin embodied integrity, tenacity, hard work, commitment to excellence, and dedication to public good and democratic good governance. In 1980, she emerged as the pioneer editor of National Concord, owned by the late MKO Abiola.
“She later became the managing director and editor-in-chief of all the Concord titles, including founding the Weekend Concord, which set new standards for making people the focus of reporting.
“I had a good relationship with the late Doyin, which stemmed from my close relationship with the late MKO Abiola. As MKO’s wife, Doyin became acquainted with politics and took a keen interest in it, particularly when her husband ran for the country’s presidency in 1993.
“She played a prominent role in MKO’s election, mobilising and providing direction for the media under her control. And when the June 12 election, won by her husband, was annulled, she did not stand aside.
“Despite the military junta shutting down the Concord Group, she also joined the fray, demanding the validation of the election.
“She was a soldier of democracy in her own right. Nigerians will never forget Doyin Abiola’s leadership during her illustrious journalism career, her championing women’s empowerment, and her commitment to democracy.
“I commiserate with the Abiola and Aboaba families, her only daughter, Doyinsola, and the government and people of Lagos and Ogun States. May her soul rest in peace. May this nation be blessed with more women of Doyin Abiola’s calibre and pedigree.”
