Buhari’s Death Ignites Old Wounds: Kemi Olunloyo’s Fiery Condemnation and Nigeria’s Unresolved Past.

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  • July 14, 2025
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The passing of former Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari at 82 has elicited a torrent of reactions, from solemn tributes to searing critiques. None, however, has been as incendiary as that of controversial investigative journalist Kemi Olunloyo, who declared the late leader would “meet [her] father at the gates of hell.” Her scathing remarks, laden with decades-old grievances, have reignited debates about Buhari’s divisive legacy and the unresolved traumas of his military rule.

Olunloyo’s outburst, posted on Facebook hours after Buhari’s death was announced, was deeply personal. She framed their histories as intertwined tragedies: Buhari’s 1983 coup ousted her father, Dr. Victor Omololu Olunloyo, then governor of Oyo State, despite both later belonging to the same political party, the APC. “My father never met Buhari,” she wrote, casting the timing of his death—on Nobel laureate Wole Soyinka’s birthday—as symbolic retribution. Her post demanded accountability for alleged injustices: the release of political prisoners, justice for executed journalists, and a correction of Buhari’s age, which she claimed was 89, not 82.

The vitriol underscores the enduring polarization of Buhari’s legacy. To supporters, he was an anti-corruption crusader who stabilized Nigeria’s democracy; to critics like Olunloyo, he remained the iron-fisted general who suppressed dissent. Her reference to “journalists executed during his military reign” echoes documented human rights abuses under his 1983–85 dictatorship, including the notorious Decree 4, which criminalized critical reporting. Yet, her tone—mocking and unrelenting—has divided Nigerians. While some applaud her audacity, others condemn her lack of decorum during national mourning.

Beyond personal vendetta, Olunloyo’s outburst reflects broader societal fissures. Buhari’s presidency (2015–23) was marked by economic stagnation, escalating insecurity, and allegations of authoritarianism, including the deadly suppression of the 2020 #EndSARS protests. His administration’s mixed record—lauded for infrastructure projects like the Second Niger Bridge but criticized for failing to curb Boko Haram’s rural expansion—fuels the polarized reactions to his death. Olunloyo’s diatribe, then, is less about grief than a demand for historical reckoning.

As global leaders, from the African Union to the U.S. State Department, issue measured condolences, Olunloyo’s unrestrained fury serves as a stark counterpoint. It forces a uncomfortable question: Can a nation mourn a leader while confronting the shadows of his past? Her words, however provocative, amplify voices of those who felt sidelined by Buhari’s narrative of redemption. In death, as in life, he remains a figure who unites and divides in equal measure.

The coming days will see Buhari laid to rest with state honors, his legacy polished by diplomatic eulogies. But Olunloyo’s fiery post ensures that another, messier legacy—of unresolved grievances and contested history—will not be buried with him. For Nigeria, the challenge is not just to mourn, but to reconcile these competing truths.

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