The son of former Nigerian
military head of state Yakubu Gowon is due to return to Nigeria after spending
22 years in a US prison after being convicted on drug-related charges. It is
believed Musa Gowon was released from the Taft Correctional Facility Bakersfield,
California, after US President Barack Obama granted him pardon earlier in
November.
The
Igbo Mandate Congress (IMC)- which advocates for the Igbo ethnic group in
Nigeria - has said it was arranging a welcome ceremony. The date of Gowon's
arrival has not yet been disclosed. He is currently being held at a deportation
centre in the US.
Who is
Musa Gowon?
According
to the IMC, Gowon was born in 1969 after his father had started a relationship
with an Igbo woman, late Edith Ike-Okongwu.
The
relationship allegedly ended during the Nigerian civil war (1967-1970) - also
known as the Biafran war - as Okongwu disagreed with Yakubu Gowon - then head
of state - over the role of the Nigerian army in the war. The army has been
accused of deliberately bombing Biafran civilians and imposing a blockade that
resulted in the death of hundreds of thousands of civilians due to lack of food
and medicine.
After the war, Okongwu
emigrated with her son to the US. She later returned to Nigeria, while Musa
remained in the US where he joined a Colombian drug cartel. He was arrested and
sentenced to 40 years in jail in 1992, at the age of 23. Musa was said to have
lived a flamboyant lifestyle until he was arrested on November 18, 1992 aged
23, prosecuted and given 40-year jail sentence the following year.
U.S.
President Obama last month granted him state pardon after he had spent 22 years
in prison. He is now in the custody of U.S. Immigration booked for deportation
to Nigeria anytime from now
IMC
thanked Obama for the pardon: "Igbo Mandate Congress also expresses
gratitude to the United States President Barrack Obama for the pardon granted
Musa Ngonadi Gowon in the spirit of reconciliation and demand good treatment of
this man born under the contradictions of love, hate and an unnecessary civil
war."
Gowon
created a Facebook account in 2013 where he routinely wrote messages thanking
family and friends for his support. in March 2015, he wrote: "To all my
family and friends. I recently read all your lovely birthday messages to me,
and I was overjoyed at the beautiful and kind words of encouragement sent to
me. I hear you all and unfortunately I can't respond directly to everyone...
But in due time we shall all see again, by the grace of God. Thank you once
more for the love and support and I hold you all in a special part of my heart.
God bless."
After
being overthrown in 1975, Gowon's father moved to the UK, where he obtained a
PhD at Warwick University in 1983. He returned to Nigeria that same year after
being pardoned by the then president Shehu Shagari for his alleged role in the
1976 coup d'etat in Nigeria. Gowon's father still lives in the UK.
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