Zina Network: There's been a little controversial storm growing around an award the president recently received.
President
Muhammadu Buhari awarded the First Black History Month National Black
Excellence and Exceptional African Leadership Award (Twitter/BashirAhmaad) When President Muhammadu Buhari was awarded the very First Black History Month National Black Excellence and Exceptional African Leadership Award by the family of famous human rights activist, Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., it was a big deal.
At the award ceremony which took place at Council Chambers in Abuja on Monday, March 26, 2018, the delegation of the King family was led by Dr Naomi Barbara King who advised that the nation continue to pray for peace and strive to eradicate corruption in order to be a nation to be reckoned with.
To
the presidency, it was a big deal because it validated their insistence
of the president's value as a credible leader being recognised by a
powerful family for his war on corruption in the country.
To
the dissenting Nigerian public, especially on social media, it was a
scam being orchestrated and paid for to further pull the wool over the
country's eyes about the president's shortcomings as the 2019
presidential election approaches.
The
objections were mostly based on the perceived clash in the human rights
fight of the late Dr King and the governing style and track record of
President Buhari.
When MLK's nephew, Isaac Newton Farris Jr, further counselled Nigerians against voting out the president in next year's election, it kicked up more dust.
He said, "I
will counsel Nigerians to say give this man the time he needs to do the
job that he is doing. He is one of the most legitimate leaders that the
continent has produced.
"So I
will just counsel Nigerians, I know, I am a visitor it is really not my
business but be careful before you vote this man out of office."
This
raised even more controversy as, as Farris himself feared, Nigerians
told him it was none of his business and wondered why the MLK family was
rooting for the president.
Last night on Wednesday, March 28, an interesting development emerged.
No immediate MLK connection
After the 1968 assassination of MLK Jnr, a prominent leader of the Civil Rights Movement in America, his wife, Coretta Scott King, founded the Martin Luther King Jr. Center for Nonviolent Social Change.
One
of the nongovernmental organisation's drive is to develop a family of
leaders who personify the philosophy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in
their own lives and apply the philosophy of nonviolence to the problems
and issues of the world.
MLK Jnr's youngest child, Dr Bernice King, has been The King Center's president and CEO since 2012.
On Wednesday, The King Center denied any connection to the award that the family purportedly awarded President Buhari.
It posted on its official Twitter handle, "The
award given to President Buhari of Nigeria was not given by The King
Center, at the request of The King Center or by the children of MLK and
Coretta Scott King."
The Center's denial seemed to confirm Nigerians' suspicion about the award's authenticity and the actors behind it.
Many even started to suggest that the president of the most populous black nation was swindled by a foreign party.
So who is behind the award?
A lesser-known King
Dr Naomi Barbara King, who presented President Buhari with the award, is the wife of Alfred Daniel Williams "A. D." King,
a Baptist minister and a civil rights activist, who was MLK Jr's
younger brother and died in an accidental drowning 15 months after his
assassination.
Dr Naomi King, also a human rights activist, co-founded the A.D. King Foundation
in 2008 with the primary focus on youth/women empowerment and
nonviolent social change strategies as a way of life and
entrepreneurship as the center core; travelling all over the world to
promote such and speak out on important issues.
An interesting link between the award and Nigeria is Dr. Rev. Babatunde Olusegun Onabanjo, a co-founder and CEO of the AD King Foundation who has Nigerian roots.
The
A.D. King Foundation and The King Center are two organisations who
appear to have similar goals but are different and tied to two different
Kings.
The frenzy around the president's
award had led many to blur the facts about the actors behind it with
some even confusing Dr Naomi King to be MLK's deceased wife, Coretta
Scott.
This could have been what prompted
the needed response from The King Center to clarify that the President
Buhari was not awarded on its behalf.
When
Dr Naomi King presented the award to the president, she didn't pass it
off as an award from The King Center. All the official statements that
came from the presidency suggested that it was an award from the family,
with a vagueness about how far that link extends.
While
the initial public reaction to the award contributed to the confusion
around it which prompted The King Center's denial, Farris' role in the
delegation had raised the stakes a little higher.
Isaac Newton Farris is the son of Christine King Farris, MLK Jnr's oldest sibling, who was also the Vice Chair and Treasurer of The King Center for many years.
Farris
was named president and CEO of The King Center in September 2005, after
he had spent the previous five years as chief operating officer.
His
tie to the The King Center had carried some weight when he made his
comments on the reelection of President Buhari who is even yet to formally announce that he'll be running. This contributed largely to the confusion over the whole award situation.
Even
though the award given to President Buhari was not a 'scam' like many
have shared jokes about, but The King Center's disregard of it strips
the award of some of the gloss it had just three days ago.
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