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Akin Omoboriowo

Akinwole Michael Omoboriowo
Deputy Governor of Ondo State
In office
October 1979 – October 1983
Personal details
Born (1932-01-12)12 January 1932
Died 10 April 2012(2012-04-10) (aged 80)

Akinwole Michael Omoboriowo (12 January 1932 – 10 April 2012) was a Nigerian lawyer and politician who was Deputy Governor of Ondo State, later switching parties and contested for the governorship election of 1983 in Ondo State during the Nigerian Second Republic. He was initially declared the winner but was disputed and later reversed by a court of appeal before he could take office.

Omoboriowo was elected deputy governor on the Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN) platform, running with Michael Adekunle Ajasin, who became governor. He claimed that he should have been UPN candidate for governor, since he had won more votes that Ajasin in the primaries, but that the UPN leaders had rigged the results. During his period as deputy governor, he fell out with Governor Ajasin, who refused to swear him into power as acting governor when Ajasin was away from the state.

Omoboriowo switched to the National Party of Nigeria (NPN) and ran against his old boss in the 1983 elections. This came on the heels of the latter's refusal to step aside from the gubernatorial race as previously allegedly agreed between Omoboriowo and Ajasin. Omoboriowo and certain other stalwarts of the party including Chief S.A. Akerele against popular sentiment, left for the ruling NPN under which he ran for the guber seat. When the federal Electoral Commission declared Omoboriowo the winner on 16 August 1983, the announcement sparked deadly riots. The riots were reportedly the most violent in the history of post-independence Yoruba-land second only to the "Wet è" riots. The riots, particularly aimed at NPN stalwarts and sympathisers claimed lives and properties of prominent individuals. Chiefs Omoboriowo and Akerele were spared though Akerele's house was razed to the ground by irate rioters (Akerele had at the time fled with his family to Kwara state). In the same riots, Chief Olaiya Fagbamigbe of Fagbemigbe publishers was killed as well as Hon. Kunle Agunbiade. An unverified version of events states that Agunbiade was beheaded and his head was taken on a plate to certain UPN leaders.

In the midst of the political saga, Omoboriowo had the support of the Ondo state house of assembly. Upon his resignation as deputy governor, Chief Ajasin twice presented the name of Dr. N.F. Aina to the House for ratification as Omoboriowo's replacement- a request that was repeatedly turned down by the house in apparent solidarity to Omoboriowo

His election was disputed, and was reversed by an electoral court of appeal before he was inaugurated, with Ajasin being reinstated in office. After the coup on 31 December 1983 that brought General Muhammadu Buhari to power, he was jailed, as were almost all the former governors and their deputies, but was then released without charge in less than 30 days. He would later state that Buhari was right to have jailed him and the others at the time.


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