On March 5, 1986, three of Nigeria’s most prominent literary figures — John Pepper Clark, Chinua Achebe, and Wole Soyinka — reportedly arrived at Dodan Barracks, then the seat of Nigeria’s military government, to plead with Head of State Ibrahim Babangida for clemency.
Their mission was to appeal for the life of Mamman Vatsa, a Major-General in the Nigerian Army who had been convicted by a military tribunal for allegedly participating in a coup plot against the Babangida regime.
Historical Context
Major-General Mamman Vatsa, a close associate and childhood friend of Babangida, was arrested in early 1986 following allegations of involvement in a planned coup. After a military tribunal found him guilty, he was sentenced to death.
Despite appeals for mercy — including the intervention of respected intellectuals and public figures — Vatsa was executed by firing squad on March 5, 1986, alongside other convicted officers.
Significance
The visit of Clark, Achebe, and Soyinka underscored the moral weight carried by Nigeria’s literary community at the time. Their presence symbolised an appeal not just for an individual life, but for reconsideration within a tense political climate marked by military rule.
The execution of Mamman Vatsa remains one of the most discussed and controversial moments of Nigeria’s military era, reflecting the severity of military justice during that period.
Source:
Sunday times newspaper archives (March 1986 reports on the Vatsa trial and execution)
Interviews and memoirs referencing the 1986 coup allegations
Historical records on Nigeria’s military tribunals under the Babangida administration
Historical Nigeria