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Doyin Abiola, Nigeria’s First Female Editor-In-Chief Of A National Daily, Dies At 82

gisthub Aug 06, 2025
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Trailblazing journalist, Dr. Doyin Abiola, a titan in Nigerian media and the first woman to rise to the position of Editor-in-Chief of a national daily newspaper, has passed away at the age of 82.

Her death was confirmed on Wednesday by Jamiu Abiola, son of the late Chief MKO Abiola, the widely acclaimed winner of the annulled June 12, 1993, presidential election and her husband. “Yes, she passed away last night,” Jamiu said in a phone interview.

Dr. Doyin Abiola’s life was a saga of breaking glass ceilings. From her early days at Daily Sketch, penning the fearless “Tiro” column, to ascending the leadership of National Concord as Managing Director and Editor-in-Chief in 1986, she stood at the vanguard of journalism, wielding her pen like a torchlight in Nigeria’s often murky socio-political landscape.

Born in 1943, she earned her degree in English and Drama from the University of Ibadan in 1969 before moving to the United States, where she obtained a PhD in Communications and Political Science from New York University in 1979.

Her career was a masterclass in grit. Rejecting a limiting offer as “Woman Editor” at Daily Times, she demanded to be judged on merit — not gender — insisting on a Features Writer role, eventually rising to Group Features Editor and joining the paper’s Editorial Board alongside journalistic giants like Dele Giwa and Stanley Macebuh.

As pioneer daily editor of National Concord, and later as Managing Director/Editor-in-Chief, Doyin Abiola helmed one of Nigeria’s largest newspaper groups, overseeing 14 publications, while navigating turbulent political waters. Her leadership faced perhaps its sternest test under General Sani Abacha’s military regime, when Concord’s presses were destroyed, and the paper was proscribed for 18 months. Yet, she remained undeterred, championing press freedom with a quiet, unflinching resolve.

Beyond the newsroom, Dr. Abiola’s influence spanned academia, media governance, and global journalism standards. She chaired the Awards Nominating Panel of the Nigerian Media Merit Award, served on Ogun State University’s Advisory Council, and was a CNN African Journalist of the Year Awards Chairperson. Her trailblazing journey earned her an Eisenhower Fellowship (1986) and a DAME Lifetime Achievement Award, making her only the second woman ever to receive that honor.

She stood firmly beside MKO Abiola during the dark, uncertain years of political oppression that followed June 12, embodying resilience not just as a journalist, but as a wife, mother, and “soldier of democracy”.

President Bola Tinubu mourned her passing, hailing her as a “media trailblazer and democracy defender”, praising her enduring impact on Nigeria’s press freedom and nationhood.

Funeral arrangements will be announced by the Abiola family in due course.

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