 The story and victory of June 12th struggles are not complete, without the mention of journalists whom despite fierce threats of guns by the military never stopped writing, they give birth to guerrilla journalism after the 1993 presidential election. Plus TV senior correspondent Kayo De La Dain speaks with some of these journalists. True to their description and the constitution, as the fourth estate of the realm with the mandate to uphold public trust, Nigerian journalists lived up to their responsibility. The poster boy of the struggle, Masud Kashima Wabiola, once had a newspaper known as Concord Newspaper which largely helped in pushing the demands against the annulment of the election widely believed to be peaceful and free from our practice. Two of the journalists working with the newspaper then, Dele Momodou and Ulushala Oshunke, share their different experiences both at home and in the diaspora. I found myself in detention at a lag borne detention camp between July and August 1993. But I'm not sure that Nigeria has fully liberated itself from the grip of the military. If you live in a big transformer, I tell you there was one that was overnight somewhere in Yapa. I was there, I attended the meeting, you know that popular question and lawyer. The deal was running out and we just saw some funny moments before we knew that not the colleagues are there from that place. And even Lainka Adagun, who was working with the government-owned media house, will not allow his conscience betray him. For once, we started having underground journalism, guerrilla journalism, I know of a publication where pages one, two, three, four will be published with one printed in one somewhere in Shimulu. Some other pages will be printed somewhere in Moshi. Almost three decades after this activism journalism, has this fourth estate of the REM lost its team and the face of seeming oppression. For me, I will continue to talk and I will continue to advise our friends, peers, talk, write responsibly, but nobody should ask you not to use the basic tools of your profession. It's like someone asking you to tear your certificates. We are saying that we should do all that is possible. For these veterans, it is a mixed bag if the nation has achieved the goal of what June 12 stood for. The best monuments to the June 12th memory is this holiday we are having, at least for once we are telling the world that that was the day we showed the world that we can be democratic. While President Mohamedu Buhari enjoys the encomium of declaring June 12th as the democracy day and subsequently conferred the honor of GCFR on MQ Abiola, the consensus here is that it must ensure freedom of the press as guaranteed in the Constitution. Thank you very much.