After the return to democracy in 1999, Adisa ventured into publishing with a paper ''The People's Advocate'' based in Ilorin. The paper was the target of a N250 million libel action from the Kwara State Governor,
Mohammed Lawal, which was later withdrawn. In 2003, Adisa said he would not accept a pardon from President
Olusegun Obasanjo, who had himself participated in a coup attempt in 1995. In April 2004, he was active in the
People's Democratic Party (PDP) in
Kwara State. One PDP group suspended the Minister of State for Women Affairs, Miss Funke Adedoyin, but another group of PDP elders, led by Adisa, voided Adedoyin's suspension. Adisa also became vice-chairman of the Kwara Progressive Movement (KPM). Adisa was leader of a movement to elect General
Ibrahim Babangida as president in 2007. He published an attack on the
National Democratic Coalition (NADECO) in
The Guardian of 28 April 2004, warning the group not to try to prevent the Babangida's presidential election. He said the
Yoruba would vote for Ibrahim Babangida despite his role in annulling the June 12, 1993 presidential election won by the Chief
MKO Abiola. Adisa died in a London hospital on February 25, 2005 from injuries sustained in a car accident. His body was returned for burial in Ilorin, the Kwara State capital on 27 February 2005, in a ceremony attended by many prominent people including three former state governors and General Ibrahim Babangida. On 23 June 2009, President
Umaru Yar'Adua granted a presidential pardon posthumously to Abdulkareem Adisa and others convicted of treason for the Sani Abacha coup attempts. ==References==