In a feat of acerbic verbal tantrums, Nobel Laureate
Professor Wole Soyinka Tuesday December 2, attacked President Goodluck Jonathan
and likened the Nigerian leader to Nebuchadnezzar the biblical autocrat and
king of Babylon who initially denounced the Living Supreme God.
Soyinka who
addressed a press conference on the state of the nation at the popular Freedom
Garden in Lagos, said that Jonathan is tyrannical because the Inspector General
of Police Suleiman Abba stopped the attempt by the defected speaker of the
House of Representatives, Aminu Tambuwal to enter the Green Chamber of the
National Assembly with thugs.
The respected professor of dramatic literature who is
clearly biased in his recent pronouncements given his current alignment with
top leaders of the opposition political party, the All Progressives Congress
(APC) said so many unprintable things against the administration of President Jonathan.
Indeed, the distinguished playwright is entitled to his
opinion especially in a wide democratic space in which freedom of association
and of speech is the norm. But it is unfortunate that the renowned literary
icon could allow his judgment to be beclouded by a historical considerations.
By this recent act of likening Jonathan to Nebuchadnezzar,
Soyinka has come down from his Olympian height as a global citizen and
statesman to the sheer pedestrian rabble of petty villainy and rancour. It is a
pointer to the fact that every great intellectual has his weak points. Our own
Kongi is no exception.
Even with the unsavory political development in Anambra
State in 2004 which led to the unfortunate withdrawal of the security personnel
of former Governor Chris Ngige after his attempted abduction by the police, no
Nigerian, not even Professor Chinua Achebe who rejected former President
Olusegun Obasanjo’s national award due to that crisis, went as far as comparing
the former President with Nebuchadnezzar.
For the benefit of the reader who might not know the
ancient/biblical story, Nebuchadnezzar was king of the Neo-Babylonian Empire
who reigned c. 605BC-562BC. He was said to have constructed the Hanging Gardens
of Babylon (now Iraq) and the destruction of the Temple of Jerusalem.
Nebuchadnezzar II was the fourth king of the Second Dynasty of Isin and Fourth
Dynasty of Babylon who ruled for 23 years. One very notorious fact about him is
that Nebuchadnezzar did not recognize the existence of the God of heaven and was
basically tyrannical.
But he later bowed to and worshiped God when he saw the
efficacy of God’s mysterious powers as demonstrated by Daniel the young Jewish
believer. Given Jonathan’s antecedent and pedigree as a faithful adherent of
the tenets of the word of God whose administration strictly adheres to the
fundamental principles of the rule of law, Soyinka’s attempt to demonize him is
wicked and unacceptable. In the light of the above statement that
Nebuchadnezzar did not know God and the reality that Soyinka does not believe
in the God of heaven, Soyinka and Jonathan, who is like Nebuchadnezzar?
Every discerning Nigerian who can read between the lines
knows where Soyinka is coming from. His recent outburst is yet another pure
political statement by an APC sympathizer meant to rattle the President and
sway the sympathy of Nigerians from his administration. Suddenly everyone who
thinks he has something to say has now turned to a primary school headmaster
wielding a big stick to whip the leader of the world’s largest Black Country.
“Jonathan Bashing” is the name of the game. Soyinka who relishes controversy,
who enjoys being primed in the fantasy of the media has cooked another meal to
attract acclamation.
But the applause he received in Lagos in the name of Jonathan-bashing
to humour Nigerians was a soured one. It is a grand, though disingenuous alibi
not only for parrying the barbs of those who see him as hobnobbing with the
opposition, but also a ploy to curry favor from Nigerians for those who vowed
to make the country ungovernable and still planning to form a parallel
government if Jonathan wins in 2015.
Of course, Soyinka has always been tactless in his political
(mis)adventure and intellectual over bearingness. Yet, it is unthinkable that
Soyinka is now on the side of the feudal forces still determined to keep
Nigeria in perpetual medieval servitude. Without necessarily alluding to his
rapport with the military regime of General Ibrahim Babangida whom he described
as an autocrat soon after IBB refused to grant their (he, Achebe and J. P.
Clark) petition to spare the life of the poet/soldier Mamman Vatsa, and he
burnt his fingers, Soyinka has not always been ideologically so refined as to
escape the crudity of the orthodox left.
In spite of everything, those of us his younger admirers
still manage to ask ourselves: why did Soyinka abandon his search for the
killers of Dele Giwa, the colorful Nigerian journalist who was bombed in his
study on October 19, 1986?
As a renowned statesman and global citizen, Soyinka’s words
should act as a soothing balm which would heal this troubled land of ours
instead of taking sides in petty partisan showmanship thereby heating up the
polity. It is amply absolutely absurd and anti-intellectual for Soyinka to
circulate that a man like Jonathan, who cannot hurt a fly, who is so mild and
apolitical that even the opposition branded him “clueless” is worse than
Nebuchadnezzar.
If the truth be told, just as Jonathan has dwarfed the
achievements of past administrations in terms of infrastructure, so is also his
achievements in the area of fundamental human rights. Jonathan is the most
abused and attacked President in the annals of this country, and if not for his
humane temperament Nigeria would have been worse than Sudan by now.
Yet, how many Nigerians or even his political opponents are
unjustly harassed or languishing in gaol? How many are reported killed as a
result of political vendetta or envenomization? How on earth would a man like
Jonathan be branded an autocrat, not even by those who have an open agenda to
pull him down but by a respected international figure such as Soyinka who
claims to be the conscience of humanity and yet hobnobbing with corrupt
politicians? Why has Soyinka not condemned this eerie act of déjà vu called political
defection, which is being used to tear the country apart by politicians of all
shades?
How right can Soyinka be if he encourages the opposition to
take up arms against the Jonathan administration as they are gradually doing?
Why would the police allow Tambuwal to invade the National Assembly with
political thugs? When has thuggery become constitutional because it favors a
particular political party that has the support of the Nobel laureate?
Nigerians of goodwill should condemn Soyinka’s attempt to demonize President
Jonathan.
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