Nobel Laureate, Prof. Wole Soyinka, asked the United States
yesterday to stop giving excuses on why it would not supply arms to Nigeria.
Speaking at a press conference in Lagos, Soyinka, who stated that the
country is in a war situation, said what Nigeria needs was not emergency relief
materials, but support to win the war.
He said: “Please, United States of America, could you
please, overlook the arithmetical deficiency of governance and stop giving an excuse
to this government for failing to protect us. We are trying to create, I
hope a situation, where we do have conflict affected households. We do not need
emergency relief supplies. We want to stop the displacement of humanity
etc.
“So, please, just say that will not supply arms to Nigeria
and leave it at that. But don’t say that instead you will send other
things. That is not the issue at this critical moment for Nigeria. We are
fighting a legitimate, a just war,” he noted.
The Nobel Laureate also descended heavily on the
Inspector-General of Police, (IGP), Mr. Suleiman Abba, for the recent invasion
of the National Assembly by the police. He said the action was an
unambiguous declaration of war against the people. According to him, the nation
has seen Abba’s type in the past and know what became of public officers, who
thought that they were more than the state.
Soyinka said members of the House of Representatives, who
scaled the gates to enter into legislative chambers to perform their duties must
be applauded and not derided. According to him, if anybody is to be ashamed, it
should be the Inspector-General of Police for “his slavish adherence to
conspiratorial, illegal, and unconstitutional instructions – to undermine a
democratic structure, and one – to make matters worse – convoked in response
to an emergency of dire public concern.”
According to him, President Goodluck Jonathan
“continues to surprise us in ways that very few could have conjectured.
Peaking at his own personalized example where he set the law of simple
arithmetic on its head – I refer to the split in the Governors’ Forum, and his
‘formal’ recognition of the minority will in a straightforward, peer election –
democracy has been rendered meaningless where it should be most fervently
exemplified. Nothing is more unworthy of leadership than to degrade a system by
which one attains fulfillment, and this is what the nation has witnessed time
and time again in various parts of the nation, the recent affront against the
legislative chamber being only the most blatant and unconscionable. We
know of course that this is not the first of its kind in the nation’s history,
but precedents are not binding. Each leader selects his or her own model for
emulation or avoidance, and that choice is certain indication of the true
nature of such a leader, and a clue to the kind of conduct that a people can
expect of him. It is a warning. His choices for the occupancy of crucial
public positions – such as the protective arm of the nation – constitutes an
even more immediate and constant public alert. The signals are ominous – for
and beyond 2015.
The Nobel Laureate said that to state the obvious, “these,
to state the obvious, are not ordinary times. The menace of Boko Haram hangs
over the corporate entity called a nation and over every individual, citizen or
mere bird of passage. The cliché ‘heating up the polity’ may grate the
ear-drums with its banality but I think that we have a right to demand of a
leader not to stoke up the furnace in which events have cast its citizens.
Every day records a new violation of our humanity.
“The atrocious targeting of the great mosque of Kano has
rendered any lingering doubt of impending national imposition an invitation for
collective suicide, preferably through piecemeal dismemberment. The theories of
cause and effect can wait, or continue – it does not matter – the omniscient in
such matters continue to pontificate, some of them blithely forgetting that
they indeed contributed to policies that landed us in this brutal cleft. What
does matter is an awareness that the nation is only part of a global eruption
of fundamentalist delusions whose staple diet consists of destabilization and
dehumanization – all summed up as an ideology of hate for the different,” he
noted.
Soyinka said, “the line has been drawn. The people
must decide – whether to submit or resist. We may be no-count plebians in the
sight of the new-born patricians of Aso Rock and their apologists but – must we
revert to the Abacharian status of glorified slaves? Of course, it is up to any
people to decide.”
What US wants is for Nigeria to split
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