Tag: Clark

  • Clark, Gbonogi, Ekwueme call for war on Boko Haram

    Clark, Gbonogi, Ekwueme call for war on Boko Haram

    A  group, the Southern Nigeria Peoples Assembly (SNPA), has called for full military action against the Boko Haram sect to quell the insurgency in the Northeast.

    The group, which is an assembly of leaders of thought from the three zones in Southern Nigeria – the Southeast, Southwest and Southsouth – said the unity of the country was paramount and the security situation should be tackled headlong to save Nigeria.

    SNPA, which has three co-chairmen – Ijaw leader Chief Edwin Clark; Bishop Bolanle Gbonigi, co-chair and Chief Alex Ekwweme, met yesterday for over two hours to consider the nation’s security situation with a view of making its contribution towards finding a lasting solutions.

    According to Bishop Gbonigi, the group is becoming uncomfortable with the new dimension the security challenge is taking, especially with the abduction of the over 200 schoolgirls in Chibok, Borno State.

    He therefore urged President Goodluck Jonathan to do everything possible to remedy the situation including full deployment of military.

    He said: “We urge the president to take additional measures including the full deployment of our military arsenal to defeat the terrorists.

    “The corporate existence of the nation and collective will of the people to live peacefully together is been challenged and every patriotic Nigerian irrespective of their tribe, religion and political affiliation should rally round President Goodluck Jonathan as he leads the fight to take back our country from agents of darkness and self seeking bigots.”

    He said: “We cannot fold our arms and watch our dear country slide into anarchy, the painful memories and scars of the unfortunate civil war are still very much with us.”

    Gbonigi also urged the security agencies in the country to do everything possible to apprehend and bring to justice the sponsors of the group.

    Chief Ekwueme who was represented by Dr. Dozie Ikedife said the country cannot afford to play with naked fire, as this is what the present situation connotes.

    Dr Ikedife warned that it is incumbent on all to ensure the unity of the country.

    He added: “We must find solution to the issue of insecurity because it must not be beyond us.”

    Clark, who also spoke on the issue said the only way out right now is the declaration of full state of emergency in the troubled states.

    The former federal commissioner also Clark also raised alarm about the new security threat posed by the Fulani herdsmen.

  • I was released on Tompolo’s order, Clark’s son

    Ebikeme Clark, son of Ijaw national leader, Chief Edwin Clark, who was kidnapped last Wednesday, has regained his freedom from hostage.

    Ebi, as he is fondly called, reportedly got his freedom from his kidnappers at about 12am on Sunday unconditionally.

    Narrating how his freedom came about, Ebi told the Nation in Warri on  Sunday  that it took the intervention of ex-militant leader, Tompolo and one Chief Boro Opudu, for the kidnappers to release him.

    He said  his experience while he was kept a hostage was not pleasant, adding that he was kept in a community near Bayelsa state.

    “They were ordered by their leader, Chief Tompolo to free me and one Chief Boro Opudu. I was freed 12 mid night today ( Sunday). No ransom was paid. They have people they listen to or they lose their lives. I can’t give you full details now.

    “It couldn’t have been pleasant. All I know is that they have people in the community aiding them to keep people. You eat anything you are given and you don’t expect it to be good enough. I was taken to a community somewhere near Bayelsa State”, Ebi said.

    Spokesman of Chief Clark,  Dickson Bekederemo, also said Ebikeme got his freedom without payment of ransom.

    He said  he accompanied  the Delta Waterways Security to pick the released Ebi where his kidnappers dropped him.

    “He was released at about midnight and they gave him N5000 to transport himself out of the community in Bomadi where they dropped him. He was released unconditionally and he is good health”, Bekederemo said.

  • Clark’s kidnapped son freed

    Ebikeme, son of Ijaw leader, Edwin Clark who was kidnapped last Wednesday has been released by his captors.
    Delta State Public Relations Officer, DSP Tina Kalu confirmed that Ebikeme was released Saturday midnight.
    Ebikeme was kidnapped at Kiagbodo community in Bomadi.

    it was not confirmed if the N50m ransom demanded by the kidnappers was paid.

  • We won’t pay ransom, Clark family dares son’s kidnappers

    The Edwin Kiagbodo Clark family has resolved not to pay the ransom demanded by the kidnappers of the second son of the Ijaw National Leader, Ebikeme Clark.

    Disclosing the family’s official decision in Warri Saturday morning, Chief Edwin Clark’s counsel and spokesman, Dickson Bekederemo, advised the kidnappers to release their hostage unconditionally with immediate effect or face “war”.

    Ebikeme, a politician, was kidnapped Wednesday evening by some gunmen who were said to have trailed him to Kiagbodo village. The kidnappers have since demanded a N60 million ransom for his release.

    Bakederemo said underground checks carried out by the family had revealed the identities of the kidnappers.

    “We’ve identified all those involved now and our position, right from the day one is that they must release him unconditionally. They must have made a mistake of identities, but now they have realised their mistake, they must release him unconditionally.

    “If that is not done, if anything happens to him, they know the Ijaw custom very well, it is life for life, we’ll go after them, its a declaration of war. They and their families will know no peace.

    “This is an embarrassment to the Ijaw nation and we’ll not take it from them. Clark symbolises the voice of the Ijaw man, when they needed a voice to speak for them, he came out at the risk of his life so we see no reason why an Ijaw son would want to embarrass this man, having made the ultimate sacrifice for them”, Bekederemo said.

  • Clark and the fear of Tinubu

    Clark and the fear of Tinubu

    Great minds discuss ideas; Average minds discuss events, While small minds discuss people. -Eleanor Roosevelt

    All in the queer quest for political relevance and more precisely to get his Ijaw-born brother, incumbent President Goodluck Jonathan back to Aso Rock come 2015, Chief Edwin Clark, has suddenly found his long-lost voice and turned himself into his paymaster’s megaphone. Ordinarily, one would not want to join issues with any Nigerian who has worthy contributions to make to elevate the level of national discourse. But when an elder citizen, such as Clark, starts employing tactless tirades, guttersnipe language to disparage and deconstruct great achievers in the political field, we have to remind him that even within the ambit of free expression there is a boundary of decency. Beyond that, right-thinking people do not over step.

    Similarly, when otherwise respected individuals resort to arm-twisting tactics, leaving the substance of the much sought after, (yet elusive) good governance to chasing the shadows of self-aggradisement, inadvertently to attempt to rubbish great minds with useful ideas, we have to bring him back to the path of robust reasoning.

    The erstwhile Federal Commissioner for Information under the defunct General Yakubu Gowon-led military administration, who has suddenly turned himself into GEJ’s alter ego, continues to trade verbal missiles, with perceived opponents. Last week, it was against Chief Olusegun Obasanjo. This time, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu is his main target. Unfortunately for him, he keeps missing the points, all predicated on the national question.

    For instance, Clark, in a recent letter sent to Tinubu by legal adviser, Kayode Ajulo, accused Tinubu of denying the Yoruba a political identity. Beginning with base, primordial sentiments, he questioned Tinubu’s identity and background. Elijah, who is one of the greatest prophets in the Bible, is an indication of how God can use an unknown entity to move mountain as nobody knew about his background.

    Indeed, Clark is ignorant of history, because if he is a good student of history, he would have known about the American dream, which is about raising an unknown entity to become great and powerful as seen in the case of former American President Bill Clinton, who is one of the greatest presidents America ever had. It would interest Clark that the name Clinton belonged to the former American president’s step father.

    Or, how else can we explain the pettiness and hollowness of most of the questions thrown up in Clark’s infamous letter? What is Clark’s business with Tinubu’s heritage? Has any Yoruba family gone to court to put a disclaimer over Tinubu’s claims to his place of origin and the family thereof? “Though he regularly attempts to obliterate his past life, he however grew up with people, they are alive and they know him inside out.”

    So, who are those people who know Tinubu ‘inside out’? Why didn’t Clark go to them for answers to his nagging questions instead of writing a vainglorious letter to that effect? What is the relevance of such senseless questions to moving the Nigerian state forward, in terms of infrastructural development, quality healthcare delivery, stable power supply, good access roads, sound education and employment opportunities, all of which his brother, Jonathan has denied the good people of Nigeria for over three years.

    Instead of being greatly troubled about the widely accepted public opinion that Jonathan has indeed become a colossal failure in government and projects a bad image for the Ijaw Nation, Clark is more concerned about Tinubu’s educational qualifications. ss

    Clark does not need rocket science to know that being so aggrieved the noble step to take is to go to court with evidence of the so-called ‘”forged qualifications”. Let him prove to the world that he has no ulterior motives in his Tinubu-phopbia.

    Rather than acknowledge the God-given talents and well-honed skills of the famed Asiwaju in the management of men and materials, Clark is having sleepless nights. Over what, you may ask? He is worried stiff over Tinubu’s uncommon political sagacity and superlative strategies in Nigeria’s undulating political terrain. In questioning why Tinubu’s daughter has become the Iya Oloja and his wife Oluremi a Senator, Clark has forgotten the Kennedy and George Bush dynasties of the United States as well as the Ghandis of India. Put in simple terms, there are some families who God in His graciousness has blessed with rare leadership qualities. And no amount of human envy and mischief making can rob them of their positions in national histories. That should explain to Clark that Tinubu has over the years emerged as one of the “galaxy of titans” that Lagos parades, rather than describing him as Lilliputian.

    The Tinubu phenomena should in fact become a course of study in the Department of Strategic Studies in some select Nigerian universities instead of the continued attempts to rubbish such exemplary legacies by lesser minds from the failed PDP. That is what obtains in more advanced economies. Even here in Nigeria, some researchers have obtained doctorate degrees by understudying what unique qualities defined the late Fela Anikulapo-Kuti’s Afrobeat.

    Honestly, Clark should start considering this suggestion for his proposed university so that the younger generation would gain a lot from Tinubu’s managerial skills, his business acumen, the people-friendly policies, his crowd-pulling magnetic persona and his constitency in the pursuit of the enthronement of democratic values in Nigeria.

    May we remind Clark that Tinubu was the solid shoulder which the activists leant on in the dark days of military despotism under the jackboot of the late Gen. Sani Abacha. As a nationalist, Tinubu was the one who moved the motion for the 13 per cent derivation which Clark and the favoured few Niger-Delta politicians enjoy till this day at the expense of their long-suffering people. It should interest him to find out what magic wand brought Tinubu and Muhammadu Buhari together to form the All Progressives Congress (APC) that is causing PDP endless political worries. How did he, while still in opposition, get a PDP politician, Aminu Tambuwal from the Northwest geo-political zone as the Speaker, House of Representatives at the expense of a Yoruba man or woman? How did he sweep the carpet from under the Southwest PDP? How come that those who once boasted in a sheer delusion of grandeur, that the PDP “will rule this country for 60 years” are now crisscrossing the country to mend fences within the party’s rank-and-file? Why were they caught napping? How come the gale of defections from past PDP faithful also caught the likes of President Jonthan and former party Chairman, Tukur napping?

    These should be the questions to agitate Clark’s mind, not some spurious innuendoes on the person of Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu. Of course, he should ask himself in good conscience how the true man of the people was able to transform the Alliance for Democracy (AD) to a bigger party with the name of Action Congress (AC) through the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) that has finally merged with like minds into Nigeria’s first formidable opposition party, the APC with a more national outlook? Should anyone consider this ever-expanding political space by one man’s political sagacity a deconstruction of Yoruba political identity or bringing his people to the mainstream?

    Truth be told, Tinubu deserves more awards (that have made Clark envious) for his political courage, sacrifice of resources for the good of the Yoruba race and taking a regional party to the realms of national consciousness.

    For Clark, those who live in glass houses should be wise enough not to throw stones. He it was who worked under the Gowon-led administration that was overtly corrupt. Indeed, if Clark was smart enough as the Commissioner for Information, he would have prevented his master from telling the whole world that Nigeria had more money than it could ever spend back in the seventies. And even go ahead to spend public money via the frivolous Udoji Award to civil servants, without caution, plan or thought for tomorrow.

    With the stupendous national wealth during the Gowon days, the rural areas should have been opened up through massive agricultural and industrial revolution. That would have done us more good than concentrating on the urban areas that eventually led to the rural-urban drift, causing the upsurge in youth unemployment and related whirlwind of crimes and criminality still with us till today.

    As the nation moves towards another general election, elders of Clark’s stature should be circumspect in words and actions. He should be a bridge builder across the religious, political and tribal divides instead of fuelling ethnic chauvinism. By that alone, he has clearly shown that he does not truly love President Jonathan whose every wrong action he attempts to justify. And whose political nemesis he goes to the rooftop to disparage. Good governance, is what Nigerians have been clamouring for. It is the mantra that Clark should be drumming into the ears of his Ijaw brother, if he truly loves him.

  • Ekwueme, Clark, others hail Senate  President’s call for national conference

    Ekwueme, Clark, others hail Senate President’s call for national conference

    The Southern Nigerian Peoples Assembly (SNPA) has thrown its weight behind the renewed call by the Senate President, David Mark, for the convocation of national conference as a way of resolving the country’s political crises.

    The group noted that the Senate President’s call that ethnic nationalities be given the space to discuss the future of the country is most germane and timely.

    The Senate President had at the opening session of the new Senate session in Abuja last Tuesday called for a national conference to foster frank and open discussions on the national question.

    In a statement signed by Rev. Emmanuel Gbonigi for the South West, Dr. Alex Ekwueme for the South East and Chief Edwin Clark for the South South, the group stated that it was elated by the call which it said was in line with its own view.

    Part of the statement reads: “The Southern Nigeria Peoples Assembly welcomes the remarks made by the Senate President, Senator David Mark, on the urgent need for a national conference while addressing senators back from vacation.

    “The Senate President’s call that ethnic nationalities should be given the space to discuss the future of Nigeria is most germane and could not have come at a better time.

    “We are indeed elated that the Senate President has aligned with our long-held view that a conference of ethnic nationalities is imperative in correcting the enormous discontent in the Nigeria polity.

    “Instructively, the position of the Southern Nigeria Peoples Assembly in resolving burning national issues threatening the corporate existence of the nation has been very clear.”

    The group noted that since their inaugural conference in 2012 and the succeeding conference early this year, it had “affirmed it’s commitment to the convening of a national conference.”

    This position, it further claimed, was reaffirmed in the communique issued at the end of it’s general assembly conference held in Lagos on May 20, 2013.

    Extracts of the communique relating to the call for national conference reads:

    “That the observed unease in the polity culminating from the several threats and drums of war is a clear expression of the continually shrinking space for national dialogue.

    “As we move gradually towards the precipice, our rescue lies only in the convocation of a national conference which shall provide an unfettered platform for Nigerians to negotiate and agree on terms of living together on the basis of mutual respect and trust. This is the only way to justify and make meaningful our centenary celebrations.

    “Accordingly, President Goodluck Jonathan is urged to take every appropriate step leading to the convening of a national conference without further delay.

    “That a committee is hereby established to work out strategies and modalities to assist in the convocation of national conference by not later than December, 2013.

    “We therefore call on President Goodluck Jonathan to set up a committee to work out strategies and modalities for the convocation of a national conference by not later than December 2013.

    “Giving the ethnic nationalities of Nigeria the opportunity to discuss their collective future after a ‘forced’ marriage of 100 years remains the most rewarding centenary gift President Jonathan can give to Nigerians.”

  • Ex- PDP member blames Obasanjo,Tukur for party crises

    …  Flay Anenih, Clark 

    A founding member of the Peoples Democratic Party, Chief Abu King Shuluwa, on Wednesday said former president Olusegun Obasanjo and the National Chairman of the party, Alhaji Bamanga Tukur should be blamed for the crises rocking the party.

    He also faulted roles played by the Chairman of PDP Board of Trustees; Chief Tony Anenih and a prominent Ijaw leader; Chief Edwin Clark in the current hostility within the party.

    Addressing journalists in his Makurdi residence, Shuluwa, an associate of the late Shehu Musa Yar’Adua and former vice president Atiku Abubakar, said the quartet took advantage of President Goodluck Jonathan’s perceived weakness to mislead the party and pursued their personal agenda.

    “Don’t forget that Anenih is the chief financier of the People Democratic Movement and don’t that he wants it to be registered as a party. The entire governors fighting the president are loyalists of ex – president Obasanjo while Clark is drumming ethic war.

    “Tukur is running the party like a private property, bringing crises for the President.

    “President Jonathan does not know the power play currently going, he is innocent and they are making him to look confused,” Shuluwa stated.

     

  • 2015: Only constitution can stop Jonathan, says Clark

    IJAW leader, Chief Edwin Clark, has said it is only the constitution that can stop President Goodluck Jonathan from contesting the 2015 presidential election.

    The one-time Federal Commissioner noted that the purported agreement between the President and some governors of the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) does not hold water.

    He said since the constitution provides for two terms, every other agreement on the number of terms for the President is illegal.

    Clark blamed the controversy on the President’s second term bid on some politicians who he accused of overheating the polity for their personal ambitions.

    The Ijaw leader spoke yesterday when he received a delegation of Second Republic’s federal legislature in his Asokoro, Abuja home.

    He said: “Nigeria is great. Only a few people want to confuse this country, because of their personal ambitions.

    “Today, it is Mr. President’s turn; tomorrow, it will be another man’s turn. That is why we have the constitution.

    “The constitution says that before you can be qualified to be a President of this country, you must have contested an election and, after the first term of four years, you can contest again for a second term of another four years. Thereafter, you will not be eligible again, that is the law…”

  • Africa suffers low research output

    Low research output has been identified as one major reason why many African universities are yet to attain the world-class status.

    To reverse the trend, Dr Paul Effah, former Executive Secretary, National Council for Tertiary Education, Ghana, said there must be a reawakening and new orientation towards academic research which must be contextualised to align with individual university mandate.

    Effah spoke while delivering the eighth convocation lecture of the Covenant University (CU), Ota Ogun State. The lecture held, at the university chapel was titled: Repositioning African Universities for excellence- Theoretical and practical perspectives.

    He said: “A 2009 UNESCO Science Report indicates that sub-Saharan Africa’s share of world researchers was 0.8 or 71.7 researchers per million population. The corresponding figures for Asia and North America were 38.2 per cent and 660.2 and 26.8 per cent and 4,653.2 respectively.”

    Effah said it is about time universities in Africa established criteria that will align with their mandates and key indicators upon which they can assess themselves based on laid down guidelines by their managements or Governing Councils.

    The charge, Effah argued, is against the backdrop of many research works carried out in Africa, which might not be directly addressing local challenges or the mandates of the university that executed them because such researches are being substantially funded by western donors.

    “One worrying aspect of research in African universities is that most of the research is financed by foreign donors who invariably dictate the terms of the research. This was confirmed in a study undertaken at the University of Ghana in 2010 by the Ghana Institute of Management and Public Administration which indicated that about 90 per cent of research funds in the university were from international agencies or collaborative efforts with other institutions abroad.

    “A related issue to externally drawn research agenda is the whole question of dissemination of research results which often is not made available to African governments and institutions for implementation. Another is that the external partners always become principal researchers with the contributions of the local counterparts hardly acknowledged.”

    Aside seeking more research funding, and infusing indigenous knowledge into research Dr Effah frowned against the practice where academics are saddled with administrative work which he said could hamper them from carrying out research. He also spoke against too much of teaching at the undergraduate level, leaving little room for research, as well as lecturers who hop from one university to another teaching on part-time or full-time basis without substantial time for research.

    On how African universities can be repositioned for excellence, Effah said the need to restructure governance in Africa is paramount as many of the ills plaguing African universities are a reflection of poor governance at all levels politically.

    Quoting a researcher, Burton Clark who identified three models of university governance – European, British and American, Effah urged Africa to develop her own model approximating some of the ideals such as participatory approach, autonomy, and distributive authority among others in the three aforementioned models.

    “Without a corps of dedicated and committed leaders, men and women of vision, action and character, growth and development will continue to elude Africa. The challenge is for African universities to strive to turn out African leaders to transform the continent and take her to the next level of development,” Effah concluded.

     

  • Of leaders and dealers: Soyinka Vs Clark

    Of leaders and dealers: Soyinka Vs Clark

    A community with worthy elders never comes to ruin – Yoruba proverb 

    When do elders morph from leaders to dealers?

    The latest foxtrot on the Rivers crisis, by the South-South Elders and Stakeholders, a group led by Pa Edwin Clark, Ijaw leader and presidential godfather, might just offer a clue.

    The Clark-led elders, on July 24, told Governor Chibuike Amaechi to stop blaming President Goodluck Jonathan and Patience, his ever-meddling wife, for the contrived Rivers crisis; told the governor to shape in or shape out; told the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to kick out the governor to serve as warning to other power renegades; pooh-poohed the four northern governors that went on a solidarity visit to Amaechi as cynical meddlers; and branded Nobel Laureate, Prof. Wole Soyinka, as an arch-hypocrite who wept more than the bereaved at the legislative banditry of the Rivers G-5, while he kept mute in earlier legislative outlawry in Oyo (where Governor Rashidi Ladoja was illegally impeached) and Soyinka’s native Ogun State (when Governor Gbenga Daniel inspired legislative lawlessness in his gubernatorial dying days).

    Indeed, they practically did a pun on the famous author of The Man Died and his work: that the man died in the Nobel Laureate for his alleged quiet at constitutional outrages in Oyo and Ogun states; while jerking awake at the repeat of the same crime in their Rivers!

    But, of course, Clark and his “elders”, in their release, never bothered with the rigour of reason. All they barked, conceited folks, was the language of power, boasting neither wisdom nor reason.

    The whole thing was some dumb smartie’s response to the five northern governors’ “Save Democracy tour” to former President Olusegun Obasanjo (Jonathan’s estranged godfather), Gen. Ibrahim Babangida and Gen. Abdulsalami Abubakar, three former soldiers ironically pitched to help save democracy under Jonathan’s reckless assault!

    But again, the Clark gambit was a classic from the brilliant dullness of the Jonathan court: no tactics, no strategy, just stark power blundering and bumbling!

    Even then, if the so-called elders wilfully lost a bit of their wisdom in anticipation of some power gravy, can’t their young Turks at least work hard to safeguard the integrity of their claims?

    The Clark group made the fantastic claim that Soyinka kept mute during the legislative anomie in Oyo and Ogun states. But this claim is either criminal forgetfulness or plain mischief.

    On the Ladoja illegal impeachment, Soyinka called for Obasanjo’s impeachment, linking the Oyo legislative crisis to his complicity – just as Jonathan’s link to the present Rivers affront is crystal clear.

    “Obasanjo has acted sufficiently against the constitution to warrant his impeachment,” Soyinka declared on 20 January 2006. “There is more than enough evidence to warrant his impeachment”.

    That was even a case of 18 (a simple majority) removing the governor in a 32-member legislature, which nevertheless fell short of the constitutionally required two-thirds majority: not a case of Rivers’ “simple minority” of five versus 27! AFP, with Nigerian newspapers, reported the Soyinka stand.

    On the Gbenga Daniel legislative shenanigans in Ogun, where the minority G-9 overthrew the majority G-15, Soyinka was no less hard-hitting. “I wish to state, categorically, this cannot and must not be allowed to stand. I call on the citizens of the state to ensure democracy is restored. A minority” he insisted, “cannot sack a majority”.

    Indeed, since Soyinka’s famous “Daani Elebo” laconic putdown, he had visited every OGD misdeed with ringing condemnation, including dismissing OGD’s as “government by billboard”.

    But where was Clark’s beloved presidential godson in all of these? Feigned culpable disinterest enough to name and retain Daniel as his South West presidential campaign coordinator! For Jonathan, it was, it is and ever shall be: to win and keep power, every constitutional breach is tolerable!

    All these were in the public space. They are eminently verifiable with a push of the computer keyboard. Yet, Clark and his elders made such an outlandish claim! Might these elders suffer criminal senility, just to patch up the ultra-bad case of their beloved godson?

    Even if Soyinka had kept mum: does that justify the criminality in the Rivers Assembly of five (with a fake mace to boot!) trying to overthrow the will of 27, simply because of collusion from Jonathan’s Nigeria Police? That is the futility and hollow arrogance of power, while these so-called South-South elders ought to have built their case on rigour and reason. It falls flat – even in the ears of the dumb!

    But Soyinka was right: if Obasanjo had been impeached for the Ladoja outrage or Jonathan seriously reprimanded for playing dumb, for electoral gain, on the OGD-inspired Ogun legislative crime, this nonsense would not have repeated itself; and the Clark “elders” would not ridicule themselves with woolly thinking to back constitutional evil.

    But maybe it is good Jonathan is pushing his good luck. And maybe, if he pushes it enough, he just might be impeached to avert any future presidential rascality! Did these elders ever think of this dire possibility?

    Really, it is amusing Clark of all people would doubt Soyinka’s total commitment to a Nigeria driven by equity, justice and fair play, and not arbitrary power. Indeed, when Soyinka landed in Ibadan in 1969, after his Civil War Kaduna incarceration, his first response to the war-time jingle, “To keep Nigeria One …” was a snappy riposte: “Justice must be done!”

    A younger Clark was busy collaborating with the same northern forces he now wants to demonise, to willy-nilly protect his godson – a power he doesn’t even have. But that is the way of Nigeria’s power men and women of all seasons!

    Soyinka comes from a diametrically opposed culture: justice men and women of all seasons. And names like Obafemi Awolowo, Tai Solarin, Ayodele Awojobi, Gani Fawehinmi, Femi Falana – do they ring a bell? They stand for justice and fair play and would battle anyone, no matter where he comes from, even within their own Yoruba stock, that essays impunity.

    So those orchestrated merchants of vulgar abuse, who claim the Yoruba are their problems because Soyinka told Jonathan to rein in his henchmen and women in Port Harcourt, miss the point.

    The Nigerian Presidency is not South-South property. Whoever occupies that post must play by the rules or face the flak of right-thinking citizens – Nigeria is a republic, after all! So it is with President Jonathan.

    As for Clark’s grouse with the visiting northern governors, the late Chuba Okadigbo called it “political arithmetic”. If Jonathan, with his power delusion and certified incompetence, alienates a wide swath of the North and a good chunk of the South West, how does he hope to win a second term? Indeed, if his party is in disarray and he is, for ego, planting further insurrection in his back yard, how does his centre hold?

    Elders are supposed to be wise. Clark and co must do some hard thinking, save Jonathan from self-inflicted ruin and stop playing to juvenile gallery.