Tag: Prof. Wole Soyinka

  • Soyinka lauds Alia’s industrial strides

    Soyinka lauds Alia’s industrial strides

    Nobel Laureate, Prof. Wole Soyinka, has hailed Benue State Governor Hyacinth Iormem Alia for significant breakthroughs in the state’s industrial development.

    The global literary icon spoke after an inspection of major projects of the Alia administration in Makurdi, the state capital.

    During his visit, Prof. Soyinka toured flagship initiatives of the Alia administration, including the Food Basket Brewery and the Benval Fruit Factory, both central to the state’s expanding agro-industrial landscape.

    Before the inspection, the literary icon held a closed-door meeting with the governor at the Presidential Wing of the Governor’s Lodge, with the Group Managing Director of the Benue Investment and Property Company (BIPC), Dr. Raymond Asemakaha, and other top officials in attendance.

    Read Also: Agriculture as tool for economic recovery

    The delegation also visited an Internally Displaced Persons (IDP) camp on the Gbajimba Road, where Soyinka sympathized with displaced families and reaffirmed his commitment to their welfare.

    He said part of his mission was to assess the use of books he previously donated, assuring the IDPs that “all hope is not lost”.

    The tour continued at the Food Basket Brewery on Gboko Road and the Benfruits Factory at the Industrial Layout in Makurdi.

    Prof. Soyinka applauded Governor Alia’s infrastructural drive — especially ongoing road and underpass projects — expressing confidence that Benue State is “on the path to optimal growth and development”.

    At the Benval Fruit Factory, both Soyinka and the governor were impressed by the facility’s expanding capacity.

    Henry Boager, who conducted the tour, confirmed that the factory had completed its test runs and was fully ready for concentrate production.

    Addressing reporters, Alia reiterated his directive for orchard farmers to prepare for a strong harvest season, stressing that the new factories require a steady supply of oranges.

    The governor restated his policy that “by December, no oranges will leave Benue State,” emphasizing that all produce should be processed locally.

    Asemakaha announced that BIPC had mapped and collected data on about 5,600 orchard farmers through geo-fencing, ensuring a dependable supply chain for the fruit-processing factories.

    Prof. Soyinka’s visit signalled a strong endorsement of the state’s industrialisation efforts, further boosting the profile of Benue State’s growing agro-industrial hub.

  • Artist-soldier Monguno shocks Soyinka with birthday gift

    It’s obvious that Nobel Laureate Prof. Wole Soyinka did not solicit the unusual love that has been showered on him these past weeks as he celebrated his 85th birthday mid last month.

    Apart from newspaper reports that featured him regularly throughout the month of July, Soyinka had the sheer luck of being celebrated in different quarters by different groups at different venues.

    Some of the parties were privately held while some were full public show. One would not be surprised if the 85th birthday celebration of the literary icon is still on or about to be held in some other quarters.

    But the particular one that the Nobel Laureath will not forget in a hurry is the artistic show of love and deep regard that artist-soldier Gen. Babagana Monguro (rtd) displayed for him some days ago.

    Read Also: ‘Soyinka deserves highest national honour’

    The Borno State-born general and incumbent National Security Adviser presented a collection of artistic paintings he devotedly created by himself. They were different sketched portraits of the Nobel laureate presented to him in Lagos.

    An enthralled Soyinka, we heard, expressed great delight and thanked the amiable general for his unusual gesture.

    Soyinka said: “It’s fascinating and nice for the NSA Gen. Monguno to take time to make the sketches. I’m pleasantly surprised. Thank you General,” he said.

  • My book is love letter to my childhood, author tells youngsters

    A note Ajeluorou of The Guardian Newspaper, told the 85 student guests of Nobel laureate Prof. Wole Soyinka and other dignitaries that his debut children’s fictional storybook, Igho Goes to Farm, is a love letter to his childhood. The event held in Lagos and Abeokuta on July 12 and 14 as part of OpenDoorSeries/Wole Soyinka International Cultural Exchange (WSICE 2019) programmes to celebrate the iconic writer’s 85th birthday.

    Ajeluorou told the youngsters last Friday at Freedom Park at a symposium exploring the ‘Rights, Honour, Respect, patriotism, Tolerance, and Humanism’ of Soyinka that Igho Goes to Farm is a love letter he wrote to his childhood as a way of reconnecting with his younger days in the small Delta State community called Ibedeni where the story is largely set and where the author also grew up. He said childhood is the best years of any human being and how he or she is nurtured during those early years is key for the individual’s later years as an adult, noting that parents must take care how they bring up their children. Ajeluorou said storytelling was a significant part of his childhood and Igho Goes to Farm is a result of that shared experience, especially the folktale Igho’s grandma shared with him and his cousin, Onome.

    He further told the students that the title of the book is modeled after another famous childhood storybook, Eze Goes to School, written in the 1970s by Onuorah Nzekwu and Michael Crowder as a way of referencing an older literary work for youngsters. The idea, according to him, is to also draw attention to the older work (Eze Goes to School) as a complimentary reading material for young readers. At Ijegba Forest home of the Nobel laureate, where he presented Igho Goes to Farm to the iconic writer, Ajeluorou also admonished the youngsters that they should also read Ake: The Years of Childhood, written by Wole Soyinka. He said while Igho Goes to Farm is a fictional work, Ake is the real childhood story of Soyinka, saying, “If you wish to understand his (Soyinka’s) background, his parents, his upbringing and formative years, you should look for Ake and read it!”

    A special reprint edition of Igho Goes to Farm, facilitated by WSICE, was distributed to students from across the country who had gathered in a festive spirit to celebrate Kongi (Soyinka) at his birthday. The four-day programme is a yearly feast that celebrates Soyinka who turned 85 on July 13. Eighty-five secondary students who excelled in an essay competition gathered in Lagos, Abeokuta, and Akure to felicitate with the literary icon in a number of dazzling cultural programmes that immersed them on the life of Soyinka that span writing, teaching, performance, politics, and activism.

    The 85 finalists were hosted by Professor Soyinka at his Ijegba Forest home in Abeokuta, where they engaged him in conversation, and drew from his fountain of wisdom and knowledge, with the winners receiving their awards from him. Also, a presentation of WSICE@10 books: Memo to our Future was made by The Guardian’s former Arts Editor and Sunday Editor, Mr. Jahman Anikulapo.

    Earlier, Mr. Ajeluorou had expressed delight at his participation at the cultural feast to celebrate a longstanding mentor and present his book to youngsters for whom his book specially designed. He also expressed gratitude to the entire Zmirage Multimedia Ltd crew, particularly its CEO, Alhaji Teju Kareem, and programme consultant and former editor of The Guardian on Sunday, Mr. Jahman Anikulapo, for the collaboration and opportunity to speak on writing and why his book is an important companion to the youngsters who easily get distracted in an age of social media.

    “OpenDoorSeries/WSICE is a huge platform to present an important small book like Igho Goes to Farm,” Ajeluorou had said. “The young ones are very impressionable and they need to be guided so they don’t stumble. Igho Goes to Farm speaks to their concerns and how to help them navigate some of the modern distractions that can derail them from getting the best from their educational quest, particularly smart phones and social media.

    “The book also addresses Nigerian adults on being patriotic. Why have Nigerians failed to develop the country’s tourism potential? Why do Nigerians always travel abroad for holidays? Why don’t they patronise local goods and products? Why spend scarce resources on foreign products and goods? These are some of the concerns Igho Goes to Farm tries to address in a subtle way as the youngster lead character is shipped off to the village to spend his long holiday because he fails to perform well in his schoolwork while his siblings go to Disneyland in America.”

    Drama performances were among the exciting programmes the 85 students participated in during WSICE 2019.

  • Soyinka compares Leah with Mandela

    •Leah Sharibu, one of the school girls still held by Boko Haram insurgents, turned 16 yesterday. It was her 449th day in captivity. As a tribute on her birthday commenmoration, Prof. Wole Soyinka read an ode saluting her resilience at the GeorgeTown Univeristy, United States, Emmanuel Ogebe reports.

    Nobel Laureate Wole Soyinka has paid tribute to abducted schoolgirl Leah Sharibu in an ode to her and Chibok, a community in Borno State where some schoolgirls were abducted five years ago.

    Likening Leah to iconic human rights champion the late Nelson Mandela of South Africa, Soyinka said we must “celebrate the exception who said “no” ” as it reminded him of Mandela who refused conditional release.

    Reciting the ode titled: Mandela comes to Leah at Georgetown University in Washington DC, United States, Soyinka said: “No”, she said, “Faith is not of compulsion”… her torch undimmed in the den of zealots.”

    Soyinka said he could only recite excerpts from the ode because he broke down the last time he had tried to read it.

    He also did an epic takedown of a Georgetown professor’s claim that poverty and desperation was behind Boko Haram terrorism.

    He said that it was ideological bordering on the metaphysical and we should not underestimate it. “We’re dealing with something much deeper,” he said. He recalled that the son of a former Chief Justice of Nigeria, who is in the upper middle class, joined ISIS abroad.

    Read also: Emotions as activists, others celebrate Leah Sharibu’s 16th birthday

    “There’s a will to deny the possibility of horror and evil. We have reached a point where we have to go beyond the material analysis of this phenomenon. It goes beyond poverty and marginalisation. The ideology of sheer morbidity,” he added.

    Soyinka deplored the 20 American intellectuals who wrote protesting the proposal to designate Boko Haram as a Foreign Terrorist Organisation (FTO, because, according to them, it would interfere with their “scholarly research”. He said: “It took my breath away”.

    The retired professor said: “Some were my friends (but) they, in all seriousness, had a wrong analytical approach to the problem. We must simply jettison the language of political correctness. Political correctness is turning Africa continent into the graveyard of freedom and liberty if we don’t call things by their proper names…

    “We’re dealing now with the toxin of power which barely manifests itself under the cloak of religion.”

    Also on the panel with Soyinka was the ambassador who belatedly announced Obama’s decision to designate Boko Haram as an FTO as then top US diplomat for Africa Assistant Secretary of State Linda Thomas Greenfield.

    Greenfield pleaded impotence in responding to the Chibok abductions due to denials by many as to what happened, which she said, was her biggest challenge. “I had this feeling of impotency – a superpower who couldn’t do anything…I still feel it…there’s no more frustration to be in and I felt frustrated.” She also mentioned a recent attack in Nigeria where some girls were taken away.

    Greenfield also paid tribute to some of the girls whom she had met as being strong, saying she was traumatised after watching the drama “Chibok: Our Story” which preceded the panel discussion.

    International human rights lawyer Emmanuel Ogebe, who led the advocacy  to designate Boko Haram as a FTO, thanked the cast and producer/playwright of “Chibok:Our Story” Wole Oguntokun for giving voice to the Chibok situation, despite the government’s effort to silence the campaign.

    He mentioned the sad news that Leah’s 16th birthday would come up in captivity  and the good news that one of the escaped Chibok girls he brought to attend school in the US was graduating with an associate degree in science this same week.

    Stating that he forgave Greenfield for the Obama administration’s delay in designating Boko Haram as a FTO because she delivered the good news, Ogebe noted that the Chibok girl graduated from college without one dime of US government support in the past five years. “We can’t bring back the girls, but we can all do something,” he added.

    Ogebe and Greenfield had testified together before the US Congress on the day the FTO designation was announced. She represented the Obama administration; Ogebe and a Boko Haram victim represented civil society.

    The panel event was part of the Currents Festival at Georgetown University where the Chibok play, performed in Nigeria and Rwanda, made its US debut to rave reviews.

    Oguntokun, the acclaimed producer/playwright, is a protégée of Soyinka.

  • Anti-graft battle: It’s no longer business as usual, says Soyinka 

    President Muhammadu Buhari’s anti-corruption battle got a ‘pass mark’ from an unusual quarter yesterday. It was rated above average by Prof Wole Soyinka.

    The literary giant, however, scored the President below average on the anti-terror war.

    Soyinka spoke on the Bristish Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) programme, Hardtalk, anchored by Zeinab Badawi on Monday.

    Appraising the anti-graft battle, Soyinka said:  ”We have this issue of corruption, which is… and I frankly despise those who try to trivialise it in Nigeria simply because they don’t like the face of the man who is behind it.

    “But, it’s no longer business as usual in Nigeria because we have bankers who are on trial; we have legislators who are on trial and we have former governors who are on trial. Immediately they step out of the office, they are grabbed by the anti-corruption agencies. On corruption, as far as I’m concerned, he scored the best.”

    On the anti-terror war, the literary icon said: “Take for instance, the issue of Boko Haram, if action had been taken at the beginning, and we are not talking about the time of the reign of Jonathan. When the first governor decided to make his state a theocratic state… that was when action should have been taken.

    Read also: Buhari failed on security, says Soyinka

    “The President of that time compromised because he was ambitious and he needed the support of the state governor. And when you start a theocracy, a movement will berth and killings will start. They start saying, that you are not holy enough’ and the killings start.”

    He said the President should have learnt from the past by nipping in the bud the clashes between herders and farmers.

    “Well, he is making progress, but then another problem has sprung up and that is where the problem is. Yes, he is very slow in responding. Buhari has failed in that respect.”

    The Nobel laureate also defended his support for Buhari during the 2015 election, saying he was a better option to stop Dr. Goodluck Jonathan who, he said, was not doing enough to pilot the affairs of the country as President.

    Soyinka said: “Gen. Buhari didn’t really win…, he won by default, because it was impossible to continue with Jonathan. Yes, I did use that expression, born-again democrat. The reason I used that expression is because when somebody compete in an election first time, second time, third time, fourth time and persists, he must believe in democracy.”

    Justifying his support for Buhari, a former military head of state, Soyinka said: “First of all, Nigeria is not peculiar in that respect. We’ve had examples like that everywhere. We’ve had many military people doing that. So, the transition is not impossible.

    “On the second circumstance, the fact that Nigeria has shown the military what a huge failure they were, makes it possible for one to identify the possibility of exception. In any case, I keep emphasising that Nigerians had difficulty of making a choice. Like I said, it was between the devil and the deep blue sea.”

    Reflecting on his detention in the 60s and how he wrote on toiletries, Soyinka said:  “Yes, it was a solitary confinement. I was deprived of books – writing materials. So, I had to create my own world. So, toiletry paper became my template in which I could create the micro world in which I lived.

    “They were supplying toiletries and they were so generous with it. Mostly, I was writing short, short pieces, mostly poetry. Somehow, I did get out. At a time, I have a book smuggled to me. Everything had to be hidden.”

    The professor said it was high time the younger generation took the baton from the older generation, who he referred to as fogies.

    He said: “I compare today with the dreams, aspiration that we had in those days when we considered ourselves as the ones going to lift the continent to world standard and make it competitive anywhere. But that has not happened.”

    On this year’s presidential election, won by incumbent President Buhari, the playwright said: “It was one of the most depressed elections we’ve ever had. For me, it wasn’t possible for me to make a choice. I’m talking for myself. The simple reason is that the two candidates, they both had history. One is immediate, and the other is past, which made one to look for alternative.

    “I want us to define the youth very carefully. There are some young people that will still compound or are worst than the rulers. I’m talking about those youths with fresh and good vision. I’m talking about those who felt ashamed of what Nigeria is today. Those who have traversed the world a bit and seen how things are done, and achieved in other countries. And analyse the problems of Nigeria, not contend to the old ideas. I’m talking about those youths that will get their priority right.”

    When asked the chances available to the youth in Nigeria, where money plays a great role, Soyinka said: “When we started encouraging young people to come out, there was one person spearheading that movement and they could have come up with a consensus candidate.

    “But they eventually failed. But the question is: why and how have the fogies hijacked the movement? It was because he wanted to be at the head. Let me give you an exception. There was a candidate… who rode on bicycles campaigning. He went from door to door campaigning. Also, there is a man called President Lula in Brazil.  He talked to his people on what he is going to do. He went on, on and on. And he eventually became the President. So, if that can happen in Brazil, why can’t it happen in Nigeria?

    “Democracy is a continuous process. If the current dispensation is working, I have no problem with that.”

  • It’s season of cultural displays

    Come April 13th and 19th respectively, both the Abuja Carnival and Death and the King’s Horseman, a play by Wole Soyinka will be on display. While the Abuja Carnival will happen to usher in President Muhammadu Buhari’s second tenure, Death and King’s Horseman will be staged to remind the public about the sensitive cultural issues raised in the play. Edozie Udeze highlights the essence of these two shows

    The theatre and culture sector in Nigeria will be agog this Easter period.  First of all, the annual Abuja Carnival that did not hold last year, due to some unforeseen problems has been rescheduled to hold in April.  Feelers from the Abuja Carnival secretariat indicate that the carnival will hold on the 13th of April and to end on the 15th.  Apart from ensuring that the carnival forms part of series of events and programmes to usher in the second tenure of President Muhammadu Buhari, it is also to encourage Nigerians, particularly Abuja residents, to witness the total beauty of cultural displays that usually make Nigeria an outstanding society where culture is venerated.

    For now, letters have been sent to states to prepare to have one of the most colourful and elaborate carnivals.  In a statement, the Director of Abuja Carnival, Biodun Abe reinstated the need for states to anchor their preparations around the theme of the carnival.  As always, culture is the beacon of the people; upon it dwells the habits and existence of a people.  So far most of the states that had been absent from the carnival in the past have shown their resolve to be there at Abuja in April.

    It is not just to display the cultures of Nigeria.  The Abuja Carnival, in the reckoning of the Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Muhammad, is an apt moment to bring Nigerians together.  It is the best time to allow artists to meet; to display and highlight those attributes that make one state different from the other.  Over the years, this has been so, so that artists go back home feeling better, knowing one another better.  Indeed Abuja Carnival has been known to be a unifier, a rallying point for Nigerian youths and those who oversee the cultural affairs of Nigeria.

    In a telephone chat, Abe pointedly noted: “This year, we already have seven foreign nations that will grace the carnival.  I have just returned to Nigeria from Brazil where I went to watch the Rio carnival.  It was fantastic and the director of Rio Carnival has indicated his interest to be here for this year’s Abuja Carnival.  In all, the carnival will also encourage most delegates to be part of the 29th May swearing in ceremony of PMB.  This is why all hands have to be on deck to have a more blissful, colourful and resplendent Abuja Carnival come April 13th.  As usual, the states will up their game with assortments of costumes, spiced with the presence of masquerades, boat regatta, the durbar, dancers and more.  The floats as usual will display the theme to attract the attention of viewers”.

    In the end, the best float will carry the day as well as depicting the states that have come to embrace culture in the way they carry themselves in and outside of Nigeria.  Abe hopes that as more states that participate the more juicy the outing will be so as not to disappoint or discourage the foreign countries that will be here.  “It is good to know that the carnival has caught so much attention that even Brazil is showing interest.  This shows that we can use culture to cement love and togetherness in the world”, Abe opined, noting, “We will make this year’s Abuja Carnival a very remarkable event in the country”.

    In another development, Live Theatre Lagos will use the occasion of this Easter to stage once more, Professor Wole Soyinka’s Death and The King’s Horseman.  In a statement, the producer of the play, Shola Adenugba, said it is an ample time to revisit the issues Soyinka raised when he wrote it.  Adenugba said, “The play is a stage classic based on real events which happened in a Yoruba town during the British Colonial days around 1943 – 44.  Elesin is a prominent chief and the King’s chief Horseman who enjoys all privileges whilst the King lives.  But he must be ready for ritual suicide whenever the King kicks the bucket.  This is in order to escort the Oba on his eternal journey in the afterlife”.

    Adenugba made it clear that come April 19th, the play will depict clearly how the King dies and what happens to Elesin.  “Yes the King dies and he is to be buried.  Now, according to the local law; his dog, his favourite horseman must accompany him to the afterlife.  However, the horseman dilly dally at the moment of truth.  His delay threatens the continuation of the Kingdom and the entire Yorubaland…”  This is the lesson here.  The play will happen at the Lagos State Council for Arts, Ikeja, with some notable stage artistes on stage.  It is equally to spice the season and ensure a steady cultural moment for holiday makers.  It will be spiced also with dances, cultural displays and more.

     

  • Abdulsalami,Soyinka,Akeredolu,others in BEARD identity

    NOBEL laureate Prof. Wole Soyinka, former head of state Abdulsalami Abubakar, veteran actor Pete Edochie, Ondo State Governor Rotimi Akeredolu and star actor Richard Mofe-Damijo have one obvious thing in common: their perfectly groomed beard. Although they are renowned for their outstanding accomplishments in different fields, their signature beards are as familiar as their names.

    It is no secret that long and medium beards have become one of the most popular trends for men. Perhaps because of their ability to change one’s looks and carve a unique kind of identity, more and more men tend to be embracing the idea of wearing a beard.

    However, most men above the age of 60 tend to see the idea of keeping and maintaining a beard as a mere waste of time. But not so for these stylish oldies who started keeping their beards in their younger days and have stayed faithful to them.

    By sporting and maintaining their enviable beards over the years, they have transformed not just their appearances but their styles, carving peculiar niche for themselves.

    The remarkable thing is that there is a beard style for every man. Whatever style you want to rock, whether it is the handsomely rugged one like Soyinka’s or the soft and subtle type like Richard Mofe-Damijo’s, you are sure of an identity that sets you apart from the crowd.

    So, young and upwardly mobile men seeking a new look this season can opt for one of these oldies’ looks to redefine their appearance. Whether you choose a short, medium or a long beard, regular maintenance is key.

  • Just when is terror?

    Just when is terror?

    Nobel laureate, Prof Wole Soyinka, struck the right chord on Wednesday, when he asked the rather apt question of “just when is terror.” Prof Soyinka might not have said anything new, but his view represented that of many Nigerians who have been wondering who the worst enemy is: Boko Haram, the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) or the killer herdsmen. Such view, when expressed, especially by someone of Soyinka’s caliber, usually makes the authorities quiver.

    The Nobel laureate made his views on the activities of the herdsmen known in a statement made available to newsmen. He asked President Muhammadu Buhari to stop the killing of innocent Nigerians by herdsmen. “In plain language, they have declared war against the nation and their weapon is undiluted terror. Why have they been permitted to become a menace to the rest of us? It is happening all over again. History is repeating itself and alas, within such an agonisingly short span of time”, Prof Soyinka noted.

    If there is any issue on which I have had cause to be on the same page with the Ekiti State governor, Ayodele Fayose, it is on these herdsmen. Fayose made history last year when he outlawed open grazing in the state. A few offenders  had been prosecuted for breaking that law. That is the way it should be. Someone asked to watch over a shop should not attempt to be the owner of the shop. In the same vein, herdsmen who should be grateful for the easy passage they have all over the country should not begin to feel it is their God-given right to do that with impunity.

    I have said it several times that we do not have to call cow brother simply because we want to eat beef. Even the people in civilised countries who eat more nutritious beef are not doing that. Studies have shown that our cows are the poorest in terms of their nutritional value as well as the quality and quantity of milk they produce per day. Indeed, studies have also shown that no Nigerian cow currently has the capacity of producing up to a litre of milk daily, whereas cows elsewhere produce an average of 12 litres per day. Moreover, Holland, with far less population compared to Nigeria has 350 million cows while Nigeria has only 19 million. The import is that we spend so much money importing milk. Sadder still, the milk is not even of a good quality. As the Minister of Agriculture, Chief Audu Ogbeh, noted at a conference organised by his ministry in September, last year: “The sad thing is that the country is not spending this money on the best quality of milk, it is the lowest quality, powdered milk that is being imported into the country.” The long distance that our cows trek before getting to the point of consumption has not only drained the best of the nutrients in them; it also makes them vulnerable to all kinds of diseases, some of which they end up passing to human beings.

    These are the reasons why many people are saying it’s time for our herdsmen to  move away from their old ways and embrace ranching, which is what obtains in other places where cows give more value for money. Yet, these people are so attached to this antediluvian practice that they are not ready to consider the merits in ranching. They should not be allowed to get away with this nonsense. A country that wants to develop cannot leave its destiny in the hands of people who barely know their right from the left. Herdsmen, whether they are Fulani or whatever, cannot force the country to come down to their level; rather, they should aspire to come up by seeing the promise that ranching holds.

    Some people have said that the Benue killings were a function of the defects in the law made by the state house of assembly banning open grazing in the state. Even if this is correct, it could not have justified the senseless murder of innocent people by herdsmen wielding sophisticated weapons. The problem is that the state government lacks the capacity to enforce that law. I guess this was what informed the decision of Governor Fayose to put hunters in the state on red alert, because the state has a similar tough law on open grazing.

    What the Buhari presidency does not seem to realise is that if the Ekiti balance of terror is replicated in many states of the federation, the result can only be better imagined. Fayose, the street-wise person that he is, is merely taking a cue from the Yoruba saying that “nitori were ita la se nni were ni’le” (literally meaning that it is because of the crazy people outside that we also harbour crazy people within). This may not be a perfect translation of that Yoruba saying, but it at least gives an idea of what one is talking about. The most basic duty of government is protection of lives and property. When a government fails in this, its very essence is eroded. Naturally, there will be a resort to self-help, which is what Fayose is doing and this comes with calamitous consequences. Fulani herdsmen should not be allowed to continue to get away with the impression that they can always sneak into a place and senselessly kill as many people as they want, unchallenged. If only those Ekiti hunters can do like their forefathers, then, there will be casualties on both sides, instead of some rag-tag herdsmen all bolting away alive after killing innocent people, including women and children.

    The pictures that adorned the cover pages of our major newspapers last week did not portray the Buhari administration in good light; and rightly so. An array of caskets bearing the bodies of people murdered for no just cause is not a good emblem for any government; not in the least the Buhari government. Then when you see local hunters in their traditional attire, as if preparing to go to war in a country with a sitting government, one does not need anybody to tell him that all is not well. And indeed, there is fire on the mountain.

    Prof Soyinka has raised a poser which the Buhari administration has to answer. Just when is terror? Do the herdsmen have official cover for the sophisticated weapons they carry about? All the same, it is heartwarming that the Federal Government has deployed special forces in Benue, Taraba, Nasarawa, among others, where the herdsmen have been snuffing life out of people with reckless abandon. But it is one thing for such teams to be deployed; it is another for them to do their job professionally. They have no business reading the body language of the president or anybody for that matter in the course of their assignment. Many Nigerians want to see the president’s fury in tackling the herdsmen’s challenge. They refer to his handling of Boko Haram and even IPOB. And I think they are right. If IPOB is considered a terrorist organisation, Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association of Nigeria, the umbrella body of the herdsmen is even more so.  They do not have any right to tell a state government how to make laws or how not to make laws. That is beyond their ken.

     

  • State police: Soyinka backs call

    State police: Soyinka backs call

    • •‘Second term call hasty’

    Nobel Laureate Prof Wole Soyinka has added his voice to the on-going agitations for restructuring of the country, saying that Nigeria is over-centralised.

    The eminent writer also gave his backing to the clamour for the decetralisation of the police.

    “My own position is that people shouldn’t allow themselves be put up by those who try to cheat on the expression, ‘restructuring.’ It doesn’t matter by what name you call it. We all know that this nation was deconstructed and what we live in right now, as a nation, is not allowing structuring that expresses the true will of Nigerians,” he said.

    Soyinka spoke yesterday in Lagos, when he announced the 10 Nigerian writers, who would be leaving for Lebanon in a cultural exchange programme, The Sail Project, between The Wole Soyinka Foundation and Cedar Institute, University of Lebanon.

    According to him, every Nigerian knows what restructuring is all about, whether it is called reconfiguring, return to status quo, or reformulating the protocols of association.

    He however decried those who try to divert away attention from the main issue by mouthing platitudes like it is the mind that needs restructuring.  To him, this is a constant process, both as individual exercise as well as even the theological exercise. “People go to churches and mosques for their minds to be restructured. Restructuring the mind is not the issue; nobody is saying restructuring the mind should not be undertaken; anybody who is involved in examination already engages in mental and or attitudinal reconstruction.

    “So people should not try to substitute one for another. I find it very dishonest and cheap, trivialising the issue when people said it is the mind, which needs to be restructured. Who is denying that? So, why bring it up? We’re talking about the protocol of the association of the constitutive part of the nation. We’re talking about decentralisation, that is, another word. This country is over-centralised and that has been the bugbear of development, even of issues like security.

    “Even if it is one state, that state has the right to say, listen people, let us restructure this state; the protocols that went into the making of this state are no longer viable or have been distorted along the way or have been abandoned and we want to go back to the original set of protocols that created what we call his national entity. You can say you want to reinvent the wheels completely or you want to go back to the original protocols of association,” he added.

    He noted that an average citizen felt less secure than a few years ago, yet ‘when people talk about state police, there are reasons for it. When they talk about bringing policing right down to the community level, they know what they are talking about; this is also part of restructuring or reconfiguration of the articles of association.’

    When asked to comment on the clamour for a second term in office for Buhari by his aides and supporters, Soyinka said he was shocked by the move just midway into the president’s administration.

    “Why are we talking about second term, for heaven’s sake? I don’t understand this; we have hardly gone half-way or barely gone half-way and people are already talking about positions. I refuse to be part of that discussion and absolutely refuse to be part of that discussion.”

     

  • Nigeria is over-centralised – Soyinka

    Nigeria is over-centralised – Soyinka

    Nobel Laureate Prof Wole Soyinka has added his voice to the on-going agitations for restructuring of the country, saying that Nigeria is over-centralised.

    Soyinka spoke on Monday in Lagos when he announced the 10 Nigerian writers, who would be leaving for Lebanon in a cultural exchange programme, The Sail Project, between The Wole Soyinka Foundation and Cedar Institute, University of Lebanon.

    He noted that the present structure of the country  does not allow structuring that expresses the true will of Nigerians.

    “My own position is that people shouldn’t allow themselves be put up by those who try to cheat on the expression, ‘restructuring.’

    “It doesn’t matter by what name you call it. We all know that this nation was deconstructed and what we live in right now, as a nation, is not allowing structuring that expresses the true will of Nigerians,” he said.

    According to him, every Nigerian knows what restructuring is all about whether it is called reconfiguring, return to status quo, or reformulating the protocols of association.

    He however decried those who try to divert away the attention from the main issue by mouthing platitudes like it is the mind that needs restructuring. To him, this is a constant process, both as individual exercise as well as even the theological exercise.

    “People go to churches and mosques for their minds to be restructured. Restructuring the mind is not the issue; nobody is saying restructuring the mind should not be undertaken; anybody who is involved in examination already engages in mental and or attitudinal reconstruction.

    “So people should not try to substitute one for another. I find it very dishonest and cheap, trivializing the issue when people said it is the mind, which needs to be restructured. Who is denying that? So, why bring it up? We’re talking about the protocol of the association of the constitutive part of the nation. We’re talking about decentralization, that is, another word. This country is over-centralised and that has been the bugbear of development, even of issues like security.

    “Even if it is one state, that state has the right to say, listen people, let us restructure this state; the protocols that went into the making of this state are no longer viable or have been distorted along the way or have been abandoned and we want to go back to the original set of protocols that created what we call his national entity. You can say you want to reinvent the wheels completely or you want to go back to the original protocols of association,” he added.

    He noted that average citizen feels less secure than a few years ago yet ‘when people talk about state police, there are reasons for it. When they talk about bringing policing right down to the community level, they know what they are talking about; this is also part of restructuring or reconfiguration of the articles of association.’