Tag: Soyinka

  • Soyinka was right on Jonathan

    SIR: It was certainly inevitable that President Goodluck Jonathan, who has, to all intents and purposes, abandoned restraint, would trudge on, like a pilgrim bound for doom. He had to keep chalking up more outlandish blunders until they were sufficient to transfix the Nobel Laureate. The law of inertia, valid in a physics lab as in the corridors of power, had Jonathan for a victim.

    Tyranny always had a humble beginning – like promiscuity. One instance of violation stealthily grows in fits and starts, to a consuming routine. And the virgin moves from a first timer to an addicted returner to the forbidden. You have it when the shy, demure mien gives way to a self-assured, dismissive I-Don’t-Give-A-Damn look. Professor Wole Soyinka just had to do it. The man would have died in him if he had chosen convenient dumbness in this dawning dictatorship. Soyinka was alive – alive to his duty as citizen and patriot. He had to rebuke this modern Nebuchadnezzar.

    Before, when Jonathan was starting off with seemingly little infractions, we largely excused them as evidences of his fallibility. Those acts of mischief counted, for sure, but were not considered symptomatic of dictatorial tendencies. But the Jonathan of this day has become a threat to the country, inspiring anarchy in the sensitive realms that cannot bear attack. So, Soyinka did the right thing, calling the tyrant, a tyrant. Without the correct christening, Jonathan would be no less ruthless and malevolent – after all, the WS of a bygone era had rhapsodized that a rose called by another name would smell as sweet. But it was very important to name Jonathan properly.

    In pronouncing him Nebuchad-nezzar, we do not hallow his name. Rather, we say, we will reference him only with the repulsion we feel for the oppressor. We still remember this President was so ashamed of one of his names, he buried it. It remained a classified secret until he recognised that the dormant name had potential electoral value. Then, he promptly resurrected it and instructed that it be appended to his other names, to convey the notion of consanguinity with the East. That was how an approaching election compelled an Azikiwe impostor to introduce himself.

    As in that election, this impending one is also introducing another Jonathan to us.

    And what you can see is the Nigerian politician at his debauched best. He was capable of dispensing smooth talk until he faced the dire prospect of a challenging election. When he perceived that there is a real possibility that a fair contest could throw him off the seat, he made a clever decision to cease relating to his faculty of sanity. That is why he has gone into overdrive, battling to avert this portent that is reasonably worse than biological death. Of course, any shortcut to that end is fair. This flagrant desperation to complete a total conquest of the political space, which is setting the nation on the edge, is rooted in his insecurity. Jonathan nurses a fervent conviction that his re-election rests squarely on his use of state sanctioned terror. So far, his biography is replete with interventions of good luck. He senses that he may have exhausted his credit of fortune and needs to create his luck. His discretion tells him that fate has already given him the power to secure his power.

    In his reading of the scriptures, Nebuchadnezzar’s command and terror over Babylon and beyond must have struck President Jonathan as power as it ought to be. But the strictures of a democratic context, he acknowledged, would not permit him to mimic that fairy bogeyman. So there came the thought that this country of Nollywood might feel indulged to see him acting Nebuchadnezzar, unscripted.

    We needed Soyinka to do it. It seemed that we were unwilling to admit that the tally of all we have seen sufficed to prove that a dictator now reigns. How many more feats of impudence would Jonathan need to enact to qualify? Soyinka, the accomplished man of letters, answered the question, ‘’ is Jonathan the dictator, or should we look for another?’’ He traced the pattern of Jonathan’s trajectory and removed all doubts.

    Soyinka’s rebuke could call forth an interlude of reflection. But trust the career sycophants of Aso Rock to dilute the censure’s effect and press Nebuchadnezzar to show his iron fist more often. In the bubble where Nebu lives, a word of caution is hard to come by. Not from a wife who is a terror in her own right.

     

    • Emmanuel Uchenna Ugwu

    @emmaugwutheman

  • Magazine names Awo, Soyinka as Yoruba icons

    The late sage, Chief Obafemi Awolowo has been named the Yoruba Man of the century by a pan Yoruba media online IrohinOodua.

    The medium also listed Prof Wole Soyinka and Pastor TB Joshua as outstanding Yoruba personalities that have made unequalled contributions to the upliftment of the glory and grandeur of the Yoruba people.

    It described Soyinka as a “stainless steel and the most righteous of the living Yoruba faithful.” The statement was signed by the Editorial Board Chairman of IrohinOdua, Babatunde Adeleke.

    According to the statement the three personalities were selected after a careful consideration of the role each has played in the annals of Yoruba modern history as it relates to placing the Yoruba on the positive angle of global reckoning.

  • 60 reasons why I won’t vote for Jonathan, by Soyinka

    60 reasons why I won’t vote for Jonathan, by Soyinka

    Nobel laureate Prof. Wole Soyinka yesterday gave 60 reasons why he would not advise anyone to vote for President Goodluck Jonathan in next week’s presidential election.

    The eminent playwright’s position is another blow to the President’s flagging reelection campaign.

    Prof. Soyinka was addressing some youths at the Freedom Park in Lagos during the unveiling of the finalists for the 2015 edition of the Vision of the Child (VOTC) – the children/student segment of the yearly Lagos Black Heritage Festival (LBHF).

    There are 60 finalists –  30 for creative writing and 30 for painting.

    Soyinka spoke on the theme for the VOTC: “The Road to Sambisa”.

    In reference to the April 2014 kidnapping of almost 300 pupils of the Government Girls Secondary School in Chibok, Borno State, he said: “It is impossible to think of today’s election without thinking of what happened to your colleagues, your siblings, your peers in the village called Chibok.

    “It’s not possible to think of the future of this nation, its sense of responsibility, without that albatross called Chibok coming to the fore of our contemplation. This festival doesn’t involve itself, collectively, in political affairs. I am telling you now as a consultant to this festival, that I have at least 60 reasons for not voting for a continuation of this present government. And those reasons are here, that at least 60 reasons why I will not vote or encourage anyone to vote for the continuation of this present government, simply because your colleagues, numbering over 200, were kidnapped. We sent them on a mission – education, enlightenment – take their examination to rob minds with their peers, and they disappeared. And the government of this nation failed to show leadership. So anybody who says that after that event I would vote or cast my vote or encourage anyone to vote for this regime must be living in Sambisa forest.”

    The dramatist went on: “There has been a failure of leadership, our children have been betrayed. They are betrayed because no action or appropriate action was taken to retrieve the children who were stolen from under our noses. It took 10 days before this government even accepted the fact they were missing.   So, after that dereliction of duty; after that failure of leadership; after that betrayal of future; for anyone to think or to put words in my mouth suggesting that I will vote for such a regime, it is a travesty of intelligence.

     ”Nigeria is in a parlous state. There are more than two candidates; whoever wins, they should understand that it is a burden; it is a mission which is being imposed on that individual.

    “They should understand that this is not a European nation, and it is not a nation which has not been enjoying the number of the infrastructural development even in basic thing like agriculture; and that there is a lot of work to do to rescue this nation.

    “So, search your conscience, don’t sell your votes, and don’t be intimidated, especially by crude, vulgar and barbaric policemen – commissioner or whatever position – who have been sent on a mission on disrupting the process of elections. Agree absolutely with Oba (of Lagos) Rilwan Akiolu,  that Commissioner of Police or whatever position they hold, had better beware when they tangle with the very very dissatisfied electorate.”

  • Wole Soyinka Centre trains 203

    Two hundred and three journalists were trained during the pilot edition of the Pro-Engage: House-to-House project conceived by the Wole Soyinka Centre for Investigative Journalism in Nigeria.

    The initiative, in partnership with the British High Commission, was held from January 19 to 30.

    It took advocacy for investigative reporting from one media house to the other.

    A statement by the Centre’s coordinator, Ms. Motunrayo Alaka, said the training provided capacity support for the creation and or improvement of investigative reporting desks in eight selected media houses in Lagos and Abuja.

    The media houses trained are The Nation, New Telegraph, Media Trust, The Leadership, The Guardian, The Premium Times, The News and Television Continental.

     The Wole Soyinka Centre staff alongside its faculty, comprising veteran investigative journalism professionals, visited seven media houses to conduct the training for members of staff and followed up with workshops for representatives of the eight media houses.

     Ms. Alaka said continuous training and re-training of media professionals is essential to ensure the revival of investigative journalism.

  • Obasanjo, Soyinka hail female drummer, Ara on birthday

    Obasanjo, Soyinka hail female drummer, Ara on birthday

    Africa’s foremost female drummer and one of Nigeria’s greatest entertainment exports, Aralola Olamuyiwa, popularly known as Ara, has been described a pride to the African youth by former president, Olusegun Obasanjo.

    Obasanjo said this at Ara’s birthday celebration which held recently at the prestigious Oriental Hotel, Lagos.

    “While I wish you a very happy birthday, I also want to commend you for all you have been able to achieve at such a young age,” said Obasanjo in his congratulatory message. “You have done very well for yourself; you have succeeded in placing our culture on the map of the world. The talking drum used to be associated with dirty old men but with your smartness, talent and doggedness, you have added glamour and value to the act of playing the talking drum. I urge our youths to take a cue from you and promote our culture because that is all we have and who we are.”

    Nobel laureate Prof. Wole Soyinka also commended the ace drummer for her contributions to the arts industry. “A happy birthday to our very talented and gifted artiste,” the bard said. “I remember you started very young, quite young then when I heard of you. You are a model to be emulated by the young people, absolutely no height to which you cannot reach if you are committed. Congratulations.”

    The multi-pronged event, tagged, ‘an evening with Ara’ featured a movie premiere, album preview, a special birthday dinner and intellectual discourse.

    “I had a whole lot of accumulated activities that have been pending due to my national and international engagements,” said Ara, “but I have decided to use today, being my birthday, to fraternise, hobnob and cross pollinate ideas with stakeholders of the Ara brand, amidst all the various activities you have witnessed.”

    Dr Joe Odumakin, Barrister Mohammed Fawehinmi and other eminent Nigerians were part of the discussants and guest speakers on the topic: ‘The Nigerian Youth; Problem and Solution’ at the discuss section of the event.

    Besides a special birthday dinner held in Ara’s honour, the evening was also spiced with an exclusive screening of her much touted movie; ‘Osunfunke’.

    “The movie, ‘Osunfunke’ is an extension of my theatrical talent,” Ara said. “(It’s) another medium I have chosen to express myself as an entertainer with a passionate commitment to the promotion of our socio-cultural heritage.”

    Guests also got the privilege to listen to some tracks from Ara’s much-anticipated debut album due for release soon. The artiste explained that the opinions of the panel of discussants will add great value to the album.

    At the event, Ara signed a new management deal with one of Nigeria’s top artiste management outfit, Akinwale Oluwaleimu’s Event and Entertainment Consult. It was also disclosed that Ara is currently signed on to Aremo Segun Oniru’s ‘D Prince Is Here Entertainment’ record label.

  • Soyinka endorses candidates’ anti-violence pact

    Soyinka endorses candidates’ anti-violence pact

    Nobel laureate Prof Wole Soyinka has endorsed the accord signed by President Goodluck Jonathan, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari and nine other presidential candidates to maintain peace during next month’s election.

    He described the pact as “a positive step”, and praised the organisers of the 2015 General Elections Sensitisation Workshop on Non-Violence, where the agreement was signed.

    Soyinka said he hoped 2015 would prove to be a “a live-and-learn election year, not a do-or-die!”

    The Nobel laureate condemned politicians and media outlets who publish fabricated “interviews” which he never granted.

    “I have never made a statement endorsing any presidential or governorship contestant,” Soyinka said in a statement entitled: Identity thieves and the 2015 Election Peace Accord.

    The statement reads: “It was with high expectations that I went through details of the Abuja peace accord recently agreed by the political party leaders, mandating decent and civilised campaign conduct among the contestants, their agents and supporters. I was not disappointed. It is a positive step in the direction of democracy, for which I must commend the efforts of those seasoned interventionists, Emeka Anyaoku and Kofi Annan.

    “Adhered to with good will and sincerity, it should ensure a wholesome space for future elections, and pre-empt further violence. It might even come close to what the democratic ideal should be, as canvassed by others, including Governor Fashola a few years ago – a people’s fiests!

    “From personal interest however, I was disappointed that the communiqué makes no reference to the violence done to members of the electorate whose identities are stolen, abused and debased during this exercise.

    “It is rapidly becoming commonplace to encounter totally fictitious statements, even entire interviews published and attributed to unsuspecting authorship. This criminal proceeding has even involved the cloning of media mastheads to which non-existent interviews are then attached. To render it in local parlance, this is political 419, and of the most despicable brand.

    “While it would be unjust to place direct responsibility on the contestants, one must stress that they also have a moral responsibility to denounce these dirty tricksters in the strongest terms, even in their own interest.

    “The resentment inspired in victims of such cowardly conduct cannot but impact on their own political image. The media must also protect itself by taking necessary measures against such unprincipled confusionists. It is the democratic right of every citizen to know exactly who is saying what on issues that affect their political choices.

    “Let me thus seize the occasion of the Abuja accord to state categorically that I have never made a statement endorsing any presidential or governorship contestant.  All such attributions are fabrications by faceless, often self-appointed agents of deception, and should be publicly pilloried.  “

  • ‘Obasanjo a  predator on others’ achievements’

    ‘Obasanjo a predator on others’ achievements’

    The controvery triggered by President Olusegun Obasanjo’s latest book – My Watch – may linger for long. Nobel laureate Prof Wole Soyinka, who is one of the personalities criticised  in the book, has taken exception to the scathing remarks about him by the ex-President. In his reply entitled: Watch and pray, Watch and prey!, the literary icon accused ex-President Obasanjo of abusing the exhortation by Jesus Christ.

    I HAD fully attuned myself to the fact that our Owu retiree soldier and prolific author is an infliction that those of us who share the same era and nation space must learn to endure.

    However, it does appear that there is no end to this individual’s capacity for infantile mischief, and for needless, mind-boggling provocations, such as his recent ‘literary’ intrusion on my peace.

    Perhaps I ought to interrupt myself here with an apology to some mutual acquaintances – ‘blessed peacemakers’ and all – especially in this season of ‘peace and goodwill to all men’. Please know that your efforts have not been entirely in vain.     I had a cordial exchange with Obasanjo over the phone recently – engineered by himself, his ground staff and/or a chance visitor  – when I had cause to visit his Presidential Laundromat for the first time ever.  During that exchange, I complemented him on making some quite positive use of landed property that was acquired under morally dubious circumstances, and blatantly developed through a process that I denounced as ‘executive extortionism’. That obscene proceeding has certainly set a competitive precedent for impunity in President Jonathan’s recent fund-raising shindig, editorialised in The PUNCH (December 23, 2014) as  “Impunity Taken too Far”.

    So much for the latest from that direction – we must not allow handing-over notes between presidents to distract us for too long.

    To return to our main man, and friendly interventionists, you may like to note that I went so far as to engage him in light banter, stating that some of his lesser sins would be forgiven him for that creative conversion of the landscape – a conversation that he shortly afterwards delightedly shared with at least three mutual acquaintances. I promised a follow-up visit to view some mysterious rock script whose existence, he informed me, was uncovered by workers during ground clearing.

    The exchange was, in short, as good as ‘malice towards none’ that any polemicist could hope to contribute to the ongoing season of peace and goodwill.

    Obviously that visit will not now take place, any more than the pursuit of vague notions of some creative collaboration with his Centre that began to play around my mind.               That much I do owe you from my report card.

    Perhaps you will now accept that there are individuals who are born incorrigible but, more importantly, that some issues transcend one’s personal preferences for harmonious human relationships even in a season of traditional goodwill.

    The change in weather conditions sits quite well with me however,  since we are both acquainted with the Yoruba proverb that goes:  The child that swears his mother will not sleep must also prepare for a prolonged, sleepless infancy.  So, let it be with Okikiola, the overgrown child of circumstance.    One of the incessant ironies that leapt up at me as I read Obasanjo’s magnum opus was that we are both victims of a number of distasteful impositions  – such as being compelled again and again to seek justice against libel in the law courts.

    I felt genuine empathy to read that he still has a pending thirty-year case instituted by him against his alleged libelers! Judgment was delivered in my favour regarding one of the most nauseating only this year, after surviving technical and other procrastinations, defendant evasions and other legalistic impediments for nearly as long as his.

    That leaves only a veritable Methuselah on the court list still awaiting re-listing under the resurrection ritual language known as de novo.

    Unfortunately, not all acts of defamation or willful misrepresentation are actionable, otherwise, my personal list against this newly revealed fellow-sufferer would have counted for an independent volume of the Nigerian Law Report since our paths first crossed during the Civil War.  My commitment to the belief in the fundamental right of all human beings ‘Not to be lied against’ remains a life obsession, and thus demands, at the very least, an obligation of non-commission among fellow victims.     I must therefore reserve a full, frontal dissection of Obasanjo’s  My Watch for later, most especially since the work itself is currently under legal restraint and is not readily accessible to a general readership.

    So, for now, let me single out just one of the most glaring instances of this man’s compulsive career of lying, one sample that the media can readily check upon and use as a touchstone – if they do need one – in assessing our author’s multi-faceted claims and commentaries on people and events.

    I refer here to the grotesque and personally insulting statement that he has attributed to me for some inscrutable but obviously diversionary reasons.

    In the process, this past Master of Mendacity brazenly implicates an innocent young man, Akin Osuntokun, who once served him as a Special Adviser.

    Instead of conferring dignity on a direct rebuttal of an ignoble fabrication, I shall simply make a personal, all-embracing attestation: I despise that species of humanity whose stock-in-trade is to concoct lies simply to score a point, win an argument, puff up his or her own ego, denigrate or attempt to destroy a fellow being.

    However, even within such deplorable species, a special pit of universal opprobrium is surely reserved for those who even lack the courage of their own lies, but must foist them on others.

    When an old man stuffs a lie into the throat of an age-mate of his own children – omo inu e! – we can only pity an irredeemable egomaniac whose dotage is headed for twilight disgrace.           D.O. Fagunwa, the pioneer Yoruba novelist, was a compulsive moralist. I suspect that he may have exerted some influence on our garrulous General, resulting in his pupil’s tedious, misapplied and self-serving deluge of moralising. It seems quite likely indeed that the ghostly, moralistic hand of Fagunwa reached out from the Great Beyond, sat his would-be competitor forcefully before a mirror and bade him write what he saw in that image.

    I invoke Fagunwa because, at his commemorative colloquium in Akure in August last year, I drew my audience’s attention to a remarkable passage in Fagunwa’s Igbo Olodumare. The passage had struck me during translation and stuck to my mind. I found it uncanny that the original creative moralist, Fagunwa, had captured the psychological profile of a being whom I have been compelled by circumstances to study as an eerie creation, yet this was a character Fagunwa was unlikely to have encountered in real life at the time that he produced that work.

    The section comes from an account of a visit to the abode of Iku (death), the terrifying host to Olowo-aiye, the narrative voice of the adventure.  Iku, the host, had been admonishing his guests through the histories of seven creatures who were not permitted a straightforward passage to heaven or hell, but were subjected to admonitory punishment at the halfway house to the abode of the dead.

    The most horrendous tortures were reserved, it would seem, for the last of the seven such ‘detainees’, and I invited my audience to ponder if they could identify any prominent individual, a public figure whose life conduct seamlessly fitted into Fagunwa’s portrayal, which went thus: “The seventh…. is not among those who set out to improve the world but rather to cause distress to its inhabitants. It was through manipulations that he attained a high position.

    “Having achieved this however, he constantly blocked the progress of those behind him, this being a most deplorable act in the eyes of God, and rank behaviour in the judgment of the dwellers of heaven – that anyone who has enjoyed upliftment in life should seek to be an obstacle for those who follow him. This man forgot the beings of earth, forgot the beings of heaven, in turn, he forgot the presence of God.

    “The worst kind of behaviour agitated his hands – greed occupied the centre of his heart, and he was a creature that walked in darkness. This man wallowed in bribery, he was chairman of the circle of scheming, head of the gang of double-dealing, field-marshal of those who crept about in the dark of night.

    “With his mouth, he ruined the work of others, while he used a big potsherd to cover the good works of some, that others might not see their attainments. He nosed around for secrets that would entrap his companions, and blew them up into monumental crimes in the eyes of the world. He who turns the world upside down, places the deceitful on the throne, casts the truthful down – because such is a being of base earth, he will never stand as equal among the uplifted.”

    My co-occupants of the High Table, in side remarks, and those who came up from the audience afterwards to volunteer their answer to the riddle, without exception named one individual and one individual only, even as I remained non-committal. Indeed, one or two tried to put up a defence of that nominee, and I had to remind them that I had named no one! Fagunwa wrote largely of the world of mongrelised creatures but, as I remarked, his fiction remains a prescient and cautionary mirror of the society we inhabit, where beasts of the forest appear to have a greater moral integrity than those who claim to be leading lights of society.

    In this season of goodwill, we owe a duty to our immediate and distant neighbours: CAVEAT EMPTOR!  Let all beware, who try to buy a Rolex from this indefatigable watch peddler.

    His own hand-crafted, uniquely personalised timepiece has been temporarily confiscated by NDLEA (National Drug Law Enforcement Agency) and other guardians of public health but, there is no cause for despair. Such has been the fate of the misunderstood and the envied, avatars descended from the heavens before their time, the seers, and all who crave recognition.

    Our author invokes God tirelessly, without provocation, without necessity and without justification, perhaps preemptively, but does he really believe in such an entity? Does our home-bred Double-O-Seven believe in anything outside his own Omnipotency? Could he possibly have mistaken the Christian exhortation – ‘Watch and Pray’ for his private inclination to “Watch and Prey? This is a seasoned predator on others’ achievements – he preys on their names, their characters, their motivations, their true lives, preys on gossip and preys on facts, preys on contributions to collective undertakings…..even preys on their identities, substituting his own where possible.

    Well, hopefully he may actually believe in the inevitable end to all vanities? So, let our Great Immortal, the Unparalleled Achiever, Divinely appointed Watchman even on the world that is yet to come remember Fagunwa’s  Iku, the ultimate predator whose visitation comes to us all, sooner or later.  Chei! There is Death o!

    What Obasanjo wrote on Soyinka

    He is a “misfit as a political analyst, commentator or critic.
    “For Wole, no one can be good, nor can anything be spot – on politically except that which emanates from him or is ordained by him.
    “He is surely a better wine connoisseur and a more successful “aparo” (guinea fowl) hunter than a political critic, not to talk of what he would do as a politician.
    “I take him seriously on almost all issues except on the political particularly Nigerian politics.”

  • Gowon, Soyinka and US

    The role of the United States of America (US) in the war against Boko Haram insurgency came under serious scrutiny last week. At least, two well respected Nigerians came out publicly to deprecate the attitude of that country to the raging insurgency that has left thousands killed and maimed while property of inestimable value destroyed.

    First to take on the US was Gen. Yakubu Gowon Rtd, a former head of state and one of the few of such leaders whose views are taken very seriously by many. Gowon had criticized the US for refusing to sell arms to Nigeria to fight the insurgents. For him, if the US was a truly diplomatic friend of Nigeria, it should do everything to keep its corporate existence by aiding it fight any aggression from any quarters.

    He recalled the US did the same thing during the Nigerian civil war by refusing to sell fighter jets to the country even as they were shipping fighter jets and loads of ammunition to Zaire. “What sort of friends are they”, he queried.

    Nobel Laureate, Wole Soyinka added weight to Gowon’s position when he called on the same government to stop giving baseless and flimsy excuses for its refusal to sell ammunition to Nigeria to prosecute the war. He asked the US to stop ridiculing and laughing at this country through its current posturing on the war against the insurgents.

    Gowon and Soyinka’s intervention has raised the stakes on the inexplicable role of the US since the war on terrorism commenced in this country. Besides, it has elevated to the vortex of public opinion the inherent contradictions in some of the reasons that have before now, been adduced to justify the vague behavior of that country to Nigeria’s current predicament.

    Hiding under the spurious allegation of human rights abuses by soldiers, the US had sought to justify its refusal and obstruction of Nigeria’s attempt to acquire Cobra helicopters and ammunition to successfully prosecute the escalating war.

    Not unexpectedly, the schism within the political class on the motive and direction of the insurgency has allowed some of these curious excuses to fester. Those who want to take advantage of the war to further their political ambition have taken turns to hype the perceived excesses of the military on human rights. Curiously, a willing US government quickly bought into that idea and had since posed an obstacle to Nigeria’s attempt to acquire weapons to tame the monster. It is good a thing respected citizens are now coming to terms with the inherent contradictions in the US reasoning. Not long ago, the US ambassador to Nigeria James Entwistle amplified his country’s position on the issue when he said they would only sell or give out arms when they are sure of the purpose for which it would be used.

    “Before we share equipment with any country, we look at a couple of things. Does it make sense in term of the country’s needs? The second thing we look at is the country’s human rights situation. As you all know, there have been instances, I’m not saying across the board of human rights abuses by the Nigerian military in the north-east” the ambassador said.

    It can be deduced from the above that US does not see any need for Nigeria to acquire these weapons despite the admission of Entwistle in the same interview that Boko Haram has gone beyond being a small insurgent group with a couple of guns to a very effective collection of conventional force. Yet, the same government is of the view that Nigeria has no need for the ammunition it seeks to buy. Nothing can be more contradictory than this.

    Soyinka captured this contradiction very succinctly when he argued that what the country asked for are little weapons to destroy the enemy; weapons for self defense since we have found ourselves in a situation of destroy the enemy or have ourselves destroyed. He could not fathom how such weapons of self defense can be denied in the face of a heartless and murderous marauding enemy.

    There is much to indicate the US is not coming clean on this issue. Neither is their argument plausible. They recognize the war has assumed a dangerous dimension in the face of the sophistication of the insurgents in weaponry resulting in heavy casualties on the part of our soldiers. They are also not unaware of the murderous escapades of the insurgents: a litany of abductions, the sacking and burning down of communities and their celebrated scant regard for the sanctity of human life. Why the US chose to look the other way in the face of these human right abuses by the insurgents has remained largely cloudy. Not long ago, the world was rattled by the abduction of over 200 school girls in Chibok in very inexplicable circumstances. Since then, we have been inundated with varying chilling accounts of the mindless abuses the girls have been subjected to in captivity by the insurgents. In the same very suspicious manner, the concerns of the international community have been more on the inability of the government to rescue the girls. Not much attention is being paid to the criminals that have been holding and abusing the poor girls. Despite the offer of assistance by the international community including the US for the quick release of the girls, nothing has so far come out of that engagement. Such has been the insincerity and deceit that had surrounded the war against the sect that one begins to wonder if some people are not set to achieve set goals through it. It did not come as a surprise when Nigeria cancelled the scheduled training of its soldiers by the US on account of that country’s refusal to share their equipment for the exercise. What these series of events in respect of the US activities in this war underscore is that Nigerians are getting more suspicious of her real intentions in this fight against the insurgents. This suspicion is further amplified by earlier predictions from the same country that Nigeria is likely to self- destruct by 2015. As that year fast approaches, no body is sure events are not being activated from so many corners to bring about the doomsday. Though issues of human rights cannot be discounted, we find US position in the instant case tenuous because the insurgents have worst records of human rights abuses.

    Even if we succeed freeing the Chibok girls without terminating the war, chances are that the insurgents will abduct more sets of girls given the very way the previous one was hyped. Events have since proved this right. So it is a huge contradiction to disallow Nigeria the acquisition of the needed armament to tame the insurgency and at the same time, expect the war will be over. It will rather escalate and degenerate. Our people stand the risk of being consumed. No leader worth his onions will stand by and watch that happen. The nation must do all within its powers to defend itself in the face of the onslaught of the Boko Haram insurgents? Why the US is applying double standards in its perception and treatment of the evils of religious extremism as propagated by the sect is best known to them?

    It is puzzling that the same US that spent years and huge resources in Afghanistan fighting the Taliban; the same US that is currently fighting unsolicited wars in Syria and Iraq against ISIS is singing a different tune in the fight against Boko Haram. This ambivalence cannot be for nothing given that Boko Haram and ISIS are two sides of the same coin.

  • Diatribe against Soyinka

    SIR: Most Nigerian youths nowadays suffer from memory loss – reason why they tolerate polemicists, demagogues and proselytes to redraft history for them: of course for selfish reasons.

    I have read many a diatribe from government spokespersons, laymen and many others who love to impugn the image of the revered Nobel Laureate Professor Wole Soyinka. The professor is a major stakeholder in the Nigerian project and is in his own right to express his views, for the right reasons and, for the growth of country.

    The sage, many decades ago as a young man before the Nigerian Civil War, crossed over enemy lines at a time when others could not, to persuade Colonel Odumegwu-Ojukwu not to go to war.  He was subsequently locked up by General Yakubu Gowon because he visited the supposed adversary of the Nigerian state.

    Only a man with a genuine love for the unity of his country could do that. How many of today’s numerous pseudo-analysts named the professor a ‘traitor’ when he, (Soyinka) called the bluff of General Sani Abacha, by calling for the enthronement of democracy even when his life was in danger? How many knew how he fared when he went under during those dark days but still campaigned for democracy through international channels like CNN?

    To ask the professor to sit on the fence and play “siddon look”, when the country is in a deep hole is derisory.  Didn’t today’s beneficiaries of the rewards brought by democracy play “siddon look” at a time when men needed to be counted? Of course, they were in their comfort zones, without a care for country back in the day.

    How many of today’s numerous pseudo-analysts called the professor a quisling when he sacrificed for this country as officer in charge of the Federal Road Safety Corps suffering private economic overheads to ensure that the agency functioned without gremlins.

    How many of today’s young, bogus, experts could at the professor’s age, a moment ago, challenge the nameless cabal that tried so hard to prevent Goodluck Jonathan from ascending to the presidency after the sudden death of that good man, the late President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua? Could they at his age have gone on those protestations? That professor was a superman before these decriers at that moment, but a reprobate now.

    He is a wrong doer, only because he expressed misgivings on the leadership style of the current president.

    That professor was not a troublemaker when he joined issues with the Nigerian military when some of their members a moment ago went wild beating up people in Lagos over the death of one of their own.

    Some have swiftly branded him an ally of the opposition but having observed this man from a distance, it is easy to deduce that he won’t spare any party his fiery bombardments, should they decide to engage in the politics of jibber-jabber.

    I do not celebrate his foibles because we all are subject to human frailties. But that said, the sum of the respected professor’s appeal is more than the sum of his weaknesses. Some positions in life come with a lot of responsibilities and that of a Nobel Laureate is no less.

     

    •Simon Abah,

    Port Harcourt.

  • ‘Soyinka’s works are not difficult to understand’

    People criticising Prof Wole Soyinka for using semantic language and esoteric concepts in his works are not gifted to understand such works, a dramatist, Kemi Ilori, has said. He said people could make meaning of Soyinka’s work through the application of relevant theories used by the Nobel Laureate to write his works.

    Ilori, in a lecture delivered at a seminar of the Institute of Cultural Studies in Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile-Ife, Osun State, said the works of Soyinka followed some theories propounded by philosophers, which influenced his thinking.

    He said: “In my study of Soyinka’s theatre, I found out that there are many layers of meanings. When you look at these theories, you are meeting a man that has read vastly and if you are going to catch up with him, you have to catch up with some of his sources, which influence his thinking. I feel the echoes of Chakravorty Spivak, Homi K. Bhabha, Edward Said, and Victor Turner in the characters that I see in Soyinka plays.”

    In most works of Soyinka, he said, there is always a character challenging orthodoxy and rationality in one way or the other. “We may not like what they are saying or their approach to life but they will be there as a kind of person that stands out,” he said.

    The chairman of the Institute, Prof Gbemisola Adeoti while hailing the speaker, described the lecture as a “great home coming” in the field of art. He said: “Ilori is great dramatist, poet and a great critic of art.” Adeoti also praised Prof Ahmed Yerima, who was a speaker at the event.