Tag: Wole Soyinka

  • Soyinka condemns spate of killings, kidnappings in Nigeria

    Nobel Laureate, Prof. Wole Soyinka, on Thursday condemned the spate of killings and kidnappings in several parts of the country.

    Soyinka made the condemnation in Lagos while speaking at a programme “The Ripples Dialogue: Rebuilding a Divided Nigeria.”

    He described wanton killings of innocent Nigerians by criminals and herdsmen as “homicidal fiesta”, saying the situation was unfortunate.

    Soyinka said the government’s response to the security challenges was poor, especially those associated with herdsmen.

    He said it was bad for herdsmen to invade and kill people across communities in the country to graze their cattle.

    “The Lake Chad Basin is receding.The water is drying up. But that should not be a reason for herdsmen to attack people in Bayelsa, down in Oyo and Ogun, that should never be an excuse,”he said.

    Soyinka also condemned the abduction of school girls in Daphchi in Yobe State by Boko Haram members .

    He said that the abduction would have been prevented if those saddled with ensuring security in the school had done the right thing.

    The Nobel laureate described Boko Haram as “blood sucking “, saying their activities are a threat to humanity.

    On  the myriads of problems facing the country, Soyinka said Nigeria would be a better country if leaders were committed to service and the welfare of the people.

    The Nobel Laureate, however, said the followership also had its share of blame for some of the problems.

    He said working nations were not built by leaders alone but by good followers too.

    On the “shit hole” remark made by President Donald Trump about Nigeria and some other countries, Soyinka said the American president latched on the numerous problems in the country.

    According to him, if Nigerians had made the country work, Trump would not have had the opportunity to use such derogatory term to refer to the country.

    Soyinka, however, said he was not disappointed by President Trump’s  comment as he had always seen him as not fit for the office.

    The Nobel laurate condemned a bill being proposed by the National Assembly prescribing death penalty for those who made hate speeches.

    He said the bill was an attempt by the lawmakers to silence speech so that they could be immune to  scathing criticisms.

    While describing hate speeches as “dangerous and destructive”, he said hanging people was not the right  punishment.

    “Hate speech is bad and destructive, but do I want anybody hanged? No, I would rather want people shamed, “he said.

    Soyinka also urged the government at all levels to be alive to their responsibility.

    In his contribution, Dr Reuben Abati, immediate past  Special Adviser to former President Goodluck Jonathan on Media and Publicity, said there was a disconnect between leadership and followership in the country .

    He  attributed the disconnect to  the mistrust between the two, in the light of failure of leadership to deliver the goods.

    Abati urged  leaders to discharge their responsibilities to the people, not only to earn the trust of their followers, but also to promote the development in the country.

    NAN

  • Nigeria is sick and empty- Wole Soyinka

    Renowned Nobel Laureate, Professor Wole Soyinka has described Nigeria as sick and empty, deserving of the term “shithole” as described by United States President, Donald Trump.

    Soyinka said this while speaking at the Ripples Nigerian Dialogue titled “Rebuilding trust in a Divided Nigeria,” held at The Wheatbaker Hotel in Ikoyi, Lagos.

    “We have become laughing stocks in the eyes of the public.

    “We have earned the term of shithole. Nigeria is sick and empty. Some retrogressive forces won’t just stop. Everything Nigeria touches rusts.”

    He condemned the humiliation of Nigerians by  military personnel, stating that the humiliation of Nigerians led him to relocating abroad.

    “The treatment of Nigerians by the military led me to relocating to a saner clime. I remember invading Obasanjo’s residence in Lagos and challenging him concerning the way Nigerians were being treated. It is a disgrace to us, as a nation. We have been left behind in nearly every field.

    “There are lessons to be learnt from the diaspora. We need to peep across the Atlantic to see how other countries have been faring,” Soyinka said.

    Drawing illustrations from his lecture titled “From Miyetti to Haiti: Notes from a Solidarity Visit,” Soyinka emphasized the need to end slavery in our  society.

     

    Soyinka emphasized the need of looking in the mirror to solve Nigerian problems and encouraged  youths to resist the passage of the Hate Speech bill.

    The round table featured  Soyinka, Professor Pat Utomi, represented by Mr Rasheed Adegbenro, Ex Governor Peter Obi and Dr. (Mrs) Abiola Akiyode-Afolabi.

    The session was moderated by former Presidential spokesman Reuben Abati.

  • Not OBJ’s third force

    SIR: It was Professor Wole Soyinka that first introduced the word “Third Force” into Nigeria’s political lexicon. In 1967, during the Nigerian civil war, Biafran forces led by Brigadier Victor Banjo, a Yoruba, overran the Mid-West and were speedily heading towards Lagos to unseat General Yakubu Gowon and capture Nigeria’s federal capital city when they suddenly stopped at Ore, a town in Ondo State. Brigadier Banjo, apparently unwilling to shed Yoruba blood, had sent Soyinka as an emissary to deliver a message to Major Olusegun Obasanjo, who was the commander of the forces in the Western Region, to allow easy passage of Biafran troops to Lagos. He also revealed that his true intentions was not to divide Nigeria but to unify the country as part of a Third Force comprising of soldiers both in Nigeria and Biafra, who saw the war as a clash of egos between two men (Ojukwu and Gowon) and proposed a solution to the crises by toppling both regimes, bringing an end to the war, and unifying the country.

    Obasanjo snitched on Soyinka to the federal authorities who promptly clamped him into detention until the end of the war.

    The recent call for a Third Force by the same person who frustrated the success of the initial Third Force is not unconnected with the failure of the First Force (PDP) and the Second Force (APC), to satisfy the yearnings and aspirations of the people. However, here is a caveat, we must not mistake Obasanjo’s Coalition for Nigeria Movement as the Third Force that we desire or seek. As a matter of fact, Obasanjo’s new group must be avoided like a plague by all well-meaning Nigerians truly desirous of change.

    My reason for saying this is neither far-fetched nor are my fears unfounded. The Coalition for Nigeria Movement (CNM) is largely made up of political disciples of the former president some of whom were accused of vote rigging in times past and evicted from power by judicial pronouncement from the temple of justice. Others have corruption cases hanging over their heads like the proverbial Sword of Damocles.

    What we need is a granite coalition made up of several interest groups and stakeholders in the Nigerian Project. The Nigerian Intervention Movement, the Red Card Movement, Civil Society Organisations, labour unions, professional bodies and even CNM should coalesce together to form the Third Force. It should transmute from a political movement into a political party that would present credible and competent candidates at all levels of governance in this country in the 2019 elections.

    Nigeria is arguably the only federal republic in the world that has about 62 items on its exclusive list. That implies too much workload on the federal government and that is why whenever anything bad happens in any part of Nigeria, we blame it all on the president. For example, if we have state police and even community police, why would anyone blame President Muhammadu Buhari for the killings by supposed Fulani herdsmen in various parts of Nigeria?

    • Peter Ovie Akus,

    Ifo, Ogun State.

     

  • Killer Herdsmen: Impunity Rides Again – Wole Soyinka

    Killer Herdsmen: Impunity Rides Again – Wole Soyinka

    It is happening all over again. History is repeating itself and, alas, within such an agonizingly short span of time. How often must we warn against the enervating lure of appeasement in face of aggression and will to dominate! I do not hesitate to draw attention to Volume III of my INTERVENTION Series, and to the chapter on The Unappeasable Price of Appeasement. There is little to add, but it does appear that even the tragically fulfilled warnings of the past leave no impression on leadership, not even when identical signs of impending cardiac arrest loom over the nation. Boko Haram was still at that stage of putative probes when cries of alarm emerged. Then the fashion ideologues of society deployed their distancing turns of phrase to rationalize what were so obviously discernable as an agenda of ruthless fundamentalism and internal domination. Boko Haram was a product of social inequities, they preached – one even chortled: We stand for justice, so we are all Boko Haram! We warned that – yes indeed – the inequities of society were indeed part of the story, but why do you close your eyes against other, and more critical malfunctions of the human mind, such as theocratic lunacy? Now it is happening again. The nation is being smothered in Vaseline when the diagnosis is so clearly – cancer!

    We have been here before – now, ‘before’ is back with a vengeance. President Goodluck Jonathan refused to accept that marauders had carried off the nation’s daughters; President Muhammed Buhari and his government – including his Inspector-General of Police – in near identical denial, appear to believe those killer herdsmen who strike again and again at will from one corner of the nation to the other, are merely hot-tempered citizens whose scraps occasionally degenerate into “communal clashes” – I believe I have summarized him accurately. The marauders are naughty children who can be admonished, paternalistically, into good neighbourly conduct. Sometimes of course, the killers were also said be non-Nigerians after all. The contradictions are mind-boggling.

    First the active policy of appeasement, then the language of endorsement. El Rufai, governor of Kaduna state, proudly announced that, on assuming office, he had raised a peace committee and successfully traced the herdsmen to locations outside Nigerian borders. He then made payments to them from state coffers to cure them of their homicidal urge which, according to these herdsmen, were reprisals for some ancient history and the loss of cattle through rustling. The public was up in arms against this astonishing revelation. I could only call to mind a statement by the same El Rufai after a prior election which led to a rampage in parts of the nation, and cost even the lives of National Youth Service corpers. They were hunted down by aggrieved mobs and even states had to organize rescue missions for their citizens. Countering protests that the nation owed a special duty of protection to her youth, especially those who are co-opted to serve the nation in any capacity, El Rufai’s comment then was: No life is more important than another. Today, that statement needs to be adjusted, to read perhaps – apologies to George Orwell: “All lives are equal, but a cow’s is more equal than others.”

    This seems to be the government view, one that, overtly or by implication, is being amplified through act and pronouncement, through clamorous absence, by this administration. It appears to have infected even my good friend and highly capable Minister, Audu Ogbeh, however insidiously. What else does one make of his statements in an interview where he generously lays the blame for ongoing killings everywhere but at the feet of the actual perpetrators! His words, as carried by The Nation Newspapers:

    “The inability of the government to pay attention to herdsmen and cow farming, unlike other developed countries, contributed to the killings.” The Minister continued:

    “Over the years, we have not done much to look seriously into the issue of livestock development in the country….we may have done enough for the rice farmer, the cassava farmer, the maize farmer, the cocoa farmer, but we haven’t done enough for herdsmen, and that inability and omission on our part is resulting in the crisis we are witnessing today”

    No, no, not so, Audu! It is true that I called upon the government a week ago to stop passing the buck over the petroleum situation. I assure you however that I never intended that a reverse policy should lead to exonerating – or appearing to exonerate – mass killers, rapists and economic saboteurs – saboteurs, since their conduct subverts the efforts of others to economically secure their own existence, drives other producers off their land in fear and terror. This promises the same plague of starvation that afflicts zones of conflict all over this continent where liberally sown landmines prevent farmers from venturing near their prime source, the farm, often their only source of livelihood, and has created a whole population of amputees. At least, those victims in Angola, Mozambique and other former war theatres, mostly lived to tell the tale. These herdsmen, arrogant and unconscionable, have adopted a scorched-earth policy, so that those other producers – the cassava, cocoa, sorghum, rice etc farmers are brutally expelled from farm and dwelling.

    Government neglect? You may not have intended it, but you made it sound like the full story. I applaud the plans of your ministry, I am in a position to know that much thought – and practical steps – have gone into long-term plans for bringing about the creation of ‘ranches’, ‘colonies’ – whatever the name – including the special cultivation of fodder for animal feed and so on and on. However, the present national outrage is over impunity. It rejects the right of any set of people, for whatever reason, to take arms against their fellow men and women, to acknowledge their exploits in boastful and justifying accents and, in effect, promise more of the same as long as their terms and demands are not met. In plain language, they have declared war against the nation, and their weapon is an undiluted terror. Why have they been permitted to become a menace to the rest of us? That is the issue!

    Permit me to remind you that, early in 2016, an even more hideous massacre was perpetrated by this same Murder Incorporated – that is, a numerical climax to what had been a series across a number of Middle Belt and neighbouring states, with Benue taking the brunt of the butchery. A peace meeting was called, attended by the state government and security agencies of the nation, including the Inspector General of Police. This group attended – according to reports – with AK47s and other weapons of mass intimidation visible under their garments. They were neither disarmed nor turned back. They freely admitted the killings but justified them by claims that they had lost their cattle to the host community. It is important to emphasize that none of their spokesmen referred to any government neglect, such as refusal to pay subsidy for their cows or failure to accord them the same facilities that had been extended to cassava or millet farmers. Such are the monstrous beginnings of the culture of impunity. We are reaping, yet again, the consequences of such tolerance of the intolerable. Yes, there indeed the government is culpable, definitely guilty of “looking the other way”. Indeed, it must be held complicit.

    This question is now current, and justified: just when is terror? I am not aware that IPOB came anywhere close to this homicidal propensity and will to dominance before it was declared a terrorist organization. The international community rightly refused to go along with such an absurdity. For the avoidance of doubt, let me state right here, and yet again, that IPOB leadership is its own worst enemy. It repels public empathy, indeed, I suspect that it deliberately cultivates an obnoxious image, especially among its internet mouthers who make rational discourse impossible. However, as we pointed out at the time, the conduct of that movement, even at its most extreme, could by no means be reckoned as terrorism. By contrast, how do we categorize Myeti? How do we assess a mental state that cannot distinguish between a stolen cow – which is always recoverable – and human life, which is not. Villages have been depopulated far wider than those outside their operational zones can conceive. They swoop on sleeping settlements, kill and strut. They glory in their seeming supremacy. Cocoa farmers do not kill when there is a cocoa blight. Rice farmers, cassava and tomato farmers do not burn. The herdsmen cynically dredge up decades-old affronts – they did at the 2016 Benue “peace meeting” to justify the killings of innocents in the present – These crimes are treated like the norm. Once again, the nation is being massaged by specious rationalisations while the rampage intensifies and the spread spirals out of control. When we open the dailies tomorrow morning, there is certain to have been a new body count, to be followed by the arrogant justification of the Myeti Allah.

    The warnings pile up, the distress signals have turned into a prolonged howl of despair and rage. The answer is not to be found in pietistic appeals to victims to avoid ‘hate language’ and divisive attributions. The sustained, killing monologue of the herdsmen is what is at issue. It must be curbed, decisively and without further evasiveness.

    Yes, Jonathan only saw ‘ghosts’ when Boko Haram was already excising swathes of territory from the nation space and abducting school pupils. The ghosts of Jonathan seem poised to haunt the tenure of Mohammed Buhari.

  • VON’s Fayemi wins Female Reporters Fellowship award

    VON’s Fayemi wins Female Reporters Fellowship award

    Broadcast journalist with the Voice of Nigeria (VON) Olufunke Fayemi has won the Female Reporters Leadership Fellowship Award organised by  Wole Soyinka Center for Investigative Journalism (WSCIJ)
    She won with an investigative report on  the poor living  condition of young girls in Oko-Oba, Agege titled “The Life of Girls in Destitute Camps” and a leadership project on empowering female journalists in her organisation.
    Fayemi was one of the  15 fellows  from across media houses in the country who participated  the leadership programme.
    Juliana Francis, Crime Editor of New Telegraph was the first runner up, while Bunmi Yekini of Radio One was the second runner up.
    The programme is a pilot initiative of the Wole Soyinka Centre to rewrite the narrative of female marginalisation in the media sector and mobilise a network of reporters repositioned for leadership.
    Supported by Free Press Unlimited, the fellowship was also a consolidation on the Report Women project of the WSCIJ designed to cover prime issues of access and abuse of girls and women in Nigeria.
    Besides unearthing critical but underreported issues hunting the female gender across diverse sectors, the fellows were tasked with the execution of leadership projects under the tutelage of mentors including the Executive  Director, Women Advocate, Research and Documentation Center Abiola Akiyode-Afolabi, Deputy Director, Enterprise Development Center, Pan Atlantic University, Nneka Okekearu and Managing Editor, Online Editor, The Nation newspaper Lekan Otufodurin.
    Other fellows include Faith Yahaya (The Nation), Abosede Omoruyi (Core TV),  Amina Alhassan (Daily Trust), Nkechi Isaac (Leadership), Godiya Daniel (NTA,Yola), Ene Osang (Blueprint), Evelyn Okakwu (Premium Times), Ayodele Olofintuade (9jafeminista), Ifeoma Okeke (Businessday), Thelma Okoro (TV 360), Maria Albert Zirra and Nafisat Abdulkarim (Freelance journalist).
    Veteran broadcaster, Mrs Bimbo Oloyede who presented the overall prize urged the fellows to “embrace criticisms with humility and accept commendations with joy.”
    ” I urge you to accept with humility any word of constructive criticism that comes from any member of your group. At this point, I expect that everybody wants everybody to improve. Again, just as you criticise, make sure you praise. When you get constructive praise from your colleagues who understand what it took you to bring out that report, it goes a long way,” she said.
    According WSCIJ Coordinator, Mrs Motunrayo Alaka, the debate on gender balance would not indeed be balance until women exert themselves by ensuring mainstream coverage of gender issues.
    “Experience has shown that female reporters are usually missing in the room when we have our awards, not because they are not able to but because the environment doesn’t allow them. Female and males are equal but we have to own our part and stand up to be counted and participate as members of the society along with the male colleagues.”
    Dr Akinyode-Afolabi described the fellows as  the change agents needed reposition the world of women, noting that the pursuit of a gender-balanced society was not a race but a marathon.
    “It was an experience worth the while. We must appreciate the different contributions of people who bring forth the issues of gender. I now have a better impression of the media,” she said.
    Otufodunrin said the mentorship platform was a reinforcement of his passion for raising unique crop of journalists with the right skills set. He urged journalists to match their skills with technological improvement to ensure they are not bypassed by opportunities.
    “What this has done is a confirmation of what I’ve wanted to do. Our career somehow flounder away reporting others and not minding our careers. Journalists are like others are human beings who need to accomplish their career goals,” he noted.
  • Wole Soyinka  attends ‘Felabration’

    Wole Soyinka attends ‘Felabration’

    Legendary playwright, Wole Soyinka made a surprise appearance at the finale of ‘Felabration’ last Sunday.

    A cousin of the late revolutionary African musician, Fela Anikulapo-Kuti, in whose honour ‘Felabration’ is held every year, an excited Soyinka said; “I am happy to be here to celebrate Fela with everyone.”

    Read More: Ambode unveils Fela’s ‘Liberation Statue’

     The literature professor who won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1986 is the first African to be honoured in that category.

    The festival which ran for seven days, at the New Afrika Shrine, was put together to celebrate the life and times of the great Fela Kuti.

    Other superstars like Sir Shina Peters, Adewale Ayuba, Wizkid, Burna Boy, Tekno, Adekunle Gold, Simi, Wande Coal and Runtown among others graced the Felabration 2017 stage.

    Also, backing ‘Felabration’ 2017 was Nigeria’s stout brand, Legend Extra Stout, which joined millions of Nigerians in the week-long musical event.

  • Wole Soyinka attends ‘Felabration’

    Wole Soyinka attends ‘Felabration’

    Legendary playwright, Wole Soyinka made a surprise appearance at the finale of ‘Felabration’ last Sunday.

    A cousin of the late revolutionary African musician, Fela Anikulapo-Kuti, in whose honour ‘Felabration’ is held every year, an excited Soyinka said; “I am happy to be here to celebrate Fela with everyone.”

    The literature professor who won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1986 is the first African to be honoured in that category.

    The festival which ran for seven days, at the New Afrika Shrine, was put together to celebrate the life and times of the great Fela Kuti.

    Other superstars like Sir Shina Peters, Adewale Ayuba, Wizkid, Burna Boy, Tekno, Adekunle Gold, Simi, Wande Coal and Runtown among others graced the Felabration 2017 stage.

    Also, backing ‘Felabration’ 2017 was Nigeria’s stout brand, Legend Extra Stout, which joined millions of Nigerians in the week-long musical event.

  • Soyinka cautions army on Operation Python Dance

    Soyinka cautions army on Operation Python Dance

    The Nobel laureate, Prof Wole Soyinka, on Wednesday urged the Nigerian Army to be cautious in its activities following the declaration of Operations Python Dance and Crocodile Smile in some parts of the country.

    Soyinka made the call during his address at a press conference marking the 50th anniversary of the death of a poet, Christopher Okigbo.

    The event took place at the University of Ibadan.

    Okigbo died while fighting on the Biafran side during the Nigerian civil war in 1967

    Soyinka lamented that humiliation and dehumanisation of the civil populace by military was beginning to creep back into the nation.

    He urged the Federal Government and the military authorities to tread with caution while dealing with civilians.

    He said: “There has to be a way out of a repeat of war. But we are reaching a stage whereby, like Christopher Okigbo, people are putting their lives on the line again, which can lead to terrible consequences.

    “I think at a time when cattle rearers, who feel they own the nation, humiliate and dehumanise innocent citizens in their communities, this is an area the military can focus more on.”

     

     

  • Anti-graft war: EFCC rewards 25 youths

    Anti-graft war: EFCC rewards 25 youths

    The EFCC has rewarded 25 youths with Net book laptops with Bribe Buster application for joining the Commission in the anti-corruption campaign through their art works.

    Mr Osita Nwajah, the Director, Public Affairs of the commission, presented the gifts to the youths during the launch of the Creative Youth Community Development Initiative (CYCDI), an NGO, in Lagos.

    Nwajah, who represented the commission’s Chairman, Mr Ibrahim Magu, said that the commission had been in a partnership with the Creative Youth Initiative against Corruption (CYIAC) sponsored by Prof. Wole Soyinka.

    According to him, the 25 recipients emerged from the three-month intensive creative programme organised by the commission to curb corruption through creative development.

    The director noted that the students, aged between nine and 14 years, showcased their talents in painting, drama, poetry and singing.

    “The Net Book, a mini laptop, is packaged with educational materials and Bribe Buster application; an animated video series for children and youth developed by TRACE International, USA, for the purpose of advancing commercial transparency worldwide.”

    Nwajah said that the commission was very delighted to be identified with the CYIAC, stressing that its involvement in the project was a deliberate effort at achieving a corrupt-free Nigeria.

    “Corruption is fighting back and it is easy to be discouraged; but the EFCC will do all it can within its powers to ensure that corruption is fought to the barest minimum.

    “One of the ways to achieve the preventive mandate of the commission is to support this initiative. The CYIAC is a corruption preventive initiative of the EFCC.

    “It kicked off in October 2016 and is committed to lead change in children and youth by eradicating corruption through character (attitude) and skill (aptitude) development for the positive advancement of Nigeria,” he said.

    Earlier, Mr Foluke Michael, the Project Director of the CYIAC, said that the project was aimed at creating corruption awareness in children and youths, adding that the objective had been achieved through various forms of art.

    The Chairperson of CYCDI, Chief Oyenike Okundaye, in her remark, said that her organization would provide the necessary support and platform to ensure that CYCDI delivered its objectives of building a new Nigeria.

    She said that the platform would engage children, youths, women and the creative community for the advancement of the nation.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that CYCDI is an NGO that aims to empower children, youths and women through creative development, to support the creative industry.

    It also seeks to support other community development projects by promoting creativity, entrepreneurial skills, empowerment programmes and wealth creation in children, youths and women in Africa.

  • Lagos at 50: Wole Soyinka, others grace Jide Kosoko’s ‘Ogun Ahoyaya’

    Lagos at 50: Wole Soyinka, others grace Jide Kosoko’s ‘Ogun Ahoyaya’

    AS part of the ongoing Lagos at 50 celebrations, a stage play, Ogun Ahoyaya (The Boiling Battle) opened to guests last Tuesday at the National Theatre, Iganmu, Lagos.

    A reenactment of the 18th century Lagos, Ogun Ahoyaya follows the life of the traditional ruler of Eko Kingdom, Oba Akintoye (played by Jide Kosoko) and his warring uncle, Kosoko.

    The presentation opened with a rendition of birthday songs to Lagos at 50. Song after song explored the beauty of Lagos as a commercial hub, a land of plenty, occupied by good people.

    Ogun Ahoyaya highlights the richness of the lifestyle and culture of the Awori people, their mannerisms and peculiarities.

    In that era, Prince Akintoye lays claim to the Lagos throne.

    However, as portrayed in Ogun Ahoyaya, the conniving Eletu Odibo (the Prime Minister), schemes his way towards making sure that Kosoko is crowned the Oba of Eko.

    Akintoye is sacked from his palace and quickly goes into hiding. However, to get back to his rightful throne, he signs a treaty with the visiting explorers from the Queen’s land.

    They agree to abolish slave trade, bring an end to human sacrifice, and that the white man would be allowed to propagate his religion. On these terms only will the explorers support Akintoye’s claim to the throne.

    In the first battle, the foreign invaders were pushed back under the warrior, Oshodi’s command. However, they regrouped and came back with a superior firepower. The shelling that followed left many dead in their wake and ensured the sacking of Oba Kosoko.

    This in turn paves the way for a new era, leading to the birth of what has come to be known as Lagos to this day.

    Laced with a high dose of humor, Ogun Ahoyaya depicts Lagos as a heritage that has survived the dynamics of change.

    The humor in the drama further makes for an interesting watch. For instance upon arrival, the Queen’s representative speaks with Prince Akintoye through an interpreter. He tells him that they have four issues to discuss and the interpreter, in his wisdom, tells Akintoye that the white man is demanding for isu merin, which translates to four yams.

    Interestingly, some of the cultural practices in 18th century Eko still hold sway in modern day Lagos.

    Present at the stage presentation were Nobel Laureate, Wole Soyinka, filmmaker of repute, Fred Amata and a host of others.

    Among other popular actors in Yoruba theatre and film sector featured in the play are Yinka Quadri, Segun Remi (kanran), Fatai Odua, Yemi Solade, Bidemi Kosoko and Taiwo Hassan who are the play’s lead characters.