Tag: soyinka

  • Wole Soyinka denies endorsing Tinubu for 2023 elections

    Wole Soyinka denies endorsing Tinubu for 2023 elections

    Nobel laureate, Wole Soyinka, has debunked claims that he has endorsed the presidential ambition of the National Leader of the All Progressives Congress, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu.

    Pictures of Soyinka and Tinubu went viral on Wednesday after the former Lagos State Governor declared his presidential ambition.

    The post, which first trended in 2021, quoted Soyinka as saying, “I have never involved myself in politics or campaign for any politician but in 2023 I will be involved in politics and campaign for a longtime friend in 1993 NADECO struggle.”

    However, Soyinka in a statement entitled, “Season of Fakery Galore,” dismissed the post as fake news, advising the public to disregard it.

    Part of the statement read, “Here we go again. This same boring, illiterate public interlopers who lack the courage of their conviction and must steal the identities of their betters. One can only hope that the public has learnt to identify Fake News and join in the urgent task of exposing and disgracing these despicable touts.”

    Soyinka noted that he has not thought about the 2023 presidential election or endorsing any candidate for the position.

    “For the avoidance of doubt, I have not even thought about 2023, much less inserted candidates into coveted positions. The signature of this latest moron is familiar as he or she does not even know the difference between ‘Laureate and Laurel.’

    “This is an ancient forgery being recycled for the umpteenth time. Those who pass it round do themselves and their recipients a disservice. Find something worthwhile to occupy your time.

    “In any case, we have no business with politics in the land of the dead, and the most recent information I have on me is that I died sometime last year,” the statement read.

  • Soyinka dares Buhari to publish reports of investigations into Bola Ige’s murder 20 years after*

    Soyinka dares Buhari to publish reports of investigations into Bola Ige’s murder 20 years after*

    Twenty years after the murder of a former Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Chief Bola Ige, Nobel laureate Wole Soyinka has challenged the Federal Government to show the report of the investigations of the dastardly act.

    In a letter to Mrs Funso Adegbola, daughter of the late Ige, Soyinka recalled that President Muhammadu Buhari had pledged to open an inquiry into the spate of political murders in the country.

    The letter was in commemoration of the 20th anniversary of the killing of the politician, who was also the governor of old Oyo State between 1979 and 1983.

    Discussants at the event tagged: ”Ige Memorial Symposium”, which was held in Lagos— Chief Adeniyi Akintola (SAN), Dr. Olu Agunloye, Bayo Aina, and Awa Bamiji — urged government to fish out those behind the killing.

    Ige, popularly known as Cicero of Esa-Oke, was shot dead on December 23, 2001 at his Ibadan residence, shortly after his security aides allegedly went out for a meal.

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo deployed troops in the Southwest to prevent a violent reaction to the murder. He also ordered a probe of the killing, but the suspects were discharged and acquitted.

    In the letter, Soyinka pointed out that unsolved crimes do not only lead to a culture of impunity, but put the nation at risk.

    Lamenting that “this is a lesson that Nigerian leadership has yet to learn,” the playwright asked Buhari to “share the rewards” of his ”investigations – if any.”

    The letter reads: “President Muhammadu Buhari, what has become of your robust pledge to open an enquiry into the spate of political murders that the nation has undergone in recent years?

    “Does it all amount to yet another instance of political bravado? While we all accept that all lives should be valued equally, some impose a special responsibility on those in governance. Bola Ige, as the nation’s minister of justice, and United Nations’ civil servant designate was unarguably one such.

    “A nation’s honour is in question and remains so until the hour of closure. Thus, she must never relent in demanding an explanation for his brutal murder, expose the perpetrators, identify the conspirators and reinstate the broken lines of justice.

    “At the very least, we need a formal declaration regarding those who displayed an abnormal interest in the fates of those accused, to a level of proven, documented interference both in the investigative process and within the judiciary.

    “I am not alone in having written and lectured on these sordid aspects that fuelled the subversion of justice. There are surviving witnesses.”

     

  • How Nigerians returning home from Europe sleep at airports over FG’s ‘special document’ requirement – Soyinka

    How Nigerians returning home from Europe sleep at airports over FG’s ‘special document’ requirement – Soyinka

    Nobel laureate Wole Soyinka on Thursday decried the immigration processes required to enter Nigeria from Europe.

    The literary icon, during a press briefing in Lagos, said he was stopped from boarding a flight at the Charles de Gaulle airport in Paris because he didn’t have a special document.

    “I had my vaccination, I have taken the 72-hour Covid test, I was negative but there was one more, there was a new one called PCR which the Nigerian government had begun to insist on,” he said.

    He was also asked to fill a questionnaire which he said bore little relation to COVID-19.

    Soyinka said the tedious process had led to many Nigerians “lying in couches” at the airport, unable to proceed with their journey into Nigeria.

    “I don’t believe that I should require – or any Nigerian should require – a special permission to enter his or her own country,” he said.

    “What the majority of those questions have to do with Covid, I don’t understand; six Air France staff were working on various computers to generate this permit for which payment are being made.

    “Nobody is saying we shouldn’t take the necessary precautions. Other nations do it, but I don’t believe that other nationals are obstructed the way we are.

    “It is not a pleasant sight to see your fellow Nigerians lying on couches – they can’t go in, they can’t go out; they are trapped in limbo.

    “So, whoever is responsible for these ones should sit and design something easier for humanity to fulfill and also to have backup situations; when technology breaks down, human intelligence should come to the rescue.”

  • Everything is the opposite yet Nigeria not a complete disaster – Soyinka

    Everything is the opposite yet Nigeria not a complete disaster – Soyinka

    Nobel laureate, Prof Wole Soyinka, has stated that Nigerians are still managing to eke out a living despite the depressing realities confronting the country.

    Soyinka spoke during an interview with the Cable News Network

    Commenting on the ironic title for his first novel in 48 years, Chronicles from the Land of the Happiest People on Earth, he noted that things happened around one as one grew up, witnessing the degrading of dream and environment in one’s society and on the continent.

    He explained that for him, the issue had been a difficult journey, adding, “It has reached such a stage, I found intuitively, that only prose fiction can handle things that have been bubbling up inside me.”

    He said the title came after some people some years ago conducted a poll which placed Nigeria among the top four happiest nations in the world.

    The playwright noted, “That thing has been with me, in my head. I asked, ‘Who are these people? What do they know? What have they seen? What have they experienced in Nigeria that they make such an attribution?’ That title really has been waiting to answer that claim in many ways. When you look at the surroundings, everything is the opposite and yet, Nigeria is not a complete disaster.

    “People still manage to eke out a living not only a living but to some extent a dignified and satisfied living. I think it’s not surface appearance of contentment or making the best of a really bad job, insisting that no matter what life must go on… It’s that which needed to be, quote and unquote, celebrated in addition to the bleak actualities.”

    Sharing his thoughts on the 2021 Nobel Prize in Literature awarded to Tanzanian novelist, Abdulrazak Gurnah, Soyinka said his immediate statement after the announcement was “let the African tribe expand wherever situated.”

     

  • Soyinka speaks on Igboho’s detention in Cotonou, NBC’s query to Channels Television

    Soyinka speaks on Igboho’s detention in Cotonou, NBC’s query to Channels Television

    Nobel Laureate, Professor Wole Soyinka, has called on the government of the Republic of Benin to release Yoruba Nation agitator, Sunday Adeyemo, popularly known as Sunday Igboho, to continue his journey.

    The playwright spoke during an interactive session with journalists in Lagos on Friday.

    Speaking during the interactive session titled, “Sanctions on the loose: Chasing the gnat with a sledgehammer,” Soyinka said Igboho’s offence was resisting tyranny of herdsmen against his people in Oyo State.

    His words: “I refuse to believe that Igboho committed any offence except agitating against tyranny on his people. He peacefully demonstrated his position. I can’t consider that to be decided a criminal. Agitating for secession is not a criminal act as long as it’s done peacefully. You don’t have to criminalise that.

    “What the government and the security did by raiding Igboho’s house in the middle of the night, killing two of his own people and claiming, without a warrant or anything, that they found weapons… who’s going to believe that cock and bull story?”

    He also queried the government of Benin Republic on why they are keeping Igboho. He said: “Why are you keeping this victim? What offence did he commit against your state that you’re holding him, instead of letting him continue his journey? He has not committed any offence against any known law in this country.

    “Declaring an independent state is not out of our constitution. Since he’s doing it peacefully and collectively within the law, you do not criminalise that action.”

    On NBC’s query to Channels TV he said, “who decides media professionalism? It is one of outstanding semi-illiterate official queries that I have ever seen. And I wish to exalt the media that they have their official bodies with symbolic gestures. I think we have the responsibility to tell the government that if any media institution is sanctioned on this kind of trivial, absolute ground, we will fulfill our responsibility by mobilising the nation to boycott all government media and we shall wage the media war against the government.”

    “Decree no 4 has no place in a democracy and it is high time we manifested that, both in language and in act.

    “The president seems deaf about the agitations and plights of Nigerians. What I suggest is that youths, and citizens especially, should take the situations into their hands by using any of the civil actions to ensure the government listens to them and correct the problems in Nigeria.”

  • Nigeria may not see another Democracy Day if Buhari fails to listen – Soyinka

    Nigeria may not see another Democracy Day if Buhari fails to listen – Soyinka

    NOBEL Laureate and elder statesman Wole Soyinka has said Nigeria may not celebrate another Democracy Day if President Muhammadu Buhari fails to listen to the people.

    Soyinka said this on Monday during an interview on Arise TV. The interview focused on the recent June 12 Democracy Day celebration in Nigeria.

    The Nobel laureate noted that the upsurge in secessionist agitation in the country in recent times stemmed from Buhari’s refusal to listen to Nigerians.

    “I am saying this whole nation is about to self-destruct and I am not the only one saying it, and except Buhari and his government listen and take action, otherwise we would not celebrate another Democracy Day come next year,” Soyinka said.

    He noted that kidnapping had become a business in the western corridors of Lagos, Ogun, Kwara and other states but the president often came on air to act like nothing had happened.

    Soyinka argued that the creation of a regional security outfit, Western Nigeria Security Network codenamed Operation Amotekun, was as a result of the frustration and desperation felt by the people.

    According to him, Buhari was still asleep and unaware that the nation had changed dramatically over the last few years.

    He noted that the situation in Nigeria had changed drastically, adding that Buhari must understand that whoever was in charge of the country should listen.

    Soyinka said that Buhari must also understand that the threat of disintegration in the country had accelerated in the last couple of years beyond what was obtainable since the civil war.

    Commenting on the recent ban on Twitter in Nigeria, Soyinka observed that truncating the various channels of self-expression open to any polity amounted to absolutely abrogating the very essence of democracy.

    Soyinka noted that although the president had shown a symbolic gesture of restitution by recognising June 12 as Democracy Day, such an act must be consistently manifested.

    “Democracy is not a sequence or spasm of symbolic gesture such as restoring June 12 as the Democracy Day, it is an act of restitution.

    “That restoration was obviously a symbolic gesture, very calculative, but it has to be manifested consistently without exception in the act and when you truncate any channel of self-expression of the people, you are literally becoming an enemy of democracy,” he said.

  • Buhari’s Twitter ban, a petulant gesture, unbecoming of a democratically elected president – Soyinka

    Buhari’s Twitter ban, a petulant gesture, unbecoming of a democratically elected president – Soyinka

    Professor Wole Soyinka has condemned the suspension of microblogging and social networking service, Twitter operations in Nigeria by the President Muhammadu Buhari-led Federal Government.

    Soyinka explained that Buhari should be able to sort whatever differences he has with the social networking service privately without infringing on the right of Nigerians to express themselves.

    Reacting on Friday to the ban placed on Twitter by the Federal Government, the Nobel Laureate said the move is a “petulant gesture” that is “unbecoming of a democratically elected president”.

    Soyinka noted that a Twitter ban in the country is a “technical issue Nigerians should be able to work their way around”.

    He added that “the field of expression remains wide open, free of any dictatorial spasms”.

    Below is the brief communique as put out by the Nobel Laureate.

    “Heard the news of Buhari’s ban on Twitter an hour or so after sending off TO SHOCK AND AWE to the print media. Kindly add my total lack of surprise at this petulant gesture, unbecoming of a democratically elected president.

    “If Buhari has a problem with Twitter, he is advised to sort it out between them personally, the way Donald Trump did, not rope in the right to free expression of the Nigerian citizen as collateral damage.

    “In any case, this is a technical problem Nigerians should be able to work their way around. The field of free expression remains wide open, free of any dictatorial spasms!”.

    Wole SOYINKA

  • Buhari’s threatening messages ‘wrongly targeted’, ‘tragically untimely’ –  Soyinka

    Buhari’s threatening messages ‘wrongly targeted’, ‘tragically untimely’ – Soyinka

    Nobel Laureate, Prof. Wole Soyinka has joined his voice to the nationwide condemnation of President Muhammadu Buhari’s controversial statement that his government will deal with violent secessionists in the South-east “in the language they understand”.

    Soyinka, in a statement he personally signed and sent TheNewsGuru.com, TNG on Friday, said President Buhari’s “recent deployment of this language is thus wrongly targeted, and tragically untimely.”

    “Those of us in the fields for 30 months, who went through the war, will treat them in the language they understand,” Buhari had said in reaction to attacks on state institutions and personnel in the South-east and South-south regions of Nigeria.

    The president’s statement has stirred controversy across Nigeria and beyond with critics describing it as insensitive and suggesting genocide against the Igbos. The president’s supporters, however, say the statement was simply a stern warning to violent insurrectionists in the South-east.

    On Thursday, Twitter deleted the president’s post with the Nigerian government later saying the social media giant has a hidden agenda in Nigeria.

    Meanwhile, the federal government through the Minister of Information and Culture on Friday announced the suspension of the U.S. microblogging application in Nigeria.

    Read Soyinka’s full statement below:

    To SHOCK And AWE!

    We heard it last during the heydays of Donald Rumsfeld under George Bush – and judge in what condition it has left that part of the world, and beyond. Rumsfeld’s namesake – asobering coincidence – also spat the same gung-ho rhetoric. That Donald once ordered his uniformed forces to “go out there” and“dominate the environment”, followingcivilian protests at extra-judicial killings of blacks by state police. Soon enough, leaving nothing to chance, that Donald II seized on thefirst opportunity to personally mobilize a mobtodominate” Capitol Hill, his own seat of government that was clearly slipping from his control.

    Optimists are free to underplay that threat to the much-acclaimed democratic beacon. Study that scenario carefully however, and you find It is not a question of: it could never have succeeded. Such surmises are wrong, It COULD HAVE SUCCEEDED, albeit with unpredictable consequences for America and the world. And so, when the elected head of a democratic state like Nigeria, not perchedprecariously on the knife edge of power but with a couple more years in the kitty, threatens to “shock” dissidents, we should indeed be shocked out of any complacency. Even if History has been deliberately eliminated fromthe school’s curriculum, Memory suffices to jerk us into a watchful, precautionary alert.

    I hold no brief for those who resort to burning down police stations, slaughter their occupants simply for the crime of earning a measly monthly pittance, torch electoral offices,assassinate politicians in calculated effort to set sections of the country against others in the promotion of their own political goals. These are largely nihilists, psychopaths and/or criminal lords, soul mates of Boko Haram, ISWAP, Da’esh and company, not to be confused with genuine liberators. All over the world, throughout history, elections are denounced, boycotted, and generallydelegitimized without recourse to wantonbutchery.

    When, however, a Head of State threatens to “shock” civilian dissidents, to “deal with them in the language they understand”, and in a context that conveniently brackets opposition to governance with any bloodthirsting enemies of state, we have to call attention to the precedent language of such a national leader under even more provocative, nationdisintegrative circumstances. What a pity, and what a tragic setting, to discover that this language was accessible all the time to President Buhari, where and when it truly mattered, when it would have been not only appropriate, but deserved and mandatory!

    When Benue was first massively brought under siege, with the massacre of innocent citizens, the destruction of farms, mass displacement followed by alien occupation, Buhari’s language – both as utterance and as what is known as “body language” was of a totally different temper. It was diffident,conciliatory, even apologetic. After much internal pressure, he eventually visited the scene of slaughter. His language? Learn to live peacefully with your neighbours. The expected language, rationally and legitimately applied to the aggressors, was exactly what we now hear “I shall shock you. I shall deal withyou in the language you understand”. That language was missing at the moment that mattered most. It remained “missing in action”for years until a belated “Shoot at sight” outburst. Too late, and of course, inappropriately phrased. The precedent had been set, the genie let out of the bottle, consolidating a culture of impunity that predictably spread its bloody stain all over the nation.

    Buhari’s recent deployment of this language is thus wrongly targeted, and tragically untimely.Even while he was threatening dissidents, an agenda of both secessionism and alien occupation was taking place not too distant from Aso Rock. ISWAP was taking over the already excised territories of Shekau’s Boko Haram, appointing new warlords of the occupational forces, sectioning Nigeria into vassal states and unfurling their replacement flags of domination. Soon, logically, ISWAP’sletters of diplomatic accreditation will be presented in Aso Rock?

    We must however backtrack a little – that is the function of memory. It would be false to suggest that these eggs of impunity are newly laid. They have been incubating in loathsome hatcheries of power and domination for years, even decades, and now the raptors have been hatched and taken wings. The political culture of the devil’s bargain, of denial, evasion, avoidance of constitutional mandates, the culture of “appeasement of the unappeasable” – to quote myself – in order to gratify the vested interests of a narrow, power obsessedelite has blossomed. Finally, the chickens have come home to roost.

    The evocation of the Civil War, where millions of civilians perished, is an unworthy emotiveploy that has run its course. In any case and this has been voiced all too often, and loudly –the nation is already at war, and of a far more potentially devastating dimension than it has ever known. Every single occupant of this nation space called Nigeria has been declared potential casualty, children being pushed to the very battlefront, without a semblance of protective cover. We have betrayed the future. We need no breast beating about past wars.The world has moved on, so have nations. Some, however, prefer to move backwards. The continent is full of these atavists. In Nigeria, powerful cliques of this persuasion still roam the corridors of power We areindeed at war. It does not take the formal declaration of hostilities, with or without lethalbombardments, for a nation to find itself shell-shocked. The populace of this nation is already in that shell-shocked condition. So, what is there left to shock?

    It is time to think “outside the box”. That many, in so doing, find no landing place except dissolution, is not a crime. It is not peculiar to any peoples, and is embedded in the ongoing history of many, and not only on this continent. It is their natural right as free citizens, not slaves of habit and indoctrination. Where disillusion rides high, sentiment tumbles earthwards, and the only question becomes: what can be salvaged? It thus remains the responsibility of leadership to persuade them, through both discourse and remedial action, that there are other options. Attempted bullying is not a language of discourse, nor the facile ploy of tarring all birds with the same feather.

    I shall end on a personal note. It was not intended but, in view of breast thumping rhetoric by one president after the other overmilitary sacrifice – undeniable, certainlysuch recalls should be considered salutary. The heroic exploits of our military in confronting some of the deadliest internal forces of dehumanization deserve their place of honour, not only in history, but in contemporary consciousness. However, let not the military fail to take its place centrally in the nation’s ongoing, unavoidable soul searching. And soto an instructive intervention by this “bloody civilian”, in what should be an exclusionary portfolio of the keepers of a nation’s mandate for secure existence.

    It took months for me to effect a meeting, agreed in principle, with a former National Security Adviser. It took that long only because I refused to meet him within the country, since it had become clear that the security forces, in addition to high levels of governance, had become infiltrated by the very vicious elements that have fully establishedand sustained a lethal dimension. I was not about to let myself be “sold out” to unseen forces in my eagerness to sound an oppressive warning. We eventually met in London. The records, I am certain, will be found in the National Security files and, in any case, I went accompanied. My mission wasstraightforward – to let him know that the nation was under siege, that the nomadic herdsmen that then threaded the forests were of a different breed from those whom we normally encountered in that environment that was also close to second home to some of us. We met. That National Security Adviserassured me that the military was aware of this, and that his mission to the United States was to negotiate the purchase of spotter planes to patrol the forest routes. I retreated, satisfied, to my normal preoccupations. No, not entirelytrue – I did take other supplementary steps internally, including meetings with high levelstate officials in the West.

    Now comes the rub! imagine the chagrin, this past week or two, as revelations emerged, ten years after that meeting, of humungousamounts from oil resources being found in the US off-shore accounts of that pivotal figure of any nation’s security architecture! Is that an exceptional tale? Not in the least! He is not the first multi-starred general to be thus exposed, some even brought to trial. While Boko Haram was consolidating, a Nation’s Security Czarwas also consolidating his nest egg with funds meant for elimination of a national scourge.

    Shock? No. Civil Society already has a superabundance of the military shock treatment!

    Wole SOYINKA.

  • Soyinka distances self from fake WhatsApp posting on Yoruba Nation in his name

    Soyinka distances self from fake WhatsApp posting on Yoruba Nation in his name

    Nobel Laureate, Prof. Wole Soyinka on Thursday denounced a fake WhatApp posting on the Yoruba State agitation being attributed to him.

    Soyinka, in a statement titled: “They are back,” urged the public to ignore the utterances of those contemptible interlopers who lacked the courage of their conviction and thus take to identity theft for the furtherance of their views.

    He said he did not not not participate in Facebook, Tweet, Blog, WhatsApp or other offerings of the Social Media.

    According to him, any views he wished to express on national and other issues routinely went through the print media.

    The statement reads in full: “THEY ARE BACK!

    “Professor Wole SOYINKA wishes to denounce the fake WhatsApp posting on the Yoruba state agitation being attributed to him.

    Once again, he requests the public to ignore the utterances of those contemptible interlopers who lack the courage of their conviction and thus take to Identity Theft for the furtherance of their views. For a start, Wole Soyinka does not participate in Facebook, Tweet, Blog, WhatsApp or other offerings of the Social Media.

    Any views that he wishes to express on national and other issues routinely go through the print media.”

  • Soyinka to Buhari: ‘Nigeria at war, seek help now!’

    Soyinka to Buhari: ‘Nigeria at war, seek help now!’

    Nobel Laureate Wole Soyinka on Saturday advised the President Muhammadu Buhari led federal government to seek help as it appears the Nigeria is at war.

    The outspoken elder statesman in a statement on Saturday night said it would only amount to pretence if the nation’s leaders refuse to admit that a war in going on especially with the incessant kidnappings and calls for secession in some quarters.

    Soyinka, in a statement on the development, said: “This nation is at war, yet we continue to pretend that these are mere birth-pangs of a glorious entity. They are death throes. Vultures and undertakers hover patiently but with full confidence.

    “Not for the first time, what many hoped was a Natural Law of Limitations has been contemptuously, defiantly breached. We need to remind ourselves of hideous precedents.

    “We must remember Chibok. And Dapchi. And numerous antecedents and after, unpublicized, or soon relegated to the sump of collective amnesia. The wages of impunity never diminish. On the contrary, they distend.

    “Again, this is no new counseling, but of course, the dog that will get lost no longer heeds the hunter’s whistle. I envy no one the task ahead, terminating the toxic harvest of past derelictions.

    “Blame laying is for later. Right now is the question of – what needs to be done, and done urgently. We keep avoiding the inevitable, but that very unthinkable now hammers brutishly on our gates, the blood ransom arrogantly insatiable.

    “The dogs of war stopped merely baying years ago. Again and again they have sunk their fangs into the jugular of this nation. The plague called COVID has met its match on the earth of some nation space once known as Nigeria.

    “To this government we repeat the public cry: Seek Help. Stop Improvising with Human Lives. Youth – that is, the future – should not serve as Ritual Offering on the altar of a failing State.”