Nobel laureate, Wole Soyinka, yesterday condemned the stopping of some
governors of the All Progressives Congress, APC, from attending a campaign
rally in Ekiti State. He described it as
an act of war.
Some APC governors who were attending Governor Kayode
Fayemi’s final electioneering campaign in Ado-Ekiti, last Thursday, were
prevented from getting to their destination by army soldiers.
The APC leadership accused the Peoples’ Democratic Party,
PDP-led federal government of orchestrating the plot.
“I think it is important that we don’t lose sight of
preparations before an election simply because we want the event to be over and
done with.
“The prevention of some governors and their supporters from
going for their own campaign was nothing short of an act of war. So maybe I
should learn to be less metaphoric in my approach to language and learn to take
politicians’ word a bit more serious,” he added.
Mr. Soyinka said that practices such as waving of party
flags and sweeping the stage after your opponent had finished a rally are part
of the language of democracy.
“But to prevent governors from attending a campaign for the
success of their own party is for me not just unconstitutional, it’s criminal,
and such people should be charged to court. It’s not different from rigging
during the election, from women suddenly becoming pregnant with ballot papers,
with stealing and even daylight robbery of ballot boxes. What is the
difference? Electioneering is part and parcel of the democratic process,” Mr.
Soyinka said.
The Nobel laureate also condemned the Nigerian military for
allowing the army to be used as “election thugs.”
“Let me ask you a question: Suppose Governors Amaechi,
Oshiomhole, Nyako, and the other APC governors are being in a motorcade that
had been waylaid by thugs with guns, machetes, cudgels, or even acid.
Supposing it was hired thugs who had stopped the electoral
candidates from proceeding to the polling booth, will this be considered
constitutionally acceptable?
“So when the army begin to act like thugs on account of
election, I see no difference between the waylaying of those governors by paid
thugs on a lonely road if they were going by road, I see no difference between
that and the military waylaying governors, preventing their helicopters from
landing. I see no difference whatsoever between that kind of conduct and just
ordinary paid thugs. So I’m asking the military, when did you take on the job
of electioneering thugs?”
‘Punish the culprits’
Mr. Soyinka called for an immediate end to the violation of
citizens’ rights by law enforcement agents, adding that those involved in the
Ekiti incident be punished to serve as deterrent to others.
“This is the kind of conduct which this police commissioner
Mbu considered a proper conduct for a law officer in Rivers State. When we
spoke, in this very hall that day, people were saying what business does Wole
Soyinka, Falana have in Rivers state?
“What we were saying is that if we allow this kind of
conduct to be accepted once, there will be escalation. It happened, and in a
more dangerous dimension in the same Rivers State,” Mr. Soyinka continued.
“We have a responsibility in any part of Nigeria when the
right of a citizen is violated. It doesn’t matter whether the person is a motor
mechanic, market woman, or a governor, a legislator, we have a responsibility
to cry out, and to tell Nigerians that if you don’t speak now it’s going to
come to your door, and it’s going to be far worse with fatal consequences.
“It’s about time we abandon the language of orders from the
top. We want specifics. Who gave orders like that? Is it the Chief of Army
Staff? Is it a general somewhere? Is it the military police? Enough is enough.
Amaechi has a name, Oshiomhole has a name, Nyako has a name, Fayemi has a name,
why is it that those who prevent them exercising their citizen’s rights do not
appear to have a name.
“The military is being paid from the public purse. The
military has no business taking sides in a political election,” said Mr.
Soyinka.
Mr. Soyinka demanded the National Assembly to institute a
commission of enquiry to unravel what happened in Ekiti State.
“We want to know who gave orders, we want these people to be
called to give evidence,” said Mr. Soyinka.
“I think that all these governors should sue for the
violation of their human rights. Let us make an example once and for all. We
cannot continue this spiral of misconduct which makes us a laughing stock all
over the world.
“We will not be satisfied with a face saving commission of
enquiry. If that is what happens, then we will set up citizens’ court. We did
it during the fight against Abacha. We’ve done it for Bashir of the Sudan,
which we got witnesses, victims, journalists to come and testify about the
violation of human rights there. We asked for international help.
“If such a trial is broken up here, then we will hold it
next door. We will hold it anywhere, all the worse for the Nigerian government.
They created the shame if we are forced to hold such court outside, with United
Nations help if necessary, with international bodies, we’ll place the
government of this county on trial.
“This must be the very last time that such an incident
happens, it bodes ill for future elections. It makes a sham of all we had
fought for. It’s a wastage of our very existence. I still cannot believe that
this thing happened.”
Mr. Soyinka reiterated his call to Nigerians to support the
efforts of the military in their fight against the Boko Haram insurgency.
“But if the military conduct themselves in this way, then we
have to consider them allies of Boko Haram. Because Boko Haram could have
attacked to stop the governors going to campaign. Boko Haram does not believe
in democracy. Boko Haram despises democracy.
“What happened in Ekiti was a violation of the constitution
and those who are responsible should be exposed and where necessary punished,’’
the nobel laureate added.
Source: Premium Times
No comments:
Post a Comment