Nobel
Laureate, Professor Wole Soyinka, on Saturday lambasted President
Goodluck Jonathan for embracing corrupt politicians and failing to
prosecute the sponsors and members of Boko Haram.
Soyinka stated that he had no doubt
about the Boko Haram sponsorship allegation against a former Governor of
Borno State, Ali Modu Sheriff, by an Australian negotiator, Stephen
Davis.
He expressed his resolve to back a human
rights lawyer, Mr. Femi Falana (SAN), to seek Sheriff’s prosecution,
saying security agencies had enough evidence to prosecute the
ex-governor.
The Nobel Laureate said if Sheriff was prosecuted, “it is certain he will also take many others down with him.”
In a statement entitled, ‘The wages of
inpunity’ made available to the media on Saturday, Soyinka challenged
Jonathan to investigate the claims that Davis made about Boko Haram and
its sponsors.
He said, “I am, therefore, compelled to
warn that anything that Stephen Davis claims to have uncovered cannot be
dismissed. It cannot be wished away by foul-mouthed abuse and cheap
attempts to impugn his integrity — that is an absolute waste of time and
effort.
“Of the complicity of ex-Governor
Sheriff in the parturition of Boko Haram, I have no doubt whatsoever,
and I believe that the evidence is overwhelming. Femi Falana can safely
assume that he has my full backing — and that of a number of civic
organisations — if he is compelled to go ahead and invoke the legal
recourses available to him to force Sheriff’s prosecution.
“The evidence in possession of security
agencies — plus a number of diplomats in Nigeria — is overwhelming, and
all that is left is to let the man face criminal persecution. It is
certain he will also take many others down with him.”
The literary icon also alleged that the
name of a top Central Bank of Nigeria official who has major links with
the sect had been forwarded to President Jonathan.
He said, “In the process of our
enquiries, we solicited the help of a foreign embassy whose government,
we learnt, was actually on the same trail; thanks to its independent
investigation into some money laundering that involved the Central Bank.
“That name, we confidently learnt, has
also been passed on to President Jonathan. When he is ready to abandon
his accommodating policy towards the implicated, even the criminalised,
an attitude that owes so much to re-election desperation, when he moves
from a passive ‘letting the law to take its course’ to galvanising the
law to take its course, we shall gladly supply that name.”
Concerning Davis’ allegation that a
former Chief of Army Staff, Gen. Azubuike Ihejirika, is a sponsor of the
sect, Soyinka proposed that an international panel be set up to examine
“all allegations, irrespective of status or office of any accused.”
The professor also condemned the
#BringBackJonathan2015 electoral campaign, a clone of the campaign of
the #BringBackOurGirls global campaign for the release of the
schoolgirls
Soyinka said, “Goodluck Jonathan has
brought back into limelight more political reprobates — thus attested in
criminal courts of law and/or police investigations — than any other
Head of State since the nation’s independence.”
He berated the Presidency for turning the case of the over 200 abducted Chibok girls into a stand-up comic material.
“Spurred by electoral desperation, a
bunch of self-seeking morons and sycophants chose to plumb the abyss of
self-degradation and drag the nation down to their level.
“It took us to a hitherto unprecedented low in ethical degeneration,” Soyinka stated.
The famous author stated that while
Jonathan had since disowned all knowledge or complicity in the political
campaign, “the damage has been done, the rot in a nation’s collective
soul bared to the world.”
Soyinka proposed that Davis should be invited to a roundtable for further talks.
The professor, who backed the
Australian’s investigations, claimed to have worked with him when the
late President Shehu Yar’Adua was making efforts to resolve the
insurrection in the Niger Delta.
Soyinka said, “While awaiting the Chibok
girls, and in that very connection, there is at least an individual
whom the nation needs to bring back, and urgently. His name is Stephen
Davis, the erstwhile negotiator in the oft aborted efforts to actually
bring back the girls.
“Nigeria needs him back — no, not back
to the physical nation space itself, but to a Nigerian induced forum,
convoked anywhere that will guarantee his safety and can bring others to
join him.”
The Nobel Laureate lamented that several
alarms previously raised on the activities of Boko Haram had been
ignored, while stating that stiffer actions should have been taken
against the sect.
He further criticised Jonathan for attending a meeting with the Chadian President, Idris Deby, in company with Sheriff.
He faulted the Presidency’s defence that
Sheriff, as friend of the host President, had travelled ahead to Chad
to receive Jonathan as part of Deby’s welcome entourage.
In his reaction on Saturday, Sheriff challenged Soyinka to make public whatever evidence he had linking him to the sect.
The ex-Borno governor also challenged
the Nobel Laureate and those he claimed were privy to other shreds of
evidence to go to court.
Speaking through the Commissioner of
Information and Home Affairs under his administration, Mr. Inuwa Bwala,
in a telephone interview with reporters, Sheriff said Soyinka was only entertaining Nigerians with his mastery of the English language.
He stated that Soyinka’s statement lacked any form of merit.
Sheriff said, “As the ‘cultist’ we know
him (Soyinka) to be, being the founder of a confraternity for which the
world is still waiting for answers from him, he is the least morally
qualified to speak on the alleged involvement of any Nigerian in
whatever crime.
“We challenge him to name this person he
says he knows as a sponsor of Boko Haram in the Central Bank, if he is
as patriotic as he claims to be. We also challenge him to prove to
Nigerians that he is not the cultist we have always known him to be.
“No security agency anywhere or an
individual who claims to have investigated this matter independently can
dictate to Nigerians or our security personnel what to do about this
Boko Haram menace. Therefore, this needless diversion is unwelcome.”
The Presidency was not available for
comments on Saturday. Efforts to get the Special Adviser to the
President on Media and Publicity, Dr. Reuben Abati, were not successful.
He did not pick calls made to his telephone or reply the text message
and electronic mail sent to him.
No comments:
Post a Comment