Wole Soyinka writes on #BringBackJonathan201
The dancing obscenity of Shekau and his gang
of psychopaths and child abductors, taunting
the world, mocking the BRING BACK OUR
GIRLS campaign on internet, finally met its
match in Nigeria to inaugurate the week of
September 11 – most appropriately.
Shekau’s dance macabre was surpassed by the
unfurling of a political campaign banner that
defiled an entry point into Nigeria’s capital of
Abuja. That banner read: BRING BACK
JONATHAN 2015.
President Jonathan has since disowned all
knowledge or complicity in the outrage but,
the damage has been done, the rot in a
nation’s collective soul bared to the world. The
very possibility of such a desecration took the
Nigerian nation several notches down in
human regard. It confirmed the very worst of
what external observers have concluded and
despaired of - a culture of civic callousness, a
coarsening of sensibilities and, a general
human disregard.
It affirmed the acceptance, even domination
of lurid practices where children are often
victims of unconscionable abuses including
ritual sacrifices, sexual enslavement, and
worse. 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. The bets were placed on
whose turn would it be to take the next
potshots at innocent youths in captivity whose
society and governance have failed them and
blighted their existence?
Would the Chibok girls now provide standup
comic material for the latest staple of Nigerian
escapist diet? Would we now move to a new
export commodity in the entertainment
industry named perhaps “Taunt the Victims”?
As if to confirm all the such surmises, an ex-
governor, Sheriff, notorious throughout the
nation – including within security circles as
affirmed in their formal dossiers - as prime
suspect in the sponsorship league of the
scourge named Boko Haram, was presented
to the world as a presidential traveling
companion. And the speculation became: was
the culture of impunity finally receiving
endorsement as a governance yardstick?
Again, Goodluck Jonathan swung into a
plausible explanation: it was Mr. Sheriff who,
as friend of the host President Idris Deby, had
traveled ahead to Chad to receive Jonathan as
part of President Deby’s welcome entourage.
What, however does this say of any president?
How came it that a suspected affiliate of a
deadly criminal gang, publicly under such
ominous cloud, had the confidence to smuggle
himself into the welcoming committee of
another nation, and even appear in audience,
to all appearance a co-host with the president
of that nation?
Where does the confidence arise in him that
Jonathan would not snub him openly or, after
the initial shock, pull his counterpart, his
official host aside and say to him, “Listen, it’s
him, or me.”? So impunity now transcends
boundaries, no matter how heinous the
alleged offence?
The Nigerian president however appeared
totally at ease. What the nation witnessed in
the photo-op was an affirmation of a
governance principle, the revelation of a
decided frame of mind – with precedents
galore. 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.
It has become a reflex. Those who stuck up the
obscene banner in Abuja had accurately read
Jonathan right as a Bring-back president. They
have deduced perhaps that he sees “bringing
back” as a virtue, even an ideology, as the
corner stone of governance, irrespective of
what is being brought back.
No one quarrels about bringing back whatever
the nation once had and now sorely needs –
for instance, electricity and other elusive
items like security, the rule of law etc. etc. The
list is interminable. The nature of what is
being brought back is thus what raises the
disquieting questions. It is time to ask the
question: if Ebola were to be eradicated
tomorrow, would this government attempt to
bring it back?
Well, 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.
I know Stephen Davis, I worked in the
background with him during efforts to resolve
the insurrection in the Delta region under
President Shehu Yar’Adua. I have not been
involved in his recent labours for a number of
reasons. The most basic is that my threshold
for confronting evil across a table is not as high
as his - thanks, perhaps, to his priestly calling.
From the very outset, in several lectures and
other public statements, I have advocated one
response and one response only to the
earliest, still putative depredations of Boko
Haram and have decried any proceeding that
smacked of appeasement. There was a time to
act – several times when firm, decisive action,
was indicated.
There are certain steps which, when taken,
place an aggressor beyond the pale of
humanity, when we must learn to accept that
not all who walk on two legs belong to the
community of humans – I view Boko Haram in
that light. It is no comfort to watch events
demonstrate again and again that one is
proved to be right.
Thus, it would be inaccurate to say that I have
been detached from the Boko Haram affliction
– very much the contrary. As I revealed in
earlier statements, I have interacted with the
late National Security Adviser, General Azazi,
on occasion – among others.
I am therefore compelled to warn that
anything that Stephen Davis claims to have
uncovered cannot be dismissed out of hand. 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 organizations - 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.
Finally, Stephen Davis also mentions a Boko
Haram financier within the Nigerian Central
Bank. Independently we are able to give
backing to that claim, even to the extent of
naming the individual. 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
criminalized, an attitude that owes so much to
re-election desperation, when he moves from
a passive “letting the law to take its course” to
galvanizing the law to take its course, we shall
gladly supply that name.
In the meantime however, as we twiddle our
thumbs, wondering when and how this
nightmare will end, and time rapidly runs out,
I have only one admonition for the man to
whom so much has been given, but who is now
caught in the depressing spiral of diminishing
returns: “Bring Back Our Honour.”
Wole SOYINKA.
Culled from Sahara Reporters »
@LastßornNews(07060428346)
2much english
ReplyDelete