Nobel Laureate, Professor Wole Soyinka has, again, explained his support for Biafran agitators.
Soyinka said the Igbo people have been so wronged that they have no choice than to consider opting out of Nigeria.
Prof. Soyinka spoke on Al Jazeera, yesterday where he shed light on his support for Biafra agitators.
“I am very much pro- Biafra because I recognise that the Igbo have been wronged desperately.
“They have been brutalised in a way that justifies their feeling that they were not part of the nation.
“Let me also say this, Biafrans are not entirely innocent in this
affair. They were not, but the unleashing of such venom, such
devastation on them as a people, was sufficient to justify their
decision not to be part of the nation.
“I was pro-Biafran in the sense that I felt that they needed justice.”
Soyinka denied he was a troublemaker, especially in the Biafran crisis,
but added, “I grew up in certain circumstances being very conscious
politically, in this very Abeokuta; my mother was involved in the
politics, my aunt, Mrs. Funmilayo Ransome Kuti was a leader…
“I grew up among political arguments on issues that concern humanity and
I find that basically gravitated towards recognising the basic worth of
human beings.
“Something I disagree when they call me a patriot because I don’t
agitate on some certain entity called a nation; I agitate on humanity.”
He criticised the removal of History and teaching of the Biafran crisis in schools.
“Officials do not want to confront their own history, especially the
history in the making of which they feel uncomfortable but, if you do
not confront your past, you are going to mess up your future.”
On Boko Haram and the breakup of Nigeria, he said ironically, Boko Haram might be part of the reasons Nigeria may stay together.
Soyinka said a few years ago, he would have agreed that Nigeria would
break, but, now that a section of the country is in trouble, there is
some kind of pulling together. He added that the conscience of many
Nigerian has been awakened such that they cannot abandon that section of
the country.
He urged Nigerians to recognise the plurality of Nigeria, how it came
together and begin to devise and adopt a method of governance which
cannot only be of massive decentralisation. “That way, we can stay
together. If we continue to have a centralist government, then, Nigeria
is on the brink.”
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