Soyinka
Human rights activist and Nobel laureate, Prof. Wole Soyinka, yesterday lambasted the President Muhammadu Buhari-led government over its seeming inability to rein in the violent activities of herdsmen across the country, which he described as “the nation’s identification stamp.”
He spoke days after
suspected Fulani herdsmen unleashed terror on Ukpabi Nimbo, a community in Uzo
Uwani Local Government Area of Enugu State, killing scores of people,
displacing over a thousand.
Noting that the
government was yet to come up with an articulate solution to tackle the menace,
Soyinka stated in his address to the National Summit on Culture and Tourism,
that, “I have not heard an order given that any cattle herders caught with
sophisticated firearms be instantly disarmed, arrested, placed on trial, and
his cattle confiscated.
According to him, “The
nation is treated to an eighteen-month optimistic plan which, to make matters
worse, smacks of abject appeasement and encouragement of violence on innocents.
“Let me repeat, and of
course I only ask to be corrected if wrong: I have yet to encounter a terse,
rigorous, soldierly and uncompromising language from this leadership, one that
threatens a response to this unconscionable blood-letting that would make even
Boko Haram repudiate its founding clerics.
“When I read a short
while ago, the Presidential assurance to this nation that the current homicidal
escalation between the cattle prowlers and farming communities would soon be
over, I felt mortified.
“He had the solution,
he said. Cattle ranches were being set up, and in another 18 months, rustlings,
destruction of livelihood and killings from herdsmen would be ‘a thing of the
past’. 18 months, he assured the nation. I believe his Minister of Agriculture
echoed that later, but with a less dispiriting time schema.
“Neither, however,
could be considered a message of solace and reassurance for the ordinary
Nigerian farmer and the lengthening cast of victims, much less to an intending
tourist to the Forest Retreat of Tinana in the Rivers, the Ikogosi Springs or
the moslem architectural heritage of the ancient city of Kano. In any case, the
external tourists have less hazardous options.”
Soyinka, while
recalling with nostalgia how he – in the company of the late Segun Olusola –
journeyed across Nigeria in the pre-war 60’s, mostly out of curiosity, asked:
“But now, would the young adventurous set out to visit the mystery caves of
Anambra and its alleged curative pools from mere interest?”
“They would think
twice about it. It is not merely arbitrary violence that reigns across the
nation but total, undisputed impunity. Impunity evolves and becomes integrated
in conduct when crime occurs and no legal, logical and moral response is
offered,” he said.
Soyinka shared a personal
experience he recently had with the cattle herders, right at his doorstep,
saying: “I returned from a trip outside the country about to find that my home
ground had been invaded, and a brand-new ‘Appian way’ sliced through my
sanctuary.
“That ‘motorable’ path
was made by the hoofed invaders. Both the improvised entry and exit are now
blocked, but interested journalists are invited to visit.
“In over two decades
of living in that ecological preserve, no such intrusion had ever occurred. I
have no idea whether they were Fulani or Futa Jalon herdsmen but, they were
cattle herders, and they had cut a crude swathe through my private grounds.
“I made enquiries and
sent alerts around, including through the Baale of our neighborhood village.
There has been no repeat, and hopefully it will remain the first and last of
such invasion. What it portends however is for all thinking citizens to reflect
upon, and take concerted measures against.”
The Nobel laureate
noted that herdsmen are among humanity’s earliest known tourists and must be
taught a culture of settlement with their hosts, stressing that “the leadership
of any society cannot stand idly and offer solutions that implicitly deem the
massacres of innocents mere incidents on the way to that learning school.
“For every crime,
there is a punishment, for every violation, there must be restitution. The
nomads of the world cannot place themselves above the law of settled humanity,”
he stated.
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