Legendary Nobel laureate, Professor Wole Soyinka, has described the incessant killing across the country especially Benue state, as an ethnic cleansing.
While speaking during a courtesy call on Governor Samuel Ortom of Benue State, Professor Wole Soyinka on Thursday, charged President Muhammadu Buhari to cry out for help from the international community to stem the killings by herdsmen which he described as ethnic cleansing.
According to Vanguard, the nobel laureate expressed regret that the administration was treating the malaise as a ringworm itch instead of the deadly cancer it is.
He said: “I don’t believe in false pride, if the government cannot cope, it should not shy away from asking for international help.
“When human lives are concerned in their thousands and so on, as it was observed everywhere all over the world, those nations where our military has served before can come to our assistance. I think there should be no business of national integrity, national pride and so on.
“People are dying, this government cannot cope, please just ask for international help and I know they’re ready and willing to come to our aid.
“Just like refusal to recognise, and at the critical moment, the nature of a particular problem that has been the basis of the massacres going on in this region, especially Benue State, there’s no other word for it.
“Let’s not play around with the euphemisms. It’s no other word but ethnic cleansing. There’s no other definition for what has been going on here. And it’s very sad to me personally to see that a nation like Nigeria, with so much human talent, has failed to learn the lesson of the history of places like Rwanda.
“It happened in Europe, ethnic cleansing in Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina and elsewhere, so it’s not a new phenomenon. And, therefore, we should have been able to learn from the experiences of others and stopped this thing before it became an epidemic which is what it is today.”
Governor Ortom in his response, said the recent events in the state were a combination of ethnic cleansing and jihad.
He said: “This is not a hidden agenda, it’s known, and those people who are perpetrating it did say it. They have not hidden it.
"They held press conferences, they came out and said they were going to resist our law, that they were going to do ethnic cleansing, it’s about Jihad, it’s about taking over the land, it’s not about herders and farmers’ clashes.
“They said it clearly, and it’s written, and we have the documents and have reported them to the security agencies. I agree with you, but as law-abiding citizens, we don’t even have cutlasses to fight back.
“We cannot use any weapon to fight back; we depend on the law enforcement agencies. Even the cutlasses that we used to have were taken over by security agencies.
“Our dane guns, the Inspector General (of Police) said we should surrender them, including those that were licensed. So we are left in the hands of the security men. Those of them who are posted in Benue State are doing their best, and they have been victims of these attacks too.
“Several policemen have been killed in the course of this crisis. Soldiers and the Civil Defence are not spared. The State Service (Department of State Services officials) are not also spared. They have been killed and slaughtered like animals.
“So, like you rightly said, this is not a matter of ringworm but real cancer. If there were any other word stronger than cancer, I would have said what is happening in Benue State is more than cancer. And like you rightly observed, it is our responsibility to rise to defend the unity of this country and to defend our integrity as leaders.”
The governor commended Professor Soyinka for his solidarity and President Muhammadu Buhari for upgrading the military action in the state and expressed hope that the invaders would be flushed out.
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