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Monday, 9 January 2012
Subsidy: Achebe, 37 others back protest
Nigerian literary writers, led by Professor Chinua Achebe, Sunday, reacted to the ongoing face-off between the Federal Government and the organised labour which culminated in calling a nationwide general strike, today, by the labour saying they “stand with the Nigerian people who are protesting the removal of oil subsidy which has placed an unbearable economic weight on their lives.”
In a statement issued Sunday, signed by Professor Achebe and 37 other Nigerian writers entitled Statement of Solidarity with the Nigerian People, the writers, however, applauded President Jonathan in some of his policies such as the declaration of state of emergency in some local government areas in four states but insisted that “President Jonathan’s decision to remove fuel subsidies in the country at this time was ill-advised.”
The writers in their statement said: “We are troubled by the turn of events in Nigeria, and hereby call on President Goodluck Jonathan and the rest of the country’s political leadership to take immediate steps to tackle the state of lawlessness in certain parts of the nation and address the trepidation and rage that has reached dangerous levels within the Nigerian populace.
“Nigeria is witnessing a new escalation of sectarian violence, culminating in explosions that have killed or seriously wounded scores of people at churches and other centres of worship and local businesses.
“As a people who lost two million citizens in a Civil War, Nigerians must bring an urgent sense of history to the gloomy events. The country’s leadership should not view the incessant attacks as mere temporary misfortune with which the citizenry must learn to live; they are precursors to events that could destabilise the entire country.
“We applaud President Jonathan’s declaration of a state of emergency in certain local government areas in four states. However, we have seen little indication that the country’s security and law enforcement agents are up to the task of protecting the lives and property of citizens in all parts of Nigeria.
Source
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