Nobel
Laureate, Prof. Wole Soyinka, on Monday urged President Goodluck
Jonathan to stop the “culture of executive impunity” currently pervading
the country.
Soyinka, in a statement entitled, ‘Cool
it, President Goodluck Jonathan’, said the call had become imperative to
end the arbitrariness “fast becoming the norm” in the polity.
He said, “The increasing flash points in
the nation have reached an unsustainable level, and responsible
governance must accept that it is an urgent duty to diminish, not
increase them.
“Even the notoriously short Nigerian
memory remains traumatised by recollection of the rape of Anambra that
was enabled by the connivance of federal might, and the abandonment of
all moral scruples in executive disposition.
“The people of Ogun State were
humiliated by the antics of a power besotted governor, with their
elected legislators locked out of the Assembly for upwards of a year.
“That hideous travesty was again made possible by the abusive use of the police.
“Even a child in this nation knows that
the police derive its enabling and operational authority from the
dictates of the centre. So there can be no disguising whose will is
being executed wherever democratic norms are flouted and the people’s
rights ground to mush under dictatorial heels.
“Before the irretrievable point of
escalation is reached, we have a duty to sound a collective alarm, even
without the lessons of past violations of constitutional rights and
apportionments of elected representatives of the people and their
consequences.
“There is an opportunity in Rivers
State to break this spiraling culture of executive impunity – manifested
in both subtle and crude ways – that is fast becoming the norm in a
post-military dispensation that fitfully aspires to be called a
democracy.”
PUNCH
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