Nigeria’s Nobel Laureate,
Wole Soyinka, on Tuesday alleged that the Olusegun Obasanjo administration
‘protected’ those who murdered Nigeria’s former Attorney General of the
Federation and Minister for Justice, Bola Ige.
Mr Soyinka, playwright and
social critic, made this known in a statement on Tuesday titled “Trivialise
Corruption, Neutralise Justice”, issued in his capacity as convener of Citizen
Forum.
The statement comes against
the background of the crisis rocking the judiciary following the controversial
suspension of the Chief Justice of Nigeria, Walter Onnoghen, over his failure
to declare his assets.
Mr Soyinka, who said
impunity reigns where there is no justice, explained that the present crisis in
the judiciary shows that the nation and its leaders did not learn from the
murder of the late Mr Ige and “the manner investigations into his death were
handled”.
Mr Ige served first as
Minister of Power and later as Minister of Justice under
Mr Obasanjo, who governed
Nigeria between 1999 and 2007.
He was murdered in December
2002 in his home in Ibadan, the Oyo State Capital.
Mr Soyinka Mr Obasanjo’s
government knew the killers of the late minister and politician and indeed
allegedly protected and rewarded them.
“The government at the time
of Ige’s killers know the truth. That government protected – I repeat –
protected, and rewarded his killers. Those who wish to dispute this had better
first immerse themselves in the circumstances of that murder, and the
unconstitutional, indeed illegal trajectory of the principal accused, one that
not only facilitated his unconstitutional participation in the ensuing election
but catapulted him straight to the occupancy of the seat that had been kept
warm for him during his trial and absence,” Mr Soyinka said.
“On release, he was ushered
straight into the slot of Chairman of the Appropriation Committee of the House
of Representatives. That was not all. The head of that government, General
Olusegun Obasanjo, proceeded to burnish Ige’s memory with characteristic zeal.”
No comments:
Post a Comment