Soyinka, who condemned the shooting of the protesters in Lekki said the governor did not also complain of a breakdown of law and order in the State.
Nobel
laureate, Prof Wole Soyinka on Wednesday said his enquiry so far indicated that
Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu did not invite the army to shoot at #EndSARS
protesters in Lekki.
He said the
centre has chosen to act in an authoritarian manner and has inflicted a near
incurable wound on the community psyche.
In his words:
“It is absolutely essential to let this government know that the Army has now
replaced SARS in the demonic album of the protesters.
“My enquiry
so far indicates that the Lagos governor did not invite in the Army, did not
complain of a ‘breakdown in law and order’.
Nevertheless the Centre has chosen to act in an authoritarian manner and
has inflicted a near incurable wound on the community psyche.”
However,
Soyinka asked State Governors where the Federal Government has deployed
military to quell protests to demand their withdrawals now to avoid further
escalation of crisis.
“At that
earlier mention Lagos sector, Lekki, where most of the affirmative action
gatherings had taken place, soldiers opened fire on unarmed demonstrators,
killing and wounding a yet undetermined
number. One such extra-judicial killing has drenched the Nigerian flag in the
blood of innocents – and not symbolically.
“The video
has, in accustomed parlance, ‘gone viral’. I have spoken by phone to
eye-witnesses. One, a noted public figure has shared his first hand testimony
on television. The government should cease to insult this nation with petulant
denials,” he said.
“To the
affected governors all over the nation, there is one immediate step to take:
demand the withdrawal of those soldiers.
Convoke Town Hall meetings as a matter of urgency. 24-hr Curfews are not
the solution. Take over the security of your people with whatever resources you
can rummage.
“Substitute
community self-policing based on Local Councils, to curb hooligan infiltration
and extortionist and destructive opportunism. We commiserate with the bereaved
and urge state governments to compensate material losses, wherever,” he added.
Soyinka said
to “commence any process of healing at all – dare one assume that this is the
ultimate destination of desire? – the Army must apologize, not merely to the
nation but to the global community – the facts are indisputable – you, the
military, opened fire on unarmed civilians. There has to be structured
restitution and assurance that such aberrations will not again be recorded.
“Then both
governance and its security arms can commence a meaningful, lamentably overdue
dialogue with society. Do not attempt to
dictate -Dialogue!”

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