I’ll give my assessment of Tinubu after 1 year – Soyinka

Nobel Laureate Prof. Wole Soyinka says his assessment of President Bola Tinubu’s administration will come after one year in office.
I’ll give my assessment of Tinubu after 1 year – Soyinka

Nobel Laureate Prof. Wole Soyinka says his assessment of President Bola Tinubu’s administration will come after one year in office.

Why I Won't Criticise Tinubu's Govt For Now – Wole Soyinka – Starnews

He stated this in Lagos while fielding questions from State House Correspondents on Sunday.

Soyinka said that this had been his tradition with Tinubu’s predecessors over the years.

”We met last five years ago and it was an embarrassing visit because I went to tell him not to run for office. I told him and Atiku to leave the stage for young people. I call him “olori kunkun” which means the stubborn one. He ignored my advice completely.

”I came to see him to find out how he is doing after neglecting my advice. I wanted to see how he and his wife are faring. I also came to wish them a merry Christmas.

”You know we are old friends. And it was as a friend that I told him ‘don’t run,” he said.

The Nobel Laureate said that he presented a seven-point agenda to the President toward moving the country forward “in these trying periods”.

He said he would not want to disclose what he presented, but added that a critical aspect was that of respect to the rule of law and adherence to the constitution of the land.

Soyinka added that the discussion also centred on the release of various Nigerians languishing in prison for standing on some personal principles.

He added that he is optimistic that something positive would be done about the incarceration of prisoners of consciousness across the country.

Soyinka said he is aware that the President may not be in the know of such cases due to the bureaucracy involved in governance.

“That is the reason behind making this request; that is the way to get results for legal breaches,” he said.

Total
0
Shares
Related Posts
Read More

Analysis: Buhari’s Dot-In-a-Circle and Makinde’s AK-47 – By Festus Adefayo

Was it better that President Muhammadu Buhari remained unapologetically deaf to all entreaties to address Nigerians or open a window into his mind and reveal a cesspit of foul-smelling hate? Peradventure there were still nationalistic remnants among his coterie of admirers, after last Thursday’s interview the president granted Arise TV, they would be at the crossroads. Their dilemma may jolly well be addressed by a famous Maurice Switzer quote whose authorship had before now been a subject of controversies. Was it authored by Abraham Lincoln or celebrated humourist, Mark Twain? Anyway, Switzer, in a book written in 1907, had said, which I tinker with for the purpose of this discussion, that, “It is better to remain silent at the risk of being thought an ethnic bigot (inflection mine), than to talk and remove all doubt of it.”
Read More

New law empowers Lagos to take over Tinubu, Fashola, Ambode’s cases from EFCC, ICPC

The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission, and other anti-graft agencies must hand over corruption cases to the state government under a new law signed by Lagos State Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu.