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Soyinka Laments Gradual Destruction Of UNIMAID By Boko Haram's Activities - Education - Nairaland

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Soyinka Laments Gradual Destruction Of UNIMAID By Boko Haram's Activities by AllNaijaBlogger(m): 11:42am On Nov 20, 2014
Speaking at the the 2014 Foundation Day Anniversary and Convocation Ceremonies of the University of Ibadan, Professor Wole Soyinka bitterly complained about the effect of terrorism on Nigeria's educational institutions, specifically the University of Maiduguri.

Soyinka also hinted that the problem is also that of the failure of the government to protect its young students from terrorists by highlighting the efforts of the USA government in federalising its national guard in order to protect a young girl in 1957. The professor criticised the Nigerian government's handling of the Chibok girls' abduction by Boko haram.

Soyinka's points will of course not go unnoticed by fellow Nigerians who are deeply disturbed at the consistent activities of Boko Haram in destabilizing the northern region, especially by abducting female students and bombing schools. The professor is among many Nigerians who are desperate for elimination of Boko Haram by the Nigerian government as it is becoming more and more a national embarrassment.







Seven months after more than 200 students of the Government Girls’ Secondary School in Chibok, Borno State, were abducted by Boko Haram, Nobel Laureate, Prof Wole Soyinka, said yesterday that Nigeria is living under the cloud of shame.

He spoke after he was awarded Doctor of Letters (D.Litt.) by the University of Ibadan (UI) at the 2014 convocation and Foundation Day held at the International Conference Centre of the institution. Soyinka, who spoke on behalf of other four awardees, comprising the first alumnus of the university to become its vice chancellor, Emeritus Professor Tekena Tamuno; first Nigerian professor of medicine, Emeritus Professor Theophilus Ogunlesi; former president, Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), Chief Wole Olanipekun, and one other business tycoon.

He told the Minister of Education, Mallam Ibrahim Shekarau, who represented President Goodluck Jonathan on the occasion, to tell his principal that Nigeria lacks genuine leadership. But Shekarau just looked at him.

Soyinka, who noted that the ceremony was organised to celebrate success, said: “Yes, it is a festive occasion. But, we are here and we know we are sitting under a cloud. It’s a very heavy cloud; it’s cloud of embarrassment, of shame, a feeling of dereliction or solemn irresponsibility towards children. We are sitting here under a cloud of impotence of a calamity that was not without notice.

“You all know why we are all here. It is in the course of learning and till death, we will not stop learning. It is all about learning and that is what life is all about. We never stop learning. The cloud is made up, as I said, of a sense of humiliation.

“We sent our children (Chibok schoolgirls) out on errand and they did not come back. But the errand on which we sent them (graduands) is what we are celebrating today. This is what creates this festive atmosphere. Though, it is a festive mood, but our young protagonists went on that errand, we gathered them together in preparation for this day and they never came back.

“In Port Harcourt where I made a speech at the University of Science and Technology three years ago, I asked deliberately: where is the University of Maiduguri today? In the U.S back in 1957 at the time of racism, the president of that nation federalised the National Guard and ordered it to protect a young girl.

“Do we send children to school to have their hands tied and their throats slit? Yet, we have leadership that is asking the terrorists to come to the table and negotiate with it while children were being killed and taken away in Chibok. What crime did they commit?

This is not what our children deserve. It begins with the failure to respond as the U.S President did to protect the little girl. What is the difference between Nigeria’s Boko Haram and American night and day riders of hate and destruction? Both thrive on hate, intimidation and inculcation of fear, intolerance and terror. This is what is happening to our institutions, especially in the northern part of our country,” Soyinka said.

But Mallam Shekarau, in the President’s address, described Boko Haram insurgency as one of the challenges confronting the Jonathan administration and must be tackled headlong. He noted that many innocent lives have been lost in different parts of the country.

“Government is clearly on top of the situation as no group can be more powerful than the nation. Let me assure Nigerians that the activities of the Boko Haram sect would soon be a thing of the past. We all should be united in our fight against terrorism and other security issues raging in our country. We appreciate organisations and the international community for their support and cooperation thus far,” he said.

It is a festive occasion and I am not ready to cast a pall on it. I wish I could be among you, celebrating over and over again. I wish to congratulate the Vice Chancellor and members of the community on the vast changes I have noticed in the university. It is a festive occasion and as I said, I will not cast a pall on it.

I am so happy to see my friend, Mallam Ibrahim Shekarau, here. He invited me once and I came all the way from Los Angeles to address some issues. I came here. That address did not take place.

Mr. Shekarau knows why it did not. Something happened. It is what we are undergoing today. Yes, it is a festive occasion. But, we are here and we know we are sitting under a cloud. It’s a very heavy cloud; it’s cloud of embarrassment, of shame, a feeling of dereliction or solemn irresponsibility towards children.

We are sitting here under a cloud of impotence of a calamity that was not without notice. You all know why we are all here. It is in the course of learning and till death, we will not stop learning. It is all about learning and that is what life is all about. We never stop learning.

The cloud is made up, as I said, of a sense of humiliation.

We sent our children out on errand and they did not come back. The errand on which we sent them is what we are celebrating today. This is what creates this festive atmosphere. Though, it is a festive mood, but our young protagonists went on that errand, we gathered them together in preparation for this day and they never came back.

It is something we can never allow our souls to forget. Let us remain faithful to our temple of knowledge by safeguarding its moralities. It is the morality that engages us in the protection of the future.

The temple of knowledge is dedicated to a very simple expression, the pursuit of truth. It doesn’t matter whether we are herbalists Buddist, Hinduism, Christianity. There is only one. Ir is a hovering indictement onall of us as a nation.




Source; http://sunnewsonline.com/new/?p=91389

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