Nobel Laureate, Prof. Wole Soyinka, in an interview with The Guardian on Sunday reached to his literary depth to paint the image of the presidential and National Assembly elections, which summed as the most vicious, unprincipled, vulgar and violent he had ever witnessed.
Soyinka said in the interview, “We’re talking about a very positive response by the public in terms of determination to register and vote but, you know, this has been one of the most vicious, unprincipled, vulgar and violent exercises I have ever witnessed.
“I just hope we won’t go down as being the incorrigible giant of Africa.”
The literary icon, who is also an respected activist, said that the stakes appeared to be so high that all scruples were set aside.
He dismissed any comparison of this election with that of 1993, which drescribed as one of the most orderly, civilised and resolute elections the country ever had.
He said, “This one was like a no-holds-barred kind of election, especially, frankly, from the incumbency side. One shouldn’t be too surprised anyway given the kind of people who are manning the barricades for the incumbent candidate.
“Most expensive, most prodigal, wasteful, senseless, I mean really insensitive in terms of what people live on in this country.
“This was the real naira-dollar extravaganza, spent on just subverting, shall we say, the natural choices of people. Just money instead of argument, instead of position statements.
“And of course the sponsoring of violence in various places, in addition to this festive atmosphere in which every corner, every pillar, every electric pole is adorned with one candidate or the other, many of them in poses which remind one of Nollywood.”
Soyinka said he was recently invited by President Goodluck Jonathan to discuss various issues, and how the President affirmed his preparedness to relinguish power if the electorate do not give him the votes.
the Nobel Laurette said, “We even discussed life after power, whenever that takes place.
“It was difficult for me to decide from his side how readily he might accept defeat. He absolutely swore that if he lost he was going back to Otuoke village. If I take him literally, I think he will accept the result, but I’ve learned never to trust any politician from here to there, even if they’re just coming out of communion. So I really don’t know.
“I think Nigerians have had a very rough time over the last few years with Boko Haram and all kinds of insecurity, failure of governance and so on. I think we deserve to have this period as a period of comparative tranquillity and peace of mind to reconstruct and address some really fundamental issues of society. So I really hope the result, however gracelessly or grudgingly, will be accepted by the loser.”