On the heels of his 89th birthday celebrations, Prof Wole Soyinka has made three solid demands from the Federal Government, including that security agencies reopen unresolved cases of religious killings and a public holiday be created for traditionalists.
The Nobel laureate noted that the demands were aimed at ‘all the security agencies in this country and of the governance itself, right from the President to the lowest individual in this country.’
Soyinka decried the failure of security officials to prosecute the perpetrators of extrajudicial killings.
His appeal was underpinned by the case of Deborah Samuel, a second-year student of the Shehu Shagari College of Education in Sokoto State who was killed on May 12, 2022, over allegations of blasphemy.
The literary icon asked that the files ‘be opened — beginning with Deborah — on all those who have killed extrajudicially in the name of religion.’
Soyinka’s second demand was targeted at members of the diplomatic community.
According to him, it is not enough for the international community to place travel restrictions on perpetrators of electoral violence in the 2023 general elections.
He asked that visa bans be extended to religious bigots.
Lastly, the famed playwright decried the neglect faced by traditionalists in the country, declaring that ‘we’ve had enough’.
‘It’s about time we demanded, on behalf of traditional religions, an annual holiday like Islam and Christianity. We’ve had enough,’ he said.
‘We’ve had enough of being second-class citizens in this nation. So, equal time, equal space, we demand public holidays. We demand it of state governments, local governments, and the Federal Government. We want an annual public holiday.’
Africa Today News, New York recalls that the United States had taken steps to impose visa restrictions on specific individuals in Nigeria for undermining the democratic process during the just concluded 2023 general elections.