Nobel laureate, Prof Wole Soyinka, has expressed the willingness to be involved in any legal proceedings that could unravel the killers of former Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Bola Ige.
Soyinka made this known at a media briefing in Lagos on Thursday. The media interaction was ostensibly in reaction to the reply to his earlier comment on Ige’s murder by the National Secretary of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Senator Iyiola Omisore.
Ige, an ex-governor of old Oyo State, was assassinated by gunmen at his Bodija, Ibadan home on December 23, 2001.
In 2002, Omisore was arraigned for Ige’s murder, but was later acquitted alongside 10 others.
Soyinka, had in a statement last Saturday, said the resumption of an investigation into Ige’s murder was already hamstrung and disrobed of credibility with the emergence of a prime suspect in the case as the National Secretary of the ruling party.
Omisore, who replied to Soyinka’s position in a statement, instructed his lawyer, Kayode Ajulo, to write the Nobel Laureate, demanding a retraction of the comments.
Also on Thursday, Ajulo, in an advertorial published in a national daily, explained how Omisore was discharged by Oyo State High Court of all allegations of complicity in the murder of Ige and going forward, “he has been instructed to activate legal processes against anyone for defamation and probable prosecution of any person who continues to make disparaging comments about Omisore not in tandem with the true representation of facts.”
But speaking in Lagos on Thursday, Soyinka said there is a need to unearth the circumstances surrounding the death of Ige, which he believes would be of enormous value to the course of democracy and education.
He said a man decaped a respected minister and threw the cap at thugs, adding that such action led to other actions.
“That doesn’t mean you were responsible for the person’s death. But certain actions led to other actions.
“We are talking of somebody who was capable of attacking a Minister of Justice, taking off his cap in the palace of the spiritual head of a large group of people, that person is not fit to be seen as national secretary of a ruling party.
“Actions of disgracing and humiliating a highly respected individual, a traditional chief, a minister, who was a guest at the revered palace, that action alone and the consequence of it disqualifies whoever initiated that action from aspiring to a respected position.
“We heard a case of the judge, who kept the diary, recording the pressure that he was receiving from very high quarters during that period. There are cases of vanishing witnesses and retraction of statements.
“I say to the leadership of the APC, I’m not talking to Buhari alone, I am saying what has happened to your sensibilities, were you so short of materials even within your party that you have to unleash scorpions on our memories, which we are just managing to forget since that event?” he asked.
According to Soyinka, such a person should have been made an envoy if the party desired to give him a post, but not the secretary of a ruling party.
“Even if President Buhari or the APC wanted to reward Omisore, he ought to have been given an ambassador appointment, even if it is to Ukraine and not a national secretary of the ruling party.
“We are talking of the party of those in charge of the governance and justice of this country; the leadership of APC and I am not talking of Buhari alone. Do you have to unleash scorpions on our memory? It is not Soyinka who provided this. It’s those who were so insensitive, who rubbed that murder in our faces. I will be delighted to go to court so that we can go into details. I ask the APC leadership to have a rethink because the issue will not go away.
“Those who want to go to court because Wole Soyinka said this, I will be delighted, then we can really go into details. Perhaps what we need is a judicial enquiry. The court had done their work; we accepted the verdict of the court. But there is a lot to be unearthed, which are of enormous value to the education and course of democracy”, he said.
He further decried the rising insecurity in the country leading to killings, kidnappings and violence in several states.
In his reaction, a human rights lawyer, Chief Femi Falana (SAN), said the killers of Ige must be found, noting that Soyinka had reminded the President of his pledge to open an enquiry into the country’s spate of political murders.
He pledged to render free services to Soyinka, if he was issued for exercising his freedom of expression, adding that he is taking on a matter that is of public interest and importance.
“If you are sued, we will represent you free of charge because you are taking on a public issue”, said Falana.
Emphasis on the need for society to be humane, Soyinka said, “The society should be about humanity, it was the late Justice Okocha, who made the point, in the case of Josiah and the state, that when you talk of murder when you are talking of justice in a murder case, it is a three-way traffic, not two, not one. Justice to the suspect or the accused, justice to the deceased, who is crying for justice in his grave and justice to society. It is three-way traffic.”
Adding that in any civilised society, once the killers of anybody have not been found, the file should not be closed because information may come at any time. “Sometimes they call it cold cases in the US, and these cases are in the archives. Anybody may turn up to say, ‘we have some information or I did it, I am having sleepless nights, I now want to open up.’ Sometimes those who are at the tail end of conviction are brought out of prison and those who have been killed are given some restitution”, he explained.
Meanwhile, Soyinka had admitted he preached against the reelection of former President Goodluck Jonathan.
He, however, added that he urged the youth to mobilise for their candidate of choice and didn’t mentioned Vote for Buhari.