Enough is Enough’, Soyinka warns South African gov’t
Nobel Laureate Professor Wole Soyinka has taken a swipe at the South African government for its confrontational attitude towards Nigeria and its citizens, which according to him distorts the fraternal relationship between the progressives of Nigeria and South Africa.
Soyinka made this assertion on Saturday 15 June at an event tagged: An Eveniing with Professor Wole Soyinka at 90. The event was organized by The Metropoolitan Club, Lagos to mark the 90th birthday of the distinguished writer, which comes up on 13 July 2024.
It was held at the Main Hall of The Mentropolitan Club in Victoria Island, Lagos. Soyinka was in conversation with Yinka Akinkugbe.
“I mention this deliberately becauae we
have a problem with South Africa. There is this kind of complex, I haven’t quite figured it out. A kind of complex which distorts what I consider a fraternal relationship of progressives between Nigeria and South Africa.
“I am saying this as a message to South Africa. Please don’t do that sort of thing again. We dont know whose turn it is going to be, ” the Nobel Laureate said.
Soyinka made this assertion against the backdrop of the negative roles played by representatives of the South African government, which sabotaged the efforts Nigerian activists were making to kick the late Nigerian dictator Gen. Sani Abacha out of office.
As the Nigerian activists were gearing up for the conference in South Africa, the representative of the South African government in Nigeria asked the activists to submit their passports to him so he could help them process their visa, only for him to sabotage their efforts. When the South African givernment was confronted, they said they did not want to be seen to be harming the king.
Soyinka also recalled how he had suffered humiliation several times at the hand of South African immigration..
“I can tell you a number of times I have suffered humiliation at the hand of south Africa immigration. Some of which are in the public domain, others are not. But these are issues which sometimes make me wonder.
“I want to use this opportunity to pose this as a challenge to South African progressives,” Soyinka maintained.
It was an evening of intellectual discourse and revelations as many facts that were not in the public domain was revealed by the accomplished writer. Soyinka went down memory lane as he fielded questions from Yinka Akinkugbe and the audience.