ABUJA—
Apparently worried by the continuous decline in the nation’s economy, Nobel laureate,
Prof. Wole Soyinka, yesterday, called on President Muhammadu Buhari to convene
an emergency economic conference for experts to brainstorm on the way forward
and future of the economy.
The
Nobel laureate made the call when he paid a courtesy call on the Minister of
Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, in Abuja. According to Soyinka,
the conference became necessary to enable experts diagnose the problems
currently facing the country and make necessary recommendations for government
to get the economy out of the woods. He said: “I agree with those who say the
economy is bad.
It
is obvious and it is so bad. I think the Presidency should call an emergency
economic conference where experts will be enlightened. “We really need an
emergency economic conference, bringing experts together to march the nation
forward. I think the economy is not encouraging. Quite frankly, I think most
economists will agree with this.” Don’t wait to see a bonanza economy While
urging Nigerians to be patient with the present administration, the Nobel
laureate urged them not to expect an end to the present hardship as it would
linger for a long time.
“Don’t wait to see a bonanza economy in the
next few months to a year. Recovery is going to take time. But at the same
time, we have to rely on the objective analysis of experts to tell the
government when it gets bad, which might compound the problem and ultimately
left the people as victims.
“At the beginning, this cabinet had no Culture but
had Information ministry. We had to scream, before the Ministry of Culture
later came,” Soyinka said. Cautions on human rights abuse Asked to rate the
performance of Buhari’s administration, he said though it might be too early to
assess the administration’s performance, it would be right for the government
to recognise the provisions of the law and constitution of the land to avoid
violation of the fundamental human rights of people. He said: “My attitude to
the performance of the present administration is that the rule of the law
should be followed. I belong to any government which is very patient to getting
results. I have a very clear idea of governance tempo. “If that goal is
attained by constitutional means, if nothing else, it would have moved this
nation forward.
“The tempo of motion, for me is very reasonable. For me, I
would say more than reasonable. But on the human right side, we have to watch
very carefully to see if that can be achieved without forfeiting the
fundamental human rights of people, which form the basis we derive from
citizenship.
“I will say, while the human right is respected, governance should
move on, which I believe most Nigerians approve. “What is going on now is an
exposure of open robbery in their faces, while the government should damn the
consequences of its action, with ethical rigour without minding whose ox is
gored. “Government, for me, is a very complicated matter and there is a lot of
debris to be cleared. Maybe, we need to be a little bit more patient to see
what the administration will do.”

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