Nobel laureate, Prof. Wole Soyinka, has endorsed Prof. Kingsley
Moghalu, presidential candidate of the Young Progressive Party (YPP),
for President.
Soyinka and his civil society group, Citizens Forum, made the
announcement in a statement personally signed by him and obtained by
DAILY POST on Friday.
According to Soyinka, the decision to endorse Moghalu was reached
after months of rigorous analyses of the profiles and manifestoes of the
various candidates vying for the nation’s top job.
THE FULL STATEMENT:
“The nation has been brought to her knees. Internally, the blaring
media testimony needs no augmentation. Beyond her borders, Nigeria is
the tale of citizens designated pariahs of the global community for whom
special dossiers are opened, and units of security agencies are
specifically assigned. Online transactions are programmed to reject
basic usage once the word ‘Nigeria’ is inserted in the Data profile.
There are few nation left, within or outside the continental borders
where – no matter the codeword – a Nigerian ‘room’ has not been
designated. Her humanity litters the sand trails of the Sahara, it lines
the Mediterranean sea-bed with the bones of a desperate generation,
seeking ‘green pastures’. Lines from my poems have been appropriated and
embossed as epitaphs on the tombstones of Nigerians washed up the isle
of Catania and accorded dignified burials by total strangers, certainly
paid more respect than Nigerians themselves consider due to their own
humanity. Other would-be migrants have been slaughtered by religious
fundamentalists on the shores of Tripoli, while waiting for their
precarious crossing on suicidal boats. Yet others end up as commodities
in the slave markets of Libya and Mauritania, hundreds recently rescued
and airlifted – credit where credit is due! – repatriated by government.
“It was not always thus. Numerous Nigerians believe that it need not
remain so. There is always a choice to be made outside any presumptuous
orders – in reality associations guaranteed to perpetuate social
disorders and the politics of inequality. This is not the thinking of
any one individual but of a large section of this populace. If it were
not, there would not have been a record number of nearly a hundred
political groups aspiring to take over the reins of governance. We do
not need any instruction however to estimate that several of the
aspiring groups are mere plants, raised to sow confusion. It redounds to
the credit of a few individuals, including some of the candidates
themselves, who embarked on efforts to winnow down their own ranks, then
seek a consensus candidate as standard bearer for the battle against
the two political behemoths.
“They did not succeed, but that is no cause for despair. They still
deserve the gratitude of Nigerians for their uniquely principled
efforts. The CITIZEN FORUM – last heard of during the time of the
dictator, Sani Abacha – was pulled out of retirement to join in their
effort to arrive at peer consensus. The Forum worked peripherally with
them. It made no attempt – I stress this – no attempt whatsoever to
impose its own preferences, but utilized material from the deliberations
of at least four such selection groups. It remained on the fringe,
except on invitation. Our mission today is simply to present the result
of that effort by Citizen Forum which, I am especially gratified to
reveal, coincides with my own personal preference. The CF conclusion is
obviously not binding on other groups or individuals involved in the
exercise. May I take this opportunity to advise the public that neither
Citizen Forum nor myself, belongs to any Third Force or other Consensus
seeking councils by any other name. Please ignore any such attributions.
“Over the past few months, we studied the careers, experiences and
track records of most of the presidential aspirants, and most intensely
those actually short-listed by the opposition parties themselves. Like
millions of Nigerians, we watched the debates. I physically interacted
with some of the acknowledged top contenders, in some cases several
times. We participated in HANDSHAKE ACROSS NIGERIA, where some
candidates presented their briefs. Among others, I delivered a keynote
address. We watched television interviews. We have exchanged notes with
highly respected international Civil Servants. The drive towards
Consensus among these dedicated groups sometimes took the form of test
questionnaires to the aspirants, including items such as: ‘Who among the
contestants would you choose, if you did not emerge as the ultimate
preference?’
“There was nothing complicated about assessment parameters: mental
preparedness, analytical aptitude, response to the nation’s security
challenges, economic grounding, grasp of socio-political actualities,
including a remedial concern with the Nigerian image in foreign
perception etc. etc. not forgetting a convincing commitment to
governance and resource decentralization – commonly referred to as
Restructuring. The Forum rejected retrograde propositions of a political
merry-go-round, which urge the electorate to choose this or that
candidate in order to ensure “our turn” at the next power incumbency.
Overall, the exercise was exacting but also – therapeutic. It proved yet
again that there is over-abundant leadership quality locked up in the
nation, and that it is a collective shortcoming that the political space
has not been sufficiently opened up to let soar such potential. Well,
to cite the Chinese proverb: a journey of a thousand miles begins with
the first step.
“Let me reiterate: there is over-abundant, but stifled leadership
material, and there can be no excuse, now that that potential of high
quality is being manifested, for constricting the political space in a
population that is nudging two hundred million. And that statement is of
course specially addressed to those who took part in this exercise,
those who deliberately opted out of it, some of whom were assessed
anyway. Such potential compelled us to exercise utmost rigour in what
proved to be a most daunting exercise. The final determination however
is – the flag-bearer of the Young Progressive Party – KINGSLEY MOGHALU.
“I shall conclude with a somewhat interesting aside. I met Moghalu
again on Monday morning, February 4th, and informed him of the Forum’s
decision. During our discussion, I happened to ask him – what is the
meaning of Moghalu. I was curious, because it had taken quite some time
along the way for me to know to which ethnic group the name belonged. He
replied, it means – “Evil Spirit, Leave me Be!” Then I asked him for
his other names and he spelt them out: “Actually my full names are
Kingsley Chieedu Ayodele Moghalu”. Eyebrows raised, I asked, How come,
Ayodele? A piquant revelation resulted: “Oh, that came from Mrs.
Funmilayo Ransome-Kuti. She was friends with my father. Mrs. Kuti was my
godmother, and she gave me the name Ayodele”.
“I was learning this for the first time. Moghalu’s CV is however in
the public domain – his publications, record, and vision. The above is
just a side-note that contains its own mild, thought provoking
instruction, for those who care to examine the distractions of ethnic
equivocations, and the rigid mind-sets and stereotypes imposed on
products of circumstance.
“That immediate task being now completed, Civic Forum will now join
forces with those who pray, “Evil Spirit, leave us be!” – at least those
who subscribe to the belief that political elections are not a
Do-or-Die Affair!
“Wole SOYINKA Convener, CITIZEN FORUM 2019”








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