CPC: Soyinka Cautions Nigerian Leaders On Foreign Aid, Says It Might Worsen Situations

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Lucky Obukohwo, Reporting

 

Nigeria’s Nobel Laureate, Professor Wole Soyinka, has issued a passionate appeal to Nigerian leaders asking them to be mindful of accepting foreign donations amid the country’s worsening security crisis.

Soyinka, who spoke in Government House, Makurdi, after a closed-door meeting with the state governor, Hyacinth Alia, said the interventions might worsen the country’s security challenges.

Soyinka praised Governor Alia’s developmental strides, recalling that under the previous federal administration, Benue became a hub for terrorists in the North Central region.

The Noble Laureate said former President Buhari’s failure to stop the killings, noting that he was among the few individuals who boldly challenged the administration’s negligence.

Prof. Soyinka said he was in Benue to follow up on educational materials he donated during an earlier visit when many displaced children were out of school.

Soyinka later toured parts of Makurdi to inspect ongoing projects executed by the Alia administration and also visited several internally displaced persons (IDP) camps to sympathise with the affected families.

Governor Hyacinth Alia, while receiving Soyinka, again dismissed claims that he ever denied the killings of Benue people by bandits and terrorists, insisting that his earlier comments were misinterpreted and taken out of context.

He told newsmen that it was important for the public to understand the proper context and global meaning of terms such as genocide.

He explained that discussions around genocide must be based on the United Nations’ definition and historical context, noting that many people use the word loosely without considering its origin, its interpretation, or the criteria that qualify an event as genocide.

According to the governor, his earlier description of the attackers “executing their plans religiously” was an idiomatic expression—similar to someone saying a task was carried out judiciously, meaning consistently and not in any religious sense, adding that the misinterpretation of his statement caused unnecessary confusion.

Recall that Governor Alia had stated, “I never denied that my people were killed. I remain very firm that we have bandits and terrorists who come fully organised to destroy, maim, and kill. I have consistently—yes, religiously—stated that their aim is land grabbing. This did not begin as anything religious.”

He emphasised that the crisis began as farmer-herder conflicts before escalating into full-blown banditry and terrorism, stressing that people from different faith backgrounds have suffered losses; therefore, attempts to frame the killings as religiously motivated were misleading and harmful.

The governor cautioned journalists against politicising the tragedy or amplifying misinterpretations, urging the media to seek clarification whenever issues arise rather than worsening tensions through inaccurate interpretations.

“You journalists are great minds and great hands. You are not weapons of mass destruction; you are weapons of societal construction. When something is unclear, one phone call can clarify it instead of confusing the entire society,” Alia said.

He added that every loss of life in Benue weighs heavily on him as governor and called on the public to avoid trivialising the suffering of displaced families.

He reiterated that the state was attacked, violated, and its people driven from their ancestral homes—hence the large number of IDP camps in Benue today.

The governor also warned against turning the crisis into a single-narrative issue, saying, “The situation is multi-sectoral. Don’t reduce it to religion. Both Muslims and Christians have been killed. Benue is the most populous Christian state in the North, so naturally, there are unspoken expectations, but let us not politicise people’s pain.”

He commended Professor Soyinka for his genuine concern for the people and for visiting to see the progress being made.

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