From The Cable; Nobel
Laureate Wole Soyinka has described the Igbos as people who can be
predicted when it comes to voting. According to him, the Igbos vote
based on their stomach and have an incurable money mindedness. Prof.
Soyinka said this while delivering a lecture titled 'Predicting Nigeria,
Electoral Ironies’ at Harvard University Hutchins Centre for African
and African American Research", in Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA.
"Igbos remained unrepentant and resolute towards their strategic
objective of secession at worst; or a Nigerian president of Igbo
extraction at best,” he said at the lecture which held on April 29.
"The climax of MASSOB’s war against the Nigerian state was the call for
sit-ins and civil disobedience that shut down markets and public
services, as Igbos stayed at home in a symbolic gesture to assert
Biafran independence. The call was honoured by governors in the two
principal Ibo states, though without fanfare. The Igbos are probably the
only group of Nigerians that you can predict with great accuracy whom
they will vote for in an election, because they tend to put their votes
where their stomachs take them; suffering as it were, from incurable
money-mindedness, as they would stop at nothing in their quest for
personal financial gain. Muhammadu Buhari was the better of the two
evils as the incumbent president Goodluck Jonathan had been an
unmitigated disaster and failure. It was a painful decision to tell
people to vote Buhari, but the country needed a new beginning. I was
more against Jonathan, than I was pro-Buhari. “Nothing is more unworthy
of leadership than to degrade a system by which one attains fulfillment,
and this is what the nation witnessed time and time again under
Jonathan, who was increasingly becoming intolerant of opposition in an
escalating streak of impunity and authoritarian madness, which was most
blatant and unconscionable. The ‘militricians’ – soldiers turned
politicians in power – aren’t looking for excellence; their civilian
cohorts are worse. Short cuts and how to circumvent the system for the
profit of a few are the norm of governance. Those who do honest work are
derided as lacking the skill to fit it. Ironically, things haven’t
quite changed a bit after 16 years of democracy in the country.” he said
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