Soyinka Condemns Killing of Harira, Deborah in Anambra, Sokoto

Gboyega Akinsanmi

Nobel Laureate, Prof. Wole Soyinka yesterday lamented the killing of a 200-level student of the Shehu Shagari College of Education in Sokoto, Deborah Yakubu and a pregnant woman, Mrs. Harira Jubril and her chil-dren in Anambra State.

Consequently, Soyinka cancelled a school engagement in Anambra State to empathise with the brutal murder Harira Jibril and her children.

He condemned the killing in a statement he personally signed yesterday, wondering why such an ugly, abominable act would remain locked down within the dark pit of primitivism hidden in the Nigerian psyche.

A mob of religious extremists had stoned Deborah to death in Sokoto three weeks and her remain was set ablaze for allegedly blaspheming Prophet Muhammad on a WhatsApp group.

Gunmen had also killed Harira and her four children at Isulo, Orumba North Local Government Area, Anambra State, a killing that has ethnic undertones. The children were identified as Fatima, 9; Khadijah, 7; Had-iza, 5 and Zaituna, 2.

In a statement titled: “Drawing the Red Line on Infanticide” yesterday, Soyinka described the killers of Deborah and Harira as the retarded minds, which he said, “are ever present among us, and only await the most trivial excuse to actualize their innermost craving.”

Referring to Deborah’s killing, Soyinka said: “From the pronouncements of even those who claim to be men of God, we are left in no doubt that such craving receives endorsement from across the human spectrum.

“Where they cannot act, they incite others to fulfil their credo of morbidity. The horror that was recently afflicted on the people of Anambra and the rest of us was redoubled for me personally because the news reached me outside the country while I was participating in an event of youth  empowerment – a college graduation ceremony.

“The anticipated question surfaced again and again: What kind of mind is capable of such bestiality? And yet it happens, again and again. We know who these killers are, they live among us. Sometimes I undergo the feeling that I actually know them, that I have encountered them, have heard them and perhaps even read them. 

“We know that unless they are pre-emptively denounced and exposed, they will strike and strike again. Their actions reduce us all, tarnish us, and question our humanity,” the Nobel laureate lamented the implication of the killings as a country.

Soyinka, therefore, proposed the need to develop the collective sense of a Lowest Common Denominator in the seizure of our humanity, saying any act that attempts “to drag us below, or remove that rung of the human ladder should be answered by a total community shutdown – or other equivalence – of its own accord, until that rung is fully reclaimed.”

“The Anambra infanticidal orgy is one such. Deborah’s mob immolation was another. Response to such abominations transcends the mandatory functions of security agencies.  The act constitutes a breach in community ramparts and should be answered by collective action.

“Again, I insist that it is long past time to move beyond pious denuncia-tions – essential, yes, but insufficient. We simply must devise ways of making our revulsion so stark, unambiguous, and inclusive.

“Only then will such pollutants of civic consciousness be brought to re-think, come to understand that it is not just the immediate family, friends and colleagues whose humanity is thus violated, but the totality of cohabitants.

“I admitted, in Abuja, that I nearly cancelled that engagement as an ex-pression of that revulsion, and in solidarity with the bereaved. In the end, I decided that this would not be the right gesture.

“It so happens that I also have an engagement in Anambra, at a school where, for all I know, the children of Mr. Jibril Ahmed were enrolled, or would soon be enrolled, a sanctuary of learning for the one yet in the womb of the murdered Harira. 

“It need not have been that very institution, but it is just such a place of creative formation that they were all innately predetermined,” he can-vassed the need to nip the spate of killing in the country in the bud.

He acknowledged the efficacy of collective action to put insecurity na-tionwide to an end, though observed that such resolve “is not always easy to come by – except of course by coercion, which is what we are witnessing in the activities of militant groups in the East. 

“That, however, is not the issue, this being a crossroads that the Anam-bra people will navigate themselves. The cold-blooded murder of guests in our home is however not merely a national issue but a violation of the much touted values of the black race. 

“We must begin somewhere, “draw a line” – however individual and lim-ited.  I totally repudiate the killing of guests, of the unarmed, of innocents, the vulnerable, indeed, the murder of humanity.

“This time, I believe the decision is right, the moment compelling. In em-pathy with those innocents whose scholastic careers have been so bru-tally annulled, I serve notice of cancellation of that engagement with the Anambra school, scheduled for August.

“The deaths of those innocents cannot be reversed, but we must begin, even yesterday, the process of reversing the mental trajectory that makes death from innocence the current norm of national existence,” Soyinka observed.

Related Articles