Nobel laureate, Prof Wole Soyinka, has blasted President Muhammadu Buhari for waking up late from a prolonged siesta, to give his much needed direction on the way forward in the ongoing war to crush the rampaging COVID-19 which is increasingly claiming victims in Nigeria.
His criticisms were contained in a statement on Monday and titled ‘Between Covid and Constitutional Encroachment,’
In it, he faulted the president for locking down Lagos, Abuja and Ogun state, a move he believed might be unconstitutional especially since the nation is not at war.
He said: “Constitutional lawyers and our elected representatives should kindly step into this and educate us, mere lay minds.”
According to the statement: “The worst development I can conceive is to have a situation where rational measures for the containment of the Corona pandemic are rejected on account of their questionable genesis. This is a time for unity of purpose, not nitpicking dissensions.
“So, before this becomes a habit, a question: does President Buhari have the powers to close down state borders? We want clear answers.”
The president had in a nationwide broadcast on Sunday directed a 14-day lockdown on Lagos and the Federal Capital Territory, the two places most affected by the outbreak. The lockdown also affected Ogun State due to its proximity to Lagos.
But Soyinka said: “Appropriately focused on measures for the saving lives and committed to making sacrifices for the preservation of our communities, we should nonetheless remain alert to any encroachment on constitutionally demarcated powers.
‘We need to exercise collective vigilance, and not compromise the future by submitting to interventions that are not backed by law and constitution.
“A president who has been conspicuously AWOL, the Rip van Winkle of Nigerian history, is now alleged to have woken up after a prolonged siesta and begun to issue orders. Who actually instigates these orders anyway? From where do they really emerge?
“What happens when the orders conflict with state measures, the product of a systematic containment strategy- – `including even trial-and-error and hiccups — undertaken without let or leave of the centre.”
Nigeria’s coronavirus cases rose to 111 as at Sunday night, with Lagos and Abuja recording 68 and 21 respectively.
Soyinka said the country’s anti-COVID-19 measures, so far, have proceeded along the rails of decentralised thinking, multilateral collaboration, and technical exchanges between states.
“The centre is obviously part of the entire process, and one expects this to be the norm, even without the epidemic’s frontal assault on the Presidency itself. Indeed, the centre is expected to drive the overall effort, but in collaboration, with extraordinary budgeting and refurbishing of facilities.
“The universal imperative and urgency of this affliction should not become an opportunistic launch pad for a sneak re-centralisation, no matter how seemingly insignificant its appearance.
“I urge governors and legislators to be especially watchful. No epidemic is ever cured with constitutional piracy. It only lays down new political viruses for the future.”