Nigeria
is currently battling a number of violent groups including the Boko Haram,
militants and other agitators – Professor Wole Soyinka , while speaking at the
University of Benin, advised government on the next line of action to take
Nigeria’s Nobel Laureate, Professor Wole Soyinka, has advocated for stiff
punishment for religious leaders caught preaching hate messages.
Soyinka, who spoke at the University
of Benin, Edo state, attributed the high- scale violence experienced in many
parts of the country partly to what people hear from their religious leaders.
while delivering a lecture titled: ‘Culture at risk’ at 2nd Eminent
Lecture series organised by the university, the litrary icon said some
preachers engaged in messages that encourage religious intolerance.
According to him, the bombing and killing of
innocent citizens in parts of Nigeria are a result of what people have heard
from their religious leaders and made to believe. He said the destruction of
mosques, churches, shrines and ancient monuments are all products of religious
intolerance in the country.
For some years, Nigeria has been battling
Boko Haram in the north-eastern part of the country just as Rivers, Bayelsa and
Delta states have become the faces of militant activities with the result being
destruction of government installations. In the eastern part of the country,
various groups, including the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) and the
Movement for the Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB), have continued with
agitation for secession.
Currently, Nnamdi Kanu, the leader of
IPOB has remained in detention refusing to negotiate with the federal
government. Soyinka said: “My view is that, we can complain, we can proffer, we
can condemn, as much as we want, until those who are guilty, even by curious
liability, when a murder is committed are brought to book and made to apologize
to the whole nation, and face penalty, such will not stop.

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