Wife of the President, Mrs. Patience Jonathan, on Friday took on the
Nobel Laureate, Prof. Wole Soyinka, for attributing the crisis in the
Rivers State House of Assembly to her.
In a statement by her
spokesman, Ayo Osinlu, the President’s wife said Soyinka betrayed the
moral duty that expected him, as a respected member of the society, to
carefully consider all shades of issues that informed his opinions on
any matter.
Mrs. Jonathan said Soyinka had become an embarrassment to his admirers with his diatribe against her.
The statement read in part, “Unfortunately, Soyinka betrayed moral duty in his recent diatribe against Mrs. Patience Jonathan.
“Of
course, this would not be the first time he would reach out against the
First Lady, usually from self-righteously indignant lecterns.
“In
this particular instance, his verdict was that Mrs. Jonathan was
‘stoking the crisis currently rocking her home state of Rivers…’, and
thereupon asked Mr. President to caution his wife.
“The good, old
Prof. reminds one of the truth that indeed, most of the giants on the
street are men of like passions like everyone else. Worse still, most of
them are actually standing on clay feet and would fail the test of a
gentle push.
“Otherwise, who would have believed that the social,
civil, constitutional and sundry rights crusader Prof. would maintain a
safe distance from the heart of an activity that is a potential threat
to the peace, security and safety of the people of a state, then collect
exaggerated stories and jaundiced perspectives from familiar
propagandists and character assassins, and promptly summon the media to a
“state of the nation” address.
“It’s an embarrassment to his
throng of admirers and followers, that a sage of Prof. Soyinka’s status,
who used to be a gauge of public morality in this nation, would lend
himself to a propaganda of high drive, to save a governor who elected to
launch into a river without applicable survival skills.”
Mrs.
Jonathan argued that the calculation was to attack the President and
pull to pieces anyone associated with him, as a strategy for attracting
public sympathy to the “clear underdog.”
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