Nobel laureate Wole Soyinka has pulled out of a 
rally in Lagos featuring President Goodluck Jonathan and planned by one 
of Nigeria’s prominent activists, Joe Okei-Odumakin, who runs the 
non-governmental organization, Women Arise. The rally, which is 
scheduled to start today at 9:30 a.m. has been tagged an anti-terror 
event. 
But in a brief interview with a correspondent of 
SaharaReporters this evening, Professor Soyinka said he decided to pull 
out of the rally because things did not seem as they initially appeared 
when he first agreed to join the rally.
In a related development, Afrobeat musician, Seun Kuti, told 
SaharaReporters that he had initially agreed to join the “walk against 
terror” because he was told that the event was a “non-partisan” action 
against terrorism. Asked if he would still perform at the event 
tomorrow, Mr. Kuti, who is one of the sons of the late Afrobeat maestro 
Fela Anikulapo-Kuti, told SaharaReporters that he was not sure anymore 
if the rally would be interpreted as a political endorsement for 
President Jonathan.
Mr. Jonathan has reportedly arrived in Lagos to lead the rally, a Presidency source told our correspondent.
Described as “a non-partisan, citizen-based national rally 
against terror,” the event is scheduled to hold at the cricket pitch of 
the Tafawa Balewa Square in Lagos.
A source close to Professor Soyinka stated that the Nobel 
laureate was already preparing his presentation at tomorrow’s rally when
 word reached him that President Jonathan’s associates were behind a 
disruptive protest rally held in Lagos earlier yesterday and organized by 
the national coordinator of the Oodua Peoples Congress (OPC), Gani 
Adams. OPC members wielded guns, machetes and spears as they terrorized 
the city and its residents. Our reporters said the OPC thugs assaulted 
people, tore down APC campaign posters, and destroyed vehicles and other
 property.
The Nobel laureate declined to state whether his decision to 
pull out of tomorrow’s event stemmed from today’s violent action by the 
OPC, which paralyzed parts of Lagos.
SOURCE: Saharareporters

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