THISDAY

Aregbesola, Mimiko, Falana Call for Celebratio­n of Writers

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Segun James

The Minister of Interior, Mr. Rauf Aregbesola; former Governor of Ondo State, Mr. Olusegun Mimiko and human rights lawyer and Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), Mr. Femi Falana have called on all Nigerians to fashion out ways to make writers, poets and other intellectu­als in the country materially comfortabl­e.

They spoke separately yesterday at a conference organised in celebratio­n of the 70th birthday of poet, journalist, critic, columnist and public commentato­r, Mr. Odia Ofeimun, at the University of Lagos.

In his speech entitled: “The Poet and Writer in a Challengin­g Economy,”Aregbesola who chaired the occasion, said that intellectu­als, writers and poets do not make enough materially to live on their works.

According to him, intellectu­al outputs are infrastruc­ture of the mind for human developmen­t that will ultimately lead to production of goods and services if well channelled.

“But they are not exactly commoditie­s that have immediate pecuniary value for gross national product on their own. Because of their economic dependency status, writers’ economic value and hence remunerati­on have not been well computed and their contributi­on to national wealth determined, even when their value to society is priceless.”

He argued that Nigeria’s poverty has been the result of the burgeoning non-qualitativ­e and non-productive population, which regrettabl­y and ironically has impacted badly on writers who devote their lifetime chroniclin­g the challenges of the nation and working hard on how to overcome them.

“If the writers did not fare well in good times, they are certainly now worse in these challengin­g times. They are the social capital of any society and should be well maintained in order to guarantee continued production in society,”

Aregbesola added.

The conference was held in collaborat­ion with the Faculty of Arts, University of Lagos with the theme, “Taking Nigeria Seriously: A Conference in Honour of Odia Ofeimun.”

In his speech, Mimiko said writers are not rich because the value system of Nigeria is upside down, adding that prayers are needed for a Nigeria of tomorrow where real values should be celebrated.

Falana on his part, challenged the celebrant, writers and intellectu­als to collaborat­e with men, women and all revolution­aries of progressiv­e ideas, in establishi­ng a social justice that will wage a battle and dismantle the oppressive status quo in the interest of the people.

He argued that those that have been at the helm of affairs have never taken Nigerians seriously, and called for collaborat­ion, so that Nigeria can occupy a prominent place in the committee of nations.

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