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‎‎Soyinka Deplores Huge Security Presence Around President’s Son, Says ‘Soldiers, Policemen Guarding Seyi Tinubu Enough To Crush Benin Republic Uprising’

‎Nobel laureate, Prof Wole Soyinka, has advised President Bola Tinubu to be cautious about his approach to regional security, domestic governance, and the use of state protection for privileged individuals.

‎This was as Soyinka criticised what he described as the excessive deployment of security operatives around the family of the President, warning that such overreach undermines Nigeria’s security priorities.

‎The literary icon said this at the 20th Wole Soyinka Centre for Investigative Journalism Awards in Lagos on Tuesday.

‎He recounted his recent encounter with what he termed a “battalion-level” security detail attached to the president’s son at a hotel in Ikoyi.

‎Soyinka said he had initially assumed a film was being shot on the hotel premises due to the sheer number of heavily armed personnel he saw.

‎“I was coming out of my hotel, and I saw what looked like a film set,” he said. “A young man detached himself from the actors, came over and greeted me politely.

‎“When I asked if they were shooting a film, he said no. I looked around and there was nearly a whole battalion occupying the hotel grounds.”

‎According to him, about 15 heavily armed officers formed the president’s son’s security cordon—an arrangement he found alarming.

‎“When I got back in my car and asked the driver who the young man was, he told me. And I saw this SWAT team, heavily armed to the teeth.

‎“They looked sufficient to take over a neighbouring small country or city like Benin,” he said.

‎The playwright added that he was so disturbed that he attempted reaching the National Security Adviser (NSA) to verify whether the deployment was official.

‎“I began looking for the NSA immediately. I said, track him down for me. They got him somewhere in Paris, but he was in a meeting with the president.

‎“I described the scene and asked: ‘Do you mean a child of the head of state goes around with an army for his protection?’ I couldn’t believe it.”

‎Soyinka, in a tone laced with sarcasm, suggested that the federal government need not deploy the military or air force to quell threats in neighbouring countries when such a formidable force already escorts the president’s son.

‎“Tinubu didn’t have to send the air force or military to deal with any insurrection. There is an easier way,” he said.

‎“Next time there’s an uprising, the president should call that young man and say, ‘Seyi, go and put down those stupid people there. You have troops under your command.’”

‎He stressed that while heads of state often have families, such privilege must never be abused or allowed to distort national security structures.

‎“Children should know their place. They are not potentates; they are not heads of state,” he said.

‎“The security architecture of a nation suffers when we see such heavy devotion of security to one young individual.”

‎Soyinka’s remarks added to ongoing public debate about the scale and visibility of state-provided security for politically connected individuals, particularly in a period of heightened security challenges across the country.

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