The
Federal Government has expressed its readiness to make the National
Theatre what it should be - a magnet for the creative arts.
The Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, gave the assurance on Saturday during a courtesy visit to Prof. Wole Soyinka in his office at the Freedom Park in Lagos.
Reiterating
his earlier statement, he assured that the national monument would not
be sold but would be brought up to standard through a Public-Private
Partnership (PPP)
Alhaji
Mohammed said he is currently studying the PPP proposal with a view to
ensuring that the government and people of the country get a good deal
from it.
He said the visit to the Nobel Laureate was to enable him to drink from his (Soyinka's) cup of wisdom.
Prof.
Soyinka had earlier called on the Federal Government to consider
building a 'genuine' National Theatre, saying what is presently referred
to as the National Theatre was never designed to be a theatre in the
first place, even though it is 'adaptable in many ways'.
''This
nation needs a genuine theatre. As long as we keep calling it (National
Theatre) a theatre, this nation will never build a theatre,'' he said.
Prof.
Soyinka agreed with the Minister that a PPP deal represented one of the
most realistic ways to upgrade the standard of the National Theatre and
enhance its functionality.
Answering
questions from the reporters who accompanied the Minister on the visit,
the Nobel Laureate said he is sure that the Federal Government's
ongoing anti-corruption fight will succeed, but warned against
complacency since, he said, corruption would always fight back.
He
said never before, not even during the country's civil war, was the
money meant to buy arms for the military to defend the country and
protect the citizenry shared by a few people.
Prof.
Soyinka said despite the fact that corruption will always fight back, he
was so sure that the anti-graft battle would not fail that he is ready
to give his choicest wine to the reporter who asked him the question,
should the anti-corruption fight go otherwise.
''We are
not where we were (in the fight against corruption) before this
administration took over, but (the government should realize that)
corruption will always fight back,'' he said, noting that those already
in the cesspit of corruption will be in the forefront of such a
counter-battle.
Segun Adeyemi
SA to Hon Minister of Information and Culture
Lagos
Jan. 9th 2016
SA to Hon Minister of Information and Culture
Lagos
Jan. 9th 2016
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