Emeka Odumegwu Ojukwu, his wife Bianca and Managing Director of the NLNG, Chima Ibeneche at the awards night Photo: AKINTAYO ABODUNRIN

Time to dismantle this sham literature prize

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Chima Ibeneche, managing director of the Nigeria Liquified Natural Gas (NLNG) company, should fire his speech writer. If perchance he wrote the speech he delivered at the NLNG Literature Prize Award night himself, then he has passed a vote of no confidence on himself. His speech at the fiasco of October 10 was shot through with infelicities. Before the night was over, he promised, they would be crowning "the new kings and queens of Nigerian Literature."

Anyone following the lacklustre build-up to the night would have questioned: queens? There was not one woman on the shortlist of writers to be honoured or - given what transpired - dishonoured, by the NLNG. For weeks, the literati stomached, rather too easily, a shortlist made up entirely of males; this, in a writing milieu in which women are doing great things. In an act of latent misogyny, the NLNG saw nothing wrong in effectively saying the best poets in Nigeria are men. No one raised any dust, which is symptomatic of the easy pass that has been given to this prize so far. $50,000 cash prize is worth any lapses in the administration of the prize, it seems.

Ibeneche set out the kind of people due for recognition by his company. "We have... passed the stage of having just a handful of men and women define this country," he declared. Have we? A look at newspaper adverts proclaiming the NLNG's grand award night in celebration of literature, is instructive. One listed former Nigerian head of state, Yakubu Gowon as chair of the award gala; special guests of honour were former military ‘president' Ibrahim Babangida and Shehu Shagari of the second republic. Minister of Information, Dora Akunyili, completed the list.

A charade

No mention of the nine shortlisted writers, the ‘stars' for whom the whole charade was being organised. There was a collage of images from previous award nights; weighted heavily in favour of politicians. Also in the collage, is Ibeneche and his wife, Ugo, who has now sung at the NLNG gala two years in a row. And what's with this obsession with politicians by the organisers of a literary prize? The NLNG's insistence, year on year, to make politicians the unworthy beneficiaries of a vanity gravy train, has long been a sore point for writers. The decision to make Babangida (a grotesque pillager of the Nigerian psyche, who orchestrated the scourge of anti-intellectualism from which the country has not recovered) a keynote speaker in 2007, was highly controversial. Babangida it was after all, who dispatched Mamman Vatsa to an early grave, the latter a beloved soldier-poet.

Impervious to criticism

NLNG compounds the insult by inviting the dictator again in 2009. Is this the action of an organisation that has the tiniest jot of respect for writers?

Who ever heard of politicians presiding over a literature prize? Imagine Britain's Margaret Thatcher, delivering a keynote speech for the Booker Prize, and you would have a sense of the idiocy. Another advert announced that Biafran leader, Odumegwu Ojukwu, would give the 2009 keynote speech - such that the gala night began to take on the air of a vacuous national reconstruction exercise. And who assigned to the NLNG this role of a one-night only cosmetic exercise for the nation? Is it not enough that the gas company already reaps the benefits of million dollars' worth of image laundering through its insincere literature prize?

And what is the dividend of a literary prize (NLNG's petty cash, really) dispensed by an energy company hard at work in the Niger Delta? It is that you buy the silence of the class of society most likely to criticise you. Let us come out and say it: the NLNG's Literature prize is hush money. Let the NLNG acknowledge it and let the writers acknowledge it - and let's move on.

Chima Ibeneche says his gala night is where "writers... previously unsung... achieve recognition and success despite our collective preference to recognise only power and money." But the NLNG, by recognising only the Babangidas of this world, have shown that they only recognise power and money. Why have former rulers lord over the award? They are not particularly renowned for their love of literature or reading. As for Dora Akunyili, her talent these days seems to be for the ‘foot-in-mouth' disease, as she demonstrated again on October 10.

Yet, Ibeneche would have us believe that his gala privileges only the "ordinary man" - the writers. That he classes writers - more often than not members of the intellectual elite - as "ordinary", shows that Ibeneche does not know his subject. Whilst writers readily identify with the masses, they are far from ordinary. Why should a writer consider it a "pleasure to sit with full merit amongst the business and political elite?" Let Ibeneche know, that writers are stars and do not need his validation. The shame is the NLNG's for failing to see this.

No commitment

In a Freudian slip, Ibeneche said he hopes to give winners "at least temporary fame". Temporary? Where is the commitment to the future of the writer and literature in general? A prize of this stature, if properly organised, should transform the winner's life and art permanently. But what, pray, has Kaine Agary done with the 2008 prize, other than being dollar-rich, at least temporarily? Ibeneche's grand condescension really takes the cake. All this, while his wife jumps on the coat-tails of the sham literature prize to musical relevance. For what would Ugo Ibeneche - she with no album, no music career - be doing performing at the NLNG award if she were not the boss's wife?

It has been suggested that a science company was bound to mismanage this prize, conforming to the trait of those to whom literature is a foreign country. That perhaps, is where the literature committee comes in. Speaking on behalf of the committee, Professor Ayo Banjo defended the administration of the prize, which excludes Nigerian writers based abroad. He questioned the supposed dependence of "exile literature" on memory and imagination. The judges were seeking poetry that "reaches beyond a private quest for meaning," he informed. The "presence of introspection" did not also sit well with him. As a professor of English, Banjo should be embarrassed to go on record with such poppycock.

Here are some facts: writing is nothing if not a personal quest for meaning; and poetry is the most private of the literary genres. And as any writer knows, fiction and poetry are acts of the imagination, exertions of memory - so what is Ayo Banjo talking about?

Meanwhile, the ‘stars' of the award gala, the short-listed writers, were not even invited! So, who on earth was the NLNG celebrating? To cap the insult, the judges (who, by the way, are secret; where is the transparency, the accountability?) decided that none of the nine writers deserved the award. The $50,000 prize will go to a hitherto obscure body known as the Nigerian Academy of Letters (NAL). Ayo Banjo is a fellow of NAL. No wonder some are suggesting that the committee and the faceless judges awarded the cash to themselves.

Why this murkiness, always, even in literature? Why can't we in Nigeria attempt to do things right for once? Why can't people attempt to be decent, to be seen to tow the honourable path? The 2009 NLNG Prize for Literature is a disgrace. Professor Ayo Banjo's position is untenable and he should resign from the committee, along with others found to be members of NAL. Conscientious members of the committee should leave this disreputable arrangement with the NLNG.

As for the prize, it is a shambolic endeavour that has lost all credibility and should be dismantled. Writer Denja Abdullahi walked out after Ayo Banjo's bombshell. The Nigerian writers' body should follow suit and boycott the prize as presently constituted. It is time for effective non-cooperation. $50,000 is too cheap a price for our dignity. I am a writer and I am saying this now: I will never enter a work of mine for the NLNG Prize - may the future hold me to it. There are others like me, and our numbers are growing.

In the final analysis, Odumegwu Ojukwu was the only one that attempted to be decent on the night. "What are we doing here?" he repeatedly asked. Good question

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Reader Comments (61)


Posted by Fela on Oct 17 2009

Yes, yes, yes! Very well put, Ms Wood.

Posted by Patrick on Oct 17 2009

Well written Molara. It is no surprise that the credibility of the NLNG prize was compromised the moment it excluded works from Nigerian writers outside the country. What is really sad is that there was a calculated plot to disrespect the shortlisted writers, i don't get this part. If this is a literary award, it should have writers and members of the literati in attendance and not politicians. Why do we does things differently in this country?

Posted by ktravula on Oct 17 2009

I like this. I hope that the circle of Nigerian writers will have the decency to stand up for what is right, and boycott this bloody prize until something good is done. There are too many things wrong with the NLNG Nigerian Literature Prize, and this article sums it up nicely without losing the requisite rage.

Posted by Nkechi on Oct 17 2009

Whao, well written. That night was a shock, still is. Unbelievably!

Posted by Sola Osofisan on Oct 17 2009

Good one Molara. There is no way to justify an awards night without the so-called short-listed writers in attendance. Sounds like they knew way ahead that there would be no award, so they never bothered to invite them. Only in Nigeria...

Posted by chukwuma on Oct 17 2009

Hear! Hear! Yes, it was obvious from the onset that the NLNG Literature Prize was never for writers. It would be stupid of writers to therefore continue to be fodder for grand conspiracy.

Posted by Philip Braide on Oct 17 2009

Corruption is now a part of our national life and the politicians have gone on to legitimise it so it shouldn't come as a suprise that anybody is ready to sell out their soul or conscience for money.

Posted by unoma on Oct 18 2009

Well said Molara! What a freaking sham!

Posted by C Karimu on Oct 18 2009

Writers need to critically re-examine their relationship with the NLNG and its prize, which, yes, is a sham. More poetry collections must have come out this year than in the last 10 years put together. Why, to enter for the prize, which honoured poetry this year. My point is this: we are too busy scrambling to win this prize that we as writers have missed the big picture. Poets lambast IBB and his ilk in their poetry, yet will shake his hand at the award dinner. We write endless lines of verse weeping for the Delta, yet we prostitute our works and sell our souls to the NLNG. I have never been able to get my head around paradox. I vote for a complete boycott of the NLNG Prize. The whole thing should be done away with.

Posted by Chima on Oct 18 2009

The dance macabre must end. Motion for a boycott of the NLNG prize should be on the agenda of the ANA convention coming up soon in Minna. Whatever ANA decides, I am boycotting the NLNG prize. A sham, true.

Posted by Ibukun Babarinde on Oct 18 2009

From the wake of Remi Raji's disqualification from entering the contest, I suspected this shambleness. It was not really in a particular support for RR that I said it then, that I will never enter any of my work for a prize in Nigeria. Molara, this is a war we writers have to fight, let us all boycot the NLNG prize. And for Banjo and the AL, they had better returned the money to the NLNG to redeem thier image. i had a silent conviction, that Agary's win last year was because of the Oil sentiments in the story, now that the Niger deltan poets on the shortlist would not be silent further on their cause, there wont be a prize. also, the choice of an October 10, was that not the day that Saro Wiwa was killed? Deja should was right to have walked out of that insult, let everyone of us join him.

Posted by tayo aje on Oct 18 2009

the call for boycott is not new, this sham called LNLG prize should have been discarded to the dustbin years ago. The Nigerian writers of this generation should stop their shameful life and proceed in the same path of honour men like Soyinka, Achebe and Vatsa continue to tread. Good story, same old story.

Posted by Kole Odutola on Oct 18 2009

Finally a person like me may just win the prize now that " Ms Wood a writer and reporter has come out clean that she will never enter a work of hers for the NLNG Prize - may the future hold her to it. There are others like her, and their numbers are growing. Have I looked forward to this day? Yes I have and I shall work my behind out to win the prize. A pity that Nigerian writers think nothing goes for nothing. The prize gets its PR mileage each year not by dint of hard work but by CONTROVERSY. The year a non-news person is shortlisted such a person wins. Look at the female professor of UNILAG who has now turned this to an annual fest and makes sure there is something to enter each year. The year she won it with Mama Segun any person can guess why they won it. This prize was born in controversy, and it continually develops in controversy and will turn old in controversy. The day reporters ignore this prize is the time I Kole Odutola, of the Poet Bled will win. Mark my words. I promise to do everything in my power to win this award and reward what ever it will take. Thank you Madam Molara Wood.

Posted by Elegba on Oct 18 2009

We should have sussed that the NLNG prize was a sham when Kaine Agary was chosen over Jude Dibia last year. Has anyone actually tried to read Yellow Yellow? It is horrifically unedited and a poor advert for self- publishing. No way could Yellow Yellow break out onto the international market, whereas Dibia's works definitely could. Something very fishy went on last year which no one really talked about. ANA should officially boycott the prize and encourage all Nigerian writers to ignore the prize. IBB and literature? Tufiakwa.

Posted by Mej Obada on Oct 18 2009

All writers should boycott the Prize

Posted by Akinluyi on Oct 18 2009

You cannot blame NLNG, they are only doing what the writers themselves have been doing. Ask the almighty Association of Nigerian Authors (ANA), what they did with the Ford Foundation Grant. Ask ANA what they do with the millions given to them by host state governors during the annual conventions. Ask ANA why they refused to boycott an NLNG Award when the man who killed one of the founders of the Association gave the key note address. Ask ANA what they have done with the plot of land in Abuja. Ask ANA why a thieving former Education Minister is being tipped to be the Association's next leader. Ask ANA what really happened at the inception of the NLNG prize. Please...ask ANA..

Posted by Bayo on Oct 18 2009

Ouch! Bravo! Excellent piece.

Posted by Ike Anya on Oct 18 2009

Well said, Ms Wood. About time we stopped messing about with mediocrity

Posted by Wumi Raji on Oct 18 2009

The comments are eloquent. There is nothing to add to them. But will Nigerian writers be able to achieve a boycott of the award? Some have already confessed that $50,000 is too tempting a sum of money, that it will be difficult for them to ignore it. Makes me feel very sad. But this is good writing, Molara. Well done.

Posted by Sunday Jimoh on Oct 18 2009

Just one small correction: Ugo Ibeneche was in fact lead singer to The Gospel Singers at The University of Nigeria Nsukka in the late seventies. That group had at least one album, recorded and produced by Godiac Records.In my view, the album was one of the greatest Nigerian Gospel albums of that decade. I do not make this point to discredit the piece - I am only correcting an inaccuracy.

Posted by Gringo on Oct 18 2009

Forensic intelligence. I like the angles on the Freudian slips. Lets now show NLNG how to service literature.

Posted by Gringo on Oct 18 2009

@Sunday Jimoh Thanks for the clarification.

Posted by kayode on Oct 18 2009

"There wont be a prize. also, the choice of an October 10, was that not the day that Saro Wiwa was killed?" Ibukun Babarinde Hi, Ibukun, Saro Wiwa was killed November 10, not October 10.

Posted by Toks on Oct 18 2009

Dear Sunday Jimoh, I'm stunned to hear that Ugo Ibeneche once lead a choir. She is a dreadful singer! I know because I'm forced to listen to her every Sunday at my church. Molara, lovely call to arms. Let's hope the writers with integrity will all be able to stand up to it.

Posted by Sylvia on Oct 18 2009

Hear! Hear! Ms. Wood. I couldn't have said it better myself.

Posted by sylvia Ofili on Oct 18 2009

@Sunday Jimoh: at UNN?"lead gospel singer"? in the 70's? one album? hahahahahahaha abeg, make una no kill me...that just makes it even more hilarous! It was better when I thought she had none...hahahahahahahahaha

Posted by TO on Oct 18 2009

If I were the arts editor of a newspaper of quality such as NEXT, I would get one, two or three persons whose appeciation of poetic works can be considered respectable. I would ask each of them separately to judge the nine works that had been shorlisted and present their judgments to the my readers. Justaxposed against the Literary Committee statement, we can then proceed to know who is wrong or right? That is, assuming that in this business, there are rights and wrongs. Perhaps, the cause of literature would have been better served that way. Just perhaps.

Posted by joy okoduwa on Oct 18 2009

you have said it all. i also seriously think writers should boycott NLNG for their own good. And ANA should take the bull by the horn and ensure all literary awards in the country worthy of writers patronage are properly defined and credible.

Posted by manny on Oct 18 2009

I guess Naija writers, like Nigerian politicians must be bad losers especially when the carrot is raw cash.

Posted by Tamoo Tiye on Oct 18 2009

As a writer, I have resolutely decided not to enter any of my works for any prize in Nigeria again. And I do intend to start my own prize in the near future for bright Nigerian writers. It may not exactly be $50'000, but will be worth hundred times that sum in credibility.

Posted by Tunji Lardner on Oct 18 2009

A prosaic prattle of pretenders presiding over poetry and prose! Well done Molara for rightly hacking this foolishness to pieces. E be like say you vex well, well

Posted by my2kobo on Oct 18 2009

lol @ sylvia ofili. As a layman to writing and writers, I never saw it this way. Thanks for shining the light M. Wood!

Posted by Kole Odutola on Oct 18 2009

I cannot believe what I am reading here, it is like we all have lost it. A reporter who should maintain a measure of objectivity goes all sentimental and reporter-philosopher like Tunji Lardner gives kudos? What is happening to this profession? Have we lost all the moral bolts that ensure news does not turn into views? Is NEXT a newspaper or Viewspaper? Until someone explains to me what this company stands to gain or benefit from this award if not PUBLICITY...Is there anyone here who has read anything about how the company is run? Year in year out they manage to choke the public space with fights about a prize that pays for the cost of their PR. Please Madam Molara Woood, please stick to reporting the issues and leave the reading public to judge. @TO I feel you and please note that the new journalists are all part-activists who must push their perspectives on us. QED

Posted by Ovo on Oct 18 2009

A sham you say? One is hardly surprised. It's a fair measure of the contemptible depths this country can reach.

Posted by 'Gbolade on Oct 18 2009

Well written Molara. Nice to know we still have writers out there with conscience that can not be bought. Well done!

Posted by joy okoduwa on Oct 18 2009

Na wa o! i thot i posted my thot? i hope the NLNG syndrome is nt playing out it's self here too? But my sincere opinion is that writers should boycott that price next time.

Posted by Rich writer on Oct 19 2009

Well done, Molara. Yes, we should boycott this idiotic, wait to hear who the traitors are next year and hang them by their ears!

Posted by NWILO BURA-BARI V on Oct 19 2009

I'M A WRITER BUT LET THE PAPERS BE OBJECTIVE AND LEAVE THE WRITERS TO THINK ABT OUR NEXT STEPS. AS FOR NLNG - THERE SHOULD BE A REPORT DETAILING THE LINE OF ACTION FOR WHAT WAS DONE IS A SIGN OF INSULT. LET'S KNOW WHAT WENT WRONG AND HOW TO HELP - AS FOR ME, I BELIEVE IN DIALOGUE AND NONVIOLENCE

Posted by Celebrate Mediocrity on Oct 19 2009

Dinner Title: "Celebration of Mediocrity" Hosts: "Nigerian Liquefied and Natural Mediocrity"

Posted by Jide Adebayo-Begun on Oct 19 2009

@Kole Odutola and Nwilo: I think both of you are wrong when you say Molara Wood didn't write objectively. Pleazzze!! let's call a sham a sham! That's objectivity. Go tell Michiko Kakutani to be objective!

Posted by Akinluyi on Oct 19 2009

@Rich writer: How do you intend to actualise a boycott and the eventual lynching?

Posted by Kole Odutola on Oct 19 2009

@Rich Writer, be sure I will enter my sub-standard works next year. @Jide is this an opinion piece or reporting? Do you have an idea about what objectivity means? Let us call a spade a spade before we call a sham a sham. Why is this event a sham? So what has Michiko Kakutani got to do with this? We are told "She is best known for her book reviews. Her harsh critiques of some prominent authors have garnered both attention and, on occasion, criticism. She has been known to write reviews in the voice of movie or book characters" Mafdam Molara Wood is a Nigerian and I see no comparison here. Am I missing something?

Posted by Jeje on Oct 19 2009

@Kole Ade Odutola, you are missing something. Besides, you cannot enter your sub-standard work next year 'cause you're based abroad. To the NLNG writers like you are persona non grata.

Posted by Chuks on Oct 19 2009

@Kole Odutola. Let me clarify: for objective reports about this event please refer to reports in Punch, Guardian, even Next has several, some even linked to this here article. A Next journalist wrote something about "Nine called, none chosen" - pretty objective and straight to the point I'd say. As for this one here by the person you insist on derisorily calling Madam Molara Wood, I was referred to it from another site actually. They called this one a "critique". I hope that goes some way in clearing up any fogginess in your mind. On why that event was a sham, please excuse me, otherwise we'd be here till tomoorrow. Regards.

Posted by Reaper on Oct 19 2009

Theo Vincent, Ayo Banjo and Dan Izevbaye are fellows of NAL (Nigerian Academy of Letter). They conspired to siphon the cash prize off for themselves. Old, greying men without shame or honour. More's the pity.

Posted by Kole Odutola on Oct 20 2009

@Jeje where in my text did you read about my location. Please let the text speak. You do not know me and I do not know you. I will do what is needed to qualify. @Chuks, so madam is derogatory in your dictionary? Haba if you need favors from the writer please do not use me as your foot-mat, you hear? ..and I still do not understand where you are coming from. This is exactly what NLNG wants and each time they remain in the public domain for long. I can tell you that NLNG is reading all these and to God be the glory, I will be given the reward for this support. I NEED an award too or how else will I be rewarded? Lord Chuks any ideas?

Posted by Lisander M on Oct 20 2009

The article writer showed Ayo Banjo no mercy. But the old professor deserves the opprobrium. How can he belittle Exile literature? The 2 most celebrated Nigerian novels of our time, The Famished Road and Half of a Yellow Sun, came from writers living outside Nigeria, and won the Booker and Orange Prizes respectively. NLNG is truly a ghetto prize next to those more illustrious awards. Chimamanda Adichie need IMAGINATION to write about a war that ended years before she was born; and Ben Okri needed MEMORY to write about an Abiku in the Nigerian setting. Shaking my head at Professor Banjo.

Posted by Tade Ipadeola on Oct 20 2009

@Kole Odutola: Erm, its like this... the article is an analysis an not reportage. There is a difference. And I entirely agree that unless and untill NLNG puts its house in order, no sane Nigerian writer should enter his or her works for the ghetto prize.

Posted by Chixzy on Oct 20 2009

Let me ask a frank question and I want you guys to think well before responding-Do we really have writers of quality in this country or hacks-I mean, among the present generation? Two, did Achebe, Soyinka, JP Clark or Okara, write to win awards? I have always had my doubts about these people winning awards, whether, Orange, Booker, Mango or Pawpaw. It has bred a class of writers without depth or without class. Only one or two in the last ten to fifteen years can really be said to really know how to write-IN MY OPINION. Years ago, Prof. Donatus Ibe Nwoga of blessed memory, wrote in the " Limitations of Universal Critical Criteria", that there cannot be universal standards for judging works of literature given diffences in culture, experiences and worldview. So, why do our writers always look to the West for validation of their works? I make this particular comment in respect of the comment by Lisander M complaining that writers in "exile" have been banned from having their works condidered by the NLNG Prize. Most Nigerian writers living acbroad think that because they live in the whiteman's country they are necessarily better than those at home. Anyway, to return to Molara's call for shunning of the prize. This call is long overdue. It is a sham and it is an insult to any self-respecting writer( the problem here is that not many of them are self-respecting)and should be boycotted.

Posted by Kole Odutola on Oct 20 2009

@Tade...How did you come to that conclusion that is it an ANAlysis and not a reportage? You see you are better than myself. You can see things I cannot see. When a piece leads in a paper my foolish self takes it to be news and not opinion of the writer. We learn everyday and thanks Lawyer TI for the media studies 101. I should have known that.....I am ashamed of myself. How did I miss such a simple distinction when it was posted in bold that this is a news ANAlysis...please you all pardon me oooo I will not do that again -:)

Posted by Nnorom Azuonye on Oct 20 2009

Molara Wood's piece is as usual a very good read. Molara of course has a right to boycott the NLNG Prizes and has the right to call other writers to do the same. But what about the right of some of the other writers to desire $50,000 of NLNG money which politicians and soldiers and their cohorts would have blown anyway? My view is that any writer who needs the money more than he needs literary glory should enter the for the prize. The odd seven and half million Naira could put a roof over his family's head or help out with medical bills of a loved one. As long as a writer is not stealing the money, but is grabbing his piece of his national cake with quality or even sub-standard work, that is his prerogative. Personally, I have no desire to enter any of my past or future work to the NLNG prize, but I will never deride anyone who does. We all have our lives and our stories.

Posted by Kole Odutola on Oct 20 2009

@Nnorom, please send me your address so I can send you a part of the prize money when I finally win. You are the greatest. May your shadow not grow less and may you write that Magus Opus before you are 40!!! You are fantastic. The more you good writers stay away the brighter my chances of winning the GOLD medal. Now back to the grinding stone for THE WORK that will win this gas money. NLNG here I come.

Posted by Reaper on Oct 20 2009

A sham is a sham is a sham.

Posted by Akinluyi on Oct 21 2009

Are the manipulated ANA Prizes not even a worse sham?

Posted by Rich writer on Oct 23 2009

@kole: tade said no sane writer should enter so you i guess you are okay to enter your work in order to cream what you can from the oil boys. Everyone knows you are based in the US. @Nnorom: you just need to look hard enough; you'll always be able to justify selling your soul. And for what? This is exactly how people rationalise corruption. Disgraceful!

Posted by Concerned reader on Oct 23 2009

@akinluyi: Akachi Ezeigbo's poems were shortlisted this year. They are the worst i have ever read. ANA prizes are a sham.

Posted by Akinluyi on Oct 24 2009

@Rich Writer: You still have not answered the questions I asked. Meanwhile you must have been reading a different long/shortlist. Akachi Ezeigbo is not on the list this year.

Posted by Rich writer on Oct 24 2009

Yes, she is on this year's ANA shortlist. Which question again? The boycotting? Well that ball is rolling. Re: hanging the writers by the ears, I will start by giving traitors like this Kole Odutola a pubic flogging. The man is a clown and lives in a circus. He is a sell-out, a hungry desperado. Someone gove him some cash so he can give the world a break from his trashy poetry.

Posted by Akinluyi on Oct 24 2009

@Rich Writer; Oh, the ANA shortlist you mean. You should have said the shamlist. That is how it has been for about ten years now. An incestuous arrangement for friends or supporters of the leadership who have made it a profession.One of them is even a publisher so those on his imprint are sure candidates for one of the prizes annually. Imagine if they had their way to administer the NLNG prize, as had been their plan at the inception. But the NLNG folks would have none of that.

Posted by Gringo on Oct 25 2009

@ Akinluyi:Na wah for this our country o. If gold rusts what shall iron do?

Posted by @Gringo: on Oct 28 2009

If gold rusts then it has no value and at that point even iron is better. That is what ANA has become - valueless. Only a place for a few who have made leading the organisation a profession, moving through the ranks from one position to the other.So it has become a mafia, a cult of visionless and unscrupulous people. In no way different from the type of leadership that exists in the country. One day when all the sordid details about the Abuja land, the Ford Foundation Grant, the deal with the Imo State Govt etc come to light, many Nigerians will be shocked that writers in the country can be so corrupt and lacking in integrity.



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