Thankfully
under President Goodluck Jonathan the Igbo managed to do better than at any
other time in our history. As a matter of fact this was so much the case that
Nigerians from other parts of the country, particularly the Yoruba and the
Hausa-Fulani, often sulked about it and openly complained.
Jonathan
had a soft spot for the Igbo and I have little doubt that that partiality was
borne out of his innate sensitivity to their historical trials and
tribulations. It may have been sub-conscious but I have no doubt that it was
there.
Unlike
others he viewed the Igbo as equals and regarded them as human beings: he
treated them with respect and decorum and he gave them their due. Consequently
it was under Jonathan that Lt. General Azubuike Ihejirika the first Igbo Chief
of Army Staff since the civil war was appointed. It was also under Jonathan
that Senator Pius Anyim, the first Igbo Secretary to the Federal Government of
Nigeria since independence was appointed.
Sadly
when President Muhammadu Buhari was elected into office all that changed and
eastern stars stopped shining. Under him the persecution, marginalization,
humiliation, detention, state-sponsored executions and assassinations and
sectarian and ethnic-motivated murder of the Igbo has reached pre-civil war
proportions.
To add to
that the Igbo have been treated with more disdain and contempt by the Buhari
administration than any other government in our entire history. Permit me to
share juat one example of that here.
A few
days ago hordes of AK-47-wielding Fulani herdsmen and militants attacked some
farms in Enugu state. Fearing that the Agatu treatment may be meted out to them
and in order to protect their lives, their families, their property, their
livestock and their crops from the murderous vandals and marauders the Igbo
farmers organised themselves and fought back gallantly.
Consequently
there were casualties on both sides. Instead of the police to come in to
apprehend the Fulani aggressors and raiders, seize their weapons and bring them
to justice they arrested 76 Igbo farmers. Up until today those farmers are in
police custody and their families have had no access to them.
As far as
I am aware not one Fulani militant or herdsman was questioned over this
incident let alone disarmed, caitioned or arrested. As unbelievable as it may
appear this patterm of behaviour by the security agencies has been the norm
throughout the Middle Belt and the south since President Buhari has come to
power.
They have
displayed great reluctance to protect the indigenous people and farmers of
those two regions from the pillaging, killing and raping that the Fulani
herdsmen always subject them to. It is also instructive to note that the
political leaders of the igbo nation appear to have been so intimidated by this
trend of events that none of them has spoken out against the abduction of the
Enugu farmers or condemned the barbarous action of the Fulani herdsmen that
raided their farms.
As a
matter of fact the only two politicians in the entire country that have publicly
expressed concern about the safety, whereabouts and plight of the 76 Igbo
farmers are both from the south west and they are Governor Ayodele Fayose of
Ekiti state and yours truly. Fayose did so in an advert in the newspapers a few
days ago and I did so in my column last week titled “Of Tyrants, Martyrs and
Heroes (Part 2)”.
Everyone
else, including the Igbo Governors. Senators, Ministers, elders and leaders of
their socio-political groups has maintained a curious, submissive and stoic
silence on this matter. I guess that is a sign of the times that we are living
in and I cannot blame them. Given the circumstances and the obvious constraints
of their political leaders and elders why would the younger generation of the
Igbo not agitate and fight for the establisment of Biafra?
This is
especially so given the fact that it is self- evident that under the leadership
of President Buhari igbos, and indeed other southerners, are not just being
subjected to violence in the north but they are also being attacked by
northerners down in their own states in the south.
Southern
leaders are expected to live with this, accept it as the norm and most
importantly they are not expected to defend themselves, defend their people or
complain about the atrocities that they are being subjected to in their own
land.
This
hardly kindles hope for the future of our nation and it certainly does not
engender confidence in our country or enhance national unity. It is clear that
the contempt with which our government views the people of the south and
particularly the igbo is obvious and glaring.
President
Buhari himself, during one of his interviews with Al Jazeera and during the
course of an earlier interview with Nigeria’s NTA, displayed that contempt very
eloquently when, in answer to a question about Nnamdi Kanu, the leader of
IPOB’s prolonged detention and the increasingly aggressive agitation for
Biafra, he asked rather brusquely “what exactly do the Igbo want?”
When he
was told that the Igbo felt marginalised by his government he went further on
to ask “who is marginalizing who?” Again before millions of viewers from all
over the world President Buhari refused to watch the footage of the
extra-judicial killing of some IPOB youths by his security forces when he was
asked to do so during his infamous interview with Al Jazeera.
In that
same interview he went on to dismiss the legitimate aspirations of and
agitation by millions of young people from the eastern part of our country for
the creation of Biafra in just one sentence.
He said
that if they had any complaints they should agitate for more states in the east
instead of yearning for their own country. One wonders how state creation can
appease a generation of angry young Igbos who genuinely believe that their
people are being systematically killed off and that they have been turned into
slaves and second class citizens by Nigeria.
And this
coming from a man who has refused to appoint one single Igbo into the
Presidency and who believes that he has done them a favor by appointing five
Igbo Ministers into his cabinet. He forgets that the constitution of our
country compels him to appoint at least one Minister per state and that whether
he likes it or not he must appoint those five because the Igbos control five
states in the Federation each of which must be represented in the cabinet.
It may
not be fashionable to say it publicly but the truth is that the Igbo are
virtually an endangered species under President Buhari’s government. They have
been robbed of their dignity, their sense of self-worth, their self-esteem and
their self-respect by our government and the Igbo youth particularly do not
believe that they have much of a future left in Nigeria. That is why the
agitation for Biafra has reached fever pitch among them.
Whatever
anyone feels about Biafra the fact of the matter is as follows: as my friend
and brother Chief Orji Uzor Kalu, the former Governor of Abia state, said a few
days ago, “the igbo have not been fully integrated back into Nigeria 46 years
after the civil war”.
Thankfully
not all Igbo voices have been intimidated and silenced. If virtually all the
politicians from the east have not been able to find their voice on this matter
then at least some members of the eastern Clergy have managed to do so. For
example the Methodist Bishop of Onitsha, Bishop B.L. Onuagha, in his address to
mark the 14th annual Diocesan Synod of the Church, which was reported in the
Sun Newspaper yesterday, lamented the plight of his Igbo kinsmen at the hands
of the Fulani militants and herdsmen of Nigeria.
He
concluded his address by advocating the break up of the country. I have known
Bishop Onuagha for many years. We were colleagues at the Presidency between
2003 and 2006 when we both worked as Special Assistants to President Olusegun
Obasanjo. He is a man of vision and faith: a very spiritual man with deep
religious convictions, immense courage, unimpeacheable integrity and
extraordinary passion. He does not speak lightly, he does not suffer fools
gladly and he is a man that must be taken very seriously.
If people
like him are advocating the break-up of our country and calling for the
establishment of Biafra then there really must be a problem and those that are
in power had better sit up. The Bishop spoke his mind on the state of the
Nigerian nation and noted that the amalgamation of 1914 “has not favoured the
Igbo” appealing to world leaders to listen to the south-east and break up “this
monster called amalgamation.”
He said
that since the amalgamation was not working in the interest of the components
of the federation that the best option should be to dissolve it based on the
fact that “a section of the country is suffering enslavement”. The Bishop cited
the activities of the Fulani cattle herdsmen who he said “had displaced
communities, killed, maimed and burgled the people with impunity whilst our
government remains complacent”.
He said,
“amalgamation has brought about the erosion of human dignity, the enslavement
of a section of the people in the name of one Nigeria. This deadly monster has
led to the loss of millions of lives of Igbo and no one is talking about the
genocide. Yes, our culture and that of those in question are not the same. Our
language is not the same, our customs, our tradition, our faith and our
education are not the same. Our values are at variance. Then, why must we be
forced to be in a marriage that we do not want and we see that it is not
favorable?”
He
concluded by saying that he was not surprised that a group was crying for
separation from the ”unholy marriage forced on Nigeria by the British
government in 1914”. Bishop Onuagha has said it all and spoken the hearts and
minds of many throughout the country.
Another
interesting contribution to the debate came from Mr. Bruce Fein, a respected
American constitutional lawyer, who argued very forcefully in a brilliant,
historically-factual, incisive and insightful essay titled “The Case For Biafra
Is Stronger Than South Sudan and Kosovo” that the manner in which the igbo had
been treated in Nigeria since the amalglamtion of 1914 and especially since the
Buhari regime came to power warrants the creation and establishment of the
sovereign and independent State of Biafra. I recommend Fein’s contribution as
essential reading for those that wish to understand the nature and depth of the
problem and the raison d’etre for Biafra.
Yet
despite all these admonitions and warnings those in power do not appear to be
listening and curious and strange things just keep happening. Permit me to
share just one example. The two massive fires that took place in two separate
Kano markets in the space of the last two weeks in which the shops, goods and
stalls of hundreds of igbo settlers and traders were targetted and burnt to the
ground confirms the fact that, once again, there is something sinister brewing
in the north.
Let us
hope that those that kill orhers for sport and at the drop of a hat are not
preparing the ground for a repeat performance of the pre-civil war pogroms of
1966 in which hundreds of thousands of igbo civilians were massacred in the
space of just three months. Predictably the Buhari government have made no
arrests in connection to these two fires and the common and popular refrain is
that they were both “acts of God”.
The truth
is that Nigeria is not working for most of the ethnic nationalities and
everyone knows it. And as long as those that hold power at the center today
remain there things will not get any better. As a matter of fact as long as
they are in power things will get worse. In Buhari’s Nigeria if you are not
from the core north and if you are not a Muslim you do not have much hope of
getting to the top or achieving your full potentials.
That is
“chanji” for you and that is Buhari’s mission and vision. We said it during the
Presidential campaign but regrettably few would listen. Now the same people
that would not listen are regretting it bitterly and they are saying that we
were right.
In
Buhari’s Nigeria it is one law for the oppressed and another for the ”Born to
Rule” oppressor. Whether we wish to admit it or not that is the reality and
everyone knows it. There is also a well-orchestrated attempt to Islamise our
country and suppress the practice of Christianity in some parts within our
shores. Kaduna state is an example and what is going on there is nothing but a
test run for the rest of the country. .
Yet the
truth is that everything has its expiry date including religious bigotry,
bondage and slavery. The oppressor often forgets that the future belongs to the
oppressed. The Irish experience and the beautiful people of Eire and the
Emerald Isle have taught us that. Far away London in merry England was once
their capital yet today it is their very own Dublin. If God can do it for them
He can also do it for us. It is just a matter of time.
Some will
disagree with the contents of this contribution whilst others will hate me for
writing it. To such troubled souls I recommend the words of Albert Einstein. He
said: “Great spirits have always encountered opposition from mediocre minds.
The mediocre mind is incapable of understanding the man who refuses to bow
blindly to conventional prejudices and chooses instead to express his opinions
courageously and honestly”.
I need
say no more
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