Category: Uncategorized

  • The memoir: There was a country

    The memoir: There was a country

    The persecution of the Igbo didn’t end with the Biafran conflict. Until the nation faces up to this, its mediocrity will continue

    Almost 30 years before Rwanda, before Darfur, more than 2 million people-mothers, children, babies, civilians-lost their lives as a result of the blatantly callous and unnecessary policies enacted by the leaders of the federal government of Nigeria.

    As a writer, I believe that it is fundamentally important, indeed essential to our humanity, to ask the hard questions, in order to better understand ourselves and our neighbours. Where there is justification for further investigation, justice should be served.

    In the case of the Nigeria-Biafra war there is precious little relevant literature that helps answer these questions. Did the federal government of Nigeria engage in the genocide of its Igbo citizens who set up the Republic of Biafra in 1967 through punitive policies, the most notorious being starvation as a legitimate weapon of war? Is the information blockade around the war a case of calculated historical suppression? Why has the war not been discussed, or taught to the young, more than 40 years after its end? Are we perpetually doomed to repeat the errors of the past because we are too stubborn to learn from them?

    The Oxford English Dictionary defines genocide as the deliberate and systematic extermination of an ethnic or national group … The UN general assembly defined it in 1946 as …a denial of the right of existence of entire human groups. Throughout the conflict the Biafrans consistently charged that the Nigerians had a design to exterminate the Igbo people from the face of the earth. This calculation, the Biafrans insisted, was predicated on a holy jihad proclaimed by mainly Islamic extremists in the Nigerian army and supported by the policies of economic blockade that prevented shipments of humanitarian aid, food and supplies to the needy in Biafra.

    Supporters of the federal government position maintain that a war was being waged and the premise of all wars is for one side to emerge as the victor. Overly ambitious actors may have taken actions unbecoming of international conventions of human rights, but these things happen everywhere. This same group often cites findings, from organisations (sanctioned by the federal government) that sent observers during the crisis, that there was no clear intent on behalf of the Nigerian troops to wipe out the Igbo people … pointing out that over 30,000 Igbo still lived in Lagos, and half a million in the mid-west.But if the diabolical disregard for human life seen during the war was not due to the northern military elite’s jihadist or genocidal obsession, then why were there more small arms used on Biafran soil than during the entire second world war? Why were there 100,000 casualties on the much larger Nigerian side compared with more than 2 million “mainly children” Biafrans killed?

    It is important to point out that most Nigerians were against the war and abhorred the senseless violence that ensued. The wartime cabinet of General Gowon, the military ruler, it should also be remembered, was full of intellectuals like Chief Obafemi Awolowo among others who came up with a boatload of infamous and regrettable policies. A statement credited to Awolowo and echoed by his cohorts is the most callous and unfortunate: all is fair in war, and starvation is one of the weapons of war. I don’t see why we should feed our enemies fat in order for them to fight harder.

    It is my impression that Awolowo was driven by an overriding ambition for power, for himself and for his Yoruba people. There is, on the surface at least, nothing wrong with those aspirations. However, Awolowo saw the dominant Igbo at the time as the obstacles to that goal, and when the opportunity arose with the Nigeria-Biafra war, his ambition drove him into a frenzy to go to every length to achieve his dreams. In the Biafran case it meant hatching up a diabolical policy to reduce the numbers of his enemies significantly through starvation eliminating over two million people, mainly members of future generations.

    The federal government’s actions soon after the war could be seen not as conciliatory but as outright hostile. After the conflict ended, the same hardliners in the Nigerian government cast Igbo in the role of treasonable felons and wreckers of the nation and got the regime to adopt a banking policy that nullified any bank account operated during the war by the Biafrans. A flat sum of 20 Nigerian pounds was approved for each Igbo depositor, regardless of the amount of deposit. If there was ever a measure put in place to stunt, or even obliterate, the economy of a people, this was it.

    After that outrageous charade, Nigeria ’s leaders sought to devastate the resilient and emerging eastern commercial sector even further by banning the import of secondhand clothing and stockfish, two trade items that they knew the burgeoning market towns of Onitsha , Aba and Nnewi needed to re-emerge. Their fear was that these communities, fully reconstituted, would then serve as the economic engines for the reconstruction of the entire Eastern Region.

    There are many international observers who believe that Gowon’s actions after the war were magnanimous and laudable. There are tons of treatises that talk about how the Igbo were wonderfully integrated into Nigeria . Well, I have news for them: The Igbos were not and continue not to be reintegrated into Nigeria , one of the main reasons for the country’s continued backwardness.

    Borrowing from the Marshall plan for Europe after the second world war, the federal government launched an elaborate scheme highlighted by three Rs “for reconstruction, rehabilitation, and reconciliation. The only difference is that, while the Americans actually carried out all three prongs of the strategy, Nigeria ’s federal government did not.

    What has consistently escaped most Nigerians in this entire travesty is the fact that mediocrity destroys the very fabric of a country as surely as a war ushering in all sorts of banality, ineptitude, corruption and debauchery. Nations enshrine mediocrity as their modus operandi, and create the fertile ground for the rise of tyrants and other base elements of the society, by silently assenting to the dismantling of systems of excellence because they do not immediately benefit one specific ethnic, racial, political, or special-interest group. That, in my humble opinion, is precisely where Nigeria finds itself today.

  • ‘Mimiko should apologise or face court action’

    ‘Mimiko should apologise or face court action’

    An Akure activist and lawyer, Mr. Morakinyo Ogele, has described a news attributed to the Mimiko Campaign Organisation that Ekiti State is being used as a base by the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) to import arms and thugs for the October 20 poll, not only as ridiculous, but designed to create confusion and enmity between Ondo and Ekiti states.

    He said: “This is the first time such a wicked and baseless allegation will be levelled against the most peaceful state in Nigeria.

    “Labour Party (LP) is on the verge of destroying Ondo State.

    “Ekiti State indigenes are peace loving people that detest violence. For a governor drowning to frame such an allegation is senseless.

    “The Mimiko administration has been terrorising the opposition in Ondo State. This is a state where government is expected to guarantee security.

    “While the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and ACN are telling the masses how they will improve their living conditions, Mimiko is busy framing up lies. The only language LP understands is violence.

    “I hereby give Governor Olusegun Mimiko seven days to retract the story, otherwise I will not hesitate to begin a litigation. I also give him seven days ultimatum to resign for his inability to provide security in the state. A letter of apology should be written to Governor Kayode Fayemi.”

  • I would’ve opposed Nigeria’s Independence, says Afe Babalola

    I would’ve opposed Nigeria’s Independence, says Afe Babalola

    Founder of the Afe Babalola University, Ado-Ekiti (ABUAD), Chief Afe Babalola (SAN) has said he would have opposed Nigeria’s Independence in 1960, if he had enough political influence then.

    Regretting the situation of things in Nigeria, the legal luminary said the colonial lords would have made better use of the country’s oil, which was discovered after Independence, and stabilised the economy.

    He said Nigeria’s wealth now services the “bloated” civil service and the “corrupt leadership”.

    Babalola warned Nigeria against borrowing to develop the rail system. He said the projects should be concessioned to multinational corporations.

    He spoke in Ado-Ekiti on Wednesday while hosting the central executive of the Institute of Chattered Accountants of Nigeria (ICAN), led by its President, Mr. Adedoyin Owolabi.

    The association conferred a honorary merit award on Babalola.

    Babalola said corruption was responsible for the country’s stunted growth and blamed ICAN members for refusing to speak against it.

    He said: “ICAN shares in the blame for refusing to raise a voice against corruption. You are the most powerful group in the economy of this country. Your voice cannot be sidelined even by the president.

    “Nigeria has no reason to borrow a kobo from overseas. You know how much we generate from oil, but you did not cry out. You should be the directors of this economy. We make money from oil, apart from the one stolen on the sea. Borrowing will continue to undermine Nigeria’s development.

    “Government officials continue to borrow money for the future generations and you accountants do not cry out. Despite the huge debt profile of the country and the money made from oil, the railway system has collapsed, the roads are bad and education is not well funded.

    “We do not need to borrow to fix railway or roads. There are companies ready to build them on Build, Operate and Transfer (BOT) basis. The sad thing about borrowing in Nigeria today is this: Half of the money borrowed goes to maintain the civil service structure and the other half is stolen.”

    Babalola said Nigeria, which is blessed with abundant human and material resources, has regrettably become one of the poorest nations in the world. He said the constitution of a National Conference is being opposed by a few people benefiting from the present situation.

    Urging the Federal Government to create a thriving environment for private universities, the SAN said the best universities in the world, including Harvard, Yale and Stanford, are owned by private interests.

    Owolabi said Babalola’s singular “effort to transform education in the country deserves commendation”.

    He described ABUAD as “one of the wonders of the modern world.”

    Owolabi said: “I know how long it took the Federal Government to build the old universities. I know how long it took state governments to build their universities. ABUAD is just three years old and it is already a wonder. One can only imagine what it would be when it is 10 years.”

  • Residents of submerged Delta communities seek help

    After floods submerged their communities, washing away farmlands and threatening their temporary shelters, residents of about 22 clans in Ndokwa-East Local Government Area of Delta State are looking up to the federal and state governments for help.

    “Nearly all of Aboh, headquarters of the council, is submerged and there is concern about the traditional ruler, Obi Imegwu II, who is in dire need of evacuation now,” Hon. Oyibosochukwu Mike Nwabueze, a former Deputy Chairman of the council, told Newsextra on the telephone on Wednesday. “We need help.”

    Since late last month, flood waters have been sloshing downstream from the Niger River with such terrific force, washing off farmlands in low-lying communities in Ndokwa-East.

    The residents, who are predominantly farmers, hurriedly started harvesting their crops which include yams, cassava and plantain, among others. But they could only gather little due to the fast advancing floods. They fled for dear life. In some cases, emotions got the best of the farmers, who wept profusely seeing their season’s crops go to waste.

    Floods are a seasonal occurrence, even expected, in the area. But the people have not experienced anything o f this magnitude in living memory. Some said a similar disaster occurred shortly after the Civil War, submerging part of Onuaboh Clan, consisting of three communities. The current water attack has left no perching ground in the community. Every house has gone under.

    Some residents sought refuge in upland neighbouring communities such as Umunor from where Chief Gilbert Nwakude told Newsextra on the telephone that they are, at least, happy to be alive. Many of his crops are still underwater, as is his homestead and, indeed, the entire community, home to several thousands of people. Other communities such as Inyi, Aballa, Onicha-Utchi, Asaba-Utchi, Okpai, Ibedeni, Onya, Ase, Asaba-Ase, amongst others, suffered the same fate, spreading grief in the area.

    “It is wise to keep your doors open so that the flood waters will go in and out,” said Mr. Donatus Nwadocheli. “Some houses have collapsed under the impact of water, which massed up against closed doors.”

    Some residents, who own canoes, sailed with their families to Ashaka in the local government, and then Kwale, headquarters of Ndokwa-West Local Government Area. Some ended up in those places with the help of public-spirited individuals, while some others benefitted from the state government’s rescue efforts. Red Cross has been helpful.

    Hon. Nwabueze said the state government’s committee on the disaster, headed by Deputy Governor Amos Utuama, has approved relief camps, one in Ossissa community, another in Ivrogbo in Isoko area of the state, though a great deal of the sacked residents are sheltering in Ashaka and Kwale. But the worry now is that both towns are also in danger, some parts of which are even flooded and others threatened.

    “In a day or two, my family and I will move what we can out of our house because the water is about two meters away,” Mr. Lucky Chiejine, a landlord in Kwale, said on Wednesday. “It is strange, but that is the situation.”

    There are human casualties. A headmaster is said to have died in Inyi, another large clan of three qaurters, all of which under water. The traditional ruler of Adiai, His Highness Enuesike II, is still missing. A member of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) deployed to Aboh, drowned as the boat on which he was being evacuated to Ashaka capsized.

    There are other losses and worries. Nwabueze’s car is trapped, his piggery and fish pond submerged. Many others suffered similar losses. Facilities in communities where the flood victims are sheltering have been overstretched. It is even said that house rent has shot up astronomically, deepening the woes of the disaster victims.

    In the approved relief camps, some makeshift toilets have been provided, said Nwabueze, who is part of the rescue and rehabilitation efforts. But such facilities are insufficient.

    “We need help from the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), the State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) and other relevant agencies,” said Mr. Larry Ezechi, a youth leader who has also been helping with rescue work.

    Many are looking up to the federal and state governments to bring not just immediate succour but also long-term relief.

    Nwabueze fears an epidemic outbreak if sanitary conditions are not improved in the camps. He said the people also need food because many of them were evacuated with little or no supplies. The former number two man in the local government listed other needs to include medication, mosquito nets and clothing.

    Chief Azuka Nwachukwu, a community leader, said the people will need much assistance after the floods, too.

    If that support comes, it will help not just the devastated communities but several other places in the state and beyond. How? Being essentially farmers, residents of the flooded communities not only depend on what they grow to survive; they also ferry the bulk of their produce to markets at Kwale and other towns to be sold to local consumers and merchants from far-flung locations.

    To avert food crisis in the area in the coming year, the farmers need financial aid to buy seedlings of yam and cassava and plantain suckers. They also need help to rebuild their homes, many of which have given way under the impact of the floods.

  • 70-year-old man banished for defiling three-year-old in Imo

    A 70-year-old man, Pa Magnus Okechukwu, of Utulu, Oru West Local Government Area of Imo State, has been sent on exile for defiling a three-year-old girl.

    The old man allegedly lured the girl into his bedroom on the pretext that he wanted to send her on an errand at 7pm.

    Pa Okechukwu was said to have dragged the girl into his bedroom and raped her.

    The old man was said to be married and has grown-up children.

    He reportedly warned the girl to keep the matter secret, threatening to kill her.

    When the girl got home, her father was said to have found her bleeding and crying from pains.

    The woman said: “When I saw my daughter, her clothes were torn and she was weeping and bleeding. When I asked her what happened, she told me that Pa Okechukwu tore her clothes and raped her. I raised the alarm and my neighbours gathered.”

    The community’s traditional ruler, Eze Sunday Nnabue, told The Nation on phone that he could not comment on the matter.

    But a community leader, Ochamaka Anozie, confirmed the incident.

    He said the punitive measure was taken to serve as a deterrent to others.

  • ACN raises alarm over LP’s plot to kill chieftains

    group on the platform of the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN),the Independent Campaign Network (ICN), yesterday raised the alarm over an alleged plot by the Labour Party (LP) government to kill some chieftains of the ACN in Owo Local Government.

    The group also alleged that some of the governor’s aides, who hail from the community, had imported arms for the attack.

    A statement signed by ICN’s Director, Communication and Strategy Bureau, Mr. Bosun Oladimeji, said some of the weapons imported included 36 AK 47 rifles, six pistols and motorcycles.

    He alleged that the arms would be distributed to the party’s thugs who are to attack at night.

    Oladimeji said: “Information reaching us has proved that the arms and ammunition were imported into the community by Governor Mimiko’s aides last night (Wednesday night) and kept in the campaign office of a commissioner in Mimiko’s exco, who is from the town.

    “We warn members of the Amalgamated Motorcycle Owners and Riders Association of Nigeria (ACOMORAN) not to allow some desperate politicians to tarnish the image of the association.

    “We urge security agencies to investigate this matter, because our party leaders are not animals. Is it a crime for someone to be a member of the ACN in Ondo State? It is now clear to the world that Mimiko is jittery over the rising profile of the ACN.

    “It is unfortunate that the security operatives have failed to guarantee the safety of members of the opposition parties. But no amount of intimidation or harassment will stop the electorate from voting out the LP government.”

  • Oshiomhole warns tax defaulters

    Edo State Governor Adams Oshiomhole yesterday warned that tax defaulters to pay up.

    He said it is sad that while low-income earners pay their taxes, the rich do not.

    Oshiomhole spoke at the plenary session of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) at the St. Matthews Anglican Cathedral in Benin, the state capital.

    He said: “We have emphasised that we must re-invent the concept of tax. Workers at the University of Benin Teaching Hospital (UBTH) are on strike over tax payment. Tax payment is a federal law; it was not made by me.

    “People who think they can evade tax because they are working in sensitive places need to rethink. If a sick person is brought to the hospital, the fact of his being sick does not preclude the person from paying for his treatment.

    “I have a couple of times paid the hospital bills of indigent patients at UBTH, who were not discharged because they had not paid for their treatment. If you can detain the poor on account of his being unable to pay his medical bills, who are you not to pay tax?

    “We sealed the Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN) and the Petroleum Products Marketing Company (PPMC) for tax evasion. If motor mechanics pay and commercial motorcyclists pay tax, there is no reason a federal agency should evade tax.

    “It is very fashionable in Nigeria for people to spend N50 million on weddings, N100 million on birthdays and even much more on funerals, but such persons are often unwilling to pay five per cent tax.

    “In such a situation, it is better to send them to prison, just to remind them that the prison is not meant for only the poor. The prison is meant for those who flout the criminal law.”

    Oshiomhole said it was sad that 52 years after independence, the masses were getting poorer. He blamed it on the absence of good governance.

    The governor said: “The state must create a good environment for the people to operate. If politicians try to divert attention, the church must stand on the side of truth.

    “In Edo State, we have tried our best; first to regain the confidence that Edo is viable. We have made modest efforts to restore hope, but what we have done is nothing compared to what we need to do to get to the level that we deserve.”

    State CAN Chairman Rev. Peter Imasuen said the theme of this year’s plenary is: “Fostering Good Governance”.

    He said: “Good governance is all about accountability and transparency. Despite increasing democracy and stability in sub-Saharan Africa, corruption and conflict remain serious barriers to ending extreme poverty.”

  • NDLEA arrests NURTW chair, others in Ondo

    Chairman of the National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW), Taxi Unit in Ondo State, Mr. Ojo Adewole and seven other union officials have been arrested by men of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA).

    It was learnt that the suspects were caught with 18 kilogrammes of substance suspected to be Indian hemp in their office.

    Fourteen AK 47 rifles, machetes, axes and cudgels were allegedly found in their possession.

    It was gathered that some top government officials are mounting pressure on the NDLEA to release the suspects.

    It was learnt that the suspects are loyalists of a party and alleged to have been induced to cause mayhem during the rally of the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), as well as disrupt the October 20 governorship election.

    NDLEA spokesman Peter Achibong confirmed the report, but said the suspects were not arrested for possession of illicit drugs.

    Some political observers urged the NDLEA not to succumb to the pressure from top government officials seeking the suspects’ release.

    They suggested that the suspects be detained until after the election.

  • ACN demands redeployment of Police Commissioner

    The Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) has called on the Inspector-General of Police, Alhaji Mohammed Abubakar, to redeploy the Ondo State Commissioner of Police to forestall chaos in the state.

    According to a statement issued in Lagos yesterday by the party’s National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, the call was made by the ACN Chairman, Chief Bisi Akande and the governorship candidate, Mr. Rotimi Akeredolu, at a campaign rally held in Ore.

    They said the police commissioner has shown his preference for the Labour Party (LP), instead of being neutral as demanded by the sensitivity of his office.

    They said unless the partisan police boss is removed, the clamour for a free, fair and creditable poll on October 20 will be a mirage.

    Justifying the call, they said the Commissioner of Police has failed to respond to the attacks on ACN supporters in the past two days, during the party’s campaign rallies in Ikare and Ondo towns.

    “It has become a recurring experience in the last two days for suspected LP thugs to unleash terror on ACN supporters at the end of their campaign rallies.

    “After the rally in Ondo on Wednesday, some supporters of the ACN including a notable artiste, Ojo Arowosafe (aka Fadeyi Oloro) and a popular Ewi exponent, Femi Elaloro, were attacked by suspected LP hoodlums. They injured them and damaged their vehicles.

    “The Commissioner of Police, who was contacted, dismissed Akeredolu’s report, alleging that the ACN instigated the violence. Such action is not good for the conduct of a free and fair election. He must be redeployed without delay,” ACN said.

  • Opposition unites against PDP

    Opposition parties in Plateau State, under the umbrella of the Conference for All Nigerian Political Parties (CNPP), have chosen a consensus candidate to contest against the ruling Peoples Democratic Party’s (PDP’s) in tomorrow’s National Assembly by-election in Plateau North.

    CNPP said five parties are contesting the election fixed for tomorrow.

    The state chairman of all opposition parties in the state, Alhaji Muhammed Kanam, spoke at a media briefing in Jos yesterday.

    He said: “CNPP had five candidates for this election and we have resolved that it is wise to collapse them into one consensus candidate”

    “The good thing is that all the five parties under CNPP presented very credible candidates, however, the CNPP takes a look at the background that we are facing PDP, the party in government.

    “We sincerely believe that allowing five candidates to stand against the PDP is also to accept defeat before the votes are counted.”