Tag: Civil War

  • At a time like this

    At a time like this

    If any era in Nigeria’s history qualified as one of heady optimism, it was the time leading to the inauguration of the Second Republic.

    The wounds of the civil war had healed faster than most people expected. Petrodollars accrued to the national exchequer faster than the authorities could figure out what to do with the new wealth. Biafra had provided powerful intimations of what black humanity can achieve when pursuing common purpose; a re-united Nigeria, home of the largest aggregation of black humanity, was going to take its rightful place in the global community, propelled by the dynamic leadership of Murtala Muhammed and Olusegun Obasanjo.

    Nigerians everywhere walked tall. Those studying abroad, most of them on government scholarships, rushed back on completion of their programmes, believing not only that home was where they belonged but that it was where their future lay. The Naira was worth almost two U.S. dollars. The economy was expanding, and jobs were there for the taking.

    In short, a future that would be marked by prosperity at home and major influence abroad was splendidly visible and clearly attainable.

    The 1979 Constitution, the fundamental law of the Second Republic, reflected the big thinking of that era, the planning for and investing in future political greatness, what with the American-style presidency and other institutions of state, just as a sprawling bureaucracy had planned for and invested in the nation’s future economic greatness.

    Framed by a team boasting some of the nation’s best and brightest, the Constitution was as bold and innovative as the times demanded, and just as comprehensive. It left nothing to chance.

    One of its more notable innovations, which has been attributed in the main to the per-eminent legal scholar Ben Nwabueze, was encapsulated in a Council of State composed of the President and the Vice President, all former presidents or heads of state, all former federal chief justices, the president of the Senate, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, all state governors, and the Federal Attorney-General.

    Its remit, re-stated in the 1999 Constitution, is to advise the President with respect to his duties on a wide range of subjects in general, and on issues relating to the maintenance of public order in particular “when asked to do so.”

    This latter qualification makes it clear that the Council is an advisory body, pure and simple, and that it meets at the pleasure or convenience of the nation’s President. But it does not render it otiose.

    The underlying assumption was that the ex-officio members of the Council would be men and women who, having given of their best to their country, would stay splendidly above the fray and would never again seek elective office nor descend into the pit of partisanship. Thus, their good faith would never be in doubt.

    In a proper setting, the Council would be the repository of the nation’s collective wisdom and experience, a fount of inspiration, a moral force. It would be the body to turn to when the country is buffeted by strife and uncertainty – the very kind of period Nigeria is going through now.

    The nation is paralysed on practically every front. The ruling PDP is in disarray and scheming desperately to hold on to power. The economy is reported to be growing by leaps and bounds, but the nation slips farther and farther down the international misery index. Power supply remains fitful, impervious to the magic wand of privatisation.

    Interstate highways remain dangerously cratered. Youth unemployment, already alarmingly high, is soaring. Fully one-fourth of the crude oil lifted from our shores is stolen, and record-keeping of what is not stolen is scandalously shoddy.

    The immediate future promises only more of the same.

    And at the top, diffidence reigns. Not even the most fervent chants of Transformation can drown out the din of the rank innocence, the utter bewilderment up there.

    It is precisely at a time like this that the Council of State should be deliberating and helping to chart a way forward. However, that very concept has turned out to be another instance in the nation’s life of how a beautiful theory was murdered by a gang of brutal facts.

    The higher echelon of the Council today is not composed of the kind of people the framers of the 1979 Constitution had in mind – elder statesmen whose moral force would flow from exemplary rectitude and distinguished service; persons who would stay splendidly above the fray and would never again seek elective office nor descend into the pit of partisanship.

    General Yakubu Gowon, forever radiating goodwill, would pray and pray but nothing would change. Former president Obasanjo could just take over the proceedings to deliver another blistring missive. Shehu Shagari would turn up more from habit than conviction. General Muhammadu Buhari, still chafing from the outcome of the last presidential election, will not attend a meeting called by a person he regards as a usurper.

    General Babangida says he has finally given up trying to return to power, but he is nothing if not calculating. What example or inspiration can anyone expect from Ernest Shonekan? General Abdulsalami Abubakar is preoccupied tending to the vast fortune he acquired in just one year in the saddle and shopping around for more.

    The state governors could turn the meeting into a forum for settling once and for all – by fisticuffs if necessary – the lingering puzzle of which number is bigger: 19 or 16?

    It is therefore understandable that President Goodluck Jonathan is in no hurry to convene a meeting of the Council, as some of its statutory members are urging him to do. He is not constitutionally obliged to do so. To convene the Council in the present charged atmosphere would be the closest thing to political suicide. I doubt whether a meeting would serve any useful purpose.

    But the drift cannot continue. Dr Jonathan must move quickly to arrest it by reaching out beyond his present inner circle to enlist help from disinterested men and women of undoubted goodwill and sound judgment, people who can tell him what he needs to know rather than what they think he would like to hear.

    Meanwhile, it would help enormously if he travelled less, listened more, and devoted more time to the serious reading that improves the mind and enlarges vision.

  • When is a civil war?

    When is a civil war?

    The International Criminal Court (ICC) recently declared clashes between the Nigerian military and Boko Haram as a civil war.

    Not surprisingly, supervising Minister of Defence, Labaran Maku, says the conflict is not a civil but a war on terror. He justified his position this way: “When the terrorists attacked the United States in September 11, 2001, it wasn’t declared a civil war; it was an attack on a peaceful country by a group of terrorists for mainly evil objectives.”

    Truly, there’s no agreement among experts as to what constitutes a civil war. There is, however, one thing on which Maku and the ICC agree: Nigeria is at war – whether of the civil or terrorist variety. Irrespective of the tag wars involve destruction of lives and property and uncommon expense.

    By classifying the ongoing conflict as only a “war on terror” is the minister suggesting that this kind of confrontation is somehow of lesser gravity?

    Unlike what happened on 9/11, al-Qaeda had no intention to seize and hold territory. Their plan was not to topple the United States government and take over. That is unlike Boko Haram that has never hidden its intention to take over the whole of northern Nigeria and set up an Islamic republic in the manner of the Islamists in northern Mali.

    I came across two dictionary definitions of civil war that I liked. Wikipedia says “a civil war is a war between organised groups within the same nation state or republic.” Another explanation describes it as “a war between citizens of the same country.”

    I like things kept simple. Maku and the army may think they are only fighting terrorists, but Boko Haram who claim to be prosecuting a jihad would not define themselves that way. They are also intent on toppling the government of the day using the North-East as the launch pad for their insurrection.

    It has also the makings of a civil war. The recent attack on the Maiduguri military formations in which the sect rolled into town in a column of pick-up vans underlines the scope of their ambition.

    For as long as the government and military continue to see the Boko Haram conflict as some little firefight, the nation would continue to face the kind of embarrassment it was exposed to in Borno State last week. Remember that when the Nigeria-Biafra civil war began, the Federal authorities spoke of a “police action” to quickly bring the rebels to heel. Three years later the war was still raging.

  • The gathering storm

    The gathering storm

    At no time since the civil war was Nigeria in more perilous times than now. A new report entitled ‘Nigerian Unity in the Balance’, authored for the United States Army War College has, again, warned Nigerian leaders to beware of another civil war or an outright break-up following what it called ongoing divisive trends in the country. The report, released by the Strategic Studies Institute of the U.S War College, was written by two former American servicemen, Gerald McLaughlin and Clarence J. Bouchat. The foreword written by the Director, Strategic Studies Institute and U.S. Army War College, Professor Douglas Lovelace, observed that secessionist tendencies are endemic in Nigeria. Under such stresses, it emphasised, Nigerian unity may fail. Should Nigerian leaders mismanage the political economy and reinforce centrifugal forces in the country, Nigeria could break up along its previously identified fault lines, the report concluded. Unfortunately, in Nigeria where we are content with living in denial, presidential spokespersons will readily lecture you as to how ‘political wrangling among competing interests has no consequences on the nation’s political stability whatsoever’.

    Conversely, unlike us Nigerians, Americans scholars don’t just talk; rather they talk, based on observable and verifiable facts which are then subjected to serious interrogation at the end of which the most likely probabilities are drawn.

    In tandem with these American views, a Nigerian Oxford scholar, Dr Antony Akinola, recently observed as follows on our current circumstances: “At the national level, we are getting more and more divided on sectional, ethnic and religious bases during Jonathan’s regime than at any other time in our national history. The Nigeria Governors’ Forum is fractured; further bringing out the divisive tendencies in the polity. The governing party itself is fissured, wobbling towards collapse. The president has had to assume emergency powers, the most extreme of presidential powers, to provide security, failing even the most basic ingredient of governance, that of passing national budget,” even in the third quarter of the financial year.

    Neither Papa Edwin Clark nor Asari Dokubo is helping matters with their bellicose tantrums. The north is not sitting idle. But while the north is yet at the visualising stage, the presidency has moved, deliberately stoking the fires of avoidable conflagration all over the place. And to them it matters not if that move is the most banal or the most illogical, as long as they can show us they are in power. Therefore at the Nigeria Governors’ Forum, the president is backing those who stand logic and common sense on the head, claiming, tenaciously, that 16 is greater than 19 and, funny enough, a whole state governor permits himself to be so paraded. From there their agents have gone to the Rivers State House of Assembly, desecrated it under the watchful eyes of a federal agent, doubling as a police commissioner. Also, in Rivers State, in what has become the norm, the presidency is earnestly backing those who claim that 5 is greater than 27 and Mr President is believed to have since received in the Villa that great joke – one Evans Bipi – who claims he is Speaker and mouthing the profanity that Mrs Jonathan, the President’s wife, is his Jesus, albeit with a small j. And you can bet that if push comes to shove, the state police commissioner will be backing him all the way in that ludicrous claim. But that wasn’t the first time either.

    Before inviting Gov Jang to the Villa Mr. President had first recognised him as his own NGF chairman at the PDP Family Dinner at which Baba Anenih pretended to be the seminal author of the automatic nomination idea even when he was nothing more than a puppet. A perspicacious scholar has recently asked if there would be a President Jonathan today if Chief Clark had succeeded in his ‘Gowon forever’ campaign of the ’60’s or Anenih in both his Abacha forever campaign as well as his support for Obasanjo’s ill-fated Third Term Project.

    Now, while the north is restive and both the east and the south south appear to be working in tandem, mum is the word in the southwest and since nature abhors a vacuum, the presidency is assiduously working on how to use the zone as its launching pad for 2015. Today, all manner of discredited politicians attend Afenifere meetings just as some otherwise respected elders, who had, without a doubt, rendered sterling services in the cause of the Yoruba, are being had on the cheap for no other reason than to weaken the region ahead of the 2015 agenda. How, for instance, were some of the elders going to fund the spurious ‘political parties’ they are exhuming or claim to champion if not through some underhand means like the so-called oil security contract, since hopefully successfully shot down, and, what electoral purpose are they supposed to serve other than act as agent provocateurs and spoilers of the majority wish of our people in the region? Today, no thanks to them, there is not a single Yoruba leader who can successfully call a meeting of Yorubas across the political divide except in a dire emergency which we do not pray for.

    But it would still have been tolerable if the presidency was content to stop at that. Rather, they have much more dangerous designs on the southwest beginning from the 2014 governorship elections in both Ekiti and Osun states during which they intend to test run their 2015 do-or-die but extremely risky electoral shenanigans, using none other than some Yoruba politicians, in the typical ‘use a monkey to catch a monkey’ scenario.

    As at the moment, the story in town in Ekiti is that the President is rooting for his one-time benefactor, and now Minister of Police Affairs, Navy Capt Caleb Olubolade, which we learn is why one of their candidates, former governor Ayo Fayose, who believes he stands the best chance to square up to the sitting governor in the election, is dead set against a consensus candidate. He has just now been suspended. But also going the rounds, is the whispering information that the President is keen on supporting Olubolade so that once the minister resigns, he would be gifted the opportunity to name a ‘do or die’ member of the colony of Ekiti PDP gubernatorial wannabes as the new minister whose primary duty, he would be instructed, is to ‘win’ Ekiti for the PDP, no matter how.

    This should not come as a surprise because Obasanjo had set that precedent. Determined to win Ekiti for PDP in 2007, he manufactured the inchoate impeachment of Governor Ayo Fayose so he could put his kinsman, the Emergency Administrator, in place to ensure that. The events of the night of the election, 14 April, 2007, when results dramatically changed when Ekitis were already dancing on the streets for Dr Fayemi’s victory, more than confirmed that. And Nigerians know all that followed.

    Today, things are worse for the PDP in the southwest and in Ekiti, in particular. Apart from PDP’s utter confusion as a party, Ekitis have come to see and know the meaning of multi-sectoral development and the finer differences between PDP and AC N. Thanks to the administration of Dr John Kayode Fayemi. It is therefore in the best interests of professional riggers, and do and die politicians, no matter how seemingly powerful, not to think of any ‘Fehingbepon’, meaning, there would be no room here in the southwest for any act of impunity.

    Two egregious errors

    Last Sunday, on the Law makers’ salaries the following explanatory words: “figures represent proportion of persons per GPD’, was mistakenly cut off.

    Also, I wrote that Professor Oritshajolomi Thomas was sacked on 17 November, 1973. No, it should have read 17, November, 1975.

    Both errors are duly regretted.

    Arthur Medeiros, adieu

    We lost a wonderful friend this past week. We are here referring to the likes of Chief Bayo Famotibe, Engr Dave Oni, the Oniwinde twin brothers, Taiwo and Kehinde (Junior), and, of course, Akin Medeiros, his own brother and Mrs Bimbo Johnson, his niece. Arthur, a dashingly handsome and absolutely gregarious young man in our Apapa road days, when COOL CATS INN was our watering hole, passed on as a result of complications arising from a stroke which he suffered some years back. We will sure miss him.

    We commiserate with the family he left behind: the wife, the children, Kemi and Femi, the grandchildren and his siblings.

    May the good Lord rest him.

  • Bomb discovered in Imo 40 years after civil war

    A family in Umuoma Autonomous Community, Owerri West Local Government Area of Imo State, was shocked at the weekend to discover undetonated dynamite buried in its compound.

    The bomb, suspected to have been laid during the civil war, was buried in Igbokwe’s compound at Ukwo-Umuoma.

    A police source said the bomb was discovered after several rains that washed away the soil, thereby exposing the edge of the item suspected to have been buried in the compound during the civil war.

    It was not clear whether the bomb was planted by Nigerian troops or Biafran soldiers.

    But a source said the area was the base of Biafran troops, when Owerri sector fell to Federal troops.

    A villager, who pleaded for anonymity, said: “Some children were playing in the compound after the rain, when one of them observed a strange object buried in the ground with some parts exposed.

    “The people in the compound did not know that they have been living with a destructive weapon for over 40 years.”

    It was learnt that on discovery, the police were invited. The Police Anti-Bomb Squad detonated the bomb.

    The source said the bomb experts detonated the bomb in a nearby bush.

    Police spokesman Joy Elemoko confirmed the incident.

  • A swamp called Syria

    A swamp called Syria

    •Civil War is as a crazed lion devouring its own flesh; only the sobriety that comes from weariness shall stop it.

    War is hell. Civil war is hell gone mad. Once fighting began, Syria became a tragedy foretold. A society and government short on tolerance but fully conversant with ruthlessness and its attendant crafts of misrule were thrust into tumult by the protests many cheered as part of the “Arab Spring.” Arab it was. Spring it wasn’t. As events unfolded, what occurred proved worse than the most biting winter.

    A harsh nation in a dark neighborhood where friends are more dangerous than enemies, Syria was not well suited for the protests. Rarely do protests against a paranoid regime yield placid results. While liberty and justice might be the aim, the result tends toward the opposite initially. Dictators do not respond to democratic protests by offering the olive branch or more democracy. They respond by offering more dictatorship. Such was the case in Syria. The morally vacant Assad regime would flash the mailed fist to deal with the protests.

    A minority government with a callous reputation, the Assad regime knew the protests could roll into something challenging the regime’s very survival. The friends Assad has in the international community could be counted on fingers of one hand yet leaving at least two of those digits unencumbered in the accounting. Lurking behind the protests was the sectarian rivalry between Assad’s Alawite minority and the nation’s Sunni majority. Unless the protesters backed down after their initial forays, conflagration was inevitable. For good measure, toss in subterranean tribal fissures in both camps and a dose of international intrigue as leaven. The contrived peace that had been imposed by force was set to expire. It would do so in puffs of smoke, fusillades of bullets and the roadside heaping of the corpses of the innocent, the guilty and the indifferent.

    This is the worst type of civil war. Pitting a minority regime against a fragmented majority opposition, the eruption forecasted stalemate. The regime enjoys the preponderance of material assets but not by such numbers as to overcome its lack of faithful followers. Most in government belong to the Sunni majority. Their membership in government was a marriage of convenience. Few things are as inconvenient as civil war. When the pinch came, their loyalty also became suspect. For Assad, this is more than a pinch. It is a vise grip closing on his throat. Thus, his government has effectively shrunk to where half of those in it are suspected opposition collaborators. Assad fights the rebels while keeping his second eye on perceived enemies within. It is hard enough to quash an uprising using all a government’s assets and energy. Using half of that inventory makes the task impossible.

    The rebels have greater people power but the power is unharnessed, wild and as often directed against internecine rivals as against the ogre government. Thusly fragmented, it cannot be viewed as a unified opposition. It too is a marriage of convenience, wedding genuine democrats, opportunists, carpetbaggers, tribalists, Sunni chauvinists, and radical jihadists. Should Assad suddenly fall, these disparate elements will lunge with equal ferocity at each other as much as they will attack the hapless remnant of Assad loyalists. Because they lack unity and also have inferior arsenals and military experience, the rebels are not strong enough by themselves to topple Assad.

    Aided by Iran, Iraq and Hezbollah, Assad has tipped the extant balance in his favor. He still remains unable to exterminate the rebels. As things stand, however, he believes he can preside over a rump Syria. Given the alternative of dangling from the wrong end of a thick rope or of being hauled before the International Criminal Court, Assad would gladly rule this abbreviated tract indefinitely.

    Meanwhile the rebels are furious at the West. In Western calls for Assad’s departure, the rebels thought they heard the unmistaken language of material support. They saw Libya being repeated in their homeland. The West wanted Assad gone but did not want to entangle themselves in protracted misadventure. Libya had proven harder than envisioned. Syria would be harder still, with the outcome less certain. Te West, including America, has given clandestine support and weapons but not at a decisive magnitude. This dollop augments the war materiel provided by conservative Sunni regimes like Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and Qatar; still, the total cannot tip the scales.

    Ironically, some of these weapons will fall into the possession of Al Qaeda and other jihadist elements in the opposition. That this same situation played in Libya brings into question the primacy the West, especially America, publicly gives its anti-terrorism policies. While Syria can be considered a bad card in all categories, it is hard to believe Syria has been a more active and geographically diverse terrorist threat than Al Qaeda and its jumble of franchises and affiliated groups. Apparently, the war on terror has conditional primacy for the West. If there is chance to pick off an unfriendly Middle Eastern nation, the West will cooperate with the dreaded terrorists to achieve the task, even though who might ascend to govern the downcast nation remains uncertain. This tryst with terror groups strengthens the groups by equipping them and giving them a fighting chance at influence in or even leadership of the newborn government. Apparently, the West would rather toss the future of unfriendly nations upon the wheel of blind fortune than to focus on minimizing the impact of terrorist groups. Western nations evidently believe they can stifle large-scale attacks on their territories. Thus, they can now return to the timeworn practice of picking off recalcitrant nations.

    This policy shows neo-conservative thought retains primacy even after the Bush years. President Bush designated several nations as evil. Syria was among them. While the world has moved on and danger spots have evolved, American policy seems to have remained static at its core. This is a most curious and low-minded policy. Osama bin Laden was begotten by the blowback from the West’s cynical support for jihadists in Afghanistan during the 1980s. This time it might produce a scourge more virulent. Hopefully, it will not be born in the urban battlefields of a crumbling Syria. However, if the West persists with this tack, the blowback will occur in some desolate, broken land.

    The war has stabbed into the marrow of Syrian society. The death toll exceeds 70,000; one million people have been displaced. More are disfigured and wounded. None will forget this grisly woe. Horror is written on the face of children and lodges in the wombs of those who should be giving birth to a more optimistic generation. The mounting violence ferments sectarian tension. Senseless killing demands an answer: That answer is usually hatred. With each innocent Sunni killed, other Sunnis inch closer to blaming all Alawites for wanting to suppress them. The death of a guiltless Alawite sparks fear in that community of a bloodbath should Assad fall. Neighbor looks at long-time neighbor with new fear. In a civil war, even the initially indifferent become partisan because the ethnic or sectarian divide that shapes the battlefield comes to define the entire nation. This already harsh political system and the society underpinning are sundering, gradually but inexorably to the point that repair will be measured in decades not in years.

    Superimpose international rivalry on this picture. What emerges is the turbid portrait of a genuine catastrophe.

    Heretofore the West hoped to oust Assad by the power of positive thinking. When this failed, the spigot of clandestine aid was opened. That proved inadequate. A few months ago in an attempt to restrain Assad and pre-position the Syrian leader as being criminally responsible for potential American intervention, the American president proclaimed the use of chemical weapons would be “a game changer,” implying America would deliver militarily decisive aid to the opposition or get even more directly involved. The statement was tantamount to striding out on a narrow ledge. It would encourage renegade Syrian troops or rebels to deploy chemical weapons on a small scale to provoke a massive U.S. response. It would make little sense for Assad to order such a deployment unless he was certain the American statement was pure bluff. Assad is ruthless but not so reckless as to take the unnecessary gamble. The inhumane use of any chemical weapons was probably done by solders outside the chain-of-command or by agents provocateurs trying to elicit a muscular American response.

    When confronted by foggy evidence of deployment of the despicable weapons, President Obama wisely retreated from the precipice. Exercising prudence, he did not take the bait. His move was roundly condemned by America’s conservatives as having sacrificed the nation’s credibility. These people complain because they somehow ache for more war notwithstanding Afghanistan and Iraq. They seem to prefer America on permanent war footing. It must be good for their stock portfolios as it makes little sense from the standpoint of national interests. To his credit, Obama ignored their protestations. He realized leaping to war based on such scant evidence would not have added to America’s global credibility. It would have confirmed either American naiveté or its war lust.

    European leaders have been more hawkish than President Obama. In the face of Assad’s recently military gains, the European Union seeks to reestablish a more even balance. Consequently, it ended the arms embargo on Syria, meaning it will start openly supplying the opposition. However, given the EU’s history of half promises and given the uneven Libyan performance of key EU members, the opposition still might be disappointed by the wares it gets. The EU move will place pressure on America to openly supply the rebels. At some point, America will join the line.

    Meanwhile, Israeli takes occasional potshots at Syrian installations and Hezbollah soldiers entering Syria. Israel dislikes Assad because of his support for Hezbollah in Lebanon and because of the disputed Golan Heights. However, Israel is wary of his downfall because of the complete breakdown of order it might occasion. Israel would rather see Syria in indefinite turmoil. The uncertainty furnishes a credible reason for Israel to be skittish about peace talks with anyone, including the Palestinians. Moreover, the global attention directed at Syria deflects the overall pressure on Israel to talk peace.

    On Syria’s side stand Russia, Iran, Iraq and Hezbollah. In the shadows, hides China. Russia has too much invested in Syria, including a naval installation, to walk away from Assad. In a demonstration of support that counters the EU arms action and that will make Israel think twice about airstrikes, Russia is giving Assad new anti-air missiles. No nation makes such an expensive, obvious gift to a leader who it believes will soon be scurrying for his life. Iran has been Syria’s best friend in the region. Iran needs a friendly Syria as a conduit to Hezbollah in Lebanon. Without a cordial Syria, Hezbollah’s supply line is truncated to the extent the group will lose ground in Lebanon. Thus, Assad’s fight for survival is its own. Iraq is also a conduit of war materiel and personnel to Syria and Hezbollah. A Syria in the hands of a Sunni government with jihadist inclinations could foment Sunni resentment in Iraq, moving that already frail, febrile nation to the threshold of civil war. The Syrian crisis magnifies the Sunni/Shi’a divide throughout the region which could spark real problems in other nations.

    On balance, the western nations opposing Assad are stronger than the half-handful aligned with him. While this is serious business, it remains a bit of a lark for the West. Their existence is not threatened by the war. They have something to gain but little to lose in the contest. They will calculate how much to invest and will go no further. For them, this is a limited proxy war. For Assad’s allies, especially Iran, Iraq and Hezbollah, more is at stake. Significant interests, if not their outright existence, hold in the balance. While they have fewer assets than the West, they are willing to give more from the little they have. Much like the internal Syrian balance, the international balance of power and effort portends stalemate. However, the introduction of additional weaponry will escalate the lethality and destructiveness of the stalemate.

    In what is likely a hollow gesture at this point, the US and Russia, though on opposite sides of this matter, joined by the UN seek to sponsor peace talks. Buoyed by recent tactical military gains, Assad is eager to attend talks. With his ship currently riding high tide, any agreement achieved at the talks must memorialize his currently strong position. A few months ago, observers were talking about the regime collapsing from within and Assad escaping in the dead of night with but the shirt on his back. Today, he speaks of running for reelection next year. The opposition has no present desire for talks. Their sine qua non is Assad’s ouster; but a strong Assad will not step toward the exit let alone walk through it. Consequently, the opposition wants to continue fighting in order to change the shape of the battlefield before approaching the negotiating table.

    This problem is inherent with all wars, particularly civil wars. Rarely do both sides simultaneously see an advantage in negotiating. It may take years and concomitant war fatigue before the parties negotiate. In war, combatants rarely come to the table as a function of wisdom or reason. They usually do so because out of weariness.

    Without divine intervention or the sudden irruption of wisdom among the leaders of both sides, war shall continue for some time to come. Those who head the rival sides have little to fear personally war’s continuance. They live in padded comfort far from the daily misery and the macabre. They bear little of the physical brunt of war. They don’t experience the physical danger or the material deprivation. The anonymous, common man, woman and child whose only dream was to live a decent existence in relative peace and comfort will bear the brunt.

    Their dreams now shattered, they exist to survive. They are no longer human beings. They are objects in a dreadful game of sniper fire, indiscriminate bombing and rash executions. For them, this is not war and this war is not about them or their interests. In a situation like this, the prospective leaders who hold the interests of the people to heart are rarely those who possess enough military power to take over. Those who hold such power, on either side of the fight, are not those most interested in the people. This war is but a contest between those who want to rule but not necessarily improve the nation. For the Syrian people, this war is hell. For the rest of us, it is a hellish reminder that the best way to end a civil war is never to start one.

  • Civil War as literary tonic

    Civil War as literary tonic

    One of Nigeria’s most traumatic periods was the civil war years. However, it has also become one of its most fecund period in terms of intellect. It produced lots of literature that have become world class, Edozie Udeze reflects on this.

    At the end of the World War II in 1945, the then British Prime Minister, Winston Churchill, was asked by a journalist how he felt about the war. He retorted: “Oh, the war? It was a beautiful war, a wonderful war.” And an obviously flabbergasted reporter then thundered back at him; “But why? Why do you say so?” Churchill, who led the British forces to victory over the intransigent forces of Adolf Hitler and his allies, threw back his head and laughed, “Because we will write about the war ourselves.”

    A few years after, Churchill did not only produce so many memoirs on the war, and how it was fought and won, he ended up winning the Nobel Prize in Literature. Today the experience of World War II still ranks as one of the most single event in world affairs that has produced the largest number of literature and literary documents. Mostly in literature, what shapes a writer’s world-view is what he has experienced or encountered or seen others suffer or wade through in life.

    In the Nigerian literary firmament, the Civil War of 1967 – 1970 has come to dominate the literary zeal and attention of most writers. Since the war ended, over 200 materials in different genres of literature by Nigerians and foreigners have been produced. As it is now, even the younger generation of writers is still writing on the history of the war, exploring new styles and themes and approaches.

    According to Professor Akachi Adimora-Ezeigbo who teaches literature at the University of Lagos, writings on the Civil War will not cease. “Historical experiences will always continue to inspire writers, even future writers who have not been born today. Writers can always approach the issue from different angles; somebody could approach it from the perspective of children in the war, soldiers in the war or the civilians.” Ezeigbo’s Roses and Bullets which is on the war, equally made the shortlist of Wole Soyinka Literature Prize this year. A number of tertiary institutions offer it both at the graduate and post graduate levels. So also is Chimamanda Adichie’s Half of a Yellow sun and For the love of Biafra (a play) which are making waves presently.

    The lesson in the documentation of the civil war experiences is that it threw up a lot of writers especially among the military. In the words of Arnold Udoka, a playwright and poet, the war was not just the explosion of guns and bombs and air raids, it was also an internal raid and explosion of intelligence. It has contributed a lot of criticism to Nigeria’s literary sphere. Authors have basically explored and are still exploring the four genres of literature – prose, poetry, drama and children’s literature. It produced a fantastic drama entitled The Biafran Road by late Dr. Ogonna Agu. A lot of other plays are underway”.

    Udoka who has written several poems on his personal experiences about the war, opined that the greatest beauty of it all is that most lettered soldiers who participated in the war were able to pen down something for posterity. “Yes,” he said, “most of the soldiers who we thought were unlettered, we later learnt were not. The military were made up of highly intelligent people, who while in the thick of the war were gathering materials to write books. This is one of the beauties of the war. But unfortunately a lot of Nigerians still see and regard the war as basically a Biafran palaver.”

    The lesson

    Nigerians, he said should study and read the works by Olusegun Obasanjo, Ben Gbulie, Alex Madiebo, Mamman Vatsa (the doyen of military poetry) Joe Garba and such other military personnel, to learn first hand what war does to the psyche of a society. “These writers showed their outburst in literary firmament of the country. Their works led to the development of literature and literary affairs. Beyond that, we need to address the areas of peace and war studies in relation to the war and literature generally in the country,” Udoka further stated.

    Although many Literature Departments in tertiary institutions now offer the civil war literature as a course, Chijioke Uwasomba, a Literature teacher at the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) Ile-Ife, Osun State, insists that more needs to be done to elevate it to the level of attention given to European and other aspects of literature. “We should do it in such a way that it permeates the society and penetrate the inner being of everybody. In fact, the way we are going no one seems to have learnt anything from the war. Seriously speaking the experiences of the war ought to make us sober and reflective and serious about a reoccurrence; about the cohesion and unity of this country,” Uwasomba said.

    Udoka is equally not comfortable with the way the federal government is handling the aftermath of the war. He said: “I am not even sure if it is being studied at the Nigerian Institute of International Affairs (NIIA) as a subject or at the War College, Kaduna. These are the issues we need to address so that people will get to know the whys and why not of the civil war. Those who handle peace and war courses need to understand this in order to know what to teach the students.”

    War literatures, both fictions and non-fictions, should be studied regularly to know the kind of political and economic situations being addressed by these works. They will help the country to know what to avoid in order not to fight again. What the war has done is that it did not only spill a lot of blood, it has generated bundles of literature and academic works that help for the social and economic development of the country. Nigerians need to look deep into all these.

    Ezeigbo’s account of how she experienced the war should also serve as a lesson in this regard. “Yes,” she said, grinning, “I was a special constable. We were given military training, actually. I was in secondary school when the war started and some of us were trained as Red Cross personnel. But we did not go to the war front. What I did was take part in security and then train other constables. I also worked in a refugee camp when I finished my work as a special constable. Well, I used part of my experience to explore some of the issues in the novel. I had relations who went to war and told us the story… The activities of the youths who were organizing entertainments and dramas to help raise some money for the army were also explored in the novel,” she said.

    Part of what she and others presented in their works have further exposed and explored the futility of war and what both the leaders and the led should continuously do to oil the wheel of progress of a society like Nigeria where ethnicity and narrow interests continue to occupy the psyche of the people.

    Yet like Uwasomba rightly observed: Forty-two years after the war, what lessons have we learnt; what new cultural values have we imbibed to make Nigeria a better and conducive place for all irrespective of a person’s place of birth, ethnic group, faith or persuasion in life? This is what people should be pondering over as the nation marks its 52 years anniversary and looks forward to renewed efforts at unifying the people based on equity, love and progress.