Tag: fantasy

  • Flight of fantasy

    An idea is much like beauty, its appeal is in the eye of the beholder. That must be why there’s been so much firestorm over the sheer ingenuity in statecraft unveiled lately in Nigeria’s southeast state of Imo.

    State Governor Rochas Okorocha came up with the brainball of an idea and he’s just not being appreciated for it. He minted a crisp ‘Ministry of Happiness and Purpose Fulfillment’ out of the state’s dreary bureaucracy and named his biological kid sister, Mrs. Ogechi Ololo, to oversee the portfolio. But no one seems happy with this governance novelty other than the appointed happiness commissioner and, of course, the governor with his camp. What philistinism!

    How much else can artsmanship in the handling of a bogus bureaucracy get? Ololo was among 28 commissioners sworn into cabinet by Okorocha penultimate Monday to administer Imo – a state with a population of some 3.9million people, going by the grossly outdated but only available official data of the 2006 census. That is not counting the army of aides and advisers to the governor, of which Ololo was one before her emergence as happiness commissioner. Let’s be clear that straight comparisms hardly ever reflect all the factual underpinnings of reality. But just to make a point, you could match the Imo bureaucracy against the 18-ministry structure known to exist in Anambra State with a population of 4.1million people, courtesy of the 2006 census data; or the 24 ministries in Lagos State with a hotly disputed population of some 9million people, using the same 2006 census benchmark. Okorocha’s administration of Imo State is a swamping bureaucracy, and the governor surely needs as many structures as fancy can throw up to sustain the sprawl. So, what’s the fuss?

    Even the designation and mandate of the new ministry appear to yet be patchworks in motion. How then could anyone in good conscience foreclose its deliverables?

    At Ololo’s swearing in, her portfolio was cited in official records as ‘Ministry of Happiness and Couple’s Fulfillment’. And as the public erupted in uproar against the statecraft masterstroke, she jumped in to educate the undiscerning on the bounties that her brief holds. “I am truly surprised by the outbursts…(against) His Excellency, Dr. Rochas Okorocha. If you don’t understand something, keep quiet, read and research. Make good use of your senses,” she wrote on her Twitter handle @MrsOgechiOlolo, which she only recently signed up to, apparently to take issue with critics of her appointment. Ololo said the mandate of her new ministry included ensuring that Imo people remain happy despite all odds, and that couples in the state have a more fulfiling experience. Her words: “In a time when couples’ divorce is at all-time high, I will use my good office to ensure couples in Imo (are) fulfilled and serve as examples to the world.”

    It however seems doubtful that Ololo got her job description right at her inauguration by the governor. Because shortly after her tweet, the Okorocha administration renamed the portfolio ‘Ministry of Happiness and Purpose Fulfillment.’ The governor’s spokesman blamed the initial tag on the printer’s devil, saying: “There was a typographic error in the first statement issued on the swearing in of the new commissioners. The word ‘couple’ was inadvertently written, instead of the word ‘purpose.’ We regret that.” Error noted. And Madame Commissioner had been stomping the waves to deliver on couples!

    But that is just by the way. The point is, the design of the new ministry and its mandate remain in a flux, never mind that the attached cabinet post is squarely nailed down for the governor’s kid sister. So we can’t in honesty prejudge that the innovation is superfluous, can we?

    Actually, Okorocha himself said as much. In the face of public fury at the seeming prodigal nepotism, he said the impact of the new ministry would confound critics. “At the end of the day, the achievements of the new Ministry of Happiness and Purpose Fulfillment will be so amazing that critics of the initiative will not only be shocked, but will also regret to have drawn the curtain (against) the new ministry even before it takes off,” his spokesman said in a statement.

    The governor acknowledged the confidence crisis spilling over from his recent unveiling of South African President Jacob Zuma’s statue, to which N520million price tag was attached. He insisted though that Zuma deserved the controversial honour. “The criticisms that greeted (the) Zuma statue were all anchored on corruption allegations against the South African President. Yet, the fact remains the man is still the president of that country. He has neither been sentenced to imprisonment nor impeached as president following these corruption claims,” the government statement added.

    But if you take the Imo doctrine as scripture, Zuma could well be the proverbial prophet without honour in his home. Because only last week, the embattled leader lost two court cases linking him to corruption in one day. Pretoria’s high court ordered him to raise a judicial inquiry into graft charges against him, calling the president “seriously reckless” for challenging recommendations to that effect by the country’s watchdog. In another suit, the judge ruled that he abused judicial processes by trying to block a report linking him to corruption, and ordered him to pay the legal fees out of his own pocket.

    Ololo’s throwback to global precedents in justifying her new brief gets quite instructive upon scrutiny. “Let me educate Nigerians on this, for those lacking ignorance (sic). United Arab Emirates has ministers of happiness and they are ahead of us,” she had tweeted.

    Well, the UAE is the first and only Arab nation thus far to cite citizens’ happiness as a portfolio of government, naming a minister of state for happiness in February 2016. But it is moot that is the reason “they are ahead of us.” Leadership in the oil-rich country is relentlessly posterity-minded in developmental exertions and resource application – goals that seem helplessly a mirage in our clime. Isn’t the country a favourite playground for pleasure seekers, including Nigeria’s wealthy class? And the country isn’t letting up just yet. At the same time that he appointed a happiness minister, the UAE premier reformatted the Cabinet ministry to take an additional brief for future strategies, thus becoming ‘Ministry of Cabinet Affairs and the Future’.

    Even then, expectations from the UAE happiness minister have not been so clear-cut. In an interview with the Los Angeles Times sometime this year, Ohood Al Roumi said she gets strange requests like: ‘My parents won’t accept my marriage. Can you help convince them?’ or ‘I got a traffic ticket. Can you fix it?’ Sometimes it’s just a simple plea: ‘Please make us happy,’ the paper reported. What Roumi was clear about, though, were the obligations of government. “We have no intention as government to impose happiness, or mandate it, or force it. We’re just doing the right things for our people … so they can have a better life,” she reportedly said. If you look into Okorocha’s Imo, would you say you couldn’t see the ‘better life’ genie running lose?

    There are a few other countries in the happiness race. Remote Himalayas kingdom of Bhutan enshrined the goal in Article 9 of its law and measures growth, not by the conventional gross domestic product (GDP) instrument but by the gross national happiness (GNH) index. Venezuela in 2013 created a Supreme Social Happiness ministry; and just last week, the only Indian state with happiness ministry, the central state of Madhya Pradesh, declared the minister wanted for murder.

    It isn’t very clear how much inspiration these parallels hold for Okorocha’s experiment. But Ndi Imo, Ndi Nigeria, a genius is at work. Let us be happy!

     

    • Please join me on kayodeidowu.blogspot.be for conversation.
  • FICTION: When fantasy becomes a reality

    FICTION: When fantasy becomes a reality

    I am very sure, the dream of every young teenager is to see their fantasies play out in real life. But that they never seem to understand that if life was an open cheque that could really go bad. As an underage girl, I wasn’t quite different from those in the fantasizing world but looking back, I think reality and its attendant effect dawned on me abruptly.

    The day was precisely 3rd June 2000, when I met “Alex Martins”. Funny enough, he was to be the beginning and end of my fantasies, in terms of who a real boyfriend should be. I had met him through a mutual friend and the chemistry that sparked in the course of our handshake sent a lot of shivers down my spine. After that meeting, one thing led to another and we began to see ourselves “in camera”. I got so engrossed that I became ” love blinded “, started seeing things from his own perspective, entered into the emotional world with his name as my password and the unfolding event from the emotional world was enough to make me want his love the more, thus praying for an eternal relationship with a fairy tale ending. Soon he started pushing advances at me, wanting to be intimate. By the way, here was I, a virgin and naive, but also too “love drunk” to resist.

    I finally gave into the pressure, maybe it was part of the fantasy. Listen, I had barely known him for 2months although I was worried, we fixed a date and a venue. Trust me, as the D-day finally came, I was anticipating with love and fear, the last thing I remembered was that I was dressed at my best because I was going to be giving out the map to my hidden treasure. I had sneaked out of the house to the hotel, of course with Alex’s helping hand. We had secured a room, after which we got emotional. Having let my guards down and loose, with one thrust, reality dawned on me that I had been “incorporated” into ” womanhood”. To be fair, love making with him had been a mixture of pain and pleasure, after which, sleep was the next thing on my mind.

    The morning after got me becoming a realist and traumatised, I had woken to an empty room and a stark naked lady, which was obviously me. After getting dressed, I called Alex but his number was not available. For the rest of the day, I kept trying the number but all to no avail. At this point, I need to say, I felt used, stupid, scared, foolish and trust me, these feelings weren’t helping matters. Mum and dad on their own part, were furious and breathing fire down my back after they found out the whole escapade. In my naivety, and sensing trouble, so I had to tell them. When I was done, we got into the car and headed for the hotel. At the hotel, we enquired from the receptionist about Alex Martins, but she said that there was none by that name according to the visitors’ list.

    After two weeks, I found out I was pregnant.This was the last straw, as my parents made up their mind, as regarding my case. I was to be sent to the village, to stay with my grandparents, thus effectively ending my city life, as all my schooling henceforth, was to be in the village.This marked the beginning of my long process to self-realisation and ‘reality’.

    I need to take a little break, as Ifunaya, my daughter runs up to me, asking that I see her report card. I honestly have tried to hate her, but all I get is me just loving her. She has her father’s facial features but a lot of my mother’s independence and tenacity. Every time I see Ihunaya, and that is for the past six years, I see the tangible seed of my silly mistake.

    I have grown up, a wiser and smarter woman, with a beautiful daughter to go with. Certainly, reality had set in and all my fantasy has evaporated, leaving him with the full weight of life’s reality in its wake.

  • Housing for all: Living on fantasy island?

    Housing for all: Living on fantasy island?

    The phrase-affordable ousing, has become more of a cliché because not many Nigerians can afford the so-called houses. It is not only the houses provided by private developers that are beyond the reach of mst Nigerians, the ones built by the government are equally offered at punitive prices.

    The reason for this is not far fetched: it is simply because the cost of getting these houses are completely prohibitive. Those that need to be accommodated- the lower and middle income earners cannot afford them. It is more disheartening, when the government that has  the social responsibility of providing shelter for its people put on sale, houses that are priced beyond the income of the people they were targeted at.

    For instance, the Ogun State Property and Investment Company (OPIC), in its New Makun City housing scheme at Shagamu interchange on the Lagos-Ibadan expressway, has placed a N15 million price tag on a three-bedroom bungalow sitting on about 78 square meters. The price is said to be inclusive of a plot of land, which OPIC priced at N2.5 million.

    The same goes for that of Lagos State under the Lagos Home Owners Mortgage Scheme (LagosHOMS), where Lagosians, truly desirous of partaking in the scheme, have cried out against its high cost. Under this scheme, depending on the location, a one-bedroom unit in a block of flats can cost as much as N5.7 million. Fears are that with the free fall of the naira, the prices may be reviewed upwards as the cost of construction will definitely rise.

    More worrisome is the initial deposit of between 10 and 30 per cent required for these houses. At N5.7 million, 30 per cent deposit translates to N1.71 million. Now, with the minimum wage pegged at N18, 000 per month, that translates to N216, 000 per annum.

    The question now is: Can there truly be affordable housing in the country? What is the way out of this?

    The Chief Executive Officer, Aggregates and Concrete, Lafarge Africa Plc, Mr. Loren Zanin, explained that houses have become expensive in this clime because efforts to reduce the country’s housing deficit, estimated at 17 million, are not commensurate with the population growth.

    According to him, affordable housing means building homes that are accessible to the vast majority of the people adding that his firm has a team that builds high quality and affordable houses which people are happy to live in.

     Affordable housing model

    The concept of affordable housing according to Zanin, is a general term which again is relative in interpretation. For instance, he explained that N50million can be affordable to some people, while N2million can be affordable to others. “So it depends on the homeo wner,” he said. He said his firm is only making homes available by creating access to home ownership. One of the major things, he explained, is cost, a factor that has motivated the firm to go into affordable housing initiative with the aim of bringing down construction costs through technology.

    Zanin said the firm works with some developers, who provide the land and the cement giant, Lafarge, which  provides the technology. By this, he said, construction is industrialised, making it faster, neater and with minimal wastage. “This is where affordability comes in. The other area the firm focuses on is making bricks that are durable,” Zanin said, adding that “the target is to build and bring the cost as low as possible, since our focus is on the low-income earners, those at the end of the pyramid.

    “We have two ways of doing that: the microfinance scheme and mass housing. So, if it has volume and is required to have low cost, you will find us there.”

    He  added  that  even though houses are not available for the base of the pyramid, it is also not available for the middle class, thereby making the term “affordability” relative.

    Foray into affordable housing

    He said Lafarge Africa is not new to this concept, but only just trying to make it more efficient and deliver more quality units to home owners. “We have been into housing for 193 years, but now we are focusing more on what we want to deliver. It is not just in Nigeria, in Malawi, we do affordable housing; in France. We also do affordable housing because even in the developed countries, there is need for low cost housing for the citizens,” he explained, adding that this year, LaFarge Africa’s target is to build at least 3,000 homes in Nigeria.

     

    Achieving the feat

    Already, concrete steps seem to have been taken by the firm to achieve the target. For instance, the firm recently signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with Fortis Microfinance Bank for the provision of 3,000 housing units target this year. With this, the firm hopes to reach more home owners and have better spread of homes.

    Head, Affordable Housing & Building, Lafarge Africa Plc., Mrs. Jumoke Adegunle, buttressed this position. She said through the company’s partnerships with Shelter Afrique, LAPO Microfinance Bank, among others, more houses have been delivered to the public. “We look at ways we can take advantage of these partnerships, relationships and in-house strength to make sure that we deliver value and also avoid some risks. Some of them are beyond our control, but we have to carry on because the future of Nigeria is very bright. Also, there is an existing partnership between Lafarge and Ogun State. Talks are also at an advanced stage with Lagos State government. “The cement manufacturing giant is also currently working in the Northeast too where there are a lot of displaced people, to provide them shelter. There is a lot of oil, gas, agriculture and people. So, the potential is very high and we are positioned, this year may not be as good, but next year, we are hoping that things will be much better. We  can’t  just stop because things are tough,” Adegunle explained.

    She said while the country is waiting for the government to do something,  there is a lot going on in the business space. This is where her firm sees projections and tries to work as much as possible within them. For instance, Adegunle said with 17 million housing deficit, and an ever growing population, then there’s a lot of houses to be built.

     

    Govt policy vs affordability

    Both Zanin  and Adegunle agree that one of the biggest issues affecting  homes affordability is the high interest rate on mortgage for homeowners. For certain category of people, they advised government to have facility to make it lower. “Some people can afford to pay 20 per cent interest rate, for instance, but for some others, it should be much lower; that will be  a huge advantage if the government can reduce the cost of mortgage. It is a big factor in housing provision,” Adegunle said.

    Besides, Zanin disclosed that government policy summersault has remained a natural fear in the country, obviously because of past experience. He, however, said Lafarge has not had any troubles with the government.

    Indeed, the era of affordable housing may still remain unattainable, especially because many developers run from affordable housing because small profit margin believed to be associated with it. But according to Zanin, this may not be the case again, especially when his firm’s technology, which comes with speed, less wastages compared to when brick and mortar are used, are deployed. This is because it reduces the cost of homes and housing to between 15 and 20 per cent.

    Given the prevailing scarcity of land in places such as Lagos, Zanin feared that since a lot of people prefer bungalows to high-rise buildings with some space around them for  gardens, the challenge of affordable housing may linger.

  • Sweet memories and some fantasy

    MANDY was in her second year on campus when she ran into Bode, a simple and very unassuming gentleman. They liked one another and they had so many things in common which made the relationship exciting and full of prospect.

    She was always ready to tell her friends that this was her dream man. He actually helped to fill all the missing gaps in her life and for those two years that they shared together it was a dream come true. But somewhere along the line, one of her friends came in between them and they fell apart.

    So, what went wrong and who was responsible for this emotional mess? “He started listening to other people’s opinion about me and a lot of times they fed him with lies. Initially, I went to different lengths to prove my innocence but it got to a point where I realised that they was no point crying over spilt milk. It actually worsened the situation and always made me sad.“

    About fifteen months after the break in emotional transmission, Bode discovered the truths. He apologised and wanted to come back. But somehow, Mandy was not as eager as he was. She was afraid that the old scenarios were going to play up again and there was this fear of the unknown.

    Arguments should never be about right or wrong. It should be about what will encourage a healthier relationship. This is done by talking (not yelling) through issues and not only forgiving your partner but being a mature personality in the emotional arena.

    By not letting go of an issue, they will fester over time and cause you to operate negatively in your relationship as if you are in a war zone. Operating in a relationship that was built in love can metamorphose to something terrible. And if you allow yourself to move in this direction as you would do in a war, then it will make you to look at your partner as the enemy and not your partner. The truth of the matter is that it is impossible to be happy and enjoy life when you are constantly in “defence mode.”

    Yes, that sadly is what a lot of people experience in their relationship. On the other hand, it feels better when what you feel brings ecstasy, sweet memories and some fantasy. A colourful relationship can therefore be compared with the rainbow which ushers you into a breath of fresh air.

    Emotionally, we respond to colours as they fit the time of day or year. Lack of sunlight can cause mood swings, depression and low energy level. You appreciate the combination in the rainbow in you understands what some of the colours stand for. For instance, blue is the colour of distance and you can relate this to the oceans, skies and the heavens.

    The energy of blue helps us to hook beyond the immediate environment, expanding our perceptions towards the unknown. As we swing to yellow you get entangled with the sun and its life-giving and sustaining energy. Yellow enriches, lightens and activates many of the systems of the body. Are you fascinated with the colours? Well, there is still a lot of excitement for you as you track your emotional rainbow.

    The words you say and the things you do are very important. It is better to learn how to say the right things at the right time. This actually would give a lasting impression about who you are and where you intend to take the relationship to. Unfortunately, most women never really recognise that they have been making a critical mistake all along in the bid to “save the relationship”.

    While they work desperately to keep the one treasure, they end up discouraging their Romeo by saying things he doesn’t really like. Surprisingly, they never figure out that this particular mistake they keep making is the thing that is actually pushing the man far and further away instead of bringing him closer.

    Something the woman may think that talking things through is all it takes to make things better. They couldn’t be more wrong. Interestingly, at such moments, the best way to save your relationship isn’t more about talking, or sacrificing, or convincing, or even criticizing. It’s figuring out how to inspire your man by doing the things and being the woman that made him feel passionate about you in the beginning.

    It is always better to understand the personality that you are entangled with and the things that he or she likes or dislikes. Once this is settled, then you can move on to the next stages by sealing the deal with affectionate strategies .This would have to be applied in phases and it is better to take one step at a time and not do the last things first.

    So, you can see that it doesn’t have to be hard at all. Because if you’re able to make a critical psychological “shift” in the way you feel about yourself and your relationship, the changes that need to happen are going to happen effortlessly and naturally.

  • Obafemi Awolowo and Chinua Achebe’s tale of fantasy

    Obafemi Awolowo and Chinua Achebe’s tale of fantasy

    I am a historian and I have always believed that if we want to talk history, we must be dispassionate, objective and factual. We must take the emotion out of it and we must always tell the truth. The worst thing that anyone can do is to try to re-write history and indulge in historical revisionism. This is especially so when the person is a reverred figure and a literary icon. Sadly it is in the light of such historical revisionism that I view Professor Chinua Achebe’s assertion (which is reflected in his latest and highly celebrated book titled ‘’There Was A Country’) that Chief Obafemi Awolowo, the late and much-loved Leader of the Yoruba, was responsible for the genocide that the igbos suffered during the civil war. This claim is not only false but it is also, frankly speaking, utterly absurd. Not only is Professor Achebe indulging in perfidy, not only is he being utterly dishonest and disengenious but he is also turning history upside down and indulging in what I would describe as ethnic chauvinism.

    I am one of those that has always had tremendous sympathy for the igbo cause during the civil war. I am also an admirer of Colonel Emeka Odumegwu Ojukwu who stood up for his people when it mattered the most and when they were being slaughtered by rampaging mobs in the northern part of our country. At least 100,000 igbos were killed in those northern pogroms which took place before the civil war and which indeed led directly to it. This was not only an outrage but it was also a tragedy of monuemental proportions.Yet we must not allow our emotion or our sympathy for the suffering of the igbo at the hands of northern mobs before the war started to becloud our sense of reasoning as regards what actually happened during the prosecution of the war itself. It is important to set the record straight and not to be selective in our application and recollection of the facts when considering what actually led to the starvation of hundreds of thousands of igbo women, children and civilians during that war. And, unlike others, I do not deny the fact that hundreds of thousands were starved to death as a consequence of the blockade that was imposed on Biafra by the Nigerian Federal Government. To deny that this actually happened would a lie. It is a historical fact. Again I do not deny the fact that Awolowo publically defended the blockade and indeed told the world that it was perfectly legitimate for any government to impose such a blockade on the territory of their enemies in times of war. Awolowo said it, this is a matter of historical record and he was qouted in a number of British newspapers as having said so at the time. Yet he spoke nothing but the truth. And whether anyone likes to hear it or not he was absolutely right in what he said. Let me give you an example. During the Second World War a blockade was imposed on Germany, Japan and Italy by the Allied Forces and this was very effective. It weakened the Axis powers considerably and this was one of the reasons why the war ended at the time that it did. If there had been no blockade the Second World War would have gone on for considerably longer. In the case of the Nigerian civil war though the story did not stop at the fact that a blockade was imposed by the Federal Government which led to the suffering, starvation, pain, death and hardship of the civilian igbo population or that Awolowo defended it. That is only half the story.

    There was a lot more to it and the fact that Achebe and most of our igbo brothers and sisters always conveniently forget to mention the other half of the story is something that causes some of us from outside igboland considerable concern and never ceases to amaze us. The bitter truth is that if anyone is to be blamed for the hundreds of thousands of igbos that died from starvation during the civil war it was not Chief Awolowo or even General Yakubu Gowon but rather it was Colonel Emeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu himself. I say this because it is a matter of public record and a historical fact that the Federal Government of Nigeria made a very generous offer to Ojukwu and the Biafrans to open a road corridor for food to be ferried to the igbos and to lessen the suffering of their civilian population. This was as a consequence of a deal that was brokered by the international community who were concerned about the suffering of the igbo civilian population and the death and hardship that the blockade was causing to them. Unfortunately Ojukwu turned this down flatly and instead insisted that the food should be flown into Biafra by air in the dead of the night. This was unacceptable to the Federal Government because it meant that the Biafrans could, and indeed would, have used such night flights to smuggle badly needed arms and ammunition into their country for usage by their soldiers. That was where the problem came from and that was the issue. Quite apart from that Ojukwu found it expedient and convenient to allow his people to starve to death and to broadcast it on television screens all over the world in order to attract sympathy for the igbo cause and for propaganda purposes. And this worked beautifully for him.

    Ambassador Ralph Uweche, who was the Special Envoy to France for the Biafran Government during the civil war and who is the leader of Ohaeneze, the leading igbo political and socio-cultural organisation today, attested to this in his excellent book titled ‘’Reflections On The Nigerian Civil War’’. That book was factual and honest and I would urge people like Achebe to go and read it well. The self-serving role of Ojukwu and many of the Biafran intelligensia and elites and their insensitivity to the suffering of their own people during the course of the war was well enunciated in that book. The fact of the matter is that the starvation and suffering of hundreds of thousands of igbo men, women and children during the civil war was seen and used as a convenient tool of propaganda by Ojukwu and that is precisely why he rejected the offer of a food corridor by the Nigerian Government. When those that belong to the post civil war generation of the igbo are wondering who was responsible for the genocide and mass starvation of their forefathers during the war they must firstly look within themselves and point their fingers at their own past leaders and certainly not Awolowo or Gowon. The person that was solely responsible for that suffering, for that starvation and for those slow and painful deaths was none other than Colonel Emeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu, the leader of Biafra, himself.

    I have written many good things about Ojukwu on many occassions in the past and I stand by every word that I have ever said or written about him. In my view he was a man of courage and immense fortitude, he stood against the mass murder of his people in the north and he brought them home and created a safe haven for them in the east. For him, and indeed the whole of Biafra, the war was an attempt to exercise their legitimate right of self-determination and leave Nigeria due to the atrocities that they had been subjected to in the north. I cannot blame him or his people for that and frankly I have always admired his stand. However he was not infallible and he also made some terrible mistakes, just as all great leaders do from time to time. The fact that he rejected the Nigerian Federal Government’s offer of a food corridor was one of those terrible mistakes and this cost him and his people dearly. Professor Chinua Achebe surely ought to have reflected that in his book as well. When it comes to the Nigerian civil war there were no villains or angels. During that brutal conflict no less than two million Nigerians and Biafrans died and the yoruba who, unlike others, did not ever discriminate or attack any non-yorubas that lived in their in their territory before the civil war or carry out any coups or attempted coups, suffered at every point as well. For example prominent yoruba sons and daughters were killed on the night of the first igbo coup of January 1966 and again in the northern ‘’revenge’’ coup of July 1966. Many of our people were also killed in the north before the outbreak of the civil war and again in the mid-west and the east during the course and prosecution of the war itself. It was indeed the predominantly yoruba Third Marine Commando, under the command of General Benjamin Adekunle (the ‘’Black Scorpion”) and later General Olusegun Obasanjo, that not only liberated the mid-west and drove the Biafrans out of there but they also marched into igboland itself, occupied it, defeated the Biafran Army in battle, captured all their major towns and forced the igbo to surrender. Third Marine Commando was made up of yoruba soldiers and I can say without any fear of contradiction that we the yoruba therefore paid a terrible and heavy price as well during the war because many of our boys were killed on the war front by the Biafrans.

    The sacrifice of these proud sons of the south-west that died in battle to keep Nigeria one must not be belittled, mocked or ignored. Clearly it was not only the igbo that suffered during the civil war. Neither does it auger well for the unity of our nation for Achebe and the igbo intelligensia that are hailing his self-serving book to caste aspertions on the character, role and noble intentions of the late and reverred Leader of the Yoruba, Chief Obafemi Awolowo, during the civil war. The man may have made one or two mistakes in the past like every other great leader and of course there was a deep and bitter political division in yorubaland itself just before the civil war started and throughout the early ‘60’s. Yet by no stretch of the imagination can Awolowo be described as an igbo-hating genocidal maniac and he most certainly did not delight in the starvation of millions of igbo men, women and children as Achebe has tried to suggest. My advice to this respected author is that he should leave Chief Awolowo alone and allow him to continue to rest in peace. This subtle attempt to denigrate the yoruba and their past leaders, to place a question mark on their noble and selfless role in the war and to belittle their efforts and sacrifice to keep Nigeria together as one will always be vigorously resisted by those of us that have the good fortune of still being alive and who are aware of the facts. We will not remain silent and allow anyone, no matter how respected or reverred, to re-write history. Simply put by writing this book and making some of these baseless and nonsensical assertions, Achebe was simply indulging in the greatest mendacity of Nigerian modern history and his crude distortion of the facts has no basis in reality or rationality. We must not mistake fiction and story telling for historical fact. The two are completely different. The truth is that Professor Chinua Achebe owes the Awolowo family and the yoruba people a big apology for his tale of pure fantasy.