Tag: Ndigbo

  • World Ndigbo Youth summit for Enugu

    Pan-Igbo youth organisations will, on February 28, hold the World Ndigbo Youth Summit in Enugu.

    Over 12 Igbo youth groups, from parts of the world and states are expected to participate.

    Some of them are the Igbo Freedom Movement, World Ndigbo Youth Movement, Igbo Security Council, Igbo Liberation Youths, Igboezue Youth Movement, Biafra Action Congress, Movement for Eastern People, Ohanaeze Liberation Youths.

    The Coordinator of the summit and President of the World Ndigbo Youth Movement, Mr. Ndubuisi Igwekani, told reporters that the the summit would canvass awareness for the emancipation of Igbo youths and take a position on the National Conference.

    He said they were interested in how next year’s election would be conducted, adding that they would review take a position at the summit.

    Igwekani said 2,000 participants would attend from the 36 states.

    According to him, it was time the younger generation took power.

    Said he: “We’ll deliberate on Ndigbo at the National Conference and the vacuum in Ohanaeze Ndigbo leadership.

    “I urge Southeast governors and other Igbo groups to resolve the Ohanaeze crisis. If they don’t, Igbo youths will rise up and take up leadership.”

  • Okorocha: Ignore zoning

    Okorocha: Ignore zoning

    Imo State Governor Rochas Okorocha has urged leaders in the state to ignore zoning in electing the next governor.

    He advised them to consider the quality of the candidates.

    Speaking at a stakeholders’ meeting at the Government House, Owerri, the governor, who is from Orlu zone, said: “Let he, who can deliver the dividends of democracy, rule, irrespective of his zone. It is only a man with great vision, who can bring about change, who should be voted for,” he added.

    Okorocha also admonished the leaders to place the state on the path of positive change, by allowing the will of the masses to prevail during elections.

    He said emphasis should be on public interest, instead of personal gain, in the choice of a governor, adding that the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) was not the best choice for the Southeast, as it had turned Ndigbo into the minority.

    The governor said it was regrettable that the Southeast had never had its share in terms of federal projects and appointments and enjoined leaders to re-align with the All Progressives Congress (APC), which he said would give Ndigbo the opportunity of producing the president.

  • Ndigbo in Diaspora urged to invest in homeland

    The President General of Igbo World Union (IWU), Chief Dr. Mishak Nnanta has called on indigenous Igbo people living overseas to come back to Nigeria and invest in their homeland.

    Nnanta, speaking to journalists in Aba, said his group is ready to partner with any organisation which shares its major objective of the development and unity of Ndigbo.

    “We are appealing to well-meaning Igbo sons and daughters to return home and help develop Igbo land. IWU is poised to stop the brain drain among our people. Only the Ndigbo can develop Igbo land; not the Hausa, Yoruba or Ijaw people. Igbos are hardworking people and should use our God given resources to our advantage. Igbo World Union is about culture, tradition, development and bringing Ndigbo to the realities of the present day in Nigeria.

    “We are a new generation, a new generation in thinking, in strategy, in bringing glory and honour to our country, Nigeria.”

    Nnanta said that he will soon start campaigning abroad to sensitise Ndigbo on the need to return and invest at home.

    “In February 2014, I will be away to Germany, Russia, England, USA and other countries to sensitise Ndigbo to remember their roots. We need more development in Igbo land. What sets apart from other groups is that the unity of Ndigbo and development of our land is of utmost concern to us.

    We are set to build a new Igbo.”

    He further commended the recent visit of the leaders of Ohanaeze Ndigbo to President Goodluck Jonathan stressing that such visits should be on regular basis and extended to other ethnic groups to build bridges of understanding in Nigeria.

    The President General also dismissed reports in a national daily alleging that leaders of Ohanaeze Ndigbo fought over a gift given to them by Jonathan.

    “Such reports are not true. We have credible people in Ohanaeze Ndigbo like Prof. Anya O. Anya; Chairman of the Abia state Council of Traditional Rulers, Eze Eberechi Dick; Chairman of South East Council of Traditional Rulers; Eze Cletus Ilomuanya, among others eminent personalities who are high respected. I have no doubt they will effectively represent our people anywhere and anytime. We can’t join issues with the people spreading such false stories but I can assure you that we are proud of leaders of Ohanaeze Ndigbo.”

     

  • Obasanjo’s letter to Jonathan danger signal, says Chukwumerije

    Obasanjo’s letter to Jonathan danger signal, says Chukwumerije

    Chairman, Senate Committee on Education, Senator Uche Chukwumerije, yesterday described former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s open letter to President Jonathan as a sign of looming disaster.

    Chukwumrije in a statement last night said a second term for Jonathan is necessary to foster a sense of participation of all ethnic components in the administration of the country at the highest level.

    He warned that never again will the Igbo nation allow itself to be made a sacrificial lamb in the nation’s political history.

    He described as alarmist Obasanjo’s warning that the military is being primed for “possible abuse and misuse… for unwholesome personal and political interest…”

    The statement reads: “For System Nigeria, a period of almost half a century of silent ostracisation of a group in political wilderness should be enough of a part of the total reparation exacted from Ndigbo since the end of the civil war.

    “This major ethnic nationality has never produced an elected President of Nigeria. Still on the future of Nigeria (and specifically fate of Igbo ethnic nationality) in the dark shadows of new but predictable hazards of replay of ancient systemic uncertainties.

    “The lengthy loud ambiguities of our Delphic Oracle reek with offensive smells – innuendos of betrayals and lurking disasters, of cyclical visitations of ignored history, of clear blinks of danger signs from 1966 milepost.

    “When such an alarm comes from a revered leader, it is an invitation to a ship wreck from familiar quarters. Predictably, rehearsed but hollow threats of impeachment was a logical fall-out of the alarm. Timely counter threats of treasonable felony followed.”

    He added: “We must avert this disaster. For Ndigbo, System Nigeria can never make us again the sacrificial lamb of its fractured history. Never again.

    “If to foster a sense of participation of all ethnic components in the management of Nigeria is the prime purpose of rotation of the presidency, the formal acceptance of the current six-zone structure, (the successor to the former regions), should be the most effective mode of implementation of the formula.

    “A second term for Jonathan is important to establish this necessity. This gives to the federal edifice the solid foundation.”

    The lawmaker noted that the turbulent history of Nigeria suggests the six-zone format as a “dialectical necessity in the current phase of our nation-building.”

    He said the formula would bring all the sectors of the federation nearer to a level playing ground.

    He stated that “the reference to dialectical movement is to the history of the dynamics of power relationships among regions, ethnic blocs and under-girding hegemonies.

    “The direction of Nigeria’s political evolution since 1962 has been the inexorable pace of disintegration of hegemonic strongholds in favour of progressive democratisation of the political space.

    “Seen from this view, a second tenure for Jonathan is a necessity. It strengthens the precedent of a six-zone structure and reinforces a new convention/formula that adopts this rotation format for the Presidency as the recipe of national stability.”

    He lamented that a major ethnic group like Ndigbo have since independence been excluded from Nigeria’s elected presidency.

    He said: “The official name of the competition rule is ‘democracy is a game of numbers’. But the buzz code of the System is ‘exclusion of the Igbos for the meantime’.

    “Obasanjo has allegedly said as much a long time ago, warning that it was an insult to the System for Ndigbo to expect access to the presidency in less than 100 years from end of the civil war.

    “OBJ’s choice of use of regions as rotation units to warehouse manipulation of selection of presidential materials gives credence to this allegation.”

  • Gbogun gboro and Igbo bashing

    SIR: I will be lying if I say I look forward to reading articles in this newspaper on Thursdays by the writer hiding behind the title ‘Gbogun gboro’. Nonetheless I read them, for personal reasons. I’ve noted that Gbogun gboro’s favourite pastime seems to be taking callous and unwarranted swipes at Ndigbo. He seems ever on the lookout for opportunity, and indeed never fails to seize or create one to pelt rocks at Ndigbo. One may never know the origin of his dislike or perhaps hatred but it does seem pathological. It just oozes from many of his pieces.

    On his piece of December 19 titled ‘Nigeria: Why don’t we do the right thing?’ he lamented according to him, the escalating hostility between ethnic groups, between indigenes and immigrants. He went into a bit of specifics of the conflict but rather than move on paused to take a swipe at Ndigbo. He just could not pass over an opportunity to do so. Hear him: “Sadly, desperate Igbo folks forced to migrate from their battered homeland into the homelands of other peoples are increasingly heard claiming to be conquering those other peoples’ homelands”. One needs no soothsayer to tell that he was mostly referring to the issue of Igbos in Lagos.

    By ‘their battered homeland’ I believe he was referring to the civil war. Now, who did the battering? Was it not the Nigerian army in which his kinsmen were a major part? So, Gbogun gboro loves and cherishes his homeland so much, wants to preserve, protect and perhaps inhabit it with his kinsmen alone but has no qualms about battering that of others; such sense of fairness. When in the face of a most inhumane treatment Ndigbo retreated to their homeland and asked only to be left alone why were they not allowed to be? Now again their presence is loathed; perhaps only their disappearance will do.

    Gbogun gboro writes of virtually nothing besides how incompatible the various ethnic groups in Nigeria are and the need to either restore regional autonomy or divide the country. How ironic that decades after spilling rivers of blood on the altar of ‘One Nigeria’ some of the major protagonists have become about the most vociferous clamourers for autonomy, division. Why wasn’t the opportunity taken when it was there for the taking? Was that an error of judgment, have some people suddenly woken from slumber? Whatever!

    Gbogun gboro has every right to carry on his agitation but must please let Ndigbo be. They are neither the problem of ndi Yoruba nor Nigeria.

    •Nnoli Chidiebere

    Aba Abia State.

  • Traditional rulers urge peace among Ndigbo

    The Association of Traditional Council of Ndieze in the Diaspora has urged the Igbo at home and abroad to embrace unity for the development of their communities.

    At its quarterly meeting held at the palace of Eze Ndigbo in Akure, Ondo State capital, Eze Gregory Iloehika, the community leaders noted that acrimony among its people would retard their progress.

    He said the crisis rocking the association in Adamawa State was being tackled, stressing that a delegation would be sent to the state to provide first-hand information on the development.

    Besides, he said another committee would be set up to look into the matter in order to find amicable settlement to the crisis.

    In his remarks, the President-General of the association, Eze Hyancith Ohazulike Nkpume 11 (OON), said another delegation was sent to Accra, Ghana to settle the dispute between two contenders to the office of Igwe Ghana.

    Consequently, he said, Eze Geofrey Mokwugwo was selected to occupy the position.

    According to him, the new Igwe Ghana had diligently handled various positions within Igbo community in Ghana and was crowned for recognition by relevant authorities in Ghana.

    Eze Mokwugwo is also the grand patron of Anambra Progressive Union in Ghana and chairman, Worldwide Investment, who hails from Awkuzu in Oyi Local Government Area of Anambra State.

  • Kalu’s Njiko and a  tear for Ndigbo

    Kalu’s Njiko and a tear for Ndigbo

    You probably know the scientific fact that the sun rises from the east but I tell you today that that assertion may no longer hold true. Not for the Southeast region of Nigeria at least, indeed the sun seems to have left that part of the world entirely. The celestial element probably finds no pleasure in blazing upon a land and a people remorselessly in retreat. Today, the entire Igbo miasma would make any keen observer drop an unconscious tear. You know there are no flowers where the sun does not shine, where there is no vegetation there is denudation of monumental proportions, a phenomenon we glibly call gully erosion. And laugh if you will, but it has been said that any land that cannot harbor the white man in this age is doomed. You will hardly find a white man in Igboland today. Yes, perhaps mixed mulatto or earth-brown white, and even fugitive white man on mercenary duty, but hardly any real white man on legitimate assignment. Such is the state of the vast oriental land east of the great Niger River.

    You will shed a tear for Ndigbo if you understand the historical odyssey of this people; how they got trapped in the proverbial Nigerian rain and how they are still under the torrential downpour drenched, cold and shivering. I got another tear-evoking glimpse of it when I read an interview granted by Chief Segun Odegbami to Sunday Punch (May 5, 2013 page 76). The great national team footballer of yore who could have been something of a Cristiano Ronaldo were he playing today had this to say when asked how the Nigerian civil war affected him: “Like I said, we were reduced to just 17 pupils in my school (as a result of the pogrom and ensuing war, only 17 students were left of the entire St. Mulumba College, Jos populated largely by Igbo students). And as a young boy, I experienced the pogrom; the killing of civilians. I was walking to school one day and the people I knew, young boys and girls, were running away from the people who were trying to lynch them. For the first time in my life, I saw a dead body. I saw people throwing stones and actually killing people. I saw it, I experienced it. It was horrible and the pictures are still etched in my mind up till now, even though I didn’t quite know what was going on as a young boy…

    “But I trekked three kilometers to my school and I saw all the way from my house to the school, killings along the way… I saw it all and it was horrible. For me, we don’t want such things to happen again. In that regard, the pogrom affected me, the war affected me and many of my friends were killed, so many of them fought in the war but I did not experience the war myself. But it left a permanent scar. It’s something I dread; it brings back those ugly pictures and I pray that our country does not degenerate to that level again.”

    If the searing of Odegbami’s innocent, little mind does not break your heart, how does it make you feel that those people who were hunted down like wild hogs and mauled to death on the streets of Nigeria never learnt any lesson from their sad history? You are bound to worry if you conjecture that these fellows are still being literally chased down and targeted at every opportunity. And if perchance, an implosion results, they are likely to face the same fate as in the 60s because they have remained out there in the same vengeful rain. Since after the Biafran war, Ndigbo have not managed to come together as a people; not under one voice and not under one platform. The so-called Ohaneze Ndigbo has long become Ohaneze ndi oshi na ama. In the last 14 years, the body has been turned to an ugly bird of prey that feeds on the entrails of Ndigbo. The recent election by some mealy-mouthed young turks simply rededicated the already prostrate body to Aso Rock for the purpose of 2015. The prize is a putrid pot of porridge.

    Would you not feel sorry when Igbo statesmen hold landmark birthdays in Abuja, Lagos, London and anywhere else but their homesteads in Igboland? Many now conduct traditional marriages in the cities because they dare not return home. Home has been abused and desecrated; home has become a place of anguish for the Igbo. Your heart is bound to sink when you see some popinjays posing as monarchs of Igboland visiting Aso Rock on your behalf; people who are largely impostors with made-in-China totems and imaginary kingdoms, they are the veritable face of the unchallenged ruse and refuse that has become Igboland. You are bound to cry when you see Igbo’s biggest politicians celebrating worthless board appointments and ambassadorial postings. One becomes weary when Igbo stakes in the polity are tied to unfulfilled and unfulfillable promises like a Second Niger Bridge, dredging of the River Niger, inland port and the dualisation Onitsha-Owerri-Aba roads, among others.

    Finally, you will sob, knowing that the caterpillar defoliating our tree lives in the tree. When you see mushroom groups such as Njiko Igbo, C- 21, Aka Ikenga, Igbo Kwenu, etc, spring up purportedly on behalf of Ndigbo but otu awughi n’eshi. They are all masquerades dancing for the coins, for survival. Consider Njiko Igbo for instance, founded (though being disputed) by Chief Orji Uzor Kalu, former governor of Abia State. It is only in Igboland that leaders hold series of very high positions yet do not grow to prominence or to be statesmen. The last we heard was that Chief Kalu, the new-day champion of Igbo cause took our matter to the British House of Commons (BHC). What a calamity! What a scandalous calamity.

    If only Kalu consulted, he would have been tutored that it was the same British colonialists who wilfully impaled Ndigbo by crafting their current status in Nigeria’s political equation. How they would laugh him to scorn for his astounding ignorance of Nigeria’s recent history and how they would enjoy the comic relieve! What could the BHC possibly do anyway? Can’t Kalu see that the solution to Igbo problem is hidden somewhere here at home among Igbo leaders, elite and people? Should we overlook his past political philandering and missed opportunities, is he capable of leading change? Only if he would allow some light to filter in. But first, where is the new moon, the very symbol of a rebirth? Has he swum the stream of no return that imbues one with the spirit of self-immolation or has he carried the sacred sacrifice of the people to the cross roads to offer up his self?

    As it stands we all can see through Kalu’s veil of hidden motives in Njiko. On the other hand, this assignment requires self cleansing, Spartan discipline and dogged enlistment of other Igbo leaders; it must be a concert of all stakeholders tediously meshed by a visionary, tenacious (and for the umpteenth time,) selfless leader. And where is the philosophical underpinning, the institutional backbone and the administrative platform? The very pillars that will stand when human energy wanes and our frailties bob up to subvert the grand idea.

    Make no mistake about it; to lead a people out of their peripatetic history into a glorious new dawn is not a champagne party. It is often a life-time endeavor needing extreme sacrifice. The reward of course is to own a chunk of history. Does Kalu have such wisdom, grit, rigor, stamina and temperament to change the course of Igbo history? I think not but will be glad to be proved wrong.

  • Ndigbo and Kalu’s call for unity

    Ndigbo and Kalu’s call for unity

    Unity is something that is essential in the Igbo mythology. This is why every family, kindred and village in ala-Igbo always meet in their different soirees to discuss issues bothering on their welfares. The Igbo knows the importance of unity, and the forebears had a proverb that says, no one can break a bunch of broom, but it is easy to break just one broom.

    For the umpteenth time, the former Governor of Abia State is calling on the Igbo to unite, irrespective of their political affiliations and associations. He has been reaching out to Igbo people both at home and in the Diaspora. From Cambodia to Canada he has not hidden his voice for this noble act. He is of the belief that the Igbo might not have gotten it right in the past, but are capable of getting it right this time. All it will take is just unity.

    What makes his call unique is the neutral position he has taken in making sure that this is achieved. But this does not make him not to support any political party in Nigeria that would zone the 2015 presidential ticket to Ndigbo. This is what Kalu sees as the fundamental objective of his, since Ndigbo are not in dearth of credible and dynamic persons that the presidency of the country can be entrusted on.

    Being over qualified to be president of Nigeria and with their wealth of entrepreneurship, Ndigbo can ever boast of the sagacity and dexterity to lead Nigeria. This is the bane of Kalu: why a people with such charisma cannot be allowed to mount the exalted number one seat in the Nigeria’s political positions. And it is time Ndigbo came together and avoid trading blames of the seemingly past that can never re-emerge in the existence of man.

    Kalu would tell anybody who doubts the stuff the Igbo are made of that they have made name in virtually all the areas of man’s endeavours. Is it in the business, politics, academia and benevolence, the Igbo have always hold the mace, but have not been allowed the pronouncedly lead Nigeria.

    In the area of doing everything humanly possible for the wellbeing of Nigeria, the Igbo have always put in their legs. They have always expressed their republican nature in the amalgam that is called Nigeria by voting people of different ethnic backgrounds overwhelmingly. Amongst others, they voted for Chief M.K.O. Abiola (when he was alive) and Chief Olusegun Obasanjo in the 1993 and 1999/2003 presidential elections. They have also shown the same affability in them to President Goodluck Jonathan by mobilising and voting for him without blemish in the 2011 elections and as well have stood by him till date, in affirming the Igbo aphorism that says, Igwe bu ike.

    But there is chagrin on the face of Kalu that the Igbo cannot always be in unity, only when they want to support an ‘outsider’. They have to support their own and guide their integrity with every thud of responsibility. For this reason, from the USA to UK, Kalu has been mobilising for the unity of the Igbo. Many people have expressed and given him their support for this Igbo unity crusade, while few persons

    are still swimming in the pool of political brigandage against their Igbo kiths and kins, because of the infinitesimal derivations they get from the powers that are, especially in Aso Rock, the Nigeria’s seat of power.

    Ndigbo have to parley without equivocation for their unity. Ndigbo must solicit for the support of this unity project with unflinching support to the Igbo cause. No matter how anybody might be looking at it, Kalu has always fought for a selfless cause. One was when he rocked as the president, Student Union Government of the University of Maiduguri, Borno State.

    It could be recalled that he refused the offer by the school authority to pardon him alone during the remonstration of the SUG that saw to many students being hounded out of the school.

    Just as he is going everywhere telling the Igbo to come together and unite, so also he refused to be solely pardoned by the University of Maiduguri, saying that unless everyone involved in the march was pardoned. His function in shopping for the formation of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) cannot be easily forgotten. The likes of Dr. Alex Ekwueme, late S.M. Afolabi, Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida, Atiku Abubakar and Aliyu Gwarzo, among others, would always thumb up for Kalu for his political wizardry.

    Today, the party has become a party that has produced the highest political office holders since 1999 democracy was restored in the country. It is therefore very aplomb to applaud the commitment of Kalu in making sure that the Igbo is united to further the promotion of Nigeria. Kalu has got what it takes to unite the Igbo no matter any gainsaying opinion. He has got the contacts beyond party and ethnic linings.

    Onwumere is the Coordinator, Concerned Non-Indigenes In Rivers State (CONIRIV)

  • Ndigbo celebrate  new yam in Lagos

    Ndigbo celebrate new yam in Lagos

    Ndigbo in Lagos State have celebrated their annual New Yam Festival at Obi Ndigbo.

    In his address, the Eze Igbo in the state, Eze Nwabueze Ohazulike, said that the new yam festival has remained one of the strongest vehicles for the preservation of Igbo cultural identity in the country and in the diaspora.

    “The truth is that our language is going extinct. our culture is dying. We have, in response, stepped up the tempo of our celebrations as our own contribution to Igbo corporate effort for cultural irridentism.

    “For us, the crop, yam, has become a metaphor for this effort. It is, therefore, a necessary imperative for our children, scholars and teachers not to allow our cultural heritage to die,” he said.

    Speaking further, Eze Ohazulike expressed the gratitude of Ndigbo to the Lagos State government and leaders of the various Igbo socio-cultural organisations in the state.

    His words: “We… commend His Excellency, Mr. Babatunde Fashola, exceutive governor of Lagos State, who has made all our progress possible through the provision of a visionary and dynamic administration.”

    However, he appealed to the federal government to do more to empower rural farmers to combat famine in the country.

    “Next week Thursday is World Food Day; the question is, is government really doing enough to put food on the table of every Nigerian? I think there is still much to be done to empower substantive and commercial farming.

    “In the western world, the richest people there are the rural farmers but here in Nigeria we worship white elephant billionaires. Governments have to assist farmers and encourage young graduates to cultivate. Look at, the price of a tuber of yam is not affordable for an average Nigerian. A lot of people don’t believe that farming is what we need to fight poverty. Government needs to subsidise agriculture and also make it enterprising for intending farmers,” he said

    The festival, which was attended by prominent Igbo sons and daughters in Lagos and diaspora, was described as a unity festival that brings people from other ethnic groups to celebrate with their Igbo friends.

    According to Acting President Ohanaeze Lagos State, Thompson Ohia yam crop, in Igbo cosmology, is regarded as the king of crops. “It symbolises also the virile qualities of a successful man, prowess, progress and prosperity,” he said.

    He also used the medium to clear the air on the reason why the executive committee suspended Chief Oliver Akubueze as the president of association.

    His Words:”The executive suspended Akubueze from office because of gross misconduct and abuse of office. A deadline date to retract a publication credited to him which is capable of causing the disintegration of Ndigbo Lagos State before the suspension.

    Akubueze who was apparently absent at the yam festival declined the knowledge that he has been suspended from office. He spoke with our correspondent on the phone, noting “that a vote of confidence has just been passed on him by the Igbo speaking community in Lagos.”

    According to Ohia the executive committee which included himself, the Deputy President Collins Ozor, its Legal Adviser Fabian Onwughalu, the Publicity secretary Chief Louis Okafor, took the decision for the integrity of Ndigbos in Lagos.

  • Ohaneze Nd’Igbo honours Imoke’s wife

    The pan-Igbo socio-cultural organisation, Ohaneze Nd’Igbo, has honoured the wife of Cross River State Governor, Mrs Obioma Imoke, with the Ugo Nma Nd’Igbo Award.

    The award is reserved for outstanding Igbo daughters, who have made valuable socio-economic contributions to humanity either at home or abroad.

    Ohaneze Nd’igbo said Mrs Imoke, besides distinguishing herself as an illustrious Igbo daughter, has contributed towards the improvement of the lives of Cross River State residents through various projects and poverty alleviation programmes.

    At the presentation in Abuja, the Acting Chairman of the Ohaneze Nd’Igbo in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Val Ogosi, noted that the award was in appreciation of Mrs Imoke’s contributions to the society and the Igbo race.

    Ogosi said the organisation was proud to identify with Mrs Imoke’s laudable projects, adding that the governor’s wife is a source of pride to Nd’Igbo and a role model to many Igbo women.

    Mrs Imoke, who was represented by the wife of the House of Representatives member for Obubra/Etung, Mrs Rachael Owan Enoh, promised to do more for the economic and socio-cultural advancement of Nd’Igbo.

    She also promised not to relent in improving the welfare of the less privileged in the society.