Tag: pro-Biafra

  • What are pro-Biafra agitators up to?

    What are pro-Biafra agitators up to?

    Forty five years after the end of the civil war, some Southeast elements are invoking the spirit of the ill-fated Biafra Republic as they threaten succession, thereby undermining national sovereignty and unity. Group Political Editor EMMANUEL OLADESU examines the implications for national cohesion and what government can do to foster a sense of belonging by the six geo-political zones. 

    For two months, pro-Biafra protesters have been on the prowl in the Southeast and Southsouth. They chant war slogans as they agitate for the Biafra Republic, which was dead and buried in 1970. These protests, according to government, were inspired by a self-acclaimed activist, Nnamidi Kanu, who was standing trial for terrorism. His followers are agitating under the banner of a new group, the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB). Thus, government is facing heat on two fronts-Biafra and Boko Haram.

    Forty five years after, new radicals bubbling with idealist yearnings are venturing into a terrain where Col. Emeka Odimegwu-Ojukwu (rtd), the secessionist leader, failed. In their view, history should repeat itself.  But, to analysts, the new rebellion underscores the fragility of federalism. They argue that threats of secession may not be the appropriate answer to the non-resolution of the national question.

    According to the protesters, the demonstrations are legitimate. They believe that the Southeast region has not fared better in a united Nigeria since Ojukwu’s rebellion was crushed. Although many stakeholders have decried the protests, the demonstrators have not relented in disrupting commercial and social activities in some cities in the Southeast and Southsouth. However, the protests have been peaceful.

    Since the protesters are predominantly Igbo, many observers have described it as the carry-over of the region’s hostility to President Muhammadu Buhari’s bid for the Presidency. But, prominent Igbo leaders, who had witnessed the horror of civil war, have disowned the adventurists, stressing that their tirades were not products of widespread consultations and collective agreement. In their opinion, the protests are defeatist and product of blood cuddling political scam ever visited on Ndigbo. Yet, others are of the view that the President should listen to their complaints. Former Education Minister Prof. Tunde Adeniran urged President Buhari to implement the report of the last National Conference, adding its implementation will assuage the feelings of the protesters. He, however, did not elaborate further.”The Federal Government should implemet the report,” he said.

    At the public presentation of his book, Science and Technology Minister Dr. Ogbonnaya Onu urgeed the President to listen to the agitators. The President, who was present at the ceremony in Abuja, did not make any comment.

     

    Memory of civil war:

     Igbo leaders, who have decried the protest, said it was motivated by selfish interest. “It is about bread and butter,” said Monday Ubani, a lawyer. “The demonstration is being sponsored by bad losers of election. What is peculiar about the demonstrators is that majority of them neither saw nor experienced the 1967-70 civil war. The intrigues, mistakes, connivance, betrayals, wisdom and foolishness of that war cannot be as real to them as to those who witnessed it. The young men and women are trained to sing “let my people go” because they are told that the economic survival, safety and prosperity of Igbo cannot be guaranteed in Nigeria. This is as hallow as it is defeatist and is borne out of the most blood scam cuddling political scam ever visited on Ndigbo,” he added.

     

    Handshake across Niger:

     Many believe that the youths have not learned from the lessons of history. The civil war period was the worst period in national history.

    The cost to the nation was huge. The eyes of the world was on Nigeria for 30 months for the wrong reason. Fears were rife that the most populous African country was about to disintegrate. Neighbouring West African countries were livid because they would not be able to cope with mass exodus from Nigeria. After the war, it was difficult to rebuild Igboland. Many people were missing. The rehabilitation of displaced people was cumbersome. The military regime also had to grapple with the problem of abandoned property.

    The entire Southeast was bereaved. But, it was a collective tragedy. Prominent Army officers ended their careers and life in the avoidable war, leaving behind young families to mourn their demise. Later, the government started the programmes of reconstruction, rehabilitation and reconciliation. Although the Biafran rebellion may have been forced on Ojukwu, he nevertheless, retraced his steps in the post-war period. Many Igbo perished in the war, but Ojukwu and his family survived. After his 13-year exile in Cote d’Ivoire, he reintegrated himself into the political system. He joined the defunct National Party of Nigeria (NPN), became its national deputy chairman and contested for the Senate. When he later joined the presidential race, he said his mission was to “complete the process of reintegrating the Igbo into the mainstream of Nigerian politics.  His party, the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA), was registered. Ojukwu canvassed a handshake across the Niger, stressing that ethnic groups should evolve a basis for peaceful coexistence. Later, his military rank of colonel was restored by the Federal Government. Instead of championing fresh hostilities, Ojukwu lent his voice to the convocation of the National Conference. In fact, when it was convoked in 1994, he was a delegate. Chiding the agitators for twisting facts, Ubani said: “It is tragic that Nnamidi Kanu and his followers to describe Ojukwu as their inspirational figure and to consequently portray him as an Igbo irredentist.”

     

    Igbo in a united Nigeria:

     Also, a group, Igbo Conscience, has warned of the consequence of demonstration by pro-Biafra agitators, saying that they are exposing the lives and business interests of Ndigbo to danger in other parts of the country. The group lamented that the “rootless and uncoordinated agitation” has renewed anti-Igbo sentiments in the Southsouth and rekindled the old rivalry capable of affecting Igbo interests in the foreseeable future.

    The leaders of the group said prominent Igbo believe that the race is better off in a united Nigeria, contrary to the drum of war being beaten by the unscrupulous elements. They, however, called for the restructuring of the country by President Muhammadu Buhari to redress the long years of injustice and give every region a fuller sense of belonging.

    “We unequivocally distance the generality of Ndigbo from the present politically orchestrated clamour for secession from Nigeria. It is dubious. It is fraudulent. It is selfish and does not command the support of most Igbo. It is a non-event, inconsequential, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing. Ndigbo are better off and will do better in a united and prosperous Nigeria,“ they added.

     

    Danger of rebellion

    To Comrade Joe Igbokwe, the Lagos State All Progressives Congress (APC) Publicity Secretary,  those chanting war slogans may put the Ndigbo in danger, if the peaceful demonstrations are hijacked and it turns violent, adding that the outcome may be perceived negatively by other zones.

    He said: “It is beyond doubt that a bulk of Igbo investment is domiciled outside the so-called Biafra. It is certain that more Igbo live outside the so-called Biafra and it is beyond doubt that these ssenseless agitators and their sponsors are exposing both the massive Igbo properties, wealth and majority of Igbo people to danger by the present politically-induced and needless agitation. We believe that Nigeria provides a big space for Igbo to thrive. When you have an Atlantic Ocean to swim in, you do not need a pond in Okigwe to do the same.”

    Ubani, a lawyer, agreed with his submission. He doubted the sincerity of the agitators, who he said are fired by selfish and personal interest, adding that they are bread and butter agitators. Describing the demonstrations as worrisome and confounding, he pointed out that the demonstrators neither saw nor experienced the 1967-70 civil war. He said the reluctance of prominent Igbo leaders to decried the protests have fuelled the wrong impression that the Ndigbo is in solidarity with them

    Flaying the leader of the protest, Mr. Kanu, for the misadventure, he said the London-based agitator lacked the mandate of the Ndigbo because the stakeholders were not consulted and carried along before launching the war. Ubani said while the godfathers behind the demonstrations are targeting concessions by the Federal Government, they have carefully ensured that none of their relatives or family members participate in the protests.

     

    Distorting history

    Igbokwe decried an attempt to distort history by casting the late Chief Emeka Odimegwu-Ojukwu in the image of a poster child for Nigeria’s unity, recalling that the ex-Biafra warlord had proposed a handshake across the Niger. Ubani also berated prominent Igbo, who have participated in governance in the last 16 years for the backward position of the region, stressing that, while any Southwesterner can serve in any capacity in Lagos, former governors of Abia and Enugu have sacked Igbo who are not from the state from their civil service.

    Igbokwe said the agitation was misguided, saying it is curious that some Igbo are not protesting marginalisation, despite the fact that prominent Igbo occupied prime positions in the Jonathan Administration in the last six years.  Urging President Buhari to restructure the country, he added: “Those arrested and detained on connection with the protest should either be charged to court or released unconditionally.”

     

    Conference report:

    Foremost political scientist Prof. Adeniran observed that the protesters may have grievances and needs, which government should meet. He canvassed dialogue, streiing that violence is not the answer. The former Education Minister urged President Buhari to study the report of the last constitional conference, adding that, if the recommendations are implemented, it will reduce the cries of despondency.

    Echoing him, the Chairman of the Conference Consultative Committee, Senator Femi Okunrounmu, said the report has solutions to some of the problems confronting the country, particularly the fear of domination and marginalisation.

  • Pro-Biafra traders protest in Lagos

    Pro-Biafra traders protest in Lagos

    Pro-Biafra traders yesterday staged a peaceful protest in Alaba Market in Ojo Local Government Area of Lagos State. They shut down shops and restricted vehicular movements in the area between 10am and 1pm.

    The Biafran supporters were demanding the unconditional dismissal of the case against the Director of Radio Biafra, Mr. Nnamdi Kanu.

    A few hours later, the protest ended abruptly when news filtered in that the agitators had been released.

    The Lagos State chapter of the All Progressives Congress (APC) had warned members of the movement not to stage any protest in Lagos.

    Policemen from Area E Command were on hand to prevent the protest from being hijacked by hoodlums.

  • N’Delta minister rejects pro-Biafra agitators

    N’Delta minister rejects pro-Biafra agitators

    The Minister of Niger Delta Affairs, Pastor Usani Uguru Usani has called on pro-Biafra agitators to have a re-think on their mission, insisting that all efforts should be geared to promote a united and indivisible Nigeria.

    He cautioned against violent agitations, saying it would not only be counter-productive but inimical to the efforts and determination of the present administration to address the challenges facing the country.

    The Minster said that those who went through the horrors of the Nigerian civil war will cherish the peace now prevailing in the country, adding that we should learn to value Nigeria as a single entity.

    The Minister spoke when a delegation of the Nigerian Legion decorated him along with the Minister of State for Niger Delta Affairs, Professor Claudius Omoleye Daramola and the Permanent Secretary in the Ministry, Mrs. Belema Wakama with the 2016 Armed Forces Remembrance Day Emblem.

    “Every Nigerian should detest any suggestion to separate Nigeria.  We must decry any person or group agitating for the State of Biafra,” he emphasized.

    Instead of violent agitation for Biafra, its advocates should follow peaceful rules and procedures as enshrined in our constitution for redressing any issue peacefully, the Minister further advised.

    He recalled the hardship suffered by ex-soldiers in the past when their retirement and pension entitlements were not paid in good time, a situation which discouraged many young persons from enlisting in the military in those days.

    In his remarks, the Minister of State for Niger Delta Affairs, Professor Claudius Daramola, commended the leadership of the Nigerian Legion for remembering their fallen colleagues who paid the supreme sacrifice for the peace and unity of Nigeria and supporting those alive in various ways.

    Earlier, the National Chairman of the Nigerian Legion, Col. Micah Gayya  (rtd) who is also the Chairman of the 2016 Armed Forces Remembrance Day Fund Raising Sub-Committee said that the organization was raising money by selling the Remembrance Emblem and using it to support families of fallen members of the Legion in need.

    He stated that the Nigerian Legion recently donated relief materials to its members living in Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) camps in various parts of the country.

  • Two policemen, nine others die in pro-Biafra protest in Onitsha

    Two policemen, nine others die in pro-Biafra protest in Onitsha

    Onitsha, the Southeast’s commercial engine-room, was boiling yesterday as pro-Biafra protest turned bloody.

    It was the second day of the planned three-day blockade of the Onitsha Head Bridge – the gateway to the East from the Western part of the country.

    The protests have been raging in Southeast capitals and Port Harcourt, the Rivers State capital, in the last few weeks. The call has been for the release of detained leader of the Independent People of Biafra (IPOB) who is also the coordinator of underground Biafra Radio.

    Kanu, who is based abroad, was arrested on arrival in the country in October. He has been charged to court in Abuja by the Directorate of State Services (DSS).

    No fewer than 11 persons, including two policemen, were killed during the fracas that followed a clash between the protesters and the Joint Task Force (JTF).

    The JTF comprises soldiers, policemen, naval ratings and men of the Civil Defence.

    A mosque on Sokoto Road was burnt along with eight trucks marked “Dangote Group” packed within the premises.

    Anambra State Governor Willie Obiano called for calm in a broadcast as the situation degenerated into a near total breakdown of law and order in Anambra’s biggest city.

    The governor warned mischief makers to steer clear of the state.

    The clash began as the JTF men moved to dismantle the barricade put on the Onitsha Head Bridge.

    The blockage of the bridge on both side Onitsha and Asaba ends started on Tuesday and stalled inter-state travels, crippling economic activities.

    The protesters blocked the highway between 2.pm on Tuesday till 2.30am yesterday, when the JTF moved in.

    They also made bonfires on the Onitsha-Enugu Expressway.

    The encounter left about nine people dead, five at the Niger Bridge Head, three at Obodoukwu Road, and a hawker who was said to have been hit by a stray bullet. He died instantly.

    Miscreants, on hearing that some people had been shot dead,  marched on the Central Mosque near Onitsha Main Market and set it ablaze. A Hilux van with Federal Government number was also burnt.

    It was like a war situation, with sporadic shootings and people scampering for safety.

    All markets in Onitsha were shut down, traders took to their heels.

    It was alleged that the killings of the IPOB members got members of the Movement for the Actualisation of Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB) to join forces with their colleagues to repel the JTF.

    Commercial motorcyclists banned on the highways by the state government made brisk business and had a field day. Motocycles were the only means of coming in and out of Onitsha.

    IPOB National Coordinator Mr. Chidiebere Onwudiwe alleged that five of its members were killed; 18 were injured.

    He said, he learnt that more people had been killed in the sporadic shootings at Upper Iweka, but he could only confirm the killing that involved his members.

    The Nation gathered that Chief Rommy Ezeownwuka (Rojeny), the Ogirisi Igbo, who is said to be respected by MASSOB and IPOB youths, was attacked at about 1.35 am when he went to appeal to the protesting youths at the Niger Bridge Head.

    The Campaign for Democracy (CD), South East Chairman, Dede Uzor, said: “IPOB has been peaceful in their protest and there should not be any reason to open fire on them by security agencies.

    “We are also calling for the unconditional release of Nnamdi Kanu and other IPOB and MASSOB members in detention.”

    The former President of Igede Development Association, Anambra State Branch, Chief Patrick Akobo, said the Igbo had built Nigeria and could not afford to abandon what they  built.

    “The only thing they should do is to empower themselves and be like the Japanese that the  world is relying on now, and at the end of the day, the whole Nigeria will rely on them because of their God-given talent.”

    Anambra State police spokesman Ali Okechukwu confirmed the killing of two policemen by the protesters. He said one of them was a sergeant.

    He also confirmed that eight Dangote trucks and the mosque on Sokoto Road were burnt.

    Biafran activists yesterday washed their hands of the burning of the Onitsha Central Mosque and vehicles.

    They, however,  claimed that eight of their members, including two women were shot dead in Onitsha.

    In a statement by the leader of a faction of the Movement for the Actualisation of the  Sovereign‎ State of Biafra (MASSOB), Uchenna Madu, the activists laid the blame at the doorstep of the federal authorities who want to impress that they were violent.

    The statement said: “The setting of Onitsha central mosque, vehicles ablaze and making of bornfires which depict violence are not done by members of IPOB or MASSOB under my leadership. This unwarranted  acts of violence are perfected by hoodlums sponsored by agents of the federal to create the impression that the non-violent  and peaceful pro-Biafran group has turned violent on our agitation for Biafra.

    “With today’s killing of our members and injuring many with bullet shots, we are no longer comfortable with Presidency’s move for dialogue.   Federal Government’s  move  for dialogue is hypocritical and deceitful.

    “Any Igbo group, organisation and persons negotiating, or meeting with the Presidency on our behalf without our consent or mandate should stop now.

    “MASSOB, led by Comrade Uchenna Madu and IPOB, led by Nnamdi Kanu, have never mandated any person to negotiate for us.”

    Obiano, in his broadcast, said: “I wish to address you on the on-going protest staged in Onitsha by the members of the Indigenous People of Biafra and MASSOB.

    “The government of Anambra State has been monitoring developments and is greatly concerned about the security of lives and property of residents and visitors to the state.

    “As your Governor and Chief Security Officer of the state, I am compelled to act to avert any likely breakdown of law and order. In all situations, the preservation of human life comes first and I am determined to enforce that.

    “Since the inception of my administration, we have made the security of lives and property our priority and we are not going to compromise on that.

    “I therefore, sincerely appeal to the members of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), MASSOB and other aggrieved groups and individuals to maintain the peace and resist any attempt by hoodlums to take advantage of the situation and destabilize any part of Anambra State.

    “I am in constant touch with all the security agencies in the state to ensure that what has otherwise been a peaceful protest is not hijacked by trouble makers.

    “All mischief makers are hereby warned to keep off as we will not tolerate any breach of peace under any guise or pretext. You are seriously warned!.

    “I, therefore, wish to assure Ndi Anambra and all visitors to the state to go about their normal business peacefully as the security agencies are on top of the situation to preserve law and order,” the governor said.

     

  • Pro-Biafra protests shut down Onitsha, Aba

    Pro-Biafra protests shut down Onitsha, Aba

    Activities in the commercial city of Aba in Abia State were yesterday stalled as the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) continued its protest  for the release of its leader and Director of Radio Biafra, Nnamdi Kanu.

    Though the protest was peaceful, vehicular movement was grounded as the group marched on double lanes of major roads. The Aba-Owerri Road, Azikiwe Road, Faulks Road, Tonimas, Aba-Ikot Ekpene Expressway and other entry and exit routes were blocked.

    It was gathered that the group, yesterday, went round major markets in Aba and warned traders against opening for business. The order was obeyed except for shop owners within streets who though opened, closed down upon sighting the crowd.

    Most public and private schools opened for business though they said it was a risky gamble owing to the tension in town. Most proproetors said they could not close as they were preparing for the December break.

    Banks witnessed low patronage as only few customers came for business.

    Sources said the protesters blocked the Enugu-Port Harcourt Expressway and prevented vehicles from entering Aba.

    The protesters said  they would not relent in their quest to get freedom for Kanu. 65- year-old Jude Iheme, a pastor, said the actualisation of Biafra was revealed to him in a dream and so he would not relent until Biafra was realised.

    “I don’t believe in violence or arms bandying because I am a pastor. Since I got a revelation about Biafra, I have been preaching about it everywhere I go and always joined any pro-Biafra protest because we need to be free.”

    Another protester said the protest would continue so far the Federal Government refuses to release Nnamdi Kanu, saying that there would be another protest on the next adjourned date of his trial.

    “Nnamdi Kanu is our leader, there is no way we will remain quiet while he is facing trial unjustly. How many of the Boko Haram leaders have they arrested and tried?”

    The protest ,which started at about 7am went on till about 5pm as members of the group were seen on the streets of Aba still protesting.

    Residents have however lamented their loss since the protest started. They said continuing the protest in December, a period regarded as the peak of economic activities would not be in the interest of business owners.

    They urged President Muhammadu Buhari and authorities concerned to seek ways of ending the agitations.

  • Pro-Biafra protest disrupts activities in Nnewi

    Pro-Biafra protest disrupts activities in Nnewi

    Activities in Nnewi, Anambra State, was disrupted yesterday by the  the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), which was protesting the detention of its leader and Director of Radio Biafra, Nnamdi Kanu.

    The protesters mobilised from Onitsha, Asaba, Awka, Ekwulobia, Awka-Etiti, Enugu, Imo, Ebonyi and Abia States and converged on Nnewi to salute the late Ikemba of Nnewi, Dim. Chukwuemka Odumegwu Ojukwu.

    According to one of its commanders, Comrade Emeka Onwane, the protest is to urge the Federal Government to release Kanu.

    He said the protest would last for three days, with no market days during the period.

    The protesters carried placards, inscribed with: “Free Nnamdi Kanu, free Biafra”; “No Biafra, no peace; “We want Biafra now”; “Biafra now or never”.

    They moved from St Mary’s Junction to Nkwo Nnewi market, down to the expressway leading to Nnewi Area Command, through Odumegwu Ojukwu’s residence to Owerri Road, Nkwo Nnewi Triangle.

    Onwane said the journey was an endless one, but promised it would be peaceful.

    He said they chose Nnewi as it was home to the late Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu.

    The commander said:  “IPOB is looking up to the international community, including the United States, Russia, France and every other country, excluding Britain, which is the enemy of Biafra.

    “We are not talking about Igbo Presidency; we are talking about an independent nation of Biafra. So, we are looking up to world leaders to help us actualise Biafra,” Onwane said.

     

  • Pro-Biafra agitation is all about National Question, says The Patriots

    Pro-Biafra agitation is all about National Question, says The Patriots

    The Patriots, the socio-political association of elderly Nigerians, said yesterday that the renewed  agitation for Biafra and other security challenges are signs   that Nigerian youths are yearning for a resolution of the National Question.

    It therefore asked the Buhari Administration to take the bull by the horn and deal with national question once and for all.

    “The biggest challenge, in our view, is the National Question, which is how to coalesce the 389 ethnic nationalities in Nigeria into one Nigerian nation. Three hundred and eighty-nine is a large number. How do you get them together to form one nation? We make the mistake of always talking about the Nigerian nation; we are not a nation yet; we‘re a state,” leader of the group, Professor Ben Nwabueze told reporters in Lagos.

    He said: “I don’t necessarily believe that the protesters want Biafra actualized. It is the general condition in the country. It involves unemployment and other serious issues. That has given rise to youth unrest and protests. It is the feeling of the youths. What do you expect from youths who spend three, four or more years after graduation in the unemployment market? That is the issue.

    “The second issue that has given rise to the protests is the issue of injustice. Some areas of the country feel that they have not been well treated. They feel that they are treated as if they do not belong to the country.

    “Consider the recent appointments in government by our President and the way they are slanted to favour a particular section of the country.”

    Nwabueze said the group is in full support of the war against corruption, provided it is done in a manner that does not give the impression that some groups and individuals are being specifically targeted.

    Nevertheless, he said corruption is not the biggest challenge facing the country.

    Reviewing the last National Conference organised by the Jonathan Administration,Nwabueze said the  organizers  “isolated the ethnic nationalities.

    The Patriots, in a  communique issued at the end of  its   meeting,  called for greater urgency in addressing the socio-economic and political challenges confronting the country.

    It said though it did  not expect a quick-fix to the enormous challenges, the Buhari administration should  have at the back of its mind that the elections that propelled it to power were won on a promise of ‘change’.

    The Patriots said government should pay attention to the fight against corruption; execution of priority projects/programmes; increasing resources allocated to education and human capital development; appropriate pricing of gas, to encourage provision of adequate gas to the power sector; renegotiation of fiscal arrangements with multi-national oil companies/joint venture partners of the Federal Government; and review of the conclusions and recommendations of the 2014 National Conference.

    On the Kogi governorship election, Nwabueze called for fresh voting following the death of the governorship candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Prince Abubakar Audu, who was leading in the November 21 election declared inconclusive by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    Nwabueze, a constitutional lawyer, argued that whatever votes the late Audu scored during the election died with him and cannot be transferred to another man.

    His words: “Anybody saying that the votes of a dead man should be transferred to another does not make sense to me; I don’t understand it. When he died, the votes cast for him died with him and there should be fresh elections.

    “The mandate given by the people of Kogi State was for a dead man; nobody else can come and say he’s been given a mandate by the votes cast for the deceased Audu. That mandate died with the death of the man who the votes were cast for.”

    He said people do not understand the concept of a running mate under the Nigerian Constitution. “A running mate is a spare tyre; the votes are for the governorship candidate and it does not give any mandate to the running mate, who is there only to support his principal,” he said, adding that the constitution does not allocate specific powers to a deputy.

  • Pro-Biafra: Agitation mirrored in malice

    SIR: Make no mistake, the pro-Biafra demonstrations in some part of the Eastern Nigeria being engineered by the so-called Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) and the factional Mobilization for the Actualization of Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB), is not a struggle for self-determination or advancement for the interest of an average Igbo man. Far from it! The protests are the handiwork of some disgruntled politicians in the region who lost out power at the 2015 general elections. It is, however, unfortunate that the idle youths, who are the victims of this selfish power play, are ironically being used to execute the deceit.

    It is highly laughable and mischievous that the same groups who had given an overwhelming support to the immediate past President Goodluck Jonathan at the last election suddenly woke up from their cocoons to realize that the region is being marginalized and therefore want to secede from Nigeria. Assuming the former president won the last election would the groups have clamoured for separation as they are presently doing?

    The malicious and deceitful motive of the agitation is further exposed by a pin drop silence from the political class in the region. Those who have decided to speak did not leave anyone in doubt as to how politically and ill motivated their involvements in the saga are. For instance, the former Governor of old Anambra State, Chief Emeka Ezeife, blamed the uprising on President Buhari, whom he accused of sidelining Ndigbo from his government in terms of political appointments. But Ezeife forgot that the Enugu-Port Harcourt road, Onitsha-Enugu road and the much touted Third Niger Bridge are still unattended, notwithstanding that Ndigbo occupied key positions in the previous regime.

    If the protest and struggle are really for the common good of Ndigbo, as the sponsors want us to believe, one wonders why the same people clandestinely championing same rejected the very soul of Biafra, late Dim Chukwuemeka Ojuchukwu, in 2003 when he contested the presidential election. The same fictitious individuals have also squeezed life out of the late warlord’s legacy, the All Progressive Grand Alliance (APGA), yet they want the gullible protesters to buy into project Biafra as only a way out of the region’s quagmire.

    Like the Imo State Governor, Rochas Okorocha, recently stated, I totally acknowledge that the Southeast had long been schemed out of the political equation in Nigeria, but I vehemently refuse to accept that the region can only negotiate this infraction on the platform of Biafra. The bleeding truth is that the more the region continues to adopt this approach in addressing myriad of problems bedeviling it, the more it will continue to imperil her chances from having a bite at the presidency. But sadly, those who could have galvanized the people for this cause are the ones instigating the ongoing counter-productive protests in the region. It is instructive that all this while, the Igbo socio-cultural group, Ohanaeze Ndigbo looked the way until the Imo State Governor, Rochas Okorocha, summoned a meeting of Igbo leaders in Owerri last week, though the outcome and impact of the meeting on the agitation are entirely a different ball game, however, one takeaway from the meeting is that it is time Igbo politicians offered effective leadership in that region.

    Genuinely concerned Ndigbo like me believe strongly on the principles behind Biafra to wit; equity, justice and fairness, but I do not share the view that Ndigbo should always reawaken that spirit only when the political class in the region fell out of power. Neither do I believe that the region should be selective in their demand for better and more recognition from the successive governments. To do so is to negate these principles and cast the image of the region in bad light amongst other political zones of the country. The protesters should hold their leaders accountable to the current state of the region rather than point accusing fingers on others. The clamour for secession is also not a viable option in view of the present political arrangement and structure of Nigeria; dialogue with other ethnic group and political zones is it.

    Meanwhile, it is important that the leader of the group, Nnamdi Kalu, be released henceforth from detention if, indeed, he had fulfilled the bail terms granted to him by the court. To continue to keep him in detention against this fact is not just a violation of his rights, it is anathema to the principle of rule of law and democratic tenets.

     

    • Okoro Gabriel Esq.,

    Lagos.

  • ‘Pro-Biafra demonstrations may backfire’

    ‘Pro-Biafra demonstrations may backfire’

    A group, Igbo Conscience, has said pro-Biafra agitators are endangering the lives and businesses of Ndigbo outside the Southeast.

    The group lamented that the “rootless and uncoordinated agitation” has renewed anti-Igbo sentiments in the Southsouth and rekindled the old rivalry capable of affecting Igbo interests in future.

    The group’s leader, Mr. Monday Ubani, told reporters in Lagos that prominent Igbo believed that the race was better off in a united Nigeria, contrary to the drums of war being beaten by unscrupulous elements. He, however, called for the restructuring of the country by President Muhammadu Buhari to redress the long years of injustice and give every region a sense of belonging.

    “We distance the generality of Ndigbo from the politically-orchestrated clamour for secession from Nigeria. It is dubious. It is fraudulent. It is selfish and does not command the support of most Igbo. It is a non-event, inconsequential, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing. Ndigbo are better off and will do better in a united and prosperous Nigeria.”

    Ubani, who was accompanied by Comrade Joe Igbokwe and others,  said those chanting war slogans may put the Ndigbo in danger, if the peaceful demonstrations were hijacked and it turns violent, adding that the outcome might be perceived negatively by other zones.

    He said: “It is beyond doubt that a bulk of Igbo investment is domicilled outside the so-called Biafra. It is certain that more Igbo live outside the so-called Biafra and it is beyond doubt that these senseless agitators and their sponsors are exposing Igbo property, wealth and Igbo people to danger by the politically-induced and needless agitation.”

    “ We believe that Nigeria provides a big space for Igbo to thrive. When you have an Atlantic Ocean to swim in, you do not need a pond in Okigwe to do the same.”

  • Pro-Biafra protests shut Umuahia

    Pro-Biafra protests shut Umuahia

    The pro-Biafra protest train arrived Umuahia, the Abia State capital yesterday, moving through major streets under the watch of security agents.

    The pro-Biafra demonstrators were fulfilling their vow to take the protest to all states of the Southeast before heading to Abuja, if the leader of the Independent People of Biafra (IPOB) and Director of Radio Biafra, Nnamdi Kanu, was not released.

    Alhough economic activities were not disrupted, about 500 protesters marched through Isi Court in Umuahia South, Aba and Umuwaya roads as well as Bende and Enugu Roads peacefully.

    They were accompanied by security agencies, apparently to forestall a breakdown of law and order.

    Roads leading to the Government House was blocked with police vans.

    The protesters, who carried Kanu’s portrait and the Biafran flag, chanted songs of freedom and asked the Federal Government to order Kanu’s release.

    Before the protesters arrived, security agencies including the police, Army and civil defence, mounted surveillance in strategic locations including the Government House.

    Police spokesman Ezekiel Udeviotu said the protest was peaceful and there were no arrests as the police applied international best practices of the rule engagement.