Tag: Uwazuruike

  • MASSOB accuses Uwazuruike of plot to  attack secretariat

    MASSOB accuses Uwazuruike of plot to attack secretariat

    The Uchenna Madu-led faction of the Movement for the Actualisation of the Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB) has accused ousted leader, Ralph Uwazuruike, of plotting to attack its secretariat at Okwe, Onuimo council in Imo State, in order to restore himself as the group’s leader.

    The group warned Uwazuruike to stem the plan as it will resist such attempts, even as it appealed security agencies to come to its aid.

    “Uwazuruike is under pressure because he never fought for the Igbo cause. That is why we are appealing to security agencies to come to our aid as our demonstration for Biafra is peaceful. We will resist Uwazuruike fire-to-fire if security agencies fail to arrest him.

    “We will not watch him take over our headquarters. He has mortgaged our future to politicians,” Madu said.

    The group reiterated its insistence for the release of the leader of Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), Nnamdi Kanu, leader of the Biafra Zionist Movement (BZM), Ben Onwuka, and other Biafra activists in detention.

  • MASSOB warns Uwazuruike against planned election

    MASSOB warns Uwazuruike against planned election

    The Uchenna Madu-led faction of the Movement for the Actualisation of the Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB) has warned leader of the Biafra Independent Movement (BIM), Ralph Uwazuruike against ridiculing the genuine Biafra struggle with his planned election.

    A statement by Madu cautioned Uwazuruike “to stop gambling with the Biafra project and parading himself as a Biafra leader or agitator as he does not have the mandate of genuine Biafra agitators like MASSOB, IPOB, Lower Niger Congress, Bilie Human Right Initiative and the Council of Elders of IPOB”.

    The statement reads: “Though Uwazuruike has formed a new group to further his criminalities and cover his shameful acts of sabotage against Biafra, he remained expelled from all Biafra self-determination projects, both at home and in the Diaspora. Very soon, MASSOB shall come up with its final verdict on Uwazuruike’s offence and punishment.

    “MASSOB knows that Uwazuruike’s noise of electing governors and lawmakers is a way to revive his damaged reputation, but it will not see the light of day because of the agreement he signed with Alhaji Hamzal Mustapha, Dokubo Asari, Fredrick Fasheun, Yerima Sani, among others, for the unity of Nigeria.

    “In 2013, Uwazuruike agreed not to engage in anything that could jeopardise the sovereignty of Nigeria, after collecting N5 billion, which he promised to share with his members but did not.

    “Uwazurike is deceiving his brainwashed members who still believe he will give them Biafra, not knowing he has sold them. Why is Uwazuruike cancelling the proposed election and prayer summit without telling his members the real reason? Who is he consulting? Does he have a good relationship with Igbo and Southsouth leaders? The only reason is that the DSS invited him and showed him the documents of the agreement he signed to maintain Nigeria’s oneness.

    “MASSOB therefore warns Uwazurike to stop his false activities in the name of Biafra and keep silent until MASSOB comes up with its final verdict on his crime and acts of sabotage against Biafra.”

  • Uwazuruike to set up parallel govt

    Uwazuruike to set up parallel govt

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    • Election to hold February 22

    Movement for the Actualisation of the Sovereign State of Biafra leader, Ralph Uwazuruike has announced plans to set up a parallel government in the Southeast and Southsouth.

    Election will hold on February 22 into wards, provinces, districts, regions and zones of the Southeast and Southsouth, which it said are Biafra  territories.

    Speaking during the presentation of the 2016 Biafra Budget at the Ojukwu Memorial library, Uwazuruike announced the appointment of Rev. Fr Samuel Aniebonam, a Catholic Priest, as the Chairman of the Biafra Independent National Electoral Commission (B-INEC).

    His words: “In line with our principle of non-violence towards establishing a sovereign control over the territorial boarders of the New Biafra, a Catholic Priest, Rev. Fr. Samuel Aniebonam has been appointed the Chairman of Biafra Independent National Electoral Commission, (B-INEC).

    “The Chairman, with other anointed men and women of God as members, will supervise the internal election into the offices of the new Biafra Government on February 22.” The separatist leader said the election will be by open ballot, popularly known as Option A4.

    “Our election will not be like Nigeria’s election, it will be a transparent one. In Biafra, there won’t be electoral fraud. The tenure of the elected Regional Governor or Minister would be four years and nine months. There shall be no second tenure.

    “Once you are defeated, you won’t appeal in a tribunal against your opponent. This is why members of the commission would be men and women of God.”

    MASSOB’s National Director of Information, Sunny Okereafor, in a telephone interview, said the elections is in line with democratic ideals and international best practices, which Biafra was founded on, and where citizens would find satisfaction.

    He explained that only members of MASSOB and its parent body, the Biafra Independence Movement, (BIM), are qualified to vote and be voted for in the election.

    “The electioneering has began; we are conducting elections into all offices from wards to the zones, to elect leaders to administer Biafra. We are going to show Nigeria how to conduct free and fair elections without rigging, intimidation and favouritism.

    “Biafra will be a country where others would come to learn how democracy works. We have already set standards. Our non-violent approach is legendary and we have received several commendations for it. We want freedom; Biafra is the answer.”

    Okereafor said as soon as the elections were concluded and winners sworn in, Biafra would re-introduce its legal tender, the pounds.

     

  • Pro-Biafra protests are politically motivated – Uwazuruike

    Separatist leader and founder of the Movement for the Actualization of Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB), Chief Ralph Uwazuruike, on Tuesday disclosed that the pro-Biafra protests rocking the Southeast and other parts of the country are politically motivated to paint the struggle in bad light.

    Uwazuruike, who briefed journalists at the Ojukwu Memorial Library in Owerri, the Imo State capital, said the violent protests by members of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) are breach of the non-violence position of MASSOB.

    He said, “The current pro-Biafra protests are political, if not so where do they get the monies they share for those participating in the protests. We will actualize Biafra without spilling blood and all those behind the protest are sabotaging the genuine struggle.”

    Uwazuruike, who was recently expelled by a faction of MASSOB, however stated that factions are healthy for the struggle.

    “We welcome factions in the struggle because MASSOB cannot do it alone. All those preaching violence are not genuine because will not encourage violence in any form,” he stated.

  • Uwazuruike floats new group

    Uwazuruike floats new group

    Movement for the Actualisation of Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB) leader Ralph Uwazuruike yesterday announced a new group, the Biafra Independent Movement (BIM). He said MASSOB would be reorganised and handed over to youths as the youth wing of the Biafra agitation.

    Uwazuruike, who addressed reporters during a general meeting of Zonal and Regional Administrators at the Ojukwu Library, said MASSOB had been rested temporarily and “old members will now belong to the new BIM while the MASSOB structure will be reorganised as the youth wing of the Biafra struggle”.

    He said he would be referred to as Biafra leader instead of MASSOB leader, as he was previously known, noting that the metamorphosis was in line with laid down plans for the actualisation of Biafra.

    A faction of MASSOB led by the former Director of Information, Uchenna Madu, expelled Uwazuruike for alleged financial misappropriation.

    The embattled leader apologised to victims of the Onitsha mayhem, which left about 13 people, including two policemen, dead.

    “We condemn the demonstration in its entirety, MASSOB was not part of the demonstration and we apologise to the victims, including the Hausa community.

    “There is nothing special about Nnamdi Kanu’s detention. He is not the only person to be detained because of Biafra. I have been to prison more than 16 times and nothing happened. We cannot continue to suffer our people by closing the roads and forcing traders to close their shops; IPOB should take the demonstration to Abuja and Lagos where the impact will be felt by the Federal Government instead of creating problem in the Southeast.”

  • MASSOB’s faction expels Uwazuruike

    MASSOB’s faction expels Uwazuruike

    •Inaugurates new leaders

    A faction of the Movement for the Actualisation of the Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB) has expelled Chief Ralph Uwazuruike, who leads another faction of the group.

    Its national officers yesterday inaugurated a new leadership, led by former National Director of Information Uchenna Madu and Ugwuoke Ibem Ugwuoke.

    MASSOB warned Uwazuruike to stop “parading himself as the leader or using Ojukwu’s name to dupe Ndigbo to pursue his political ambition”.

    A communique by the National Officers and Administrators at Okwe, MASSOB’s Headquarters, said “the development is to redeem and revive the lost spirit and confidence of the Biafra revolution in our people, friends and sympathisers.

    “A vote of no confidence and total rejection has been passed in Ralph Uwazuruike. His inability to sustain and maintain Ojukwu’s dream of Biafra, his deviation into the mainstream of Nigerian politics and using the Biafra struggle to enhance his selfish political ambition, are the onus of our rejection of his association with Biafra struggle”.

    The members also indicted the sacked MASSOB leader of defrauding members to enrich himself.

    “The introduction of the Biafra international passport was a dubious means through which he generated about N1,000,000 for himself. The existence of the passport without Biafra sovereignty was illegal. Today, the passport is useless to holders, even Uwazuruike does not use it.

    “The over N40 million realised from the dedication of the Biafran war veterans’ home in Okwe, built by MASSOB members, remains unaccounted for.

    “In the light of these developments, we felt that Uwazuruike has betrayed the leadership mantle Dim Odimegwu Ojukwu bestowed upon him.”

    Also reading its report, the four-man committee, which probed Uwazuruike’s leadership of MASSOB, indicted him of fraud and gross betrayal.

    The committee, headed by  Comrade Samuel Edison, alleged that MASSOB contributed N4 billion in monthly dues and other levies in the last 16 years, but were unaccounted for.

    “In the course of work, we found out that MASSOB members, in the last 16 years, contributed about N4 billion,  which remain unaccounted for.

    “With these evidences and exposures, the committee  finds Uwazuruike guilty of corruption, embezzlement and betrayal of MASSOB struggle and living extravagant life as if he is a politician or government contractor. “The committee recommends that Uwazuruike be expelled from MASSOB”.

    In his acceptance letter, Madu said: “Today’s event is a sign of new hope, vision and self-determination. The new leadership of MASSOB will work with other genuine  pro-Biafra groups in the spirit of Biafranism with unity of purpose.

    “We are more determined and motivated for the cause we so much believe in, the vision we vowed to pursue, the mission that must be accomplished.

    ”We shall strengthen our already built relationship with the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), BILIE Human Right Initiatives, Igbo Youth Cultural Association, United Eastern Congress, Lower Niger Congress and Niger Delta Self Determination groups.

    “Non-violence and peaceful agitation shall continue to be our cardinal point. We shall never resort to armed struggle, though our oppressor provokes us.”

    Uwuzuruike refused to comment when he was called.

     

  • Uwazuruike, Kanu  and the rest of us

    Uwazuruike, Kanu and the rest of us

    Probably the greatest headache the nearly six-month Buhari administration is suffering from right now is the Biafra resurgence, bar, of course the country’s sharp economic downturn arising from the collapse of the price of oil, the country’s single biggest source of public revenue.

    The administration, of course, suffers from other headaches, several of them very acute, notably Boko Haram insurgency, mostly in the Northeast and violent clashes between Fulani cattle rearers and farmers in most parts of the country. None of these headaches, however, seems of recent to have received as wide a media publicity as the Biafra resurgence. None certainly is as rooted in the popular imagination – grand delusion, is the more accurate description – of a huge chunk of a section of the country’s youth as the Biafra resurgence. Consequently, it has the greatest potential for defying any quick fix among all the problems with Nigeria.

    Former president, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, obviously thinks otherwise. “This,” he told reporters at his Abeokuta Hilltop residence late last month, “is fake agitation. You people make a mountain out of a molehill.” Obasanjo was probably right to say that those spearheading the Biafra resurgence are fake. “The people who are doing this,” he said, “are the same people in the 419 business, they are the same people you will find in drugs all over the world. To them this is another source of making money.”

    I do not know about 419 and drugs, but it speaks volumes about the motives of the spearheads of the Biafra resurgence that Nnamdi Kanu, the proprietor of the London- based pirate Radio Biafra and the immediate source of the new Biafra headache, would, in effect, dismiss his erstwhile boss, the leader of the Movement for the Actualisation of the Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB), Ralph Uwazuruike, as a carpetbagger. (Kanu, until he became estranged from Uwazuruike, was the London coordinator of MASSOB).

    In perhaps the longest news feature on the issue to date, the Saturday Sun (November 14) quoted Kanu as accusing Uwazuruike of deceit and self-enrichment. “I can tell you today,” Kanu reportedly told the newspaper “even MASSOB members are revolting now because they know that their leadership is fraudulent and decaying.” One of such fraudulence, Kanu said, was that whereas Uwazuruike printed and sold Biafran passports to his people, he always travelled abroad with his Nigerian passport.

    MASSOB was founded in 1999 and the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) eight years later by Kanu as a breakaway faction. Since MASSOB, among other fraudulent activities Kanu spoke at some length about in the Sun interview, had always printed and sold Biafran passports, while Uwazuruike used Nigerian passport, one must wonder why it took Kanu all the intervening years to realise that his former boss was fake. Chances are, it wasn’t any moral principle, high or not.

    So, I agree with Obasanjo and many like him who believe the leadership of the Biafra resurgence is fake. Even then I disagree with him that expressing concern about the resurgence is making a mountain out of a molehill. That was what many of us thought of Boko Haram in its early days – and look where it has landed us since 2009 when we thought we could quickly despatch its headache with military sledgehammer.

    Uwazuruike and Kanu, like many in the leadership of Boko Haram who denounced science and modernism, but relished in their fruits, may be fake. But then we now live in a world where “verisimilitude matters more than veracity,” to quote The Economist in an article it published in its edition of December 18, 2010 on global public relations, entitled: “Rise of the image men.” To rephrase the magazine, we live today in a world where the appearance of truth matters more than the reality of truth itself.

    Uwazuruike, and even more so Kanu, are clearly good students and disciples of Edward Barnes, a nephew of the famous 19th Century German psychologist, Sigmund Freud, and widely regarded as the father of modern public relations. Barnes, like his uncle, believed people responded best to images and emotional appeals, rather than to rational arguments. Hence Uwazuruike’s and Kanu’s appeals to the effective emotion, but grand delusion, of a Biafran El Dorado that never was and is unlikely to ever be even if Biafra is to become a reality.

    Their Biafran dream is obviously based on the illusion that all the so-called people of Biafra, defined by Kanu as “the Idoma people, the Igbo people,  the Efik, the Ibibio, the Anang, the Ijaw, the Itsekiri, the Urhobo and the Anioma people” are the same but completely different from other Nigerians. This is clearly a false assumption. Of course, we do differ in race, beliefs and tongue. But even within each of these three categories, there are also differences, at times great.

    Take, for example, the assumption that all Igbo are the same. Nothing debunks it like a lengthy interview I had with the great late Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe in 1979 at his Nsukka residence when he was the presidential candidate of the Nigerian Peoples Party (NPP) in that year’s general election. Responding to a question I asked him on his role in Biafra, he said he did his best to keep his Igbo people in Nigeria in spite of their misgivings about their welcome in the country. His efforts, he said, were in the end thwarted essentially because some of the advisers of the late Chief Odumegwu Ojukwu, as Biafra’s military head of state, persuaded the man that he should be wary of Zik as an Onitsha man.

    These advisers, he said, told Ojukwu that Biafra was holding its own militarily and so did not need any conference to sort out his difference peacefully with General Yakubu Gowon, the Nigerian head of state. They told Ojukwu, he said, that “he should be very very careful with me as an Onitsha man because they thought that I was using him as a means to give publicity to myself internationally and that time will come when people will look more to me than himself. Well, as a young man, human, he fell for the flattery.”

    The moral of Zik’s inferred contention that Biafra was not inevitable should be obvious; there are no differences, individual or group that cannot be ironed out, if only we can, as individuals, get our egos and self-interests out of the way. After all, whatever our race, belief or tongue, we are all part of God’s humanity, with more shared needs and values than differences. Related to this is the moral that there is no end to our differences if we chose to focus on them.

    People like Uwazuruike and Kanu who harp on our differences and try to divert our attention away from our common humanity may be fake. But their capacity to appeal to our emotions makes them particularly dangerous and thus makes it necessary to handle them with the greatest care.

    In a world in which the Internet has made image more important than substance, it is difficult to solve problems by appealing to human rationality. However, in the long run there is simply no substitute for doing exactly that. The practical implication of this is that we must address the differences the likes of Uwazuruike and Kanu seek to exploit and at the same time respect due process in bringing them to book for their attempts to exploit those differences by criminal means.

    And MASSOB and IPOB, whatever their leaders and supporters think, are simply illegal, if not criminal enterprises, just like Boko Haram. Unlike Boko Haram, they may not have resorted yet to arms, but the hate speeches they spew against other Nigerians are criminal, and recognised as such by our laws and by international laws as well. In any case, given Kanu’s appeals last September to the Igbo in diaspora to support his cause with guns and bullets at the Igbo World Congress in Los Angeles, USA, it is only a matter of time before at least IPOB resorts to arms.

    Perhaps it was inadvertent, but in urging all the Igbo outside the Southeast to return home, MASSOB’s National Director of Information, Mr Uchenna Madu, gave the game away when he said “MASSOB has vowed to stop kidnapping, armed robbery and other criminal tendencies in Igbo land because there is no place in Nigeria like Igbo land (Saturday Vanguard, November 21).

    No doubt, there is the need to handle MASSOB and IPOB firmly as illegal enterprises. However, because they have succeeded in tapping into the popular, some of them legitimate, disaffections of a large section of the country’s youth, there is an even greater need to scrupulously respect due process in dealing with the Biafran resurgence.

  • Uwazuruike disowns Radio Biafra boss

    The leader of the Movement for the Actualization of Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB), Chief Ralph Uwazuruike, on Monday disclosed that the Director of Radio Biafra, Nnamdi Kanu, who was arrested on Sunday by the Department of State Security (DSS), does not belong to the movement.

    Uwazuruike, who spoke through his Assistant Director of information, Mr.  Sunday Okereafor, in Owerri, Imo State, described Kanu as a rebel who had long been expelled by MASSOB for inciting violence among members.

    “Kanu’s arrest has nothing to do with the struggle for a sovereign state of Biafra,” the MASSOB leader stated.

    He continued that Kanu broke the group non violence approach and was summarily dismissed.

    Uwazuruike, however, dismissed the allegation that MASSOB was behind the arrest of the Biafra Radio boss, adding that the movement cannot meddle into unnecessary matter.

    Meanwhile, a faction of MASSOB had condemned the arrest, insisting that it could cause the country “diplomatic damage.”

  • Police arrest 20 in raid at Uwazuruike’s home

    Police arrest 20 in raid at Uwazuruike’s home

    The Imo State police command yesterday arrested 20 persons when it raided the home of the leader of the Movement for the Actualisation of the Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB), Chief Ralph Uwazuruike.

    But Uwazuruike was not  arrested.

    When The Nation visited the compound in the new Owerri Area F, policemen prevented visitors from entering the compound.

    MASSOB’s Director of Information Mr. Chris Muocha said the whereabouts of the MASSOB leader was unknown.

    “Up till now, we don’t know the whereabouts of our leader. But we know that our members, including Uwazuruike’s personal security, were arrested and taken to zone 9 from where they will be taken to Abuja, but we don’t know if he was among them or if anything has happened to him.”

    He warned that the security agencies should not take the group’s peaceful disposition to mean cowardice.

    “We are warning the security agencies to leave MASSOB alone and concentrate on fighting Boko Haram because no person or group has the monopoly of violence.

    “We will not continue to watch while our unarmed members are brutalised. We need our own republic, the Republic of Biafra, and no amount of intimidation or harassment will stop us,” Muocha said.

    Confirming the incident, police spokesman Mr. Andrew Enwerem said the raid was not unconnected to the group’s activities.

    He said police’ presence in Uwazuruike’s premises and other flashpoints in the state were to check a possible breakdown of law and order, adding that there was no express order to arrest Uwazuruike.

    “The Commissioner of Police, Taiwo Lakanu, has declared total annihilation of criminal elements and the raid is in line with that directive. You will also notice an increase in police patrol across the state,” Enwerem said.

  • MASSOB blasts Uwazuruike

    The Movement for the Actualisation of the Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB) has slammed its leader, Chief Raph Uwazuruike, for the woes faced by the group, describing him as a selfish person.

    MASSOB, which has been in crisis for the last one year, urged Ndigbo to vote wisely.

    In a communiqué yesterday after its Executive Council meeting at Okwe in Imo State, signed by the Director of Information, Uchenna Madu, MASSOB said it picked candidates for the National Assembly elections in the Southeast.

    It said the group endorsed the son of former leader of Ndigbo, the late Dim Chukwuemeka Odumegwu- Ojukwu, Chukwuemeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu (Jnr), candidate for the Nnewi North/South and Ekwusigo  seat on the platform of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA).

    Others included Chief Uche Onyeaguocha (Owerri senatorial seat), on the platform of the All Progressives Congress (APC); Chief Orji Uzor Kalu (Abia North, PPA); Chief Victor Umeh (Anambra Central, APGA); Chief Athan Nneji Achonu (Okigwe zone, PDP); Andy Ubah (Anambra South, PDP); Ozo Nwabueze Okafor (Enugu East, APGA);

    Also picked were Senator Ike Ekweremadu (Enugu West, PDP); Abia State Governor Theodore Orji (Abia Central, PDP); Chief Sam Egwu (Ebonyi North, PDP); ThankGod Ezeani (Orlu Zone, APGA) and Princess Stella Oduah (Anambra North, PDP).

    The group listed Anambra House of Assembly Speaker Princess Chinwe Nwaebili (Ogbaru Federal Constituency, APGA); Tobias Okechukwu (Awgu-Aniri, Oji River Federal Constituency, PDP); Prince Emeka Mamah (Udenu/Igboeze North Federal Constituency, APGA) and Ofochukwu Egbo (Enugu North/South Federal Constituency, APGA).

    Although Uwazuruike boycotted the meeting, it was attended by regional administrators, state zonal leaders, foundation members and senior officers of MASSOB.

    The body said the political leadership of Ndigbo had waned, adding that it wanted strong-willed Igbo sons and daughters to represent the zone in the National Assembly.