The early part of June 2017 saw Arewa Youths issues
a “Quit Notice” to the Igbo living in Northern Nigeria. This followed the
50-year anniversary of the Biafran war where both friends and foes of Biafra
took turn to tell their stories with objective emphasis on the Igbo. After a
careful analysis, it has been easy to dismiss the entire anniversary exercise
as orchestrated by the politicians as busy doing something very close to
nothing.
Much of the blame at the anniversary was heaped
on the loss of the Biafran war. Yes, the Igbo have endured all sorts of
discrimination because of the war. But to continue to drum the linear excuse 50
years after the war is like remaining
stuck in a curse.
There might be no need to harp on the missed
opportunities before the war when Nnamdi Azikiwe and his Igbo intelligentsia
had a commanding influence in national politics—both in prestige and ideology.
Now in the post-war, it is not impolitic to suggest that the Igbo have seen a
fair share of political positions throughout the post-war democratic
dispensations beginning from the regime of Shehu Shagari to that of Goodluck
Jonathan. The tragedy, regrettably, is that there is no tangible development in
the East besides primitive accumulation of wealth by the individual politicians
themselves.
To sustain the unhindered looting of development
projects in the zone, the Southeast leaders in the Peoples’ Democratic Party
(PDP) perfected one of the most blatant political perfidy in recent memory.
Though they were keenly aware that the PDP would rationally zone its presidency
to the North in 2019, the Igbo leaders deceived their people with the false
premise that uniting with the South-South zone to support President Jonathan in
the 2015 election would guarantee a presidency of Southeast extraction in 2019.
It was not surprising, therefore, that Muhammadu Buhari’s eventual triumph over
Jonathan was generally seen as a rude coup d’état in East.
This development, coupled with the abject lack of development in
Igboland plus President Buhari’s infamous outburst to punish the Southeast and
South-South zones for voting against him in the 2015 elections, heightened the
renewed call for Biafra by innocent youths. Notably, the agitators retained the
natural map of Biafra and added parts of North Central zone.
The more troubling, however, is the mindboggling hypocrisy
being exhibited by the Igbo politicians ever since. Outwardly, they
(particularly those in PDP) appear to fan the agitation. Inwardly, these
political merchants know that the innocent youths are merely being exploited as
usual. After all, the same politicians who are continuing to deploy the
proceeds from looted development projects in Igboland to acquire choice
properties in Abuja and Lagos would resist any plan to leave Nigeria.
This explains why the Igbo PDP leaders craftily deflated the
agitation and its exigent cause. For instance, instead of capitalizing on the
undeniable natural bond between Southeast and South-South or the seemingly
sense of unity among the two zones following the 2015 elections to launch
Eastern Caucus at the National Assembly or emulate the North to create Eastern
Governors Forum, the “wise” men from the East succumbed to making the cause of
Biafra solely an Igbo-Southeast affair.
What the looters did was to simply embrace the age-long
state bandwagon to distort the Biafran history to the Igbo disadvantage. The
so-called Igbo leaders or any sensible elite for that matter cannot claim
ignorance of the fact that natural Igbo territory is beyond the Southeast. Moreover,
Biafra is not even an Igbo word to begin with. In fact, it was Frank Opigo, an
Ijaw—not Igbo—who christened the new nation at time of its birth in May 1967.
How soon can they forget that the last Head of State of Biafra, Phillip
Effiong, is not from the Southeast? What does it take to remind them that the
former Secretary-General of Ohaneze Ndigbo, a Biafran war commander, and
current Secretary-General of Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), Joe Achuzia,
is not from the Southeast? What curse would make them to join to act as if
though Chukwuma Nzeogwu, who led the coup commonly blamed for the civil war,
was not an Igbo from the South-South? What does it take to acknowledge that a
good number of influential figures from the South-South subscribes to the Biafran
cause? Even if Biafra has suddenly become an exclusive Igbo agenda, how can any
reasonable Igbo elite circumvent the knowledge of natural Igbo settlements in
the South-South and North Central zones?
Obviously, there are crises of leadership in Igboland as there are
excuses. As the popular saying goes, “a habit
of excuses is the best friend of failure.” The latest excuse is the term
“Restructuring”, whatever that means. The loudest perspective is that the Igbo
will witness the desired development once the country is restructured along
tribal lines—as if the local governments and states in Igboland are headed by
the Hausas or Yorubas. The political racketeers now want us to believe that the
over $100 billion in federal money that entered the Southeast zone since May
1999, for example, was looted by the non-Igbo.
Make no mistake about it, the merits for restructuring or
independent states can be profound. But could lack of restructuring suddenly be
responsible for the failure of Ndigbo to use occasion of the 50-year
anniversary of the Biafran war to chart a clear roadmap for the future? Is lack
of restructuring truly to blame for the failure of Ndigbo and the South-South
to emulate the North in creating concrete unifying agendas in the East 50 years
after the war? Further, is lack of restructuring responsible for the perpetual
failures of South East Governors Forum or Igbo umbrella groups, such as World
Igbo Congress and Ohaneze Ndigbo towards unity of purpose?
The dawn of 2017 was a cool breeze in the entire Nigerian polity
with the emergence of John Nnia Nwodo, a dynamic figure, as the
President-General of Ohaneze Ndigbo. But Nwodo’s reign is already trending as a
fall before the rise. The apex Igbo organization already appears hijacked by
faceless politicians. A day hardly passes without one manner of “Ohaneze
Youths” fouling the media space, shamelessly posing as shields to politicians
who have cases to answer with anti-corruption agency for looting funds
earmarked for development projects in Igboland.
The worst is that the folly does not stop with the Igbo
politicians. A host of the Igbo people, including their business men, have not
fared better in terms of common sense. It is a common knowledge that the
leading cause of armed robbery, kidnapping and, of course, the Biafran
agitation is attributed to lack of employment and development in the East. Yet,
the Igbo prefer to invest massively in other regions rather than their native
land that remains 75% underdeveloped.
he apparent dilemma is
tipping the critical threshold for mass revolution. The alarming success of a
recent Sit-at-Home Order by the Biafran agitators must alert the sit-tight Igbo
politicians that the political logic of clinging on excuses to deceive the masses
no longer favours them. Effective leadership is measured by results, not
excuses. Therefore—for now—unless the answer to the central question of this
piece is positive, instead of the mindless freebooting of project funds in the
area, it is incumbent upon the Igbo politicians to capitalize on the
widely-acclaimed ingenuity to maximize available resources to start
implementing strategic action plans that mirror some of those critical
development visions commonly graced along restructuring or under a sovereign
republic. True.
Extrapolated from Press Statement by: SKC Ogbonnia - Biafra: Did the Igbo Kill
Jesus?
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