Biafran Colt of arm

Biafran Colt of arm
Biafra is my Right

Saturday 28 December 2019

Letter To President Buhari Aka Jubril Aminu ALSUdani


 BIAFRA: I am renouncing my Nigerian citizenship.
      I'm now a Biafran (Open Letter to Mr.                                     President)
            Opera.com Dec 26, 2019 6:39 PM
A powerful and breathtaking letter has been sent to President Buhari of Nigeria written by Solomon Uchenna Egbo, a Biafran now residing in the UK, renouncing his Nigerian citizenship. Solomon, who is now part of the Biafran diaspora, works for the main independence organisation seeking to achieve Biafran self-determination, the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), with its headquarters seated in Germany.

The letter reads as follows...
"Dear President Buhari

I am writing to inform you that I am renouncing my Nigerian citizenship.

I am not Nigerian. I am Biafran. I lived in the country called “Nigeria” for 40 years. Nigeria, as you know, is a country that was created for the administrative convenience of our colonial power, Britain, in 1914. Nigeria is the forced amalgamation of different peoples, different religious groups, different customs and beliefs. Nigeria may have worked for the British but it doesn’t work for the peoples forced to be Nigerians. It does not, and never has, worked for the people of Biafra.

The crimes of Empire are multiple, but surely the biggest crime of all was that, on independence, Africa was forced to retain those colonial boundaries imposed by Europeans. By accepting this post-Colonial settlement, African leaders became complicit in the oppression of Africa. Your determination to maintain the borders of Nigeria imposed by the British simply reinforces their dominion over us.

As you know, Biafra existed before the British turned up. Biafra is that landmass that nestles around the Niger Delta. To all intents and purposes, Biafra is the south east corner of modern day Nigeria. Despite colonisation and being forcibly absorbed into Nigeria, we Biafrans retained our common values and a shared sense of identity. Biafrans are made up of different people, but we are all Biafrans.

We don’t all speak the same language. I am an Igbo speaker. Other Biafrans speak Urhobo-Isoko, Ijaw-Epie-Ogbia, Ogoni, Efik, Annang, Eket-, Oron-Ibibio, Ogoja, Ejagham, Igala, Idoma, Ibani and Igbanke among others. Biafra is made up of the following provinces: Rivers Province, Cross River, Akwa Ibom, Ebonyi, Imo, Anambra, Abia, Enugu, Bayelsa, Delta. I am an Igbo from Biafra. Being Igbo and Biafran is synonymous.

The Igbo people did not do well out of the British. Colonisation was hugely disruptive. As a consequence of British policies, we were scattered across Nigeria and then, on independence, we were marginalised. Many Igbo had been settled into the northern states of modern-day Nigeria and barely before the ink was dry on Nigerian independence, the intimidation and attacks began. Massacre after massacre drove the Igbo people from the northern states. The northern elites were in control. You know this. You are part of that elite. As you know, our access to government was blocked by your people. On 30 May 1967 we had had enough and declared an independent state of our own, Biafra. We had no choice.

The world knows the war that resulted in Biafra because of those photographs of starving, pot-bellied children. Post-colonial Africa is still defined and haunted by those images. That starvation was reality for my family. The Nigerian government’s response to our declaration of secession was to attack with all its might. Biafrans fought with the few weapons we had. I look back at those Biafrans who fought for their survival with such pride.

They were up against a highly trained Nigerian army with the latest weaponry. The British had formed an unholy alliance with the Soviet Union to ensure that Nigerian state forces would prevail. Biafra was but a pawn in the global politics of the time. All that mattered was who controlled Nigeria. But you know all of this. You were there. It was during this war that you made your name.
For nearly three years the Biafrans held out. Surrounded, our hospitals and homes bombed by Soviet-supplied aircraft, until a deliberate policy of starvation forced Biafra to surrender and be absorbed back into Nigeria – we know it was deliberate because at a peace conference in 1968 the leader of the Nigerian delegation said “starvation is a legitimate weapon of war and we have every intention of using it against the rebels”.
The most bitter part of it is that most of Africa and the world stood by and watched this wanton destruction of human lives, the raping, the sacking and plundering of towns, villages, community after community in Biafra and elsewhere. At least two million souls perished, and the UN did not lift a finger. Some put the figure as high as six million. What is not in dispute is that as many as 12,000 starving Biafrans were dying each day.
And you, President Buhari, played your own part in this war, commanding a sector along the Oji River to stop food supplies from entering Biafra. Later you reportedly said that you had no regrets and owe no apologies.
It is incomprehensible to me that Nigeria got away with the crimes that were perpetrated against Biafra and then demanded that we remain part of the same country. The raped being forced to remain with the rapist. We did not want to be part of your country. We had no choice. In many ways the “peace” afterwards was worse than war. Those who had fled their homes found them occupied by incomers when they returned.
Our parents’ jobs were taken away from them, what little money we had left we lost through the issue of a new Nigerian currency which meant that Biafran supplies of the old currency were not honoured. Many, many Igbos left the country where they had no future and made their homes across the world. For decades Biafra became just a memory, and one that could not even be spoken about.

“Hold your ears,” my late dad told me once. It was a Sunday afternoon. I was just a boy. We were sitting together on one of his special chairs covered in animal skins. He leaned closer. “You are not allowed to discuss Biafra publicly.”

Quickly my response was, “Why papa?”

“They might kill you or you might spend the rest of your life in prison.”

My parents suffered terribly during the Biafra war. They were the victims of the policies that the Nigerian authorities instigated. My uncles and most of my grandparents did not survive: beaten, starved, shot, bombed out of their homes, the women of my family raped by Nigerian soldiers. They were so hungry my mum and late dad were forced to drink urine to survive.

My mum could barely speak about what had happened. Tears would choke her. I knew some of this, but, like anyone, I wanted to know more. I wanted to know the history of my people, the Igbo, the Biafran people, before the British came, before the forced amalgamation of populations and in that brief moment when Biafra was free after independence. However, it was a big shock to me – it was one hell of a shock – to find out I could lose my life if I dared mention Biafra publicly.

Yet within my family, it is the mention of your name that causes contempt. We despise you and all you represent. You are the symbol of our persecution; our bogeyman.

I had no future in Nigeria. Igbo who identify as Biafrans have no place in Nigeria. I came to live in Britain in 2013. I am grateful to Britain for providing me and my family a home. The irony is not lost on me that Britain, which, 50 years ago, aided my parents’ enemies – people like you – is now a place of sanctuary for me. In 2015 I began my work with the Ipob. I am based in Manchester but we are a global movement. There is a huge Biafran diaspora. It is wonderful to see so many of Britain’s rising stars are of Biafran (and Igbo) origins. People such as Chuka Umunna and Chiwetel Ejiofor have family ties to Biafra.

Ipob’s mission is simple. Our struggle is to have the right to self-determination of the Biafran people recognised. We are calling for a referendum. It is for the people of Biafra to decide, but I hope that self-determination means independence. Fifty years ago, we were forced to fight for Biafran independence. Today we battle with words and music and with our bodies and our lives, but not weapons. We reject violence. We put our faith in human rights. It is the ballot box, not bullets, which will guarantee our liberation.

You and the state that you preside over reject human rights. Your instinct is to resort to force – lethal force. Which of the atrocities that the Nigerian state has committed against Biafrans since you became president in 2015 has been the worst? People have been imprisoned. There have been killings of supporters of Biafran independence – many of them, perhaps up to two thousand.

Your police and security services do not collect accurate statistics of course. We gather as much information as we can and Amnesty International has also reported on the use of lethal force against Biafrans at major events where hundreds of peaceful protesters have been mown down; but they don't compile statistics across the board as we seek to. 
Our leader Nnamdi Kanu was imprisoned on absurd charges of treason in 2015 because he dared to criticise you, President Buhari, and called for a referendum on Biafran self-determination. Your security forces kept him incarcerated without trial until April 2017 when he was finally released on the bail he’d been granted over a year earlier. And then in September of last year the Nigerian Army surrounded the house where he was staying with his parents and attacked with bullets and grenades. Many supporters were killed. Since that day, neither Nnamdi Kanu, nor his mother and father have been seen. The Nigerian forces and the Nigerian government have offered no explanation of what happened. They have been disappeared. We all dread what that means.

You met your match in Nnamdi Kanu. Our leader was a man of such integrity and vision. He united Biafrans in a way that no one had since the war. He inspired us and exalted us. His certainty that we would once again all live in Biafra gave us our purpose. His rejection of violence perplexed you. He could have organised an armed struggle against the Nigerian state.

The extent of the persecution that the Biafran people are subjected to would justify force. Even the Universal Declaration of Human Rights recognises that persecution and denial of rights can leave the oppressed with no choice but to resort to violence, but Nnamdi Kanu, instead, focussed on nation building and creating a blue print for Biafra that respected everyone’s human rights.

While you denied him his rights, he was trying to build a state that would have recognised yours. The reason that there were so many killed when your forces stormed his parents home, is that Biafrans gathered just to be near him. To hear him speak. To be part of his movement.

So, Nnamdi Kanu has been disappeared. Yet you peddle fake news about him and Ipob. Your news agencies report bogus sightings of him from Ghana to London. Our reaction to his disappearance? We have responded with peaceful demonstrations and, as you know, a very successful sit-at-home on 30 May of this year, which brought cities in Biafra, including Port Harcourt, to a stand-still and emptied the iconic Niger River Bridge at Onitsha of traffic.

I am not a fool. In our hearts we all know Nnamdi Kanu’s likely fate and that of his parents, but we are still not able to acknowledge his death. We live in hope. That’s what disappearing people does to the survivors. We delude ourselves. But whatever you have done to him and will do to us, we will not give up on his dream.

Your Nigerian state’s persecution of us continues. No one is spared. I believe I am trailed even here in the UK by agents of the Nigerian state. You continue with your fake news, desperate to suggest that there are clashes between Ipob and the Nigerian state. Yet Ipob’s response to your violence is to remain passive and to endure. Faced with the level of cruelty that we are subjected to, our belief in non-violence is often tested, but you will not provoke us.

In June you even arrested a member of the Nigerian senate. Senator Abiribe had put up bail for Nnamdi Kanu and was arrested by the Nigerian department for state services for “aiding and sponsoring a proscribed organisation, Ipob”. Senator Abiribe is not only a supporter of Nnamdi Kanu, he has also been critical of government corruption across the board. To justify your treatment of Nnamdi Kanu and Ipob you have attempted to label him and us terrorists. Of course, the international community has rejected the suggestion. Calling for the right to self-determination and a referendum is hardly an act of terrorism.

Yet this is how the Nigerian state under your presidency, Mr Buhari, works. Criticism is branded terrorism, upholding the rule of law is “aiding and sponsoring a proscribed organisation”, calling for Biafran autonomy is characterised as a crime and when a man or woman is arrested, they never really know why, or when they will be released. But they’re lucky: they could be shot in the street without warning.

In 1952, Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, who later became the first prime minister of Nigeria from 1960 to 1966 and a leader of Nigerian Independence – one of your heroes, president Buhari – dismissed out of hand the amalgamation of Nigeria by the British government.

He declared: “The Southern people who are swarming into this region daily in large numbers are really intruders. We don’t want them, and they are not welcome here in the North.” He went on, “since the amalgamation in 1914, the British government has been trying to make Nigeria into one country, but the Nigerian people are different in every way, including religion, custom, language and aspiration. The fact that we are Africans might have misguided the British government. We here in the north take it that Nigerian unity is not for us.”
                                         
But Biafra was cursed with oil and everything changed. We Igbo people and others in the south-eEast agree with Sir Abubakar Balewa, and we will do everything we can to achieve our dream of self-determination. We urge you, president Buhari, to listen to your hero. We also encourage the British Foreign Office to review its policy on Biafra.
Britain is a contradiction to me. On the one hand the Home Office has provided many Biafrans, like me, with a home and at the same time the Foreign Office stands by the Nigerian state. Is asking for a referendum on Biafran self-determination too much?
Nigeria is an artificial entity. You force people to live there and by doing so you come to embody all the malevolence that is now associated with Nigeria. We bury our children killed by your security forces. Those kids only asked to be acknowledged as Biafrans. We don’t have the Nigerian state on our side, but international law is.
We will hold you and your state to account. You have choices. A great African leader is a benign leader. You should have worked with Nnamdi Kanu to secure Biafra’s right to self-determination. Had you done that the world would have recognised you as a visionary, but instead you force us not to take up arms against you, but to use the law against you. We will win and your legacy will be revealed for what it is.
It is for this reason, president Buhari of Nigeria, that I am renouncing my Nigerian citizenship. I do not want it. I have never wanted it. My parents did not want it. My family do not want it. I have only ever wanted to live free, for my children to grow up in an independent, democratic Biafra, free from corruption and violence, free from bigotry and persecution, free from fear. Just free.

Sincerely

Solomon Uchenna Egbo"

What do you you think about this letter?


THE REASONS WHY PEOPLE 
JUBILATED WHEN BUHARI WAS
 OVERTHROWN IN 1985.
Have you always wondered (ask your dad) why people jubilated when Buhari was overthrown in 1985?

No need to wonder any more, these are some of the reasons people went on the streets after his removal. It took pains for me to research so we can catalogue and list the real reasons he was overthrown. I am sure this would help people my age group who were too young or were not born then.

Here are my findings

1.Soured Nigeria’s relations with Britain and neighbouring countries by ordering the brutal expulsion of 700,000 West African immigrants

2.Summarily dismissed 30,000 soldiers who were mainly Southerners and Middle beltans but left Lt.Col Mohammed Aliyu Gusau intact when he knew Aliyu was operating an import license scam.

3.Abuse of human rights:----It was so bad that the Nigerian Bar Association stopped their lawyers from participating in the charade dubbed "the Nuremberg tribunals". Once you're summoned to the tribunal, consider yourself a prisoner.

4.Buhari promulgated Decree 4 on his first day in the job as head of state. It basically means you criticize the government you go to prison, end of story.

5.All the the senior positions in the SMC were occupied by northern Muslims (SMC is like present day senate and HOR)

6.Decree 2 of 1984 (Detention of Persons Decree).....It basically allows the president to arrest anybody it wants.

7.Economy-----Insurmountable economic problems plagued the Buhari regime as petroleum prices collapsed in the face of expanding foreign debt. Buhari instituted austerity measures that caused severe hardship to the average Nigerian. In addition, political corruption continued unabated, with politicians escaping to Western countries with millions of dollars in government money. From Encyclopaedia Britannica

8.Rigidity----- Does not listen to other opinions hence Babangida said this when he overthrew Buhari: Major-General Muhammadu Buhari was too rigid and uncompromising in his attitudes to issues of national significance.

9.Jailing of opponents or perceived enemies. Sam Mbakwe 100-year jail, Ambrose Ali 75yrs, Lateef Jakande 100yrs and Pa Ajasin. Pa Adekunle Ajasin was tried, found innocent, tried again and still found innocent, and Buhari just decided enough was enough and jailed him anyhow. But curiously his friend Awwal Ibrahim – the highly corrupt governor of Niger State who was arrested at Heathrow airport with £14 million was only placed under house arrest.,

The End 10. 20 months after taking power, Nigerians and the military had grown tired and impatient with his dictatorship and the rest is history as they say.

After watching the evening news with people he thought were his friends, Majors Dangiwa Umar, Lawan Gwadabe, Abdulmumuni Aminu and Sambo Dasuki rose and pulled their pistols. One of them said: Major-General Muhammadu Buhari, on behalf of the Nigerian people, I hereby declare you arrested for crimes against the Nigerian people.

In conclusion, his downfall was intransigence. Not listening to other people's opinion in a diverse nation like Nigeria, he was not a unifier.

*Evil genius
He's end is here.

OPEN LETTER 
TO 
PRESIDENT MUHAMMADU BUHARI
By Femi Fani Kayode
Mr. President, many believe that you cannot read and those that believe that you can claim that you cannot go beyond three lines and that outside of that you can only comprehend cartoons.
I do not share either view. I know you well enough to concede that when you consider a literary submission of sufficient importance you have the prescence of mind, discipline, health, intelligence and ability to read through it very slowly and very carefully weighing up every word. And that is precisely as it should be.
The first open letter that I wrote to you was in December 2015 and the following serves as the second.
You will forgive me because this is a long letter and I am fully aware that your attention span or ability to retain too much information in one fell swoop may not be as good as it used to be.
Nevertheless I urge you to do your best to muster the courage, energy and intellectual stamina to stay the course and to find the time out of your busy schedule to read it from beginning to end.
I have written it because our nation is entering into dangerous and precarious waters and I sense that something will give very soon. I am therefore constrained to use this medium to bring my observations to your attention.
Be rest assured that I speak out of nothing but love and concern for the welfare of the Nigerian people and it is not my intention to insult you or undermine and disrespect your office but rather to shine the light of truth on all your activities with a view to assisting and encouraging you to change your ways.
You will agree with me that, no matter how bitter it may be, that truth must be told. This is a sacred obligation on our part as leaders and a matter of duty and honor.
I owe you, the Nigerian people and posterity that much and I have little doubt that no matter how badly you may feel after reading it, history will vindicate me and prove me right and one day you will acknowledge and recognise the profundity, wisdom and foresight in my constant and consistent criticisms, admonitions and counsel.
Outside of that it is my earnest prayer that the God of Heaven, whose I am and whom I serve, will judge between you and I.
Your Excellency, kindly note and consider the following.
You released hundreds of Boko Haram fighters from prison claiming that they are reformed and a few days later 30 of your citizens are blown up by the same Boko Haram in Borno state.
Worse still on that same day 16 members of the same family and four others were herded into a room and burnt alive by Fulani militants in Kaduna state.
After these terrible events instead of rushing back home to stand with your people, you stayed in Addis Ababa, lamenting and crying about the security situation in Libya and you sent your Vice to a funeral in Nairobi. Such insensitivity, even by your own standards, is rarely seen.
It took you three long days to finally see fit to leave your foreign friends, leave Addis Ababa and fly directly to Maiduguri to express your condolences to the Governor and people of Borno.
Even then you could not muster the courage to go to the town of Auno where the bombing took place but only to Maiduguri, the capital of the state.
Understandably you were received with boos, jeers and shouts of "ba ma so" (meaning "we dont want") by the crowds that lined the streets and this was an eloquent testimony to the fact that the entire nation, including the north that you claim to represent and be a champion of, is fed up with you and can no longer bear your incompetence and inability to run the affairs of our nation.
Worst still hours after your condolence visit Boko Haram attacked Maiduguri itself hitting one of its suburbs called Jidari Polo.
Their leader, a cowardly creature that can best be described as a psychopathic, delusional, sociopathic, mentally-deranged, murderous, bloodthirsty, bloodlusting and unconciable monster by the name of Abubakar Shekau, even had the nerve to send you a public warning in a recorded message that was released to the public after you left in which he arrogantly and boastfully declared that you must never come back to Borno again or you would be attacked and that you "should fear and serve God and not cows". He added the following,
"Buhari thinks he is a general but God says he is nothing. He hasn't achieved anything in the sight of God. Buhari is deceiving the people and playing to the gallery".
Mr. President he has sent his message to you and to Nigeria and we have heard him loud and clear.
Yet most disturbing was not his sheer effontry but the fact that the only thing that you had to offer the leaders and people of Borno state when you got there was a lame and self-debasing question which was "I wonder how Boko Haram still survives?"
You went further by blaming them for "not taking care of local security" forgetting that that is meant to be your job and not theirs.

In your so-called condolence visit you refused to take responsibility for your own inaction and failure and instead you sought to pass the buck to the very victims of terror that you claim to have come to mourn!
You refused to inspire and encourage them and instead you accused them of, at best, rresponsible behaviour and, at worst, collusion with the enemy.
This is not just a case of rubbing salt in their wounds but it is more like blowing them up and killing them all over again. Worse still as you spoke your Minister of Defence, who sat just a few feet away from you, fell fast asleep!
Mr. President I really do wonder whether you have any feeling or any compassion at all? Has the milk of human kindness stopped flowing through your veins?
Do you know that young students, women, infants and babies were amongst those that were blown up in the Auno atrocity?
Yes you issued a statement immediately but you didn't show up till three days later and your Vice, who was in the country the day it happened, never showed up at all and instead jetted out to President Arap Moi's burial in Nairobi!
Kindly tell me what the Nigerian people have done to deserve this level of contempt? Or is there more to it than meets the eye?
Forgive me Mr. President but I am constrained to ask, why do you love terrorism, bloodshed and violence so much? Why do you find it so easy to forgive terrorists that are slaughtering your own people? Are you feeding your spiritual foundation and getting your power from the spilling of innocent blood?
Meanwhile your own Chief of Army Staff has told us today that
"we have defeated insurgency but we are facing the challenge of terrorism. There is no-where you will not find Boko Haram, even in Lagos here, there are Boko Haram. In Kaduna there are Boko Haram. There are more across the North East. Many have been arrested here in Lagos. We have been tracking them. We arrest them and take them into custody".
I commend the Chief of Army Staff for his admission of failure but what he didn't add was that after taking them "into custody" you ordered him to release them and even draft some of them into the Nigerian Army on the spurious grounds that they have repented and that they have been reformed.
Again the truth is that neither you or him ever "defeated insugency" or anything else. Instead you encouraged and supported it! Both of you have failed the Nigerian people just as I predicted that you would and if you had any decency or honor you would BOTH resign.
Aside that it takes a very mean, callous, wicked and cruel President and Commander-in-Chief to release 1,400 terrorists who have murdered, butchered, slaughtered, tortured and maimed his soldiers and terrorised his people over the last 5 years.
Mr. President I am constrained to tell you that some believe that you are a sadist! They believe that your heart is as hard as stone and your soul is as black as night.
Relevant and instructive are the words of Mr. Charles Ogbu, a brilliant writer and essayist who has consistently proved that he is not only insightful but also deeply profound. Three days after the Auno bombing he wrote the following:
"Those who are asking for the sack of the Service Chiefs as a solution to the upsurge in Boko Haram terrorism are missing the point.
Nigeria is not currently being overrun by terrorists because we have a set of incompetent service Chiefs or soldiers who cannot fight the terrorists. Not at all.
The only reason the Boko Haram terrorists are having a field day is because we have a President and a Commander in Chief who shares the same ideology as the terrorists and as a result prefers pandering to them as opposed to fighting them".
He went further by writing,
"In fact a betting man would bet that the only difference between the Boko Haram terrorists killing, maiming and beheading Nigerians in the Northeast and our President and Commander-In-Chief is in their name and location. One is named "Boko Haram" and operates from the bush while the other one is named "Muhammadu Buhari" and operates from Aso Rock. If we were to remove the cloak of fear of detention by state oppressive forces, we would all admit they are both pursuing the same goal and doing a very good job of it. You that is reading this, you know this is exactly what is happening even if you may not want to publicly say it for whatever reason".
He concluded by asking,
"Who 'rehabilitates' and releases captured terrorists back into the wild at a time the terrorists are still visiting death and destruction on his country? Even America with her sophisticated military doesn't release arrested terrorists in the heat of the war because the chances of these terrorists going back into the wild to continue killing are very high".
Mr. President, forgive me for saying so but the verdict is out and Mr. Ogbu has made a valid point. This calls for much soul-searching on your part.
I urge you to bear in mind that trading in the blood of your own people and indulging in all manner of barbarity, suppression of dissent, persecution of your perceived enemies and evil comes with a heavy price.
Every Pharaoh, Sennacherub, Herod, Jezebel and Nebuchadnezzar has a bad end.
Every tyrant, no matter how powerful and highly-placed, will eventually account to God and the people for his brutality and wickedness. Yours will be no different.
Anyone that doubts that should consider the plight of the Sudan's former President, General Al Bashir. As the great black American Nation of Islam leader and one of my favourite heroes, Malcom X, once said "the chickens have finally come home to roost". This has always been the case and it will always be the case. It is only a matter of time.
Over the last 5 years hundreds of thousands have died under your watch and virtually all have been killed by those from your core northern region. You turned a blind eye to it and even encouraged it.
Today belongs to you but let me assure you that tomorrow belongs to those of us that you have killed, persecuted, oppressed and treated with disdain and contempt.
On the 11th of February, at the burial ceremony of the 18 year old Christian martyr Nnandi Michael (the Seminarean that was abducted and later murdered by Fulani herdsmen) the respected Catholic cleric Bishop Matthew Hassan Kukah, a man of immense moral authority and intellectual vigour, courageously admonished you before the entire world, spoke the bitter truth and reflected the thoughts of millions from all over the country. Amongst many other things he said the following:
"This President has displayed the greatest degree of insensitivity in managing our country’s rich diversity.
He has subordinated the larger interests of the country to the hegemonic interests of his co-religionists and clansmen and women. The impression created now is that, to hold a key and strategic position in Nigeria today, it is more important to be a northern Muslim than a Nigerian.”
He did not stop there but went on to say,
"We are being told that this situation has nothing to do with Religion. Really? It is what happens when politicians use religion to extend the frontiers of their ambition and power. Are we to believe that simply because Boko Haram kills Muslims too, they wear no religious garb? Are we to deny the evidence before us, of kidnappers separating Muslims from infidels or compelling Christians to convert or die? If your son steals from me, do you solve the problem by saying he also steals from you?"
He then said,
"The Fulani, his (President Muhammadu Buhari) innocent kinsmen, have become the subject of opprobrium, ridicule, defamation, calumny and obloquy. His north has become one large grave yard, a valley of dry bones, the nastiest and the most brutish part of our dear country".
He added,
"Today, our years of hypocrisy, duplicity, fabricated integrity, false piety, empty morality, fraud and Pharisaism have caught up with us. Nigeria is on the crossroads and its future hangs precariously in a balance. This is a wakeup call for us. As St. Paul reminds us; The night is far spent, and the day is at hand. Therefore, let us cast away the works of darkness and put on the armour of light. It is time to confront and dispel the clouds of evil that hover over us."
He concludes by saying,
"On our part, I believe that this is a defining moment for Christians and Christianity in Nigeria. We Christians must be honest enough to accept that we have taken so much for granted and made so much sacrifice in the name of nation building. We accepted President Buhari when he came with General Idiagbon, two Muslims and two northerners. We accepted Abiola and Kingibe, thinking that we had crossed the path of religion, but we were grossly mistaken. When Jonathan became President, and Senator David Mark remained Senate President while Patricia Ette was chosen by the South West became a Speaker. The Muslim members revolted and forced her resignation with lies and forgery. The same House would shamelessly say that they had no records of her indictment. Today, we are living with a Senate whose entire leadership is in the hands of Muslims. Christians have continued to support them. For how long shall we continue on this road with different ambitions? Christians must rise up and defend their faith with all the moral weapons they have".
I assure you that these were not the words of Bishop Kukah alone but rather the Holy Spirit speaking through him. He spoke the mind and the oracles of the Living God and you would do well to humble yourself, take heed and appreciate the Lord's admonition and counsel.
Let us hope that you disregard the advice of the hardliners around you, learn from these words and change your dastardly ways though I doubt that you will.
Whatever the case and whatever you choose to do or not to do, know this: the die is cast, Caesar has crossed the Rubicorn, the horse has bolted from the stable, the cat is out of the bag, our eyes have been opened, we have lost all sense of fear and Nigeria can NEVER be the same again.
Mr. President, here ends my counsel to you but permit me to conclude this contribution with a closer look at the north that you love so much and that you seek to empower and enthrone forever.
According to the World Bank "87% of poor people in Nigeria are in the North".
One wonders what 58 years of northern oppression, tyranny, aggression, manipulation and hegemony over Nigeria has actually done for the northern masses.

Since indendence mass poverty, terrorism, religious bigotry, ethnic hegemony, Islamic fundamentalism, arrogance, born to rule syndrome, the worship of cows, ignorance, disease, hate, racism, feudalism, pedophilia, child marriage, VVF, gender inequality, male chauvinism, the persecution of Christians, the suppression of women, corruption, deceit, greed, ingratitude, a sense of entitlement, tyranny, insensitivity, bloodshed, genocide, ethnic cleansing, mass murder and gratuitous violence have all been deeply embedded in and associated with the core north.
Worse still, according to UNICEF, if Nigeria were to ever break up the core north would be the poorest spot on planet Earth.
I guess this is why northerners keep screaming "one Nigeria" and threatening the lives and liberty of those that do not share their view. Without Nigeria they would be groping in the dark, wobbling on their feet and literally starve to death.
All this yet they insist that they were "born to rule" and that southerners and Middle Belters were "born to serve" them and be their slaves!
Professor Yusuf Dankofa of the Faculty of Law at Ahmadu Bello University who happens to be a northerner himself put it in very clear terms and spoke the bitter truth when he wrote the following:
"I think the north is only interested in power and nothing more.The sweetness of power and the allure it brings is what appeals to them and not work. If not, how can a region be so decimated by its own internal contradictions and trudge on as if the region is not regressing. In the face of calamity, what you see is eerie silence, since power is with their elites who are thoroughly dependent on public treasury to survive.The poor too draws happiness from the fact that power is in the hands of their elites even if they will die of poverty and insurgency. We are happy that power is with us even though we don't know what to do with it.This mindset will definitely lead others to seek to move out of the union. You can't slow down your own progress and those of others and expect them to clap for you".
Dankofa is absolutely right! What a people! What a country!
Yet I do not blame the core northeners: I blame southern and Middle Belt politicians and leaders who have refused to unite and who have failed to resist them and stand up to them over the last 58 years.
The history of our nation records that there were a few great men of remarkable courage, extraordinary fortitude and immense valour that not only did their best but were also gallant, fearless, selfless and outstanding in their quest to deliver our people.
Some of them were martyred and others were jailed whilst all suffered an unprecedented and unbearable level of humiliation and persecution. Yet despite it all they continued the struggle.
They identified and understood the problem and fought hard in their respective ways to fix it and deliver our people from northern hegemony, domination and bondage but sadly they all failed.
The new generation of southern and Middle Belt leaders must NOT fail because this is the final lap. For our generation failure is NOT an option.
We have no choice but to use all lawful and non-violent means to break the yoke of subjugation, servitude, slavery and bondage and to succeed in our quest for total liberation. If we fail to do so future generations of our people shall NEVER be free again.
We need the prayers of the saints and the fastings and supplications of the intercessors, the Prophets, the men and women of God and the Body of Christ!
We need the Holy Spirit of the Living God: the El Shaddai, the Elohim and the Adonai.
We need the Man of War, the Comforter, the Lord of Hosts and the Ancient of Days!
We need a great deliverer: a Moses, a Joshua, a Caleb, a David, a Cyrus, a Samson, a Gideon, a Jeptha, an Esther and a Jehu all rolled into one.
We need men and women of courage to pick up the gauntlet, take up the challenge and lead us in this great and cataclysmic battle and this monumental struggle.
We need to close ranks, build bridges amongst ourselves and forget past hurts, past disputes and past disagreements and agree to be totally and completely united.
Finally we need to look within ourselves and firmly resolve that it would be better to live a short life and die as free men than live a long one and live as slaves.
We fight not for ourselves but for future generations of our family, our lineage, our loved ones and our compatriots.
God forbid that they should have to live through the hell that we had to suffer called Nigeria: a land where the accursed rule over the blessed and where slaves ride on horseback whilst Princes and Kings walk around in bare feet.

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