A Determined
And Lion-Hearted General
A Determined And Lion Hearted
22-YEAR-OLD OJUKWU
AND HIS AUNTY, WINIFRED,
IS RETURN FROM OXFORD IN
195
Below is a picture of a 22 year old, Biafran warlord, Chukwuemeka
Odumegwu Ojukwu and his aunty, Winifred Ojukwu, shortly after he returned to
Nigeria in 1955 on completing his studies at Oxford University. Ojukwu bagged a
Degree in History.
Ojukwu attended Kings College Lagos, Epsom College, Surrey, England and
the prestigious Oxford University, England.
By the time Ojukwu returned to Nigeria in 1955, his father had become
one of the richest businessmen in the country with a business empire that
spanned Transportation, Banking, Retail, Construction and Manufacturing.
Ojukwu's father took him to his corporate headquarters and showed him a
well-furnished air-conditioned office, offering him a top position in his
business organisation. Ojukwu turned his father down, telling him he wanted to
make his own way in life. Ojukwu eventually secured a job in the civil service
as an assistant district officer of Udi division, just outside Enugu. In 1956,
Ojukwu was posted to Aba. It was at Aba that Ojukwu attended a party that would
change the course of his life. At this party, Ojukwu met a young Yoruba man
called Adeyinka Adebayo, who had just been newly commissioned as an officer of
the Nigerian Army. Adebayo told Ojukwu that the Army was in the process of
being indigenized and there was a shortage of officers. A few weeks after this
party, Ojukwu was promoted to District Officer and posted to Calabar.
On hearing that his son had been posted to Calabar, Ojukwus influential
father prevailed on the authorities to cancel the posting. When Ojukwu learnt
of what his father had done, he angrily resigned his job and drove all the way
to Kaduna where he enlisted into the Nigerian Army as a lowly recruit.
The British officers at Kaduna kept wondering what an Oxford graduate
was doing as a private in the Army and sent him for officers’ course in
England. Ojukwu returned in 1957 and was commissioned a second Lieutenant, the
first graduate to join the Nigerian Army.
Ojukwu rose rapidly through the Army. He was promoted to Lieutenant in
1958, Captain in 1960, Major in 1962 and Lieutenant Colonel in 1964.
Ojukwu was commander of the 4th battalion, Kano, when the first coup
happened in January 1966.
As the coup unfolded, Major Nzeogwu called on Ojukwu to join the coup to
which Ojukwu refused. Ojukwus refusal to join Nzeogwu is one of the major
reasons why Nzeogwu's coup eventually failed.
General Ironsi then siezed power and appointed Ojukwu Military Governor
of the Eastern Region.
6 months later, mid-level officers of the Nigerian of Northern
extraction conducted a coup that led to the overthrow and killing of Ironsi,
and the installment of Lt Col Yakubu Gowon as Head of State. The coup also
greenlighted a pogrom in which over 30,000 Easterners, mainly Igbos, were
killed all over Nigeria, particularly in the North.
The inability of Gowon to stop the killings, the resentment in the
Eastern Region against his government and the fact that Ojukwu was senior to
Gowon caused bad blood between both men
The crisis became so bad that the then President of Ghana, General Joe
Ankrah, intervened and invited both Gowon and Ojukwu to his Hiltop Mansion in
Aburi, Ghana, for peace talks in January of 1967.
After two days of discussions, Ojukwu and Gowon signed an agreement that
was to be known as the Aburi Accord.
A few months after their return from Ghana, Gowon broke the Aburi accord
they signed by issuing decree 14 of 1967 which abolished all the 4 Regions,
created 12 states, reversed the fiscal federalism practiced, changed the
revenue sharing formula, all in a bid to increase the power of the North over
the rest of Nigeria.
For Ojukwu, it was the last straw. Ojukwu convened the Eastern Nigerian
Consultative Forum, a body that comprised of all the chiefs and head of the 20
provinces that made up the Eastern Region. They sat and discussed for 2 days
and mandated Ojukwu to declare the Eastern Region a separate country. On the
30th of May 1967, Ojukwu declared the Eastern Region a separate country called
the Republic of Biafra.
In retaliation, Gowon declared war. The war raged on for 3 years and
ended in January 1970 with Ojukwu handing over to his deputy, General Effiong,
flying into exile in Ivory Coast and the subsequent surrender of Biafra.
Ojukwu later returned from exile 12 years later. He died in London in
2011 aged 78. His burial remains the greatest ever witnessed in Nigeria
Ojukwu is still revered by most Igbos because they believe he fought for
their freedom.
Courtesy : Desmond Diaku
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