Nigeria: The Politics of
Ethnicity,
Its Impact on Development And
Biafra’s Quest for Self-Determination
Undoubtedly, Nigeria has
entered a period of political uncertainty. With the next presidential election
fast approaching, some politicians and experts are strongly advocating for,
among others, a constitutional review considered as the best way to preserve
peace and stability in the country. The reviewed constitution will take into
account the ethnic diversity and provide for equal representation of southern
and eastern regions in the federal system of governance.
In an early September
interview, Maazi Oluchi Ibe, a historian and a former lecturer at Gregory
University, a private educational institution named after Pope Gregory, located
in Uturu, Abia State of Nigeria, talks to Kester Kenn Klomegah, about the political
developments, the reasons for economic disparity and the Biafrans’ unquenchable
desire for political freedom and self-determination.
Here are the interview
excerpts.
Kester Kenn Klomegah: Do you
consider an urgent constitutional review as the first step towards national
integration in the Federal Republic of Nigeria?
Maazi Oluchi Ibe: I think it is
better to look at this issue from the perspective of who, in the present-day
Nigeria, wants integration. If the Hausa, Fulani, or Yoruba want integration or
re-integration for that matter, they are welcomed to it. There is a section of
Nigeria that has long gone beyond the idea of integration. That part is the
Biafra which has been under forceful military occupation by Nigeria since 1970.
Biafra gave Nigeria a clear, unambiguous path to integration at Aburi in 1967.
What Biafrans saw clearly in 1967 is what the rest of Nigeria is contemplating
today. Biafrans are also telling Nigerians today that that we saw 53 years ago
is no longer tenable. Possibly in a couple of decades, Nigeria will wake up to
that reality too.
The net minimum for any look at
the Nigerian constitution is a simple declaration for a plebiscite amongst the
people of Biafra for self-determination. That remains the only basis. However,
it is important we let those who feel concerned and who think that a mere
constitutional review will solve the Nigerian quagmire, to know that history
our guide. Every Nigerian constitution was watered on the blood of Biafrans.
From 1945, to as recent as August 25th, 2020 when young Biafrans holding a
peaceful meeting were shot to death at Emene Enugu, it has been genocide and
countless killings of Biafrans. What then is the guarantee that the next
constitutional review will not follow suit?
We will not cease saying that
what ails Nigeria is beyond constitution making and reviews. What ails Nigeria
is the forceful amalgamation of incompatible entities into a geographical
expression. Is it not callous that pre-war Europe made up of multi-ethnic
nations who were mired in ceaseless wars until they unbundled through the
creation of ethnic nations will turn round in Africa and create exactly what
made old Europe unstable for centuries? Even the two Germans that were
separated in 1945 have joined back together as one nation. That is the natural
order of things. Same Europeans came to African and forced ethnic nation, some
as twice the population of an average European nation, into forceful unions
with others as large and they think it will stand? No, it will not stand as the
former USSR has proved, ditto, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia and in Africa,
Eritrea, and Sudan. To further muddle the waters, the British allowed two
contentious expansionist religions that are almost equal in population to live
in one geographical space called Nigeria. What sort of idiotic experiment was
that? Imagine what it has caused since 1914 in terms of human lives, mainly the
lives of innocent Biafrans. No, it is not a constitutional review matter.
KKK: Why are there rising
blatant criticisms about the current constitution adopted in 1999?
MOI: Simply because Nigeria has
never had a constitution. Even the so called ‘famed’ 1963 Republican
constitution was a gross failure and that was why the army step in a mere three
years after its proclamation. The current infamous 1999 constitution was merely
a baring of the fangs that in the past were covered with a glove. The ‘good’
thing about this constitution was that its criminal creators did not hide the
fact that it was a creation of a military decree. Imagine the impunity and the
blood cuddling guts of declaring a military decree as emanating from ‘We the
People!’ That very first statement in that piece of paper was and is a blatant
lie and they are not hiding the fact.
KKK: What are the narratives and
the reasons for underdevelopment in the Biafra State?
MOI: Some of the greatest
disaster that befell Biafra from the war of independence were so subtle that an
unconscious mind will hardly notice them, while many were so conspicuous that
they scream to the high heaves for all to see. For instance, the divide and
rule system introduced by the British colonizers where perfected by the Fulani
oligarchy that took over Nigeria with Biafrans at the receiving end.
Across a once peaceful land
compared to what was obtainable in other sections of Nigeria, the conquering
caliphate army imposed all sorts of divisions, ethnic, geographic, demographic,
and so on. That is why today, they would rather want Biafrans to fight within
themselves over artificial boundaries they created to divide us, like their
British did. Such externally imposed divisive tendencies does not call for
economic development. But, we are more conscious of such subtleties now.
In addition, there is what
Professor Chidi Osuagwu, defined as the deprivation of Knowledge and its
concomitant effect over the decades on Biafran economy. Professor Chidi
Osuagwu, Federal University of Technology, Owerri, Imo state, had done an
article on Igbo deprivations in Nigeria from where the excerpt on the missionary
school’s take over came from. Immediately after the war, the Nigerian caliphate
government struck at the lifeblood of Biafran development, that is, the
Missionary Schools. They took over the mission schools after the war aimed at
slowing down and degrading the booming educational Sector in Biafraland that
was the driver of Biafran progress. Today, the state of education in Biafraland
viz-a-viz what was obtainable pre-Biafran war of independence speaks volume.
By consciously shutting down
economic activities in Biafraland through strangulatory policies, significant
amongst them the £20 policy, that is, giving Biafrans only £20 without putting
into consideration whatever holdings Biafrans held in their prewar bank
accounts which the conquering army confiscated. Their nationalization decree of
1972 that turned over all major companies and conglomerated into the Nigerian
caliphate governments’ hands. Other examples are the policy of importing from
far away Lagos instead of nearby Port Harcourt and other natural seaports
available in Biafraland. Mind you, Port Harcourt seaport was opened as far back
as 1917, but today lies fallow. The cumulative effect of these policies was the
forceful dispersal of Biafran youths from our homeland. Today they remain the
largest economic migrant group the whole of Africa.
These glaring constraints
naturally forced an implosion leading to insecurities which were in turn blamed
on the people and used as an excuse to militarize the land. Biafra is the most
militarized region today in West Africa, if not the whole of Africa. Why not
militarize the North with an ongoing war that has lasted over ten years?
Let us also not forget that by
consciously imposing political leadership akin to the warrant chiefs the
British imposed on Biafraland during the colonial period, the present Nigerian
system has a grip on what gets done and what does not in Biafraland. What
brings home the truth of the parlous economic situation in Biafraland today is
not to compare it with what obtains in Northern Nigeria but to recall the fact
the pre 1967 economic indices showed the then Eastern region (Biafra) as the
fastest developing economy in the world.
KKK: How do you envisage
women’s role in the current struggle for freedom, peace, and development in
Biafra State?
MOI: Biafran women are the most
resilient in Africa if not world over. Possibly no other group of women have
passed through what they did and are still passing through in contemporary
history. These were women who lost children, siblings, husbands, fathers, and
mothers in the genocidal war Nigeria imposed on Biafra in 1967. 53 years after
they are still forced to endure rapine, and harassment in their very homes and
farms by terrorist herdsmen buoyed by Nigerian government. Yes, they are very
patient but whenever their patience dissipates as it has, you are going to be
confronted with a different level of struggle. No other people know this more
than the British who thinking that Biafran women were as docile as their
British counterpart of the early 20th century crossed the invisible line. The now
famous Aba women war of 1929, remember was fought solely by Biafran women based
on same issues as has been confronting their nation since 1970.
It is only in this part of the
world that you have women having equal if not superior rights to men. That was
why when confronted by the British judicial panel over the Aba women’s war, on
why the women listened to their menfolk and went on rampage, the angry women
leaders of the revolution had retorted, ‘here, men do not speak for us!’ This,
when published in the British press in the 1930s was picked up by British women
suffragettes and became their catchphrase, ‘here men do not speak for us, as
reported by Harry Gailey. Gailey authored “The Road to Aba: A Study of British
Administrative Policy in Eastern Nigeria” and was published by New York
University Press in 1970.
KKK: Is human rights violations
becoming a thorny issue in Nigeria? Why armed northern Islamic attacks on
Christian-dominated southwestern and southeastern States?
MOI: Human rights violations and
armed Northern Islamic attacks on Christians have gone beyond the description,
‘thorny.’ It is now an existential threat. It is a choreographed, preplanned
attempt at not just ethnic cleansing but a grand Islamization conquest in their
quest to ‘deep the Koran into the Atlantic,’ as promised them by their
forebears. This is happening with impunity with tens of thousands killed as the
world watch without lifting a finger. What did we do? Is it wrong to be
Christian and Biafran? What makes our own Christianity different from that of
the rest of the world that they have refused to help? How come all the
international news media have refused mentioning the daily carnage? Who says
Biafra with its 95% Christian population, an ancient democratic and republican system,
sharing the best of contemporary Western ideas cannot be helped to be a bastion
against militant Islamism that poses a great threat not just to Biafrans but
the rest of the world? It is unbelievable.
KKK: Does Buhari’s
administration recognize all the issues you have discussed above?
MOI: How can someone who
subscribes to the philosophy that ‘Western knowledge’ is bad recognize any of
these issues? These issues are diametrically opposed to his ideals and what he
has come to execute. He has been sincere in stating, in clear terms, all he has
been doing are pro-militant Islam and anti-westernization and modernity.
Buhari’s administration is completely blind to these important facts. The
federal government would rather exacerbate them than otherwise.
KKK: What are the expectations
from regional organizations, especially the Economic Community of West African
States (ECOWAS), and of course, the African Union?
MOI: They do not exist. There
is no point wasting energy on things that do not exist unless we want to get
entangled in an empty academic exercise. When last for instance did ECOWAS or
African union make a statement on the daily bloodshed in Nigeria?
Unfortunately for ECOWAS,
Africa and the Western world that have refused to raise a finger and are all
seating on the sideline waiting for Nigeria to implode, that implosion will
come sooner or later and when 200 million refuges start streaming all over
Africa and into the Western world, a world that could not handle six million
Syrian refuges, maybe, then all our eyes will open. This is the time for the
world to halt the recalcitrant marauding Nigerian legal and illegal security
forces bent on decapitating everything on their path to the total domination of
our space.
This is the time for the world
to force Nigeria to a round table. This forced amalgamation of 1914 has not
worked and will never work. Our situation is not that of a window dressed
constitutional review. We are all worlds apart. There is simply two
diametrically opposed cosmological views that cannot live side by side in this
space. It happened in India and in 1947/8, the British did the right thing –
separated Hindu India and Islamic Pakistan. That right thing – separation, is
our minimum demand.
VERY POWERFUL ARTICULATED WRITE UP
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