Showing posts with label POLITICS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label POLITICS. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Re-inventing Igbo politics in Nigeria

Re-inventing Igbo politics in Nigeria

on    /   in Femi Aribisala 1:22 am 
AMONG the different ethnic groups in Nigeria, the Igbo are without a doubt, one of the most remarkable.  So remarkable, indeed, that some have even traced their ancestry to biblical Israel, as the far-flung descendants of Jacob, the Jewish patriarch.  Gad, Jacob’s seventh son, is said to have had three sons who settled in South-eastern Nigeria.
These sons; Eri, Arodi and Areli, are believed to have fathered clans in Igbo-land and to have founded such Igbo towns as Aguleri, Arochukwu, Owerri and Umuleri.
Igbo genius
Even the bitterest adversaries of the Igbo cannot but admit that, as a people, they are very resourceful and ingenious.  Indeed, this has often been the cause of their envy and dislike by others.  However, more enlightened non-Igbo Nigerians see this as a cause for celebration.  While today, the centre-point of Nigeria’s manufacturing is situated in the Lagos/Ogun axis, there is no doubt that the real locomotive of Nigeria’s indigenous industrialization lies farther afield in Aba and in the mushrooming cottage-industries of the Igbo heartland.
Igbo-menIn one of the paradoxes of Nigerian history, the terrible civil war provoked homespun industrialization in the South-East.  Military blockade left the Igbo with little alternative than to be inventive in a hurry.  While Nigeria as a nation failed woefully to harness this profitably after the war, it has nevertheless ensured that the Igbo are at the forefront of Nigeria’s economic development today.
Indeed, the way we disregard “made in Aba” today is the same way we disregarded “made in Japan” yesterday.  For those of us who believe against the odds that Nigeria is the China of tomorrow, we equally recognize that the ingenuity of the Igbo is an indelible part of the actualization of that manifest destiny.
Hall of fame
The Igbo have been a great credit to Nigeria.  They have given us a great number of our favourite sons, including international statesman Nnamdi Azikiwe; military leader Odumegwu Ojukwu; regional leader Michael Okpara; vice-president Alex Ekwueme; mathematical genius Chike Obi; literary icon Chinua Achebe; world-class economist Pius Okigbo; world boxing champion Dick Tiger; international statesman Emeka Anyaoku; and world-class artist Ben Enwonwu.  Permit me to include in this illustrious list even some of my very good Igbo friends: Pat Utomi, Ojo Madueke, Olisa Agbakoba, Joy Ogwu, and Stanley Macebuh.
Let us get one thing straight: Nigeria would be a much poorer country without the Igbo.  Indeed, Nigeria would not be Nigeria without them.  Can you imagine the Super Eagles without the Igbo?  Not likely!  Who can forget Nwankwo Kanu, Jay Kay Okocha and our very own Emmanuel Amuneke?
Can you imagine Nollywood without the Igbo?  Impossible!  Just think of Stella Damascus-Aboderin; Rita Dominic and Mike Ezuruonye.  And then there are the diaspora Igbo who many are unaware are of Igbo descent, including concert singer and actor Paul Robeson; Oscar award-winner Forest Whitaker; mega-pastor T.D. Jakes; Olympic champion Christine Ohuruogu; and BAFTA actor award-winner Chiwetel Ejiofor.
You may well wonder why I have found it necessary to present this small litany of Igbo who-is-who.  I think it is important to emphasise how the Igbo have been very vital to the Nigerian project.  They have more than represented Nigeria creditably in virtually all walks of life.  This makes it all the more absurd that this same people have been consistently denied the position of executive president of the country in all but six months of Nigeria’s 54 year history.
Civil-war legacy
Of course, a major reason for this was the 1967-1970 civil-war which had the Igbo on the losing side.  But that was over 40 years ago.  If there is really to be “no victor, no vanquished” in anything more than mere rhetoric, then the rehabilitation of the Igbo back into post civil-war Nigeria will not be complete until an Igbo man finally becomes president of the country.
That imperative should be of interest to every Nigerian nationalist, committed to the creation of one Nigeria where everyone has a deep sense of belonging.  The problem, however, is that the Igbo themselves seem to be their own worst enemies in this regard.  They appear to be doing their very best to ensure that this inevitable eventuality continues to be denied and delayed.
The Igbo need to forgive Nigerians.  No one who lived through the horrors that precipitated the secession of Biafra and led to the civil-war cannot but admit that the Igbo were abused and maltreated in one of the worst pogroms ever.  It was not just that they were senselessly massacred in their own country; it was that they were butchered.
I remember vividly gory pictures of scores and scores of the Igbo with hands chopped up and with legs amputated.  And then there were the ravages of the three-year civil-war itself, resulting in the death of millions of Igbo; many through starvation and attrition.
The end of the war brought no respite, as the Igbo were pauperized by fiscal decrees that wiped out their savings and their properties were blatantly sequestered by opportunists.  All this is more than enough to destroy the spirit of any group of people.  But God has been on the side of the Igbo.
It is a testament to their resilience that, in spite of this terrible affliction, they have survived, bounced back and have even triumphed in Nigeria.  Forty years have now gone by.  The Igbo may never forget what happened to them and, indeed, should never forget.  But it is past time for them to forgive.
We are sorry
This is one voice in the Nigerian wilderness saying to the Igbo from the depth of his heart: we are sorry.  We are sorry for the way we mistreated you.  We are sorry for the way we abused you.  We are sorry for starving your children to death.  We are sorry for killing your loved ones.  We are sorry for stealing your properties.
We are sorry for making you feel unwanted in your own country.  Please forgive us.  It is time to forgive us.  It is way past time for the Igbo to forgive Nigerians.  We beg you in the name of God.
There was a civil war in the United States, but the defeated South rose from the ashes.  Five of the last nine presidents of the United States have been from the South, including Jimmy Carter from Georgia, George Bush from Texas and Bill Clinton from Arkansas.  The time is overdue for an Igbo president of Nigeria, but it is not going to happen as long as the Igbo continue to hold a grudge against Nigeria and Nigerians.
There is no question about it: the Igbos cannot elect a president of Nigeria on their own.  To do so, they have to join forces with others.   They have to form alliances with people from other parts of Nigeria.  That is not going to happen as long as the Igbo continue to bear a grudge against practically everybody else.
The Igbo have a gripe against virtually all the people they need.  They have this tendency to antagonise their possible alliance partners.  They keep dredging up the past, refusing to let sleeping dogs lie.  Until they drop these gripes, they are not likely to realise their dreams.
Demonising Yorubas
For example, the Igbo have this tendency to demonise the Yorubas.  It is alarming when reading the Vanguard blogs today to see the animosity often expressed between Igbo and Yoruba contributors.  The hatred is most unhealthy.  Insults are traded with abandon.  What is the point of this?  For how long will the Igbo demand emotional retribution from every Yoruba for the betrayal of Awolowo?  Most of the contributors were not even born when the civil-war took place more than a generation ago.
There is now even transferred aggression against Babatunde Fashola, who made the blunder of repatriating some destitute Igbo from Lagos back to their home-states.  The man has apologised for the infraction.  He should be forgiven.  Blunders are not the exclusive preserve of the non-Igbo.  The Igbo have made more than a few themselves and will yet make others.
Paradoxically, the redemption of the Igbos to prominent national office moved apace under President Obasanjo; a Yoruba man.  Recognising that Igbos are some of the most seasoned, competent and experienced public-servants, Obasanjo relied heavily on their expertise.
Thanks to him, we got Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala at Finance, Charles Soludo at Central Bank, Obiageli Ezekwesili at Education, Ndidi Okereke at the Stock Exchange, and Dora Akunyili at NAFDAC.  Indeed, Igbo statesmen came into more prominence under Obasanjo than did Yoruba statesmen.  But for some strange reason, this does not seem to have succeeded in assuaging the ill-feeling of the Igbos toward the Yorubas.
Bad politicians
Within the framework of Nigerian politics, the Igbo also have a fundamental problem.  Out of the three major ethnic groups in Nigeria, the Igbo have by far the worst politicians.  They have no recognizable leaders, and have no discernible strategy as to how to negotiate power at the centre.  As a result, the Igbo have tended to be short-changed at the federal level.  Traditionally, the inconsequential ministries, such as the Ministry of Information, have been zoned to them.
The Igbo need to work out a plan that will take them to Aso Rock.  First, they need to choose and groom a de-tribalised leader of the Azikiwe mould who can be sold to non-Igbos.  Then, they need to give him undiluted support.  At the moment the internal politics of the Igbo militates against this.  The Igbo seem to hate themselves as much as they hate others.  They seem to fight themselves with as much venom as they fight others.  Every potential Igbo leader seems to have more enemies within than without.  This must not be allowed to continue.
The Igbo need to help themselves in order that their friends can help them.  In this centenary of Nigeria’s amalgamation, as we embark on the arduous process of crafting our future through a National Conference, we salute the Igbo for their fortitude and implore them to stake their claim in Nigeria.  Nigeria cannot survive without the Igbo.
- See more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2014/03/re-inventing-igbo-politics-in-nigeria/#sthash.W2xRGlQH.dpuf

Monday, August 5, 2013

THAT FASHOLA DEPORTATION AND SILENCE OF EVIL MEN

THAT FASHOLA DEPORTATION AND SILENCE OF EVIL MEN

More than 67 Igbos were reportedly deported from Lagos state, and dumped by the bridge of Onitsha. I want you my reader to recall the over 50 bodies of Ndigbo dumped at Ezu river last year. Everywhere in Nigeria Ndigbo are being targeted, singled out like the Jews to be killed, expelled from the cities, dispossessed of their belongings, and to be maltreated. The worst of this is that no body from other geopolitical zone is condemning these inhuman acts. They kill us, they dispossess us and we are blamed for venturing into another zone, yet they bombed us when we said let us go home.

Evil does not only triumph when good men keep quite, but it also hatched, incubated at the doors of everyman that kept silence when the innocent persons are persecuted. By deporting Ndigbo, weather destitute, scums of the city, or even criminals is unjust, immoral, unconstitutional, and despicable to imagine. The effort to rationalize the act, or to explain it, or even to justify it is an insult to a bleeding wound.

The argument of rehabilitation makes me want to puke. How are you rehabilitating a citizen whose state and LGA you do not know? How can you rehabilitate a street beggar when you did not provide shelter for them? Ok let me ask what informed this malice in the first place? Why only Igbos? I hope the people of Bere in Ibadan, Oyo state are being rehabilitated. How about the beggars from the North that flung the streets of Lagos? Have they been rehabilitated and relocated? How about Agberos, Alayes and the Yoruba scums who live under the bridges and constitute nuisance in the city? Who is next in this rehabilitation and deportation program? More importantly, why target the Igbos? This means or suggest one thing, time for exodus has come.

The impudence, the audacity of silence by the law makers is very sickening. The senseless ranting of the opportunist Ngige is terrific. Who could believe that the deputy senate president is an Igboman. The deputy speaker of house of rep is an Igboman. Please somebody help tell Ekweremadu on Igbo issues is defeaning. We want to hear not only his voice, but his proposed response to this calamity Fasshola and the citizens of Lagos brought upon us.

Where are the Igbo senators and reps? How could they keep quite or have they also been deported? Where is Uche Chukwumereije?

To you stubborn sojouner, when will you start going back? Here I call on our governors to speak out. Visit those deportees, negotiate for their adequate compensation from the Lagos state. Rights of their citizenship have been impetuously violated. It behooves on the state governors to advocate for their compensations. If no such laws exits, bill should be made to stop further madness of this magnitude.

https://www.facebook.com/onyema.uche1?hc_location=stream

Police Commissioner Orders ‘Secret’ Arrest of Ohaneze Ndigbo President


Police Commissioner Orders ‘Secret’ Arrest of Ohaneze Ndigbo President

(Chief Tobias Idika, President, Ohaneze Ndigbo Kano)

The junta days of security intimidation of activists appears on the return in Kano State.
Information available to 247ureports.com indicates that the Police Commissioner in Kano State has ordered the ‘secret’ arrest of the President of Ohaneze Ndigbo – Kano Chapter, Chief Tobia Idika. As gathered, the DPO [Shaibu Bello] overseeing the Nomansland division near Sabon Gari Kano has been on a secret search throughout the Sabon Gari – in hunt for Chief Tobia Idika. Shaibu Bello is reported to be searching through the residences in Sabon Gari – in a manner – suggesting that he was in search for a common criminal.
When contacted as to why he [Shaibu Bello] was hunting for Chief Idika, he responded that “it is orders from above” – that the top bosses wanted Chief Idika arrested and brought in for ‘questioning’.
When Chief Idika contacted the Police Commissioner concerning the active/aggressive hunt by Shaibu Bello, the Police Commissioner, according to Chief Idika, yelled at the top of his voice – that he [Idika] “knows what to do“. The Commissioner dropped the line and hung up. When Chief Idika called again, the Commissioner told him to file a report.
Meanwhile, the Ohaneze leader who has been outspoken over the maltreatment meted out to the Igbo population in Kano, told our correspondent that he has been receiving death threats at a higher frequency since the Police DPO began hunting for him. ”I have been receving calls from an undisclosed number telling me that my days are numbered. The caller calls himself Dagogo“, said Chief Idika. He went to share a sms message he received on August 1, 2013 at about 1:44pm from +2348180689050 which reads “Very soon your chapter will close if you don’t run. Be warned
Chief Idika has since contacted the Director of the State Security Services [SSS].

Thursday, February 4, 2010

BREWING




IGBOS & SOUTHERNERS IN THE NORTH ............WATCH OUT

Thursday, November 13, 2008

COURAGE TO DIE FOR THE IGBO NATION

COURAGE TO DIE FOR THE IGBO NATION

(Political Advocacy a Must at the highest level in Nigeria )

The “Idea” will be like the ‘unknown rebel’ in China . The ‘Idea’, with a single act of defiance, even as a lone Igbo advocate and Nigerian patriot, shall try to revive the world’s image of courage. Just like Albert Einstein, the ‘Idea’ will prove that the Igbo man could be President of Nigeria, not as a favor, but deservingly as the best that Nigeria could produce for Nigeria’s continued growth and Unity. After the Presidency by Igbo person, the Igbo nation will never complain of marginalization. So, the Igbo nation must be careful in choosing who to support for 2011 and 2015. And, Albert Einstein was unfathomably profound – the genius among geniuses who discovered, merely by thinking about it, that the universe was not as it seemed. So it shall be for the Igbo nation and the quest for Nigerian Presidency.

It is striking, how our perceptions are being shaped by our history. And for the Igbo nation, the past is not dead. It is not even past. For this, the Igbo people continue to experience a whole range of emotions, from fear of annihilation to the deepest sadness, and to an almost violent anger for being denigrated into second-class citizenship in Nigeria . For the Igbo nation, a new era awaits, and with it, new conflicts. Leadership irresponsibility, environmental village hostility and greed will press against Igbo nationalist instincts, and Nigeria will have to confront the power of tribalism and the change of fundamentalism.

Change of fundamentalism will occur. But the Igbo mystery will endure, and even after decades of Gowons, Mohammeds, Obasanjos, Buhaharis, Babangidas, Abachas, again Obasanjos, peppered with the Shagaris and Shonekons, and now the Yar’dua, those that tried like Pat Utomi, and Orji Kalu will pinch themselves, and realistically ask themselves, could we have fared better if we supported the most credible, and eminently qualified? Orji Kalu should have backed Utomi, and they should have stayed in PDP and slug it out!! Presently, all the other political parties are a shame, and should really be proscribed, and two most viable of the lot retained as opposition. The Igbo nation and Nigeria are not closer to the greatest historical question in Nigeria : Shouldn’t the Igbo man lead modern Nigeria now?

My hopes rest with the likes of Prof. Barth Nnaji, Senator Ken Nnamani, Dr. Ugorji O. Ugorji, Dr. Chris Aniedobe, Dr. Ike Abugu, Arch. Jerome Okolo, Dr. Chris Ede, Dr. Humphrey Okoloukwu, Dr. Ifeanyi Udibe, Prof. Pat Utomi, either as a matrix or in a harmonized Coalition. Then we shall bring in the likes of Mr. Joe Eto, Attorney Charles Chikezie, Dr. James Odindu Odunze, Dr. Okenwa Nwosu, Mr. Chuks Ibekwe and Chief Theo Egbujor. We shall seek out the likes of Jimmy Asiegbu, Afam Agwu, Alloy Attah, Attorney Jude Akubilo,Chief John Egbo, Attorney Dom Ezeudu, Dr. Moe Eneh, Dr. Ezejiofor Udeh, Prof. Uzochukwu, Prof. Umez, Mr. Emeka Ukachukwu, Attorney Ken Okorie. Sometimes, we see nonsense in intellectual camouflage of visceral hostility, with an embodiment of reflective prejudice. The time for harmony is now, and we must work selflessly for the sake of our Igbo nation, and for the sake of purposeful Igbo Advocacy, especially for 2009 through 2015..

Balancing human intelligence with animal diligence, the Igbos in diaspora are going to decide whether to disband the World Igbo Congress as presently constituted; or to strengthen the operational scope and membership base of the World Igbo congress. This will happen in September 2009 if the current factions are sensible to bring the 2009 convention to Okpara Squqre. To help decide on what to do with the World Igbo Congress, it might be pertinent to answer two basic questions:

  1. Is the World Igbo Congress adequately representative of the Igbos in Diaspora and in Nigeria from villages, towns, local government areas, States for relevance and Igbo positive aspirations? What was this mess cooked up in Florida , USA ?
  1. Is the World Igbo Congress misrepresenting the Igbos in Diaspora and their aspirations to be relevant in the transformation process of the Igbo nation, and in the relationship with the other federated nationalities in Nigeria ? Who is responsible for this mess??

The leadership stories of the Igbo nation, the World Igbo congress and OHANEZE included, have never escaped allusions to the causes and failures and limited successes in the Biafran experiment. Presently, such stories are perforated with elisions and omissions. To every question, there is a surface answer and a deeper one. I have chosen to worry about both surface and deep answers. There are usually the trivial little patterns of leadership crookery that normally lead to larger patterns. The most important thing I do is the least glamorous thing imaginable - Speaking the unpopular truth:

  1. Vain talks. Wide talks. Vain shots. Wide shots. Chest beating. Bribe taking. That is the Igbo nation’s psyche and political strategy, as constituted today. Some of us who are critical of this psyche aim to reverse the Igbo nation’s political strategy for tomorrow should be consolidated now;
  1. Are there political leadership Advocacy structure in place for Igbo nation? Not really! Are there clusters of self-serving groups and organizations? Yes! Is the World Igbo Congress and PNF among these cluster groups and organizations? Yes! Can the World Igbo Congress, as presently constituted play a decisive role in Igbo nation’s political strategy for tomorrow? No! Why? The World Igbo Congress as presently constituted has foggy aims and grossly shallow-based and non-inclusive.
  1. The World Igbo Congress, presently, from all indications, and from Engr. Onwuchekwa’s legacy would not be relevant in 2009, and perhaps through 2015 as far as the quest for a president of Igbo extraction goes. Unless a miracle will happen between now and September 2009! That is the major reason why a radical change should occur in the World Igbo congress Chairmanship ‘selection’, not as a fractious ego trip in ‘power-mania’, but, as a consciously articulated soul-searching resolve by both factions of madness. It is obvious there would never be an election for popular mandate, because the majority of Diasporan Igbo who should vote are disenfranchised by a convoluted Constitution! Enugu USA leadership made a powerful presentation, through their delegation of Agwu, Akubuilo and Udibe. The offered realistic base that will save WIC in Detroit , Michigan . That was in 2005. Greed and power-steam blinded the Board members!! Now, the Igbo nation has been disgraced by the same people with short-sightedness, who were busy scheming and re-writing a constitution that spelt doom. Where is John Udo??
  1. And for a radical change to occur in the 2009 World Igbo Congress Convention, the Convention should have only two focus: (a) To endorse a Consensus candidate of Igbo extraction as Presidential Candidate for the Peoples democratic Party. To this end, the World Igbo Congress Secretariat should send letters of invitation to all the known aspirants from Orji Kalu to Ken Nnamani. The convention should be in Enugu , Nigeria . All elected and appointed Igbo sons and daughters have to come to Okpara Square in Enugu to account for their stewardship and make their case; (b) To launch Igbo political Leadership and Advocacy fund.
  1. We should not forget so soon those destructive myths of the crooked timber of Igbo humanity, nothing straight was ever made straight, to be ethically sound and sensitive in political leadership of the Igbo people, especially, since the late Ukpabi Asika administered the East Central State. This is the time for our generation to correct and lead!

I said earlier that a new era awaits the Igbo nation and with a single act of defiance, the world’s image of courage will be revived. But to comprehend the possible scenario, I hasten to reflect on the mustard gas story. It resembles the story of Biafra and Igbo Nation.

Biafra defeat was in itself a mustard gas, just like the deaths that occurred in “ SOMME ” . According to stories, every once in a while, a farmer in the Somme, France – cuts down an oak tree, sits down on the trunk, and then sickens and dies. Why? Because during the First World War, a battle had taken place on that field, a canister of mustard gas deployed. The poison got absorbed by the tree as a sapling, and decades later, it is still potent enough to kill a man.

Almost four decades after the declaration of the Republic of Biafra , the mustard gas of defeat has continued to kill the Igbo nation, choking the Igbo nation, forcing the citizenry to loose sense of self-worth, sense of harmony in pursuit of political power in Nigeria . Now, it is only vain talks, wide shots, chest-beating, bribe taking and no action!

Just 2005, Dr. Vincent Anigbogu reminded me and others the lessons contained in Romans 14:8:

If we live, we live in the Lord;

And if we die, we die in the Lord.

So, whether we live or die,

We belong to the Lord

My belief is that God will give courage to men of good will who are weak in heart. I remain your ‘Idea’. Some day you will look for me , and I will not be there!

Respectfully,

Dr. Ifeanyi G. Udibe

Eze Chinyelugo

Atlanta

(Currently, a Field Marshall )

(Founding Member, MPL & TLG & NIPADAM)

Movement for Patriotic Leadership & Tomorrow’s Leaders Group

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