We went to Aburi and there the leaders agreed that the only solution to our problems was to have a confederation but Gowon reneged -Professor Chukwumah
Elder statesman and renowned academic of Igbo extraction, Professor Benedict Imeagwu Chukwumah (BIC) Ijomah, has taken Arewa nationalist leader, Prof. Ango abdulahi, to the cleaners.
In an Open Letter dated June 21, 2017, Prof. Ijomah, the
80-year-old renowned Professor of Political Sociology, author, scholar,
academician, and institutional administrator, used facts and figures to
demolish claims recently made by the controversial Prof. Abdullahi while
defending the quit notice served Igbos living in the North by Arewa youth
leaders. Prof. Ijomah wrote thus:
OPEN LETTER TO PROF. ANGO ABDULAHI
Prof. Ango Abdullahi,
OUR attention has been drawn to your statements in Vanguard
of Saturday, June 10, 2017. You are alleged to be in support of the call on the
Igbo to quit. It is unfortunate, grossly
unfortunate, that a scholar of your calibre will be so
partisan as to be unable to see the wisdom in retaining Nigeria as a corporate
entity. I know you have, in the past, been anti-Igbo.
One would have thought that our education exposes us to a
level where we can live even with our enemies. You said in the alleged
publication that, “each year up to the time Nigeria
gained its independence, none of the two regions East and
West was able to produce for its self. I mean none of the Western and Eastern
Regions had the money to effectively run the affairs of the region until they
got financial support from the Northern Region.” It is this assumption of yours
that I want to address.
First of all it is not true that the North had bailed out
Eastern Region or the Western Region. But you claim that even before
independence none of the regions could live without Northern
subvention. Let me draw your attention to the facts before
independence. You should read W.M.M Geary’s work titled “Nigeria under the
British Rule” published by the Cass and
Company Limited, London (1927).
Subsidizing the North
May I draw your attention especially to pages 124 and 125.
You will see published, General Revenue for the Northern and Southern
Protectorates before the
Amalgamation and the Percentage of Total Revenue originating
from the North. You will see that contrary to your argument, it was indeed the
South that was subsidizing the North. I am reproducing the tables here for
clarity.
I also draw your attention to Abstracts of Revenue, 1809 to
1913. You will also see that the North could not have survived without the
Imperial grant and the support of the South. When
you look at the third table, Northern Nigeria revenue paid
by the South and the Imperial grant, it will disabuse your mind and show you
that without the South and the Imperial grant,
the Northern government/states could not have existed.
Indeed, one of the reasons for the amalgamation was the fact
that the British colonial government was tired of carrying the burden of the
North and they thought that by merging the Southern and Northern protectorates,
the country would be stable. Indeed, the circumstances that forced the British
government to amalgamate the Northern protectorate and the Southern
protectorate on January 1, 1914 were motivated neither by political exigencies
nor by a closer cultural understanding among the diverse elements of the
conglomeration that was later to be called Nigeria. It is
obvious that the primary interest of the British government was economic.
It was also obvious that the Northern protectorate, because
of its geographical location and cloudy economic prospects, was not likely to
be viable. In fact, the Lugard administration was finding it rather difficult
to maintain the Northern protectorate which was already
running into deficit. Testifying to the financial difficulty
of the North and the anticipated prosperity that would follow the projected
amalgamation of the Northern protectorate with the Southern protectorate, Lord
Lugard reported that “the prosperity of the Southern protectorate as evidenced
by the liquor trade, had risen by 57 per cent. In fact, the liquor trade
alone yielded a revenue of One Million, One Hundred and
Thirty-Eight Thousand pounds (£1,138,000) in 1913. This he believed was the
result of amalgamation of the Lagos colony
with the Southern protectorate.
The Northern administration could not have survived without
the imperial grant-in-aid which in the year before the amalgamation stood at
One Hundred and Thirty Six thousand Pounds (£136,000) and had averaged Three
Hundred and Fourteen Thousand, Five Hundred Pounds (£314,500) for the eleven
years ending in March, 1912. Besides, the burden of financing the North seemed
to have been resisted and bitterly criticized by the Southerners. The
expenditure of the British tax payer’s money in financing a colonial territory
was a contradiction of the British colonial policy enunciated sixty (60) years
before by L. Gray which stipulated that “the surest test for the soundness of
measures for improvement of an
uncivilized people is that they should be self-supporting.”
Economic position
This is by L. Gray in The Colonial Policy of the
Administration of Lord Russell, London: Cass and Company Limited, 1853, page
281″ . Further, the Northern protectorate was not only land-locked but bounded
by territories that fell under the influence of other European powers. It was, therefore,
inconceivable how the economic position would have improved without aid from
the South.
The only alternative open to Lord Lugard was to amalgamate
the North and the South and thus have a legitimate reason for the expenditure
of revenue from the South in developing the
North. Details of this manouevre was laid bare in a letter
written by Lord Lugard on November 22, 1912 to his wife explaining how he had
used the Southern resources to finance
the Northern deficit.
Regardless of the merit which Sir F.D Lugard saw in his
financial amalgamation of the South and the North, the prevalence of bitter
criticism in the South shows the unpopularity of the amalgamation. At that
time, the export from the South stood at Five Million, One Hundred and
Twenty-Two Thousand Pounds (£5,232,000) while the export from the North stood
at Two Hundred Thousand Pounds (£200,000) in 1910. This was very discouraging
to the colonial system and called for urgent remedy. On Tuesday, January 31, 1911,
there were attacks on the colonial secretary’s suggestion that the South should
advance a loan of Two Hundred Thousand Pounds (£200,000) to the North for the
completion of the Baro to Kano railway, in addition to the sum of One Million,
Two Hundred and Thirty Thousand which was required from the South.
One of the criticisms of the Northern dependence on the
South was voiced out by Honourable Sapara Williams who contended that before
the loan was to be granted, the Secretary of State should settle the type of
relationship that existed between Lagos and Zungeru, the two administrative
headquarters for the South and the North respectively.
Existing hostility
He contended that as far as he was concerned, that the
Southerners were strangers to anything connected with the railway after it has
passed Offa, the last Yoruba town on the line. He referred to the existing
hostility between the North and the South, particularly as regards the issues
of extending the Northern boundary of the Southern protectorate to incorporate
Yoruba territories now locked up in the Northern protectorate. My dear
Professor, the hostility of the
Northerners towards the Southerners is not new in the
Nigerian history. Even during the time of Sapara Williams, the Northerners did
not see anything reasonable in the relationship with the South.
You will recall the massacres of the Igbos in Jos in 1945;
you will recall the massacres of the Igbos in Kano in 1953; you will recall the
massacres that preceded the civil war. If we cannot
live together, Mr. Professor, don’t you think that it is
high time we told ourselves the naked truth.
You will also recall that in 1964, after the crisis that
followed the elections, that Dr. Nnamdi Azikwe had called on Nigerians to call
a round table conference to discuss how we could share our assets if it was
impossible for us to live together. We kept on patching this unpatchable
relationship. In my honest opinion, this relationship has soured enough that it
will take the wisdom of God to make us love one another.
We went to Aburi and there the leaders agreed that the only
solution to our problems was to have a confederation but Gowon reneged. You
will recall also that the British government, after the crisis of 1951-1952,
realized that this country could not be a unitary state and they brought in the
1953 constitution which gave us regional autonomy. If the colonial masters in
their wisdom knew that we could not be a unitary government and gave us what we
had at
independence, we should have respected their wisdom.
You will also recall that after the civil war, the regional
autonomy which our independence conferred on us was violated by the military
government led by the Northern soldiers. We ended up having this contraption
that we are having now; it has not worked. It will not work, unless there is
proper restructuring of the nation. We should stop pretending.
I believe in all sincerity that if we cannot accommodate
every segment of the federation in one Nigeria, we should call a constitutional
conference to decide how this country can be
restructured so that every area can take care of itself and
we can relate on certain agreed basis.
We have slaughtered ourselves enough. We do not want another
civil war in order to justify the existence of “One Nigeria”.
May I humbly call on all Nigerians to examine the last
constitutional conference which addressed the issue of restructuring. Let us not
leave it to our youths to tell us when we can stay together or when we cannot
stay together. The youths in Biafra are crying; the youths in the North are
crying; the Niger Delta youths are crying. The middle belt is not happy with
what is happening to them.
Added to these, the strategies of the herdsmen to penetrate
every nook and corner of Nigeria, is raising some issues for national
discourse. The Federal Government has deliberately refused to call the herdsmen
to order. They have killed many people and ravaged many communities. None of
them has been arrested. Why? In May 2016, I published two articles and warned
that the activities of the herdsmen was a plot which would soon cover the whole
country. The heavy silence of the Federal Government tends to support the view
that the
herdsmen are on an undisclosed mission which only time would
tell.
The Government must listen to the call in order to have a
workable nation.
The military, for partisan reasons, jettisoned the
independence constitution and foisted an unworkable constitution on Nigeria.
Let us be humble and accept that we made a gross mistake by throwing away our
independence constitution. It is now clear that unless we return to a structure
that guarantees regional autonomy, there will be no peace in this country. The
earlier we returned to regional autonomy the better for us.
Regional autonomy
I want you to look at the tables I have given you to see
that your postulation that the North, before independence, had been carrying
the burden of the South is a fallacy. The statistics I have given you here were
not compiled by me. They were compiled by the colonial government in 1809 and
1813.
They show that the North has always been the Southern
burden. Even in this administration, without the resources from the South, the
North cannot make it. This is a gospel truth. But if the North believes it can
go without the South, what prevents us from restructuring so that the North can
be on its own and the South can be on its own.
Let us call on our government to look seriously at this
unworkable structure called Nigeria. We must not allow our youths to be
slaughtered again defending the indefensible.
This federation, as it is, is unworkable.
My dear Professor, let us come together as scholars and look
at our country very objectively. You may also want to read some of my works
such as: Nigerian Nationalism & the Problems of Socio-Political Integration
and Quo Vadis (Where Are You Going) Nigeria? & Other Essays.
My sincere regards
Prof. B.I.C Ijomah
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