Nigeria — 57 Years After; the Vicious Circle Continues -By C. K. Ekeke
On October 1,
2017, Nigeria will be fifty-seven years old. Despite attaining such
mature age, Nigeria continues to gyrate in a vicious circle.
Since Nigeria gained its independence from her colonial master –
Great Britain on October 1, 1960, this humongous nation, an amalgamation of
nearly 300 variant ethnic groups with distinct language, religion, culture,
social norms, etc., formed for the political and economic hegemony of Britain
in Africa has not worked and may never work – unless a new kind of political
structure and leadership style are invented to govern Nigeria.
In spite of its size, population and endowed natural resources,
Nigeria continues to flounder, fumble and stumble like a baby still learning to
walk. The nation and her citizens have never enjoyed any genuine freedom
or political peace or national prosperity because of tribalism, ethnic hatred
and clashes, marginalization, political instability and poor leadership,
bribery and government corruption, injustice, indiscipline and political
irresponsibility, religious ignorance, intolerance and violence, war and moral
degradation. These and other vices continue to mar the nation’s prospect
for development and progress until today.
Those entrusted with the affairs of governance are undisciplined,
irresponsible and have been a dismal disappointment. In fact, one of the
reasons, Nigeria has not yet moved beyond its failing statehood and foolishness
is because of the kinds of people selected, elected or imposed to lead the
country. Nigerians have never elected a true leader. Nigeria has
never elected a bright, smart, intelligent, capable and de-tribalized citizen
to lead the country. Sadly, men and women who have the right
qualifications and moral fortitude to lead were either denied access to office
or never ventured into politics at all because of the crude, incivility and
political muddle in the country.
Nigeria has had
various systems of government – unitary, parliamentary, military and democratic
presidential system. But since the return to presidential democratic government
in 1999, Nigeria has not yet maximized its potential to the fullest, but
wallowed in religious and sectarian violence, political leadership failure,
corrupt courts and judges, security challenges and human right abuses.
Despite the many economic reforms that the nation has embarked upon; yet
nothing much has been accomplished to uplift her citizens.
The nation is
also rapidly falling apart and disintegrating and the rulers care less about
it. The truth is that Nigeria is faced with serious challenges of nationhood
and most politicians in power don’t want to hear it.
Nigeria is popularly labeled as the “Giant" of Africa only in
terms of population because all other indicators of a prosperous and healthy
nation do not exist in Nigeria. In fact, according to Global Peace Index,
Nigeria ranked top among the most corrupt and most dangerous countries to live
in Africa. It is also rated as one of the most corrupt countries in the world.
In terms of prosperity, economic dominance, life expectancy and so
on, Nigeria does not even make the list among the top ten in Africa.
Nigeria is also ranked highest among the top terrorist countries because of
Boko haram (3rd deadly) and Fulani herdsmen
(4th deadly) terrorist organizations in the world according to Global Terrorism
Index – all operating and resident in the Northern Nigeria.
Nigeria has also the lowest primary school completion rates in the
continent and the largest percentage of the 100 million children, mostly girls;
who are out of school worldwide. An the annual meeting of the Millennium
Development Goals (MDGs) in 2005, the following conditions — good governance,
democratization, economic and political reforms, reduction of poverty,
population explosion, fight against poverty and hunger, pandemic diseases,
terrorism, conflict and wars and domestic peace, security, prosperity, and the
rules of law were listed as key important challenges facing Nigerian and most
of the African nations.
Nigeria is a nation that murders her intellectuals, freedom
fighters and true leaders. Nigeria continues to exile her brightest minds,
scholars, engineers, doctors, educationists, scientists, poets, writers and
media professional, philosophers, social thinkers, human rights activist,
pro-democracy activists, and its young citizens.
A nation that continues to fail to educate her young generation,
but instead murders them, a nation with institutionalized bias and hatred
against its own people, discriminating against the potential segment of its own
people, and goes on rampage killing unarmed young citizens.
A nation that does not maintain its infrastructures or build new
ones but prefers to embezzle and launder public money overseas, money destined
for Federal projects, State programs, community and rural development.
This is a nation that has disregarded education which is the foundation, pillar
and engine of economic growth and prosperity.
A ranking of top universities in Africa, showed no Nigerian
university made the top 10 Africa universities, yet we pride ourselves as the
giant of Africa. South Africa, Ghana, Egypt, and other less populated
nations dominated the ranking. The University of Ibadan is the only
leading university in Nigeria that showed up in that survey and yet did not
make the top 10 in Africa.
That survey clearly shows how Nigeria has degenerated as a
society. I weep when I see the dilapidated condition many schools in
Nigeria are in. The condition of some of the primary schools will make any
sincere person shade tears. Yet, these are the young ones we are
preparing to lead the country and guide the future of the nation. Quality
education is the pillar and engine for societal development and progress and
any nation that ignores educating her young people properly is destined for
failure and doom.
And so, Nigeria has serious issues. The challenges and
problems facing Nigeria are also convoluted. Apart from the social
and economic problems confronting the nation, new kinds of challenges are
surfacing daily — intractable problems and challenges such the question of its
foundation and nation building — namely ethnic strife, bias, hatred and
clashes, religious conflicts, terrorism, political instability, poor governance
and corruption, lack of infrastructure, public healthcare crisis, poverty and
unemployment, crime, violence, lawlessness, injustice, political thuggery,
looting of public treasury, money laundering and debilitating political
corruption, massive corruption, parasitic attitude, incompetence, impunity, rascality,
callousness, lawlessness, absurdity, stupidity, foolishness, poverty and
terrorism, military brutality and human right abuses, and many other
challenges.
In this section, I am reproducing a brief portion of Nigeria’s
military and political leadership history, which was published in book I wrote
in 2010 titled: “Nigeria’s Leadership Liability: A Clarion Call to Courageous,
Compassionate and Wise Leadership – Selected Writings to Commemorate Nigeria’s
50th Independence Anniversary.”
A review of the succession of civilian and military regimes of
Nigeria clearly revealed how the Hausa-Fulani Caliphate, Yoruba Oligarchy and
corrupt political elitist sect reduced and rubbished Nigeria as a nation.
So, let us fast forward with the exclusion of British colonial
rule from 1914 and through Nigeria’s struggle for independence, the
parliamentary system of Government of the 1950’s, and the political crisis that
led to the military eras of Aguiyi–Ironsi, Nigeria-Biafra civil war, Yakubu
Gowon, Murtlala Mohammed, Olusegun Obasanjo, and then the first second republic
presidential system that led to Alhaji Shehu Shagari presidency in 1979.
On December 1983, a palace coup takes place and Muhammad Buhari, a
military general and a radical Islamic leader from the North ousts the
incompetent Shehu Shagari, a school teacher also from the North of the Sokoto
Caliphate. Buhari takes over the helm of affairs, accusing Shagari’s
government of corruption and economic mismanagement, putting him only in house
arrest, while Vice President Alex Ekwueme was put in prison, and other
Southerners were exiled or executed.
On August, 1985,another palace coup took place, this time,
Ibrahim Babangida, also another Northerner and Buhari's chief of army staff ,
overthrows his boss and accused Buhari of being insensitive to the
feelings of the Nigerian masses especially his 'War against Indiscipline' which
was excessive and targeted to those who opposed him. Buhari was not
even arrested.
Ibrahim Babangida began his reign with a Structural Adjustment
Program (SAP) and market reforms that eventually destroyed the Nigerian
currency and economy. During IBB 8-year regime, there were two attempted
coups – Mamma Vasta in April 1986 and Gideon Orkar on April 1990. Both
coups failed and IBB managed to survive those two coups. He executed the
coup plotters and imprisoned most of his critics.
In 1990, IBB began a process to return to civilian rule. In
June1993, a presidential election was held in which Moshood Abiola, a business
mogul, friend and a trusted confidant of IBB, overwhelmingly won. But
surprisingly in June 12, 1993, IBB annulled the election and declared that the
election result was fraudulent, an election that was perceived to be the first
fair election in the history of Nigeria. The cancellation led to civil
disobedience by several human right activists, pro-democracy activists, media
and thousands of demonstrators. When the pressure mounted, on August 27,
1993, IBB resigned and appointed a lame-duck civilian from the Southwest
region, Ernest Shonekan, as head of an interim government.
Within three months into Shonekan’s government, on November 17,
1993, another military general, Sani Abacha, also from the North and
defense minister of IBB, booted out the transitional government of Ernest
Shonekan in yet another palace coup and took over the government. Sani
Abacha did not also touch IBB.
Sani Abacha was practically visionless and did not have any
economic plan but a political agenda to entrench himself as a life
president. He disbanded SAP programme and introduced a monetary policy
that began the official pegging of the Naira against dollar and other nations’
currencies. During Abacha’s era, the official rate of Naira rose to
nearly 200 Naira for a dollar. He destroyed the currency and basically
rubbished the nation’s economy, which actually elevated greed, bribery, and
corruption and enthroned most of the crooks, cronies and pathetic personalities
we have today as political leaders in the nation. He looted the national
treasury and left the Nigerian economy with a horrendous national debt.
During his regime, most of the institutions collapsed. Sani Abacha
persecuted, arrested and imprisoned many notable Nigerians including Olusegun
Obasanjo, Shehu Musa Yar'Adua, music icon Beko Ransome-Kuti and many
others. He arrested and jailed those who criticized him and
charged notable Nigerians like Poet Wole Soyinka, the 1986 Nobel Prize
winner in Literature and Ken Saro Wiwa, leader of the Movement for
Salvation of the Ogoni People (MOSOP), for treason and punishable by
death for criticizing his government. Sani Abacha carried out ethnic
cleansing in Ogni, Okirika, and Adoni - oil rich Delta regions of River State.
On October 31, 1995, Abacha’s civil disturbances tribunal found
the writer and environmental activist, Ken Saro-Wiwa and eight other MOSOP
leaders guilty and sentenced them to death by hanging. Despite appeal for
mercy from the human rights organizations, statesmen, religious leaders, international
governments and world leaders including the Commonwealth and Nelson Mandela, on
November 10, 1995, all 9 MOSOP leaders and activist were hung.
Ken Saro-Wiwa, a writer, playwright and environmentalist scholar
was hung because he called the government attention to the oil spillage and
environmental pollution and degradation in his hometown, Ogni. The
military despot, Sani Abacha and his cohorts were so ignorant and visionless,
that they refused to listen to the world renowned environmentalist.
Weeks after that barbaric killings and massacre of Ogni people,
the United Nations (UN) confirmed of massive oil pollution in Niger
Delta. The report from the United Nations Environment Program, the first
of its kind in Nigeria, was based on two years of in-depth scientific research.
It found that oil contamination is widespread and severe, and that people in
the Niger Delta have been exposed for decades – the report said.
The report provided irrefutable evidence of the devastating impact
of oil pollution on people's lives in the Delta - one of Africa's most
bio-diverse regions. It examined the damage to agriculture and fisheries, which
has destroyed livelihoods and food sources of the Niger Delta region and its
environs. One of the most serious facts to come to light is the
scale of contamination of drinking water, which has exposed communities to
serious health risks. Amnesty International Global Issues Director, Audrey
Gaughran, who has researched the human rights impacts of pollution in the Delta
Region, said, "That report proved Shell has had a terrible impact in
Nigeria, but got away with denying it for decades, falsely claiming they work
according to international standards."
The UN and Federal Government of Nigeria reported that it will
take about a $1 billion and up to 30 years to clean. But we know it may
take as much as 50 years to cleanup and restore normalcy to the area devastated
with oil pollution and ongoing oil spillage till today.
The Niger Delta oil pollution is much worse than the 2010 British
Petroleum (BP) oil leak in the Gulf Coast, which affected the ecosystem and
fishing businesses of those that live around the coastline of Louisiana State,
USA. The business owners and citizens fumed and when it is all said done,
BP paid out nearly $750 million to compensate businesses, fix the leak and
cleans their mess. Until today, BP is still faced with litigation,
lawsuits, reparation and compensation for oil spillage in the Louisiana
coastline. Oil pollution has been going on in the South-south and some
Southeast communities for years.
The BP oil spill was rated the worst oil spill in US history even
though it was just about 7 month’s oil leak. The Niger Delta region oil
pollution is been going on for over 50 years.
Let us continue with the nation’s vicious circle. Sani
Abacha also imprisoned Olusegun Obasanjo and other critics of his
government. He accused MKO Abiola of treason for declaring himself
president and in 1996, placed him in solitary confinement. This was when
they were cooking the plan to murder him. After the 1994 arrest, one of
Abiola's wives, Kudirat Abiola, launched a campaign for democracy and human
rights. She held pro-democracy rallies, defied the military decree banning
political associations, presented victims of military repression to
international fact-finding missions, inspired many other people, especially
women, and won the "Woman of the Year" awards in both 1994 and 1995.
However, on June 4, 1996, she was assassinated in cold blood, and it is
believed that this was ordered by Al Mustapha, CSO to the military dictator,
Sani Abacha.
On December 21, 1997, an attempted coup against Sani Abacha by
Oladipo Diya foiled. In 1998, Diya and others believed to be co-coup
plotters were sentenced to death.
Like IBB, Abacha set in motion agenda to return to civilian rule
on October 1, 1998. However, in April 1998, Abacha became the only nominated
candidate for the presidency. Even though many political prostitutes and
vision-less Nigerians supported him in his unbridled quest, many opposed him.
Demonstrations and riots broke out, and many innocent Nigerians were
killed. On June 8, 1998 Abacha surprisingly and mysteriously died of a
heart attack.
After Abacha died, Abdulsalami Abubakar, another Northerner took
his place, and set up a transition program that would lead the country back to
democracy by 1999. After a series of political wrangling and meetings
with imminent Nigerians, statesmen and international leaders to release M.K.O.
Abiola and restore his mandate, mysteriously MKO Abiola died in prison.
Abdulsalami Abubakar government said, it was heart attack, but most Nigerians
knew that was not the truth.
Abiola’s demise in prison provoked more riots and pro-democracy
activism and the return to democracy was non-negotiable. And so, on May
29, 1999, the nation returned to a presidential democratic system of government
with the win, surprisingly, a prisoner of Sani Abacha and former military
ruler, Olusegun Obasanjo from Southwest and same state with MKO Abiola.
Many have written that Obasanjo’s civilian presidency 1999-2007 was
compensation for Abiola’s mysterious death and denial of his rightful mandate.
During the 8-year presidency of Olusegun Obasanjo, corruption,
political thuggery, godfatherism, political assassinations, Niger Delta
militancy, armed robbery, kidnapping, religious intolerance, radical
Islamic fundamentalism and lawlessness reached its zenith. Boko haram
officially surfaced in 2009 during the watch of Olusegun Obasanjo and he was
unable to tame the murderous sect. It was rumored that he allowed Sharia
when it reared up its ugly head in order to pacify the north for allowing and
voting for him to be president. Also during the Obansjo era, Sharia was
launched in many Northern States. Before he completed his two-term reign,
he began to campaign for Alhaji Yar’adua, the then governor of Katsina State,
and surprisingly handed the presidency to a sick man, Alhaji Umaru Musa
Yar'Adua, another Northerner to be the president of Nigeria.
This is the same weak and coward leadership that has been
destroying Nigeria.
President Yar’Adua took office in May 29, 2007 and in his
inauguration messianic speech like sermon on the Mount, he admitted that
Nigerians were going through hell and promised to create 40 million jobs within
10 years, lower interest rates, reduce inflation and achieve realistic exchange
rate for Naira, yet he did not want to support CBN monetary policy which was
the second phase of PDP economic agenda. He reversed most of the economic
reforms and most laws of his predecessor and re-deployed Mallam Nuhu Ribadu,
the anti-corruption czar to the Institute for Policy and Strategic Studies
(NIPSS) in Kuru, Plateau State, Nigeria.
During Yar’Adua’s watch, Nigeria entered into a state of
hopelessness until his demise in May 2010. Unlike Obasanjo that
authorized the massacre of Odi people in the predominantly Ijaw town in Bayelsa
State by the military forces, Yar-Adua was able to dialogue and reach some
settlement with the so-called Niger Delta Militants in Bayelsa. Yar-Auda
would have made good on his promises despite ill health and bad cabals that
surrounded him. His demise on May 2010, threw Nigeria into political
wrangling and turmoil.
Dr. Goodluck Jonathan, his VP and a civilian from oil rich
South-south managed to finish the first term as President after much political
fight over rotational arrangement for power to remain in the north. On
April 16, 2011, he overwhelmingly won the presidential election, which has been
adjudged to be the freest and fairest election in the nation’s history.
Immediately after his inauguration on April 29, 2011, the country
was besieged with radical Islamic fundamentalism and terrorism known as Boko
haram. Thousands of innocent citizens were killed and millions displaced
in several Northern states. Also on April 2014, nearly 300 female
students were kidnapped from the Government Secondary School in the town of
Chibok in Borno State, Nigeria – the so-called Chibok girls
(#BringBackOurGirls) campaign became a world-wide phenomenon that even the
former First Lady of the United States of America – Mrs. Michelle Obama and
other American personalities got involved. Today, millions of dollars
continue to pour into the country to support FG to rehabilitate the released
Chibok girls and military hardware to vanquish Boko haram - which is now used
by Buhari and military forces to crush Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) and
pro Biafran youths.
President Jonathan rather than focus on the security challenges,
the economy and other social problems confronting the nation, to provide
solution to alleviating the suffering most Nigerians were going through by
maximizing the technocrats he appointed in his cabinet like Dr. (Mrs.) Ngozi
Okonjo-Iweala, Prof. Barth Nnaji and others, he embarked on constitutional
amendment with a concocted six-year single tenure for the president and
governors.
Public opinion fumed against such insensitivity and within weeks,
the National Assembly tossed out that part of the bill, saying it is untimely
and suspicious. However, there were items in the Constitutional Amendment
such as true federalism that should be vigorously pursued.
As we know, Jonathan’s presidency was accidental. President
Obasanjo was clearly the godfather of Nigeria politics then and still
today. He could not find a reputable candidature to be VP. The
Rivers State Governor, Peter Odili was so embroiled in corruption. In
fact with the exception of few like Donald Duke of Cross Rivers State and
Goodluck Jonathan of Bayselsa, most of the governors during Obansjo’s two–term
were either embroiled in money laundering and state embezzlement and were
clearly in the net of EFCC.
So, Jonathan was preferred and trusted to be loyal to the
Caliphate. He was not only accidental but was also weak and incompetent.
His weakness and incompetency lead to the imposition of Mohammadu Buhari, an
ex-military dictator upon Nigeria by former British Prime Minister, David
Cameron and ex-President of the U.S., Barack Obama as well as internal
supporters like Bola Tinubu, Babatunde Fashola, Rotimi Amaechi and Others.
Sadly, since President Muhammadu Buhari came into office in May
2015, his misguided leadership, unguarded comments, nepotism, hypocrisy and
unwise actions have led to deepen the divide between the various ethnic groups
in Nigeria.
There is now deep divide, rancor, and enmity between the major
ethic groups especially between Hausa/Fulani, Yoruba and Igbo/Ijaw.
Buhari has further deepened the division of Nigeria due to his ethnic, tribal,
imperialistic and fascistic leadership style.
1. Who will forget
the brutal massacres of unarmed Biafran youths are who are rightly seeking
freedom from a nation that has denied them their life and destiny.
Biafran youths, who are rightly are seeking self-determination and freedom from
a system that is destroying their talents, potentials and destinies are being
massacred and our politicians, elders, and even religious leaders are afraid to
speak-out against such heinous massacres and crime against humanity.
These are the youths they are entrusted to protect and care for.
2. The continued
unlawful detention of Indigenous People of Biafra leaders and the recent
illegal and barbaric invasion of the family home of IPOB leader, Nnamdi Kanu.
What an atrocity and abomination!
I have read and heard all kinds of insults, blame and criticism
being leveled against Kanu. It is even pitiful when I read such criticism
from the Clergy – Christian church leaders. I want to let them and others
know that if Jesus was here with us today, he’ll be doing exactly what Nnamdi
Kanu is doing now. This is not to equate Kanu with Jesus in any
way. But we must understand that Jesus operated as a mere human
being. He divested his divine powers in order to fulfill his divine
purposes for which His Father sent him to do.
Jesus used
harsher words than Kanu is using today. Just read the Gospels to see how
he addressed the Pharisees, Sadducees and other religious and political
hypocrites of his day.
As we know, Jesus
was born in a world under the brutal domination of Rome. It was a period of
horrific political oppression of conquered territories, of moral crisis, social
unrest and disorder, economic exploitation, heavy taxation of the poor, extreme
poverty, disease, injustice and harsh repression of dissidents fighting for
liberation and freedom from Rome. Instead of the Jewish political and religious
leaders to support their people, they aligned with Rome to massacre their own
people.
More than any other factor, it was the massacres, the betrayal of
the people by the religious and political elite and off-course Roman colonial
occupation of Israel that created the setting for the formative years of Jesus
as a moral leader and activist. It was in that turmoil and tumultuous time that
Jesus was born, which prepared him to become the world’s greatest spiritual
leader, political activist and liberator of all time.
Gandhi, MLK Jr., Mandela and other great freedom fighters all
studied Jesus and used his methodology. Nigeria may kill Nnamdi Kanu but they
will never kill the spirit of Biafra. Biafra is a nation. And so,
to tag a nation of 70 million Indigenous people as terrorists is ridiculous and
laughable.
Under Buhari, other atrocities and impunities are still being
carried out upon innocent citizens:
3. The brutal
massacre of Shiite Muslims and continued unlawful detention of the leader of
Nigerian Islamic Movement, Alhaji Zakyzaky and his wife.
4. The genocide of
the people of Southern Kaduna Christians orchestrated by Kaduna State governor,
El Rufia.
5. The destruction
of farm lands, raping of girls, women and massacre of unarmed villagers by
Fulani herdsmen.
6. The continued
unlawful detention of Retired Col. Sambo Dasuki, threat and torture of other
political opponents.
7. The granting of freedom to Boko haram jihadists,
recruiting them into the Nigerian military and unleashing to carry mayhem in SE
and SS regions.
8. The continued
harassment, torture and shooting of harmless citizens without cause – latest
being the invasion of the family compound of the leader of IPOB, Nnamdi Kanu
recently.
9. The illegal and
ridiculous proscription and unconstitutional tagging of IPOB as a terrorist
group.
10. The inability of the
Federal Government to arrest Arewa Youths who issued a hateful and treasonous
declaration threatening Igbos living in the North region to vacate the region
and threatened to massacre them and destroy their businesses. As I write,
many Igbos are beginning to return home in fear of what might happen on October
1, 2017, which is Nigeria’s Independence Day. Some have had their houses
and businesses destroyed already.
11. The president’s hate
speeches – December 2015 National broadcast, 2017 National broadcast after his
return from medical leave and recently the U.N speech. Buhari speeches
have not only been hateful but insulting on the collective intelligence of
Nigerians.
12. The attacks on the U.S,
UN, EU, UK and other international organizations that have condemned the
federal government for proscribing IPOB and tagging the group as a terrorist
organization. How ridiculous can this government can be?
13. The threat to dismember
from almost 90 international organizations including ICC, where Buhari and the
Nigeria military forces have so many cases against them for their human right
abuses, and extrajudicial killings of the people of Biafra.
14. And many other atrocities,
executives lawless, impunity and corruption.
Since Mohammadu Buhari came into power, defenseless and innocent
citizens have been tortured, imprisoned, and out rightly massacred around the
country by a combined Northern military and terrorist groups namely: Army,
Police, DSS, Boko haram and Fulani herdsmen
Meanwhile, Boko haram and Fulani herdsmen continue to carry out
their mayhem on innocent and harmless citizens across the country with
impunity. And the FG is not doing anything nothing to stop these
illiterate almajiris – a group that have been rated by global watch terrorist
group as the 4th deadly terrorist organization on the planet.
In the meantime, Boko haram, 3rd deadly terrorist sect in the
world is still having a field day killing and massacring innocent citizens
including the vulnerable citizens in IDP camps. And no one is doing
anything to stop the jihadist group that is fighting for an Islamic
State. Boko haram is still firmly in control of four to five local
government areas in Borno and Yobe States. They openly display their
flags, currency, and even conduct military parades.
APC Govt led by Buhari has not unleashed the military to crush
Boko haram and Fulani herdsmen but instead unleashed Boko haram in army uniform
to massacre unarmed Biafra youths and IPOB that Buhari wants to crush. In
addition to the ongoing arrests, torture, and killings, a systemic economic
strangulation of Igbo businesses and entrepreneurial activities are being
destroyed in the North and SW.
Buhari/APC government have been torturing, arresting, killing and
massacring any opposition, critical voice and dissenting views. Is this
democracy that Nigeria opted for?
In spite of these glaring atrocities and impunity being displayed
by Fulani herdsmen, some selfish and foolish Nigerians especially from the East
continue to insult the leader of IPOB – Mazi Nnamdi Kanu and his operation to
liberate Biafran people from bondage, slavery and coming islamization that
Buhari and Hausa-Fulani and Yoruba co-conspirators are gradually carrying out
before our very eyes.
Buhari’s oppressive regime has touched virtually every facet of
life in Eastern Nigeria—the increased military presence in the country
especially in the former Eastern region and the unleashing of military killer
squad made of DSS, Army, Police, Boko haram and Fulani herdsmen in the East is
condemnable and will not help resolve the challenges facing Nigeria currently –
which is the quest for restoration of Biafra.
One of the beauties of true democracy is the ability to dialogue
to resolve conflicts and dissenting views. In democracy, dialogue and
proper reasoning are used to achieve fairness, equity, and justice.
But that has not been the case in Nigeria. Only force is used to quench
dissenting views and opposition, which will never achieve expected result.
Fifty years later, we are still talking about Biafra. If Biafra is not
restored this time, fifty years from now, Nigeria will still be dealing with
Biafra.
Democracy is dead in Nigeria under Buhari fascist regime and those
who represent us in the National Assembly and Senate are not saying or doing
anything. Buhari’s political puppets, political prostitutes and military mafia
– DSS, Army, and Police are busy arresting, torturing political opponents and
killing unarmed Biafra youths, while Boko haram and Fulani herdsmen are busy
killing and destroying innocent citizens and occupying their farms and
communities.
What we have today is a government of lies, deceit with a
relentless and almost pathological undertone to undermine the truth.
Today, we read from government and presidential spokespersons, who concoct
lies, deceits and speak with dispassion and systematic distortion and
manipulation of facts to deceive and confuse public opinion. We have not
seen such dispassion and manipulation of public opinion since the return to
democratic government in 1999.
In any civilized and sound democratic government, the president
would have been impeached for many of his violations of the constitution, not
to mention his many atrocities and hopelessness that have pervaded the Nigerian
society. I think it’s time for Buhari to bow out of this presidency before he
completely destroys Nigeria and its democratic institutions.
Nigeria is a failed state and its disintegration was forecasted by
the U.S. intelligence to occur in 2015. In fact, it is the political
elite and corrupt public officials who are delaying Nigeria’s disintegration.
It looks like they want it to happen violently – another civil war perhaps.
The truth is that Nigeria is not working and may never work.
Nigeria is now a decadent, corrupt, lawless and failed state. Nigeria’s
amalgamation has expired and needs to be re-negotiated now. Nigeria is
rotten and the only viable solution is to return Nigeria to its original state
before amalgamation or peacefully divide her into several nations. If not,
Nigeria is headed to a violent disintegration. The nation cannot continue in
the current lawlessness, stupidity, foolishness, irresponsibility and
impunity.
The Nigerian state is surely chronically ill, ethically and morally
decadent and surely suffering from a serious and severe foundational
arrangement, in which the corrupt political elitist sect are determined to keep
Nigeria and her citizens in perpetual bondage and slavery.
Since,
the 1930’s, Igbos have been massacred all over Nigeria without any arrest or
punishment of the perpetrators of such heinous and barbaric massacres.
The Eastern region have had enough of systemic marginalization, economic
exploitation, political oppression, extreme poverty, senseless massacres, and
most importantly the satanic agenda to make Nigeria an Islamic State by Sokoto
Caliphate sponsored by Saudi Arabia and other radical Islamic Arab nations.
It is time the United Nations and global powers end Nigeria forced
amalgamation and false unity. Nigeria will never be one. Nigeria does not have
shared value system, patriotic principles, religious and political ideologies
to be one country. Nigeria will never genuinely develop and proposer as a
nation without peaceful division of the country. The systemic injustice,
economic strangulation, political oppression, religious intolerance, ethnic
hatred and envy against Igbos and Biafran people are unacceptable, intolerable,
unbearable, and insufferable.
An independent State of Biafra may be the only suitable solution
to fix Nigeria’s corrupt political system, lawlessness and failed institutions.
Biafrans want to be freed from subjugation, oppression, marginalization,
mediocrity, incompetence, jihadism, tyranny, poverty, disease, and hopelessness
of Nigeria. Biafrans are tired of living in bondage, slavery and servitude. It
is time for Biafran people to live in freedom, liberty, justice, pursuit of
happiness and prosperity like other civilized peoples and nations. Freedom for
Biafran people will be freedom for other indigenous populations and freedom for
millions of young Biafrans from unemployment, poverty, disease, and
hopelessness.
France and especially Americans have a holy hatred for tyrants,
dictatorship and destroyers of the human freedom. Every July, the U.S., Canada,
France, etc. celebrate their Independence Day and reflect on their fight for
freedom and battle for liberty. It is time global powers support to liberate
Biafra from bondage, slavery, Islamic radicalism and jihad in Nigeria.
Once again, I call on the United Nations, African Union, United
States of America, European Union, United Kingdom, and other concerned nations
to intervene. It is time the International Community and Global Powers
intervene to give the Indigenous People of Biafra – a nation of seventy million
people, a State of their own. It is time to dismantle Nigeria and free unarmed
Biafran people from looming civil war that will have devastating consequences
on sub-Sahara Africa and global economy. It is time to end the bondage and
slavery of Biafrans in Nigeria and free her to compete like other indigenous
people of the world. It is time to liberate and free Biafran people from
pathological hatred, ethnic cleansing, systemic injustice, economic
strangulation, political oppression, religious violence, and radical Islamic
political ideology of the Nigerian State.
Enough is enough. ‘One’ Nigeria and ‘Unity’ cannot be by
force. One-Nigeria is a myth and a sham. It does not exist in practice
but only by mouth. Let us stop deceiving ourselves in order to save the lives
of our children and young people. Let us not allow greed and selfishness to
destroy us all.
Rev. Dr. C. K. Ekeke, is a theologian, author, consultant and
lecturer. He is the President of Leadership Wisdom Institute.
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