Igbo Ekunie’s 1st World Press Conference Held In Awka, Anambra State, Biafra land
Renascent East-Developing The Homeland
45 years after the civil war, the Buhari presidency in 2015
returned Nigeria to full blown marginalisation and the vexed politics of
exclusion. In this, the Southeast was worst hit, owing mainly to the presidents
well known insensitivity to Nigeria’s fragile diversity and his disregard for
the principles of democratic practice. In all tiers of government the Igbo
faced an orchestrated policy of exclusion, pursued and encouraged by the
president himself.
For a nation that has been through an avoidable civil war,
decades of continuing ethno-religious divisions and an ongoing Boko
Haram/herdsmen terrorist insurgency, Buhari’s blatant sectionalism, nepotism
and insensitivity to Nigeria’s diversity dealt a further blow to the long
elusive quest for national unity and nationhood. The Igbo nation has
disproportionately borne the brunt of these ill advised policies and the
overall failure of the Nigerian state. Yet while bad leadership has continued
to consign Nigeria to failure politically and economically, the Igbo nation
need not fail along with Nigeria. If anything, the long betrayed ideal for
development; driven primarily by the nation’s contradictions;
suspicion/distrust/conflicts and the destructive policies of marginalisation in
place of policies of national development has made it obvious that aspirations
for regional development can only be actualised through a self driven effort
under the auspices of an integrated private sector led regional development
platform, created specifically for that purpose.
As a distinct people; we have more population than
Singapore, United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Taiwan, Belgium, Sweden, Netherlands,
Portugal, Denmark, Ireland, Israel, Switzerland, Greece amongst others as well
as 80 percent of African nations.We are thus a nation in our own right and
accordingly have the wherewithal to mobilise our population; human and
material, at home and in the Diaspora to create a separate, ingenious and
audacious part for developing the homeland through a public/private/Diaspora
partnership. While we may not have much control over Nigeria’s decadent
and un-progressive politics, we can to a large extent control our regional
economy and create a vortex of self sustaining economic development driven
primarily by the private sector.
We hereby for the umpteenth time, call on the governors of
the Southeast region, captains of industry, Diaspora leaders, Banks and other
private investors to come together and create a regionalinvestment corporation
dedicated to development of the homeland through investments in critical
capacity building “generative” infrastructure such as tolled super-highways
(10-12 lanes), real estate, tourism, special industrial parks amongst others.
In a globalising world, we believe that such a regional
platform, benefitting from the economies of scale, partnership with the private
sector and the Diaspora can better aggregate resources for capital intensive
infrastructure and projects across the region within the framework of 5-10 year
benchmarked development plan.
The Biafran Question:
In recent years Nigeria has been flush with self
determination groups. In the North there is the Boko Haram terrorist war that
has killed thousands of Nigerians in their struggle for a pure and undiluted
Islamic state. In the East there is IPOB amongst others, In the Niger Delta
there is the AVENGERS and in the West there is OPC. These groups have been
given life by decades of misrule, growing ethno-religious contradictions,
injustice, structural/systemic deficiencies and the overall failure of the
Nigerian state. In engaging these groups, the Nigerian state has
exclusively chosen violence rather than dialogue and wide ranging
reforms/restructuring. Regrettably, government has chosen this option of
violent clampdown even for non violent groups such as IPOB who only exercised
their constitutional rights to free speech and assembly.
As Martin Luther King once said, “the right to dissent and
or to agitate for a right is what makes a nation great.” Nigeria can
neither prosper nor become a great nation except the right to dissent and
peacefully agitate for a right is acknowledged, respected and dialogue is
championed as the ultimate medium for dealing with grievances. Nigeria cannot
claim to be a democracy and yet violently suppress free speech and differences
of opinion that underpins the very essence and practice of democracy.
In that regards, we submit that IPOB in particular is and
remains anon violent organisation that only expressed dissent and opinions
within the constitutional provisions for freedom of speech and assembly. No
true democracy or sane society can use violence to meet the dissent or peaceful
aspirations of such a group. The jailing and killing of IPOB members remains
therefore a gross and criminal breach of the very constitution that enabled
theBuhari administration.
There can be no doubt that Nigeria remains in the words of
ChiefObafemi Awolowo “a mere geographical expression” in search of national
unity and nationhood. In the process, it is inevitable that groups and regions,
driven by misrule, injustice, marginalisationand failure will seek self
determination one way or the other. In such circumstances, the duty of the
state is not to kill or jail those who seek a divorce from the failing and
dysfunctional union, especially when they do so non violently, but to engage
them in dialogue in view of addressing their grievances and finding pathways to
harmony and true nationhood.
We therefore call on president Buhari, governors of the
Southeast, Ohanaeze Ndigbo, opinion leaders and human rights groups to engage
IPOB and all other self determination groups in fruitful dialogue that will
address their grievances and permanently end agitations across Nigeria. In the
same vein we call for the immediate withdrawal of all charges against IPOB
members and the unconditional release of all their detained members. In a
democratic and heterogeneous state, dialogue should be championed above
repression as that is the only way to achieve lasting peace.
Restructuring As The Way Forward:
Owing to Nigeria’s perpetual crisis of nationhood and the
increasing proliferation of self determination groups, the call for
restructuring has continued to grow louder. By now, it should be obvious that
the status quo is unsustainable and attempting to retain it, is at best
suicidal.
We submit, that the time has come for a fundamental
restructuring of the Nigerian state to a structure and system that provides
optimal governance that meets the needs of the populace and more
importantly allows each region develop at their own pace.
We note, that the fundamentals of restructuring suffer no
conflict, as all proponents virtually agree that more control/autonomy in all
facets should be given to the states and or regions as the case maybe, that
government systems should be modified/streamlined for more effective
governance, that there should be rotation of power for purposes of nation
building, that corruption should be eliminated, that security should be
enhanced and that development and welfare of the citizenry should be the
clear and unambiguous goal of government at all levels.
While the fundamentals across board are largely the same,
themodus operandi has remained the only contention. Yet we believe that the
1963 constitution, Aburi Accord, the Abacha constitutional conference and the
2014 National Conference report already provides a rich resource base of
proposals from which a working document for restructuring can be obtained by
any sincere government and given life through practical implementation.
In closing, we submit that Nigeria is not a natural nation,
nor was it ever meant to be. Nigeria was conceived by Sir TaubmanGoldie, a
British trader whose only interest was exploitation of resources/ maximisation
of material gain. The British colonial authority continued from where Sir
Goldie stopped ultimately to maximise their colonial interests in regards to
natural resources and other such material gain.
The post-colonial administration therefore inherited a
nation that never was at independence. That unresolved contradiction has
arrested the nation’s development and continued to increasingly challenge its
very existence. We believe therefore, that except and unless Nigerians engage
in dialogue and the nation is restructured to meet the aspirations of her
various peoples/nations, she is unlikely to survive the 21st century.
A word as they say should be enough for the wise!
Signed:
Chief Tochukwu Ezeoke
President Igbo Ekunie Initiative
+234 708 004 2206
Lawrence Nwobu
Secretly Igbo Ekunie initiative
+353 (89) 962 3182
Yours Sincerely,
Chief Tochukwu Ezeoke
President Igbo Ekunie Initiative
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