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The Sun Dies in Biafra Print E-mail
Written by George Onmonya   
Tuesday, 13 March 2007

Biafra will never rise again! It is dead. Lay a wreath for Biafra in the graves of your hearts. It died in 1970 when the federal troops subdued the uprising in Eastern Nigeria after three years of civil war. Why can’t we get it into our hard heads that it is all over? We must now go on with one Nigeria. Do we have any choice? Do you?

The recent outcry from Eastern Nigeria chaired by some Ibos flaunting the new Biafra was initially welcomed by some conformists, but the Biafran patriots did not do their jobs well as the whole Biafra outlook was something like the Odua People Congress (OPC) and it counterpart the Arewa People Congress (APC). But then they got support from majority of Ibos in Diaspora. What kind of support? Writing articles on internet and the print media. That’s that.

Uwazurike, the CEO of the new Biafra, got it all wrong from the beginning. It has to do with the timing, the morale of the people, and perhaps ignoring history or the ignorance of it. When Chukwuma Kaduna Nzeogwu executed his coup he was planning a revolution that would change Nigeria, not a civil war that would lead to secession. When Emeka Odimegwu Ojukwu declared secession he had no choice because the people wanted it. They came out to support it, fought it, died in it, and when it ended they had no regret. It was worth it. They fought and died for what they believed. Biafra then was an ideology, a dream, a passion, that was worth fighting and dying for. And even though it wasn’t realized there was a sense of pride and a sense of fulfilment. But after over three and a half decade after the civil war all that has died, and even though Nigeria’s unity in diversity has not been as it is sang, Nigeria has united more than ever.

Let us start with the old map of Biafra that included Cross Rivers state, Akwa Ibom state, Bendel state, Delta state and Rivers State. Today, like before, the people of these areas have made it clear that they are not Ibos and wouldn’t go along with the Ibos when it comes to Biafra. Majority of Ibo leaders are not in support of the new agitation for Biafra. The Biafran patriotism has been a beer parlour gist when people sit to relax in beer parlour and discuss what they wished after a hard day work. Even at that many Ibos are not in support or committed. When Uwazurike was charging the Ibos to obey him and ignore the federal government, some of us thought this could get serious, at least he made headlines in our dailies and weeklies, but I remember a friend told me that the man would only succeed in using Bakassi boys to cause riot. When he was arrested some of his ardent followers and supporters threatened fire and brimstone but after few weeks they all went back to their businesses leaving him now alone in jail with charges hanging on his neck. This should tell anyone that the sun that once brightened the Biafra passion has died, it cannot be resurrected again.

People who live romancing utopia will never get anywhere. I will encourage my Ibo brothers who still passionately hold to the mirage that one day they would have a Biafra to forget it and start thinking about building a new Nigeria. Our heroes past have disappointed us all; they sowed ethnicity, tribalism, sectionalism, nepotism and suspicion, which had its root from colonial manipulation to keep us disunited and dependant on them. We can all come together and change it to our advantage. I am calling to the youths of Nigeria, Ibos, Hausas, Yorubas, Idomas, Tivs, Kanuris, Nupes, Igala, Igbira, Itsekiri, Gwari, and all other tribes I have not mentioned in Nigeria, to join hands together and refuse to believe our parents, politicians, and anyone who want to separate this nation. We can make it the giant of Africa together. And it doesn’t matter if you are a Christian or Moslem, man or woman, tall or short, smart or dull. What you cannot change you make it better.

Emeka Odimegwu Ojukwu contested in the past election under APGA, a party registered by the Nigerian government. Of course he knew he was not going to win election and become Nigeria’s president, but he did. What did that tell you? That tells me Ojukwu himself no longer believes in the Biafran story. Ojukwu has always been a realist, how could you not admire such a man. He has a way of sending a message and I think that message is, ‘forget it, it is over with half of a yellow sun.’

Biafra was once a dream, a dream forced on us by Lord Luggard’s faux pas amalgamation of Nigeria, but we must bury it and forge ahead to build a bigger dream that is Nigeria. The mistake of Lord Luggard could be a bigger advantage for us. We must all face reality and stop chasing the wind, for those who chase the wind will never catch anything but end up miserable and disappointed till the end. Our problems are the very corrupt and inhuman elites. Save your energy for them. We can no longer keep silent and watch them steal our dreams to Switzerland.

We must put our hands together to fight the biggest war of our history, and that is the war against corruption. We can not afford to keep silent and watch our governors, local government chairmen, councillors, and those entrusted with responsibilities of handling affairs of this nation steal state money and share with their friends and Godfathers. We can not keep silent and let our president do what he/she wants with Nigeria. We must call our legislatures to order to make laws that would not allow anyone run Nigeria like a personal company. Nigeria is for all of us and not just for those who reside or have access to Aso Rock.

And my Moslem brothers and sisters in the north must educate their people that you cannot start killing innocent Nigerians because of a Danish cartoon or War in Iraq. Our Moslem brothers and sisters in the north must be educated that Nigeria is a secular state and not an Islamic state, therefore a Christian, Hindu, Buddhist, or pagan, has a right to worship whatever he or she believes. That is why I am in support of same sex marriage law to break the monopoly of Nigeria by either Christianity or Islam.




RobotRobot is offline 
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 # 1

We must put our hands together to fight the biggest war of our history, and that is the war again...Read the full article.

Posted by Robot| 13.03.2007 14:01

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pukpabipukpabi is offline 
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 # 2

Mr. George,

Please, nobody asked for your advice. If Biafra is dead, why are you paranoid about it?

You see, you do not understand Biafra. It is not a geographical expression like Nigeria. It is a people spirit, etched in justice and equality. Emeka Ojukwu is the symbol of that spirit. I am not supprised you do not understand it, because these too virtures do not exist in your Nigeria.

Leave Biafra alone, and embrace your Nigeria. A word is enough for the wise.

Paschal Ukpabi, J.D.
Michigan, USA

Posted by pukpabi| 13.03.2007 15:01

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AuspiciousAuspicious is offline 
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 # 3

HEED your own advice as well, Pascal Ukpabi: Embrace your Biafra as well..and leave Nigeria alone for the Ojukwus, Anyaokwus and the rest of us Nigerians who are presently active participants in working the machinery of the Nigerian engine.

Auspicious.

Posted by Auspicious| 13.03.2007 15:24

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kvin33kvin33 is offline 
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 # 4

Contrary to widely circulating reports, I can reliably confirm that the Sun is alive and well. The Sun was in Biafra on a routine medical check up after suffering from a brief cold. The doctors in Biafra have assured me that the minor cold due to an ailing sun spot has been cleared up and the sun will be back shining in Nigeria tomorrow. According to a spokesman, The Sun regards the rumors of its death as malicious acts of devilish detractors who wish Nigeria ill. The Suns wife, the Moon could not be reached for comment all day yesterday as she was busy providing light in the ensuing darkness occasioned by NEPA's sleeping sickness and subsequent trip to Cameroun for treatment.

The forever rising sun of Biafra will never die as long as injustice, inequality, criminal neglect are the hallmarks of Nigeria. To be forewarned is to be forearmed.

Posted by kvin33| 13.03.2007 15:42

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ExxcuzmeExxcuzme is offline 
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 # 5

I don't know what this writer is aiming to achieve with this article unless he wants to have a hard-on from people reacting to his crap. Writing about this subject has never enlightened anyone or change anyone's view. You could have added your own piece to Umunnah's last article and save us all from another annoying Biafra article that could make one put a gun to one's brain to escape this misery!:mad:

Posted by Exxcuzme| 13.03.2007 15:51

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NkireNkire is offline 
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 # 6

George:
Your write-up is fundamentally deficient in two aspects as follows:
1. You or anyone else cannot declare that someone else’s dream is dead. The chutzpah characterizing such a declaration is close to acting in a manner reeking in omniscience. Biafra might not be my dream or those of my family; however, I don’t have the ability to tell another guy who may be enthralled by the dream or the possibility of Biafra that his dream is not likely to become reality. Are you God, George, are you a fortune teller? I bet you that your great-grand father or even your grand father never in his dreams imagined the unholy idea of the amalgamation of 1914. But here we are today with its realities in its full force and effect.

In the 1980s when the fight against apartheid was at its epic stage, with various songs and dramatics, protestations and agitations urging for the release of Nelson Mandela from political imprisonment, who would have deduced or foretold of a President Mandela and the subsequent world statesman status he is today. Such are the nature of things, George. Similar analogies are innumerable. During the Nazi era, who would have thought about a strong state of Israel? I bet you, when the Red Army was warehousing people in the gulags and ostracizing persons to Siberia, no one would have dreamed about the demise of the USSR and the disintegration of the KGB (today, they are killing each other around the world – think about the chickens coming home). It is a dynamic world, George. Always remember this: fundamentally flawed structures and paradigms have been known from time immemorial to not stand the test of time. For a great many Nigerians, such is the structure we are looking at. My advice to you is, instead of your mission impossible task of declaring a total eclipse over Biafra (what God complex!), inquire why the desire for Biafra of tomorrow still burns in the belly, hearts and minds of many (especially young people that were born post January 12, 1970). Part of our problem as Africans is the lack of desire to have an inquiry mind – do research, obtain factual findings, analyze the findings, interpret the findings and consequently proffer solutions and resolution- strategies and/or tactics to achieve, or correct or restructure situations, issues or whatever that might be ailing us. This is what intellectuals do, unless if they are half-baked with shoot from the hip type, beer parlour-like gyrations camouflaged as ideas.

2. Your write-up confuses the historical event that is Biafra and the agitation for a future Biafra. This was actually the weakest part of your write-up. George, the two are not the same. In many parts of Eastern Nigeria, you will find many individuals who fought in the Biafran army or lived through the ravages of the war that are against any agitation for a Biafra of tomorrow. However, this stance does not invalidate their historical appreciation and comprehension of Biafra of 1967-1970, which I will call Biafra of Survival, including the events leading up to it. For example, if I reminisce about Biafra of Survival, I am reminiscing about the events leading up to it, such as the pogrom in the North and West, the assassination of Aguiyi_Ironsi (GOC), the enthronement of Yakubu Gowon, a junior officer over other more qualified senior officers, the rejection of the Aburi Accord that could have saved Nigeria and bring about a more realistic governing structure, the declaration of police action against the East by Gowon meant to last no more than three months (laughs), the Asaba massacre by Murtala Mohammed, the bombing of villages such as mine where there were no military installations nor war theatre, the declaration and implementation of hunger as a legitimate instrument of war (war criminal action), the twenty pound policy after the war, the abandoned property policy, the indigenization decree after the war and a whole host of other discreditable actions and events that enveloped the East as the war ensued, raged on and ravaged over three years. George, these historical and epochal events are facts, no sane person that lived through them can simply ignore and/or forget about them. I will be failing woefully in my parental duties if I fail to educate my children about Biafra of Survival, how it affected me, our family, the entire village and the larger Eastern region of Nigeria. Asking victims of an orchestrated criminal action to forget as if nothing happened is by itself an unforgivable action of historical proportions. You can suggest to the affected individuals or group to forgive. In the Nigerian case, I have always maintained that the East forgave and moved on long time ago. The evidence to this effect is overwhelming and glaring. Easterners were quick to physically integrate themselves into other parts of Nigeria immediately after the war. However, this action did not mean that they forgot the war of extinction that was prosecuted against them. To the contrary, it is the Nigerian state that has not forgotten about the audacity of Easterners to defend themselves in their homes and back gardens without crying uncle. It is the Nigerian state that has remained vindictive and instituted containment policies to suppress the East. It is the Nigerian state that uses its security agents to patrol the East like an occupied territory.

George, do you think that the issues and circumstances that gave rise to Biafra of Survival have been addressed, if negative, why are you surprised that the offspring of those who survived in Biafra would want the Biafra of tomorrow?

If your answer is in the affirmative, please explain in detail.


Nkire

Posted by Nkire| 13.03.2007 15:51

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reemix123reemix123 is offline 
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 # 7

yes i agree

Posted by reemix123| 13.03.2007 15:58

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AfeniAfeni is offline 
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 # 8

Biafra is still very much alive. You "Patriots" in diaspora can whine all you want about "One Nigeria", but one only need take a walk down any street in any part of Nigeria to see for themselves that the people have given-up on the country. The only thing that is fueling what little level of "love for country" is ignorance.

As of now, I suggest that all you degenerates that insist on promoting Nigerian unity should put your money were your mouth is. Pack-up from your confortable lives in foreign land and take up residence in any of the run-down slums in the "Heart of Africa." Just remember one thing, you are not VP or PDP Presidential candidate, so when you injure yourself working on your fitness, or feel faint after working on your Presidential/Guber campaign, don't expect to be air-ambulanced to the best hospitals that England and Germany have to offer.

Posted by Afeni| 13.03.2007 18:19

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AuspiciousAuspicious is offline 
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 # 9


=Afeni;161197>
As of now, I suggest that all you degenerates that insist on promoting Nigerian unity...



Typical rantings of an arrogant ragamuffin.

Auspicious.

Posted by Auspicious| 13.03.2007 19:08

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truthsayer33truthsayer33 is offline 
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 # 10

What on earth has Biafra got to do with same sex marriages?

Posted by truthsayer33| 13.03.2007 19:11

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