| On The Future Of Igwe Ocha (Port Harcourt) |
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| Written by Ozodi Thomas osuji | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Tuesday, 14 August 2007 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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ON THE FUTURE OF IGWE OCHA
Ozodi Thomas Osuji The current mayhem going on at Igwe Ocha (I refuse to call that city by the name given to it on behalf of a British pervert, Lewis Vernon Harcourt, a one time Secretary of State for British Colonies) has reignited the old debate of whether Ikwerre is Igbo or not, hence whether Igwe Ocha is an Igbo city or not?
Generally, I do not see eye to eye with the Biafra Internet Brigade but
on this issue there should be no doubt where my sentiment lies.
Nevertheless, let me make it crystal clear that I am not a Biafran.
For one thing, the name
Biafra is the name of a village in
I am from Alaigbo. It is not up to you to decide what you call me, it
is for us to do so and in as much as Igbos generally refer to their
home as
I should also make it abundantly clear that I am not for Balkanizing the already too small African countries; I am for enlarging them. I want all of West Africa united as one country and, ultimately, all of
My goal will come to pass, like it or not, for it is the inevitable
direction of history. History is moving towards larger and larger
polities, not small ones. The future is one
There are about five hundred legitimate ethnic groups in Africa (I have
documented these in my writings on African politics), so we must have
five hundred states in
Thus, we shall have an Africa Federation with five hundred states. This is the inevitable future of
Each of the five hundred states of Africa (an Africa reorganized by Africans, not
Each state must rule itself. Each state must have a unicameral (not bicameral) legislature of no more than fifty members. The legislature must select a prime minister from the party with the largest members in it. Each state must elect a ceremonial governor. Each state must have a merit recruited independent judiciary. Each state must be divided into districts, not to exceed fifty districts (if you like, you can call them counties or local government areas) with the pattern of state governance replicated at the county level, viz a county council of thirteen members, a county administrator and a county court. At the city and town level the same pattern of governance is replicated: a town/city council of eleven members, a town mayor and a town court. At the central level a federal unicameral legislature of no more than five hundred members (one member from each of the five hundred states), a prime minister, a ceremonial president, and an independent judiciary. At all levels of governance, each elected office holder has a term of five years. I have elaborated on this matter elsewhere and do not need to rehash it here. Let me just say that the above are statements of conviction and must be fought for. I am excruciatingly aware that Africans in their laziness and cowardice are not used to making statements of conviction and devoting their lives to them and fighting for them and, if need be, dying for them. Like cowards everywhere they just want to live and live for what nobody quite understands. What are you living for, anyway? A man ought to live for something or die. For our present purposes, the ideas articulated above are not up for debate, they are final. Now, to the immediate issue at hand, the status of Igwe Ocha. Igwe Ocha is part and parcel of Alaigbo. This issue is not up for debate. Ikwerre is part of Alaigbo and it is not for us to debate what nature and natures God made. Alaigbo stretches from Igwe Ocha to Agbo in present
I understand that the
Finally, the current crisis in Igwe Ocha shows the lack of political will and resolve of the thieving crowd at
A resolute leader should descend on Igwe Ocha, shoot and kill all the cultist, gangs or whatever the criminals disturbing social peace call themselves. Close your eyes and kill them. In killing them you set an example to all those who wish to disturb social peace. You do not pussyfoot with criminal gangs, you kill them. Dont even bother arresting, judging and jailing them; that is too expensive; it costs money to house and feed criminals in prisons; get rid of them (cost control). All political states are maintained by exercise of brutal power; governance is violence by political means; politics is war by other means; politics is organized violence. Man is a savage and unless you exercise brute power on him he would kill other men, so you must always hold a gun over his head if you want him to be law abiding. This is called political realism. Take away the power of coercion and there is no such thing as a nation state; take away the police of any city and chaos and anarchy reign in the land. The leaders of the Nigerian polity must therefore not hesitate killing those who disturb law and order. If Musa Yar Adua and his fellow rigger princes want to regain control of Igwe Ocha they know what to do and ought to do it.
(If all these sound like the voice of dictatorship, so be it. If it
surprises you that a man who talks about metaphysics is also an
advocate of brute exercise of power then you are new to the ways of
politics. Martin Luther in 1517 posted his ninety nine challenges to
the Bishop of Rome and initiated the Protestant Revolution. Then he
recognized the implication of what he wrought: all sorts of people felt
emboldened to interpret the Bible as they saw fit and, therefore, were
no longer willing to accept centralized interpretation of the Bible.
The consequence was the breakdown of centralized authority in
Ozodi Thomas Osuji August 13, 2007
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Posted by Robot| 14.08.2007 02:34