IPOB 5 identity misfired
III
by
Sampson i. Onwuka
The
problem was that N.C.N.C is to produce both the President and Vice
President, but the leader of the house and the majority leader of the
Senate in 1963 were adapting to the Northern People Congress but were
the party that won the general elections but not the majority of
seats. In essence, it can be argued that the role of the Prime
Minister in Nigeria was no longer an affair from 1963, a position
that Northern Nigerians resisted for reasons of their own including
the so-called 1959 Right to Protest. (5), It didn’t seem that they
was a misunderstanding about the future role of the Prime Minister or
those in the three major regions, and it seems that the Premiers of
the West, East, and North were gradually aware that there is a likely
possibility that new States will be created in Nigeria – that is
the first restructure of the Country since independence was underway,
that will also mean (6) changing the currency and adapting to
‘Nigeria only’ statuesque (what became the Naira) which some
people believe was primarily a stasis of the N.C.N.C and other
Nationalist including Obafemi Awolowo. Ben Gbulie argue
that C. Odumegwu Ojukwu was against the further division of the
States citing like certain Igbos of his elan that it would further
weaken the Eastern Region. The Northerners were getting unctions from
the East. It seems to me that the old politicians were aware that the
old ‘Rights to Protest’ (1959) granted to the Northern Nigeria
under the ‘indirect rule’ preponderance couldn’t be defended
any more and may or may not have come to an end as such all
opposition ended with ‘Presidential orders’ if so given, and
everyone including Sarduana was subordinate to now FG (Federal Govt),
and that included the Chiefs in Yoruba land and in the East that the
decision of the Senate and the Congress or so chosen Parliament which
Zik and company didn’t have problems with, was final and if so
commanded by the President or ordered by his subsidiaries, it was
binding to the Nigerian people.
This version was perhaps not taken up
seriously by Sarduana who felt that his party was perhaps displaced
and not favored
in some of the decision, besides there was more than enough to
suggest that North was not that interested in being part of Nigeria
including the West. (8) The politician were also aware that Nigeria
was a combination of 8 former empire in that region, that it has
three or four auspicious tribes capable of being great West Africa
nations, 500 ethnic groups and languages- each dying for attention
and capable on their own, more than anything Igbos and the entire
Eastern Nigeria could offer, more than what the Yoruba and the entire
West could offer, the land mass thrice those of Usman Danfodio and
Fulani which was an untenable empire until the English – especially
Lord Lugard came and forced the hands of Sokoto Caliphate. In
essence, Nigeria was a little too big for one tribe, for instance the
Igbo, the Yoruba – who were mainly Nationalist and children of
‘direct rule’, that the addition of others was a privilege that
deter the previous authorities of the most organized administrative
structures such as the Northern Nigerians under Islam to exercise any
power more than the one allotted to them through the Nigerian
Constitution. It seems to the best of us, that the Premiers of the
three main region and eventually four main regions were aware of the
relationship between monarchy and the new political mandate, that
they agreed on Presidency – an American model after the tutelage of
American trained politicians was progressive. What I think was
happening was political agitation for relevance in the new Nigeria
where Premiers under the generalissimo of Northern Peoples Congress
were jettisoning the old frame of the Federal Government.
It
was to be argued that the public humiliation of Tafawa Balewa by
Sarduana was not considered a National issue at such, but the direct
opposition to the President on matters decided by the House would
have been problematic. It seems that part of the political engine
that may or may not have opted to act through force and military in
the 60’s was a minority – won the electoral votes not popular
votes, yes there is possibility that there was more than one planned
takeover of power from Azikiwe who was the President – that’s
highest authority in the Country, and due to the influence of certain
local leaders including Sarduana on official policies it wasn’t
likely to happen without removing them from power. We may mention
that the so-called Coup in January 15, 66 was perhaps not without
reason under Aguiyi Ironsi given his new appointment in 1965. Whether
he gave the final orders is a matter he only knew, but he denied that
he was not responsible for the death of Sarduana. They were other
divisive issues besides the case of electoral votes which IPOB,
MASSOB, Biafra Zionist Federation, etc., are perhaps not unaware of
but can take into advisement the fact that it is not draw a full
measure of the impact of their actions on national theater. And it is
repeated by Ben Onwuka the Biafra Zionist that he is not sure if
Nnamdi Kanu – the IPOBer - can lead the Igbos or the Biafrans
(including others) either to war or some of other land of conscious
interest, yet the actions mitigating Anambra elections by IPOB is
thorough going that most searching historians will play the host of
today’s possible fracas against the ghost of N.P.C and their
Sarduana – Ahmadu Bello and
For
instance the problem of the Nigerian Rail Road were Sarduana
supported the forced sacking of Christians in the Nigerian Rail Roads
that go into the North including other civil services. It is history
that those who were employed by the Britain to work the train tract
ended up in the employment – many of them Igbos, Yoruba, etc., so
among the people who were compulsorily fired from service was Victor
Banjo’s Dad, Nzeogwu’s father (uncle (?)) – who remained
unemployed for many years and died after, S.L Akintola himself. The
planned Pogroms in the North was not political article, including the
so-called stock-pile to “islamatize” Nigeria – all of these was
no longer a Northern affair given refined political status. However
the main break with Northern People Congress began after the visits
of Sarduana of Sokoto to Kaduna military headquarters and afterwards
began to call Northerners to join the Nigerian Army. But indicated
that the Hausa military men should not eat with “Infidels” which
was also another problem. U.S Intelligence on Nigerian Swiss account
was under the title, Ahmadu Bello, with two other names two Lebanese
men, and an Italian. They were directly in charge of certain
financial accounts of the country, especially resources from Geneva
and United Nations and Federal Account. It is not wrong to doubt that
the accounts were closed during the civil war but a may have remained
a secret until the move by Abacha to install Chemical Bank.
It
doesn’t seem that both Tafawa Balewa – Prime Minister under the
rungs of Governor General operated freely and others needed to
understand that the word sabotage was an ongoing political issue
seems that Northern Peoples Congress was desperately interested in
Presidential seat but had problems understanding the cabinet role of
the ministers, that Tafewa (Tafawa) Balewa was not the head of either
the Executive arm, Judicial arm of the Government and by Veto
reserved for the President, it could re-position the position of the
house. Put it bluntly, Zik’s premise as the President was
understood but it seems that the argument on the Nigerian Federal
Republic that installed Presidency in 1963 – an idea common to what
was happening to nations world wide – was strategically
suffocated. This is not a useful argument but the rounding up of
these men, Akintola defeated in the election but in power through the
vise of N.P.C, none functionary Prime Ministerial – no longer at
ease – but still in power until further development with Republic.
Sarduana himself was premier of the North as conflict with Kano
rivals, but was chairman of the N.P.C, as such his arguments in North
was pronounced and his actions was portent to the limits of the King
of Sokoto ‘Abubakar III’ and within the realms of Kano polity.
That’s a preamble...
The
Southern Nigeria and the Northern Nigeria were united by Lord Lugard
in 1914, a fact that remind us of William Balfour Baike (Voyage up
the River Kwora and Binue’) and his years in an area he named
Lokoja (Niger State), that in one stranded whole-year waiting for an
evacuation to Britain, he and his group discovered series of villages
and communities along the River Niger, from Upper region to Middle
Belt all the way down to Lower Niger where their world became
animated. There is no information that Baike made it to lower Niger
– a history - (A Narrative of the Expedition to the River Niger, W.
Allen, R.N, T.R – H Thomson) – perhaps he did - saving that the
link to Calabar through the Niger runs to Mali, Guinea and Republic
of Benue. This position seethes with resentment on the claims that a
certain F. Shaw (?) disclaimer to Flora Shaw (London Guardian) called
Nigeria in 1897 – ‘people who live around the Niger’ not around
the ‘Benue’ to emphasis a point that she was probably referring
to a separate map within what is called ‘Bight of Biafra’ and
therefore not Nigeria as we know it today. There was another Shaw who
arrived with Frederick Lugard (Lord Lugard) and a few soldiers of
fortune from Congo, on invitation by George Goldie after they failed
to hold Congo for Britain as against Leopold II of Belgium. This Shaw
was definitely a soldier and was shot in Bini City in one of the
attempts by Lord Lugard (Lord Lugard’s Diary) and company, to loot
the palace of Oba of Bini on information by Goldie. They were
successful in capturing the Oba palace at Bini and were surprised at
how the Muslims weakened Bini, but may have also made tours in the
Eastern part of Nigeria for other reasons and were sure that if
Britain and the Queen could offer them any military assistance, they
could take over the commerce and force Nigeria into one existence.
The wars with the Northern Nigeria including the revolts started in
1912 and ending with the Harmmattan of 1914, and Frederick Lugard
turned his attention to the South.
In
other to maintain that politically conscious rings such as IPOB,
MASSOB, Biafra Zionista, Ohaneze, World Igbo Country, Niger-Delta
where well aware of their position in Nigeria, we look at Nigeria
before Nigeria in 1914 – a country without Britain amalgamation in
1914 - witnessed by the Azikiwe’s and perhaps Awolowo’s who were
most perhaps teenagers when in 1918, Nigeria was called to their
alarm as one country under the Great Britain. There was a country
witnessed by Azikiwe and company before the formation of Nigeria, but
these men including Alvan Ikoku were determined to re-emphasize the
statuesque with or without Britain. We can argue that unless with
William Balfour Baikie, Nigeria was by Flora Shaw’s definitions
‘people around the Niger’, which was also the route English took
as they decamped from the French to what is now the boundary between
Nigeria and Cameroon. The British society largely operated through
their missionaries given their penetration of Egypt from the land of
the Bible, Palestine, in search of Red Sea, Elephantine where Jesus
possibly grew up, in search of Exodus route through Egypt to Israel
testing the later theories of the nomadic, pastoral, infiltration of
the land of the Bible, a quest common with European Bible
missionaries at the time. On July 1st 1798,
Napoleon
and the French did everybody a favor by reaching Egypt, to find it a
spate of civil disorder and discord between the Native Christians and
Muslims and the Muslims mainly Arabic (Asiatic) who were already
involved in an 800 year war with Africans. Britain recovered part of
Egypt after they defeated Napoleon and the French and proceeded to
rule Egypt and following a century of inter-fada with Turkey and
blockage, the Turks abandoned Palestine including today’s Israel,
and Britain gradually began to nosedive through the region as well.
Between the first, second, third, fourth Aliyah to Israel is the rise
of Jerusalem today in the hands of Israelis and the Jews, the rise of
Jewish party including returnees from Europe and the Likud party with
its history. For the record, Europeans decided this war for Arabs and
for Asia and they called for the end of hostilities, and Egypt
proceeded to Southern Egypt – Sudan were some of their policies
were indicative of their latter day actions in what is now Nigeria.
This
claim is arguably correct - it is possibly incorrect, for how else
could it be that the River Niger which runs from Mali, through to Rep
of Benue, through to the course of Nigeria to empty at the
continental shelf of Cameroon is to be reduced to the word Nigeria.
Was Mali and the Sudanese not existing before 1897? It could happen
in future that these countries will be united as one, or it could
perhaps hint that Flora Shaw was not exactly referring to current
Nigeria only – if at all. But in the language of Baikie and
company, there is something about people who live along the Niger,
the Benue and the Confluence towns that was interesting, they seem to
have sporadically come under the separate spats of different
religion. The only indication that the penetration of the North may
have something to do with British interest in Sudan (South of Egypt
as it was called Suddan – does not mean ‘slaves’ - I don’t
know how that makes it to the region) was because of Egypt on one of
hand and the penetration of the Southern Boarder’> Sudan by
Gordon (In Igbo, the word for South of the border is 'nsu uda', south
of the camp 'nsu okaa). Else, Britain was a later day comer to West
Africa – whether they have earlier been to West Africa is a second
matter. We are sure that their presence in Fernando Po and Bight of
Biafra and the Cameroons was a late affair largely due to abandoned
slave-trade ports and stations in West Africa from 1848 A.D.
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