Femi Fani-Kayode writes a
series of article on the subject of the dangerous jihad and violent
expansionist ideology prevalent in Northern Nigeria. This essay is the second
and concluding part of the series. If you missed the first part read it here
Yet I wonder how those
southern leaders who have sold their glory and heritage for a mess of pottage
and who have opted to collaborate with our collective enemies and betray their
own people feel about the words of men like Mr. Mohammed and Mr. Gwarzo?
I wonder whether the small
handful of pitiful yet identifiable key leaders from the south that joined
forces with Buhari, supported him during last year’s election and drank deep
from his ‘mai chanji magic potion’ poisoned chalice have read what these two
evil men wrote and what those that share their views and disposition have to
say?
And if they did I wonder
how they can possibly justify or rationalise their positions or their decision
to support a Buhari presidency?
I refer to men like Rotimi
Amaechi, Rochas Okorocha, Tunde Fashola and so many others. As the south is
short-changed, humiliated, marginalised, and brought to her knees in this
dispensation and as she continues to suffer violence and death and bleeds,
their names will be entrenched and engraved in infamy and shame for future
generations to see.
Whether they wish to accept
it or not history will record and posterity will testify to the fact that these
men handed us all over to a small cabal of ultra-conservative Fulani
hegemonists and irredentists who not only have a clear intention to subjugate
our people and Islamise our nation but who also secretly have as much contempt
for them as they do for us.
I wonder whether they got
Adamu Mohammed’s message and whether
they understood what he said? I wonder whether they can comprehend the import
of Aliyu Gwarzo’s words?
I wonder how they sleep at
night knowing all this, seeing what is unfolding in our country and knowing
that they have effectively contributed to the enslavement of their own people.
Worst of all is the fact
that not one of them can cultivate the courage or dare to publicly condemn the
likes of Adamu Mohammed or Aliyu Gwarzo and all that they have said, believe in
and stand for.
As a matter of fact they
would rather condemn and insult those of us that are prepared to stand up
against them and reject and resist their evil intent. What a shame!
If blame were to he
apportioned for all the rubbish that is going on in our country today it should
start with people like them who have not
only sold their souls to the devil but who have also led their people
into slavery.
They have lost the
privilege to be regarded as or called leaders because these are fellow
southerners who simply do not care about the plight of the people of the south.
The Apostle Paul said
“Alexander the Coppersmith did me much evil, may the Lord repay him according
to his works”.
May it be the same for
those southern leaders who have betrayed their own people, who have mortgaged
the future of their own children, who have blighted the stars of their own
wards and dependents and who have destroyed the destiny of millions of their
own southern compatriots.
Given the words and
disposition of men like Mr. Mohammed and Mr. Gwarzo there is only one fact that
bears any relevance when it comes to the history of our nation and that fact is
that the people of the south and the Middle Belt made a monumental mistake by
supporting the north and fighting to keep Nigeria one during our civil war.
That is the long and short
of it. We owe the late Colonel Emeka Odumegwu Ojukwu, the erstwhile Head of
State of Biafra and his entire Igbo race an apology for leaving them in the
lurch and not supporting their cause and quest for self-determination when they
needed us the most and when they called on us to do so.
Given the fact that so many
from the core Muslim north hate us with passion and see us as nothing more than
slaves and animals to be ruled over and butchered at will, I believe that we
need to go back to the drawing board and divide this country peacefully before
we all end up killing ourselves.
I do not believe in
restructuring because it is too late for that: I believe in division. I believe
that the two zones in the core north should leave Nigeria and go their separate
ways whilst the rest of us that constitute the four remaining zones either stay
together as one country or break into even smaller units along zonal or ethnic
lines.
Self-determination must be
the guiding and overriding principle and referendums must be conducted in the
various zones to determine precisely what the will of the people really is.
That is democracy. That is justice. That is equity. And only that can bring
lasting peace to our sad, divided and beleaguered land.
Those that seek to crucify
me for suggesting that we should chart this new course should bear in mind the
fact that I am not the first to suggest it and neither will I be the last.
Those that doubt the veracity of this assertion should consider the following:
In 1953 the north declared
their interest to break off from the rest of Nigeria after they rejected Chief
Anthony Enahoro’s motion for Nigeria’s independence from Great Britain and
walked out of Parliament.
They insisted on secession
and it took the intervention of the British authorities to get them to sheath
their swords and agree to remain in the same country as those they openly
described as “southern devils and infidels”.
Once again in 1966 the
north did the same thing and openly demanded for secession from the south after
they effected their northern officers revenge coup on July 29th.
On the night of that
“revenge coup” they massacred over 300 Igbo officers in one night together with
the Igbo Head of State and the Yoruba Military Governor who refused to leave
his side and who insisted on protecting him.
After what was undoubtedly
one of the most bloody nights in our entire history and after all the butchery
was done, the northern officers that carried out the coup loudly declared
“araba”, which means “let us share it”, “let us tear it apart” or “let us break
it up” in Hausa.
It took three days of
frantic appeals by the British High Commissioner and a handful of American
diplomats and southern civil servants to stop them from leaving.
They eventually agreed to
stay but they gave one condition: that one of their own, a northern officer by
the name of Lt. Col. Yakubu Jack Gowon, should be the Head of State of a united
Nigeria even though there were at least three southern officers that were
senior to him in rank that were still left on the army.
The conditions were
accepted, Gowon became Head of State, the north agreed to stay and Nigeria
remained one. Yet, sadly, the story did not end there and neither was its end a
happy one.
Evidently the cold-blooded
murder of three hundred Igbo soldiers was not enough to satisfy their
bloodlust.
The north still insisted on
having its revenge and its pound of flesh for the Igbo coup that took place on
January 15, 1966 in which many northern political and military leaders together
with a handful of their political and military allies from the west were
killed.
Consequently three months
after Gowon took power mass murder and genocide was unleashed against the Igbo
population that resided in the core north and over 100,000 innocent Igbo
civilians, including women and children, were slaughtered in the sanctity of
their homes in just a matter of weeks.
Nothing had ever been seen
like that before on the African continent. It was brutal, barbaric and
horrendous. Innocent civilians, including pregnant women and little babies,
were hacked to pieces in shops, hospitals, buses, cars and in their own homes
whilst the authorities, and indeed the entire world, stood by silently and did
nothing to help them.
This led to a massive
exodus of Igbos from the north back to the east and to the declaration of the
sovereign State of Biafra (which means “come and join us”).
The result of that
declaration was the commencement of the most brutal, savage and bloody civil
war that the African continent has ever experienced in which no less than three
million Igbos, including at least one million young children, were killed all
in the name of “keeping Nigeria one”. That war lasted for three gruelling
years: from 1967 until 1970.
Yet, since 1967 when oil
was discovered in commercial quantities in a place called Oloibiri in what is
now known as the Niger Delta area of southern Nigeria, the north have NEVER
called for “araba” or the breaking up of Nigeria again.
Instead they have bullied,
intimidated, cheated, killed, maimed and slaughtered others just to keep
Nigeria one simply because they are addicted to southern oil. Without the
revenues that come from that oil the core north would be probably the poorest,
most barren, and most desolate region in the whole of Africa. In view of this
it is understandable that we have not heard “araba” from.any core northerner
again.
They now view anyone that
calls for the breakup of Nigeria with murderous intent and extreme hatred and
they label them as dangerous subversives and uninformed miscreants.
They have labelled them as
irresponsible criminals, they have denied them the right to determine their own
destiny and future and they have resolved to compel them to remain in Nigeria
by the force of arms.
The north appear to have
forgotten that they themselves called for secession in 1953 and 1966 and at
that time no-one threatened, killed or insulted them for doing so. And neither
did anyone try to enslave them or keep them in by the force of arms.
The bottomline is as
follows: as long as people like Mr. Adamu Mohammed and Mr. Aliyu Gwarzo exist
and as long as they say and do the sort of things that they say and do the
people of the south will not rule out the possibility of secession.
We will not sit back idly
and silently watch our people being marginalised, islamised, conquered,
butchered and enslaved.
We cannot be expected to
continue to take the tyranny, violence, subjugation and gratuitous insults that
are meted out to us on a daily basis by core Muslim northerners who believe
that they were born to rule. We will resist it and we will oppose it in every
lawful manner and with everything that we have got.
In the final analysis if we
are attacked and butchered for saying “enough is enough” and for attempting to
exercise our right of self-determination, and if the state refuses to protect
us, we will have no hesitation in defending ourselves and protecting our
people.
The days of keeping Nigeria
one by threats, violence and the force of arms and of sealing and cementing our
so-called unity by the shedding of southern and Middle Belt blood are long
over. We will not take it anymore.
Thomas Jefferson, one of
the great patriots, founding fathers and gallant heroes of America during their
war of independence and struggle against their English colonial masters, said
the following: “when tyranny becomes law, rebellion becomes a duty”.
Patrick Henry, another of
the great founding fathers and a noble and righteous man, proclaimed the
following words before England’s King George 111:
“Is life so dear, or peace
so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? Forbid it,
Almighty God! I know not what course others may take; but as for me, give me
liberty or give me death!”
Another by the name of
George Washington, who was a deeply courageous man, the Supreme Commander of
the rebel forces and the man who was later elected as the first President of
the proud, newly born and independent American nation proclaimed “in God we
trust” as he entered the field of battle.
He also shouted “victory or
death” as he led the cavalry charge and “you cannot rule without God and the
Holy Bible” after he became President.
These were were men who
refused to compromise with evil and were prepared to offer their lives in their
struggle to break the yoke of servitude.
Again Thomas Jefferson said
“the tree of liberty is watered by the blood of patriots and tyrants”. There
are lessons to be learnt here for us all and particularly by the leaders of the
south.
And thankfully it appears
that a few southern stars like Ayo Fayose, Ike Ekweremadu, Nyesom Wike, Segun
Mimiko, Seriake Dickson, Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi, Willie Obiano, Yinka Odumakin, Femi
Aribisala and a handful of others are beginning to learn those lessons, rise up
to the occasion and stand up like men.
Yet whatever happens and
whether the core Muslim north likes it or not our very own southern “tree of
liberty” shall be watered as well and in the end we shall be free.
That same Living God whose
name George Washington always invoked before going into battle is with us today
and He shall see us through. He shall grant us the strength and power to
endure.
He will not forsake us and,
at the appointed time, He will grant us victory over our tormentors.
I say this because His name
is faithful and Faithful He is. As old as He is, He never changes and He never
forsakes His own: that is why they call Him Ancient of Days.
He never loses in battle:
that is why they call Him the Man of War and the Lord God of Hosts. He is our
strength and our shield, our glory and the lifter of our heads. He is our
everything and without Him we are nothing.
In He alone we trust and He
will NEVER allow the counsel of ungodly, wicked and bloodthirsty men from the
deserts of a distant and barren land called Futa Jallon in modern-day Guinea,
like Adamu Mohammed and Aliyu Gwarzo, to stand.
We harbour no fears because
in the end we know that shall prevail and our freedom and liberation has been
guaranteed.
Their end, and the end of
all those that they represent, has already been determined by He that sits
above the circles of the earth and that answers by fire and that end will be
pitiful: It is just a matter of time.
Femi
Fani-Kayode is a lawyer, a Nigerian politician, an evangelical christian, an
essayist, a poet and he was the Special Assistant (Public Affairs) to President
Olusegun Obasanjo from July 2003 until June 2006. He was the minister of
culture and tourism of the Federal Republic of Nigeria from June 22nd to Nov
7th 2006 and as the minister of Aviation from Nov 7th 2006 to May 29th 2007. He
tweets from@realFFK.

Historian kayode
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