Let me make this abundantly
clear right from the outset. I love and respect Mazi Nnamdi Kanu, the supreme
leader of the Biafran movement, the founder and convener of the Indigenous
People Of Biafra (IPOB) and the man that I have appropriately dubbed as the
Lion of the East.
I do not however agree with him on everything and neither do
I share his views about President Goodluck Jonathan. I do not believe that
Jonathan was weak or that he was incompetent. As a matter of fact I believe
that the contrary is the case. I believe that he exhibited immense strength and
courage by letting go of power even though he did NOT lose the 2015
presidential election but was rather rigged out of it and even though he did
NOT need to do so.
If Jonathan had been a
lesser man and if he had wanted to do so he could have knuckled down, called
the bluff of the then opposition and held on to power even if it meant that the
bloodthirsty sociopath that threatened to soak the nation in the "blood of
dogs and baboons" if he was not declared winner of that election went
ahead and carried out his threat.
Instead of calling the
bullying beasts bluff and thereby endanger the lives of millions of Nigerian
people, Jonathan said "my being President is not worth the drop of blood
of one Nigerian" and he let go. Only a strong and disciplined man who is
not in the grip and under the power of Satan and who is not driven by a
primitive, bestiial and compelling lust for power can do that. Jonathan was not
weak: he was strong. Secondly I believe that his record of infrastructural
development throughout the nation is second to none.
Most importantly in this
context I believe that Jonathan, more than ANY other President in the history
of Nigeria, did more to rehabilitate and empower the Igbo whilst he was
President.
Having said this I must
confess that, other than his past remarks about the Yoruba people which he made
a number of years ago and which he has told me privately and said publicly that
he no longer holds, I am on all fours with Nnamdi Kanu on virtually everything
else. The truth is that I have a soft spot for him and no matter what he says
or does I will always love him like a brother because he has managed to do, in
a very short space of time, what most cannot do in a lifetime: he has won my
respect and rekindled my hope in Africa and African leaders.
I believe that he is a
courageous, strong and dynamic young man and indeed the greatest thing that has
happened to the Igbos in the last 103 years. As I alluded to in an earlier
essay which I wrote after meeting him for the first time in Kuje prison in
2016, he is an Ojukwu, an Nzeogwu and an Azikiwe all rolled into one. Despite
the contrived and sponsored disinformation and rubbish that his many detractors
are saying and writing about him, today he remains focused on his objectives
and clear about his mission: nothing appears to move him and or distract him
from his calling.
He has a date with history
and destiny and no matter what his enemies do to him or say about him he shall
keep that date. Most important of all is the fact that I understand what drives
him and kindles his extreme passion for the cause that he serves. I understand
his burning yet clearly repressed anger at the shoddy and inexcusable plight of
his Igbo people in the contraption called Nigeria.
I can feel his pain and
when you sit with him for a long period of time, to the discerning and the
sensitive in the spirit, that pain is not only contagious but also literally
tangible. Rarely have I met a man that has so much genuine love and concern for
his people. My admiration and respect for him remains intact and it cannot
easily be diminished. And frankly if I had been born an Igbo person, given the
history and what they have been through in the hands of Nigeria over the last
57 years, I would have been far more radical and uncompromising than even he
is. The truth is that Nigeria should count herself lucky that he is a pacifist
who has not called for and neither is he interested in an armed struggle.
If that had been the case
and if he had made his battle-cry "blood for blood", things would
have been very different today and our country would have been in the terrible
vice-like grip of another civil war.
Yet despite his pacifist
and non-violent approach in this struggle there are still so many that simply
hate this rising young star for no just cause. And there are thousands within
the intelligensia and ranks of the Nigerian ruling elite both from the north
and the south who oppose what he stands for and despise the very idea of the
establishment a new, sovereign and independent Biafran nation. As a matter of
fact they find such an idea and notion deeply offensive. They believe in
freedom, the rule of law, the right of self-determination, the concept of
restructuring and the cause of freedom for themselves and their own but they do
not believe that the Igbo people deserve the right to have such freedoms or to
make such choices.
What a contradiction and
what a tragedy. You are comfortable in your chains but when your Igbo brothers
say they wish to break theirs and become free you seek to deny them that right
and you join forces with the slave-masters and tell them that you will help
them to keep the igbo in chains by force. Can this be considered as being fair
and just? Can it be right before God? Can it be sustained? Can it be justified
and defended? Is it not an intellectually dishonest, spiritually jaundiced and
utterly flawed position? Should we not bow our heads in shame when we think and
talk like this? Are the Igbo not human beings too? Do they not share the same
rights that we do and that we cherish? You believe that the people of Scotland
have the right of self-determination but you don't believe that the people of
Biafra have that right as well. You believe that the people of Hong Kong have
the right of self-determination but you don't believe that the Biafrans have
that right as well. You believe that the Palestinians have the right of
self-determination but you don't believe that the Biafrans have that right as
well. You believe that the people of Northern Ireland have the right of
self-determination but you don't believe the Biafrans have that right as well.
You believe that the people
of the United Kingdom, Italy, France, Germany, Japan, South Korea, Canada,
Israel, India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, South Africa, Egypt, Iraq, Syria,
Australia, Ghana, Kenya, Benin, East Timor, Ireland, Europe, the former
Yugoslavia, the former Soviet Union, the former Czechoslovakia, the former
Malaya, Taiwan, the Sudan, the countries of South America and South East Asia
and hundreds of other nation states throughout the world and over the years
have the right of self-determination but you don't believe that the people of
Biafra have that right as well.
O Nigerians, who has
bewitched you? And who, like Apostle Paul's Galatians in the Holy Bible, has
put you under a spell? You scream "restructuring" when you know very
well that the owners of your nation and the "born to rule" will never
allow it and that it is an idea and concept that ought to have been accepted,
established and implemented many years ago. What burns in the hearts and souls
of most young Nigerians today, and this is especially and understandably so
with the young people of the east, is total liberation and independence from Nigeria.
That is what they want and not just restructuring.
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