A Benin socio-cultural
group, Great Benin Descendants, GBD, worldwide, has warned the leadership of
Indigenous People of Biafra, IPOB, against including Benin kingdom as part of
its enclave.
The group noted that the
Benin kingdom that has existed for more than 5,000 years could not be part of
Biafra.
Coordinator-General of GBD,
Imasuen Izoduwa gave the warning while addressing newsmen in Benin City
yesterday, where he also cautioned the Ijaw in Benin kingdom to stop being
“antagonistic by their utterances and actions against the Benin kingdom.”
GDB frowned on a statement
where the leader of IPOB, Nnamdi Kanu, was quoted as saying that South-South
geopolitical zone is part of Biafra.
The group said the
statement was an aberration to the pre-colonial and post-colonial history of
Nigeria.
It added, “History easily
remembers that the term Biafra is a borrowed word from the Portuguese colony in
present-day Cameroon and a supposed secessionist nation borrowed a name that is
foreign to them.
“Kanu should be taught how
the Benin people and their descendants controlled the South-South, part of
South East and South West.
“He should be taught that
it took the British to cut off our power and give it to some selected few which
the Igbo are the biggest beneficiary.
“Otherwise, people like
Nnamdi Kanu wouldn’t have the effrontery to place older ethnic groups who have
been in these places for more than 5,000 years under the wings of a group that
is purportedly claiming to have come from Israel about 2,000 years ago. Hence
we wish to warn IPOB and their supposed plan that no inch of South-South’s vast
and rich land is theirs.”
According to the group, it
has identified over 36 ethnic nationalities from the South-South and South East
that have traced their roots to Benin and wondered where Kanu is getting his claims
from.
On the recent verbal
exchanges between the Benin and Ijaw over ownership of lands in the kingdom,
GBD added, “However, we might have abandoned our way of aggression after the
unfortunate episode of 1897 but we have not lost it.
“Maybe a little refreshing
of the minds of these modern Ijaw youths in our lands should be appropriately
done by their elders about who the Benin people were.”
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