Dr.Orji Uzor Kalu’s speech at the British House of Commons.
THE HISTORICAL PLIGHT AND PRECARIOUS FUTURE OF IGBO PEOPLE IN NIGERIA:
A Speech Delivered By Dr. Orji Uzor
Kalu, Former Governor Of Abia State, Nigeria, and Coordinator of Njiko
Igbo, To The British House of Commons On April 18, 2013
Honourable Members of the House, Ladies and Gentlemen,
WHO ARE THE IGBO?
I will not detail you with genealogical
or anthropological exercise here. Let it be sufficient for me to
just say this about the origins of the Igbo: serious studies based on
verifiable evidence indicate that the Igbo have lived in Igboland for
almost as long as man has lived on earth.
The archeological finds at Ugwuele in
Okigwe provide a meaningful evidence of human activities in the theatre
of Igbo civilization more than two hundred and fifty thousand years ago.
Evidence of man-made tools like axe, pottery and carved stones dug up
at the present day Enugu and Ebonyi states lend credence to the
existence of Igbo culture for scores of millennia.
My people are known as the Igbo and our language is Igbo.
Igbo people constitute one of the three
largest ethnic groups in Nigeria – what Nigerian historians have come
to term the tribal tripod. The other two are the Yoruba and the
Hausa/Fulani.
The primary Igbo states in Nigeria are
Anambra, Abia, Imo, Ebonyi, and Enugu (if justice and equity reigned,
there should have been 6 or 7, instead of just 5 states). Due to their
mobility, the Igbo constitute between 25% – 60% of the population in
some other Nigerian States such as Delta, Rivers, Lagos, Kano, Cross
River, Kaduna, Akwa Ibom and Plateau, to mention a few.
Although my people mainly and primarily
inhabit the southeastern part of Nigeria, they have, however, spread,
like ants in the savannah, to every nook and cranny of Nigeria, Africa
and indeed the globe – thriving, building and enriching themselves,
their environment and others in all facets of life as they do so.
The veteran American diplomat, Henry
Kissinger, hit the nail on the head when he aptly observed that: “The
Ibos are the wandering Jews of West Africa… gifted, aggressive,
Westernized; at best envied and resented, but mostly despised by the
mass of their neighbors in the Federation.” – Henry Kissinger,
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT, Tuesday, January 28, 1969 [Foreign
Relations, 1969-1976, Volume E-5, Documents on Africa, 1969-1972].
IGBO AND THE PROVERBIAL RAINFALL
Permit me at this point to invoke an ancient African idiom which has its
roots in Igbo wisdom: onye na amaghi ebe mmiri bidoro mawa ya, agaghi
ama ebe o kwusiri (He who does not recognise the point at which the rain
began to beat him would not recognise when the rain ceases to fall
altogether).
For Igbo people in Nigeria, the
rainfall ensued in the early 19th century when the British first
explored the Lower Niger (I will put aside, for today’s purposes, the
preceding hellfire that was black African slavery and the Igbo’s share
of hell in it).
The rain began to beat us from January
1914 when Lord Fredrick Lugard completed the amalgamation of the
northern and southern protectorates into Colonial Nigeria and became its
first Governor-General. The Igbo did not have a say as to whether they
desired to become a part of such a contraption or not.
The clouds lifted ever so briefly and
the Igbo enjoyed a brief sunshine in Nigeria in the decade before and a
few years after independence. Having embraced Christianity and western
education with enthusiasm, they quickly rose to hold sway in the federal
civil service, military, academia, commerce and industry – the Jews of
West Africa were on the march, toiling, sweating and swinging upwards,
to the envy and hatred of their compatriots.
The Igbo in Nigeria became quickly
drenched in that awesome rain by way of separate episodes of pogrom: the
Jos massacre in 1945, the Kano massacre in 1953 and the September 29,
1966 massacre in which tens of thousands of Igbo men, women and children
were slaughtered. This last event led directly to the civil war of
1967-1970, which in turn resulted in mass starvation and deliberate
anti-Igbo genocide.
And the rain has not abated. The bloody
rain has continued to beat Igbo people, resulting in organised
anti-Igbo massacres in Kano in 1980, Maiduguri in 1982, Yola in 1984,
Gombe in 1985, Kaduna in 1986, Bauchi in 1991, Funtua in 1993, Kano in
1994, Damboa in 2000 and the Apo 6 massacre in 2005.
The ongoing nihilistic slaughter of
Igbo people by an extremist militant group known as Boko Haram is yet to
be documented. But there can be no question that a disproportionate
percentage of the thousands of victims, dead or maimed or permanently
impoverished, is made up of Igbo people.
The foregoing non-exhaustive examples
occurred exclusively in northern Nigeria. They also represent occasions
when Igbo people had been massacred by northern Nigerian Muslims who had
been provoked not by any direct misconduct by the Igbo but perhaps
because the Prophet Mohammed was insulted in Denmark by some European
artist or because Allah’s name had been taken in vain in Los Angeles by
an American satirist.
There is, therefore, a sense in which
by simply being Igbo, Christian and entrepreneurial, the Igboman is
adjudged guilty and vengeful punishment is indiscriminately and randomly
applied on a recurring basis.
THE COUP THAT CONDEMNED US ALL
On 15 January, 1966, a few young
Nigerian army officers led by an Igbo officer, Major Chukwuma Kaduna
Nzeogwu, carried out Nigeria’s first coup d’état. This resulted in the
deaths of Sir Ahmadu Bello, the Sardauna of Sokoto, a prominent northern
Nigerian of the Fulani ethnic stock and the Prime Minister, Sir Tafawa
Balewa, also a northern Nigerian Fulani.
Although the coup was foiled primarily
by another Igboman, Nigeria’s first Major-General in the Colonial Army,
General Johnson Aguiyi-Ironsi, nevertheless, the belief prevailed in
northern Nigeria that Hausa leaders were singled out for elimination by
Igbo people who had a grand design for political dominance.
This situation gave rise to a
retaliatory pogrom in which tens of thousands of Igbo people were
murdered in northern Nigeria. This led to the mass flight back to the
Eastern Region of as many as two million Igbo people.
It is conceded that the execution of
the coup in question resulted in unintended consequences. The ethnic
composition of the putschists, the ethnic origin of the individuals
killed, as well as the eventual assumption of power by Gen. Ironsi,
himself an Igboman, created the erroneous impression that the coup was
an ethnic-biased putsch organised mostly by Igbo officers in furtherance
of Igbo hegemonic agenda.
However, I must insist that the coup
was purely a military affair and that the civilian Igbo population knew
nothing about it and had absolutely nothing to do with it.
Gen. Ironsi himself was not part of
either the planning or the execution of the coup. Once the coup plotters
lost control of events, General Ironsi was invited to take office as
the military Head of State by the circumstance of his position as the
most high-ranking military officer and the General Officer Commanding
the Nigerian Army at that time.
There was neither a grand Igbo civilian
conspiracy to overthrow a northern-controlled government nor to impose a
unitary system of government, the phantom charges for which the Igbo
people have paid and continue to pay a terrible price in Nigeria today.
It must also be noted that there have
been several military coups in Nigeria since January 15, 1966 and yet
the ethnic kinsmen of the perpetrators of such coups were not subjected
to mass slaughter or wanton destruction of their property and places of
worship.
But above all, on July 29, 1966, the
northern officer corps themselves executed a retaliatory counter-coup in
which the Head of State, Gen. Aguiyi Ironsi, was killed and over 300
military officers and men of Igbo origin were massacred. Why didn’t
matters simply end there?
Eventually, the crisis reached its peak
in May 1967 with the secession of the Igbo-dominated Eastern Region
from Nigeria. The Republic of Biafra was declared and it was headed by
the British public school- and Oxford-educated Colonel Chukwuemeka
Odumegu-Ojukwu.
The secession quickly led to a civil
war after talks between former army colleagues, Yakubu Gowon and Ojukwu
and the Aburi peace deal collapsed.
The Republic of Biafra lasted only
until January 1970 after a campaign of starvation by the Nigerian Army
with the support of Egypt, Sudan and the United Kingdom led to a
decisive victory for the Nigerian side.
NEGATIVE DISCRIMINATION BY LAW
The Igbo in Nigeria have become the
receptacle of anger, hatred, envy and frustration oozing out of their
fellow compatriots. But this is on the level of the transactions between
private citizens. How about the place of the Igbo in respect of the
manner in which public affairs are conducted by the Nigerian federal
government and its agencies?
The simple answer is that the rain has
continued to beat the Igbo. To demonstrate this, I have composed a
narrow but blunt table below:
ZONES: NORTH WEST, NORTH EAST, NORTH CENTRAL, SOUTH WEST, SOUTH SOUTH, SOUTH EAST
NW NE NC SW SS SE
STATES
NW7,
NE6,
NC 6,
SW6 ,
SS6,
SE5
LOCAL GOVT AREAS
NW186
NE112
NC115
SW138
SS123
SE95
# OF FEDERAL CONSTITUENCIES
NW92
NE48
NC49
SW71
SS55
SE43
# SENATORIAL DISTRICTS
NW21
NE18
NC18
SW18
SS18
SE15
The above table does not represent an
opinion or a hypothesis. It represents the blatant reality of the third
rate status forced upon the Igbo in the political space in Nigeria.
We, the Igbo have strived but thus far
failed to persuade the Nigerian establishment about the hurt and
humiliation and deprivation that come with the idea that we as a people
are legally condemned to third rate status in our own country, as amply
demonstrated by the above table.
The implications of this calculated
fraud against my people are so massive and go entirely untold: unequal
allocation of resources, unequal voice at the Federal Executive Council,
unequal representation at the National Assembly (the gravest of all),
unequal juridic participation in the administration of justice in the
federation, unequal participation in the federal civil service and
adjunct bodies, unequal representation in the armed forces and
para-military organisations, unequal representation in the diplomatic
corps ensuring incapacity in showcasing the Igbo culture as part of a
pan-Nigerian culture in our foreign missions and embassies, fewer
primary, secondary and higher education opportunities for our children,
et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.
These structural disparities are
constitutionally entrenched (please see the Constitution of the Federal
Republic of Nigeria 1999), thus their grave implications for Ndigbo are
beyond the primary questions of inequity and marginalization.
The histories of nations are replete
with evidence of existential threat to any group whose marginalization
is made a subject matter of constitutional enshrinement.
With unequal voice in the Federal
Executive Council, in the National Assembly, on the federal judicial
benches and a vast array of other fora in which the Igbo suffer
sub-parity representation, the strength of the advocacy of our problems
and priorities is thus diminished. Little wonder, then, that the
South-East Zone, the area inhabited by the Igbo, still manifests the
physical characteristics of a conquered and occupied land, 43 years
after the civil war.
Quite apart from the psychological
assault it represents for Igbo people, the practical issues of unequal
representation and unequal allocation of resources are calculated to
retard the development of our region and our people. The massive
difference which the resources and human empowerment that we are denied
might have made in our society is something that calls not just for a
sober reflection but a gritty resolve to bring about their speedy
resolution.
The Igbo tenacity, drive and relentless
optimism to pursue life’s enduring dreams of family, faith and success
and to overcome life’s challenges will see them through. But the world
must listen to them whenever they cry out. For they have long suffered
and endured in silence, as the rain continues to beat them.
Njiko Igbo
Distinguished ladies and gentlemen, before I give a full introduction of
its nature and purpose, another blunt table will demonstrate why Njiko
Igbo was brought into existence:
1. NORTH CENTRAL – 17 YEARS 11 MONTHS 20 DAYS
2. NORTH WEST – 13 YEARS 11 MONTHS 10 DAYS
3. SOUTH WEST – 11 YEARS 10 MONTHS 8 DAYS
4. NORTH EAST – 5 YEARS 3 MONTHS 15 DAYS
5. SOUTH SOUTH – 5 YEARS 23 DAYS (by 29/05/15)
6. SOUTH EAST – 6 MONTHS 13 DAYS
MUSLIMS = 28 YEARS, 14 DAYS (as at 2010)
CHRISTIANS = 26 YEARS, 5 MONTHS, 15 DAYS (by 29/05/2015)
A citizen of Igbo extraction has
occupied the presidency or premiership or Head of Government of Nigeria
for just 6 months and 13 days in the nearly 53 years of Nigerian
independence. Again, this is a historical fact and not a conjecture.
The presidency of the Nigerian nation
has not eluded the Igbo by accident or by an act of divinity but by
human design; and it is through human pressure that we can attain it.
Njiko Igbo is the catalyst and conduit
for our collective action. We trust that you recognise, as we do, that
power concedes nothing without a demand.
Chief Emeka Anyaoku, former
Secretary-General of the Commonwealth, in a paper entitled ‘Ndigbo: An
Integral Part of the Nigerian Project,’ says that the aim of the
Nigerian project “…is to develop and sustain a nation in which all the
constituent parts and citizens are able to pursue their self-fulfilment,
and to enjoy as high a quality of life as possible; a nation that would
be a source of pride to its citizens, to Africa and to peoples of
African descent all over the world.” It is in this spirit that we have,
therefore, decided to set up Njiko Igbo (Igbo Unity), which is a
movement dedicated to changing the power formula in Nigeria in order to
obtain justice and fairness for all Nigerians. As Chief Anyaoku further
said, “There are so many Igbo names in the pantheon of our country’s
pioneer educationists, professionals in medicine, law, engineering,
journalism, and in private business.” So, why then can’t an Igbo man or
woman become president of Nigeria?
Njiko Igbo is an organisation dedicated
to the struggle for the ascent of a citizen of Igbo extraction to the
presidency of the Federal Republic of Nigeria in 2015.
We are fully committed to the security
and peace of our nation, and to the comradeship of a common justice and
equality for all Nigerians.
We are neither supportive of nor
opposed to any political party or the aspirations of any individual
politician. Our primary mission is to enlighten and mobilise the Igbo
population, both at home and in the diaspora, to stand firm and united
in the pursuit of our collective goal. Our secondary duty is to connect
with and persuade the rest of the Nigerian population about the justice
of our cause.
Njiko Igbo is waging this struggle
precisely because there is an irrefutable evidence of blatant anti-Igbo
bias in the manner in which the political architecture of this
federation is constructed.
Gross injustice is the ultimate outcome
of that deliberate discrimination. And every man or woman possessed of
conscience has a duty to take a moral stand against injustice whenever
and wherever it is manifest. This expression of conscience forms the
tradition of the deepest values we share as a people.
The impulse to demand justice and the
instinctive revolt against injustice constitute the most essential
ingredients of humanity. If we recognize this philosophical essence of
what truly defines our sentient nature, then we must accept that this
struggle is not only inevitable but mandatory.
Our strategic operations are
two-pronged: (a) an intensive drive to build and foster a united front
at home and, (b) an energetic national mobilization campaign to marshal
public opinion and secure the solidarity and support of a majority of
Nigerians.
Our methods will be conciliatory,
unaggressive, solicitous and flexible but without being amenable to the
old easy compromises and defensiveness that reinforced prejudicial
assumptions about us as a people.
We shall seek to accomplish our mission
in a manner and style deferential to elders, respectful of the
sensibilities of other tribal groups and faiths, attentive to criticisms
and open to disputations.
We are embarked on a big and noble
dream borne out of the necessities of our history and the imperatives of
justice, equity and fair-play. While our history is a proud, large and
significant imprint in Nigeria, the reality of our contemporary
existence has been rendered small by the politics of the Nigerian
republic. These times call for self-assertion and Igbo people must rise
and answer the challenges with one voice.
We are not pursuing the orthodox
argument connected with the zoning of the presidency. This is, instead, a
struggle for justice and equality of opportunity through the
instrumentalities of persuasion, mobilization, projection of a creative
vision for a stronger and successful federation.
No one should be in any doubt that the
political struggles and strifes raging in this country today, and which
will rage for at least another generation, represent the struggles to
assert group identity and legitimacy, expressed through the mechanics of
politics. Igbo people can ill-afford to take a passive stance in this
maelstrom.
Conclusion
Former President-General of Ohanaeze Ndigbo, the apex Igbo
socio-cultural group, Chief Raph Uwechue says of the Igbo, in a paper
entitled ‘Igbo are nation builders:’
“To the Nigerian project, the Igbo have given a great deal yesterday,
are still doing so today, and have a lot more in store for a much
greater tomorrow.”
It is time for the bloody rain to stop.
Igbo people are already drenched and soaked to the point of
suffocation. It is not only in the best interests of the Igbo but also
in the best interests of the Nigerian people for the sun to rise and
shine on us all.
Permit me to use this opportunity to
appeal to the British government through this distinguished gathering to
increase funding for special projects that benefit the underprivileged
in Nigeria and Africa in general. The proposed legislation to reduce aid
for health, education and infrastructure, amongst others, while
committing more funds to war areas such as Mali with the provision of
arms and ammunition will be counterproductive both in the immediate and
medium term. Nigeria needs increased funding to meet our development
challenges, the biggest of which is achieving the Millennium Development
Goals (MDGs). This intervention will bridge the gap between the rich
and poor countries, thereby making the world a much better place for all
of us and our children.
I thank you for listening.
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