, By
Amanze Obi
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photoThe outburst was premeditated and the delivery was properly rehearsed. It
unleashed vitriolic excesses on the Igbo. It described the Igbo as unruly,
ungrateful, uncultured, acrimonious and stubborn. The Igbo were also packaged
as a people with insatiable criminal obsessions. That was the Northern Youth
Coalition, spewing hate against the Igbo. The northern elements took liberties
to paint the Igbo in lurid colours. Their language did not just betray hate; it
was a classic portrayal of prejudice. It bears out the biblical dictum, which
tells us that out of the abundance of the heart, the mouth speaketh.
How were the Igbo expected to
respond to this unprovoked attack? Were they to descend into guttersnipes like
their attackers? Should they also package the Hausa-Fulani in the language that
suits them? To do so, I suppose, will be childish. It will make the issue at
stake look like a verbal combat. But the battle between races, tribes or
nations transcends this narrow, unedifying pathway. It dwells more on issues of
substance. That, I believe, explains why the Igbo haters are not being paid back
in their own coin. Whatever may be the case, the hate-mongers from the North
had a field day. They were driven by age-old prejudices. That was why they were
not restrained. Their verbal liberty was unprecedented. So astounding. To speak
so disparagingly of a people without batting an eyelid is unspeakable. It
betrays a deep-seated antipathy. The northern groups were convinced beyond
contemplation. That was why they splashed mud on the Igbo with reckless
abandon.
But the uncouth disposition and
hateful language of the northern groups pale into insignificance when you take
recourse to the message and its cataclysmic implications. The immediate message
of the northern irredentists is the forceful ejection of the Igbo from northern
Nigeria. The purveyors of hate have ordered the Igbo to leave the North between
now and 1st of October 2017. They have threatened that after this date, they
will begin a mop-up of the Igbo in the North wherever they may be. They have
declared before the watching world that their region is tired of the marriage
of convenience called Nigeria. They have also declared that they will no
longer, with effect from 1st of October, coexist with the Igbo. The northern
elements finally declared that they would take definite steps to pull out of
the present federal arrangement, beginning from the date aforementioned. These
are far-reaching declarations. Observers and participants in the unfolding high
drama are keen to see how the North will pull out of Nigeria.
While that interesting outcome is
being awaited, not a few are wondering why the North is so incensed. The new
band of secessionists said they were constrained to take stringent action
against the Igbo because of the forceful lockdown, which the Indigenous People
of Biafra (IPOB) forced on the East in commemoration of 50 years of Biafra. The
northern elements are worried that the sit-at-home directive of IPOB was
respected by the people.
But anybody who is sufficiently
familiar with the activities of Biafran agitators cannot but shudder at this
northern response. For over 10 years now, the Movement for the Actualisation of
Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB) has been embarking on annual sit-at-home
orders every 30th of May in remembrance of thousands of Igbo, who were killed
during the state-sponsored pogroms in the North in 1966. The order has always
worked. This year’s exercise was not markedly different from those of the
previous years. Perhaps, the only difference may have to do with the emergence
of IPOB. Before now, MASSOB held sway. But the advent of IPOB appears to have
taken the agitation for Biafra to new, feverish heights. This may be the worry
of the North.
The puzzle, which the northern
response poses becomes more poignant when we take into cognizance of the fact
that the Biafran separatist agitation is not directed at the North. It is about
the relationship between Nigeria and the Igbo. If there is anything untoward
about it, the entire federation should worry about that. The North ought not
single itself out as the object or subject of the Biafran agenda. In the light
of what we have on our hands, it can be safely said that the northern response
is borne out of a certain sense of guilt. It probably feels that the region is
responsible for the unsavoury state of the Igbo in post-Civil War Nigeria.
When we put all this together, we
can conveniently conclude that the northern response on this matter is clearly
misdirected. In feeling incensed over Biafran separatist agenda, the North has,
unwittingly, joined the fray. It has also chosen the path of secession. But
unlike the Biafran agitators, who have been going about their demand in a
peaceful manner, the northern elements are set to inflict maximum damage on the
corporate existence of Nigeria. Their ultimatum has a timeline. They have told
the world to get set for whatever actions they may want to take at the
expiration of the deadline. If we take these declarations serious, we will be
saying that a programmed fall of the behemoth has begun and that Nigeria is
faced with imminent Armageddon.
But if the northern elements, who
have since been backed by their elders like Ango Abdullahi, set out to upset
and destabilise the Igbo, they have not really succeeded. The Igbo seem to be
at home with this latest position of the North on Nigeria’s unity. They are at
home not because some public office holders from the North like Nasir El-Rufai
and Kashim Shettima have disowned the divisive declaration. Of course, the Igbo
are not taken in by such assurances. Those who have a sense of history will
readily see through the smokescreen. They know that it is intended to divert
the attention of the Igbo from the looming catastrophe. The Igbo have every
reason to doubt the sincerity of those who are asking them to ignore the threat
of the northern irredentists.
The Igbo are also at home with
the set-up, not because a Lai Mohammed has said that the Federal Government is
on top of the situation. The Igbo know that Mohammed just wanted to say
something. He just wanted to fill a gap in the absence of a proper response to
the threat by the Federal Government. Regardless of the idle statement of
Mohammed, the Igbo, and indeed the rest of Nigeria, know that nobody is on top
of any situation. Therefore, for the Igbo living in the North, the sensible
thing to do is to comply with the quit notice given to them. Those who are
telling them that the order is unconstitutional and unlawful may have a point.
But the law and the constitution have never deterred the blood-thirsty hounds,
who routinely spill Igbo blood as if they are engaging in a sporting activity.
The Igbo living in the north should be properly guided. Those who are talking
about their N44 trillion investments in the North should better think again.
They should beat a tactical retreat first and then talk about their trillions
of investments in the North later.
While we are expecting that the
Igbo in the North will be wise enough to move out of the region, it must be
noted that the Igbo, particularly of the IPOB
variety are elated because the
North is beginning to see reason the country’s unity should be negotiated. That
is what the northern youths have vowed to do. They want Nigeria’s federal union
to be dissolved. Again, as we earlier noted, it will be interesting to see how
the North will carry out this threat. Time is ticking away. And we are counting
down.
Credit: Amanze Obi, Daily Sun
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