Joe Igbokwe is an official bullhorn for Mr. Ahmed Bola Tinubu,
whom he calls “my leader” and the Lagos APC, which apparently makes him
partisan to any discussion concerning the Igbo in Nigeria today.
Basically, he
has taken his stance, and it is frequently a stance in opposition to a general
Igbo position. There is nothing fundamentally wrong with this, because the
Igbo, by their republican ethos, accept that all men must exercise their
conscience, have their opinions, and be allowed to dissent with the general
views.
The Igbo have a saying, “let even the mad man have his say in the
gathering of the kin and not stop him, for who knows, the spirits may relay
truth through him.” Many of us have no problem with Joe Igbokwe taking an
alternative stance, given that we know what we know as Ndi Igbo, that each man
carries his own bag of truth: “truth is like the goatskin bag, and each man
carries his own.
” That would be both a saying and a parable at the same time,
as the Igbo sages themselves are bound to say. However, what irks many Igbo
readers of Joe Igbokwe over the long period is what might be his Freudian
impulsion to “kill his father” in order to establish his on being.
The utter
disregard for the Igbo condition, and his projection of an entire Igbo entity
as antinomy. Simply because it does often threaten his own apparently quite
lucrative and beneficial affiliation, he opposes every Igbo action and opinion.
This is dirty.
The tendency to dismiss Igbo concerns as a product of some kind
of Igbo national paranoia and overreach is disturbing because it is also false.
Joe Igbokwe frequently describes the Igbo as people who apparently are
conditioned to hysteria and therefore their responses to the Nigerian national
question have no basis in truth but only in their own overdetermined reality.
This is why I find Joe Igbokwe’s essay in the Sahara Reporters very
interesting. Now Joe is right in saying, and I’m glad he is heeding my own call
in my “Orbit” column in the Sunday Vanguard, that the debate over the Igbo and
the new Biafra question should not be left alone in the hands of Nnamdi Kanu
and his followers. I am glad that Joe Igbokwe is finally awakening to the
reality that the great momentum achieved by Nnamdi Kanu and the new Biafra
movement is not simply a flash-in-the-pan, but a growing reality, a movement,
the result of a profound level of anger and alienation by a generation of young
Igbo and in many instances, other Easterners, who have felt themselves
discriminated against, and marginalized in a country that utterly disregards
them.
I am finally glad that Joe Igbokwe has also finally been forced to
acknowledge the facts of Igbo marginality which is what gives propulsion to the
fiery anger of the new Biafrans. In Igbokwe’s words: “I agree 100% that Igbo
have suffered systemic, organized, structured and official marginalization in
Nigeria.” This is the point of the secessionist movement. But Joe Igbokwe also
says “but let us go into constructive and civilized engagement to redress the
imbalance.” It has happened for far too long. Fifty years is enough for
handwringing; fifty years of “systemic” marginalization has basically aborted
an entire generation, and fifty years of “civilized and constructive
engagement” has not yielded reprieve to the Igbo. The Igbo have argued,
negotiated, cried out, pleaded, tried to build bridges, made sacrifices and
concessions for peace, have often yielded grounds to avoid conflict just to
preserve this federation, and all that “constructive” effort has actually
yielded nothing but continued marginality, discrimination, and insult to the
Igbo. Joe Igbokwe is a witness to the event in the SDP in 1992/3 when Dr.
Iyorchia Ayu, then senate president publicly insulted Odumegwu-Ojukwu at the
SDP convention in Benin city when Ojukwu raised the issue of the Igbo
representation in the party, over which Ojukwu left the SDP and backed Dawakin
Torfa and Dr. Sylvester Ugoh for the 1993 presidential elections. Yet Joe
Igbokwe said nothing about that insult to Ojukwu or the Igbo. Joe Igbokwe was
witness when Dr. Sam Mbakwe, in his negotiations with MKO Abiola who promised
to make an Igbo Secretary to his government, and Mbakwe quipped that the Igbo
needed more than the guarantee of the SGF in an Abiola-led government, because
the SGF was no more than the “President’s tea boy.” MKO Abiola in response
declared that he did not need the Igbo or their votes and that he could do
without them, to which Arthur Nzeribe made his famous declaration, “well, you
cannot be president in Nigeria without the Igbo” and fought him in his uniquely
Nzeribe-way. What did Joe Igbokwe do? Nothing. He insults Nzeribe. He insults
Zik, he insults Ojukwu, he insults Mbakwe, he insults Achebe, and he insults
everybody who has said, “Igbo eketere ole?” What is the share of the Igbo in this
republic? Anyone who says, Igbo shall not stand by as mere witnesses to
history, while others make and shape Nigerian history to Igbokwe has, how did
he and his doppelganger, Ozodi Osuji put it?, a “selfish sense of superiority
and paranoid grandiosity.” These are his very words. People who have a “selfish
sense of superiority and paranoid grandiosity” do not cry about their
marginalization. And the Igbo have cried, and cried, and cried. As a matter of
fact, Igbo cry has been for fairness and equity, not just for the Igbo, but for
all marginalized people in Nigeria. For crying out, Igbokwe also says the Igbo
are not only “paranoid” they have a “persecution complex,” a “marginalization
complex” a “defeatist syndrome” and a “leadership complex.” The last bit is
even more intriguing to me: it accuses the Igbo of either wanting to lead, or
worse exhibiting an impulsion to leadership all the time. You hear in Joe
Igbokwe’s voice, the voice of the ventriloquist. He repeats what he has been
programmed to say like a robot. But in all that yo-yoing, he never ponders or
reflects, on the contradictions of his own statement in agreeing that Igbo have
been victims of “systemic marginalization.” Joe Igbokwe accuses Nnamdi Kanu of
“hate speech.” Indeed, Nnamdi Kanu has exhibited the worst kind of instincts
and does need to be taken to task over his extremist positions, and his use of
needless incendiary rhetoric. But to then say that the so-called Arewa youths
are applying a “balance of terror” and learning “hate speech” from the Igbo,
and that the Igbo leadership and community organizations are simply, therefore,
to blame for their silence is not only ridiculous but is to be blind to the
history that Joe Igbokwe summons as his witness: Joe never said a single thing
when young Southerners, including young Igbo who had gone to do national
service as Youth Corp members, were killed by mobs of the Northern youth in
2011 after Goodluck Jonathan won the presidential elections. How about that for
“ethnic bigotry” “primordial tendencies” and ‘reckless abandon”?
What did Joe
Igbokwe say about those killings and the political riots, and the brazen
subversion of Jonathan’s presidency in the North right from its inception? What
did Joe Igbokwe say when the Oba of Lagos threatened to drown his Igbo kinsmen
in Lagos if they did not vote for Joe’s APC in the 2015 elections? Did Joe not
join in calling Igbo names, reminding them how they are merely “visitors” to
Lagos? And about the “unacceptable …abuse and uncensored choice of words used against
the person of the president” – meaning Buhari -what did Joe Igbokwe say when
people were calling President Jonathan all sorts of unprintable names? Was the
“President” in front of Jonathan’s name any less in weight than the “President”
in front of the name, “Buhari? Was it not Joe Igbokwe who first called his own
president “clueless” and such other insulting names? What did Joe Igbokwe say
when Buhari threatened to unleash mayhem in his now famous “the blood of
baboons” sermons? Did Joe consider that the blood tide that was threatened was
directed against his kinsmen in the North? This was long before Nnamdi Kanu
began to deploy his own clearly deplorable hate speech. Hate speech, in this
case, begat hate speech, and it began with Joe Igbokwe and his cohorts, and it
was directed, fully charged against President Goodluck Jonathan, who by all
estimation has been the president that was most disrespected in office in a
blizzard of obloquy unleashed on his person by Joe Igbokwe and the bullhorns of
the APC of which he is a card-carrying partisan. What the “young” Biafran
agitators are doing is following exactly in the footsteps of the Joe Igbokwes
of this world who invented political hate speech against President Goodluck
Jonathan and his supporters. It is thus quite clear, and it is not for nothing
that Joe Igbokwe is now regarded as a “saboteur” in Igboland – and I did warn
him about his terrible fate – the result of his own use of hate speech against
his own people simply because he wishes to protect his own personal investments
in Lagos. Joe has made his choices, and they are choices that places him in
direct conflict with the Igbo, for whom he can no longer speak, and with whom
he now has what we call a credibility deficit.
And there are quite a lot of things
Joe Igbokwe clearly still does not know about Ndi Igbo: one, the Igbo “ji Ofo”
– there is the ancient Igbo code of justice: as a people, the Igbo are guided
by a fierce and unbendable will to justice. The Igbo do not seek equity and
fairness alone for themselves, they seek equality and fairness for all
individual Nigerians as the primary condition of Nigerian citizenship. They
seek a great and prosperous country where no one would threaten to drown or
kill the other without consequence; or where some jackass would “order” them
out of a region where they have settled, or discriminate against them or anyone
else for that matter on the grounds of their identity. The Igbo stood solidly
for Goodluck Jonathan, and they do not want to be persecuted for their political
choices as has been the case in this APC government under Buhari which Joe
Igbokwe fully supports.
This is exactly what Joe Igbokwe fails to comprehend.
That he supports the persecution of his own people for personal political
gains, and that is an abomination. About Igbo assets in the North. It is only
property, Joe, and real estate is not regenerative investment, it is only stock
assets. It declines in value by attrition. If the Igbo, for any reasons, were
to leave the North, the property value in the North will collapse according to
the law of demand. So, whatever assets the Igbo may be forced to leave behind,
the loss will be momentarily felt, but those places where they left will be
“ghost cities.” It is not true that the Igbo can, should they be forced to
leave, not be able to live “together” in the same political space or nation.
There is no greater fiction. The greatest momentum in Igbo life took place with
the “ingathering” of 1966 – and that energy has never since been recreated or
felt in the East. There will be moments of tension, no doubt. There might even
be excessive and at times deadly competition.
But the Igbo is a conciliar
culture built on negotiations and compromise, and they will thrive if they
choose to go it alone. They may even end up partnering with the Southern
Cameroon secessionist movement to form a “union government” or better still,
effect what we might call their own “Bakassi Purchase” – equivalent of the
American “Louisiana Purchase” and there is nothing that is impossible.
Nonetheless, we must work with everyone interested in salvaging and preserving
the Nigerian nation to help pull back from these edges. About the Igbo language
– Joe Igbokwe apparently does not know that the Igbo language is one of the
official national languages of Equatorial Guinea, or that there are dialects of
the Igbo language spoken in Central Africa.
He continues to dwell on the
unreflective and unreconstructed fiction that has long been retailed about the
Igbo by official Nigerian narrative that sees the Igbo more in terms of
adversaries. And finally, while a great Nigerian nation is valuable and
desirable, and must be preserved, and might actually quite possibly be in the
long run in the higher interest of the Igbo, but it should be a nation based on
the guarantees of true equality and solidarity. But it will not happen with the
likes of Joe Igbokwe disparaging Ndi Igbo in general over their stance on their
own experience of marginalization. You must sit with Nnamdi Kanu whatever else
you may think of him, and listen to him, bring him in with his group, and
provide him conditions for rapprochement, and these without pre-condition.
It
will also not be a Nigerian nation preserved on the back of the Igbo, based on
a Carthaginian treaty and its, “peace of the graveyard,” where the Igbo will
continue to dwell inside a glass ceiling, or the condition that the late Dim
Emeka Ojukwu called the situation of “ Jonah in the belly of the beast,” just
so that the Joe Igbokwes of this world would have peace, the security of their
own investments, and continue to enjoy the long, endless, pointless rumination
also called, “civilized, constructive engagement.” At some point, people do
rise to say, “heck, No!” when they are no longer able to stomach their
condition. This is what is going on with the young Biafrans.
Once upon a time,
people used to mock the Igbo and say that Igbo people could never agree to act
with one voice. Well, Nnamdi Kanu and his group have demonstrated what I have
always known to be true, that there is a fundamental misinterpretation of the
Igbo, by people like Joe Igbokwe who have for far too long lived inside his own
head about the Igbo. The Igbo act, and are perfectly capable of constructing a
universal will, particularly when it comes to the matters of collective
justice. These are dangerous times, and truth be told, many of us who have
crossed the threshold of fifty are not in charge of this movement or its
impulsions. The young Igbo have risen to confront us with our failures to act
to prevent this moment. We can only move deftly to control the debate and
reshape the enterprise and prevent what seems currently an inevitable
confrontation.
This is the point that Joe Igbokwe must acknowledge, that he has
been a witness to a history of injustice on the Igbo, and has chosen rather to
be, not a witness of truth, but a self-righteous, self-interested dissenter,
because injustice to the Igbo is not his primary concern. His primary and
reactionary quest is that the Igbo dare not rock his boat by speaking out
against the pressure of the factors that are intent on destroying them. Igbokwe
wants Igbo silence and humility which by the way only needs three alphabets to
become “humiliation.” But as the novelist, Chukwuemeka Ike would say,
“Our
Children are coming” and they are coming with the ferocity of half a century of
suppressed and unmitigated anger. What must however be made clear to these
young Biafrans – be they Ogoni, Kalabari, Ijo, Efik, or Igbo – for it is clear
that there are great supporters of this movement among these groups too – is
that the Nigerian project is a huge work in progress, and yes,
Nigeria in which
only the Igbo prosper will be as dangerous for them as the Nigeria which seeks
to marginalize them. And Igbo interest and future can be secured in a Nigerian
federation given certain conditions. We must give Nigeria a chance. We must
help to shape it rather than abandon it. We have the opportunity today to
direct this fierce anger into a huge collaborative anger by arming the youth of
the land with ideas, and make them see that their enemies are not the other
dispossessed youth of the North or the South, so that they can build common
grounds, and aim at creating a Nigeria of opportunities; that Nigeria which Zik
promised the youth – the ones he called the “new Africans;” a Nigeria built on
cooperative citizenship rather than adversarial citizenship.
What is good for
the young people in the South must be good for the young people in the North,
and none must be made to suffer disadvantage in order to prod-up the other. We
must make them understand that merit is crucial, but accommodation is as vital
in the construction of one’s strategic interest. But one must not be at the
detriment of the other. We must guide them towards dispensing with the sustained
animosity that fails to see how religion, ethnicity, and class have combined to
become the toxic mix that now tears at the very soul of this country.
There, is
where I’m prepared to stand in my critique of Nnamdi Kanu. But we cannot blame
the Biafran agitators because they agitate out of pure anger of felt
dispossession. And so, Joe Igbokwe may witness to history, but as that sagely
philosopher of African and human freedom in the 20th century, Dr. Nnamdi
Azikiwe did once say at another crisis point, “history will vindicate the
just.” But only the just, Joe. We need a just peace, not the perfect peace, but
also not the peace of the graveyard purchased on the back of the long-oppressed
who now say, “No, in Thunder!” because history too is their witness. *Dr. Obi
Nwakanma is Professor of English, and Columnist of the “Orbit” in the Sunday
Vanguard.
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