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Yes Indeed! Ojukwu Was The One Who Released Awolowo - Deal With It - Politics - Nairaland

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Yes Indeed! Ojukwu Was The One Who Released Awolowo - Deal With It by pchukwudi: 8:22am On Dec 29, 2016
AN EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW WITH CHIEF EMEKA OJUKWU
“I Keep the Alternative Alive” - Ikemba


Published on Monday, July 23, 2001 by Rudolf Okonkwo


At 67, the revolutionary blood is still pumping through his veins. In the wake of disappointing performance by various unprincipled and unskillful politicians of Igbo extraction at the state and national level, Ojukwu is engaged in the Herculean task of keeping the Igbo spirit alive and well. Every word from his mouth is a cavalcade of commitment to his passionate goal of elevating the lot of the Igbos. In an era when politicians seeking favor are afraid of being tagged enemies of one Nigeria, Ikemba unabashedly expounds his perception of issues, not minding whose feathers are ruffled. With a profound intellect, Ikemba presents distinctive perspective on most issues.

Ojukwu, a good student of history, is constantly reinventing himself and giving himself roles that will continue to keep him relevant in the scheme of things. He always finds a potent viewpoint and he expresses it in such eloquent manner that it resonates across the board. His philosophical musings have the capacity to linger and gather moss as it rolls across the political landscape. He goes deeper than any of his contemporaries and always remains a source of wonderment to the younger generation to whom his legend is material for all times.

Ojukwu is his own action figure. He is a kind of creature a nation receives as a gift once in a generation. Never boring, always spectacular, Ojukwu has built for himself grandeur that is beyond the reach of the weathering storm. Whatever might be his perceived shortfall, Ojukwu continues to hover far and above the political pedestrians of Nigeria. He continues to update himself within the trajectories of the pendulum that oscillates from a solid reality to a final fantasy. Ojukwu has a penchant for symbolism. He has a highly abbreviated embellishment and an underrated sense of humility. He is hardly distracted by the sheer repertoire of his towering mythological image. Ojukwu’s interpretation can only be found in the man himself. In this exclusive interview with Nigeriaworld at his Boston Marriott Hotel suite on Monday the 9th of July 2001, Ojukwu revealed to Rudolf Okonkwo, in a splendid style, the spirit within.

Here are extracts:

NIGERIAWORLD: “The Federation of Nigeria is today as corrupt, as unprogressive and as oppressive and irreformable as the Ottoman Empire was in Eastern Europe over a century ago. And in contrast, the Nigerian Federation in the form it was constituted by the British cannot by any stretch of imagination be considered an African necessity. Yet we are being forced to sacrifice our very existence as a people to the integrity of that ramshackle creation that has no justification either in history or in the freely expressed wishes of the people.”

That was you speaking in 1969. Do you still believe in those sentiments or have they changed?

OJUKWU: Regretfully, they haven’t changed. The worst thing about Nigeria is that here is a nation that has so much potential but the only problem is that everybody seems unprepared to face the problems or the realities of the Nigerian situation. There is absolutely no way you can look at the Nigerian federation, the way it was conceived, and say it is a good federation. One of the federating units is bigger than the other units. The other thing is that everything that has worked in Nigeria, or appears to have worked, seems very much to have been an imposition. The idea that sovereignty belongs to the Nigerian people is all fiction as far as Nigeria is concerned.

I was talking to somebody earlier on today, and I said that one of the problems we have is that we have refused to define our union. Yet, Nigeria is one place that, because of the many, many disparate units in the country, needs to work together. This imposes on us the need to define every step of our being so that every body knows his rights but, unfortunately, this is one thing that Nigerians are not willing to do. I don’t know why. If America says to you today that they are proud of the fact that, for two hundred years, they have been trying to make their union more perfect, it sounds very reasonable. But, in Nigeria, you are not even allowed to question your union, which is ridiculous. Even if Nigerians at a certain point, say ten years ago, thought one way, what right have we got to think that new thoughts, new brains, haven’t emerged that can work out something different. This idea of considering a national conference, an idea only put out to make Nigeria breakup, is one of the most ridiculous concepts Nigerians have.

It is the same thing that we are going through over resource control. Somebody says I want to control my resources and automatically everybody takes up arms, saying no, no, you mustn’t talk about it. Why mustn’t you? It is yours. If you say it isn’t then simply declare that nobody owns any resource. At that point I would ask you, who owns the northern landmass? Isn’t the land a natural resource? Why does it belong to the North alone? Why don’t we march up there and take our own share? If it’s land, the North can have it; if it is oil, then, of course, Nigeria must have it, not the people who found it under their soil. In any case, that you want to control it doesn’t mean that you want to take it all. No. The idea of all resources is to know who owns the resource and allow that person to negotiate his own place within the federation with the resources that he has. We the Igbos, whatever we have under the ground, will negotiate, and I make this quite boldly, our place in Nigeria using our own rather high-level manpower.

In Nigeria you say you have a democracy but you don’t allow parties to spring up as parties normally would anywhere in the world. What is INEC? Registering a party? Why? They can take note of the existence of a party but they haven’t got any executive right over its functions. There is nothing wrong with me personally setting up a party purely for the interest of the people of Umudim in Nnewi. I wouldn’t win a national sort of mandate, I am sure, but if I choose to safeguard the right of a minute group, why shouldn’t I? If I choose that my political party should be one that protects four-legged animals, why shouldn’t I? Why can’t I go into politics determined that culture is essentially religion or that religion is essentially culture and determined to protect the culture of our people, why not? Even today, they have a Christian Democratic Union of Germany. In Nigeria, because of that word Christian, it will be banned. You cannot have a Christian Democratic Union in Nigeria. Why? So, generally, I say that I would like to see a more mature approach. Stop treating Nigerians all over, across the board, as children.

I don’t know who decided on a structure of 36 states, but I say, if we decide to review it, why shouldn’t we? Those states, you and I must understand, were mainly punitive creations rather than a need for economic advancement of Nigeria or Nigerians. Let us stop burying our heads in the sand. We have had national emergencies and managed to get out of it. Let us look at each other eyeball to eyeball and decide the type of country that we want to live in. I believe that is essential.

NIGERIAWORLD: For over a year now, you have been calling for the formation of an Igbo political party where Igbos would be majority, rather than the current situation where Igbos are minority in a majority party. You have argued consistently that it is the only way for Igbo agenda to receive the attention it deserves. What progress has been made towards the establishment of such a party? And following the same reasoning, why are you not supporting the formation of a country where Igbos would be majority?

OJUKWU: You caught me short there. The formation of a country where Igbos would be majority? I have never opposed it. If the Igbos feel that things are best for them in a country of their own, why shouldn’t they have it? If after all we have been going through in Nigeria we feel that Biafra is best, we have every right to seek to re-create Biafra or any other place. Let us not make the mistake of thinking that this world is a prison. You are what you are for as long as it is comfortable for you. That is how I see it. I have continued to say that in Nigeria what we require is a nation that we can build together. You will understand where I am coming from better if you understand that I was brought up in the Pan-Africanist tradition. I believe that, not only would it be better for the Black man anywhere if we in Africa find a way of joining hands, all of us - Ghanaians, Nigerians, Basotho, Sierra-Leoneans, etc. - it would be wonderful. Now, with that at the back of my thoughts you can understand that the only problem that will not permit that is man becoming beast to his fellow man because of the accident that puts power into the hands of somebody.

NIGERIAWORLD: You seem to be traveling across the globe searching for someone to take the baton from you. Is there nobody at home who is capable? What attributes are you looking for in the potential leader you are searching for?

OJUKWU: To start with, it is clear to me that I can’t suddenly wake up one morning and say, here, I have found him. It doesn’t ever work that way. More than anything else, what I am trying to do is to wake up the youths of our society. That power, the way I see it, is not my personal preserve. I think that more people should come forward and when they do, very simply, one day, another leader would emerge. I would like also to stress, in the context of this, that whatever it is that people admire in what I have done, let them remember also that I did most of them when I was 33. So, I don’t want a group of people laid back, always waiting for something to be served them on a platter of gold. Come out; show your hands, struggle; take over the baton, I wouldn’t fight you.

NIGERIAWORLD: You once said that whoever wants this baton should snatch it if it wasn’t given to him or her. Some observers think that Chief Ralph Uwazurike is fighting to snatch the baton from you but rather than receive the support of the king makers, he is being persecuted by the governments of Imo and Abia States in conjunction with the Obasanjo’s administration, making laws aimed at keeping MASSOB down. How does this hostile environment help your search for the emergence of a new Igbo leadership?

OJUKWU: There is absolutely no question of MASSOB or Ralph Uwazurike not being received by me. I like Ralph. We get on very well. He even saw me to the airport when I was leaving. That close we are. When you talk about the establishment, what you find is one of my problems about the Nigerian structure. What the governments of Abia or Imo are doing; whatever positions they have taken about Ralph Uwazurike are not Igbo positions. They are reflecting what they imagine would be pleasing to Obasanjo and his government. That’s all.

NIGERIAWORLD: Once again, Nigeria is seeing an upsurge in ethnic violence. There is a total breakdown of law and order. Large quantities of arms are being imported into the country. Is Nigeria a failed State?

OJUKWU: It is always difficult to know which is rumor and which is fact, more so in a place like Nigeria. Certainly, it is clear that the forces of law and order have tended to fail the citizenry. It is equally true that under Obasanjo’s government, though called democratic, more people have been killed for various reasons; that life has not been secured under his government. It is equally true that throughout his government in the two years, Nigeria has had ethnic problems. These are factors, I suppose, with which one can judge the success or failure of Obasanjo’s government. And it is also the factors that would indicate to you that there are underlying problems of Nigeria that need to be looked into and that if Obasanjo is not looking well into them, then he is not doing his job. That’s how I see it.

Continues in the next section...

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Re: Yes Indeed! Ojukwu Was The One Who Released Awolowo - Deal With It by pchukwudi: 8:23am On Dec 29, 2016
NIGERIAWORLD: Revisionist historians and their political friends are tearing apart the History of Nigeria. You are a major player in those years. It could safely be said that the history of Nigeria from 1966 to 1970 is nothing but the biography of Chief Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu. Why have you remained silent on this?

OJUKWU: I do not remain silent. No. And I am happy that you asked this question. When you are not vested with authority, it is always difficult to get your voice heard in Nigeria. I say this, and it is not being big headed, singularly, I am probably the most popular politician in the country. Proof: I only have to step out on the roads and you see what happens. In fact, I amuse myself and I laugh also, very often finding myself in a position where I introduce the “successful” ones who side by side with me waged the struggle. They succeeded; I “failed”, but when we get to Nigeria today, it would be expected of me to introduce them. That is the position. But the other thing that you might be alluding to, is this question of writing a book about the war. I must confess that my attitude is slightly different from yours on that matter. I am more preoccupied with the immediate future. When I came back from exile, I was asked something nearly the same as you are now asking, and I said God in his infinite mercy gave us two eyes and both of them are facing forward. He could have given us one eye in front and one behind, but he didn’t. All that he has done that for, in my view, is always to remind us that the future is more important than the past. And that, indeed, is my own feeling. The other thing is that Generals who have delusions about their earned professionalism spend years and miles and miles of paper trying to tell the world how they waged a struggle and without help won it single handedly. So, those who think they are brilliant Generals let them write. I am a historian, social scientist; I am more preoccupied with what would happen to this unit called Nigeria tomorrow, the next day, and the day after. Whenever I get down pen and paper, and I will be getting them more and more, it will be an effort to help Nigerians discover themselves, not to glorify a past that really didn’t exist.

NIGERIAWORLD: How did you receive the news that you fought the civil war over resource control? When you hear statements like the one which said you sent Biafran troops into Midwest with the sole aim of taking over Nigeria and making it an Igbo dominated country, how do you react? What does such rewritten history tell you about the people who make such statements?

OJUKWU: I laugh because it is most unintelligent. The people who say this sort of thing are people who remain fixated at a certain point in history. What they are repeating ad nauseam is the propaganda with which they fought a war that ended full 30 years ago. I urge them to wake up and look at the new situation. Nobody went across the Niger to loot banks. All the banks that have been looted till today, were looted by prominent servants of the Federal Government.

NIGERIAWORLD: Modern day analysts have opined that the Ojukwu that died in 1970 would have been more powerful than the living Ojukwu of this day. Why didn’t you stay and fight until the end?

OJUKWU: Consider committing suicide? I am asking. What I considered was to fight the war to the best of our ability and give a leadership to our people for as long as I could. If you remember, when I left Biafra I went in search of peace. I went trying to get hold of Houphouet-Boigny, the president of the Ivory Coast. He happened to be in Cameroon. By the time he came back and we had a discussion, my number two, General Effiong, had surrendered. That was the way it came about. But all that notwithstanding, I know many people would have loved a dead Ojukwu but I would not oblige them. I intend to live for very, very, much longer and I intend also to be quite vocal in politics for as long as I can.

NIGERIAWORLD: Some agitators for a New Biafra are signaling their intention to establish a government in exile if it could not be achieved at home. Did you ever consider doing so when you left Biafra?

OJUKWU: Consider? Yes, but I dismissed it.

NIGERIAWORLD: Why?

OJUKWU: Because I didn’t see what good it would do. Oh, it would do me personal good because some people would still look upon me as a Head of State and they would certainly, in certain places, give the red carpet receptions. But, is that what life is all about? Life is about the betterment of the lot of the millions of people at home. I had to consider very seriously what possible reaction a government that, for three years, had intent on genocide would have on such situation vis-à-vis our people who are still captive within the Nigerian situation.

NIGERIAWORLD: Your critics think that you came back from exile, fought and recovered your father’s properties but you have not done enough to help other Igbos to recover their so-called abandoned properties. Is that a fair judgment?

OJUKWU: I will always have critics and whatever it is, they have every right to their opinion. I am satisfied in my mind that I have done as much as I can, and I am continuing to try to do more to help as many of my compatriots as I can. What am I expected to have done? What did I do even for my father’s properties, my inheritance? I went to court. If I am going to court for Ndigbo, I think the very first thing that I would have to prove is my locus. I believe that Nigeria’s concept about my locus does not permit me to assume certain national responsibilities. That’s just one thing. There are many others but in any case, I am satisfied that I have led delegations, talked about our people who lost their jobs, retired army officers and so on. Slowly, we are getting a hearing and I shall continue doing what I can. But that wouldn’t stop anybody from criticizing me.

NIGERIAWORLD: Until recently, the Biafran veterans and the dead Biafrans have been neglected. The same is being said about those who financed the war. The fear out there is that failure to appreciate those who made sacrifices in the past would not encourage others to help when such a need arises. Have you been able to say thank you? And when will Igbos do the same?

OJUKWU: We do what we can in a circumstance that we are in control of. Even this morning, I thanked Israel for whatever help they had given us. I am constantly thanking other people whenever I meet them. I take it um of Biafra. I thank them. But that is not the issue here. The true issue is that people gave us sympathy. But financing the war? That is an odd concept. Nobody financed any war. What happened was that Nigerians decided that they would like to put a final solution to Igbo problem. They unleashed a massacre. We tried to contain them; they unleashed a second wave more vicious than the previous one. I looked upon the situation, did the best I could for our people who were scattered all over Nigeria. I said okay, this is our boundary. If you can find your way back to within this area, whatever there is within this area would be shared amongst all of us. You have as much right here as anybody who happened to be here. That actually is another way of seeing the declaration of Biafra and they had a goal and aim in their flight. The other thing to bear in mind is that we didn’t really wage a war. What we did was resist Gowon’s coup d’état and I hope that he would enter the Guinness Book of Records as the person who has waged a coup longer than any body else because the whole three years, he was actually trying to legitimize his coup.

NIGERIAWORLD: A common trend in Igbo political discourse has been the labeling of those with dissenting opinion as saboteurs. It was prevalent during the war and continued till this day. Does it mean that there will always be Ifeajunas and Banjos in Igbo socio-political life and must they always be killed?

OJUKWU: During the war, there were saboteurs. I understand that historically. Our people didn’t fully understand the enterprise of saying no to Nigeria. A lot thought, in fact, that it would end much quicker. A lot thought that perhaps, even, it would be less painful. But in the course of our propaganda, they were labeled saboteurs. After the war, I am not aware of dissenters that have been labeled saboteurs. Perhaps, some people with loose sort of language might have, but I am not very much aware of that. Since the end of the war, there have been dissents, but then, that is the essence of democracy. There will always be dissenters. I don’t expect every Igbo man, woman, and child to agree with me. No. If they did, I would probably pull out, wondering what had gone wrong. There would be dissent but my aim is that amongst the Igbos, there should always emerge clearly an Igbo agenda to which the majority of Ndigbo would find adherence. I don’t think Ndigbo would all be in one political party. No. Forgive me if I use this as an example, the Jewish National Congress is an umbrella organization that encompasses all the Jews, but you now go from Likud to Labor and all that. They are different parties. America, for strength, is poised more closely than any other place at 50:50, those who agree and those who don’t. This is the strength of democracy. Therefore, when you say some of these things, I say, look at it less sentimentally. There is no way Igbos would all speak with one voice. But let one be more slightly strident than the others. That is what I look for.

NIGERIAWORLD: I overheard two Igbos talking about your marriage to Bianca. They were of the opinion that the marriage of the greatest Igbo man alive to the most beautiful woman ever produced by Igbo land, was a reward for all the sacrifices you made for Igbos. Do you feel adequately compensated?

OJUKWU: I can never be compensated enough on this matter. If, indeed, the question is my wife, she is the greatest thing that has happened to me. I don’t know what I have done to deserve so much compensation, but, if you call it compensation, I dedicate myself much further to the service of Ndigbo who in their wisdom gave me such compensation.

NIGERIAWORLD: There is a big debate going on in the Internet over whether Awolowo said to you that if the East should secede, the West would secede. The conversation supposedly took place in Enugu on May 6, 1967 and was pulled from what was titled, Ojukwu and Pa Awo Conversation and Speeches during the War in 1967. The informatioing the War in 1967. The information was claimed to have been classified but now declassified. Is this information authentic?

OJUKWU: Let’s stop fooling ourselves, please. When any Nigerian gets up and say, this is classified information that has recently been declassified, I say, classified by whom? Declassified by whom? Do you think we are in America where you have these things? In Nigeria nobody classifies anything and nobody has declassifies anything. So, once it starts with that you know there is deception.

NIGERIAWORLD: They said you were the one that recorded this conversation.

OJUKWU: And then I declassified it recently?

NIGERIAWORLD: Prof. Aluko, Prof. Eni Njoku, Dr. Nwakanma, Dr. PNC Okigbo, Lt. Col. Imo, Chief J.I Onyia and many others supposedly attended the meeting.

OJUKWU: I find it quite amusing also that all the Igbo participants are dead.

NIGERIAWORLD: That is true.

OJUKWU: How come? Is it the death of Pius Okigbo that declassified the information?

NIGERIAWORLD: Did the meeting take place, and was there such an agreement?

OJUKWU: We’ve said this over and over again, so many times, and people don’t understand; they don’t want to actually. If you remember, I released Awolowo from jail. Even that, some people are beginning to contest as well.

Awo was in jail in Calabar. Gowon knows and the whole of the federal establishment knows that at no point was Gowon in charge of the East. The East took orders from me. Now, how could Gowon have released Awolowo who was in Calabar? Because of the fact that I released him, it created quite a lot of rapport between Awo and myself and I know that before he went back to Ikenne, I set up a hotline between Ikenne and my bedroom in Enugu. He tried like an elder statesman to find a solution. Awolowo is a funny one. Don’t forget that the political purpose of the coup, the Ifeajuna coup that began all this, was to hand power over to Awo. We young men respected him a great deal. He was a hero. I thought he was a hero and certainly I received him when I was governor. We talked and he was very vehement when he saw our complaints and he said that if the Igbos were forced out by Nigeria that he would take the Yorubas out also.


I don’t know what anybody makes of that statement but it is simple. Whether he did or didn’t, it is too late. There is nothing you can do about it. So, he said this and I must have made some appropriate responses too. But it didn’t quite work out the way that we both thought. Awolowo, evidently, had a constant review of the Yoruba situation and took different path. That’s it. I don’t blame him for it. I have never done.


NIGERIAWORLD: How does it feel like knowing that you are one of the world’s historical figures?

OJUKWU: I don’t know whether I am or not. But certainly, I do know that I am probably the most Nigerian of Nigerians alive today. I also know that the failure of Nigeria has created a reflex and that reflex can be called Biafra. I know that in the context of Biafra that existed, I am very important. Having said that, I feel that I have a responsibility to always point out the deficiencies of Nigeria and to keep alive the alternative. That’s why I say that there will always be, if not the Biafra of territory, Biafra of the heart.

NIGERIAWORLD: What does that mean?

OJUKWU: It is an attitude, a revolution, and a rejection of all the corruption and all the terrible things that you find in Nigeria. That will be always around, no matter where; in a little corner, people who want to change things and change them for the better and I am proud to be one of those.

NIGERIAWORLD: Thank you very much, Ikemba.

OJUKWU: Thank you.

http://nigeriaworld.com/columnist/okonkwo/072301.html

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Re: Yes Indeed! Ojukwu Was The One Who Released Awolowo - Deal With It by dazy2(m): 8:25am On Dec 29, 2016
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Re: Yes Indeed! Ojukwu Was The One Who Released Awolowo - Deal With It by Nobody: 8:26am On Dec 29, 2016
X
Re: Yes Indeed! Ojukwu Was The One Who Released Awolowo - Deal With It by 0xtr199r: 9:14am On Dec 29, 2016
Nice one op, placing the notorious liars and history distortionists to their rightful place - the abysmal pit of nothingness!

"A lie may travel for a thousand miles, but it takes just one step of truth to catch up with it."

"Only a day is needed to dethrone a thousand days of lies and injustice."

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Re: Yes Indeed! Ojukwu Was The One Who Released Awolowo - Deal With It by Nobody: 10:31am On Dec 29, 2016
Nice one OP .. Afonjas can't assimilate the fact that it was Ojukwu that released Awolowolo .. grin grin
I can see them scampering for safety and avoiding this thread like plaque grin

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Re: Yes Indeed! Ojukwu Was The One Who Released Awolowo - Deal With It by DropShot: 10:39am On Dec 29, 2016
Can't even be bothered to read this worthless epistle.

My concern right now is about who will release our Dilector Kanu from the zoo cage.

I hope his one million soldiers and riffles will soon come to the rescue.

grin cheesy

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Re: Yes Indeed! Ojukwu Was The One Who Released Awolowo - Deal With It by Leopardd(m): 11:16am On Dec 29, 2016
DropShot:
Can't even be bothered to read this worthless epistle.

My concern right now is about who will release our Dilector Kanu from the zoo cage.

I guess his one million soldiers and riffles.

grin cheesy

Kiss the truth up there.

17 Likes

Re: Yes Indeed! Ojukwu Was The One Who Released Awolowo - Deal With It by pentlumpro(f): 11:49am On Dec 29, 2016
Afonjas know the truth but will never admit it
They hate the fact that igbos will always be superior to them

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Re: Yes Indeed! Ojukwu Was The One Who Released Awolowo - Deal With It by pchukwudi: 1:32pm On Dec 29, 2016
grin grin
Decypher:
Nice one OP .. Afonjas can't assimilate the fact that it was Ojukwu that released Awolowolo .. grin grin
I can see them scampering for safety and avoiding this thread like plaque grin

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Re: Yes Indeed! Ojukwu Was The One Who Released Awolowo - Deal With It by Nobody: 1:35pm On Dec 29, 2016
pentlumpro:
Afonjas know the truth but will never admit it
They hate the fact that igbos will always be superior to them

Superior people who hunted and ate each other! I can only imagine if they were savages.

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Re: Yes Indeed! Ojukwu Was The One Who Released Awolowo - Deal With It by pentlumpro(f): 2:00pm On Dec 29, 2016
Aigbofa:


Superior people who hunted and ate each other! I can only imagine if they were savages.
Igbos are your superiors deal with it

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Re: Yes Indeed! Ojukwu Was The One Who Released Awolowo - Deal With It by pchukwudi: 5:30pm On Dec 29, 2016
Suprised that no one is disputing this topic here, but the other threads of lies seem quite busy. cheesy

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Re: Yes Indeed! Ojukwu Was The One Who Released Awolowo - Deal With It by ElsonMorali: 5:35pm On Dec 29, 2016
So sad. Events of over 40 years ago still haunting the descendants of the deceased.

I know it's not easy to get over losing a war, especially if it is the only war your people have ever fought in their lifetime.

I guess that's why your youths are spoiling for another war with Nigeria.

Get over the past (your painful and shameful loss) and do something productive with your lives, OP and co.

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Re: Yes Indeed! Ojukwu Was The One Who Released Awolowo - Deal With It by Eastactivist: 5:54pm On Dec 29, 2016
This issue has really been over flogged...

The truth is that Ojukwu released awo

Why didn't awo, gowon and all these rabble-rousers counter Ojukwu when he was alive...? Oh!! I forgot they accidentally went numb and dumb.
Even gowon at his age is not even Shameless. Someone that ought to be reflecting over his life.

Now they've miraculously find their mouth creating fake news and dishing out unverifiable propaganda to twist history... Yeye dey smell.
It won't work

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Re: Yes Indeed! Ojukwu Was The One Who Released Awolowo - Deal With It by pchukwudi: 6:02pm On Dec 29, 2016
1. Those who ignore their history will experience the repeat of its woes in the future.

2. If you had any sense of decency and productivity you will not lie about a historic fact.

3. Go preach your gospel of hypocricy to your co-travelers who are hell bent on distorting history.

4. We will always confront you guys with raw doses of truth until you stop distorting history.

[s]
ElsonMorali:
So sad. Events of over 40 years ago still haunting the descendants of the deceased.

I know it's not easy to get over losing a war, especially if it is the only war your people have ever fought in their lifetime.

I guess that's why your youths are spoiling for another war with Nigeria.

Get over the past (your painful and shameful loss) and do something productive with your lives, OP and co.
[/s]

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Re: Yes Indeed! Ojukwu Was The One Who Released Awolowo - Deal With It by Fremancipation: 6:07pm On Dec 29, 2016
Eastactivist:
This issue has really been over flogged...

The truth is that Ojukwu released awo

Why didn't awo, gowon and all these rabble-rousers counter Ojukwu when he was alive...? Oh!! I forgot they accidentally went numb and dumb.
Even gowon at his age is not even Shameless. Someone that ought to be reflecting over his life.

Now they've miraculously find their mouth creating fake news and dishing out unverifiable propaganda to twist history... Yeye dey smell.
It won't work

Approximately 1 year after ojukwu death, all of a sudden coward Gowon and general isama or whatever his name is found their voice to twist history. They had all the previous years to speak but they didn't say anything. Now some are writing books and some are even planning to write books. Biafrans are too far gone to care what they have to say. What happened to them the previous 40 years when ojukwu was alive? Why wait till his death to start spewing thrash?

5 Likes

Re: Yes Indeed! Ojukwu Was The One Who Released Awolowo - Deal With It by Eastactivist: 6:18pm On Dec 29, 2016
Fremancipation:


Approximately 1 year after ojukwu death, all of a sudden coward Gowon and general isama or whatever his name is found their voice to twist history. They had all the previous years to speak but they didn't say anything. Now some are writing books and some are even planning to write books. Biafrans are too far gone to care what they have to say. What happened to them the previous 40 years when ojukwu was alive? Why wait till his death to start spewing thrash?
It's very disheartening and indeed hilarious.
But they will continue to fail in their plan.
They can only get temporal and fake orgasm by writing fake books after that the truth will come back to stare at their faces.

4 Likes

Re: Yes Indeed! Ojukwu Was The One Who Released Awolowo - Deal With It by raumdeuter: 6:24pm On Dec 29, 2016
Your government of Western Region faciliated the release of Chief Obafemi Awolowo from prison after being convicted for treason. How did you arrive at that decision?

We arrived at that decision because we discovered that there was no need to put him in prison in the first instance. The old man did a lot of good works for the country, for the Western Region and, when the military took over from the civilian regime that put him in prison, it was the duty of the military regime in power to release him. That was what we did. I worked on the military on the need to release him and we agreed. Yes, we brought him into the military government and he did a lot of good jobs for us there.

So it was based on your recommendation that he became Federal Commissioner for Finance?

Well, based on the recommendation of the government (laughs), he became the Federal Commissioner for Finance and he did very well in that position and improved the economy of the country.

[size=18pt]I just want to be sure of the role you played in how Chief Awolowo moved from prison to the office of the Federal Commissioner for Finance[/size].

I recommended his release and he was released. And when we wanted to bring some civilians into the military government, we felt he would be very useful in the regime, and it turned out that he stood out of the pack. He never disappointed us and we thank God he did not.

Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2013/07/how-we-freed-awolowo-from-prison-to-join-gowons-govt-by-gen-adebayo/

2 Likes

Re: Yes Indeed! Ojukwu Was The One Who Released Awolowo - Deal With It by raumdeuter: 6:24pm On Dec 29, 2016
A former Nigerian Head of State, Yakubu Gowon, on Thursday said his administration released the late Obafemi Awolowo from prison to end the political unrest in the South West and ensure peace across the country.
Mr. Gowon, who spoke to journalists after paying condolence visit to the Awolowos at Ikenne, also noted that he was privileged to have been used by God to ensure release of the late sage from prison.
The former head of state, who was at Ikenne on account of the death of HID Awowolo, disclosed that the late matriarch was the one who persuaded Mr. Awolowo to be part of his military government.
“’It was my fortune and I thank God that it was me that had the opportunity to release Papa from prison from Calabar to Lagos and certainly to be able to help us have peace in the West at that time and then we came,” Mr. Gowon recalled.
http://www.premiumtimesng.com/news/top-news/191679-why-i-released-awolowo-from-prison-gowon.html

3 Likes 1 Share

Re: Yes Indeed! Ojukwu Was The One Who Released Awolowo - Deal With It by Olabestonic001(m): 6:37pm On Dec 29, 2016
"NIGERIAWORLD: There is a big debate going on in the Internet...".

A 'debate' on internet as at 2001?
Is someone really bent on being foolish?
When did we all began to debate online? When the internet became something in Nigeria?

This is thrash and lies.
Kindly discount this well meaning folks.

4 Likes

Re: Yes Indeed! Ojukwu Was The One Who Released Awolowo - Deal With It by Olabestonic001(m): 6:41pm On Dec 29, 2016
Eastactivist:
This issue has really been over flogged...

The truth is that Ojukwu released awo

Why didn't awo, gowon and all these rabble-rousers counter Ojukwu when he was alive...? Oh!! I forgot they accidentally went numb and dumb.
Even gowon at his age is not even Shameless. Someone that ought to be reflecting over his life.

Now they've miraculously find their mouth creating fake news and dishing out unverifiable propaganda to twist history... Yeye dey smell.
It won't work

Ojukwu was a nobody before Awo died 29yrs ago. Ojukwu had to wait till Awo has gone before saying his own version of the civil war.

3 Likes

Re: Yes Indeed! Ojukwu Was The One Who Released Awolowo - Deal With It by Nobody: 6:45pm On Dec 29, 2016
which authority did Ojukwu use to release Awolowo? Awo was jailed by the federal government, so he was a federal prisoner. He only happened to be imprisoned in federal facility located in Calabar. So what authority has a regional governor to release a federal prisoner? except if the head of state directed him to do so... Azikiwe initiated and signed his incarceration, Ironsi prolonged his stay in prison without given any consideration to all letters Awo wrote requesting for his retrial... So what is all this noise about "governor" Ojukwu releasing him? Especially when "President" Gowon already claimed he released a man that was unjustly jailed by the federal government of Azikiwe.

4 Likes

Re: Yes Indeed! Ojukwu Was The One Who Released Awolowo - Deal With It by Eastactivist: 6:55pm On Dec 29, 2016
[s]
Olabestonic001:


Ojukwu was a nobody before Awo died 29yrs ago. Ojukwu had to wait till Awo has gone before saying his own version of the civil war.
[/s]

Lies, he has been saying it and repeating it severally. This publication wasn't the first.

Ojukwu was a nobody yet released your so called hero...

I smell foolishness.

6 Likes

Re: Yes Indeed! Ojukwu Was The One Who Released Awolowo - Deal With It by pchukwudi: 6:57pm On Dec 29, 2016
How will you understand? You probably thought that Internet started in Nigeria. Or may be you actually thought that all Nigerian internet users live in Nigeria or your village.

Go back and reread the article. It was published online in 2001. And the interview was recorded in Boston, not in your village. Smart pant.

[s]
Olabestonic001:
"NIGERIAWORLD: There is a big debate going on in the Internet...".

A 'debate' on internet as at 2001?
Is someone really bent on being foolish?
When did we all began to debate online? When the internet became something in Nigeria?

This is thrash and lies.
Kindly discount this well meaning folks.
[/s]

4 Likes

Re: Yes Indeed! Ojukwu Was The One Who Released Awolowo - Deal With It by pchukwudi: 6:58pm On Dec 29, 2016
Fremancipation:


Approximately 1 year after ojukwu's death, all of a sudden coward Gowon and general isama or whatever his name has found their voices to twist history. They had all the previous years to speak but they didn't say anything. Now some are writing books and some are even planning to write books. Biafrans are too far gone to care what they have to say. What happened to them the previous 40 years when ojukwu was alive? Why wait till his death to start spewing thrash?

cc:

omonnakoda
CltrAltDel
Onijagidijagan
T9ksy
GoroTango
MayorofLagos
raumdeuter
divicode
BabaRamota1980
kayzat
onyidon22
zendy
BermudaTriangle

1. Those who ignore their history will experience the repeat of its woes in the future.

2. If you had any sense of decency and productivity you will not lie about a historic fact.

3. Go preach your gospel of hypocricy to your co-travelers who are hell bent on distorting history.

4. We will always confront you guys with raw doses of truth until you stop distorting history.

5 Likes

Re: Yes Indeed! Ojukwu Was The One Who Released Awolowo - Deal With It by pchukwudi: 7:08pm On Dec 29, 2016
You simply don't have the facts, that's why you are not thinking straight.

1. To your dad, Gowon was the head of state in 1967 - 1970 and up. But not to Ojukwu and the people/territory of Easternregion. To Ojukwu and the Eastern region, the only head of state at the time Awolowo was released was Ojukwu - no one else. Ojukwu told Gowon to his face that Gowon's grip on power was illegitimate. Go and read the text on Aburi accord.

2. Ojukwu released Awolowo with the understanding that Awolowo will keep his word of leading the west out of nigeria as soon as the east goes.

3. Gowon had no legitimate power to rearrest Awolowo. If he had tried to rearrest the man he would have lost face in the western region.

4. Gowon knew that rearresting Awolowo will simply make the entire south to oppose his illegitimate goverment vigorously.

Got it now?


[s]
Nalikedis:
which authority did Ojukwu use to release Awolowo? Awo was jailed by the federal government, so he was a federal prisoner. He only happened to be imprisoned in federal facility located in Calabar. So what authority has a regional governor to release a federal prisoner? except if the head of state directed him to do so... Azikiwe initiated and signed his incarceration, Ironsi prolonged his stay in prison without given any consideration to all letters Awo wrote requesting for his retrial... So what is all this noise about "governor" Ojukwu releasing him? Especially when "President" Gowon already claimed he released a man that was unjustly jailed by the federal government of Azikiwe.
[/s]

7 Likes

Re: Yes Indeed! Ojukwu Was The One Who Released Awolowo - Deal With It by ElsonMorali: 7:12pm On Dec 29, 2016
pchukwudi:
1. Those who ignore their history will experience the repeat of its woes in the future.

2. If you had any sense of decency and productivity you will not lie about a historic fact.

3. Go preach your gospel of hypocricy to your co-travelers who are hell bent on distorting history.

4. We will always confront you guys with raw doses of truth until you stop distorting history.



Your foaming at the mouth doesn't bother me one bit.

You all are well known for propaganda and twisting history to massage your ego that is as big as mount everest.

You'll say and do anything to make yourselves feel invincible.

You look at yourselves and smile, unfortunately others look at you and weep for you. Because you've succeeded in believing your own lies.

Keep lying and living in the past. It's your cup of tea.

1 Like

Re: Yes Indeed! Ojukwu Was The One Who Released Awolowo - Deal With It by CltrAltDel: 7:21pm On Dec 29, 2016
[s]
pchukwudi:
You simply don't have the facts, that's why you are not thinking straight.

1. To your dad, Gowon was the head of state in 1967 - 1970 and up. But not to Ojukwu and the people/territory of Easternregion. To Ojukwu and the Eastern region, the only head of state at the time Awolowo was released was Ojukwu - no one else. Ojukwu told Gowon to his face that Gowon's grip on power was illegitimate. Go and read the text on Aburi accord.

2. Ojukwu released Awolowo with the understanding that Awolowo will keep his word of leading the west out of nigeria as soon as the east goes.

3. Gowon had no legitimate power to rearrest Awolowo. If he had tried to rearrest the man he would have lost face in the western region.

4. Gowon knew that rearresting Awolowo will simply make the entire south to oppose his illegitimate goverment vigorously.

Got it now?



[/s]

Re: Yes Indeed! Ojukwu Was The One Who Released Awolowo - Deal With It by pchukwudi: 7:22pm On Dec 29, 2016
Really? So what exactly is your business on this cup of tea, since you don't care?


[s]
ElsonMorali:


Your foaming at the mouth doesn't bother me one bit.

You all are well known for propaganda and twisting history to massage your ego that is as big as mount everest.

You'll say and do anything to make yourselves feel invincible.

You look at yourselves and smile, unfortunately others look at you and weep for you. Because you've succeeded in believing your own lies.

Keep lying and living in the past. It's your cup of tea.
[/s]

5 Likes

Re: Yes Indeed! Ojukwu Was The One Who Released Awolowo - Deal With It by pchukwudi: 7:26pm On Dec 29, 2016
CltrAltDel:
[s][/s]

Good. Next time try to stay away from things you don't understand.

5 Likes

Re: Yes Indeed! Ojukwu Was The One Who Released Awolowo - Deal With It by Nobody: 7:33pm On Dec 29, 2016
pchukwudi:


cc:

omonnakoda
CltrAltDel
Onijagidijagan
T9ksy
GoroTango
MayorofLagos
raumdeuter
divicode
BabaRamota1980
kayzat
onyidon22
zendy
BermudaTriangle

Lie frm d pit of hell..Ojukwu doesn't have d power to release Awolowo when Gowon was d head of state....pls go and check d date and research well.

2 Likes

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