What we can deduct from the reasoning behind this excerpt above from Salimonu Kadiri include: (a) Ojukwu said he caused or declared the war and starved his own people; Awo and Adekunle did not declare war, they fought not to starve, but to save the East, particularly Igbo people; (b) Salimonu does not blame the "Igbo victims of this war" but "Ojukwu and his ilk" - because the "Igbo victims" of the war were mindless, powerless, comatose infants who woke up one day in 1967 and were told 'go to war!' by "Ojukwu and his ilk," and they took up arms and mindlessly went to war in which they became merely innocent "victims." Now, someone should please define the intention of this stance by Mr. Kadiri, because what I sense beyond the infantilization of the "Igbo victims of this war" is left-handed charity that obfuscates on the causes and effects of the Nigerian civil war. It is insult masquerading as charity.
I have gone on this path before, and I'm really reluctant to engage in this debate. I already see its end. We will end up boring people on this forum with Nigeria's petty ethnic narrative, because in the end, it will boil down to that. No matter the wealth of evidence to counter long held positions, we will end up repeating and recycling our positions because they offer us some kind psychological consolation. Then someone or the other will begin to cry and call the other "ethnic supremacist" because they'd have exhausted their argument, and have nothing else to offer as counter but churlish obloquy. Then we will grow silent again until the god of the crossroads awakens someone again from the deep slumber of reason, who will take a new stage name, perhaps Monusali Dikari, and begin again, this cycle of inordinate folly.
All I want to offer in summary will be the following: Salimonu Kadiri's piece is no more than revisionist clap-trap, and it really speaks to the ways that repeated falsehood in a closed circle erases every scintilla of truth. For example: the Igbo union had been formed long before Azikiwe returned from the United States in 1935. Azikiwe led the NCNC as a platform of anti-colonial nationalists intent on freedom from the British colony. Soon after India's independence and the partition, the Action Group and the NPC were both formed and financed with support from the Colonial office; the AG with money, logistical, and organization resources funneled to it through the Yoruba chiefs and businessmen, allies of the British government in 1947, to oppose and undermine the Nationalist movement. Awo, was a card-carrying member of the British Labor party as a student in London in 1945 where he was recruited by the British, offered political prospects, and was introduced to, and inspired by the writings and politics of a Pakistani fascist intellectual and politician, as he makes it known to us in his own biography. His politics was irrendentist, not nationalist. Hugh Foot, who was Awo's minder also brokered the first party alliance between the new AG and the NPC in 1947, the intent being to unite the reactionary factions of the North and South in a coalition that would form Nigeria's independent government against the prospects the nationalist party, the "Socialist NCNC." I will not go into any further details here, but suffice it to say that disagreements by 1951 during the Ibadan conferences between these two interests on who to lead the coalition and the death of Bode Thomas, who was also the lawyer that stood for Ahmadu Rabah when he'd been accused of thievery, and central to it all, led to the eventual collapse of this coalition move.
Awo was not an innocent and scented bystander in Nigerian politics and affairs as most of his later-day acolytes now paint him. When his ambition to lead the federation failed in 1959/60, he organized the first coup to overthrow the elected government of the federation, and was tried and jailed. In his judgment, Justice Sowemimo noted that the weight of evidence before him ties his hands and leaves him no room but to jail Awolowo. All these had come in the wake of his political troubles. His party was enmeshed in an internal crisis. The Coker Commission investigated AG's party finances and malfeasance under Awolowo's leadership; the AG party crisis came from some of the allusions made here by Kadiri, but also from the combustible disagreements between factions of the party which wanted to maintain its original conservative ethos and the "young Turks" like S.G. Ikoku and Bola Ige, who wanted to shift its politics to a more centrist, even socialist ethos. Awo backed the young radicals especially as his agreements with the British had collapsed and yielded not national leadership as was promised him, but opposition which he chose rather than join an all-party national government as was proposed to him in 1960 as Deputy Prime Minister with the Finance Portfolio. Awolowo's inability to manage his party's first real crisis led to the internal divisions and the factionalization of the AG by 1962. With Akintola leading the government of the West and Awolowo suddenly finding himself without a real power base as leader of opposition at the center, he sought to overthrow the government of Nigeria violently. The creation of the Midwest from Western Nigeria all happened in 1963 was while Akintola was premier, but Awoists like Salimonu Kadiri often make it seem as though it was aimed at Awolowo. Yes, the NCNC supported the creation of the Midwest, certainly in part to secure a political advantage. But the Action Group had launched the first "attack" in that direction when it provided aid, campaigned for, and funded Foncha and the Kamerun Independent Party in the plebiscite of 1960/61, to be removed from the Eastern region and be joined to the Cameroons. The loss of the Cameroonian part of the East and the retention in the North of the Adamawa province, gave the Balewa government greater leverage that also led to the crisis of the coalition in the central government. But that central government, was far from an " Igbo and Hausa-Fulani controlled" government. If anyone as much as looks at the structure of the Council of Ministers in Balewa's cabinet from 1957-1965, it will put a pin on the credibility of Salimonu's unfounded claims. That coalition was an NCNC-NPC government which had very solid Yoruba in the national government, but not Yoruba of the AG clique. However, as Akintola increasingly asserted his independence and authority from Awo, and sought to reposition the Yoruba in what was to be the original alliance with the North, and with Awolowo in jail, the politics of the West became even more combustible and anarchic. Salimonu conveniently places all Awo's troubles on the machinations of his Igbo (Zik/Okpara) and "Feudal" Hausa-Fulani adversaries. This is hogwash. From 1961- 1966, Western Nigeria was the most chaotic, most violent, and most unprogressive region of Nigeria, until January 15, 1966 when Ifeajuna's coup put a stop to the slide and its cost in human lives. The West was like the North with its Boko haram today. It had much to do with the combustible politics of the West which has its roots in the historically unresolved issues of the Kiriji wars and the internal dynamics of Yoruba politics which Awo himself addressed in some of his writings.
Ironsi, a target of the January 15 coup, stopped the coup in the South, while Ojukwu staged a defiant holdout in the strategic outpost of Kano, Northwards. Ironsi did not seek power, and was in fact reluctant to assume the emergency authority ceded to him by the Acting President. But it is a strange claim to say that Ironsi "stole" the coup of the Majors and turned it into the "triumph of his ethnic group." There again is the mystifying Salimonuan modishness that blames the Igbo on everything that has gone wrong in Nigeria. But anyone who pays but even a cursory attention to Ironsi's actions and policies and appointments from January to his death in July 1966 will notice that nothing he did favored the Igbo, nor did he run an Igbo government. I therefore challenge Salimonu to show proof of Ironsi's Igbo triumphalism or in the alternative show some decency and retract this hokum, and apologize to the memory of a great General who was sacrificed at the altar of modern Nigeria. As for Awo, by 1966/67 having be granted pardon and released from jail, he suddenly found himself serving under "feudal" northerner, as Vice-President and Minister for finance. Only too happy to serve, and with the Igbo away from Nigeria, Awo put to force his plan for a new Nigeria in which the Igbo would no longer be in the way of his own ambition. Awo was like the dog who was given a morsel to wag his tail, and he did wag that tail. Achebe was clear on Awolowo's politics and his intentions. Anyone who says "starvation is a legitimate instrument of war," speaks from a Nazi rule book. Any war commander who says, "I shoot everything that moves including Children" is a war criminal. It doesn't matter how much or how often the Salimonu Kadiris of this world work to deny it. In fact, it would not matter who caused the war. The conduct of the war remains the issue.
Obi Nwakanma
From: ogunlakaiye@hotmail.com
To: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com
Subject: RE: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Tribute: General Benjamin Adekunle
Date: Mon, 29 Sep 2014 03:48:31 +0200
From: rexmarinus@hotmail.com
To: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com
Subject: RE: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Tribute: General Benjamin Adekunle
Date: Fri, 26 Sep 2014 22:42:22 +0000
- Salimonu Kadiri
Regarding what you claim above to be a misrepresentation of your intentions in my response, it is either you do not understand the English language well enough to register and recognize your own intentions, or you do not know exactly the nature of your intentions. So, I'll put it plainly again: your intention is to put the responsibility of the suffering in Biafra squarely on Ojukwu and Igbo leadership and to absolve Awo and Adekunle of the responsibilities for war crimes. In doing that, you've taken an extreme view that suggests that the Igbo got what they deserve because they fought a war in which Gowon and his Federal side was blameless. This is how you want to read your own history of the war.
Now, Salimonu Kadiri, I do not know which books you have read, but I do know from your argument that your reading is narrow and fraught with "ill intentions." So, I'll suggest you broaden your readings a little bit more on the Nigerian crisis, and just for starters, I will recommend three books: J.R. Sullivan's Breadless Biafra (1969), Michael Mok's Biafra Journals (1969), and Waugh and Cronje's Biafra: Britain's Shame. When you're done with these three preliminary texts, I'll point you to some more. It'll be a worthwhile project to re-educate you beyond your narrow and pedestrian reading on Biafra, and point you to a vast archive of writings, journalism, and so much more on that war other than familiar party-line narrative you call history. The Biafra war is a very well-documented war.
Ojukwu rightly refused to attend any Council meetings outside the East where his personal security was not guaranteed. He was not averse to meetings; after all he met in Aburi. But with the Federal government already distorting, dismantling, and reneging on the agreements reached in Aburi, there was clearly no good faith on either side. It is also not true that the Federal government was about ratifying all the agreements, when it had in fact refused for example to pay Federal Civil servants of Eastern Nigerian origin who had fled to the East in the pogrom as was agreed in Aburi thus putting significant fiscal pressures on the Eastern government. The Federal government's refusal to remit Eastern Nigeria's tax, particularly the oil tax, was another infraction. The tinkering with emergency powers was also very clearly, a trap for Ojukwu who was undisputably the target of the emergency power clause. So, in fact, talking about the fictionalizing history, I think you need to look steadily in the mirror.
By the way you wrote the following: "Both Ojukwu and Gowon derived their powers from the barrel of the gun and not out of election or plebiscite by Northerners and Easterners respectively. Therefore Ojukwu had no mandate from Easterners to boycott Supreme Military Council meeting especially when his salary was being paid by the Nigerian Army. No matter how we may twist our words, the fact remains that if Ironsi had not stolen the coup of the five revolutionary Majors on January 15, 1966, and converted it to the triumph of his ethnic group over others, the July 29, 1966 coup could not have occurred as well as subsequent civil war."
True, neither Gowon nor Ojukwu derived their powers from the ballot box. In Eastern Nigeria however, unlike the Federal end, there was at least a Consultative Assembly that ratified Ojukwu's mandate. Gowon did not conduct a plebiscite either in Western Nigeria or Midwestern Nigeria, which with the North became the tripartite bastion of his power base and war with the East. It is interesting that you exclude those two regional entities in your assertions. But finally to put this rather pointedly: it amounts to churlish disregard for truth to suggest that the civil war would not have happened if 'Ironsi had not stolen the coup of the five revolutionary Majors... and converted it to the triumph of his ethnic group... ." And there is the simple sum of your intentions. Why not put it this way: the Civil war in Nigeria would not have happened if there was peace in Western Nigeria; if there was no sustained incendiary politics in the West, the escalation of which was one of the central reasons for the January 15 Coup led by Emmanuel Ifeajuna. It is irresponsible to suggest that "Ironsi stole" a coup when, as the General of the Nigerian Army, he was sworn to defend the nation with his life. Ironsi at great personal risk mobilized and quashed the coup of young men who were still wet behind their ears. The excuse for murdering Ironsi was that he wanted to create a "unitary state" and "unify" the Nigerian services. How ironic! Ironsi did his patriotic duty to Nigeria, and so did Ojukwu, and for an alternative, more balanced and sophisticated view of the facts of that history, I will urge you to read Akin Osuntokun's essay on Benjamin Adekunle published in Thisday. That should teach you both the felicity of language and of intentions.
Obi Nwakanma
From: ogunlakaiye@hotmail.com
To: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com
Subject: RE: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Tribute: General Benjamin Adekunle
Date: Fri, 26 Sep 2014 22:59:04 +0200
From: rexmarinus@hotmail.com
To: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com
Subject: RE: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Tribute: General Benjamin Adekunle
Date: Thu, 25 Sep 2014 23:04:52 +0000
-Salimonu Kadiri
The story of Nigerian Civil war as this writers wishes to see it is not only fraught with contradictions, but it also flows from deep unresolved antipathy against Ojukwu and the Igbo. I can tolerate this writer's personal and very subjective view of Ojukwu; it is his prerogative; but to use the excuse of war to justify mass murder or genocide is intolerable. So, Ojukwu caused a war with Nigeria? This is ridiculous revisionism: (a) The East of Nigeria did not broach secession until the Lagos regime began to violate the agreements at Aburi and went a step further to take decisions affecting the East of which the Easterners were not part or privy; (b) the East did not launch war against any part of Nigeria until July 6 1967, when the Gowon regime in Lagos opened a three-front attack on the East from Gakem, Nsukka and from the sea in Bonny. The East and its leadership were forced to take both precautionary and defensive positions. As the federal forces invaded and killed the Eastern population, refugees from these minority "liberated areas" escaped and poured into the Eastern heartland in search of refuge from the federal onslaught, until the population of the displaced overwhelmed the food supply and extended family networks of the East. Ojukwu did not drive over 1 million Easterners to leave the rest of the federation to return to the East by September 1967, thereby complicating the refugee situation of the East even before the first shots were fired. Ojukwu did not force families fleeing from war to relocate into the Igbo heartland in search of refuge. It is therefore mischievous revision to suggest that Ojukwu "forced" Easterners into concentration camps. Displaced refugees in the East who had nowhere else to go were accommodated in Primary school buildings; secondary school halls; church buildings, etc. The federal army routinely bombed these civilian targets, including open markets and hospitals. All these are well documented in incident reports by the Red Cross, Caritas, and even by foreign journalists who were present and were witnesses to some of these war crimes and drew international attention to them. Pursued right into the heart of the land, with a food blockade was enforced to force the Biafra to surrender, the Biafran regime, yes, was overwhelmed by 1968. But rather than allow a food corridor as was agreed in many international negotiations, the Federal government enforced a bloackade to prevent Ojukwu's government from getting food supplies to feed mostly the civilian population at risk. As Chief Awolowo openly said in one of his interviews as justification for the food embargo on a Biafra which he authored, "I knew civilians would suffer, but the soldiers would suffer more." That was the logic behind a very inhuman policy that starved young children, the old, and the sickly to death. Where Benjamin Adekunle's homidal campaign drove people to seek refuge inside Biafra held positions, the strafing of civilian targets from the air, and the food blockade killed off more people from disease and hunger.
Now, should Ojukwu have surrendered in the face of a federal onslaught that, from July 29 1966 made it clear that its aim was to selectively annihilate the Igbo, and did not do anything in the period to reassure the Igbo of their safety in the federation? People do not fight to the death if they glimpsed life at the other end f the conflict. The Igbo are also not people you simply lead by the nose. Ojukwu resisted the call to declare secession and worked to dissuade the agitators. But every step of the way, the federal side, from the very beginning made it clear that the only peace it sought was the peace of the graveyard; a compliant peace; or as Ojukwu once aptly put it, the kind of peace between Jonah and the belly of the whale. You mention Peter Enahoro, I think you should read his two essays on that period, one particularly, "Why I Left Nigeria," published in the Transition magazine of 1968. The excuse that by defending themselves, the Igbo therefore must take responsibility for the war, and the denial of the clear crimes of war perpetrated against them is soulless and wicked. The writer of this piece is the product of a mindset that has continued to circulate self-regarding fiction. But it is all water under the bridge? No. The contradictions of the Biafran war continues to haunt Nigeria. Today, however, my generation of Igbo are resolved about Biafra: it was a war misfought because the Biafran leadership was schooled far more in diplomacy than in warfare. Biafra was surprised by war because it did not prepare for war; and it did not fully realize in those years the depth of the anti-Igbo animosity that is at the core of contemporary Nigerian imagination. The Igbo is the Nigerian unheimlich , because they reflect the visible terror of "otherness" as a result of their pervasive migrancy, boundary-crossing, and resettlement of the new nation. Perhaps it is true, there are many Igbo who are afflicted with the neurosis of unresolved trauma; but there many on the other side of this narrative who are afflicted with the neurosis of unresolved fear and guilt.
Obi Nwakanma
From: ogunlakaiye@hotmail.com
To: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com
Subject: RE: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Tribute: General Benjamin Adekunle
Date: Thu, 25 Sep 2014 20:44:16 +0200
From: rexmarinus@hotmail.com
To: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com
Subject: RE: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Tribute: General Benjamin Adekunle
Date: Wed, 24 Sep 2014 19:09:22 +0000
Obi Nwakanma
From: ogunlakaiye@hotmail.com
To: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com
Subject: RE: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Tribute: General Benjamin Adekunle
Date: Wed, 24 Sep 2014 13:45:20 +0200
From: rexmarinus@hotmail.com
To: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com
Subject: RE: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Tribute: General Benjamin Adekunle
Date: Tue, 23 Sep 2014 19:56:51 +0000
Obi Nwakanma
Date: Tue, 23 Sep 2014 14:30:15 -0500
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Tribute: General Benjamin Adekunle
From: salauabdul@gmail.com
To: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com
Perhaps, some university in Nigeria or other academic institution, can organize an academic conference on either the civil war (1967-1970) generally and provide a panel to rigorously look into the matters raised here, or actually have the entire conference devoted to an examination of the man and the role he played in the civil war, in particular, and the political economy of Nigeria, in general. I doubt that all this name-calling would sufficiently advance the discuss on General Benjamin Adesanya Maja Adekunle or any other Nigerian from history.--On Sun, Sep 21, 2014 at 1:37 PM, Anunoby, Ogugua <AnunobyO@lincolnu.edu> wrote:If verifiable evidence is available and the request is for “authentic” evidence, the suspicion, respectfully, must be that the seeker of the latter evidence might be in some state of self-denial which by the way is the free available choice of the denier.
Many people all over the world do not believe that all is fair, proper, and right in war. There are also many who do. Everyone is free to believe as they please or choose. International law however is clear on the subject hence “war crimes” and war crime trials that follow.
“The truth is that Major Chude Sokei and Lieutenant Oguchi became pacifists only because the person they were supposed to kill, Dr Michael Ihenokura Okpara, was their tribesman.”
Why anyone based on only blunt supposition will be categorically sure that what they claim to be the truth is, and nothing but the truth is beyond me.
It is a historical fact that Archbishop Makarios, Primate of the autocephalous Church of Cyprus and the first President of the Republic of Cyprus was officially visiting Premier Okpara in Enugu after the January 1966 Commonwealth Leaders Conference in Lagos that had just ended. The coup plotters broke into the Premier’s Lodge (Okpara’s official residence as premier) in Enugu as planned on the night of the coup. They found Okpara and Makarios at a meeting. The coup plotters’ break-in at that time of the night in full military assault gear struck terror into Okpara and his honored guest. They left without Okpara because they knew that the Archbishop and President would be a credible witness to Okpara’s abduction and planned assassination except of course they assassinated the Archbishop and President too. This is the late Archbishop and President’s account of the event, at a formal, public, press conference that he addressed in Lagos, before his departure home.
One needs neither inspiration nor education to recognize that the above Sokei and Oguchi claim is most likely an invented narrative that falsely explains Okpara’s escape from Igbo coup plotters given the assassinations in Ibadan, Kaduna and Lagos on the same night. It was most likely masterfully invented to justify the brutal murders of innocent Eastern Nigerians in military barracks, and in homes and streets of the then Northern and western Regions, in the months and years that followed
The events that led to the Nigeria-Biafra war were tragic but avoidable. The war was even more so. Dispassionate and honest conversations must continue to take place so that the events’ lessons are learned and the events are not repeated.
oa
From: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com [mailto:usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Salimonu Kadiri
Sent: Sunday, September 21, 2014 8:42 AM
To: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com
Subject: RE: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Tribute: General Benjamin Adekunle
I have requested the traducers of General Adekunle to provide authentic evidence to prove their claims that General Adekunle committed war crimes or genocide during the Nigerian Civil War (1967-1970). Instead of acceding to my request, General Adekunle's traducers have been engaged in publishing innuendoes, outright lies and even forgeries just to smear the image of the revered General who advocated that the best way to stop unnecessary sufferings and deaths of our Igbo brethrens was a quick defeat of the rebel forces. Nigeria is a country where ineptitude and mediocrity are always rewarded while the truly talented, honest and patriots, like General Adekunle, are always disdained and disesteemed. Nevertheless, it is indecent and indecorum to fabricate stories out of ones imagination just because of the desire to discredit General Adekunle. General Adekunle did not cause or declare the civil war but as fate would have it he happened to one the three Divisional Commanders. In a war you have to kill and maim or be killed or be maimed. In war there is nothing like equilibrium where reactions is equal to action. This is best illustrated with what Okonkwo tells us in Chinua Achebe's Things Fall Apart that if a man comes and defecates in your compound, the only manly thing to do is to take a stick and break his head. Breaking the head of a compound defecator is out of proportion with defecating. That is how it is in war. I hate war(s) and that is why I can never be a sympathiser of war crimes.
A times, I have to choose words to describe what I see and experience. Therefore, my deployment of the word hallucination was just a description of the charge of genocide being levelled against General Adekunle. It is never in my character to insult anyone. In fact the most appropriate word I should have used was *Schizophrenia*. As it is known, hallucination - hearing or seeing things that do not exist, and delusion - believing in things that are untrue are subsets of schizophrenia. Hallucination and delusion are often referred to as symptom of psychosis which is defined as when somebody is unable to distinguish between reality and his/her imagination. Simply expressed, I am tired of hearing and reading about Adekunle's imaginary war crimes and genocide.
When an individual Nigerian wants to emotionalize issues or escape from moral predicaments and burdens, he/she mischievously turns to religion or tribe. By embellishing any issue with religious or tribal flavour, at least, two or more people might care to taste. For instance, an individual Nigerian who is arrested for stealing billions of Naira appropriated for Universal Primary Education throughout Nigeria would claim that his arrest is due his tribe and give the impression that he is representing his/her tribe in office. Yet, both his/her legitimate and illegitimate incomes in office are for his/her family alone and are never shared amongst the tribal group. A criticism of an individual bad behaviour is not a criticism of his/her entire tribe. In the same vein, my criticism of General Adekunle's traducers is not a criticism of the whole Ndi Igbo and does not amount to a dislike of all Igbos.
There appears to be resentments over my expression,*Ojukwu and his gangs* and some countered me by referring to him as a hero. Although, no one has bordered to ask me why I used the expression, *Ojukwu and his gang* I hereby endeavour to give you my reasons. At 12:30 pm on 15 January 1966, Major Patrick Chukwuma Nzeogwu, had a broadcast in the name of the Supreme Council of the Revolution of the Nigerian Armed Forces, on Radio Nigeria, Kaduna. He said among others, "The constitution is suspended and the regional government and elected assembly are hereby dissolved. The aim of the Revolutionary Council is to establish a strong, united and prosperous nation free from corruption and internal strife... Our enemies are the political profiteers, the swindlers, the men in high and low places that seek bribes and demand ten per cent, those that seek to keep the country divided permanently.... the tribalists, the nepotists.." Among the offences he listed that carried death sentence were embezzlement, bribery and corruption. By 2:30 PM the Nigerian Radio Broadcasting Corporation, Lagos, announced "In the early hours of this morning, 15th January 1966, a dissident section of the Nigerian Army kidnapped the Prime minister and the minister of finance and took them to unknown destination. The General Officer Commanding (Aguiyi Ironsi) and the vast majority of the army remained completely loyal to the Federal government and are already taking appropriate measures to bring the situation under control." Immediately after that the Commander of the 5th Battalion in Kano, Lt. Colonel Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu, promptly invited the Emir of Kano, Alhaji Ado Bayero, to broadcast a message of appeal for peace and calm on Radio Kano. Ojukwu connived with Ironsi and others to ambush the Majors and hijack their revolution. Captain Ben Gbulie in his book, Nigeria's Five Majors,revealed the infiltration and betrayal of the Majors thus, "... both Major Don Okafor and Captain Ogbo Oji had taken a stand against any step that might embody the killing of Ironsi. ... while the would be assassins were pointedly making for his (Irosi) residence, hoping to capture him, he was at the same time heading towards Ikeja to enlist the support of ... 2nd Battalion. Major John Obienu had for some insane reason turned traitor; and that he was in fact a downright insincere cowards. His failure to honour his pledge and turn up that night with his armoured cars was the one deciding factors that led ultimately to the collapse of the Lagos operation - a calamitous act of sabotage that, by depriving our colleagues of the much-needed fire-power with which to crush Ironsi's counter revolution, finally drove a nail into the coffin of our objective (p. 125 - 126)." Further on page 136, Captain Gbulie wrote, "...Major Chude Sokei and Lieutenant Oguchi of the first Infantry Battalion, Enugu, had ranked very high on the list of the strong advocates of a bloodless coup. And these were none other than the two young men upon whose shoulders squarely rested the onerous task of prosecuting the coup in the hill-clad coal city. They had indeed been so dogmatic in their stand that they could scarcely hide that they totally abhorred bloodshed - bloodshed in any shape or form." The truth is that Major Chude Sokei and Lieutenant Oguchi became pacifists only because the person they were supposed to kill, Dr Michael Ihenokura Okpara, was their tribesman. Because, of tribal infiltrators, the killings in the January 15, 1966 coup, except one, only affected non Igbos. However, on Sunday night at 23:50 hours, 16 January 1966, Ironsi reneged on his loyalty to the Federal government and announced on Lagos radio that he had taken over power.
Date: Thu, 18 Sep 2014 15:17:37 -0700
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Tribute: General Benjamin Adekunle
From: okeyiheduru@gmail.com
To: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.comThanks, OA for taking words out of my mouth, so to speak, regarding Salimonu Kadri's unfortunate sympathies for war crimes. I did not accuse General Adekunle; he did it himself and his eternal words have convicted him. Kadri and many others on this forum and elsewhere are so blinded by his/their distaste for Ndi Igbo (cf. his "Ojukwu and his gang", etc.) that they are willing to rationalize and express sympathies for war crimes. The Nigerian Armed Forces have a serious problem with war crimes and other human rights violations, but we've always rationalized these crimes because they inflicted them on "them", not "us." Guess what? That nightmarish film is now showing--or will soon show-- in a village near almost all of us.
Finally, despite my being really nice to Salimonu, he still went ahead to insult me by saying I was "hallucinated." When he's tired of reading his one-sided history, he should try and lay his hands on the submissions of Ohaneze to the Oputa Truth Commission to get an idea of the genocide and war crimes committed by the likes of the late General Adekunle.
On Thu, Sep 18, 2014 at 10:40 AM, Anunoby, Ogugua <AnunobyO@lincolnu.edu> wrote:
Our conversation is on Adekunle, the military commander in the Nigeria-Biafra war. It is not on anyone else. No one should confuse chicken for beef.
Adekunle’s war crimes are still not justifiable. There was no need for them. That other military commanders did the same do not redeem him. One war crime does not justify another in the same or different war. Wrong is wrong even in war.
Adekunle testified against himself on many occasions. He convicted himself in the public square. He was triumphalist as he did so. Those must be some measures of the arrogance, indiscipline, thoughtlessness, perhaps unsoundness of mind, and entitlement sense of the man.
War is mostly evil. War brings out the worst in evil people. War has its imperatives. Mistakes are made in war. Adekunle’s crimes against children, women, the innocent, and many soldiers under his command, are not and should be any of them. Adekunle never came round to acknowledging that he should have fought the war differently if he knew then, what he knew later. He seemed incapable of a judicious audit of his merciless command role in the war. That alone is a sad testament to the spirit of bitterness, hatred, and rancor in which he participated as a commander in the war. He rejected every opportunity to redeem himself.
Should it surprise anyone that he was for most of his post military life, shunned by his military peers? He became a virtual outcast in public affairs? Is there any more to say? There is no more to say. May he have the mercy that he did not have on others.
oa
From: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com [mailto:usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Salimonu Kadiri
Sent: Wednesday, September 17, 2014 4:53 PM
To: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com
Subject: RE: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Tribute: General Benjamin Adekunle--
Just as Adolf Hitler was against the Treaty of Versailles the outcome of World War 1 and therefore planned World War II to reverse the Versailles' Treaty, some Nigerians are planning to reverse the outcome of the Nigerian civil war that officially ended in January 1970. Therefore, these elements still talk about their presumed genocide during the Nigerian civil war that occurred between July 6, 1967, and January 15 1970. I don't know which GENOCIDE these elements are talking about.
In the history of warfare, the Federal Military Government led by General Yakubu Gowon at the time in question has been highly commended for inviting International Observer Team to the war fronts to follow and report on the conducts of the Federal troops. The International Observer Team were from the United Nations, the Organization of African Unity (present day African Union), Britain, Canada, Sweden and Poland. The International Observer Team issued its first interim report on October 3, 1968, in which it established that there was "no evidence of any intent by the Federal troops to destroy the Ibo people (as they were then known) or their property, and the use of the term genocide is in no way justified." The Polish representative in the Observer Team, Colonel Alfons Olkiewiez, at a press conference said that the Team had spoken to 'thousands and thousands of Ibos, soldiers, missionaries and relief workers but had found no trace of mass-killings of Ibos.' The Swedish member of the Observer Team, Major-General Arthur Raab, was quoted by Carl Gustav von Rosen, a Biafran sympathiser as having said that after seven months of observations, 'we have still not seen any signs of the mass anihilation which Ojukwu claims is threatened by the Federal side. Ojukwu is deliberately transferring military headquarters to schools, hospitals, churches and so on. In which case, can one call these civilian targets?' Conversion of civilian establishments into military base was confirmed by Chinua Achebe in his Swan song - There Was a Country - when he wrote on page 172 that his ancestral house was forcibly converted into a military base by the Biafran Army and the residents woke up in the middle of the night by artillery exchanges between the Biafran and Nigerian forces.
General Benjamin Adesanya Maja Adekunle was tremendously a hard-working, deligent and proud professional soldier. He understood that the best way to end the suffering of the people in Biafra was a quick military defeat of Ojukwu and his gang. Thus, on the 25th of July 1967, he captured Bonny Island, the only sea terminal for crude oil then, in a sea-borne assault. When the Biafrans invaded the then Mid-West State in August 1967, General Adekunle was recalled from Bonny Island to flush out the Biafrans from the Delta area of the State. The indefatigble General Adekunle soon returned to launch amphibious attack on Calabar and capturing it on October 18, 1967 and from there his troops linked up with the first Division at Ikom near the Cameroon border, thereby surrounding Biafra. In a quick succession after the fall of Calabar, he captured Itu, Uyo and Ikot Ekpene which according to Phillip Effiong hastened the collapse of the Biafran 12th Division and consequently of Biafra. In February 1968 General Adekunle led his troops to capture Afikpo, Ugep, Ediba, Itigidi and Obubra. On May 18, 1968, he demonstrated his military prowess by capturing Port-Harcourt. Thus, he singlehandedly liberated the entire, Rivers State and South East State, thereby paving way for the appointment of Governors with administative headquarters in Uyo and Port-Harcourt. In September 1968 he captured Aba and in defiance of order from Lagos, he attacked and captured Owerri. When the British Prime Minister, Harold Wilson visited Nigeria in March 1969 he requested for a visit to Adekunle's headquarter in PortHarcourt. True to his nature, General Adekunle asked Harold Wilson why he was pokenosing in Nigeria when he should have sent British troops to crush Ian Smith's rebellion in Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe)? General Adekunle was regarded as Malcolm X or Black power advocate who should not be allowed to finish the war. Barely, two months after Wilson's visit, Adekunle was replaced by Obasanjo in May 1969.
In order to know who actually committed genocide during the Nigerian Civil War, let us consider the millitary situation as at the time General Adekunle was removed in May 1969. Ogoja was liberated on July 11, 1967, followed by the fall of Nsukka on the 15th of July 1967. Enugu the capital of Biafra was captured on October 4, 1967 and by April 1969 all the major towns in Biafra were under the control of Federal forces. But all the Igbo towns captured by the Federal forces were forcibly evacuated so that Ojukwu had a large concentration camps of men, women and children he could not feed. When Aba, Owerri and Okigwi fell in the summer of 1968, the military situation demanded that Ojukwu and his gang should capitulate and surrender. Instead, Ojukwu sent a delegate of Biafrans to France to solicit for more arms and econocic aid. Since the French refused to increase their military and economic support for Biafra, the delegate led by Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe contacted Ojukwu that time was ripe for negotiated settlement with Nigeria. Angry Ojukwu asked the delegates to return to Biafra immediately and the leader of the delegate, Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe, absconded to London. At the same time pictures of starving and dying Biafrans began to emerge in the outside world. Yet, while addresing the so called Consultative Assembly at the end of September 1968, Ojukwu said,"Our real victory lies in our ability to prevent the extermination of our people by a heraless enemy. In so far as these aims are concerned, we have not failed (Biafra: Ojukwu's selected Speeches; Vol. 1, p. 353)." General Benjamin Adekunle did not commit any genocide against the Igbo people rather he tried to prevent Ojukwu's suicidal war against the Igbo.
S. KadiriDate: Mon, 15 Sep 2014 22:40:30 -0700
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Tribute: General Benjamin Adekunle
From: okeyiheduru@gmail.com
To: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com"A no nonsense warrior of his time. A man of great honor to the Black race."---PROFESSOR Segun Ogungbemi, 15 September 2014.
Yes, indeed! What better way to honor the Black race than genocide, including shooting at the corpses of dead children and women and proudly admitting it? As long as it's my co-ethnic who did it, it's o.k..On Mon, Sep 15, 2014 at 7:40 PM, Segun Ogungbemi <seguno2013@gmail.com> wrote:Benjamin Adesanya Maja Adekunle, a hero, a man who loved his country and gave his life for unity and peace of Nigeria. The "Black Scorpion" as he was popularly called who put smiles on our faces at the end of the civil war. A no nonsense warrior of his time. A man of great honor to the Black race.A man who stood to challenge racists because he believed in equality of all races because all human beings are created equal by God.The country owes him a great honor and it should be given to immortalize him.
May his soul rest in perfect peace as he has joined his ancestors and may the family and friends receive the most generous hands of comfort from the ancestors and that Olodumare grants them the fortitude to bear the irreparable loss of this great hero. Aase.
Segun Ogungbemi Ph.DProfessor of PhilosophyAdekunle Ajasin UniversityAkungba-Akoko, Ondo StateNigeriaCellphone: 0803304137108024670952
On Sep 16, 2014, at 3:15 AM, Mail Delivery Subsystem <mailer-daemon@google.com> wrote:
Benjamin Adesanya Maja Adekunle, a hero, a man who loved his country and gave his life for unity and peace of Nigeria. The "Black Scorpion" as he was popularly called who put smiles on our faces at the end of the civil war. A no nonsense warrior of his time.A man who stood to challenge racists because he believed in equality of all races because all human beings are created equal by God.The country owes him a great honor and it should be given to immortalize him.
May his soul rest in perfect peace as he has joined his ancestors and may the family and friends receive the most generous hands of comfort from the ancestors and that Olodumare grants them the fortitude to bear the irreparable loss of this great hero. Aase.
Segun Ogungbemi Ph.D
Professor of Philosophy
Adekunle Ajasin University
Akungba-Akoko, Ondo State
Nigeria
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