Friday, August 26, 2016

Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - MUST READ: The Aguiyi-Ironsi Tragedy

I would not characterise the bloodless coup of 31/12/1983 as conducted by "Buhari and his gang " A great many people saw the coup leaders as liberators, purifiers (yes, I understand that the guy ( a family friend) who volunteered to break the early morning news to Shagari came to a bad end...

An act of submission:

I submit to the first part of your correction that all political party activities ceased forthwith, by decree - after which the biggest losers in the officially rigged 1983 elections , the UPN and the NPP of course could only grumble and whine clandestinely at home, at the market place, in the office, at the drinking parlours whilst the old NPN magicians, in the hope of some kind of retributive justice are probably still fuming "God dae !" or what Nigerians in that part of Nigeria usually say when they are angry or believe themselves to have been unfairly treated or cheated : "God punish you!"

As you can imagine that's what Shagari's corrupt elite wanted for Brothers Buhari and Idiagbon : divine chastisement ! After all, V-P Alex Ekwueme had previously brought his friend, His Holiness the Pope to Nigeria to pray for the government ) and now the long-shuffering civil servants, workers, teachers were showering blessings on Brothers Muhammadu and Tunde - especially after we all got paid something like five months arrears in salary - also by decree , within three weeks !

Why do I call them NPN magicians? Well, I observed the 1983 elections first hand and at close range, in Bakana. I knew everybody on the island - was introduced to Royalty by Mr. Sogules the pharmacist) and I can tell you this : on the morning of the election, the NPP contestant was dragged from his abode and at the bottom of the stairs, was given the hiding of his life.

You must understand that Bakana's Levy Braide was the minister of agriculture at the time ( he was a resident) and that some of his followers must have thought that it was an affront for an NPP man to oppose him (Mind you many Kalabari men in Buguma for example, have Igbo mothers)

The voting was over by two O'clock that afternoon and the people erupted into a spontaneous victory celebration, dancing and singing " NPN Magic!" - We are made to understand that when the counting was over (and there were more votes cast that there are people on that island) the extra ballots were thrown into the river…



On Friday, 26 August 2016 15:34:06 UTC+2, Godwin Okeke wrote:
Point of Correction, Cornelius!
There was no political party activities in Nigeria from the night of 31st December, 1983, even beyond the period you're referring to (1984) when Buhari and his gang overthrew the Shagari administration.
Please take note.
GSM

--------------------------------------------
On Fri, 8/26/16, Cornelius Hamelberg <cornelius...@gmail.com> wrote:

 Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - MUST READ: The Aguiyi-Ironsi Tragedy
 To: "USA Africa Dialogue Series" <usaafric...@googlegroups.com>
 Date: Friday, August 26, 2016, 6:11 AM
 
 Amended:
 
 
 
 
         
         
         
         #yiv8933096479 p
 {margin-bottom:0.25cm;line-height:120%;}#yiv8933096479
 a:link {}
 
 
 Dear Obi,
 I followed both UPN and NPP activities in Rivers State
 and Imo
 State, 1981-84.
 
 Everybody praises AWO's universal primary school
 education where
 his vision had jurisdiction – and Nigeria is reaping some
 of the
 benefits which we see today..
 I am familiar with some of the
 speeches of Chief Obafemi Awolowo in Dawodu.com
 So, you lodge me in something of a quandary, somewhere
 between
 your proverbial rock and a very hard place, because I'm
 still waiting
 for all the AWO materials that I ordered through Sunshine
 Booksellers  - after reading which  - and after some
 consultations with Ogbeni Kadiri , I should be in a better
 position
 to understand this matter further.
 In the meantime, I should just like to say this : The
 meaning of
 labels such as Nazi
 and Nazism
  are very specifically clear whereas the terms " fascist
 " (Mussolini in mind with his ethnic
 fascism) and "psychopath"
 are all-purpose expletives specially reserved for the ethnic
 enemy,
 and tend to be inflicted more indiscriminately.
 
 And when it comes to AWO's  proposed political
 economy in
 post-colonial Africa would "fascism" be your most
 convenient term
 with which to embrace his vision?
 
 Chinua Achebe is the second African writer that I read in
 this
 life (the first was Alan Paton). Mr. Achebe was vociferously
 opposed
 to the idea of a state funeral for Chief Obafemi
 Awolowo,
 because according to Mr. Achebe  - his exact words - our
 great chief
 "was
 not an Igbo god" - implying of course that Igbo gods
 cannot be
 blasphemed.
 
 The reasons for the Igbo's intense hatred ("he was/
 is not an
 Igbo God" indeed ) is adduced to the following that was
 consistently drummed into my ears by my Igbo brethren and
 sistren
 during my sojourn in Nigeria :
 
 (1) That Awo had promised to declare Oduduwa when Ojukwu
 declared
 Biafra and
 (2) That he used starvation as a weapon of war against
 Biafra's
 civilian population – an issue that has fuelled enough
 debate and
 outrage in this series, the bottom line being argued by
 Awoists that
 should Nigeria have continued to feed enemy combatants  then
 the war
 and suffering would have been prolonged  - and most
 tellingly –
 that it was Biafra's leader who refused to allow food
 convoys into
 the besieged Biafra.
 So, please bear with me.
  In
 the meantime, I'm trying to get hold of the transcript
 of Chief
 Emeka Anyaoku's speech
 at UNILAG
 on the UN's Youth Day
 
 Pray for us
 
 Cornelius
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 On Friday, 26 August 2016 03:06:28 UTC+2, Rex Marinus
 wrote:
   
 
 
 Dear Cornelius:
 I'm not sure that you have read any of the writings
 of Mr. Obafemi Awolowo, or read his political programs. But
 if you have, I'm afraid, you have not borne true witness
 to his ideas. At this stage of our lives and awareness, it
 is crucial to tell ourselves
  some truths. The interpretation of Awo's life and work
 will, beyond this generation, be done based on his (a)
 political writings (b) the ideological basis of his
 foundational party the Action Group, and (c) the political
 program he ran as political leader.
  I want you to read the description below of
 "Fascism" and tell me whether it does not describe
 Awolowo's stated political philosophy. I did not call
 Awo a fascist without grounds. Awo himself described
 himself, his work, and recorded in his writings the nature
  of his political ideas and praxis. All you need to do is
 consult the political ideas that founded the Action Group.
 In fact, read Awo himself, and note where he
 himself acknowledged his ideological debt to a famous
 Pakistani fascist, and one of the key ideologues
  of the partition as well as the goals f National Socialism.
 One of the stated central goals of the Awolowo and his
 Action Group was also the protection of the monarchy, as
 the symbol of the
 volksgemeinschaft. I do not know what you call
 that. Meanwhile follow this link for its interesting
 conclusions  http://www.
 governmentvs.com/en/fascism- vs-social-democracy-history/
 comparison-10-50-1.
  I am not the one who called Awo a fascist. His work speaks
 for him. Printed words survive us all. And all these your
 attempts to dress Awo in a different robe comes, I daresay,
 from the emotionalism of a great admirer of Awo, rather than
 a from the rational
  examination of his work and his writings. It is there that
 you must situate him.
 
 Obi Nwakanma
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Fascism
 vs Social Democracy History
 
 www.governmentvs.com
 
 Differentiate Fascism vs Social Democracy history
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 ________________________
 
 
 As an economic system, fascism is
 socialism
 with a capitalist veneer. The word derives from
 fasces, the Roman symbol of collectivism and power: a
 tied bundle of rods with a protruding ax. In its day (the
 1920s and 1930s), fascism was seen as the happy medium
 between boom-and-bust-prone liberal capitalism, with its
 alleged class conflict, wasteful
 competition,
 and profit-oriented egoism, and revolutionary
 Marxism,
 with its violent and socially divisive persecution of the
 bourgeoisie. Fascism substituted the particularity of
 nationalism and
  racialism—"blood and soil"—for the internationalism
 of both classical liberalism and Marxism.
 
 Where socialism sought totalitarian control of a
 society's economic processes through direct state
 operation of the means of production, fascism sought that
 control indirectly, through domination of nominally private
 owners. Where socialism nationalized
  property explicitly, fascism did so implicitly, by
 requiring owners to use their property in the "national
 interest"—that is, as the autocratic authority conceived
 it. (Nevertheless, a few industries were operated by the
 state.) Where socialism abolished all
  market relations outright, fascism left the appearance of
 market relations while planning all economic activities.
 Where socialism abolished money and prices, fascism
 controlled the monetary system and set all prices and wages
 politically. In doing all this,
  fascism denatured the marketplace. Entrepreneurship
 was abolished. State ministries, rather than consumers,
 determined what was
  produced and under what conditions.
 
 Fascism is to be distinguished from interventionism, or
 the mixed economy. Interventionism seeks to guide the market
 process, not eliminate it, as fascism did. Minimum-wage and
 antitrust
 laws, though they regulate the
 free
 market, are a far cry from multiyear plans from
 the Ministry of Economics.
 
 Under fascism, the state, through official
 cartels,
 controlled all aspects of manufacturing, commerce, finance,
 and agriculture. Planning boards set product lines,
 production levels, prices, wages, working conditions,
  and the size of firms. Licensing was ubiquitous; no
 economic activity could be undertaken without government
 permission. Levels of consumption were dictated by the
 state, and "excess" incomes had to be surrendered as
 taxes or "loans." The consequent burdening
  of manufacturers gave advantages to foreign firms wishing
 to export. But since government policy aimed at autarky, or
 national self-sufficiency,
 protectionism
 was necessary: imports were barred or strictly controlled,
 leaving foreign conquest as the only avenue for access to
  resources unavailable domestically. Fascism was thus
 incompatible with peace and the international division of
 labor—hallmarks of liberalism.
 
 Fascism embodied corporatism, in which political
 representation was based on trade and industry rather than
 on geography. In this, fascism revealed its roots in
 syndicalism, a form of socialism originating on the left.
 The government cartelized firms of
  the same industry, with representatives of labor and
 management serving on myriad local, regional, and national
 boards—subject always to the final authority of the
 dictator's economic plan. Corporatism was intended to
 avert unsettling divisions within the
  nation, such as lockouts and union strikes. The price of
 such forced "harmony" was the loss of the ability to
 bargain and move about freely.
 
 To maintain high employment and minimize popular
 discontent, fascist governments also undertook massive
 public-works projects financed by steep taxes, borrowing,
 and fiat money creation. While many of these projects were
 domestic—roads, buildings, stadiums—the
  largest project of all was militarism, with huge armies and
 arms production.
 
 The fascist leaders' antagonism to communism
 has been misinterpreted as an affinity for
 capitalism.
 In fact, fascists' anticommunism was motivated by a belief
 that in the collectivist milieu of early-twentieth-century
 Europe,
  communism was its closest rival for people's allegiance.
 As with communism, under fascism, every citizen was regarded
 as an employee and tenant of the totalitarian,
 party-dominated state. Consequently, it was the state's
 prerogative to use force, or the threat
  of it, to suppress even peaceful opposition.
 
 If a formal architect of fascism can be identified, it is
 Benito Mussolini, the onetime Marxist editor who, caught up
 in nationalist fervor, broke with the left as World War I
 approached and became Italy's leader in 1922. Mussolini
 distinguished fascism
  from liberal capitalism in his 1928 autobiography:
 The citizen in the Fascist State is no longer a selfish
 individual who has the anti-social right of rebelling
 against any law of the Collectivity. The Fascist State with
 its corporative conception puts men and their possibilities
 into productive
  work and interprets for them the duties they have to
 fulfill. (p. 280)
 Before his foray into imperialism in 1935, Mussolini was
 often praised by prominent Americans and Britons, including
 Winston Churchill, for his economic program.
 
 Similarly, Adolf Hitler, whose National Socialist (Nazi)
 Party adapted fascism to Germany beginning in 1933,
 said:
 The state should retain supervision and each property
 owner should consider himself appointed by the state. It is
 his duty not to use his property against the interests of
 others among his own people. This is the crucial matter. The
 Third Reich
  will always retain its right to control the owners of
 property. (Barkai 1990, pp. 26–27)
 
 Both nations exhibited elaborate planning schemes for
 their economies in order to carry out the state's
 objectives. Mussolini's corporate state "consider[ed]
 private initiative in production the most effective
 instrument to protect national interests" (Basch
  1937, p. 97). But the meaning of "initiative" differed
 significantly from its meaning in a market economy. Labor
 and management were organized into twenty-two industry and
 trade "corporations," each with Fascist Party members as
 senior participants. The corporations
  were consolidated into a National Council of Corporations;
 however, the real decisions were made by state agencies such
 as the Instituto per la Ricosstruzione Industriale, which
 held shares in industrial, agricultural, and real estate
 enterprises, and the
  Instituto Mobiliare, which controlled the nation's
 credit.
 
 Hitler's regime eliminated small corporations and made
 membership in cartels mandatory.1
  The Reich Economic Chamber was at the top of a complicated
 bureaucracy comprising nearly two hundred organizations
 organized along industry, commercial, and craft lines, as
 well as several national councils. The Labor Front, an
 extension of the Nazi Party,
  directed all labor matters, including wages and assignment
 of workers to particular jobs. Labor
 conscription
 was inaugurated in 1938. Two years earlier, Hitler had
 imposed a four-year plan to shift the nation's economy to
 a war
  footing. In Europe during this era, Spain, Portugal, and
 Greece also instituted fascist economies.
 
 In the United States, beginning in 1933, the
 constellation of government interventions known as the New
 Deal had features suggestive of the corporate state. The
 National Industrial Recovery Act created code authorities
 and codes of practice that governed
  all aspects of manufacturing and commerce. The National
 Labor Relations Act made the federal government the final
 arbiter in labor issues. The Agricultural Adjustment Act
 introduced central planning to farming. The object was to
 reduce competition and output
  in order to keep prices and incomes of particular groups
 from falling during the
 Great
 Depression.
 
 It is a matter of controversy whether President Franklin
 Roosevelt's New Deal was directly influenced by fascist
 economic policies. Mussolini praised the New Deal as
 "boldly . . . interventionist in the field of
 economics," and Roosevelt complimented Mussolini
  for his "honest purpose of restoring Italy" and
 acknowledged that he kept "in fairly close touch with that
 admirable Italian gentleman." Also, Hugh Johnson, head of
 the National Recovery Administration, was known to carry a
 copy of Raffaello Viglione's pro-Mussolini
  book, The Corporate State, with him, presented a
 copy to Labor Secretary Frances Perkins, and, on retirement,
 paid tribute to the Italian dictator.
 
 
 
 About the Author
 
 Sheldon Richman is the editor of The Freeman: Ideas on
 Liberty at the Foundation for Economic Education in
 Irvingtonon-Hudson, N.Y.
 
 
 
 Further Reading
 
 Barkai, Avraham. Nazi Economics: Ideology, Theory,
 and Policy. Trans. Ruth Hadass-Vashitz. Oxford: Berg
 Publishers Ltd., 1990.
 Basch, Ernst. The Fascist: His State and His
 Mind. New York: Morrow, 1937.
 Diggins, John P. Mussolini and Fascism: The View
 from America. Princeton: Princeton University Press,
 1972.
 Flynn, John T. As We Go Marching. 1944. Reprint.
 New York: Free Life Editions, 1973.
 Flynn, John T. The Roosevelt Myth. New York:
 Devin-Adair, 1948.
 Laqueur, Walter, ed. Fascism: A Reader's
 Guide. Berkeley: University of California Press,
 1976.
 Mises, Ludwig von. Omnipotent Government. New
 Rochelle, N.Y.: Arlington House, 1944.
 Mussolini, Benito. Fascism: Doctrine and
 Institutions. Firenze: Vallecchi, 1935.
 Mussolini, Benito. My Autobiography. New York:
 Scribner's, 1928.
 Pitigliani, Fauto. The Italian Corporative
 State. New York: Macmillan, 1934.
 Powell, Jim. FDR's Folly: How Roosevelt and His
 New Deal Prolonged the Great Depression. New York: Crown
 Forum, 2003.
 Shirer, William L. The Rise and Fall of the Third
 Reich. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1960.
 Twight, Charlotte. America's Emerging Fascist
 Economy. New Rochelle, N.Y.: Arlington House,
 1975.
 
 
 Footnotes
 
 
 
 1.
 
 
 
 "Laws decreed in October
 1937 simply dissolved all corporations with a capital under
 $40,000 and forbade the establishment of new ones with a
 capital less than $20,000" (Shirer 1959, p. 262).
 
 
 
 
 
 
                    
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 From: usaafric...@ googlegroups.com <usaafric...@ googlegroups.com> on
 behalf of Cornelius Hamelberg <cornelius...@gmail.com>
 
 Sent: Thursday, August 25, 2016 10:56 PM
 
 To: USA Africa Dialogue Series
 
 Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - MUST READ:
 The Aguiyi-Ironsi Tragedy
  
 
 
 
 
 Ogbeni Kadiri,
 Those with their hearts and minds in the right place are
 affronted by the most remote suggestion by any person,
 miscreant or urchin, that our venerated elder
 
 AWO of blessed memory - God forbid – could in any way
 be associated with fascism.
 
 And there's no use in arguing with lunatics/fanatics,
 racists, tribalists, since they can say anything. Freedom of
 speech.
 Sometimes, sarcasm / intended sarcasm, irony can be
 misinterpreted/ wilfully misinterpreted and thus backfire
 and cause collateral damage, therefore, thanks for the
 clarification. It's another case of "you know
 better" versus " you ought to know better",
  but assuming that Citizen Obi ever waded far from the
 ethical norms of Igbo culture, in my opinion it would still
 be wrong - even sarcastically speaking - to attribute /
 blame his perceived failings on an Igbo culture which may be
 a little different from Yoruba
  culture when it comes to the degree of respect we show
 towards elders and of course towards our illustrious
 ancestors.
 I'm not the one who needs to tell you to be more
 careful about the factual basis for this kind of
 accreditation : "Obi is a
 pathological liar," ; "Obi must learn to be
 truthful and honest"
 ; "his own invented writing just as he normally does
 to invent stories, which he calls history, and credit
 them to people with whom he supposedly munched groundnuts
 and drank beer." (Beer drinkers, not palm wine
 drinkards, eh?) )
 The silence that is likely to follow your latest
 clarification, especially after quoting ZIK should be less
 of "silence means consent " and more of the extended/
 sustained silence which usually follows
 after having been corrected by Ogun's
 thunder...
 A
 musical
 tribute to Chief Obafemi Awolowo
 Peacefully,
 Cornelius
 
 
 On Thursday, 25 August 2016 23:25:14 UTC+2, ogunlakaiye
 wrote:
 
 
 Chidi, you may wish to know that when Awolowo promulgated
 free primary education for all children of school age,
 1954/55, in the then Western Region, that coverred the
 present day Benin, Asaba, Agbor, Warri and Sapele, he did
 not exclude the children of
  non-Yoruba speaking part of the Region from enjoying free
 primary education. In fact, the Children of Igbo from the
 Eastern Region who were permanently resident in the Western
 Region enjoyed the free primary education. Had Awolowo been
 a fascist, he would
  have excluded and prevented all non-Yoruba children from
 enjoying free primary education in Western Region. Calling
 Awolowo a fascist was part of the cause for my highlighting
 the cultural disparity in question.
 
 
 
 Your justification for labelling me anti-Igbo is due to
 my averment that unlike the Yoruba culture in which I was
 brought up, Obi, the caller of Awolowo a fascist, was
 brought up in a culture where youths are trained to
 demonstrate their courage and boldness
  by urinating on the graves of their elders. In your
 reaction, you are not denying the existence and practice of
 that cultural absurdity. My mentioning it is to you a crime
 that makes me an anti-Igbo. You are judging me wrongly and
 that is unfair. Speaking
  in the Eastern House of Assembly on March 20 , 1956, while
 seconding the motion for the second reading of the Abolition
 of the Osu System Bill, Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe said, "This
 Bill seeks to do three things: to abolish the Osu system and
 its allied practices
  including the Oru or Ohu System, to prescribe punishment
 for their continued practice, and to remove certain social
 disabilities caused by the enforcement of the Osu and its
 allied system. According to this Bill, the Osu system
 include any social way of living
  which implies that any person who is deemed to be an OSU,
 or ORU or OHU is subject to certain prescribed social
 disability and social stigma. Mr. Speaker, this Bill offers
 a challenge to the morality of the Easterners. I submit that
 it is not morally consistent
  to condone the OSU or ORU or OHU system. I submit that it
 is devilish and most uncharitable to brand any human being
 with a label of inferiority (slave)..." Although
 Azikiwe did not succeed to abolish the cast system of
 slavery known as OSU, ORU, and OHU in
  Igboland and the system is still in operation today, Dr.
 Nnamdi Azikiwe was never labelled anti-Igbo for his attempt
 to abolish the cast system. Why should you, Chidi, label me
 anti-Igbo for referencing cultural abnormality?
 S.Kadiri
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Från:
 usaafric...@googlegroups.com <usaafric...@googlegroups.com> för
 Chidi Anthony Opara <chidi...@gmail.com>
 
 Skickat: den 24 augusti 2016 12:35
 
 Till: USA African Dialogue Series
 
 Ämne: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - MUST READ:
 The Aguiyi-Ironsi Tragedy
  
 
 
 
 "Unlike the Yoruba culture in which I grew up, Obi
 was brought up in a culture where youths are trained to
 demonstrate their courage and boldness by urinating on the
 graves of their dead elders" (Salimonu Kadiri)
 
 
 
 When I wrote that Kadiri and Danjuma are colleagues in
 The Anti-Igbo Project and that while the likes of Danjuma
 operated from the military axis, the likes of Kadiri
 operates from the Intellectual axis, the moderator refused
 the post. Have the above not
  justified what I said?
 
 
 
 CAO.
 
 
 
 On Tue, Aug 23, 2016 at 8:33 PM, Rex Marinus <rexma...@hotmail.com> wrote:
 
 
 
 
 I could choose indeed not to dignify this drivel with a
 response because it is casting rubies to a sow. How can a
 man lie to himself who says, Unegbe trained in Pakistan,
 therefore he is "inferior" to James Pam's
 Camberly for instance, and turn around to
  deny his own statements in the same context as he is making
 it? If he now denies that he holds Unegbe's death
 comparatively insignificant to Pam's death, why did it
 become an issue for him? Why does Unegbe not being a full
 Colonel, and a mere Quartermaster-General,
  (no better than a Store keeper), and therefore
 incomparable to Pam's death, who was the
 real "Adjutant General" such a landmark
 statement, that it became a point of such a great departure
 for Salimonu Kadiri? It is either this Salimonu is bi-polar
 or he does
  not understand the language with which he is engaging these
 discussions. But I think I've cornered him in hos own
 contradiction, but the problem is that h suffers from the
 great mental problem called
 "Igbophobia."  It's really a waste of my
 time continuing
  to point out his inconsistencies and his prejudices. The
 more I do it, the more he burrows into the pit. He does not
 even know the meaning of the Joint Services Staff Course 
 (JSSC). Though they were course mates at Sandhurst, Unegbe
 made Lt. Col. in 1963
  (not 1964), ahead of Gowon by months; and Commanded the
 5th Battalion before becoming the QMG. He could not have
 commanded the 5th Battalion as a Major. Ojukwu took over
 from him as Commander of the 5th Battalion in Kano, while he
 took over from Ojukwu as
  QMG. James Pam took over from Gowon as Adjutant-General in
 1965, when Gowon went on his staff course. Military
 promotion is the gauge of seniority, and not always when you
 joined. Ojukwu was commissioned in 1957 after attending
 Eaton Hall Officers Training,
  with a 1956 Masters degree in History from Oxford, and
 after a stint as District Officer at Udi and Umuahia, a
 senior service position, and was promoted Lt. Colonel before
 Gowon. Bu they were on the same rank eventually.
 Ojukwu's argument against Gowon was
  that there was a military hierarchy which ought to be
 respected if the Nigerian Army was to maintain discipline,
 and that there was a Brigadier and a whole slew of Colonels
 before Gowon who should take charge after the coup. Ojukwu
 moved tactically to Onitsha,
  while Colonel Ogunewe remained in Enugu. It'd be
 really useful if we do not fudge these narratives. Even
 while he was in Onitsha, as military governor, he remained
 in charge of the East. As at 1 August, 1966, the East no
 longer took orders from Lagos. No troops
  could move in or out of the East without Ojukwu's
 express orders. Ogunewe had disarmed Northern soldiers in
 Enugu, and the Eastern police under P.C. Okeke was in
 charge of internal security. How therefore could Gowon give
 orders to release Awolowo who was
  in prison in the East, when Ojukwu had secured the East,
 and did not recognize the authority of Gowon? who would
 effect the order on behalf of Gowon?
 
 
 
 On a different note, although Francis Nwokedi headed the
 commission on unification, it was an idea muted as far back
 as February, preceding the appointment and inauguration of
 the Nwokedi commission in March, and the announcement of
 the decree in May 1966.
  One of the central claims of that moment was that
 "regionalism" had created so much disunity in
 Nigeria. Among the great proponents of a "National
 government" and the unification of the services was
 Simeon Adebo, who was himself a product of that kind of the
  Civil service, and who had been appointed by Ironsi as
 head of the Commission on the Economy. Much of Salimonu
 Kadiri's version of Nigeria's history is taken from
 street lore and popular rumours. There is actual value in
 "drinking beer and eating peanuts"
  with the central figures of that history; those who
 actually made that history, and who often tell their own
 stories beyond the street lore. Again, I wish that a man
 like Dr. Pius Okigbo, who worked very closely both with
 Ironsi and Adebo had completed his
  own memoirs. I will leave all that question about the
 "culture" in which I was raised alone, and rather
 make one thing clear: only ignorant and unrefined folk talk
 about another's culture of which they know nothing
 about, in which they have never lived, and
  of which they can only conceive abstractly, with such
 primitive, provincial prejudice not worthy even of middle
 school thinking! It is the kind of straw pulled by a man
 gasping for air.
 
 
 
 Obi Nwakanma
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 From:
 usaafric...@googlegroups.com <usaafric...@googlegroups.com> on
 behalf of Cornelius Hamelberg <cornelius...@gmail.com>
 
 Sent: Monday, August 22, 2016 11:52 AM
 
 To: USA Africa Dialogue Series
 
 
 
 Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - MUST READ:
 The Aguiyi-Ironsi Tragedy
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 One man's papa soup is another man's poison.
 Is this not a case of cultural chauvinism : "Unlike
 the Yoruba culture in which I grew up, Obi was brought up in
 a culture where youths are trained to demonstrate their
 courage and boldness by urinating on the graves of their
 dead elders" (Ogbeni
  Kadiri) ?
 Either Mazi Nwakanma will not dignify anybody with a
 response or it's just a matter of time before loose
 cannons and sparks start flying...ojare…
 Or as Lakunle would say,
 "I rise above taunts and remain unruffled
 "
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 On Sunday, 21 August 2016 14:56:13 UTC+2, ogunlakaiye wrote:
 
 
 
 Obi Nwakanma, the forces that confronted Fajuyi on the
 morning of 29 July 1966 were greater than him. If he had
 abandoned Ironsi, he would not have been killed because he
 was not the target of the coup makers. As a man with self
 esteem and self-respect,
  he demanded that if they took his GOC and host they should
 take him too. He was a courageous and loyal officer, and I
 would have done the same thing if I were in his position.
 But when Dialas, the master tribe, now consider Fajuyi as
 an Osu that only fulfilled
  his natural role as a slave worthy of dying along with
 Ironsi, I get pissed off.
 
 
 
 
 Instead of quoting me, Obi Nwakanma engages in malicious
 interpretation of what I have written thus,
 "As for Fajuyi, he was killed only because he
 really wished to die with Ironsi. In other words, he had a
 death wish which was cavalierly granted to him as some sort
 of perverse favour by Ironsi's captors. These are all
 your statements, and I'm taking
  you by your words. They killed Fajuyi in other words
 because Colonel Fajuyi insisted on being
 killed." I have never written anywhere that
 Fajuyi had death wish, it is only very difficult for Obi
 Nwakanma to understand that a man like Fajuyi could decide
  to follow his Commander to death when he could have
 abandoned him to preserve his own life. Fajuyi was not the
 target of the coup makers of July 1966 just as the pregnant
 wife of Brigadier Ademulegun was not the target of Major Tim
 Onwuatuegwu when he burst
  into their bedroom in January 1966. However, Mrs Ademulegun
 with her eight months pregnancy, placed herself protectively
 in front of her husband. Major Onwuatuegwu, who did not want
 to risk the revolution because of a pregnant woman ripped
 open her abdomen
  with machine-gun fire before killing the Brigadier. If Mrs.
 Ademulegun had stood by the side wailing and begging
 Onwuatuegwu, just as Mrs Pam did to Major Chukwuka, she
 would not have been killed with her unborn child. It is a
 common saying in Yoruba, IKÚ
  YÁ JU ÈSÍN AIYÉ, which means better die than to be
 subjected to world's ridicule or shame. For Fajuyi and
 Mrs Ademulegun, they would rather die than allow an armed
  intruder to control their place of abode. Defending
 one's honour is not wishing to die but
  to Dialas, it is honourable for a General Officer
  Commanding the Armed Forces of Biafra to abandon his
 soldiers in the war front and to flee to safety abroad.
 
 
 
 ...your writing insists that Arthur Unegbe's
 was an *inferior death* compared with the deaths of 
 other Lt. Colonels who had been killed on the same night as
 he - Obi Nwakanma.
 ... you insist that Lt. Colonel James Pam, although
 he was on the same rank with Unegbe was a *senior* and
 *superior* officer,
 whose death should not be equated with Unegbe's -
 Obi Nwakanma.
 
 
 
 Obi is a pathological liar, since there is no where I
 have ever  written that Unegbe's death was inferior to
 any other person,  military or civilian, killed in January
 1966. Obi is  crediting me with his own invented writing
 just as he normally does to invent
  stories, which he calls history, and credit them to people
 with whom he supposedly munched groundnuts and drank
 beer.
 
 
 
 Yes, I insisted that although Unegbe and Pam hold the
 same rank of Lt. Colonels, the latter is senior to the
 former because Pam was enlisted in 1954, commissioned in
 1955, promoted to the rank of Lt. Colonel in 1963 having
 received JSSC Staff  training.
  Unegbe on the other hand was enlisted in 1955, commissioned
 in 1956 and promoted to a Lt. Colonel in 1964 after
 receiving Staff training, PSC, in Pakistan. Mark you that
  PSC training, even if it were received in London which is
 valued higher than Quetta,
  in Pakistan, is inferior to JSSC. It is the combinations of
 year of enlistment, year of commission  date of promotion
 to Lt. colonel in addition to the type of Staff Training
 that earned Pam the appointment of Adjutant General which
 ranked him senior and superior
  to Unegbe. I am not as cynical as Obi in choosing which
 death is superior or inferior and there is no time I have
 written, directly or implied, that Unegbe's death should
 not be equated to that of Lt. Colonel Pam.
 
 
 
 .... in the advise/memo to unify the services was
 given to Ironsi by the highly respected public servant
 Simeon Adebo..
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Well Obi must learn to be truthful and honest. Even if he
 was not born or too young to remember what happened in 1966,
 he should not assume what happened because a lot of books
 have been written both by actors in the crisis and
 outsiders. On 12 February
  1966, Ironsi appointed Francis C. Nwokedi as a one-man
 commissioner to study and report on the unification of
 Nigeria's administrative machinery and public and
 judicial services. John de St Jorre noted in his, The
 Nigerian Civil War thus,
 "The key man was now Francis Nwokedi. Since
 February he had been travelling widely in the Federation
 studying the question of unifying the regional and federal
 civil services. .... However, it was becoming clear that
 Nwokedi, a clever and strong-willed
  person who was one of Ironsi's most influential
 advisers, had firm idea of his own. When a group of leading
 Nsukka University professors presented a detailed paper
 arguing against swift administrative unification Nwokedi
 ignored it." 
 Before the end of March !966 Nwokedi had submitted his
 one-man report on unitary form of government to Ironsi. Thus
 on the occasion of annual budget on the 31st of March 1966,
 Ironsi in a national broadcast told Nigerians,
 "For the first time, fiscal, economic and
 industrial projects are being considered and being directed
 by one central authority. I am convinced that the bulk of
 our people want a united Nigeria and that they want in
 future one government and not a multitude
  of governments." When the Supreme Military
 Council met on 22-23 of May 1966, Ironsi confronted his
 governors with the unification Decree that would abolish the
 Regions with stiff opposition from Fajuyi and Hassan
 Katsina. Ruth  First in The Barrel
  of the Gun wrote, "The Supreme Military Council
 had been divided, with most of its members opposed. At the
 meeting immediately before the Decree promulgated, Ironsi
 heard the governors out, after they had lodged their
 objections in writing, and then
  said, 'I'm committed." On page 310 of
 Ruth First's book, a special note was given,
 "Lieutenant Colonel Fajuyi had written a
 five-page memorandum setting out the difficulties and
 problems he envisaged. He added a concluding paragraph
 stating that if these objections were taken into account he
 agreed with the tenor of the document. The
  governor of the North telephoned Fajuyi. ' Why the last
 paragraph?' he asked. 'Out of Courtesy,' was
 Fajuyi's reply."  
 
 On Tuesday, 24 May 1966, Ironsi to the chagrins of Fajuyi
 and Hassan Katsina announced in a national broadcast, Decree
 No.34 abolishing the Regions which were to be ruled from
 Lagos. Nigeria was no longer a Federation but simply
 Republic of Nigeria ruled
  by National Military Government and not Federal Military
 Government. Except in the brain of an ethnic Mandarin, the
 architect of unitary government as promulgated by Ironsi in
 1966 was Francis Nwokedi and not Simeon Adebo. Following the
 promulgation of Unitary
  form of government, Decree No. 34 of 24 May
 1966, Azikiwe's Newspaper, West African Pilot,
 published a cartoon titled, The Dawn of a New Era,
 portraying Ironsi government as a large cock (Cock is the
 symbol of Azikiwe's NCNC political party that had had
 unitary
  form of Government in its party programmes since 1950s)
 crowing 'One Country, One Nationality.' May I add
 that Azikiwe returned to Nigeria after the coup on 25
 February 1966, barely two weeks after Ironsi had appointed
 Francis Nwokedi to implement Azikiwe's
  long time dream of unitary government for Nigeria.
 
 
 
 You lie against the dead when you wrote that Ironsi
 refused to release Awolowo, especially given the fact that
 the minutes of the Supreme Military Council indicate that a
 decision had been reached to that effect which was part of
 the announcement that Ironsi
  was billed to make that evening at the planned dinner with
 peoples and Chiefs of the Western region - Obi
 Nwakanma.
 
 
 
 I was in Lagos in the evening of 28 July 1966 and I saw
 Ironsi on TV addressing a congregation of Western Region
 Obas in the House of Chiefs in the day-time, with Oba of
 Lagos, Adeyinka Oyekan, in attendance. At the dinner in the
 evening I saw on the TV
  how Yoruba Talking Drum musicians were singing in Yoruba in
 praise of Ironsi thus:
 ÀKÀNO ÒJÌ, KÓROBÓTÓ BI OKÁ, AGÙN T'ASÓ
 LÒ, OLÚWA KÒ NI JÉOKÚ. The musicians had renamed
 Ironsi in Yoruba to Àkàno. A straight translation is as
 follows: ÀKÀNO THE STORM, ROBUST LIKE A CONSCRIPTOR (A
 type of snake in Yoruba) TALL TO FIT CLOTHES, MAY GOD NOT
  ALLOW YOU TO  DIE. That was what Nigerians saw on the
 TV and there was no announcement by Ironsi that evening of
 28 July 1966 that Awolowo was to be released. Ironsi took
 power on January 16, 1966 and Obi claimed that he was to
 announce the release of
  Awolowo at Ibadan on July 28, 1966, which did not happen.
 May be, Obi can tell us what Ironsi was waiting for,
 between January and July, to release Awolowo, if that was
 his plan.
 
 
 
 In Government Notice No. 1507/1966 titled Instrument of
 Pardon - Chief Awolowo, 2 August 1966, it was recorded: By
 His Excellency Lieutenant-Colonel Yakubu Gowon, Head of the
 National Military Government, Supreme Commander of the
 Armed Forces of the Republic
  of Nigeria.
 WHEREAS Chief Obafemi Awolowo, having been duly
 convicted........ AND WHEREAS the Supreme Military Council
 after reviewing his case, is pleased to remit the sentence
 and to grant a full pardon:
 NOW THEREFORE, in exercise of the powers conferred by
 section 101 (1) of the Constitution of the Republic and of
 all other powers enabling it in that behalf, the Supreme
 Military Council do hereby remit the unexpired portion of
 the sentence imposed on the
  aforesaid Chief Obafemi Awolowo and grant him ful
 pardon.
 GIVEN UNDER my hand and the Public Seal of the Republic
 of Nigeria at Lagos this second day of August, one thousand
 nine hundred and sixty-six. 
 Awolowo was pardoned and released on the 2nd of August
 1966 and he was flown from Calabar to Ikeja airport the
 following day. The Nigerian Daily Times of August 4, 1966
 featured Gowon greeting Awolowo at the airport with the
 remark, '' We need you for the
  wealth of your experience.''
  At the time Awolowo was released, Lieutenant Colonel
 Ojukwu had fled from Enugu and was hiding at Police
 Headquarter, Onitsha, because 85% of riffle carriers at
 Enugu Battalion were Northerners and his chance of survival
 was small if fighting should break
  out there. Ojukwu did not return to Enugu until after
 August 6, when Lieutenant Colonel David Ogunewe succeeded in
 negotiating with Northern soldiers who agreed to return to
 the North and  armed with their guns. So, Ojukwu played no
 role in the release of
  Awolowo.
 
 
 
 Obi wrote that Awolowo was a fascist for advocating true
 federalism where each ethnic group could develop at their
 own pace. Unlike the Yoruba culture in which I grew
  up, Obi was brought up in a culture where youths are
  trained to demonstrate their courage
  and boldness by urinating on the graves of their dead
 elders. If Awolowo was a fascist, all those who are now
 clamouring for restructuring of Nigeria into true federalism
 based on the current six geo-political zones
 (North-Central, North-East, North-West,
  South-East, South-South and South-West)  must be
 fascists.  As Obi has admitted in writing, he is a great
 consumer of groundnuts and beer resulting t

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