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Ohanaeze, Arewa Leaders Meet In Enugu - Politics (6) - Nairaland

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Re: Ohanaeze, Arewa Leaders Meet In Enugu by Osiris211: 9:26am On Oct 14, 2012
Dede is having multiple personality disorder and stuffers acute amnesia, hence his senility. Abeg make I laugh small this Sunday.

dayokanu:

Dende is a slowpoke.

When was the NCNC formed? and what does it mean?
Re: Ohanaeze, Arewa Leaders Meet In Enugu by T9ksy(m): 11:29am On Oct 14, 2012
dayokanu:

Dende is a slowpoke.


STALE NEWS!!!
Re: Ohanaeze, Arewa Leaders Meet In Enugu by joeyfire(m): 12:49pm On Oct 14, 2012
Fixed

dayokanu: No be today. E don tay wey Yoruba be hausa slaves

From Akintola to Sardauna

Afonja to Alimi

Idiagbon to Buhari

Diya to Abacha

Sunday Awoniyi to Any Northerner in Power

the slaves have merely reunited with their masters
Re: Ohanaeze, Arewa Leaders Meet In Enugu by olufunmibi(m): 6:30pm On Oct 14, 2012
Aigbofa:

An excerpt from Awos biography.

An article written by Zik himself, published on the front page of the Pilot, and entitled: "'Football Iliad, 1940 Edition'", shocked many people. It was a big step forward in an insidious campaign which had gone on for more than two years on the pages of the Pilot. A football team composed of students of the Christ the King's College, Onitsha, came to Lagos to play a 'Win the War' football match against St Gregory's College. The CKC team from Onitsha defeated St Gregory's team by 5 goals to 4. To the ordinary man in the street, let alone the highly sophisticated elements, there was nothing extraordinary or unusual in one school or college defeating another in a game of soccer. But not so with Dr Azikiwe. He saw in the sporting exploits and triumph of the team from Onitsha the inherent superiority of the easterners over their opponents, and he went to very great pains to establish this fact, by means of careful choice of words and emphasis. These extracts from the article are relevant: And then to think of the great combination of the Spartan heroes who crossed the lordly Niger, journeyed through the good earth of Benin, hurried across the domains of the Oshemawe of Ondo, of the Atanla of Owo, of the Owa of Ilesha, of the Oni of Ife, of the Alake of Abeokuta in their invasion of these islands!
Who, but heroes of mighty brawn and exceptionally developed brain would have dared to make this invasion and to succeed in carrying to their River Niger home, the Golden Fleece of InterCollegiate Soccer Championship of the Eastern and Western Provinces?
Yet they came to Lagos, they saw the irresistible defence put up by their opponents, and they conquered impressively, convincingly, and were graceful even in victory!
Could their achievement be paralleled?
Would it not be better for me to leave the answer to the laps of the gods?

On 24 August 1940, however, the same CKC team played in Ibadan against the Olubadan XI in another 'Win the War' match. The CKC were beaten 3-2 by the Olubadan XI which were an undiluted Yoruba team. Apart from sending the news to the Daily service myself, I also saw to it that it was wired to the Pilot. It was after there had been clamours in the Daily service, in form of letters to the editor, that the news of this Ibadan match was published some two weeks later in the Pilot. Even then, it was a small item on the back page, and it was explained in it that the CKC team were already tired and that some of them were in fact limping, before they went into the field against Olubadan XI. This was of course untrue.
I said before that the CKC episode was a big step forward in an insidious campaign which had gone on for more than two years on the pages of the Pilot. One or two more instances will be given. By the time the Pilot had published for a year, an important feature of the paper had become manifest. The Igbos in particular were given inordinate publicity on the pages of the paper. Perhaps this was as it should be. The Igbo had never had a share in newspaper publicity before the advent of the Pilot. But equally so, no Yoruba man of the class of the Igbos publicised in the Pilot ever had a share of publicity in any paper either. In those days one had to be an outstanding politician, a big shot in society, or a well-connected person, for one's name to appear in the Nigerian Daily Times, Nigerian Daily Telegraph andLagos Daily News. Of course if you had a friend working in the news or composing section of a paper, no matter who you were, you might be slipped in. Names of people like myself appeared in the papers simply because we were agitators or free-lance journalists. [b]All the same, it was generally agreed that the Igbos needed all the boosting they could get.But Dr Azikiwe went about it in a manner which disgusted those of us who were used to describing citizens of Nigeria as Nigerians or Africans, and regarding their achievements as reflecting credit on Nigeria, indeed Africa, as a whole. The following are typical of the titles of front page news items and of editorial articles in the Pilot.


1. ' Ibo Young Man to Sail to U.K.' is the heading of a frontpage story and picture on September 23, 1938. The young man is Mr Jaja Wachuku, now Speaker of Nigeria's House of Representatives.
2. '14th West African Student, 10th Nigerian, 8th Ibo in U.S.A.' Another front-page story on January 28, 1939. The 8th Ibo is Mr Nwafor Orizu, now Senator in Nigeria's Upper House.
3. 'Ibo Medical Student Passes Exam In First Class Honours.' Yet another front page story, on June 26, 1940, of the brilliant success of Dr S. O. Egwuatu.
4. Editorials:
i. ' A Model Union' ( August 8, 1938) in praise of the Ibibio State Union.
ii. 'One Year Ago' ( August 18, 1938) celebrating the first anniversary of the call to the Bar of the first Ibo lawyer, in the person of Mr Justice Louis Mbanefo, now Chief Justice of the Eastern Region High Court.
iii. 'The Ibo Are Coming' ( December 31, 1938) -- The very title is sufficiently indicative of the contents.

These are but a few examples of the publicity given to Igbos as a group. But as against these, the achievements of Yorubas and, in particular, the academic laurels of their scholars received, if at all, inconspicuous notice in the Pilot. When an Igbo did or was about to do something praiseworthy, he was invariably given a two-column headline and report in the Pilot, and was always described by his ethnic origin in the headlines. But when the Ph.D. degree of London University, indeed of any university for that matter, was conferred on the first Nigerian ever, the historic news was given a small singlecolumn space in the Pilot, and the headline read: 'Nigerian Economist Passes Ph.D. London.' The scholar concerned was Dr Fadipe, a Yoruba. As late as 1945, two Nigerian law students of Cambridge University, one Yoruba and one Igbo, passed the Law Tripos Examination. The Yoruba passed with second class honours (upper division), and the Igbo also passed with second class honours but in the lower division. The latter got front page publicity in the Pilot, but the former got a small space given to him on the back page a few days after the report of his Igbo colleague had appeared. As for outstanding Yoruba public men, they were all of them daubed as 'imperialist stooges' and ' Uncle Toms'.[/b]


Now, who started tribalism? The said article was written by Zik in 1940, over a decade before the carpet crossing you mentioned! As far back as 1938, Zik had already started his malicious campaign against Yorubas and suddenly he wanted to become their premier! Awo was a nice man, instead of carpet crossing, I would have had him flogged.
@Aigbofa, you are the son of your father, the son of the valiant and the courageous, you have not betrayed your Oodua genetics and heredity, thanks for this post, you are blessed beyond a curse my brother
Re: Ohanaeze, Arewa Leaders Meet In Enugu by olufunmibi(m): 6:44pm On Oct 14, 2012
Dede1:


I knew the inherently loudmouthed sons and daughters of tribal icons in Nigeria will pull out this write-up. It is unfortunate that these tribal jingoists were oblivious that when the aforementioned article was written, there was no entity known as Nigeria. During the period in discuss, people in the provinces of southern and northern protectorates were identified either by their ethnicity or province. One can begin to decipher the conjectural crap imbedded in this rubbish.

As for the drubbing the Christ the King's College, Onitsha handed to St Gregory's College, Lagos, there is no better way to express the duel than the manner used by Zik to elucidate the outcome of the football match. Before the soccer match commenced, some deluded juju musicians have gathered at the Palace of Olu of Ibadan singing how the boys from Onicha will disgraced on the field of soccer by the boys from Lagos because Europeans first handed them (Lagos boys) the knowledge of kicking the round object.

In order to salvage silly and tribal ego of the Yoruba, not as ordinary man on the street, Olu of Ibadan sent SOS to all nooks and carnies of Yoruba land and secured a match between CKC kids and semi-professional team called the Olubadan XI. Despite playing a tough match the previous two days, the kids from CKC humbled the semi-pro Olubadan XI side.
@Dede, how can you say there is no entity like Nigeria when Zik wrote that article when even a secondary school student who has learnt social studies knows Nigeria was almagamated in 1914, it shows how intellectually lazy you are. I think you are not a serious person, really, its pathetic.

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Re: Ohanaeze, Arewa Leaders Meet In Enugu by oluwagbami(m): 6:53am On Oct 15, 2012
The hidden problems in Nigeria are Yoruba, Yoruba and Yoruba. It's only the wise that could see beyond the realm of the ordinary people.
Cut those non-Nigerians out, Nigeria will attain a new equilibrium.

Yoruba Must Go!

They are not Nigerians.[size=8pt][/size] If anyone must go, it ought to be you people............ some years ago were you not the ones calling on Israel to come take you home because you found out that you are a lost tribe of Israel.... you guys dont even know where you came from.......
Re: Ohanaeze, Arewa Leaders Meet In Enugu by Rossikk(m): 7:31am On Oct 15, 2012
Dede1:


I knew the inherently loudmouthed sons and daughters of tribal icons in Nigeria will pull out this write-up. It is unfortunate that these tribal jingoists were oblivious that when the aforementioned article was written, there was no entity known as Nigeria.

You're a complete ignoramus and cretin to make this statement.

Instead of you to go and pick up some books and read and learn, you're here typing rubbish.
Re: Ohanaeze, Arewa Leaders Meet In Enugu by dayokanu(m): 4:51pm On Oct 15, 2012
Rossikk:

You're a complete ignoramus and cretin to make this statement.

Instead of you to go and pick up some books and read and learn, you're here typing rubbish.

Dont be hard on him, Dende is a mor0n. Abi which woman go born normal pikin name am Dende. He was deformed from birth

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