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Igbo Marginalisation is a Big lie and just a Propaganda. / Marginalisation Of Ndiigbo In Nigeria Must Stop! / Ooni, Before His Death, Spoke Of Marginalisation Of The Yoruba Race – Obasanjo (2) (3) (4)

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Nigeria: Igbos And The Marginalisation Of Citizens by Abagworo(m): 11:51am On Oct 29, 2012
Marginalisation, defined as the outcome of domination, is the most favoured word used by the Nigerian elite to describe their perceived political reality and above all to seek for more access to the national cake.

In all of Nigeria's six geopolitical zones, the story is very similar. Two broad issues are posed when ethno-regional domination emerges as a political issue in Nigeria. The first issue is the control of political power and its instruments such as the armed forces, the public service and the judiciary. The second is the control of economic power and resources. Both are powerful instruments that are used to influence the authoritative allocation of resources to groups and individuals. I am one of those who believe that reference to ethnic and cultural groups as political actors is fraught with analytical risks and any statement made about a group can be easily faulted. For the coming weeks however, a take leave of rational political science and narrate what we say about our ethno-regional groups for the purpose of building a narrative on the marginalisation of Nigerians. Today, we start with the Igbos.

Three issues are on the table today on the Igbo question, the question of state creation, the Igbo presidency and the impact of the civil war. Chinua Achebe's recent book - "There Was a Country", in which he makes unambiguous comments of the complicity of the Nigerian state and its leaders at the time, Yakubu Gowon and Obafemi Awolowo in starving over two million Igbos to death has generated a huge debate over the past two weeks. General Gowon has responded denying the charges and claiming that it was Ojukwu who refused the offer of a humanitarian corridor and many furious Yoruba intellectuals have lambasted Achebe for what they consider to be unfair attack directed at Awolowo. What we can say is that Gowon's "no victor, no vanquished" attitude blocked debate on what really happened and I think we should all thank Professor Achebe for placing the question on the table in such a dramatic manner.

There is no doubt that the civil war of 1967 to 1970 was the most serious threat to the existence of Nigeria as a country and it led to the loss of one to two million lives, depending on whose figure you accept. It should be recalled that just before the war, Western leaders had warned that if the East goes, the West will follow. That threat was not put into action and Awolowo, the Western leader was released from jail to serve as Finance Minister and Deputy Leader of the Federal Executive Council. His former political secretary, my good friend Odia Ofeinun has written this week explaining that a key document for the debate which has been suppressed all this time is the book by the 1966 coup leader, Major Emmanuel Ifeajuna, in which he states that the objective of the coup was to make Awolowo Nigeria's prime minister. He has also started a debate on the complicity of the political and traditional leaders of the then Mid-West.

The fact of the matter is that the Igbo elite have a strong empirical basis to read Nigerian political history as one of failure and frustration for them. It's a narrative that sees a proud and hard-working people, "the Jews of Africa", that have been forced to play second fiddle to the other for too long, especially the Hausa-Fulani ruling circles. Following the coup and the subsequent massacre of Igbos in 1966 in the Northern region, and the subsequent declaration of secession by the Eastern region in May 1967, the Igbo elite had assumed that other Nigerians would not fight to keep them in the Federation. They were wrong. Other Nigerians fought to preserve the Federation and the result was the thirty-month civil war and the heavy death toll.

In his book, "Igbo Leadership and the Future of Nigeria" Arthur Nwankwo argues that "Nigerians of all other ethnic groups will probably achieve consensus on no other matter than their common resentment of the Igbo", a phenomenon, he tells us, that Chinua Achebe had earlier dubbed "the Igbo problem". Nwankwo tells us that the Igbos are more cosmopolitan, more adopted to other cultures, more individualistic and competitive, more receptive to change and more prone to settle and work in other parts of the country than other Nigerians. This reality, he says, is overshadowed by the myth other Nigerians persist in spreading that the Igbo are aggressive, arrogant and clannish. This purported attitude of other Nigerians towards the Igbos he points out has led to the development of a "final solution" aimed at neutralising and marginalising the Igbos after the civil war. This is seen to have occurred in two ways.

After the civil war, there was a coordinated policy of pauperising the Igbo middle class by the offer of a twenty pound ex gratis award to all bank account holders irrespective of the amounts they had lodged with the banks before the civil war. This was followed by routing the Igbos from the commanding heights of the economy by introducing the indigenisation decree at a time when the Igbos had no money, no patronage and no access to loans to compete for the companies. In addition, landed property owned by the Igbo was declared to be "abandoned property" particularly in Port Harcourt. In the public service, the Igbo elite were marginalised by the refusal to re-absorb most of their cadres who had attained high positions in the armed forces and the federal public service.

It is in this context that many within the Igbo elite have come to understand the policies of "no victor, no vanquished" and "reconciliation, reconstruction and rehabilitation" announced after the war, were not actually applied. There is room to debate these issues today as they feed into current demands for the creation of an additional state in the South East and the clamour for an Igbo Presidency. Of course since the end of the civil war, there has been a remarkable Igbo economic and commercial élan. The marginalisation did not work at the economic and commercial level and the success of the Igbo come back is one of the remarkable stories of our time. It might be precisely because of this success that bitterness persists among the Igbo elite on why other Nigerians appear to believe that they should continue with the politics of second fiddle.

To be major players in politics requires team and coalition building. The Northern political class used to be very good at that but they have lost it in recent years. For the Igbo elite to play it successfully, they do need to convince and reassure the others. Chinua Achebe might have done this cause harm by his recent assertions which really angered the Yoruba elite and now jeopardises the possibility of a common southern political front which appeared possible for the first time in our political history. He has however done Nigeria a lot of good by demanding that we look more closely at the history of the civil war and learn more of what we did to ourselves. As I eagerly wait to get my copy of the book by Achebe and the publication of Ifeajuna's book, I am enthralled at all the revelations that have been coming out over the past few weeks and I believe understanding our recent history better is the best path to nation building. Next week, I take a look at the Hausa-Fulani and the Marginalisation of Nigerians.

http://allafrica.com/stories/201210290272.html
Re: Nigeria: Igbos And The Marginalisation Of Citizens by Jisunpack: 12:06pm On Oct 29, 2012
The ibos will blame ever other person for their woes. cry me a river!
Re: Nigeria: Igbos And The Marginalisation Of Citizens by ikeyman00(m): 12:48pm On Oct 29, 2012
^^^ and does that translate u are from the paradise part of Nigeria

talk me a river
Re: Nigeria: Igbos And The Marginalisation Of Citizens by Abagworo(m): 3:38pm On Oct 29, 2012
Ji_sun_pack: The ibos will blame ever other person for their woes. cry me a river!

Igbos are actually better off and hence have no reason to cry. They can live and adapt to any language, culture and difficult situation. So in reality we have no woes. What the writer is saying is that there is a breed of jealousy which exists and acts as a unifying factor for other Nigerians once Igbo is involved. That fear of domination needs to be removed and a level playing field introduced so that the best will come out of Nigeria.
Re: Nigeria: Igbos And The Marginalisation Of Citizens by Onlytruth(m): 3:51pm On Oct 29, 2012
Abagworo:

Igbos are actually better off and hence have no reason to cry. They can live and adapt to any language, culture and difficult situation. So in reality we have no woes. What the writer is saying is that there is a breed of jealousy which exists and acts as a unifying factor for other Nigerians once Igbo is involved. That fear of domination needs to be removed and a level playing field introduced so that the best will come out of Nigeria.

I think the bolded has always been known in Nigeria; however I personally don't think that anyone would willingly provide that "level playing field" for Igbo to thrive in any part of Nigeria. It is all a factor of mindset. I thank God that our people are slowly but finally undergoing a period of epiphany, or an enlightenment of sorts. We are gradually realizing that we must grab Nigeria with both hands and powerfully stake a claim to any part of it where we find ourselves. The "persecuted and marginalized" mindset cannot serve us.
I have always believed, that if we cannot secede successfully from Nigeria, we must embrace Nigeria as forcefully as possible, because it seems that some other Nigerians only like us when we are like them; but WE ARE NOT THEM. We can assimilate to some extent, but the moment we lose the most important attributes we possess, we will stop succeeding as we are currently doing.
That is why we must remain IGBO through and through in Nigeria. That way we win (survive, thrive) no matter what.

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Re: Nigeria: Igbos And The Marginalisation Of Citizens by lillyveezy: 4:38pm On Oct 29, 2012
Well said @ ONLYTRUTH.
Point is: "never loose ur IGBONESS" while undergoing assimilation process,else u will stop winning.
Assimilation for us is only allowed as a tool to thrive better.
Re: Nigeria: Igbos And The Marginalisation Of Citizens by Degis(m): 10:11pm On Oct 29, 2012
Well, which tribe wouldn't assimilate, transform and dissolve into other culture if they are renown for desperation, unbridled affinity for filthy lucre, penchant to outdo one another in the craze for sudden wealth and lack of respect for peaceful coexistence.
Re: Nigeria: Igbos And The Marginalisation Of Citizens by ZeusI: 10:47pm On Oct 29, 2012
Igbocracy must be a principle, idealism and moral standard. It should be purveyed by Igbos into the concept of every Nigerian and African, that like the jews we are; we must 'Never Forgive and Never Forget, we must use all within our might, we must tell it to our children and they; to theirs, of how we are hated and who are they that hates us. We shall continue to fight till they(our enemies) succumb, we must 'submit and subject to subdue'. We must use political guile or bloody force to forge this notion. If you(Nigeria) can't let us go, then, we must rule you with same measure you used on us, and that must happen, that is the Biafra of Nigeria. 'Assimilate, penetrate, infiltrate and dominate'. That is our new motto.
Re: Nigeria: Igbos And The Marginalisation Of Citizens by Jisunpack: 3:51am On Oct 30, 2012
What is breed of jealousy? What is better off?

The crux of the matter here is that people are wary of the ibo tendency to cheat in the face of small trust. Go take a honest assessment of what is obtainable in real life.

Forget about the illusion of success, cos that's not an exclusive rights of any ethnc group . The only reason for you even to think this way is because you are deluded to think like this.



Abagworo:

Igbos are actually better off and hence have no reason to cry. They can live and adapt to any language, culture and difficult situation. So in reality we have no woes. What the writer is saying is that there is a breed of jealousy which exists and acts as a unifying factor for other Nigerians once Igbo is involved. That fear of domination needs to be removed and a level playing field introduced so that the best will come out of Nigeria.
Re: Nigeria: Igbos And The Marginalisation Of Citizens by Jisunpack: 3:55am On Oct 30, 2012
“Those who cannot remember the past are condemned
to repeat it.” (George Santayana)



Zeus I: Igbocracy must be a principle, idealism and moral standard. It should be purveyed by Igbos into the concept of every Nigerian and African, that like the jews we are; we must 'Never Forgive and Never Forget, we must use all within our might, we must tell it to our children and they; to theirs, of how we are hated and who are they that hates us. We shall continue to fight till they(our enemies) succumb, we must 'submit and subject to subdue'. We must use political guile or bloody force to forge this notion. If you(Nigeria) can't let us go, then, we must rule you with same measure you used on us, and that must happen, that is the Biafra of Nigeria. 'Assimilate, penetrate, infiltrate and dominate'. That is our new motto.
Re: Nigeria: Igbos And The Marginalisation Of Citizens by dayokanu(m): 4:25am On Oct 30, 2012
Here we go again.... Same old shiit dog every different day
Re: Nigeria: Igbos And The Marginalisation Of Citizens by ba7man(m): 9:58am On Oct 30, 2012
Arrrrgggghhhh!!!!!!....Pls, give these topics a rest!!!!!

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