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Open Letter To South _south Brethren - Donald Ekpo #4 - Politics - Nairaland

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Open Letter To South _south Brethren - Donald Ekpo #4 by Chibuzoc(m): 10:30am On Mar 15, 2017
I write this letter to remind us that our region, known as the South-South today was a creation of the North for the sake of creating the disunity we face today. And more so, it was not just for the disunity for them to win the war, but to also take away our resources, our manpower and our economic future. In 2014, when President Jonathan, a son of the so called South-South, decided to re-contest the 2015 elections, Sheik Junaid Mohammed, in an engagement on behalf the Northern protectorate, reminded us that the so-called South-South was a creation of the North for effective management of the Northern interest in Eastern Nigeria. How bad could this be? Can we imagine that? So, while we are busy reminding ourselves that we are a different people or that the Igbos are wicked and are trying to kill us, the North is joyously taking over and owning 85% of our oil wells while the West takes the leftovers. And what do we get? Noise! Even the supposed football legend, Sunday Okechukwu Oliseh, is busy telling us he is not Igbo as if it is a curse to be Igbo.
One wonders if the name “Okechukwu” is of Hausa or Yoruba origin. When you speak Igbo as a language and yet claim you are not Igbo, is that not the saddest thing that can happen to any people of identical culture? Even Major Kaduna Nzeogwu that led the first coup that was said to be an Igbo coup is from Okpanam village in today’s Delta State. Could he have come out to say today, like Sunday Oliseh said, that he was not Igbo? If the Abakaliki or Nsukka indigene who has a more distant dialect of Igbo is Igbo, how come the Anioma or Okrika indigene, whose dialect is easily understood, is not Igbo? How did a people of the same culture get so separated this far?
I write this letter to speak to those of us regarded as minority tribes. How can we be minority when, in essence, we are known to be about 35 million of the said 180 million of the estimated population of Nigeria? How can we be a minority in our own lands if we were not treated as such or if we did not accept to be such? If those from the alliance which separated us from the West are said to be about 50 million in population and our brethren in the East are said to be about 40 million, how can we accept that we are a minority? Our compatriots from the alleged minorities of the North are said to be another 30 million. Who then is the minority? Having run through these figures, we know who the real minorities are. Be it as it appears, the truth is that our region was broken into two so as to weaken our original strength given that, at a combined population strength of 35 million plus 40 million people, our economic and entrepreneurial strength put together, would be something the ruling alliance will be worried about. So why should we ever think that it is logical to claim we are two different peoples when, in essence, we have always been one and the same people for over 1,000 years before the arrival of the white man? If what the white man did to us was not bad enough, is it not ridiculous that we allowed a certain minority made up of immigrants from fringes of the Sahara Desert to assume control of our economic and political future?
I write this letter to ask my brethren in the South-South these pertinent questions. Let us assume the very worst situation in this supposed fracas between us and our Igbo brothers. Why are we worried about the Igbos taking over our “natural resources”, (assuming they don’t have theirs); ARE WE PRESENTLY IN CONTROL OF OUR “NATURAL RESOURCES”? Does it make more sense that our natural resources are being controlled by some strange people from over 700 miles away? The same people that kill us at will at any single provocation of their religion? People who even kill us in our land? People who challenge us to the ownership of these our very own resources? People who show absolute disregard for who we are? People who think it is a privilege for us to be in any position of authority? And finally, people who do not, in any way, have the kind of entrepreneurial skills that we have? Why would we allow our imaginary quarrel or fights with our brothers next-door to translate into the decision of one of the women in King Solomon’s judgment who insisted that, since she couldn’t have the contested child, the other woman should not either?
So are we, in essence, saying it is better for none of us brethren to own our resources simply because we don’t trust our brothers, yet we do nothing about the strangers who have ripped us apart? Are we logically correct in believing this senseless fabricated quarrel? Even while we are senselessly worried about how the Igbos will colonize our people because that is what we were told and that is what some in the ruling alliance are still trying to tell us, can we sincerely tell ourselves that the Igbos are that evil? Evil enough to leave their own natural resources in Abia, Imo, Anambra, Ebonyi and Enugu states to come and take ownership of our own resources? How will they do that? How possible will it be for a people that barely kill by the sword to be compared to our present oppressors from up North? Do we honestly see that as a possibility? How and why did we allow these propaganda to go this far? Is this not what the hegemonic alliance has used to rule us through the divide-and-rule scheme? Sheik Jumiad Mohammed said it clearly that our separation was a creation of the North for the effective management of our regional resources while we keep fighting an imaginary enemy.

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Re: Open Letter To South _south Brethren - Donald Ekpo #4 by Nobody: 10:42am On Mar 15, 2017
Another opportunity for those who have an ear to hear, eyes to see and common sense to use it. Thanks for posting this. May God bless you abundantly.

6 Likes

Re: Open Letter To South _south Brethren - Donald Ekpo #4 by enigma3000: 10:44am On Mar 15, 2017
well written...
a food for thought!!!

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Re: Open Letter To South _south Brethren - Donald Ekpo #4 by ESDKING: 11:16am On Mar 15, 2017
This should be on front page. I am so impressed with this write up. Before I forget, always remember that enemies in this forum masquerading themselves as people of Niger delta say all sorts of rubbish all in a bid to bring disharmony between two brothers.

4 Likes 1 Share

Re: Open Letter To South _south Brethren - Donald Ekpo #4 by kingzizzy: 11:47am On Mar 15, 2017
I laugh when someone in Abonema will be saying that Igbos are his problem while the Oil well in his village is owned by an Alhaji from Sokoto.

8 Likes 1 Share

Re: Open Letter To South _south Brethren - Donald Ekpo #4 by Deprince2656(m): 12:37pm On Mar 15, 2017
Well done bro! Time has come for the northeners to know that they are good for nothing.

I laugh whenever i see Buhari in Igbo attire.

4 Likes 1 Share

Re: Open Letter To South _south Brethren - Donald Ekpo #4 by timecapsule: 1:00pm On Mar 15, 2017
Agood write up. Whew a round line return to it starting

2 Likes

Re: Open Letter To South _south Brethren - Donald Ekpo #4 by victorvezx(m): 1:29pm On Mar 15, 2017
Another Ipob tout, disguising as a south south minority to beg the south south to join Biafra. Get over it, the former eastern region is long gone for almost 50 years now and u igbos are still crying over it. And u must be senseless for calling Yoruba and Hausa strangers. They are Nigerian citizen and have the full right every Nigerian citizen can enjoy. Just like they can buy land and live in any part of Nigeria, they can also have as much oil well in the south south as they want.

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Re: Open Letter To South _south Brethren - Donald Ekpo #4 by paschu: 1:33pm On Mar 15, 2017
cheesy cheesy cheesy
Re: Open Letter To South _south Brethren - Donald Ekpo #4 by jpphilips(m): 5:26pm On Mar 15, 2017
Chibuzoc:
I write this letter to remind us that our region, known as the South-South today was a creation of the North for the sake of creating the disunity we face today. And more so, it was not just for the disunity for them to win the war, but to also take away our resources, our manpower and our economic future. In 2014, when President Jonathan, a son of the so called South-South, decided to re-contest the 2015 elections, Sheik Junaid Mohammed, in an engagement on behalf the Northern protectorate, reminded us that the so-called South-South was a creation of the North for effective management of the Northern interest in Eastern Nigeria. How bad could this be? Can we imagine that? So, while we are busy reminding ourselves that we are a different people or that the Igbos are wicked and are trying to kill us, the North is joyously taking over and owning 85% of our oil wells while the West takes the leftovers. And what do we get? Noise! Even the supposed football legend, Sunday Okechukwu Oliseh, is busy telling us he is not Igbo as if it is a curse to be Igbo.
One wonders if the name “Okechukwu” is of Hausa or Yoruba origin. When you speak Igbo as a language and yet claim you are not Igbo, is that not the saddest thing that can happen to any people of identical culture? Even Major Kaduna Nzeogwu that led the first coup that was said to be an Igbo coup is from Okpanam village in today’s Delta State. Could he have come out to say today, like Sunday Oliseh said, that he was not Igbo? If the Abakaliki or Nsukka indigene who has a more distant dialect of Igbo is Igbo, how come the Anioma or Okrika indigene, whose dialect is easily understood, is not Igbo? How did a people of the same culture get so separated this far?
I write this letter to speak to those of us regarded as minority tribes. How can we be minority when, in essence, we are known to be about 35 million of the said 180 million of the estimated population of Nigeria? How can we be a minority in our own lands if we were not treated as such or if we did not accept to be such? If those from the alliance which separated us from the West are said to be about 50 million in population and our brethren in the East are said to be about 40 million, how can we accept that we are a minority? Our compatriots from the alleged minorities of the North are said to be another 30 million. Who then is the minority? Having run through these figures, we know who the real minorities are. Be it as it appears, the truth is that our region was broken into two so as to weaken our original strength given that, at a combined population strength of 35 million plus 40 million people, our economic and entrepreneurial strength put together, would be something the ruling alliance will be worried about. So why should we ever think that it is logical to claim we are two different peoples when, in essence, we have always been one and the same people for over 1,000 years before the arrival of the white man? If what the white man did to us was not bad enough, is it not ridiculous that we allowed a certain minority made up of immigrants from fringes of the Sahara Desert to assume control of our economic and political future?
I write this letter to ask my brethren in the South-South these pertinent questions. Let us assume the very worst situation in this supposed fracas between us and our Igbo brothers. Why are we worried about the Igbos taking over our “natural resources”, (assuming they don’t have theirs); ARE WE PRESENTLY IN CONTROL OF OUR “NATURAL RESOURCES”? Does it make more sense that our natural resources are being controlled by some strange people from over 700 miles away? The same people that kill us at will at any single provocation of their religion? People who even kill us in our land? People who challenge us to the ownership of these our very own resources? People who show absolute disregard for who we are? People who think it is a privilege for us to be in any position of authority? And finally, people who do not, in any way, have the kind of entrepreneurial skills that we have? Why would we allow our imaginary quarrel or fights with our brothers next-door to translate into the decision of one of the women in King Solomon’s judgment who insisted that, since she couldn’t have the contested child, the other woman should not either?
So are we, in essence, saying it is better for none of us brethren to own our resources simply because we don’t trust our brothers, yet we do nothing about the strangers who have ripped us apart? Are we logically correct in believing this senseless fabricated quarrel? Even while we are senselessly worried about how the Igbos will colonize our people because that is what we were told and that is what some in the ruling alliance are still trying to tell us, can we sincerely tell ourselves that the Igbos are that evil? Evil enough to leave their own natural resources in Abia, Imo, Anambra, Ebonyi and Enugu states to come and take ownership of our own resources? How will they do that? How possible will it be for a people that barely kill by the sword to be compared to our present oppressors from up North? Do we honestly see that as a possibility? How and why did we allow these propaganda to go this far? Is this not what the hegemonic alliance has used to rule us through the divide-and-rule scheme? Sheik Jumiad Mohammed said it clearly that our separation was a creation of the North for the effective management of our regional resources while we keep fighting an imaginary enemy.


85% really? even those who haven't seen a water well quote figures about oil blocks pulled from their @rse, David Ekpo, all I can tell you is that just last year over 50% of Nigerian oil export was sabotaged, no single northerner was affected.
The biggest problem most of you from the Niger delta have is an uncompetitive thought process, because oil is on your land then it becomes urs for the taking without a corresponding investment to explore it, this is a typical thought process of a goat!!
Going by that insane logic, the air under your nose is yours too perhaps the air above your head is equally yours, guess airplanes should be paying you to fly over your heads.
The day you guys in the delta will make progress is the day you will come to the logical conclusion that oil under your feet without investments does not guarantee petro dollars, my only fear is that it will be too late for you guys to realize that obvious fact, for now, continue enjoying ignorance.

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Re: Open Letter To South _south Brethren - Donald Ekpo #4 by jpphilips(m): 5:34pm On Mar 15, 2017
ESDKING:
This should be on front page. I am so impressed with this write up. Before I forget, always remember that enemies in this forum masquerading themselves as people of Niger delta say all sorts of rubbish all in a bid to bring disharmony between two brothers.

An ignorant mind is always open to accept hogwash, not your fault shaa
Re: Open Letter To South _south Brethren - Donald Ekpo #4 by owobokiri(m): 5:39pm On Mar 15, 2017
jpphilips:



85% really? even those who haven't seen a water well quote figures about oil blocks pulled from their @rse, David Ekpo, all I can tell you is that just last year over 50% of Nigerian oil export was sabotaged, no single northerner was affected.
The biggest problem most of you from the Niger delta have is an uncompetitive thought process, because oil is on your land then it becomes urs for the taking without a corresponding investment to explore it, this is a typical thought process of a goat!!
Going by that insane logic, the air under your nose is yours too perhaps the air above your head is equally yours, guess airplanes should be paying you to fly over your heads.
The day you guys in the delta will make progress is the day you will come to the logical conclusion that oil under your feet without investments does not guarantee petro dollars, my only fear is that it will be too late for you guys to realize that obvious fact, for now, continue enjoying ignorance.

Face your groundnuts and cocoa and stop foaming in the mouth about resources in far away land.... All these rants to defend the looting of the Delta? Are they dragging the money from your cow sales with you? Face your resources and allow them face theirs and stop yapping upandan..

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Re: Open Letter To South _south Brethren - Donald Ekpo #4 by ESDKING: 5:45pm On Mar 15, 2017
jpphilips:


An ignorant mind is always open to accept hogwash, not your fault shaa
Afonja! Always afraid of strong unity of SS & SE. Receive sense and say no to forced marriage because you wouldn't wish your daughter to continue in a marriage where his hubby use her as a punch bag everyday.

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Re: Open Letter To South _south Brethren - Donald Ekpo #4 by jpphilips(m): 6:10pm On Mar 15, 2017
owobokiri:


Face your groundnuts and cocoa and stop foaming in the mouth about resources in far away land.... All these rants to defend the looting of the Delta? Are they dragging the money from your cow sales with you? Face your resources and allow them face theirs and stop yapping upandan..

Does it not bother you that you are not intelligent? if I were in your shoes, I will be worried.

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Re: Open Letter To South _south Brethren - Donald Ekpo #4 by Amarabae(f): 6:18pm On Mar 15, 2017
ESDKING:

Afonja! Always afraid of strong unity of SS & SE. Receive sense and say no to forced marriage because you wouldn't wish your daughter to continue in a marriage where his hubby use her as a punch bag everyday.
must SE be attached to SS all the time? Its getting embarrasing.
South East can stand on its own. If we want political alliance, we will sit down with the SS or SW and table things out.
South East is South East!
Re: Open Letter To South _south Brethren - Donald Ekpo #4 by victorvezx(m): 6:27pm On Mar 15, 2017
Amarabae:
must SE be attached to SS all the time? Its getting embarrasing.
South East can stand on its own. If we want political alliance, we will sit down with the SS or SW and table things out.
South East is South East!
Don't mind them, I have never seen any Niger delta person or person from the south south cry so desperately for alliance with the south east. Non. It is only the igbos from the south east that keeps to beg for alliance with the south south. It's either they have ulterior motives or they simply know they are useless and irrelevant without the South South. The igbos somehow feel the south south is their territory that was cut into two by the Hausa and Yoruba, so they feel they have a useless obligation not only to join the two territory as one, but to also be the sole leader of the two regions like they once were before the civil war.
Re: Open Letter To South _south Brethren - Donald Ekpo #4 by Amarabae(f): 6:33pm On Mar 15, 2017
victorvezx:

Don't mind them, I have never seen any Niger delta person or person from the south south cry so desperately for alliance with the south east. Non. It is only the igbos from the south east that keeps to beg for alliance with the south south. It's either they have ulterior motives or they simply know they are useless and irrelevant without the South South. The igbos somehow feel the south south is their territory that was cut into two by the Hausa and Yoruba, so they feel they have a useless obligation not only to join the two territory as one, but to also be the sole leader of the two regions like they once were before the civil war.
there are Igbos in south south, so trying to eradicate anything Igbo from south south is a flawed analogy.
So I am talking abt South East and South South, lets maintain political terminology.
IGBO is an ethnical terminology and is not needed in this argument.

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Re: Open Letter To South _south Brethren - Donald Ekpo #4 by ESDKING: 6:35pm On Mar 15, 2017
victorvezx:

Don't mind them, I have never seen any Niger delta person or person from the south south cry so desperately for alliance with the south east. Non. It is only the igbos from the south east that keeps to beg for alliance with the south south. It's either they have ulterior motives or they simply know they are useless and irrelevant without the South South. The igbos somehow feel the south south is their territory that was cut into two by the Hausa and Yoruba, so they feel they have a useless obligation not only to join the two territory as one, but to also be the sole leader of the two regions like they once were before the civil war.


Let it sink inside your skull that SS is not a tribe. The people you refer as SS still have Igbo indigenes among them.Go to Rivers, A/Ibom, Delta etc even in some parts of Kogi and Benue. Igbos are not only in five States.

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Re: Open Letter To South _south Brethren - Donald Ekpo #4 by victorvezx(m): 7:24pm On Mar 15, 2017
Amarabae:
there are Igbos in south south, so trying to eradicate anything Igbo from south south is a flawed analogy.
So I am talking abt South East and South South, lets maintain political terminology.
IGBO is an ethnical terminology and is not needed in this argument.
Igbos are in the south south but they are minority there like the other tribes. The way they boast on nairaland u will think they are the majority there also like in the south east. They act like they own south south while the Ijaw are the once calling the shots.
Re: Open Letter To South _south Brethren - Donald Ekpo #4 by victorvezx(m): 7:27pm On Mar 15, 2017
ESDKING:


Let it sink inside your skull that SS is not a tribe. The people you refer as SS still have Igbo indigenes among them.Go to Rivers, A/Ibom, Delta etc even in some parts of Kogi and Benue. Igbos are not only in five States.
Yea I know, but I won't deny the fact that there are igbos there, but the igbos are not the majority in the south south, and that's the truth, no matter how u lie. I wonder what makes u people think u own the south south

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