Re: The Northern Counter-coup Of 1966: The Full Story Without Bias! by Katsumoto: 1:39am On Jul 27, 2011 |
I noticed that those who disagree with there being an Igbo agenda from the first coup, completely ignored the post below. You are free to verify from other sources apart from those listed in the post. Katsumoto:
Everyone knows that the January coup was bad but it is also pertinent to look at some of the actions taken by Ironsi after coming to power forcefully and suspending the Nigerian consitution.
1. Appointments
Chief of Staff (Supreme Headquarters) – Ogundipe (West) Chief of Army (Staff) – Gowon (North) Chief of Staff (NAF),Lt. Col.George Kurubo (East, non-Igbo) Commanding Officer, 2 Bde, Lt. Col. H. Njoku (East, Igbo) Commanding Officer, 2 Bn, Major H. Igboba (Midwest, Igbo) Commanding Officer, Abeokuta Garrison, Major G. Okonweze (Midwest, Igbo) Commanding Officer, 4 Bn, Major Nzefili (Midwest, Igbo) -Rejected by Northern troops and replaced by Joe Akahan Commanding Officer, Federal Guards, Major Ochei (Midwest, Igbo) Commanding Officer, 1 Bn, Major D. Ogunewe (East, Igbo) Commanding Officer, 1 Bde, Lt. ColW. Bassey (East, non-Igbo) Commanding Officer, 3 Bn, Major Okoro (East, Igbo) Commanding Officer, Depot, Major F. Akagha (East, Igbo) Commanding Officer, 5 Bn,Major M. Shuwa (North)
2. After the Police completed its interrogation, the January coup suspects were transported to different prisons in the South but mainly in the East
3. A court-martial panel was nominated, headed by Lt. Colonel Conrad Nwawo (Nzeogwu’s friend and the man responsible for negotiating Nzeogwu’s surrender). Yet every time this panel was to sit, directives came from Supreme headquarters to postpone
4. The deaths of the victims in January, apart from Balewa, were not announced until after Ironsi was overthrown, leaving room for rumours and innuendos.
5. Ironsi’s advisory team comprised Francis Nwokedi, Pius Okigbo, and Lt. Colonel Patrick Anwunah
6. Ironsi made Nwokedi the sole commissioner forthe establishment of an administrative machinery for a unified Nigeria
7. Ironsi abolished the compulsory Hausa test for civil service positions in the North, meaning that non-Hausa speaking people could take positions in the North.
8. Ironsi promulgated decree 34 which divided Nigeria into 35 provinces and made all civil servants part of a unified civil service despite being advised not to do so by Katsina, Gowon, Bassey, and Kam Salem. The day after the promulgation of decree 34, Lt. Col.Ojukwu publicly announced in Enugu that on the basis of seniority, Igbo civil servants would be transferred to other regions and Lagos.
9. The Drummermagazine June publication contained two provocative articles; “Why Nigeria Exploded” by Nelson Ottah which allegedly derided northern leaders,and “Sir Ahmadu rose in his shrouds and spoke from the dead” by Coz Idapo, which allegedly featured a cartoon in which the reverred late Premier was asking for forgiveness from Idapo. These articles were blamed for the May 1966 riot in some Northern cities which led to approximately 600 Igbo deaths
10. Offensive photographs showing Major Nzeogwu standing on the late Sardauna of Sokoto were said to be distributed in the open including market places.Some Igbos were even alleged to have worn stickers to that effect and were eager, in conversations with northerners, to point to Nzeogwu saying ‘Shi ne maganin ku”, meaning “he is the one who can knock sense into you”.Grammophone records with machine gun sounds were released, to remind Northerners, it is said, of the bullets that felled their leaders in January. If this wasn’t true, why did General Ironsi issue orders that anyone displaying provocative pictures or singing offensive songs would be arrested for incitement and would face 3 months imprisonment or 50 pounds fine or both (Decree 40)?
11. An Army company was deployed to Sokoto as a permanent garrison allegedly under an Igbo Major.
12. Shehu Shagari was detained and questioned for three days in Lagos about questions over NPC funds. The houses of other NPC chieftains were also searched.
13. Eleven (11) Majors were promoted substantive Lt. Cols while fourteen (14) Majors were made temporary Lt. Cols.Of these, 19 were Igbo or Igbo speaking easterners and midwesterners, 5 northerners (Katsina, Akahan, Shuwa, Muhammed, Haruna) and one Yoruba (Olutoye). These promotions happened even though there was a moratorium on promotions in the military.
14. In his biography titled“Power with Civility” by Oleka and Ofondu (Neskon 1998), Rear Admiral Ndubuisi Kanu, an Igbo easterner who later fought in the Biafran Navy, states:“That Igbos, including soldiers in the barracks, teased their Northern counterparts about what they regarded as swapping of fortune, served to fray tempers.It was not long before Northerners vented their spleen on their Igbo guests. An SinParty of killing of Igbos throughout all nooks and crannies of the Northern Region kicked off.”In his book, “Revolution in Nigeria, Another View” late General Garba describes how his soldiers in the Federal Guard broke down in tears in Jankara market in Lagos when they heard the album “Machine Gun” .General Danjuma (rtd) says even the wives of Igbo soldiers were taunting the wives of Northern soldiers.
15. In an interview back in the early eighties with Radio Kaduna, then Brigadier (later Major General) Mamman Vatsa, now deceased, is quoted by Elaigwu as saying: “The July coup was motivated by the actions in January 1966 whereby an illegal action was legitimized.If you do that, you expect a counter reaction. July 29, 1966 was a reaction to an inaction against an illegal action….Right from the beginning, the GOC, Nigerian Army regarded these people as ‘rebels’.If that was accepted, the immediate thing was to take the necessary action to get them disciplined legally. If this was not done, then the GOC was condoning indiscipline or treason.Rather than punish men from his army who were on mutiny, he was now asking the civilian government to hand over to him before he could maintain discipline in an organization of which he was in charge….In the first instance, he shouldn’t even have taken over the power……”
Sources 1. “General Ironsi’s trust in his friends leads Nigeria back to tribal strife” – Walter Schwarz 2. OPERATION ‘AURE’:Northern Nigerian Military Counter-Rebellion July, 1966 - Nowa Omoigui
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Re: The Northern Counter-coup Of 1966: The Full Story Without Bias! by Chyz2: 3:34am On Jul 27, 2011 |
[size=13pt]The coup that failed[/size]
Two coups were probably brewing during the first fortnight of 1966. the evidence for the one that did not occur is largely circumstantial; but subsequent assertions that the coup of 15 january baulked another coup scheduled for 17 january are certainly very plausible. the other coup which was planned would have begun with a brief reign of terror in the niger delta of the eastern region, headed by a student at nsukka university, isaac boro, who was supplied with funds for the purpose. this would have offered prime minister balewa the chance of declaring a state of emergency in the east. simultaneously, according to the charges later made in the west, units officered by northerners were to carry out a 'ruthless blitz' against opposition (that is, upga) elements in that region, the two-pronged action would have broken the upga opposition party, again reinforced akintola in the premiership of a region which by now, hated him, and left the sardauna of sokoto's nna party in supreme control of nigeria. a number of moves were made which seem to give credence to this. on 13 january sir ahmadu bello, who had been on a pilgrimage to mecca, returned to his northern capital kaduna. the following day there was a secret meeting between him, akintola who flew north for the day, and the commanding officer of the first brigade, a. pro-akintola western officer, brigadier ademolegun. previously the federal defence minister, a npc northerner, had ordered the army commander major-general ironsi to take his accumulated leave; the inspector-general of police, mr. louis edet, another easterner, was also ordered on leave; the deputy inspector general, mr. m. roberts, a westerner, was sent into premature retirement to be replaced by the hausa alhaji kam salem, who would thus have been in control of the federal police by 17 january. the president, dr. azikiwe, was in england on a health cure. if that was the plot, it failed because it was pre-ceded by the other coup, plotted in equal secrecy by a small group of junior officers, led mainly though certainly not exclusively by men of eastern origin. in kaduna the group leader was the left-leaning and highly idealistic major chukwuma nzeogwu, an ibo from the midwest region who had lived all his life in the north and spoke hausa better than ibo. on the evening of the 14th this brilliant but erratic chief instructor at the nigerian defence academy of kaduna led a small detachment of soldiers, mostly hausas, out of town ostensibly on routine exercises. |
Re: The Northern Counter-coup Of 1966: The Full Story Without Bias! by Chyz2: 3:35am On Jul 27, 2011 |
When they arrived at sir ahmadu's splendid residence nzeogwu told the soldiers they had come to kill the sardauna. they made no demur. 'they had bullets. . , if they had disagreed, they could have shot me,' he said later. they stormed the gate killing three of the sardauna's guards and losing one of their own number in the process. inside the compound they shelled the palace with mortars; then nzeogwu tossed a hand grenade at the main door, coming too close in the process and injuring his hand. once inside the sardauna was shot along with two or three house servants. elsewhere in kaduna another group entered the house of brigadier ademolegun and shot him and his wife while in bed. a third group killed colonel shodeinde, the yoruba second-in-command at the defence academy. with that the bloodshed in the north was over. in the afternoon of 15 january nzeogwu broadcast from kaduna radio, telling his listeners, 'our enemies are the political profiteers, swindlers, men in high and low places that seek bribes and demand ten per cent, those that seek to keep the country permanently divided so that they can remain in office as ministers and vips of waste, the tribalists, the nepotists, those that make the country look big for nothing before international circles.' later he said privately: 'our purpose was to change our country and make it a place we could be proud to call our home, not to wage war, . tribal considerations were completely out of our minds at this stage.' in lagos the coup was in the hands of major emmanuel ifeajuana, a young ibo who had had a taste of fame for his earlier performances as an athlete.
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Re: The Northern Counter-coup Of 1966: The Full Story Without Bias! by Chyz2: 3:37am On Jul 27, 2011 |
some hours after dark he drove into lagos with several truckloads of troops from abeokuta. barracks. small detachments went off all over lagos seeking their objectives. three senior army officers of northern origin, brigadier maimalari, commanding the second brigade, lieutenant-colonel pam, the adjutant-general, and lieutenant-colonel largema, commanding the fourth battalion, were killed, the first two at their homes and the third at the ikoyi hotel where he was staying. major ifeajuana himself went after the politicians. the prime minister, balewa, was arrested at his home and bundled into the back of a mercedes where he was made to lie on the floor. the finance minister, chief festus okotie-eboh, a mid-westerner who had made himself a bye-word for corruption and venality even in nigerian politics, was shot at his home and his body dumped in the boot of the mercedes. the troops also went after dr. kingley mbadiwe, the ibo minister of trade, who escaped across open gardens and hid in the empty state house, home of the absent president azikiwe. it was the one place the soldiers never thought of searching. the last casualty in lagos that night was another ibo, major arthur unegbu. he was in charge of the ammunition store at ikeja barracks, and was shot dead for refusing to hand over the keys of the armoury to the dissidents. |
Re: The Northern Counter-coup Of 1966: The Full Story Without Bias! by Chyz2: 3:39am On Jul 27, 2011 |
at ibadan, capital of the west, the obvious target was the hated akintola. soldiers surrounding his house were met by a volley of automatic rifle fire. the premier kept his own private arsenal. after storming the house, during which three soldiers were killed, akintola was dragged out badly wounded and finished off . elsewhere in ibadan his deputy premier chief fani kayode was arrested. as the soldiers dragged him away he cried, 'i knew that the army was going to come, but i did not know that was the way they would come'. so far the coup had gone roughly according to, plan. by the small hours the insurgent officers, if they had consolidated, could have, claimed to control the capitals of the north, west, and lagos, the federal capital. benin city, the capital of the tiny midwest region, seems to have been left out of their plan; not without reason, for the midwest could have been taken later. even from eye-witnesses and participants, versions of what ,exactly went wrong vary considerably; one can only try to draw some kind of coherent account from the varying impressions. major ifeajuana and his co-plotters in lagos seem to have headed back towards abeokuta in the mercedes,dumping the bodies of balewa and okotie-eboh on the way. |
Re: The Northern Counter-coup Of 1966: The Full Story Without Bias! by Chyz2: 3:41am On Jul 27, 2011 |
it is still largely presumed that balewa was shot, although one eyewitness has sworn he died of a heart-attack. the bodies were found on the abeokuta road a week later. ifeajuana and his collaborator in lagos, major david okafor, commander of the federal guard, seem to have made the crass error of not leaving anyone of calibre in the federal capital when they left. this was largely why the plot failed, coupled with the brisk action of the g.o.c., major-general ironsi. the result was that when the ibadan group swept into lagos shortly after dawn with the body of akintola and the trussed but living form of fani-kayode in the back of the car, the city had changed hands. the ibadan group were arrested by soldiers loyal to ironsi, and fani-kayode was freed. meanwhile ifeajuana and okafor realized there was no officer to take charge of enugu, capital of the east and the last of the four cities they aimed to control. they then set off in the mercedes, followed by a volkswagen with some soldiers, for the 400-mile cross-country drive to enugu. |
Re: The Northern Counter-coup Of 1966: The Full Story Without Bias! by Chyz2: 3:42am On Jul 27, 2011 |
one of the props for the idea that the coup of 15 january was an all-ibo affair aimed at bringing about ibo domination of nigeria has always been that there was no coup in enugu. the evidence does not support this theory. troops of the first battalion, garrisoning enugu, moved against the premier's lodge at 2 a.m.; they surrounded it, but waited for orders before attacking the house and its occupants. the commanding officer, lieutenant-colonel adekunle fajuyi, a yoruba, was away on a course; the second-in-command, major david ejoor, a midwesterner, was in lagos. the troops, not predominantly ibo as has been suggested but largely middlebelt infantrymen from the northern region, crouched round the house as dawn rose and waited for orders. meanwhile ifeajuana and okafor were speeding across country to give those orders.no man did more to foil the coup than the army g.o.c. major-general ironsi. himself an ibo from umuahia, he had joined the army as a boy soldier and come up through the ranks. he was a big bull of a man, a thorough-going professional soldier who knew where his duty lay and stood no nonsenseit seems he too was destined for death that night. earlier he had been at a party given by brigadier maimalari and had gone on to another party on the mailboat aureol, moored at lagos docks. when he returned home after midnight his telephone was ringing. it was colonel pam, to say there was something afoot. |
Re: The Northern Counter-coup Of 1966: The Full Story Without Bias! by Chyz2: 3:43am On Jul 27, 2011 |
minutes later pam was dead. 1ronsi put down the phone as his driver, a young hausa soldier, came in to say there were troops driving through the streets. ironsi moved fast. he jumped into his car and ordered the driver to take him straight to ikeja barracks, the biggest barracks in the area and home of the army headquarters. he was stopped by a roadblock of ifeajuana's soldiers who pointed their guns at him. ironsi climbed out, stood up straight and roared 'get out of my way'. they moved. at ikeja he headed for the regimental sergeant-major's quarters and rallied the garrison. from ikeja he sent out a stream of orders throughout the morning. troops loyal to him and the government took over. major ejoor, reporting to him just before dawn, was ordered to get back to enugu and re- sume command as fast as he could. ejoor went to nearby ikeja airport, took a light plane, and headed for enugu airport. on the way he overtook ifeajuana's mercedes driving along the road below. ejoor, arriving first in enugu, took over the garrison and withdrew the troops around dr. okpara's home. at 10 a.m. the same troops stood guard of honour as a fearful premier said good-bye at the airport to president makarios of cyprus who had been finishing a tour of nigeria in enugu. later dr. okpara was allowed to leave for his hometown of umuahia. in the midwest dissident troops arrived at the premier's lodge at 10 a.m., but were withdrawn on orders from general ironsi at 2 p.m. the coup had failed. ifeajuana and okafor arrived in enugu to find ejoor in the saddle. they hid in the house of a local chemist, whence okafor was arrested; ifeajuana fled to ghana, later
to return and join the other plotters in prison. it was not a bloodless coup, but it was far from a bloodbath. the premiers of the north, the west and the federation were dead, as was one federal minister. among senior army officers three northerners, two wcsterners and two easterners were dead. (another ibo major had been killed, this time by loyal troops who thought wrongly that he was among the plotters.) apart from that a handful of civilians including the wife of one of the officers and some houseboys from sir ahmadu bello's household, together with less than a dozen soldiers, had died. nzeogwu maintained later that there should have been no deaths at all, but that some of his colleagues became over-enthusiastic. |
Re: The Northern Counter-coup Of 1966: The Full Story Without Bias! by Chyz2: 3:45am On Jul 27, 2011 |
in lagos general ironsi had taken command of the army and had restored order, but it was not that which put him later in power. it was the reaction of the population as much as anything else that made quite plain to all that the reign of the politicians was at an end. this public reaction, often forgotten today, gives the lie most firmly of all to the idea that the january coup was a factional affair. in kaduna a throng of cheering hausas sacked the palace of the dead autocrat. a smiling major hassan usman katsina, son of the fulani emir of katsina, sat beside nzeogwu at a press conference prior to which the latter had named hassan military governor of the north. alhaji ali akilu, head of the northern civil service offered his support to nzeogwu. but the ibo major's star was falling. in lagos and the rest of the south, ironsi held the reins and would have no truck with the"plotters. but he had the sense to realize that, although what the plotters had done went against all his own training and inclinations, they had still performed a popular service and had a lot of mass support. on saturday afternoon, 15 january, he asked the acting president to appoint a deputy premier from whom, according to the constitation, ironsi could take valid orders. but the politicians procrastinated through into the sunday morning, and when the cabinet finally met he had to tell them that he could not ensure the loyalty of his officers and prevent civil war unless he himself took over. in this he was almost certainly right, as numerous officers have made known since. even those who had not taken part in the coup would not have accepted a return to the rule of the now thoroughly discredited politicians. |
Re: The Northern Counter-coup Of 1966: The Full Story Without Bias! by Chyz2: 3:46am On Jul 27, 2011 |
the situation had deteriorated, too. nzeogwu, realizing his colleagues in the south had muffed their job, took a column of troops and drove south, and reached jebba on the niger river. if the garrisons of the south had split into warring factions for or against nzeogwu, civil war could have been the only outcome. fifteen minutes before midnight ironsi broadcast from lagos that since the government had ceased to function, the armed forces had been asked to form an interim military government and that he, general ironsi, had been invested with authority as head of the federal military government. the crisis swung in his favour. the army obeyed his orders. nzeogwu withdrew to kaduna barracks whence he too later emerged to go into custody. it may be that the nigerian cabinet (meeting under the chairmanship of alhaji dipcharima, transport minister, a hausa, and senior npc minister after balewa) had no option but to accede to general ironsi's request for authority to take over. but it is equally true that ironsi had no choice but to make the request, if civil war was to be averted between rival units of the army. |
Re: The Northern Counter-coup Of 1966: The Full Story Without Bias! by Chyz2: 3:47am On Jul 27, 2011 |
This was important for three reasons; it explains why the accusation that the whole affair was an ibo plot to overthrow constitutional rule and install ibo domination of nigeria was an invention adduced long after the coup and at variance with the facts; it belies the later suggestion that subsequent massacres of easterners living in the north were excusable or at any rate explicable on the grounds that 'they started it all'; and it throws light on the conviction to this day of lieutenant colonel ojukwu that ironsi's accession to power was both constitutional and legal while that of lieutenant-colonel gowon six months later after ironsi's murder was illegal and therefore invalid. |
Re: The Northern Counter-coup Of 1966: The Full Story Without Bias! by jason123: 3:52am On Jul 27, 2011 |
;d ;d ;d ;d ;d |
Re: The Northern Counter-coup Of 1966: The Full Story Without Bias! by Katsumoto: 3:56am On Jul 27, 2011 |
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Re: The Northern Counter-coup Of 1966: The Full Story Without Bias! by Chyz2: 4:01am On Jul 27, 2011 |
Katsumoto:
LWKMD
Chyz, I hope you are not done?
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Re: The Northern Counter-coup Of 1966: The Full Story Without Bias! by Katsumoto: 4:03am On Jul 27, 2011 |
Chyz*:
At least post the source or author. |
Re: The Northern Counter-coup Of 1966: The Full Story Without Bias! by Nobody: 4:05am On Jul 27, 2011 |
Katsumoto:
At least post the source or author.
by Biafrans. |
Re: The Northern Counter-coup Of 1966: The Full Story Without Bias! by jason123: 4:06am On Jul 27, 2011 |
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Re: The Northern Counter-coup Of 1966: The Full Story Without Bias! by Katsumoto: 4:08am On Jul 27, 2011 |
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Re: The Northern Counter-coup Of 1966: The Full Story Without Bias! by jason123: 4:15am On Jul 27, 2011 |
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Re: The Northern Counter-coup Of 1966: The Full Story Without Bias! by Katsumoto: 4:20am On Jul 27, 2011 |
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Re: The Northern Counter-coup Of 1966: The Full Story Without Bias! by NegroNtns(m): 4:25am On Jul 27, 2011 |
Chyz,
Did you review the chronological order of events in East and Lagos before you post?
Go back and look at the timing, you suspended the clock on Okpara's movement. |
Re: The Northern Counter-coup Of 1966: The Full Story Without Bias! by Chyz2: 4:39am On Jul 27, 2011 |
Katsumoto: Bear in mind that there is a distinction between those involved in the planning and those involved by circumstance.
Majors Ifeajuna Nzeogwu Okafor Anuforo Chukwuka Aghaya Onwuatuegwu Ademoyega Chude-Sokei Obienu
Captains Gbulie Nwobosi Oji Udeaja Ude
Lieutenants Oyewole Adeleke Ezeigbo
Second Lieutenants Azubuogor Nwokocha Ojukwu Onyefuru Igweze Egbibor Olafimihan Ngwuluka Nweke Ikejiofor
NB. Major Aghaya was also arrested but his involvement remains indeterminate. He wasn't involved in the execution but he was aware of the coup
MajorsIfeajuna ( From Onitsha, Anioma)<---Yes he is my brother too. Onitsha people are our brothers. Nzeogwu ( Midwest) Okafor ( Midwest) Anuforo ( Midwest) Chukwuka ( Midwest) Aghaya ( West) Onwuatuegwu ( Midwest) Ademoyega ( West) Chude-Sokei ( Midwest) Obienu ( Midwest) Anioma Towns: Anioma can adequately be grouped into Ukwuani (mostly spoken by the Ndokwa and Ukwuani), Enu-Ani (Ibusa, Ogwashi-Uku, Asaba, parts of Igbodo, Ilah, Issele-Uku etc), Ika (Agbor) and Aboh. There are Anioma people in Edo state of Nigeria (Igbanke), Anambra state ( Onitsha, Ozobulu, Obosi, Oraifite) Imo state (Oguta), Rivers state (Ndoni, Ogba) amongst several others. The British following the defeat of the Anioma people by them during the years of Ekwumekwu wars imperialistically carried out this great harm of balkanization. <---Yes, the only reason Onitsha is in the "East" is because of british balkanization. http://www.conversas.org/anioma-people-towns-and-communitiesLets focus on the majors above,because according to you, the other plotters were just "following orders". From the list of the "Igbo coup" why were there no "Nwa Onye Igbo"(Igbos outside of Anioma) included in the plot? These are the Igbos refered to "Core Igbos"?<---This is something for you to think about. Also your claim about Zik and Ifeajuna being cousins. It way be unaware to you, or at least up until now, that they are both Aniomas and were both aware of their history(Anioma history) which included the 31 year war that their fore fathers put up against British imperialistic powers;which ended less that even 55 years before the coup plot. This is more that likely where whatever affinity they may have had with each other at a certain point came from. It is better to drop the accusation of their being blood-related or family(apart from them being Aniomas). Friendships don't always last, they dim, and sometimes end completely based on ones integrity. You do not in any way know the circumstance between these two men in their latter times. Accusations are just that without solid proof. In fact, as a benefit of a doubt becaus maybe you know something about their families that we all don't, how are the two related? Is it by their fathers being brothers, mothers being sisters, one's father is the brother to the other's mother,etc.? These are questions that will have to come up and the evidence provided. But of course, I'm not perfect. Correct me where, if, I'm wrong. |
Re: The Northern Counter-coup Of 1966: The Full Story Without Bias! by jason123: 4:44am On Jul 27, 2011 |
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Re: The Northern Counter-coup Of 1966: The Full Story Without Bias! by Katsumoto: 4:49am On Jul 27, 2011 |
Chyz*:
Majors Ifeajuna (From Onitsha, Anioma)<---Yes he'sni my brother too. Onitsha people our our brothers. Nzeogwu (Midwest) Okafor (Midwest) Anuforo (Midwest) Chukwuka (Midwest) Aghaya (West) Onwuatuegwu (Midwest) Ademoyega (West) Chude-Sokei (Midwest) Obienu (Midwest)
Anioma Towns:
Anioma can adequately be grouped into Ukwuani (mostly spoken by the Ndokwa and Ukwuani), Enu-Ani (Ibusa, Ogwashi-Uku, Asaba, parts of Igbodo, Ilah, Issele-Uku etc), Ika (Agbor) and Aboh. There are Anioma people in Edo state of Nigeria (Igbanke), Anambra state (Onitsha, Ozobulu, Obosi, Oraifite) Imo state (Oguta), Rivers state (Ndoni, Ogba) amongst several others.
The British following the defeat of the Anioma people by them during the years of Ekwumekwu wars imperialistically carried out this great harm of balkanization. <---Yes, the only reason Onitsha is in the "East" is because of british balkanization.
http://www.conversas.org/anioma-people-towns-and-communities
Lets focus on the majors above,because according to you, the other plotters were just "following orders". From the list of the "Igbo coup" why were there no "Nwa Onye Igbo"(Igbos outside of Anioma) included in the plot? These are the Igbos refered to "Core Igbos"?<---This is something for you to think about.
Also your claim about Zik and Ifeajuna being cousins. It way be unaware to you, or at least up until now, that they are both Aniomas and were both aware of their history(Anioma history) which included the 31 year war that their fore fathers put up against British imperialistic powers. This is more that likely where whatever affinity they may have had with each other at a certain point came from. It is better to drop the accusation of their being blood-related or family(apart from them being Aniomas). Friendships don't always last, they dim, and sometimes end completely based on ones integrity. You do not in any way know the circumstance between these two men in their latter times. Accusations are just that without solid proof. In fact, as a benefit of a doubt becaus maybe you know something about their families that we all don't, how are the two related? Is it by their fathers being brothers, mothers being sisters, one's father is the brother to the other's mother,etc.? These are questions that will have to come up and the evidence provided.
But of course, I'm not perfect. Correct me where, if, I'm wrong.
Dude, No one cares whether they were Anioma, Ngwa, Owerri, etc to you; to the rest of the world, they were Igbo. Plain and simple; you can't sort out the issue of who came from where amongst yourselves. Quit debating like a dummy. Also, you are a bloody liar. Anuforo is from Imo Chukwuka is from Nnobi in Anambra Onwuategwu is from Nnewi, Anambra Chude-Sokei is from Onitsha Obienu is from Oba, Anambra Oji (one of the original three planners) is from Umuahia, Abia. Nzeogwu is from Okpanam, Delta Ifeajuna is from Onitsha (u are correct about this) Okafor is the only one I don't know where he comes from. We all know Ademoyega is Yoruba, so no point. Whether he was Ijebu, Egba, Ekiti; he was a Yoruba son. Aghaya was not a plotter; he was arrested but he wasn't prosecuted like a few others. So it was the British that separated Onitsha from Asaba, and not River Niger? It appears you keep beating your record. We are still waiting for the author of that crap you posted. jason123:
Chei! this guy came back sha!
Yes he came back for more thrashing. 1 Like |
Re: The Northern Counter-coup Of 1966: The Full Story Without Bias! by NegroNtns(m): 4:56am On Jul 27, 2011 |
Lets focus on the majors above,because according to you, the other plotters were just "following orders". From the list of the "Igbo coup" why were there no "Nwa Onye Igbo"(Igbos outside of Anioma) included in the plot? These are the Igbos refered to "Core Igbos"?<---This is something for you to think about. -------------
I thought Igbo language is the common thread that defines the sons of Igbo soil. Which one is this legitimate igbo and bastard igbo? Sound like Hausa bakwai and Banza bakwai here. |
Re: The Northern Counter-coup Of 1966: The Full Story Without Bias! by henry101(m): 4:58am On Jul 27, 2011 |
Katsumoto:
Dude,
No one cares whether they were Anioma, Ngwa, Owerri, etc to you; to the rest of the world, they were Igbo. Plain and simple; you can't sort out the issue of who came from where amongst yourself. Quit debating like a dummy.
Also, you are a bloody liar.
Anuforo is from Imo Chukwuka is from Nnobi in Anambra Onwuategwu is from Nnewi, Anambra Chude-Sokei is from Onitsha Obienu is from Oba, Anambra Oji (one of the original three planners) is from Umuahia, Abia. Nzeogwu is from Okpanam, Delta Ifeajuna is from Onitsha (u are correct about this) Okafor is the only one I don't know where he comes from. We all know Ademoyega is Yoruba, so no point. Whether he was Ijebu, Egba, Ekiti; he was a Yoruba son.
Aghaya was not a plotter; he was arrested but he wasn't prosecuted like a few others.
So it was the British that separated Onitsha from Asaba, and not River Niger? It appears you keep beating your record.
We are still waiting for the author of that crap you posted.
Yes he came back for more thrashing.
I think He's from Delta. ika to be precise. (Will confirm) |
Re: The Northern Counter-coup Of 1966: The Full Story Without Bias! by Katsumoto: 5:03am On Jul 27, 2011 |
henry101:
I think He's from Delta. ika to be precise. (Will confirm)
That’s how he recruited”. Major Tim Onwuatuegwu bought Nzeogwu’s anti-government line. [size=14pt] Onwuatuegwu was an Igbo from Nnewi and a colleague of Major Nzeogwu at the Nigerian Military Training College, where Onwuatuegwu was also an instructor.[/size] Onwuatuegwu was tagged a dull, parade ground “goody two shoes” type by one his own course-mates at Sandhurst but fell under Nzeogwu’s spell and was convinced enough to break into the house of, and shoot his own Brigade commander during the coup. http://www.gamji.com/article5000/NEWS5254.htm |
Re: The Northern Counter-coup Of 1966: The Full Story Without Bias! by Chyz2: 5:18am On Jul 27, 2011 |
Katsumoto:
Dude,
No one cares whether they were Anioma, Ngwa, Owerri, etc to you; to the rest of the world, they were Igbo. Plain and simple; you can't sort out the issue of who came from where amongst yourself. Quit debating like a dummy.
Also, you are a bloody liar.
Anuforo is from Imo Chukwuka is from Nnobi in Anambra Onwuategwu is from Nnewi, Anambra Chude-Sokei is from Onitsha Obienu is from Oba, Anambra Oji (one of the original three planners) is from Umuahia, Abia. Nzeogwu is from Okpanam, Delta Ifeajuna is from Onitsha (u are correct about this) Okafor is the only one I don't know where he comes from. We all know Ademoyega is Yoruba, so no point. Whether he was Ijebu, Egba, Ekiti; he was a Yoruba son.
Aghaya was not a plotter; he was arrested but he wasn't prosecuted like a few others.
So it was the British that separated Onitsha from Asaba, and not River Niger? It appears you keep beating your record.
We are still waiting for the author of that crap you posted.
Yes he came back for more thrashing.
" More thrashing"? Not even, I checked whatever incorrect statement that was probable with my last sentence. Also, I see that you are now throwing in names, Lol. Where did " Oji" come from? . How come he wasnt in your first list? By you addingin oji, whose to say that there weren't other "unknown" majors even more of non-igbo decent? Bad move,dude. Why would anything else from you be regarded as truth? " No one cares whether they were Anioma, Ngwa, Owerri, etc to you; to the rest of the world, they were Igbo. Plain and simple; you can't sort out the issue of who came from where amongst yourself. Quit debating like a dummy."<--------------------------This comment that you made was a bad move, bro. It leaves one to suggest that you have some sort of animosity again Igbos are an agenda. Not Good. Also, where you get the hometowns of some of the people you listed puzzles me. Maybe you should chect the roots of Obienu and Onwuategwu(especially these two),etc. I am unaware that people in anambra of non-anioma origin carry those names. Katsumoto:
So it was the British that separated Onitsha from Asaba, and not River Niger? It appears you keep beating your record.
I never said or posted such. If I did, kindly point it out. Katsumoto:
Aghaya was not a plotter; he was arrested but he wasn't prosecuted like a few others.
Who were those "few others"? |
Re: The Northern Counter-coup Of 1966: The Full Story Without Bias! by Katsumoto: 5:25am On Jul 27, 2011 |
Chyz,
I hope you have not gone to the author of that rubbish article to manufacture another article with all the plotters coming from Ijebu? Chyz*:
"More thrashing"? Not even, I check whatever incorrect statement that was probable with my last sentence. Also, I see that you are now throwing in names, Lol. Where did "[b]Oji" come from? . How come he wasnt in your first list? By you addingin oji, [/b]whose to say that there weren't other "unknown" majors even more of non-igbo decent? Bad move,dude. Why would anything else from you be regarded as truth?
"No one cares whether they were Anioma, Ngwa, Owerri, etc to you; to the rest of the world, they were Igbo. Plain and simple; you can't sort out the issue of who came from where amongst yourself. Quit debating like a dummy."<--------------------------This comment that you made was a bad move, bro. It leaves one to suggest that you have some sort of animosity again Igbos are an agenda. Not Good.
Also, where you get the hometowns of some of the people you listed puzzles me. Maybe you should chect the roots of Obienu and Onwuategwu(especially these two),etc. I am unaware that people in anambra of non-anioma origin carry those names.
I never said or posted such. If I did, kindly point it out.
Look at the list I posted again and see whether Oji is listed there under Captains. You are free to manufacture animosity on my part if it suits you. As far as you are concerned, I am a bigot but I could care less. That is what people like you resort to when facts are handed to you. I was merely stating that it is dumb to expect non-easterners to care about sub-groups. In Nigeria, you are either Yoruba, Hausa, Fulani, Urhobo, Igbo, etc. Most people don't go down to sub-groups or villages. To hammer on that is plain disingenuous on your part. They were Igbo, end of story. Like I said, Okafor is the only individual that I don't know the particular area that he is from. The rest, I got from books. You should try reading them (books) every now and then. If you did, you wouldn't be asking whether I am sure about what I posted. 1 Like |
Re: The Northern Counter-coup Of 1966: The Full Story Without Bias! by NegroNtns(m): 5:32am On Jul 27, 2011 |
You mean his state, right? But no doubt he is also Igbo. |
Re: The Northern Counter-coup Of 1966: The Full Story Without Bias! by NegroNtns(m): 5:33am On Jul 27, 2011 |
Hey don't respond to that. I'm sleepy! |
Re: The Northern Counter-coup Of 1966: The Full Story Without Bias! by Katsumoto: 5:34am On Jul 27, 2011 |
Negro_Ntns:
You mean his state, right? But no doubt he is also Igbo.
Yes, he is Igbo but I don't know his state of origin. Some of these chaps assume wrongly that others don't read books like them and then attempt to twist facts. Negro_Ntns:
Hey don't respond to that. I'm sleepy!
lol, ok |