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Fani Kayode Breaks Out From The Chains Again! - Politics - Nairaland

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Fani Kayode Breaks Out From The Chains Again! by chino11(m): 10:55pm On Dec 07, 2013
In an interview with a newspaper on November 30, 2013, Dr. Omololu Olunloyo, a great nationalist, a two-time former Commisioner of Education of the old Western Region, a former Governor of Oyo State, one of our few remaining elderstatesman and a man that played a prominent role in the politics of both the First and Second republics, said the following:

“Chief S.L. Akintola was the supreme leader. Chief Obafemi Awolowo left (the Premiership of the Western Region) of his own volition without advice to contest the federal election. In the federal election he contested but he had no alliances. Stubborn, aggressive, very hardworking, visionary leader that Awolowo was, he never understood real politics at any time. In real politics you have to look at the figures, you have to have allies- there are no permanent friends or permanent enemies. You must have some allies. Nigeria is too fragmented for you not to have allies. If you are counting in the presence of someone with nine fingers, you don’t count in the person’s presence and say ‘so you have nine fingers’. We had a brilliant man called S.L. Akintola who understood real politics. Awolowo believed that book knowledge was so important but he (Akintola) knew better. A situation arose- Awolowo wanted to ally with the East and Akintola wanted to align with the North. So there was a crisis”.

These are interesting historical perspectives and insights from a man that was appointed as a Commissioner (or Regional Minister) for a region that comprised of no less than what are seven states of the Federation today (Oyo, Osun, Ekiti, Ondo, Ogun, Edo and Delta) at the tender age of 27. I am not sure that I entirely agree with Olunloyo’s assertion that Awolowo did not appreciate the importance of building bridges with other ethnic groups and forming alliances given the fact that he and his Action Group did build bridges and form an alliance with the ethnic minorities of both the old Northern and Eastern regions and did in fact champion their cause and fight for their rights. Yet that is neither here nor there. The important thing is that we are witnesses to an important contribution from a major player and participant to the debate about a period in our history that affected the fortunes of our country in a very real and profound manner.

I say this because it could be argued that the bitter fight that took place between Chief Obafemi Awolowo and Chief S.L. Akintola and their respective supporters throughout the early ’60s, the division within the Action Group and its eventual splitting into two separate and distinct parties, the ugly events in the South-west at the time and the unrestrained and brutal violence that was unleashed by both sides against one another led directly to the first coup d’etat of January 15, 1966. This in turn led to the second coup d’etat of July 29, 1966, to the shocking pogroms and mass killings of the Igbo in the North and ultimately to the Nigerian civil war. It is therefore good news when those that participated at the highest level of governance at the time and that are living witnesses to those events, like Dr. Omololu Olunloyo, speak out and share their insights and wealth of knowledge with us. I sincerely hope that he will continue to do this and that other participants and witnesses from both sides of the political divide, like Chief Olaniyun Ajayi, Chief Ayo Adebanjo, Chief Richard Akinjide, Chief Ayo Fasoranti will also share their views and insights with us as well.

Agreement
When one considers and reflects on Olunloyo’s words and the entire background of the Awolowo/Akintola feud ultimately one has to make a choice and come to a decision as to who was right and wrong and determine which side was really at fault. Yet many questions still need to be answered before one can take a legitimate and definitive position on this. For example as Mr. Adeniji Mudahir Akinniyi, a young and insightful commentator on facebook, asked ‘’ What was the agreement between Akintola and Awolowo before Awolowo left for the Federal Government poll? Who was the traitor amongst the two? Who is the father of civilization in the South-west? Who is responsible for the socio-political and economic development of the old Western Region? I need answers to these questions before I post my final comment’’.

For the answers to these questions one has to look at the history books even though, as Napoleon Bonaparte once said, ‘’history is more often than not written by the victor and not the vanquished’’. Akinniyi has indeed asked the relevant questions. I know the answers to them but I will not share them here or anywhere else because I will not say or do anything that will resurrect the great division of the past. Suffice it to say that both Awolowo and Akintola were great Yoruba leaders and great men and they were both human beings and were therefore prone to making errors of judgement from time to time. We the Yoruba owe EVERYTHING to them both and it is very unhelpful for our collective cause to attempt to demonise one and idolise the other. Neither of them was a demon or an angel- they both had their faults, strengths and weaknesses. Yet they were both great men.

One of the things that fascinated me about Dr. Olunloyo’s interview and which is historically factual, is what he said about Akintola entering into a political alliance with the North (which was known as the NNA) and Awolowo entering into a political alliance with the East (which was known as UPGA). This was the essential difference in strategy between the two and it represented their respective worldviews. Akintola, who had deep suspicions for the Igbo, felt that the interests of the Yoruba were better protected and served by an alliance with the northern ruling class whilst Awolowo, who had equally deep suspicions for the northern ruling class and the Hausa-Fulani oligarchy, felt that the Yoruba interest was better served and protected by an alliance with the Igbo. The Western Region became the intellectual, spiritual and physical battle ground for the two opposing and conflicting strategies and world views and the rest is history.
*Fani-Kayode

*Fani-Kayode

My only mild criticism of both of these two great Yoruba leaders is that they and their respective supporters and followers in the old Western Region, including Dr. Omololu Olunloyo himself, did not sufficiently understand or appreciate the importance and benefits of building bridges between themselves and avoiding a major conflict. Instead of making peace, making the necessary concessions and attempting to foster unity in the collective interest of the Yoruba nation BOTH camps went for the jugular and an all out war ensued which did not end until May 1 1967 at the Yoruba “Leaders of Thought” meeting in Ibadan. Even after that tensions and suspicion still existed between the two sides for many decades and, to a certain extent, still remain till today.

June 12
The annulment of Chief MKO Abiola’s election of June 12, 1993 by the northern ruling class and ‘’their’’ military dealt a death blow to the Akintola philosophy and strategy of a strong northern and western alliance. However that alliance and trust is being slowly and carefully rebuilt and resurrected today with the recent merger between the ACN, ANPP and CPC and the formation of the APC as a political party. Whether anyone likes to admit it or not the APC essentially represents an alliance between the North, the South- west and the Mid-west. The annulment of Abiola’s June 12 mandate was sad and unfortunate but it had one positive result- it brought the two sides in Yorubaland much closer together in a very meaningful way and from that point on till today they have operated more or less with one accord. This is so even though there is still an uneasy peace between the two camps and their descendants and even though from time to time flashpoints of disagreements are voiced out. My view is that if we are really interested in fostering Yoruba unity and perhaps one day forging and establishing our own nation we must keep that peace at all costs and move forward as one.

Yet given the disposition of Awolowo towards the Igbo as Mr. Jide Olajolu, another young facebook commentator, asked, ‘’is it not ironical that the average Easterner detests the same Awolowo and equates Yoruba nationalism with him?’’
Chief Awolowo

Chief Awolowo

APGA
Jide is absolutely right. The greatest irony of all is that, generally speaking, the Igbo detest Awolowo and have done everything that is physically possible to malign and discredit him since 1967. Yet this was the man whose party went into an alliance with them at the most critical point in our history (between 1964 and 1966) and who urged his faction of the Yoruba to work closely with them even though by that time he was in prison. That is what the UPGA alliance represented- an Igbo/Yoruba alliance which was pitted against the Hausa-Fulani North and Akintola’s pro-northern faction in the West. Awolowo suffered immensely in the hands of the North and the other group in the South-west because his party refused to compromise with them and because they took that position. Yet very few Igbo are prepared to admit this even when they know it to be true and most of them don’t even know it because they were never taught it in their schools. The Igbo do not teach their children all these things and instead they tell them that Awolowo was the devil incarnate, a murderer of children, a genocidal maniac and an Igbo-hater who ended up committing suicide out of frustration. These of course were all lies and well orchestrated fabrications that were designed to rubbish the man’s memory and legacy. They demonised Chief Awolowo, their friend and political ally, and on the night of Jan 15 1966, during the course of the Ifeajuna-led Igbo coup, they murdered Chief S.L. Akintola and Sir Ahmadu Bello (the Premiers of the Western and Northern Regions respectively) who were both their political adversaries, who saw through them at an early stage and who had open contempt for them.

Yet only the Igbo can explain why they hated and still hate Awolowo so much. I say this because he was their friend and ally when the crisis in the Western Region took place. I guess that their hatred stems from the role that he and the Yoruba played during the civil war. Yet I believe that Col. Emeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu, the Igbo rebel leader, made the greatest mistake by attempting to secede at the time that he did (against Awolowo’s advice and better judgement) and, worse still, he attacked the Western Region with his Biafran forces even when many of our people had sympathy for their cause and plight. As a matter of fact the man that led the Biafran forces in the attack against the Midwest and the West was a gallant and courageous Yoruba officer by the name of Col. Victor Banjo who believed strongly in the Igbo cause and who (along with Major Emmanuel Ifeajuna, the leader and arrowhead of the Jan 15, 1966 coup) was later executed by Ojukwu.

Ojukwu betrayal
The truth is that it was Ojukwu that betrayed Awolowo and the Yoruba and not the other way around. I say this because they fired the first shot and tried to overwhelm, capture and enslave us by attacking our territory with their forces. They overwhelmed the people of the Niger Delta and the Midwest very easily but when they got to the gates of the Western Region at a place called Ore they were stopped in their tracks by the Yoruba forces and the famous 3rd Marine Commando which was 98 per cent Yoruba fighting force. That is how they were prevented from entering Yoruba land and they were pushed back, inch by inch, from the Midwest and the Niger Delta area (by the same 3rd Marine Commando) back into the very heart of Igboland from whence they came until they were broken, defeated and forced to surrender. After being attacked the Yoruba had no choice but to fight back and we did so very successfully. Chief Awolowo, General Benjamin Adekunle, General Olusegun Obasanjo, Brigadier Sotomi, Col. Alabi Isama, General Adeyinka Adebayo, General Olutoye, General Ogundipe, General Alani Akinrinade, General Ogunleye and a number of other key Yoruba officers and public servants played a key role in that war and that struggle to protect our people and our territory and I am very proud of their efforts. If not for them we would have been conquered and enslaved and we would all have been speaking Igbo as our first language by now. Finally I believe that Akintola’s position about the Igbo has been vindicated. Both he and Ahmadu Bello were right about them all along and Awolowo obviously did not fully understand them. Today, though he was once their best friend, they hate Awolowo with as much passion as they once hated Akintola and Ahmadu Bello.

‘Achebe’s racist categorisations’
Permit me to make reference to what the late Professor Chinua Achebe had to say about Awolowo and the Yoruba in his last, and most controversial book, entitled, ‘’There Was A Country’’. I will not repeat his words and racist categorisations here but I would urge all those that are interested in it and that can stomach it to go and read those words in the book. I believe that those words reflect the real thinking of most Igbo about the Yoruba even though they tend to make attempts to hide it until they are pushed to the wall and lose their cool. This is proved by the fact that, to date, not one single Igbo leader or commentator of note has condemned the book or disagreed with Achebe’s comments and assessment. As a matter of fact rather than condemn it they have wholeheartedly endorsed and applauded it. The real reasons for the deep hatred that most Igbo have for Awolowo, Akintola and the Yoruba generally can be found in that book. Sadly most of the Igbo youth since the end of the civil war were weaned on such fairytale of genocide and betrayal at the hands of and by the Yoruba. This explains the attitude of many of them and the tendency for them to view even the mildest form of criticism as evidence of ‘’Igbophobia’’ and proof of a deep-seated hatred for the Igbo people. Yet nothing could be further from the truth.

The Yoruba have always been very kind, very generous and very accommodating to the Igbo and history attests to this. As a matter of fact, if the truth is to be told, the unbridled political ambition of the Igbo to dominate and control the whole country and their strong dislike for the Yoruba can be traced back to 1945 when key Igbo leaders like Charles Daddy Onyeama (who was a member of the Legislative Council at the time and who, many years later, went on to become one of the most revered and respected judges in the World Court at the Hague) made some openly racist, provocative and incendiary remarks about what he described as the ‘’inevitability’’ of the Igbo to eventually ‘’dominate Nigeria’’.

‘God of the Igbo’
Two years later, in 1947, this was followed by Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe’s famous speech about the ‘’god of the Igbo’’ who he believed would eventually give them leadership over Nigeria and Africa. These were the deeply offensive sentiments of those that belonged to the Igbo State Union which was the umbrella organisation of all the Igbo at the time and which spoke for every single Igbo in the country. It was this rabid and violent expression of Igbo nationalism and intention to take control of the levers of power in our country at all costs, even at that early stage, that created all our problems in the south. That is where and when tribalism started in the southern Nigeria and the truth is that the Igbo started it. It cost Azikiwe the Western Regional elections in 1951 after the founding of the Action Group that same year. If not for that we would have had an Igbo man as the first Premier of the Western Region in 1951 and Nigeria’s history would have been very different. For more details on this permit me to refer readers to my essay entitled, ‘’The Bitter Truth About The Igbo’’, which was widely published in various newspapers and which can be found in the essay column of my website- www.femifanikayode.org.

Permit me to conclude this essay by making a final point. I believe that it is important for us to know our history and to have a clear understanding about what went on in our past. This is the only way forward if we do not want to repeat the mistakes of that past. Whether we are pro-Akintola or pro-Awolowo does not really matter and whether we are from the North, South, East or West is neither here nor there. The most important thing is for us to be well acquainted with ALL the relevant facts of history after which we can then make an informed judgement about past events and past leaders. Contributions from informed and experienced leaders like Dr. Olunloyo are therefore most welcome even though some may not share all his views or his interpretation and understanding of past events. My prayer for him and indeed for all those that served our country during that turbulent and troubled era that are still with us is that they continue to live long and prosper and that they continue to share their deep wisdom and vast reservoir of knowledge with us. Given the unfolding events in our country today, God knows that we need it now more than ever.

*Fani-Kayode was a minister of aviation
- See more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2013/12/olunloyo-wild-wild-west/#sthash.jUdVNz4q.dpuf
Re: Fani Kayode Breaks Out From The Chains Again! by chino11(m): 10:58pm On Dec 07, 2013
The fixation of this clown on the Igbos shows how much he fears the Igbos.. grin

Ironically this is the same people that wants to use Ngige to rule Anambra..?

FFK will only do more damage than good to the Islamic Yorobar Party- APC..

They never learned anything from what happened to them in the last election in Anambra due to the same divisive comments by FFK in the past.. grin

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Re: Fani Kayode Breaks Out From The Chains Again! by donphilopus: 10:59pm On Dec 07, 2013
Why telling us na?? You should have simply chained him back! grin

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Re: Fani Kayode Breaks Out From The Chains Again! by wordcat(m): 11:44pm On Dec 07, 2013
FFK is an insecured man, and very afraid of the Igbos.

[quote
author=chino11]The fixation of this clown on the Igbos shows how
much he fears the Igbos.. grin

Ironically this is the same people that wants to use Ngige to rule
Anambra..?

FFK will only do more damage than good to the Islamic Yorobar Party-
APC..

They never learned anything from what happened to them in the last
election in Anambra due to the same divisive comments by FFK in the
past.. grin
[/quote]

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Re: Fani Kayode Breaks Out From The Chains Again! by plaindealer: 12:49am On Dec 08, 2013
Ojukwu betrayal
The truth is that it was Ojukwu that betrayed Awolowo and the Yoruba and not the other way around. I say this because they fired the first shot and tried to overwhelm, capture and enslave us by attacking our territory with their forces. They overwhelmed the people of the Niger Delta and the Midwest very easily but when they got to the gates of the Western Region at a place called Ore they were stopped in their tracks by the Yoruba forces and the famous 3rd Marine Commando which was 98 per cent Yoruba fighting force.

That is how they were prevented from entering Yoruba land and they were pushed back, inch by inch, from the Midwest and the Niger Delta area (by the same 3rd Marine Commando) back into the very heart of Igboland from whence they came until they were broken, defeated and forced to surrender. After being attacked the Yoruba had no choice but to fight back and we did so very successfully.


We don't play..

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Re: Fani Kayode Breaks Out From The Chains Again! by russellino: 1:22am On Dec 08, 2013
plaindealer:


We don't play..

FFK is too old for these sort of lies. I'm really sorry for the gullible and weak ppl he will lead astray. Don't get conned by that cokehead.

1. The 3rd marine commando did not fight at Ore. They saw action from rivers state and that axis of the south-south

2. The force that did fight at ore was the 2nd division under Murtala and was made up of mainly middle belters and hausa/fulani men. There was no yoruba fighting force. FFK is a shameless liar and dope fiend who needs a real job fast

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Re: Fani Kayode Breaks Out From The Chains Again! by macayub(m): 2:23am On Dec 08, 2013
russellino:

FFK is too old for these sort of lies. I'm really sorry for the gullible and weak ppl he will lead astray. Don't get conned by that cokehead.

1. The 3rd marine commando did not fight at Ore. They saw action from rivers state and that axis of the south-south

2. The force that did fight at ore was the 2nd division under Murtala and was made up of mainly middle belters and hausa/fulani men. There was no yoruba fighting force. FFK is a shameless liar and dope fiend who needs a real job fast

Do you have your facts?

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Re: Fani Kayode Breaks Out From The Chains Again! by kolubo(m): 2:28am On Dec 08, 2013
Op kindly summarize it in 10 lines coz i know in the long run na bullsh*t FFk go talk.

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Re: Fani Kayode Breaks Out From The Chains Again! by yousee(m): 2:37am On Dec 08, 2013
When I saw the topic initially, two things readily came to my mind.

1. Fani Kayode is the name of a bingo

2. Fani Kayode is the name of a lunatic

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Re: Fani Kayode Breaks Out From The Chains Again! by emmalexabl(m): 3:32am On Dec 08, 2013
The lunatic is on the loose again and i wonder who opened his cage this time
The foul odour of Kayo-ODE really nauseates me.angry angry
The foool is dumber than frogs and fish.
In his lying fashion.,"gallant yorubas fought against the biafra soldiers at ore "....grin grin grin grin

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Re: Fani Kayode Breaks Out From The Chains Again! by gurnam: 4:34am On Dec 08, 2013
As usual....they've started the name calling....

FFK is always on point when he said their usual response includes curses...insults ..abuses and dis-jointed emotional verbiages.

Pick one of his statements and put a lie to it with your own fact and not the tales pass down to you by your forefathers, but a verifiable source.

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Re: Fani Kayode Breaks Out From The Chains Again! by Ngwakwe: 4:48am On Dec 08, 2013
No direct quotes, no citation and no reference where and when they were expected in an issue of this magnitude and he still wants intellectuals to take his conjectural escapades serious .

I took time to re-read the portion he talked about Achebe's book but never saw any direct quote from the book to buttress his points yet FFK is convinced he needs no handler.

A pathetic researcher and writer to say the least.

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Re: Fani Kayode Breaks Out From The Chains Again! by gurnam: 4:55am On Dec 08, 2013
Ngwakwe: No direct quotes, no citation and no reference where and when they were expected in an issue of this magnitude and he still want intellectuals to take his conjectural escapades serious .

I took time to re-read the portion he talked about Achebe's book but never saw any direct quote from the book to buttress his points yet FFK is convinced he needs no handler.

A pathetic researcher and writer to say the least.

Pick one statement in his write up and provide a contrary opinion.
Re: Fani Kayode Breaks Out From The Chains Again! by Nobody: 5:25am On Dec 08, 2013
Nigerian foremost liar and lunatic on the prowl yet again.

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Re: Fani Kayode Breaks Out From The Chains Again! by gratieao: 6:18am On Dec 08, 2013
Yoruba people should call this mad man to other before he damage their reputation.
Who takes a liar, nitwit and lunatic infestation like kay-ode serious this day?

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Re: Fani Kayode Breaks Out From The Chains Again! by nerodenero: 7:08am On Dec 08, 2013
As the years goes bye,leaders from different regions of the country have always given us assumptions/facts on the need why the country needs to break and this isnt any different.I am not for/or against FFK's write-up but I dont think the country needs such provocation write-up at this time.This is a time we need our leaders to be united but if that is too hard for us to achieve as a nation,then we go our separate ways.
Re: Fani Kayode Breaks Out From The Chains Again! by Femolacaster(m): 7:15am On Dec 08, 2013
In as much as Ffk is entitled to his own opinion, most of the points he raised are undiluted facts!

1 Like

Re: Fani Kayode Breaks Out From The Chains Again! by Ngwakwe: 7:53am On Dec 08, 2013
From the tone and the format of the paragraph he mentioned Achebe's book, There was a Country, it was conspicuously obvious that FFK don't have the book neither has he read it but chose to summarise the content from controversial point of views arising from media talkshows and Yorubas defence of Pa Awo after its launch.

When writing an essay of this magnitude, he ought to cite the page containing what he thought was Achebe's attempt at rewriting the history before putting up the correction and seeking for Ohaneze Ndigbo to render apologies to Almighty Sophisticated tribe in Nigeria.

gurnam:

Pick one statement in his write up and provide a contrary opinion.

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Re: Fani Kayode Breaks Out From The Chains Again! by DahomeyAmazon(f): 8:21am On Dec 08, 2013
3rd Marine Commando, the greatest fighting force ever in the history of Nigeria, thumbs up to the black scorpion. God bless FFK, adding this to my personal archive.

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Re: Fani Kayode Breaks Out From The Chains Again! by DahomeyAmazon(f): 8:26am On Dec 08, 2013
Ngwakwe: From the tone and the format of the paragraph he mentioned Achebe's book, There was a Country, it was conspicuously obvious that FFK don't have the book neither has he read it but chose to summarise the content from controversial point of views arising from media talkshows and Yorubas defence of Pa Awo after its launch.

When writing an essay of this magnitude, he ought to cite the page containing what he thought was Achebe's attempt at rewriting the history before putting up the correction and seeking for Ohaneze Ndigbo to render apologies to Almighty Sophisticated tribe in Nigeria.

Why should he qoute from a story book? A fiction of someone's imagination. Ashebe is nothing but a pained story teller. A failed diplomat who couldn't convince the world about ojukwu's greed. biafra

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Re: Fani Kayode Breaks Out From The Chains Again! by kross01(m): 8:30am On Dec 08, 2013
From all the various accounts i have read about the civil war i've never heard about this FFK's version of Yoruba forces stopping the biafrans at ore. And to think he mentioned a marine unit as being responsible for that. pray tell me Mr kayode, why was banjo and ifeajuna made to face the tribunal and afterwards executed? If not for the fact that they sabotaged the mission by halting at ore even when there wasn't any resistance from Nigeria. it took the federal forces two days to get over the shock of biafran forces being so close to the capital Lagos before they started the counter attack. that was actually the turning point of the war as Gowon saw how close Nigeria came to loosing the war hence afterwards he intensified his attacks.
Plz FFK don't rewrite history, 2nd infantry division repelled Biafra from the west and Midwest Nigeria and was formed and led by murtala Mohammed. 3rd marine division fought in the delta

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Re: Fani Kayode Breaks Out From The Chains Again! by Slizbeat(m): 9:19am On Dec 08, 2013
I laughed when I read this post.

Achebe did not write anything as referring to Awolowo in his book except the qoute:

"In war, all is fair, and starvation is one of the weapons of war. I dont see why we should feed our enemies fat in order for them to fight harder".

Kayode is a pathetic liar. Why choose to rewrite History of what you had no clear memory of when it happened??

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Re: Fani Kayode Breaks Out From The Chains Again! by Pangea: 9:33am On Dec 08, 2013
Another well placed nuke right in the middle of the haters grin
While you guys are nitpicking, why not respond to the vital points raised by ffk?
I've read so many materials on the troubles of the 60s but I've not seen it in these light before!
Kudos to FFK, for another wonderful article that is presently hooking the throats of some people. grin

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Re: Fani Kayode Breaks Out From The Chains Again! by Pangea: 9:38am On Dec 08, 2013
@op
Why are you guys such an hipocrite?
The other day FFK wrote an article berating some northerners about their born to rule mentality.
All the Igbos on this forum were praising and agreeing with him, now the sniper scope is on their back, they are whining like a biiatch grin

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Re: Fani Kayode Breaks Out From The Chains Again! by russellino: 9:42am On Dec 08, 2013
macayub:

Do you have your facts?

Its a no brainer really. Even non-historians know that the 3rd Marine Commando attacked from the Rivers State end. Marine = water. Its one of the most readily available facts about the war. Just google

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Re: Fani Kayode Breaks Out From The Chains Again! by Nobody: 9:53am On Dec 08, 2013
Ngwakwe: From the tone and the format of the paragraph he mentioned Achebe's book, There was a Country, it was conspicuously obvious that FFK don't have the book neither has he read it but chose to summarise the content from controversial point of views arising from media talkshows and Yorubas defence of Pa Awo after its launch.

When writing an essay of this magnitude, he ought to cite the page containing what he thought was Achebe's attempt at rewriting the history before putting up the correction and seeking for Ohaneze Ndigbo to render apologies to Almighty Sophisticated tribe in Nigeria.


Obvious only to you that he doesn't have nor have read the book....most people know the gists in the book...at least the essentials in it. You don't have to read a book from cover to cover to know its theme...so stop using such to castigate him.

gurnam asked you to pick a particular sentence in FFK arguments and counter it with your own fact...but you are here regurgitating the old and worn out lines you guys have been vomiting all this while.

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Re: Fani Kayode Breaks Out From The Chains Again! by Nobody: 9:54am On Dec 08, 2013
Pangea: @op
Why are you guys such an hipocrite?
The other day FFK wrote an article berating some northerners about their born to rule mentality.
All the Igbos on this forum were praising and agreeing with him, now the sniper scope is on their back, they are whining like a biiatch grin

You dey mind them? Only their type take them serious here...very lacking in principles

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Re: Fani Kayode Breaks Out From The Chains Again! by Nobody: 10:31am On Dec 08, 2013
plaindealer:


We don't play..
Biafra didn't fight with Nigeria.
World powers supported Nigerian forces when they saw Biafra was winning initially.
Go and read it from a credible source, if u like that of a Yoruba sef or better still from a foreigner.
Re: Fani Kayode Breaks Out From The Chains Again! by Nobody: 10:33am On Dec 08, 2013
macayub:

Do you have your facts?

Do u have the counter facts?
Re: Fani Kayode Breaks Out From The Chains Again! by DahomeyAmazon(f): 10:37am On Dec 08, 2013
ngozievergreen:
Biafra didn't fight with Nigeria.
World powers supported Nigerian forces when they saw Biafra was winning initially.
Go and read it from a credible source, if u like that of a Yoruba sef or better still from a foreigner.
Shut up and read up the 3rd Marine Commando. The asse whooping was epic. Thank your stars you ain't born as spoils of war. grin

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Re: Fani Kayode Breaks Out From The Chains Again! by bloggernaija: 12:26pm On Dec 08, 2013
FANI KAYODE-THE FATHER OF THE IGBO NATION
These things are in the open .
The fact is that the Igbos made a play for supreme power/domination and when it blew up in their faces,they turned around and started blaming others.
More than any other ,that play for naked power empowered the north .
Awo strategy was to build a mostly southern juggernaut to confront the northern election rigging machine ( the federal government ).
Most of his famous quotes denote this fact.
Thinking he was going to meet like minds in Lagos,he found that there were no takers at the cash and carry ,food is ready parliament.the igbo politicians had already aligned with the north and were sharing the national cake ,keeping for themselves ,what was meant for the whole south .
on the home front ,akintola ,the rabid conservative that he was ,was busy doing what conservative do ,causing trouble .
Re: Fani Kayode Breaks Out From The Chains Again! by fluteman: 12:34pm On Dec 08, 2013
people are missing the irony of the Awolowo/Igbo relationship described in the write up. Awolowo preferred the Igbo in his lifetime BUT the Igbos are trained to loathe him, Akintola saw through the Igbos and was killed in the Jan 1966 coup by the Igbo coup plotters.

Awolowo is paying for his wrong judgement of character!

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