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Why The Igbos Are Angry With Nigeria. - Politics - Nairaland

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Why The Igbos Are Angry With Nigeria. by Jerrypolo(m): 5:36pm On Oct 12, 2017
WHY IGBOS ARE ANGRY WITH NIGERIA

My friends who are not from the East of Nigeria where Igbos come from often ask me why there is so much anger in the East and among Igbos. Some wonder why, despite the famed Igbo” wealth’ and enterprise all over Nigeria, the people still complain that Nigeria is unfair to them. Some insinuate that the anger comes from the loss of the 2015 election by Jonathan who the Igbos heavily backed.
And why is it that the current generation of Igbos are so angry as to contemplate carrying arms against the country? With lots are following Nnamdi Kanu of IPOB with his secessionist message. Those not following may despise his antics and rhetoric but are sympathetic to his underlying message? And what is that message? That Igbos don’t feel wanted in Nigeria. That decades of official marginalization and discrimination should be stopped or they would be ready to take their chances in a new nation.
First, for those who think this is all about Jonathan and Buhari. It is not. Igbos were disappointed that Jonathan did not win. But those whose candidates lose elections lick their wounds. It is allowed. It happens when your candidate loses election. Why did the Igbos invest so much emotions in Jonathan, a non-Igbo Ijaw? It was more because of the fear of their experience in the past 50 years. Nigeria has placed an embargo on any Igbo man becoming Nigerian president. Jonathan was the next best thing. Other parts of Nigeria have supported their sons to the presidency. Some have bombed Nigeria into submission to get their son to Aso Rock. Igbos have little capacity to blackmail Nigeria to the presidency. They chose Jonathan as their “Igbo”. But that’s not to say that they are angry enough because he lost to contemplate going to war on his behalf. Jonathan was not really the model of a President you would go to war for. And his Ijaw people have accepted his loss. So?
Igbo anger has been building up in Nigeria since I was a kid in the 70s. As kids, we made choices in our school years based on the narrative of the Igbo place in Nigeria. We knew of the glass ceiling against Igbos before we were out of puberty. After the civil war, despite the “No winner, no vanquished” program, Nigeria placed glass ceilings and no-go areas for Igbos. The war reconstruction program was observed more in the breach. There was the “abandoned” property program that was introduced to drive a wedge between components of the former South-East Nigeria. While the country was too embarrassed to put the discrimination program down in an official gazette, it was there for anyone who cared to look. It was evident in the Igbo police officer who stayed in one position while less qualifies juniors progressed to become his bosses. It was evident when no Igbo qualified to become the Inspector General of Police, or leader any division in the armed forces. It was there when "sensitive" or "lucrative" positions were shared in Nigeria and Igbos were conspicuously absent. It was there when Igbos were only fit enough to be made Minister of Information until Obasanjo came to power. And even recently, it was there when Buhari appointed 47 people to man the critical roles in his government and no one from the South east was there. Any time there is a federal appointment in Nigeria, its usually the east that shouts. It was there from Buhari first term to his second term and anyone in-between.
The Igbo elite called it marginalization. Other Nigerians countered by saying no part of Nigeria was getting enough. Marginalization was universal. But they forgot something. The Igbo cry of marginalization was official policy. It was expected. It was programmed. And occasionally, key government officials let it slip that Igbos should not complain. After all, they fought a war with Nigeria. Talk about No Victor, No Vanquished. There was a Victor alright. And they were reminded of that at every turn. Every appointment. Every national project. Nigeria was only pretending. Igbos were licking their wounds and complaining and the rest of Nigeria was too busy to notice.
Go to the South-East today. Since the 70s and the oil boom. Nigeria has invested in commercial industries across the country. None has been sited in the South east. None. Refineries, Steel Plants, Cement Firms. Any Industry. The South East was systematically de-industrialized. Even when it was the best location for any industry, there was always a reason why it should not be sited there. What this means was that any Igbo man that wanted to work in a commercial federal establishment had to leave the east. Add this to the indigenization policy of the early 70s that pushed the Igbos out of private companies. It meant that international companies also avoided expansion into the south east. The Nigerian Breweries, the Dunlop and other such firms sited their plants outside the East and only set up distribution centers to sell in the region. This is one of the main reasons the exodus of Igbos from the zone accelerated after the war and continues to this day despite the hostility they face in certain parts of Nigeria. And why most became traders and commercial business men. Because access to organized work either in the government, government commercial institutions and even commercial institutions were limited.
The only industrial enterprise in the east are built by easterners; Nnewi, Aba, Onitsha. These are Igbo indigenous industrial cities.
This has been the practice since the end of the war.
In addition to this, the Federal Government has systematically made it difficult for Easterners to do commercial business even in the East. The Federal Roads in the East are some of the worst in Nigeria. The Eastern Sea ports have been made ineffective. It was a war to get the Enugu Airport upgraded to an International Airport. The former Finance Minister shed tears on the day the first International Flight landed in Enugu. Yes, Okonjo Iwealla cried! Recently, it was only the South East that was conspicuously missing in the New Railway Plan of the Federal Government. Nigeria has 6 regions. And one was missing in a national railway plan. Incidentally, Igbos who reside here are the most itinerant in the country and would benefit most from a national transport plan. Even our President changed the plan to include his village but a zone of the country was not included.
When you go to the east, despite the lack of federal presence, the presence of police all over the east tells a story. They mount road blocks and make it difficult to have commercial activity. Recently, Customs has joined. And lastly the army. It is an occupied territory. They extort money. They intimate. They recently have started killing.
Nigeria has made the east unlivable. Purposely. Carefully.
I am often in conversations where people accuse the east of being clannish. That while we are welcome in all parts of Nigeria, outsiders cannot come to the East. My question is: why would you come to the east? To do what? There is no business to do in the east. Nigeria has ensured that. Why would someone from the South West of Nigeria go to the East to invest? No one would prevent you. But it hardly makes commercial sense. Nigeria has ensured that. Those from the North are there in droves. Igbos love to celebrate with cows. And the cattlemen go there to sell their cattle. No one molests them. In my village and most villages in the East, they live unmolested. But those are the only people who can find commercial reason to be there!
So those who wonder why Igbos are angry, wonder no more. While most would not dare carry arms against Nigeria, don’t under estimate the level of disconnection and anger especially among the younger generation. Nigeria is made of nations that came together to form a country. No nation will like to be in perpetual servitude. That Nnamdi Kanu’s supporters starred down army tanks with sticks is a sign that the next generation will be ready to fight bare hands if necessary to stop Nigeria treating the Igbo nation as second-class citizens. There will be fiercer and angrier Kanus in our immediate future if Nigeria does not officially stop the “vanquished “program against the Igbos who fought the civil war. You cannot preach unity and indivisibility of the country on TV and all your actions point at discriminating against the components of the country. It is as dangerous as it is foolhardy. Let those who preach unity walk the talk and stop open discrimination of their countrymen. History has shown that you cannot decree peace. You cannot decree unity. You cannot force any group to belong to a country by force, it may work for a time. But never sustainable.
Nigeria has a lot to look forward to as a united country. It also has enough for the regions and nations that make up the country. Our diversity is a blessing. Our failure to reach our potential is caused mostly by the internal contradictions and the inability to build a fair country that can bring out the best out of her component regions. Those who shout most about loving Nigeria today are mostly those its current unfair structure favor. But Nigeria will continue being as strong as its weakest link. And the weak links are all there to see. The East is one of the weakest links. Until it stops being a weak link, Nigeria cannot truly make progress.

Source: Facebook.com/ErnestOkechi

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Re: Why The Igbos Are Angry With Nigeria. by Engrmartins123: 5:39pm On Oct 12, 2017
IBE KACHIKWU, NIGER DELTA AND THE SCIONS OF DANFODIO.

By Charles Ogbu.

I've said it before and it bears repeating now, President Muhammadu Buhari is an incurable ethno-religious Jingoist and a fulani supremacist with a feudal mindset. As far as he's concerned, the North, specifically the Fulanis, owns Nigeria with the whole South as a conquered territory.

When a Fulani Muslim or any Northerner is involved in corruption, Buhari views that the exact way a man views the action of a son who takes his father's money which is his by right as the son of the father. But when a southerner is suspected of corruption, Buhari sees that with the anger a slave master feels when a mere slave steals from him.

Examples abound:

Till today, Buhari has continue to swear that Abacha did not steal. Dasuki is not in prison for any 2billion dollars arms fund. He's in jail for his role in booting the Daura born ex-soldier (Buhari) out of office in 1985. In Olisah Metuh's trial, he was handcuffed and his request to go treat a spinal cord problem abroad denied even when former Kano state governor, Attahiru Baffarawa, facing the same charge, was allowed to go pray in Mecca for one whole month.

The case of Ibe Kachikwu is a further testament to the criminal disdain which the Sons of Danfodio hold for all Southerners.

Make no mistake, Ibe Kachikwu's humiliation in the hands of the Feudalists IS NOT an isolated case. If you think it is, then you are mistaken.

As I type this, vice President Yemi Osinbajo is going through worse indignity at the hands of Abba Kyari and co. Most of the things he says like when he described those asking for Restructuring as hungry people looking for appointment etc, were not his thought. Ngige, Ogbonnaya Onu and every Southern minister in Buhari govt is passing through one humiliation or the other in the hands of Arewa men who ordinarily are not qualified to hold their bag.

They were all given an unwritten option which is to either be in office as obedient slaves creating the impression that there is a regional balance in appointment and be collecting salaries with the attendant humiliation OR resign. And because they are all integrity-challenged men with no principle, they accepted the former.

The only reason Kachikwu is still in office is just to keep maintaining the lie that Niger Delta is represented in Buhari's govt so the Creek boys will keep being deceived.

The day Buhari took the AK47 assault rifle from Kachikwu (NNPC Director) and handed him a catapult without even a stone (junior Petroleum minister) was the day he should have resigned if he had any honor in him.

Buhari is the Petroleum minister. Baru is the NNPC boss. As I type this, a mega power project has been launched in Kaduna for the Northern region. Rail-lines connecting the North to even Niger Republic are in progress. Northeast Development Commission is heavily funded. VAT, which is sourced mainly from Alcohol, has a special % going to the North even when alcohol is banned in the Sharia North. Last week, there was a report in the Guardian that NNPC compels firms to pay a monthly sum of 100million to fund Northern projects.

Meanwhile, in the Niger Delta region, Ibe Kachikwu's region, the main region producing the oil, what you will be greeted with is an environment unfit for even non-living things. No good water for fishing or drinking, no clean air to breathe, no land to farm on, no nothing!

All because of oil exploration in the region.

Nature blessed you with oil. But all you have to show for it are pains, miseries and death while those who do not have even a litter of "condemned" oil in their land are the ones owning all the oil wells in your own backyard and using them to develop their place and still treating your sons and daughters like subhumans.

An Ibrahim from Sokoto can own oil blocks in the Niger Delta and make billions without doing any work but if a Tompolo from Niger Delta gets contract to secure oil pipeline in the same Niger Delta

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Re: Why The Igbos Are Angry With Nigeria. by gidgiddy: 6:10pm On Oct 12, 2017
Why is it hard for some Nigerians to understand why Igbos want independence?

Countries that are doing far better than Nigeria have people in them that seek independence

Scottish people had independence referendum from Britain in 2014

Catalonia had independence referendun 12 days ago


Yet a Nigerian is scratching his head and wondering why Igbos want independence.

Is being Nigerian now by force?

I dont get some people, honestly.

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Re: Why The Igbos Are Angry With Nigeria. by jiinxed: 6:12pm On Oct 12, 2017
Hmm
Re: Why The Igbos Are Angry With Nigeria. by Nobody: 6:42pm On Oct 12, 2017
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Re: Why The Igbos Are Angry With Nigeria. by istandfortruth: 7:13pm On Oct 12, 2017
If only Nigerians will take out time to read this. The Igbos have been continually marginalised for many years but many have chosen to look the other way because there's this tiny "tintily" hate for the igbo race which has beclouded thier consciences. It didn't start now but it must stop else this nation will only be moving in circles while we wonder why we aren't moving forward

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Re: Why The Igbos Are Angry With Nigeria. by tsdarkside(m): 8:09pm On Oct 12, 2017
istandfortruth:
If only Nigerians will take out time to read this. The Igbos have been continually marginalised for many years but many have chosen to look the other way because there's this tiny "tintily" hate for the igbo race which has beclouded thier consciences. It didn't start now but it must stop else this nation will only be moving in circles while we wonder why we aren't moving forward

i dont think so....its not realy the job of the federal goverment to be building infrastructures to start with...no goverment in the world does that...roads,sanitation plants,water plants okay...but houses and ports,power plants?? no...their are some few exceptions that the goverment invest directly..its investors that build those things...

but investors invest in the intention to make profit....but if investors see no profit in building those things in the yeast then you have only yourselfs to blame..

igbos have to make their area actractive for investors...how do you do that??...well,surely not making a chaotic area like ipob did...

we can argue all day,who to blame...but fact remains the yeast is not actractive to investors..
Re: Why The Igbos Are Angry With Nigeria. by istandfortruth: 2:43pm On Oct 13, 2017
Sorry to disagree with you, i really do think its the job of the Nigerian government to build infrastructure in Nigeria's case where everything goes to the central government. Our case is quite different from that of other sane climes, thats why the central government has refused to devolve powers to the state and local governments. If we had a capitalist economy or a truely federal system then i'll hold the regions and states responsible but for now the federal government is too loaded to give silly excuses. You can't take all the power and reject the responsibilities.

Infrastructure lays the foundation for development, it opens new grounds for development. Akwa Ibom is a typical example of this, in the coming years they will begin to reap the benefits and that's great. Show me one region thats developed without the government placing the infrastructure at one point or the other?

tsdarkside:


i dont think so....its not realy the job of the federal goverment to be building infrastructures to start with...no goverment in the world does that...roads,sanitation plants,water plants okay...but houses and ports,power plants?? no...their are some few exceptions that the goverment invest directly..its investors that build those things...

but investors invest in the intention to make profit....but if investors see no profit in building those things in the yeast then you have only yourselfs to blame..

igbos have to make their area actractive for investors...how do you do that??...well,surely not making a chaotic area like ipob did...

we can argue all day,who to blame...but fact remains the yeast is not actractive to investors..
Re: Why The Igbos Are Angry With Nigeria. by tsdarkside(m): 4:51pm On Oct 13, 2017
istandfortruth:
Sorry to disagree with you, i really do think its the job of the Nigerian government to build infrastructure in Nigeria's case where everything goes to the central government. Our case is quite different from that of other sane climes, thats why the central government has refused to devolve powers to the state and local governments. If we had a capitalist economy or a truely federal system then i'll hold the regions and states responsible but for now the federal government is too loaded to give silly excuses. You can't take all the power and reject the responsibilities.

Infrastructure lays the foundation for development, it opens new grounds for development. Akwa Ibom is a typical example of this, in the coming years they will begin to reap the benefits and that's great. Show me one region thats developed without the government placing the infrastructure at one point or the other?


okay....
Re: Why The Igbos Are Angry With Nigeria. by rlauncher(m): 8:13pm On Oct 13, 2017
istandfortruth:
If only Nigerians will take out time to read this. The Igbos have been continually marginalised for many years but many have chosen to look the other way because there's this tiny "tintily" hate for the igbo race which has beclouded thier consciences. It didn't start now but it must stop else this nation will only be moving in circles while we wonder why we aren't moving forward

Igbo marginalized themselves. They don't know how to relate well with people of other ethnic groups. It is not uncommon for them to issue threats to their host communities. They lack tacts. They don't know how to form alliances with other people groups.

A case in point was in 1960 when the late Sage, Chief Obafemi Awolowo in coalition with Chief Azikiwe asked him to take the post of Prime Minister while Awolowo settles for the post of finance minister.. What did Azikiwe did. He ditched Awolowo to go form alliance with Sir Ahmadu Bello, where they made him the ceremonial president while the northerners took the Prime Ministership, thereby relegating Azikiwe to the background in the scheme of things.

It is sad that Ibo people are still making the same mistakes today while blaming everybody else except themselves for their political and economic misery.

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