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Igbo Scare: Southern Cameroon Hate For The Igbo Led To Secession From Nigeria - Politics - Nairaland

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Yoruba Nation: Modupe Onitiri Abiola Declares Secession From Nigeria (video) / The Igbo Scare in the British Cameroons - 1945 -1961 ( Why we joined Cameroon ) / Igbo Scare: Southern Cameroon Hate For The Igbo Led To Secession From Nigeria (2) (3) (4)

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Igbo Scare: Southern Cameroon Hate For The Igbo Led To Secession From Nigeria by AsiwajuNdigbo: 1:53pm On Jun 03, 2019
Igbo Scare: Southern Cameroon Hate For The Igbo Led To Secession From Nigeria In 1961 |RN


THE so-called Igbo “scare” in the British Cameroons between 1945 and 1961 allegedly led the southern part of the British mandate to opt to leave the federation of Nigeria on the 11th of February 1961. The fear of Igbo domination in all the sectors of social and political life in the former German and British territory was given as a major factor. Kumba, Mamfe, Bamenda, Tiko and Victoria had a large number of NdiIgbo who dominated the economy. This led to local resentments, which politicians like Dr E.M.L.Endeley, Chief Manga Williams and J.N.Foncha exploited for selfish interests.

Stereotyping the Igbo did not change the natural disposition of the latter to hard work, aggressiveness, showiness and ethnic pride—all of which may be interpreted as the Igbo hubris, which in literary parlance is a tragic flaw. Yet local resentment did not stop Igbo migration to Cameroons. The Igbo helped to build the Nigerian-Cameroonian Highway. They became petty and full time traders, engaged in farming, sometimes dispossessing original land owners of their lands through legitimate purchases, and held sway in the plantations.

Because of their education, NdiIgbo became dominant in government services and commerce, especially with the departure of the Germans in 1939. Menial jobs were the reserve of the less educated Cameroonians. There were monopolies like the United African Company and John Holt, all owned by the British. Yet the Igbo, not the British, were accused of marginalizing the Cameroonians.

The Igbo, they cried out, controlled the local administration and made it impossible for locals to occupy high government posts. They had a point but the Igbo did not ask them to be laid back and not to go to school. A British Resident administrative officer in Cameroon also accused the Igbo of injustice and, in his own words, as behaving as” if they were a law unto themselves and not wont to recognize ‘local authority”(See Resident, Cameroon Province, Buea, to Secretary, Eastern Provinces, Enugu, 29 June, 1948).

Such reports did not reduce tension; rather the emerging Cameroonian business and political elite fuelled it to advance their political agitations and encouraged many other unproven allegations against the Igbo. Unsubstantiated Igbo misdemeanor, too numerous to bother the reader with here, occupied the social and political space in the late 1940 Southern Cameroons. The Buea Native Authority demanded the expulsion of the Igbo in 1948 accusing them of dominating the plantations, especially. Earlier, the Bakweri Native Authority had specifically issued the following orders:

1. Nobody is allowed to sell his or her house to an Ibo; neither must anybody give his or her house for rentage to an Ibo.
2. No farmland must be sold to an Ibo or rented to an Ibo
3. Nobody must allow an Ibo to enter any native farm or forest for purpose of finding sticks for building or for any other purpose.
4. House or farm already sold to any Ibo man shall be purchased by native Authority who will afterwards resell same to some suitable person.
5. Nobody shall trade with Ibos for anything of value or not.
6. All landlords must ask their Igbo tenants to quit before 15 March 1948.
7. No Cameroon woman is allowed to communicate with the Igbos in any form
8. Anybody disobeying those rules shall be liable to a fine of £5 or five months imprisonment.
9. Any Ibo native disobeying Rule (3) above will be liable to prosecuting in the Native Court.
10. All Ibo Government officials are exempted from Rule (5) above.
(Cf: Bakweri, N.A. Buea to Senior D.O, Victoria, 21 Feb.1948.).

It is believed that Chief Manga Williams and Dr Endeley, two parliamentarians in the Eastern House of Assembly, were behind these anti Igbo laws.
We have seen similar sentiments directed against the Igbo in Nigeria, in colonial and postcolonial times, since NdiIgbo began their endless adventure outside Igbo hearth and heartland. It is also to say that quit notices against Ndibanyi did not start today. Hate speech and hate literature did not start with Nigerians. As we write English speaking Southern Cameroon is directing its angst against Yaoundé and the minders of power in their capital city. The same Cameroonians are also terrorizing Bakasians. They were in hearty collaboration with Nigerians during the civil war and were rewarded with a good chunk of Biafra land and its mineral deposits.

The aggravations Ndibanyi receive from our neighbours and hosts require a different and more robust approach than what is available now. It requires a vision with a homeland ideology, to show we have a home that is prosperous and could be second to none in the world. Is history a farce? Is the Cameroonian narrative a matter of marrying two husbands and knowing which is better? After demonizing the Igbo and seceding from Nigeria to join their supposed kit and kin in French ruled Cameroons, in 1960, the battle cry has changed. South Cameroons is clamouring for another secession. A case of the other perceived as the evil? The Devil now is not the Igbo, but Biya and his fellow Fulani.
Of course there are many possible readings of this story plot.

Contextually, it is all about the quest for self-apprehension. I am however, interested as a social historian, in what our people can learn from our sublime encounters with history whose outcome need not be quixotic or Sisyphean. A laundry list of anti Igbo prescriptions such as the above should provoke deep reflection on our part, especially in the context of our recent experiences from our country men in the northern and western parts of the country which reveal a deep rooted resentment against Ndibanyi.

Certainly, there is an Igbo complex just as there is the Igbo Question in Nigeria. Both need resolution. Said the Hon Nnamdi Azikiwe in 1949 while addressing NdiIgbo in Aba:
It would appear that God has specifically created the Igbo people to suffer persecution and bear victimization because of their resolve to live. Since suffering is the label of our tribe we can afford to be sacrificed for the ultimate redemption of the children of Africa”.
Is Zik’s position anachronistic or is it messianic? Can we deny our Igboness? Does being cosmopolitan mean abandoning our homeland? There is a man in the Igbo, which must be saved for the sake of humanism.

Causal factors have been important in determining Igbo journey in the pluriverse and that journey has been dramatic. Can we, NdiIgbo, control the natural instincts and impulses, which drive our relationship with our environments and social political spaces? Should there be a change in our foundational approaches and rethink strategies in our efforts at self and group fulfillment, a rethink of our approaches to constitutive freedoms? I am calling for a consequential reasoning and re-examination or even prioritization of our freedom rights, especially when our libertarian rights seem and are violated?

I am also calling on Attorney Chris Aniedobe and Dr Okenwa Nwosu to do a distillation of all the currents of ideas through our contributions on this forum and publish it timeously—a humongous task indeed— but not an impossible one. It would be a worthy and ageless contribution to Igbo phenomenology and scholarship, subjects of our direct experiences—one from which future generations will gain a lot—a tribute to all who believe in the relevance of communal enquiry, valent episteme and solid good ideas. I am just thinking aloud.

PROF.IHECHUKWU MADUBUIKE

The Republican News

16 Likes 7 Shares

Re: Igbo Scare: Southern Cameroon Hate For The Igbo Led To Secession From Nigeria by AsiwajuNdigbo: 1:58pm On Jun 03, 2019
Igbos are truly the Jews of Africa. In every way our story is just like story of Israelis. We are holed up in a hostile land but we thrive and dominate all our neighbors in military tactics, in trading and economy, in arts and entertainment, in literature and science, in politics and academics, in beauty and fashion and style, even in food and cuisine.

God bless Ndigbo!
True Jews of Africa.

28 Likes 1 Share

Re: Igbo Scare: Southern Cameroon Hate For The Igbo Led To Secession From Nigeria by mcjohny(m): 2:11pm On Jun 03, 2019
op do your research well. you don't even know what you are saying

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: Igbo Scare: Southern Cameroon Hate For The Igbo Led To Secession From Nigeria by BlueAir: 2:22pm On Jun 03, 2019
I stopped reading that flawful pride motivated write-up after the 4th line.



No logical and evidential sense at the beginning nor the end

11 Likes 1 Share

Re: Igbo Scare: Southern Cameroon Hate For The Igbo Led To Secession From Nigeria by MONIKERREVEALER: 2:31pm On Jun 03, 2019
igbos are the redemption of Africa!!!

22 Likes 1 Share

Re: Igbo Scare: Southern Cameroon Hate For The Igbo Led To Secession From Nigeria by RichBoy247: 2:43pm On Jun 03, 2019
MONIKERREVEALER:
igbos are the redemption of Africa!!!

Why does everyone, every tribe, every country, every race hate Igbos?

12 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Igbo Scare: Southern Cameroon Hate For The Igbo Led To Secession From Nigeria by oilPUSSY(f): 2:47pm On Jun 03, 2019
RichBoy247:


Why does everyone, every tribe, every country, every race hate Igbos?

34 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Igbo Scare: Southern Cameroon Hate For The Igbo Led To Secession From Nigeria by oilPUSSY(f): 2:49pm On Jun 03, 2019
Infact, once you call Buhari out because of his archaic style of government and killings in Nigeria, they will tag you Igbo ist before finding out who you actually are despite the fact that Igbos are not worst hit of Buhari's administration .. Not only on nairaland, but on facebook and other social media as well .

It's a good thing anyways because Some people have indirectly made Igbos symbol of Justice and equity in Nigeria.


@the topic, I haven't read it, but if it's true then they fell from frying pan to fire.

27 Likes 5 Shares

Re: Igbo Scare: Southern Cameroon Hate For The Igbo Led To Secession From Nigeria by MONIKERREVEALER: 2:51pm On Jun 03, 2019
the same reason why most of the world hate the Jews!!!


deal with it!!!


we are Hebrews!!!


RichBoy247:


Why does everyone, every tribe, every country, every race hate Igbos?

20 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Igbo Scare: Southern Cameroon Hate For The Igbo Led To Secession From Nigeria by pipeliner: 2:54pm On Jun 03, 2019
Babalegba:
ibos are the worst example of the African man,they are desperate,greedy , heartless and would do all sort of evils to make money. I believe that the traders in the video pushing a bottle into a woman's private part are ibos traders who are exhibiting the beasthood inherent in their culture. I can't wait for kanu to succeed so that we can rid Yoruba land of all this beasts

Igbo are not known for bestial crimes. In Igbo culture we believe in live and let live. The description you put up best fits the two other major ethnic groups in Nigeria. There are loads of evidence to prove it and I know that you know. Your last line reeks of the same bestial instinct your stock possesses.

22 Likes 4 Shares

Re: Igbo Scare: Southern Cameroon Hate For The Igbo Led To Secession From Nigeria by Ekpeitit(m): 2:55pm On Jun 03, 2019
AsiwajuNdigbo:
Igbo Scare: Southern Cameroon Hate For The Igbo Led To Secession From Nigeria In 1961 |RN


THE so-called Igbo “scare” in the British Cameroons between 1945 and 1961 allegedly led the southern part of the British mandate to opt to leave the federation of Nigeria on the 11th of February 1961. The fear of Igbo domination in all the sectors of social and political life in the former German and British territory was given as a major factor. Kumba, Mamfe, Bamenda, Tiko and Victoria had a large number of NdiIgbo who dominated the economy. This led to local resentments, which politicians like Dr E.M.L.Endeley, Chief Manga Williams and J.N.Foncha exploited for selfish interests.

Stereotyping the Igbo did not change the natural disposition of the latter to hard work, aggressiveness, showiness and ethnic pride—all of which may be interpreted as the Igbo hubris, which in literary parlance is a tragic flaw. Yet local resentment did not stop Igbo migration to Cameroons. The Igbo helped to build the Nigerian-Cameroonian Highway. They became petty and full time traders, engaged in farming, sometimes dispossessing original land owners of their lands through legitimate purchases, and held sway in the plantations.

Because of their education, NdiIgbo became dominant in government services and commerce, especially with the departure of the Germans in 1939. Menial jobs were the reserve of the less educated Cameroonians. There were monopolies like the United African Company and John Holt, all owned by the British. Yet the Igbo, not the British, were accused of marginalizing the Cameroonians.

The Igbo, they cried out, controlled the local administration and made it impossible for locals to occupy high government posts. They had a point but the Igbo did not ask them to be laid back and not to go to school. A British Resident administrative officer in Cameroon also accused the Igbo of injustice and, in his own words, as behaving as” if they were a law unto themselves and not wont to recognize ‘local authority”(See Resident, Cameroon Province, Buea, to Secretary, Eastern Provinces, Enugu, 29 June, 1948).

Such reports did not reduce tension; rather the emerging Cameroonian business and political elite fuelled it to advance their political agitations and encouraged many other unproven allegations against the Igbo. Unsubstantiated Igbo misdemeanor, too numerous to bother the reader with here, occupied the social and political space in the late 1940 Southern Cameroons. The Buea Native Authority demanded the expulsion of the Igbo in 1948 accusing them of dominating the plantations, especially. Earlier, the Bakweri Native Authority had specifically issued the following orders:

1. Nobody is allowed to sell his or her house to an Ibo; neither must anybody give his or her house for rentage to an Ibo.
2. No farmland must be sold to an Ibo or rented to an Ibo
3. Nobody must allow an Ibo to enter any native farm or forest for purpose of finding sticks for building or for any other purpose.
4. House or farm already sold to any Ibo man shall be purchased by native Authority who will afterwards resell same to some suitable person.
5. Nobody shall trade with Ibos for anything of value or not.
6. All landlords must ask their Igbo tenants to quit before 15 March 1948.
7. No Cameroon woman is allowed to communicate with the Igbos in any form
8. Anybody disobeying those rules shall be liable to a fine of £5 or five months imprisonment.
9. Any Ibo native disobeying Rule (3) above will be liable to prosecuting in the Native Court.
10. All Ibo Government officials are exempted from Rule (5) above.
(Cf: Bakweri, N.A. Buea to Senior D.O, Victoria, 21 Feb.1948.).

It is believed that Chief Manga Williams and Dr Endeley, two parliamentarians in the Eastern House of Assembly, were behind these anti Igbo laws.
We have seen similar sentiments directed against the Igbo in Nigeria, in colonial and postcolonial times, since NdiIgbo began their endless adventure outside Igbo hearth and heartland. It is also to say that quit notices against Ndibanyi did not start today. Hate speech and hate literature did not start with Nigerians. As we write English speaking Southern Cameroon is directing its angst against Yaoundé and the minders of power in their capital city. The same Cameroonians are also terrorizing Bakasians. They were in hearty collaboration with Nigerians during the civil war and were rewarded with a good chunk of Biafra land and its mineral deposits.

The aggravations Ndibanyi receive from our neighbours and hosts require a different and more robust approach than what is available now. It requires a vision with a homeland ideology, to show we have a home that is prosperous and could be second to none in the world. Is history a farce? Is the Cameroonian narrative a matter of marrying two husbands and knowing which is better? After demonizing the Igbo and seceding from Nigeria to join their supposed kit and kin in French ruled Cameroons, in 1960, the battle cry has changed. South Cameroons is clamouring for another secession. A case of the other perceived as the evil? The Devil now is not the Igbo, but Biya and his fellow Fulani.
Of course there are many possible readings of this story plot.

Contextually, it is all about the quest for self-apprehension. I am however, interested as a social historian, in what our people can learn from our sublime encounters with history whose outcome need not be quixotic or Sisyphean. A laundry list of anti Igbo prescriptions such as the above should provoke deep reflection on our part, especially in the context of our recent experiences from our country men in the northern and western parts of the country which reveal a deep rooted resentment against Ndibanyi.

Certainly, there is an Igbo complex just as there is the Igbo Question in Nigeria. Both need resolution. Said the Hon Nnamdi Azikiwe in 1949 while addressing NdiIgbo in Aba:
It would appear that God has specifically created the Igbo people to suffer persecution and bear victimization because of their resolve to live. Since suffering is the label of our tribe we can afford to be sacrificed for the ultimate redemption of the children of Africa”.
Is Zik’s position anachronistic or is it messianic? Can we deny our Igboness? Does being cosmopolitan mean abandoning our homeland? There is a man in the Igbo, which must be saved for the sake of humanism.

Causal factors have been important in determining Igbo journey in the pluriverse and that journey has been dramatic. Can we, NdiIgbo, control the natural instincts and impulses, which drive our relationship with our environments and social political spaces? Should there be a change in our foundational approaches and rethink strategies in our efforts at self and group fulfillment, a rethink of our approaches to constitutive freedoms? I am calling for a consequential reasoning and re-examination or even prioritization of our freedom rights, especially when our libertarian rights seem and are violated?

I am also calling on Attorney Chris Aniedobe and Dr Okenwa Nwosu to do a distillation of all the currents of ideas through our contributions on this forum and publish it timeously—a humongous task indeed— but not an impossible one. It would be a worthy and ageless contribution to Igbo phenomenology and scholarship, subjects of our direct experiences—one from which future generations will gain a lot—a tribute to all who believe in the relevance of communal enquiry, valent episteme and solid good ideas. I am just thinking aloud.

PROF.IHECHUKWU MADUBUIKE

The Republican News

1 Like

Re: Igbo Scare: Southern Cameroon Hate For The Igbo Led To Secession From Nigeria by wingmanII: 3:19pm On Jun 03, 2019
Babalegba:
ibos are the worst example of the African man,they are desperate,greedy , heartless and would do all sort of evils to make money. I believe that the traders in the video pushing a bottle into a woman's private part are ibos traders who are exhibiting the beasthood inherent in their culture. I can't wait for kanu to succeed so that we can rid Yoruba land of all this beasts

The rate of head hunting and ritual killings in yoruba land makes them the ones that "would do all sort of evils to make money". I wonder anything more beastial than beheading your fellow man for money rituals.

25 Likes 4 Shares

Re: Igbo Scare: Southern Cameroon Hate For The Igbo Led To Secession From Nigeria by Babalegba(m): 3:24pm On Jun 03, 2019
pipeliner:


Igbo are not known for bestial crimes. In Igbo culture we believe in live and let live. The description you put up best fits the two other major ethnic groups in Nigeria. There are loads of evidence to prove it and I know that you know.
I was not talking about bestiality but beastly barbaric human behavior,greed, boastfulness, jingoistic behavior in inter tribal relations and disrespect of others. Ask yourself introspectively why ibos are always the subject of hatred and you would understand that character flaws that needs to be addressed are present in their midst.No tribe is anywhere near perfect but it is bad that many yorubas prefer the hausa who is Muslim to ibos who are Christian.

3 Likes

Re: Igbo Scare: Southern Cameroon Hate For The Igbo Led To Secession From Nigeria by Babalegba(m): 3:28pm On Jun 03, 2019
wingmanII:


The rate of head hunting and ritual killings in yoruba land makes them the ones that "would do all sort of evils to make money". I wonder anything more beastial than beheading your fellow man for money rituals.
Stop the delusion, the same happens in iboland

4 Likes

Re: Igbo Scare: Southern Cameroon Hate For The Igbo Led To Secession From Nigeria by Babalegba(m): 3:38pm On Jun 03, 2019
MONIKERREVEALER:


agree with you on the bolded 100%

for the rest of your post, had it been that seun osewa and his moderators weren't so biased, you should be immediately banned!!!

lalasticlala
seun
mynd44
OAM4J
obinoscopy

please take note!!!
lol, screaming for help like you always run to the UN for help after being unable to finish something you started.

2 Likes

Re: Igbo Scare: Southern Cameroon Hate For The Igbo Led To Secession From Nigeria by pipeliner: 3:39pm On Jun 03, 2019
Babalegba:
I was not talking about bestiality but beastly barbaric human behavior,greed, boastfulness, jingoistic behavior in inter tribal relations and disrespect of others. Ask yourself introspectively why ibos are always the subject of hatred and you would understand that character flaws that needs to be addressed are present in their midst.No tribe is anywhere near perfect but it is bad that many yorubas prefer the hausa who is Muslim to ibos who are Christian.

Igbo do not have those character traits of the typical Blackman that makes the Blackman highly unproductive and backward. That is what you see as greed, boastfulness, whatever. In another clime where hard work is regarded highly people would rather study a hard working person and emulate him than put him down. Boastfulness is not charitable but it is not a moral transgression like stealing, or the like. You can also boast if you feel so pained unless you have nothing to boast about. You can see that Igbo are total strangers in their country Nigeria. They have no kindred brethren save very few like the people from Akwa Ibom.

23 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Igbo Scare: Southern Cameroon Hate For The Igbo Led To Secession From Nigeria by wingmanII: 3:59pm On Jun 03, 2019
Babalegba:
Stop the delusion, the same happens in iboland

Same indeed. You re the one deluded.

9 Likes 1 Share

Re: Igbo Scare: Southern Cameroon Hate For The Igbo Led To Secession From Nigeria by wingmanII: 4:04pm On Jun 03, 2019
Babalegba:
I was not talking about bestiality but beastly barbaric human behavior,greed, boastfulness, jingoistic behavior in inter tribal relations and disrespect of others. Ask yourself introspectively why ibos are always the subject of hatred and you would understand that character flaws that needs to be addressed are present in their midst.No tribe is anywhere near perfect but it is bad that many yorubas prefer the hausa who is Muslim to ibos who are Christian.

You see why you are so deluded. Which tribe in Nigeria love the other? If you believe that the Igbos are more hated than the yorubas, then you live in fools paradise.

10 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Igbo Scare: Southern Cameroon Hate For The Igbo Led To Secession From Nigeria by mrvitalis(m): 4:11pm On Jun 03, 2019
RichBoy247:


Why does everyone, every tribe, every country, every race hate Igbos?
Can u hate someone u are better than ?

11 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Igbo Scare: Southern Cameroon Hate For The Igbo Led To Secession From Nigeria by mightyhaze: 4:13pm On Jun 03, 2019
Igbos,..the shinning bastion of Africa..

9 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Igbo Scare: Southern Cameroon Hate For The Igbo Led To Secession From Nigeria by Amatarasha(f): 4:14pm On Jun 03, 2019
AsiwajuNdigbo:
Igbos are truly the Jews of Africa. In every way our story is just like story of Israelis. We are holed up in a hostile land but we thrive and dominate all our neighbors in military tactics, in trading and economy, in arts and entertainment, in literature and science, in politics and academics, in beauty and fashion and style, even in food and cuisine.

God bless Ndigbo!
True Jews of Africa.
And am supporting ambazinia because analqueen d south camerounian ,analqueenluci so u pple ar like dis

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Igbo Scare: Southern Cameroon Hate For The Igbo Led To Secession From Nigeria by Amumaigwe: 4:30pm On Jun 03, 2019
Babalegba:
I was not talking about bestiality but beastly barbaric human behavior,greed, boastfulness, jingoistic behavior in inter tribal relations and disrespect of others. Ask yourself introspectively why ibos are always the subject of hatred and you would understand that character flaws that needs to be addressed are present in their midst.No tribe is anywhere near perfect but it is bad that many yorubas prefer the hausa who is Muslim to ibos who are Christian.

Igbos are hated everywhere because they prosper more than their hosts everywhere. Prosperity begets hatred. #Akubuilo

15 Likes 1 Share

Re: Igbo Scare: Southern Cameroon Hate For The Igbo Led To Secession From Nigeria by iSlayer: 4:47pm On Jun 03, 2019
The Southern Cameroonians jumped from frying pan to hell fire.


The Igbo are always hated because they're usually more successful than those around them. It has happened and continues to happen across history.

13 Likes 1 Share

Re: Igbo Scare: Southern Cameroon Hate For The Igbo Led To Secession From Nigeria by Timmypromise(m): 4:57pm On Jun 03, 2019
Amumaigwe:


Igbos are hated everywhere because they prosper more than their hosts everywhere. Prosperity begets hatred. #Akubuilo

cheesy grin grin
Funny post
Re: Igbo Scare: Southern Cameroon Hate For The Igbo Led To Secession From Nigeria by Aidejay(m): 5:11pm On Jun 03, 2019
Lies
Lies
Lies
Lies
Stop lying
You will go to hell
Stop lying
Always shifting the blame
Every freaking time
Chai!

1 Like

Re: Igbo Scare: Southern Cameroon Hate For The Igbo Led To Secession From Nigeria by Firingpin: 5:24pm On Jun 03, 2019
pipeliner:


Igbo do not have those character traits of the typical Blackman that makes the Blackman highly unproductive and backward. That is what you see as greed, boastfulness, whatever. In another clime where hard work is regarded highly people would rather study a hard working person and emulate him than put him down. Boastfulness is not charitable but it is not a moral transgression like stealing, or the like. You can also boast if you feel so pained unless you have nothing to boast about. You can see that Igbo are total strangers in their country Nigeria. They have no kindred brethren save very few like the people from Akwa Ibom.
Empty chest beaters claiming to be the best of the black race but are neither the richest nor the most intelligent but certainly the loudest and the most politically naive.

5 Likes 1 Share

Re: Igbo Scare: Southern Cameroon Hate For The Igbo Led To Secession From Nigeria by Nobody: 5:28pm On Jun 03, 2019
Which biafran land wss given to Cameroun
Re: Igbo Scare: Southern Cameroon Hate For The Igbo Led To Secession From Nigeria by Banmeallday: 5:30pm On Jun 03, 2019
Last time I checked Ambazonia is considering joining Biafra...

2 Likes

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