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*akwa Ibom’s Indigenous Igbo* How True Is It ? by ariesbull: 5:09am On Jan 12, 2021
Whenever ethnicity is mentioned in Akwa Ibom State, what easily comes to mind is the tripod – Ibibio, Annang and Oro. It took a long struggle before Ekid (people of Eket and Esit Eket Local Government Areas) and Obolo (people of Eastern Obolo and Ibeno Local Government Areas) could be accepted by the Big Three in the 1990s as separate ethnic groups from the Ibibio.

But unknown to most people of the state, there exists three other indigenous ethnic groups in the state – Efik, Igbo and Ogoni, the Small Three, whose kith and kin are more in neighbouring Cross River, Abia and Rivers States.

The Efik, who speak almost the same language with the Ibibio and Annang, is the most populous of the three, what with three Efik-speaking clans (mainly descendants of Efik settlers who speak Efik as a first or only indigenous language) in Akwa Ibom State. These clans include two in Itu Local Government Area (LGA) and a substantial, if not majority, part of one in Okobo LGA. Interestingly, Itu is in the Ibibio heartland while Okobo is one of the five LGAs of Oro Nation.

The Igbo and the Ogoni are ensconced in a village each in Ukanafun and Oruk Anam, two neighbouring LGAs dominated by the Annang.

*Geography of Akwa Ibom’s Own Igbo*

Ohaobu Ndoki, as Akwa Ibom’s indigenous Igbo call their village, is located in Southern Ukanafun Clan and precisely in Ward II. The village is about seven kilometres from the local government headquarters, Ikot Akpa Nkuk.

She is bounded on the east by Ikot Inyang Udo, on the south by Edem Idim, still in the same ward, on the north by Ikpe Annang village of Etim Ekpo LGA and on the west by the Blue River which separates Ohaobu people from their kith and kin in Ukwa West LGA of Abia State and Oyigbo LGA in Rivers State.

Going around the village, which is quite large and rustic, she is no different from a typical Akwa Ibom village in terms of environment. The only thing that sets her apart is the Igbo spoken by almost everyone. This makes it difficult to believe that one is in Akwa Ibom.

*Population*

Though the Akwa Ibom State Government recognizes Ikot Inyang Udo II (Ohaobu) as one village, the people, on their own, divide themselves into four villages – Akpala, Okpikro, Umuchuta and Ohaobu.

Numbering over 2,000, Ohaobu people belong to the Ndoki, an Igbo sub-ethnic group. The Ndoki and their Asa cousins dominate Ukwa West and Ukwa East, the only two oil-producing LGAs in Abia State, and Oyigbo, an oil-producing LGA in Rivers State which boasts of the famed Afam Power Station located in Okoloma.

“We are the Ndoki of Akwa Ibom State,” explains Pastor Magnus Kamanu, the Secretary of Ohaobu Village Council. “Ndoki are balkanized into three states. The river demarcates us from other states.”

The people’s occupations are mainly farming and fishing. In the past, the Blue River, which harbour is in Ohaobu, was a beehive of activities including smuggling (from Cameroon to Aba) and oil bunkering done largely by non-indigenous criminals and some local accomplices. Apparently, that necessitated the establishment by the Federal Government of a customs’ post not far from Ohaobu.

The people are mainly Christians of the Anglican faith. Christ Army Church and Assemblies of God Church also have many adherents in the village.

*How Ohaobu Became Part of Akwa Ibom*

Ohaobu used to be part of old Imo State (from which Abia State was created in 1991). In 1987, the village was made part of old Cross River State (from which Akwa Ibom State was created shortly after) by the Federal Government.

The river was used as a natural boundary, based on the recommendation of the Boundary Adjustment Committee chaired by Late Alhaji Kaloma Ali, a lawyer and politician who subsequently served as Minister for Solid Minerals’ Development during the regime of his close associate, Late General Sani Abacha.

*Ohaobu or Ikot Inyang Udo II: Much Ado About a Name*

There is a long-running dispute about the name of the village. The Akwa Ibom State Government in its Gazette (2000), which this writer sighted, recognizes the village as Ikot Inyang Udo II. This is the name Ohaobu’s Annang neighbours in Ukanafun and Etim Ekpo LGAs call the village. But the Ohaobu people vehemently reject this name.

It is obviously a measure of how the people are fervent about the Ohaobu name that the Eze-elect of the village, Chief Lucky Nwosu, rejected his certificate of recognition as the Village Head from the State Ministry of Local Government and Chieftaincy Affairs in November, last year, simply because Ikot Inyang Udo II, not Ohaobu, was written on the certificate.

“Let them give me the certificate in the name of Ohaobu,” Nwosu pleads.



From the foregoing, it is crystal clear that Akwa Ibom State has her own indigenous Igbo population and not just Igbo residents (mainly businessmen) from Abia, Anambra, Delta, Ebonyi, Enugu, Imo and Rivers States.

And so, whenever ethnic groups in the state are listed, the list should not end in five – Ibibio, Annang, Oro, Ekid and Obolo (Ijaw). Three more should be added – Igbo, Ogoni and Efik. Clearly, the trio is indigenous to Akwa Ibom State, a fact of life that cannot be wished away.

Indeed, Akwa Ibom is a multi-ethnic state.


By Inemesit Ina



https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=2639099749644885&id=100006346565950

1 Like

Re: *akwa Ibom’s Indigenous Igbo* How True Is It ? by Nobody: 5:24am On Jan 12, 2021
Ibom amaka.

cc lzaa

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: *akwa Ibom’s Indigenous Igbo* How True Is It ? by ariesbull: 5:26am On Jan 12, 2021
imhotep:
Ibom amaka.

cc lzaa

Can they make this to front page so that Nigerians can be educated... And know their country very well

2 Likes

Re: *akwa Ibom’s Indigenous Igbo* How True Is It ? by Ogbuu101: 5:36am On Jan 12, 2021
ariesbull:


Can they make this to front page so that Nigerians can be educated... And know their country very well
You want Omenka ,HELLinues and their colleagues to die of heart attack? ¹

3 Likes

Re: *akwa Ibom’s Indigenous Igbo* How True Is It ? by ariesbull: 5:42am On Jan 12, 2021
Ogbuu101:

You want Omenka ,HELLinues and their colleagues to die of heart attack? ¹
why would they die of heart attack
Re: *akwa Ibom’s Indigenous Igbo* How True Is It ? by nsiba: 5:43am On Jan 12, 2021
ariesbull:

Whenever ethnicity is mentioned in Akwa Ibom State, what easily comes to mind is the tripod – Ibibio, Annang and Oro. It took a long struggle before Ekid (people of Eket and Esit Eket Local Government Areas) and Obolo (people of Eastern Obolo and Ibeno Local Government Areas) could be accepted by the Big Three in the 1990s as separate ethnic groups from the Ibibio.

But unknown to most people of the state, there exists three other indigenous ethnic groups in the state – Efik, Igbo and Ogoni, the Small Three, whose kith and kin are more in neighbouring Cross River, Abia and Rivers States.

The Efik, who speak almost the same language with the Ibibio and Annang, is the most populous of the three, what with three Efik-speaking clans (mainly descendants of Efik settlers who speak Efik as a first or only indigenous language) in Akwa Ibom State. These clans include two in Itu Local Government Area (LGA) and a substantial, if not majority, part of one in Okobo LGA. Interestingly, Itu is in the Ibibio heartland while Okobo is one of the five LGAs of Oro Nation.

The Igbo and the Ogoni are ensconced in a village each in Ukanafun and Oruk Anam, two neighbouring LGAs dominated by the Annang.

*Geography of Akwa Ibom’s Own Igbo*

Ohaobu Ndoki, as Akwa Ibom’s indigenous Igbo call their village, is located in Southern Ukanafun Clan and precisely in Ward II. The village is about seven kilometres from the local government headquarters, Ikot Akpa Nkuk.

She is bounded on the east by Ikot Inyang Udo, on the south by Edem Idim, still in the same ward, on the north by Ikpe Annang village of Etim Ekpo LGA and on the west by the Blue River which separates Ohaobu people from their kith and kin in Ukwa West LGA of Abia State and Oyigbo LGA in Rivers State.

Going around the village, which is quite large and rustic, she is no different from a typical Akwa Ibom village in terms of environment. The only thing that sets her apart is the Igbo spoken by almost everyone. This makes it difficult to believe that one is in Akwa Ibom.

*Population*

Though the Akwa Ibom State Government recognizes Ikot Inyang Udo II (Ohaobu) as one village, the people, on their own, divide themselves into four villages – Akpala, Okpikro, Umuchuta and Ohaobu.

Numbering over 2,000, Ohaobu people belong to the Ndoki, an Igbo sub-ethnic group. The Ndoki and their Asa cousins dominate Ukwa West and Ukwa East, the only two oil-producing LGAs in Abia State, and Oyigbo, an oil-producing LGA in Rivers State which boasts of the famed Afam Power Station located in Okoloma.

“We are the Ndoki of Akwa Ibom State,” explains Pastor Magnus Kamanu, the Secretary of Ohaobu Village Council. “Ndoki are balkanized into three states. The river demarcates us from other states.”

The people’s occupations are mainly farming and fishing. In the past, the Blue River, which harbour is in Ohaobu, was a beehive of activities including smuggling (from Cameroon to Aba) and oil bunkering done largely by non-indigenous criminals and some local accomplices. Apparently, that necessitated the establishment by the Federal Government of a customs’ post not far from Ohaobu.

The people are mainly Christians of the Anglican faith. Christ Army Church and Assemblies of God Church also have many adherents in the village.

*How Ohaobu Became Part of Akwa Ibom*

Ohaobu used to be part of old Imo State (from which Abia State was created in 1991). In 1987, the village was made part of old Cross River State (from which Akwa Ibom State was created shortly after) by the Federal Government.

The river was used as a natural boundary, based on the recommendation of the Boundary Adjustment Committee chaired by Late Alhaji Kaloma Ali, a lawyer and politician who subsequently served as Minister for Solid Minerals’ Development during the regime of his close associate, Late General Sani Abacha.

*Ohaobu or Ikot Inyang Udo II: Much Ado About a Name*

There is a long-running dispute about the name of the village. The Akwa Ibom State Government in its Gazette (2000), which this writer sighted, recognizes the village as Ikot Inyang Udo II. This is the name Ohaobu’s Annang neighbours in Ukanafun and Etim Ekpo LGAs call the village. But the Ohaobu people vehemently reject this name.

It is obviously a measure of how the people are fervent about the Ohaobu name that the Eze-elect of the village, Chief Lucky Nwosu, rejected his certificate of recognition as the Village Head from the State Ministry of Local Government and Chieftaincy Affairs in November, last year, simply because Ikot Inyang Udo II, not Ohaobu, was written on the certificate.

“Let them give me the certificate in the name of Ohaobu,” Nwosu pleads.



From the foregoing, it is crystal clear that Akwa Ibom State has her own indigenous Igbo population and not just Igbo residents (mainly businessmen) from Abia, Anambra, Delta, Ebonyi, Enugu, Imo and Rivers States.

And so, whenever ethnic groups in the state are listed, the list should not end in five – Ibibio, Annang, Oro, Ekid and Obolo (Ijaw). Three more should be added – Igbo, Ogoni and Efik. Clearly, the trio is indigenous to Akwa Ibom State, a fact of life that cannot be wished away.

Indeed, Akwa Ibom is a multi-ethnic state.


By Inemesit Ina



https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=2639099749644885&id=100006346565950

.




https://www.nairaland.com/5455636/aba-ngwa-abiriba-arochuwkwu-ancestral/1

Re: *akwa Ibom’s Indigenous Igbo* How True Is It ? by ObiOfOnistha: 5:43am On Jan 12, 2021
What economic important is it to me as Obi of Onitsha

Re: *akwa Ibom’s Indigenous Igbo* How True Is It ? by Godons1: 6:15am On Jan 12, 2021
Lies.
IGBO'S are only indigenous to 4 States in the EAST only. They are Enugu, Abia, Imo and Ebonyi States. ANAMBRA is an IGALA STATE.

1 Like

Re: *akwa Ibom’s Indigenous Igbo* How True Is It ? by Nobody: 6:30am On Jan 12, 2021
Igbos just dey everywhere lol.
Re: *akwa Ibom’s Indigenous Igbo* How True Is It ? by SIONKPO1(m): 7:59am On Jan 12, 2021
Op,I think this topic is a needless one,in as much as they see themselves as Akwa Ibomites
Mind you there are indegeenous Ibibio and Anaang in Abia State but they claim Abia likewise Igala in Anambra,IDOMA in Ebonyi
Re: *akwa Ibom’s Indigenous Igbo* How True Is It ? by Ogbuu101: 9:11am On Jan 12, 2021
ariesbull:
why would they die of heart attack
Cos all the lies that were handed over to them by their forefathers about Igbos being landgrabbers are being disproved under their watch.
It is very painful.
They must be cursing whoever invented the internet and social media.
The lies were easy to propagate during the reign of Lagos-Ibadan brown envelope journalism.
Re: *akwa Ibom’s Indigenous Igbo* How True Is It ? by Ogbuu101: 9:13am On Jan 12, 2021
ObiOfOnistha:
What economic important is it to me as Obi of Onitsha
'importance'.
Iti boroibor
Awolowo's free education must not be in vain oo
Re: *akwa Ibom’s Indigenous Igbo* How True Is It ? by Sammy07: 9:15am On Jan 12, 2021
Well, anyways we don't share borders.
Lemme mind my business
Re: *akwa Ibom’s Indigenous Igbo* How True Is It ? by ariesbull: 9:19am On Jan 12, 2021
Ogbuu101:

Cos all the lies that were handed over to them by their forefathers about Igbos being landgrabbers are being disproved under their watch.
It is very painful
oh I see.... It's the other way round
Re: *akwa Ibom’s Indigenous Igbo* How True Is It ? by ChangedMan1999(m): 10:46am On Jan 12, 2021
Their former Attorney General Nwoko is an Ndoki-Igbo man.

Re: *akwa Ibom’s Indigenous Igbo* How True Is It ? by Omahjasper(m): 2:34pm On Oct 13, 2022
SIONKPO1:
Op,I think this topic is a needless one,in as much as they see themselves as Akwa Ibomites
Mind you there are indegeenous Ibibio and Anaang in Abia State but they claim Abia likewise Igala in Anambra,IDOMA in Ebonyi
where can you find idoma in Ebonyi state?
Did we even have boundary with idoma's?
Or Ebonyi territory where carved to Benue state, there no plot that will make Igbo look minor in Nigeria....go and hug transformers if u hate Igbos.

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