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Ojukwu’s Death Is A Big Loss To Nigeria - Fashola - Politics (2) - Nairaland

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Re: Ojukwu’s Death Is A Big Loss To Nigeria - Fashola by freecocoa(f): 12:11pm On Nov 27, 2011
Okay na BLUETOOTH and NAMFAV una go die today,everywhere you go na OJUKWU talk dey ground,what a HERO,you guys can also make this one a very long thread.
Re: Ojukwu’s Death Is A Big Loss To Nigeria - Fashola by 27naira(m): 12:14pm On Nov 27, 2011
I am begining to think that Nigerians swear more than any other.
make una take am easy now, you feudilistic, bomboclastic, repurgnant non-entities.  grin
All these Yoruba bigots, just like their fatherless Tinubu should let us hear word. maybe, Obasanjo should die so that we can render our own eulogies. Igbo people, o gini? na watin? Ojukwu was a man with a personal conviction. however, he was a the stupidest war-monger that fought a battle he knew he will never win. Anu ohia  grin I respect him because am igbo  wink

Almagiri people, when Gowon go die now? his turn never reach? make una tell am say we dey wait oh  grin
Re: Ojukwu’s Death Is A Big Loss To Nigeria - Fashola by OneNaira6: 12:39pm On Nov 27, 2011
LMFAO. grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin

Nairaland Bluetooth and co what do you have to say right now?
Re: Ojukwu’s Death Is A Big Loss To Nigeria - Fashola by Nobody: 2:02pm On Nov 27, 2011
Odumegwu Ojukwu, Breakaway Biafra Leader, Dies at 78
By ROBERT D. McFADDEN
Published: November 26, 2011


Odumegwu Ojukwu, an Oxford-educated Nigerian colonel who proclaimed the Republic of Biafra in 1967 and led his Ibo people into a secessionist war that cost more than a million lives, many of them starved children whose skeletal images shocked the world, has died at a hospital in London. He was 78.
Enlarge This Image


Odumegwu Ojukwu, left, taking an oath in 1967 to be the leader of the Republic of Biafra, just after it declared independence.
International news reports quoted Maja Umeh, a spokesman for the All Progressive Grand Alliance Party in Nigeria, as confirming Mr. Ojukwu’s death. The Associated Press said he died on Saturday, but Bloomberg News said the death occurred on Friday. The cause was not cited. Mr. Ojukwu had a stroke at his home in Enugu, Nigeria, in December 2010, and had since been under treatment in London.
[size=15pt]Mr. Ojukwu was an unlikely militarist and a reluctant rebel: the sports-car-driving son of one of Nigeria’s richest men, an urbane student of history and Shakespeare who read voraciously, wrote poetry, played tennis and, with his wealth and connections, might have been a business mogul or a worldly rouge-et-noir playboy.
But he spurned his father’s offer of a business partnership[/size], joined Nigeria’s civil service and then its army in the turbulent last years of British colonial rule. And as maps of Africa were redrawn by forces of national and tribal self-determination, he became military governor of the Ibo homeland, one of three tribal regions, at a historic juncture.
At 33, he found himself at the vortex of simmering ethnic rivalries among Nigeria’s Hausas in the north, Yorubas in the southwest and Ibos in the southeast. [size=20pt]The largely Christian Ibos were envied [/size] as one of Africa’s best-educated and most industrious peoples, possessed of much of Nigeria’s oil wealth. Tensions finally exploded into assassinations, coups and [size=25pt]a massacre of 30,000 Ibos by Hausas and federal troops.[/size] [color=#990000][/color]
While he denounced the massacre and cited other Ibo grievances, Colonel Ojukwu for months resisted rising Ibo pressure for secession. He proposed a weak federation to separate Nigeria’s three tribal regions politically. But Col. Yakubu Gowon, leader of the military government in Lagos, rejected the idea. A clash over federal taxation of the Ibo region’s oil and coal industries precipitated the final break.
“Long live the Republic of Biafra,” Colonel Ojukwu proclaimed on May 30, 1967.
Five weeks later, civil war began when Nigerian military forces invaded the breakaway province. It was a lopsided war, with other nations supporting federal forces seeking to unify the country and Biafra standing virtually alone. Nigeria was Africa’s most populous nation, with 57 million people, of which 8 million to 10 million were Ibos.
Poorly equipped and outnumbered four to one, Biafra’s 25,000-member army held its own for months, supported by a citizenry that donated food, clothing and supplies. Colonel Ojukwu ran Biafra as a wartime democracy, fought alongside his troops and was said to be revered by his people.
He gave orders in a slow, deliberate baritone: native Igbo with an Oxford accent. Fond of Sibelius, he chose “Finlandia” as Biafra’s national anthem. And he read Shakespeare. “Hamlet was my favorite,” he told a New York Times correspondent. “I wonder what the psychiatrists will make of that.”
Over a battle map he looked like a brooding Othello, with solemn eyes and a luxuriantly bearded countenance. He slept irregularly, sometimes working nonstop for days, taking a meal now and then, rarely touching alcohol but chain-smoking English cigarettes.
Tanzania, Zambia, the Ivory Coast and Gabon recognized Biafra, and France and other nations provided covert aid. But the Soviet Union, Egypt and even Britain, after a period of neutrality, supplied weapons and advisers to Nigeria. The United States, officially neutral, provided diplomatic and relief coordination aid. But after 15 months of war, Biafra’s 29,000 square miles had been reduced to 5,000, and deaths had soared.
As crops burned and refugees streamed away from advancing federal forces, much of the population was cut off from food supplies. As the 30-month civil war moved onto the world stage as one of the first televised wars, millions around the globe were stunned by pictures of Biafran babies with distended bellies and skeletal children who were succumbing to famine by the thousands daily in the war’s final stages.
Colonel Ojukwu appealed to the world to save his people. International relief agencies responded, and scores of cargo planes ferried food in to the encircled Biafrans, but airlifts were woefully inadequate. Deaths from starvation were estimated at more than 6,000 a day, and postwar studies suggested that a third of Biafra’s surviving preschoolers — nearly 500,000 — were malnourished at war’s end.
In January 1970, secessionist resistance was crushed and its leader, by then a general, fled into exile in Ivory Coast and London. Granted a presidential pardon after 13 years, he returned to Nigeria in 1982 and was welcomed by enormous crowds. He became a Lagos businessman and ran unsuccessfully for president several times, but remained a hero in the eyes of many of his countrymen.
The legacies of the war were terrible. Deaths from fighting, disease and starvation were estimated by international relief agencies at one million to three million. Besides widespread destruction of hospitals, schools, homes and businesses, Ibos faced discrimination in employment, housing and political rights. Nigeria reabsorbed Biafra, however, and the region was rebuilt over 20 years as its oil-based economy prospered anew.
Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu (pronounced chuk-woo-MA-ka oh-doo-MAG-woo oh-JU-kwoo) was born on Nov. 4, 1933, in Zungeru, Nigeria. From modest beginnings, his father, Sir Louis Phillipe Odumegwu Ojukwu, had made fortunes in transportation and real estate, and was Nigeria’s wealthiest entrepreneur when he died in 1966.
The boy nicknamed Emeka attended Kings College in Lagos, Nigeria’s most prestigious secondary school; Epson College, a boys’ prep school in Surrey, and Lincoln College, Oxford, where he graduated with honors in history in 1955. Classmates said he was popular, dressed stylishly, drove a bright red MG sports car and loved discussions of Machiavelli, Hobbes, Louis XIV and Shakespeare.
He had three wives. His first, Njideka, a law student he met at Oxford and wed in 1962, died in 2010. His second, Stella Onyeador, died in 2009. He married Bianca Odinaka Onoh, a former beauty queen and businesswoman 34 years his junior, in 1994. Returning to Nigeria in 1956, he rejected his father’s business overtures, worked on development in remote villages, and in 1957 joined the army. He called himself an amateur soldier, but rose rapidly in the ranks after Nigeria gained independence in 1960. In 1966, he became military governor of the Ibo region, and declared Biafran independence after repression enveloped his people.
He sometimes compared Biafrans to Israelis. [size=20pt]“The Israelis are hard-working, enterprising people,” he told a visitor to his besieged field headquarters in 1969. “So are we. They’ve suffered from pogroms. So have we. In many ways, we share the same promise and the same problems.” [/size]

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/27/world/africa/odumegwu-ojukwu-leader-of-breakaway-republic-of-biafra-dies-at-78.html?pagewanted=2&_r=1&partner=rss&emc=rss
Re: Ojukwu’s Death Is A Big Loss To Nigeria - Fashola by Johnpaul2k2(m): 2:15pm On Nov 27, 2011
Prominent men are busy paying Condolence visits ,
some bigots from SW also busy with their neighbor's laptops pasting rubbis.h angry angry angry angry
Re: Ojukwu’s Death Is A Big Loss To Nigeria - Fashola by omonnakoda: 2:25pm On Nov 27, 2011
Re: Ojukwu’s Death Is A Big Loss To Nigeria - Fashola by jerk: 2:36pm On Nov 27, 2011
ayusman16:

For someone who tried to break up Nigeria must not be seen as a national hero but that of Igbo.
that one concern you,keep enjoying Nigeria and the way its moving hypocrite like you.
Re: Ojukwu’s Death Is A Big Loss To Nigeria - Fashola by omonnakoda: 2:39pm On Nov 27, 2011
any way sha the man evil well well sha after him kill him people like fowl him com run like dog wen e hear say OBJ don land.

is it really true he committed suicide
https://www.nairaland.com/nigeria/topic-812272.0.html#msg9642294
Re: Ojukwu’s Death Is A Big Loss To Nigeria - Fashola by lagerwhenindoubt(m): 2:49pm On Nov 27, 2011
I dount much will be said of Tinubu by any ibo elite after he passes on by 2015 grin
Re: Ojukwu’s Death Is A Big Loss To Nigeria - Fashola by omonnakoda: 2:50pm On Nov 27, 2011
is it really true he committed suicide
https://www.nairaland.com/nigeria/topic-812272.0.html#msg9642294
this is how we shall remember him

Re: Ojukwu’s Death Is A Big Loss To Nigeria - Fashola by jerk: 2:59pm On Nov 27, 2011
omonnakoda:

is it really true he committed suicide
https://www.nairaland.com/nigeria/topic-812272.0.html#msg9642294
this is how we shall remember him
you are a[b] pig[/b]
Re: Ojukwu’s Death Is A Big Loss To Nigeria - Fashola by omonnakoda: 3:02pm On Nov 27, 2011
you are a reptile
Re: Ojukwu’s Death Is A Big Loss To Nigeria - Fashola by omonnakoda: 3:03pm On Nov 27, 2011
anyway the man lucky sha say aboki come pardon am
Re: Ojukwu’s Death Is A Big Loss To Nigeria - Fashola by segunjowo(m): 3:55pm On Nov 27, 2011
He can say that again. But its true. so sad, his death.
Re: Ojukwu’s Death Is A Big Loss To Nigeria - Fashola by omonnakoda: 4:21pm On Nov 27, 2011
Re: Ojukwu’s Death Is A Big Loss To Nigeria - Fashola by Goldieluks: 7:38pm On Nov 27, 2011
Oh well.
Re: Ojukwu’s Death Is A Big Loss To Nigeria - Fashola by omonnakoda: 7:39pm On Nov 27, 2011
i know .

it is sad

to kill yourself in old age becos of a small girl

https://www.nairaland.com/nigeria?topic=812272.msg9642773#msg9642773
Re: Ojukwu’s Death Is A Big Loss To Nigeria - Fashola by Bolan123: 7:44pm On Nov 27, 2011
@omnnokada and Eko Ile.

I have come to realize that most of ur postings and comment can only come from people whose entrance into this world was as a result of an unsuccessful abortion by your mothers. It has been confirm that when you learnt about the truth and coupled with the fact that the person who did it was an Igbo man, you became real angry with the Igbo nation. I pity both of you.
Re: Ojukwu’s Death Is A Big Loss To Nigeria - Fashola by omonnakoda: 7:47pm On Nov 27, 2011
i pity you and Ojukwu
Re: Ojukwu’s Death Is A Big Loss To Nigeria - Fashola by fyomer: 7:48pm On Nov 27, 2011
i wish you whatever you wish this man
Re: Ojukwu’s Death Is A Big Loss To Nigeria - Fashola by Bolan123: 7:58pm On Nov 27, 2011
@omnnokada and Eko Ile.

I don't see both of you having a life of human beings. What I see working in you is the life of a beast and of a people whose upbringing came from the gutters of Ijora Badia. I don't know why normal humans can not see the kind of people they respond to here. If I should because of you descend on the Yorubas, I will be given you people some sense of belonging. I know like Rhindo.5, whose mother is from Ghana and who claimed to be a Yoruba and was later unmasked by me, that both of you are products of a dog. I am yet to ascertain your true paternity before I tell you about your lineage.
Re: Ojukwu’s Death Is A Big Loss To Nigeria - Fashola by omonnakoda: 8:01pm On Nov 27, 2011
una too vex


wen una post this one

https://www.nairaland.com/nigeria/topic-548978.64.html


we no call you monkey even though u resemble am

all "na makate"

abi you no sabi say game wey get first half must get second half too??

na second half we dey now
Re: Ojukwu’s Death Is A Big Loss To Nigeria - Fashola by Bolan123: 8:14pm On Nov 27, 2011
If u want to know the children from monkey you should look at their father. We know where OBJ comes from.
Re: Ojukwu’s Death Is A Big Loss To Nigeria - Fashola by EkoIle1: 8:16pm On Nov 27, 2011
Bolan123:

@omnnokada and Eko Ile.

I don't see both of you having a life of human beings. What I see working in you is the life of a beast and of a people whose upbringing came from the gutters of Ijora Badia. I don't know why normal humans can not see the kind of people they respond to here. If I should because of you descend on the Yorubas, I will be given you people some sense of belonging. I know like Rhindo.5, whose mother is from Ghana and who claimed to be a Yoruba and was later unmasked by me, that both of you are products of a dog. I am yet to ascertain your true paternity before I tell you about your lineage.    


Back to sender and everybody inside ya house x 1 million.
Re: Ojukwu’s Death Is A Big Loss To Nigeria - Fashola by Nobody: 8:42pm On Nov 27, 2011
@ OP For those calling for national monument in respect of the great Igbo Hero, please think twice. It is like telling Museveni of Uganda to name an international airport or any stadium after Idi Amin. Just my thoughts nt imposed on you please
Re: Ojukwu’s Death Is A Big Loss To Nigeria - Fashola by Bolan123: 9:02pm On Nov 27, 2011
I am through with both of u
Re: Ojukwu’s Death Is A Big Loss To Nigeria - Fashola by Kobojunkie: 9:45pm On Nov 27, 2011
How can his death be a big loss? The man died at the age of 79. He has lived his life and moved on. Why is he now a loss to Nigeria?

If anything I hope the other OLD GENERALS(not that I am saying they are all in the same calibre) follow suit in the months to come. I look forward to a Nigeria without all dem old guards/old boys . . . . Maybe then, people will start to THINK FOR THEMSELVES.
Re: Ojukwu’s Death Is A Big Loss To Nigeria - Fashola by Decryptor(m): 9:53pm On Nov 27, 2011
@Bluetooth[b]less Dog[/b], @nama(cow)-fav,@aki(coconut-head)ns56 @sicknet02, @omoanaconda child of a python, @Eko ileusi Smelly tongue: Ojukwu was a true leader who will forever be remembered. At least, he was better than your traitor Pa Adesanya and [b]Bone[/b]la Ige that collected millions from Abacha to thwart the June 12 ambition of Abiola. angry angry Thank God for Al-Musthapha's video tapes and his confession, we would'nt have known that even the yorubas can sell their own brothers because of money. And before i forget, Ojukwu died of illness which is as a result of old age than being riddled with bullets by an AK-47 like your Bola Ige while trying to escape from the ceiling of his house tongue
Re: Ojukwu’s Death Is A Big Loss To Nigeria - Fashola by iDo3: 10:44pm On Nov 27, 2011
As a Yoruba Man I appreciate and praise the former President of Biafra Chukwuemeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu. He was a great man that articulated his principles and did not compromise with the locusts eating Nigeria empty then and now.

Even from an early age he stood up for the oppressed and would not be bought like most of our politicians/civil servants from ALL ethnic groups today. Find below a quote from Wikipedia about his early predisposition to fight for the oppressed:

"He began his educational career in Lagos, southwestern Nigeria. In 1944, Emeka was briefly imprisoned for assaulting a white British colonial teacher who was humiliating a black woman at King's College in Lagos, an event which generated widespread coverage in local newspapers."

We need more leaders like him - RIP!
Re: Ojukwu’s Death Is A Big Loss To Nigeria - Fashola by Areosapien(f): 10:59pm On Nov 27, 2011
The largely Christian
Ibos were envied as one of
Africa’s best-educated and most
industrious peoples, possessed of
much of Nigeria’s oil wealth.


Nuff said.
Re: Ojukwu’s Death Is A Big Loss To Nigeria - Fashola by HighChief4(m): 2:36am On Nov 28, 2011
Ikemba the only Nigerian that truly loved his people, he relinquished his father's wealth for public service. If only our present crop of politicians had same mindset
Re: Ojukwu’s Death Is A Big Loss To Nigeria - Fashola by okunoba(m): 4:48am On Nov 28, 2011
Great Nigerian, RIP Ikemba.

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