Fingard02k's Posts
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pls can games such as pes,fifa etc work in acer mini laptop?, and also some softwares that can't work in it?, pls nl can you guys suggest Help softwares for me. thanks |
Abeg my people o , wetin dem (baryern) do?, did they steal anything from FC MESSI-lona?, they Don.'t deserve to be treated like this na, |
@crazyman its not inside udoka estate but opposite it, beside C.C.C. company along the enugu-onitsha express way, the building is still under construction. majority of those that survived the incident were those that jumped out from the 2nd floor, only 3 people were found others died. |
That's all for now guys, sorry nairalenders i can't post the videos here, i think these ones can do?
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Images from ekwueme's square today in awka
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For those you saying their is no building opposite udoka, think again, it happened inside lento aluminium compound, i will post all pictures i got before i went to ekwueme square, I MUST COMMEND C.C.C COMPANY, they brought all the machine that was used to save,lift the building. |
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Mehn, i no fit shout. will update you guys later. it happened opposite udoka housing estate along express way |
My fellow Anambrarians, Visitors and residents in Anambra, please lets make this thread lively by sending images,video links and live updates of happenings at Alex Ekwueme square, government house, Nnewi and other parts of the state, "Okwa mgbosi mmadu kwara mmadu k'okwara onwe ya" , thanks |
Abegi make all of una stop whining, shey i told of una earlier say them best result go be draw?.,those chickens are bound to fail, if you love your life please please stop watching ordinary chicken's game, hmmm make una no say i no warn una oo, as for me i don ban myself from watching any nigeria soccer games. |
Hey guys the best these chickens can get in this match is draw, so make una mind una business o cos they must disappoint as usual. as for me,i don ban myself from watching any nigeria matches, so even if they offer me bribe to watch the match, i will will not take, my life is more important to me. am Too young to die of heart attack, goatluck to them |
That rail way side is very dangerous especially at nights, Lots of bad things usually happens that side, @TOPIC those police men are not saying the truth. Judging from what they said, they are lying cos their is no way they can see a person with a gun from that their patrol van in that street, cos the street is not that kind wide, long or straight, I don't believe them one bit, They killed the man for reasons only known to them simple. |
All markets,office,companies etc will not open till its 10a.m due to commencement of our father,leader,hero's burial that will begin from tomorrow- anambra state goverment |
The FA have confirmed that Fabio Capello has resigned from his post as England manager with immediate effect. The Italian, whose reign was set to end after Euro 2012, had been angered by the FA’s decision to step in and remove John Terry as the national team’s captain, making comments on TV in Italy declaring his displeasure at the move. |
Pin me @ M156W6 |
As 2011 winds down, we celebrate with my anti Pepe - Patience Jonathan's top 12 quotes, one for each month of the year, 1. My husband and Sambo is a good people. 2. The President was once a child and the Senators were once a children. 3. My fellow widows. 4. A good mother takes care of his children. 5. The people sitting before you were once a children. 6. Yes we are all happy for the effort,, it is not easy to carry second in an International competition like this one, (addressing press men after Female Under-19 FIFA World Cup). 7. The bombers who born them? Wasn’t it not a woman? They were once a children now a adult now they are bombing women and children making some children a widow. 8. My heart feels sorry for these children who have become widows for loosing their parents for one reason or another. 9. We should have love for our fellow Nigerians irrespective of their NATIONALITY. 10. Thank God the Doctors and Nurses are responding to treatment. 11. I would rather kill myself instead of committing suicide. 12. Ojukwu is a great man, he died but his manhood lives on. |
ChinenyeN and ifyalways |
The stage is set for the commencement of a grand farewell to the late Dim Chukwuemeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu with the declaration of a seven-day prayers and mourning, beginning from Thursday, December 1. Ojukwu died last Saturday morning in a London hospital. He was flown out of the country on December 23 last year, following a stroke. The prayer and mourning period was declared yesterday at a press conference addressed at the Casa Bianca, Enugu residence of the late Ikemba Nnewi, by the leader of the Movement for the Actualisation of the Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB), Chief Ralph Uwazuruike. The prayer session was also endorsed by the Chairman, South-east Governors’ Forum and Anambra State Governor, Mr Peter Obi, who returned from London yesterday morning and arrived at Ojukwu’s house shortly after the conference ended. “I just came back this morning, everybody is aware of his death. We are all in mourning mood, Igboland is in mourning mood, Nigeria is in mourning mood. He (Uwazuruike) declared prayers, which all must follow/ We need prayers for our leader, it is seven days of prayers and every Igbo person should support that,” Governor Obi said before he proceeded to Abuja to officially inform President Goodluck Jonathan of the demise of the Ezeigbo Gburugburu. |
The following is the last interview Dim Odumegwu Ojukwu ever granted to any newspaper. Excerpts… It may be difficult to determine which of these two Dim Odumegwu Ojukwu loves most: Ndigbo or his wife Bianca? If you speak with Ojukwu, you immediately come away with the impression of a man married, as it were, to both. However, with age taking its toll on the Igbo icon [he is in his late 70s], Bianca, his ageless wife, is like the guardian angel attending to his needs. That was why she stayed home on the appointed day for an interview with Daily Sun. She stood by her husband all through the interview to ensure that “he did not say anything volatile” and that he was “frugal” with his answers. Ojukwu would naturally detest any bid to “cage” him. At a point he got angry and called off the interaction. Ironically, it took Bianca’s intervention to get him back on the “hot seat”. He then fielded questions within the ground rules, namely: that you do not drill him for more than an hour, and that you do not insist on all your questions being answered. Age may have slowed him, but not his articulation and unflinching consistency over his beliefs. Forty years after, Ikemba still believes he was right to have declared a war in defence of the Igbo people, but would flatly refuse to talk about the war. He believes that Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida has a ‘sense of humour’ and ‘may have something to offer’ should he decide to return to the seat of power at the Presidency. The interview is vintage Dim Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu. Your Excellency, why did you choose to pursue a career in the military? I must confess you caught me pants down there, completely off guard. But I thought everybody knows why I went into the Army. I joined the Army to serve the nation. I also joined the Army because I liked the military. I also joined to prove a point to myself, the point being that, as many people said and thought, at that time, that I was not [speaking in Igbo] Onye aba aba nna [meaning a jolly good fellow spoilt by wealth]. I wanted to make that point to myself first and then to others. I needed to show that whatever needed to be done in my country, I would do my own part. I joined the Nigerian Army and I am proud to say that I continued to serve to the rank of General. I don’t know how many of us can boast of that. I am very proud of that. I have been seen in action in the barracks. I have been seen in war. That’s it. Muammar Gaddafi had on two occasions in one month called for the splitting of Nigeria. The Senate president described him as a mad man. What’s your take? No, I would not go as far as calling him a mad man. He is a leader of his people and I respect that fact. If you look through my entire career, you would find that even with a country as close to us as Ghana, at no point have I suggested what type of government they should have, because it is not my business. Having said that, it is clear that whatever Gaddafi thinks, he has every right to his thoughts, but as a political leader, he should note that he has no right to decide for Nigeria what Nigeria should do. So, I say to him, my friend Gaddafi, please shut up. Forty years after the civil war, would you say the circumstances that led you to draw a line of defence for your people have abated? I hesitate to answer that question, because I don’t like to be boxed into a corner. Quite a lot of the issues have been raised over the years. But whether they have abated, I would say yes, to a certain extent. However, that we are today still talking about the safety of our citizens is really sad. What are our leaders doing and why is our society so fragile? By now Nigeria should have grown beyond all these sectarian crisis and insecurity, which now makes people scared of travelling to or going to live in some parts of the country. I feel we should have gone far beyond that. But, more than anything, I want to make this very clear, namely: that it is for this kind of things that we have leaders. I call upon the leaders to guarantee the safety of our people. I hope I have made myself clear. Let me add here that I also speak as a General. The Anambra State election has come and gone. One of the remarkable things about that election is that you stuck out your neck and your reputation for Governor Peter Obi. What did you see in him? Every one is already talking about the outcome of that election. I was very proud of the campaign and I am still very proud that I made a call and despite all the rough things people say about Ndigbo, it appears very clearly that Ndigbo listened to what I said. And by that they obviously accepted me as their leader. They acted in accordance with my wishes. I am very proud of this. You are Igbo and you know how difficult it is to get Ndigbo together to accept one person. I am proud that I told them this was my last wish and they responded. But then, don’t laugh at the next thing I am about to say, but I am hoping that Ndigbo will still be available to do other ‘last wishes’ that I would have [general laughter], you understand? I do, sir. Yes, because I am still very much around and I will ask for more last wishes [more laughter]. You have not talked about Peter Obi. Oh yes, Peter Obi. To start with, I like his modesty. No doubt about that. He is one leader who does not come here to see me as though he was attacking a fortress. He is very modest. Whenever we have to talk, he comes as Peter. He does not bring half a brigade as entourage as others would do. You notice also that whenever he talks he keeps to the point and does not elongate matters unnecessarily. I like Peter and I hope I would be more useful to him in his career. The truth, however, and Peter can claim this more than everyone else, is that while I can say that I have helped him in his career, he can also stand up and say he has also helped me in my own career. You can see there is some mutuality in our interaction. But having said all these, my advice for him is that he should try to be more of a politician than a businessman. The country has waited 40 years to read your war memoirs and it has not come. Will it ever come? Yes, it will come. From time to time I tell myself that I am just starting. Again, it is this question of the last wish. I say it is the last wish, but somehow the Almighty says no it cannot be the last wish yet. War memoirs you call it, well, it will come out in the course of my own memoirs. When you say war memoirs, I tell you straight away that I do not want to be remembered necessarily as a soldier. I want to be remembered as a patriot. I will write and I will explain whatever needs to be explained about the war time. I will do that because I want the truth to be available. What time would that be? [Long pause, then his wife Bianca says] He had only just started. So, it would be difficult to say when that would be. [Another long pause, then Ojukwu says] What I find amusing is that I am being asked to determine when what I have described as my final act would be. I have already said to you that there will be many other final acts and I pray to God that it would be so. But one thing I would tell you is that I made a promise to my wife, and you know how much I love her, I promised her that I would not leave her without my own testament. So, it is sure to come? Yes. It is coming. What’s your comment on Goodluck Jonathan’s emergence as Acting President, and do you think he should run for the 2011 election? Has there been any problem over his emergence? As far as I am concerned, he is a Nigerian citizen, and the most prominent one at that, for now. If he wants to continue, then he should run for election next year. It is not a North and South thing, and I noted that he is a Nigerian and he is free to run and should run if he wants to continue to be in charge of the country. From that point of view, yes, he can run for as long as the Constitution of Nigeria permits him. The papers reported that you are backing Iwu’s reappointment and that you have endorsed his return as INEC boss, is it true? Absolute nonsense! Why should I back him? He did a good job and I am proud that I stood up to say yes, you have done well. I will do that for any Nigerian who has done well, not only because he is an Igbo son who is producing for Nigeria a good result, which the whole world applauds. Iwu did a good job in Nigeria and Anambra, as far as I am concerned. People making comments about good elections are not just talking about Anambra; for a long time people have wondered whether we are capable of conducting elections. We have shown that we are capable of conducting elections and producing results the whole world will look at and acknowledge. We have successfully had a civilian to civilian hand-over. That is certainly a plus. Should he be reappointed? Oh, come off it. I am not his employer. The question of his reappointment is between himself and his employer, why should I dabble into his job? People said when he visited the other day that he asked for and got my support. No such thing happened. Let me use this opportunity to put it clearly that he came to visit me on his way to Abia where he had a job to conclude. At no time during the interaction on his visit did he seek my support, nor did I give to him the said support for elongating his tenure in INEC or for seeking another mandate. As I said in the opening of my response, that is a matter between him and his employer, which in this case, is the Federal Government. I was not even consulted when he was appointed, so how can I now be instrumental to his reappointment? Why were you unable to win election into the Senate in 1983 even when the Igbo nation stood still on your return from exile in 1982, what happened? It may be that the people did not want me. But there are records of what happened. And I don’t go beyond that actually because I felt that whatever happened to me then was a temporary set back. I want you to always remember that most leaders are not really idols where they come from. Anything could have gone wrong. One thing I have suffered in this sense is the fact that Ndigbo would seem not just happy that I am there, but they would like to claim every inch of my skin as theirs and they would like to control every bit of my blood, too. It is natural. In fact, instead of just rejoicing that I am useful to them, they seem to have cast themselves in a tug of war with Nigeria, whether Nigeria has a greater pull on me or they. You will always find that even in Nnewi I am at once their most popular son, yet I know that Nnewi people feel they have been cheated by the rest of Nigeria that did not father me, and are coming out now to claim a lot of me. These petty conflicts you can find anywhere. But let me put it very clearly, I have said this before and I will continue to say it: I came into politics for the Igbo cause. I came in to do what I can to rescue Ndigbo. I shall continue to do so and my focus remains that entity called Igbo. That’s all about that. If you have the opportunity to present yourself for the Presidency, would you do that? [Long pause, then Bianca says] No. You won’t allow him? Binca: No. Ojukwu: you heard her. Yes. That’s my answer. You said in the past that you will not condemn MASSOB, neither would you support them, but right now their leader, Uwazurike, is being held… [Cuts in] Most unjustly. Uwazurike, like anybody else, must have made mistakes, though I have not seen any yet, but why should he be detained for three months? What is worse is that even in court his accusers do not bring him forward to answer to the charges against him. I don’t want to be a scare-monger, but really, to be honest with you, I am not sure he is still alive. It is a terrible thing for an Igbo man to disappear like that before our very eyes. No, the Igbo race certainly has it as a bad mark against the Federal Government that locked him up for three months. We demand, I will demand on their behalf that we be told in clear terms where Uwazurike is. Where is he, why does he not attend court when he is under the care of the Federal Government in prison and in circumstances where the government want him to answer to charges preferred against him? Where is he? I have asked this question and I say to the Federal Government that I shall continue to ask; find my brother Uwazurike, tell me where he is. If what you say about him is right, I would feel better if he were permitted to come out and answer to your charges. It’s only fair. Keeping him away is culturally an abomination. How can a man just disappear and we cannot give him the rightful honours he deserves as a human being under our culture? Secondly, if you think as a government that he has committed certain offences, I now ask the government, has his wife committed the same offence? Why must his relations be punished? Bring him out. Tell us where he is, and above all, give the courts the opportunity of pronouncing him guilty or not. I hope I have made myself clear. Ralph Uwazurike cannot just disappear into thin air. Each time they come to court to say they have adjourned for one reason or the other, yet the man is in custody of the government that is adjourning. That is not right. It is this sort of thing that makes me often wonder whether it is not part of the suffering of Ndigbo, because I can’t see any other tribe or any other group being handled in this off- hand manner. If he has done wrong, let him go to court. Try him and let us hear the verdict. Yes. But, it is for these kinds of things that Gaddafi called for the country to be split if certain people are going to be treated like second class citizens in their own country, isn’t it? If I had said what Gaddafi said, I would stand by it. But I did not. And we have not reached a stage where we can now hire Gaddafi to come and be our advocate. He has his own problems. Please, Gaddafi, don’t mix your problems with ours and if you feel you have to talk, come and talk to me. I am the leader of Ndigbo. The name Gaddafi does not appear in our lexicography. Biafrans refined oil during the war and thus had fuel they used. Forty years after Nigeria is importing fuel. How does that make you feel? It makes me feel awful and there are many things that make me feel awful. I don’t expect every problem to be solved at the same time, but there are many things we could do better than we are doing now. These things were done, but the people who did them should come out and be counted. I have become notorious for waving the ethnic flag, but I am always proud of the opportunity because what I am after is equity for all citizens of the block I serve. In 1966 when Nigeria experienced the first military intervention, did you think the circumstances at that time warranted a coup? You will be surprised. As junior officers in the Army, practically every thing that happened got us thinking of the possibility of a coup de tat. So, when you ask do I think that circumstances warranted the coup, my answer is yes. As an Army officer, I thought Nigeria needed a shake- up at that time. Do you think you were right to have declared a war in defence of Ndigbo in 1967, was it the right thing to do at that time? Of course, I was right. Even now, I still believe I was right and I will even go further to say that if I am found exactly the same situation again, I would wish that I have the courage to be as right as I was then. Are you with me? I am with you, sir. But some people did not think you were right even at that time and I understand that they advised you to use diplomacy rather than war. I wouldn’t know whether looking back you would say they were correct? There is no situation you wouldn’t have some supporting and others not supporting. They have their right to support or not to support. But I should warn you that if you think you are leading me into a situation where I would review the war, I think it is better for you to recognise that before you stands a brick wall. Why wouldn’t you want to talk about it? [Flares up, eyes popping] Because I don’t want to. Ok. Let’s go back to the beginning. You were said to be a pampered child. How true? [Turns to Bianca] Darling, was I a pampered child? Bianca: Well, I always tell you when you throw tantrums that we need to go and wake up your mother from the dead so she can come and take better care of you, because she may have spoilt you. Yes, you are a pampered child. Ojukwu: My wife thinks I was pampered. Was it true that as a child you lacked nothing as a young growing boy? That’s how I saw it, but others might have seen it differently. But I certainly had everything that was necessary. I went to the best of schools, CMS Grammar School, Kings College, Lincoln College, Oxford, and so on. Yes, my father did the best he could to bring me up and I always say, and it doesn’t take anything off me at all, that the product which he finally got justified his efforts. People generally say Ojukwu is a stubborn person. How do you see yourself? I hope I remain stubborn. If this is stubbornness, yes. But the important thing is to get things right. If you look around in Nigeria, we tend to sweep things so much under the carpet only to come back and start picking them bit by bit. If the verdict is that I am stubborn, then I draw comfort from the fact that Winston Churchill was stubborn, Napoleon was stubborn. I draw consolation that today Mandela is stubborn. All around me the names that keep coming up are those of very stubborn people. If I am stubborn, then there is just one point I want to make about stubbornness, and it is this: I believe I am stubborn for the right reasons. Your fellow soldiers, Olusegun Obasanjo, Muhammadu Buhari, IBB, have all had opportunities of leading this country at one time or the other. Now, some of them want to offer themselves again for the same position. People have said that soldiers are not really good administrators, should they be allowed to come back? I don’t join the group that would casually say that soldiers are not good administrators, because I know that in the Army you are trained to administer. I know that in the Army you find great administrators who lead men to make the highest sacrifice known to this world. Soldiers are very good administrators. In fact, you cannot be a good soldier if are not a good administrator, because I know that in the Army you are trained to administer. I know that in the Army you find great administrators. It is only in the Army you would take a man and administer all his needs until his death. That is true administration. Obasanjo ruled for eight years… Did he? Yes. He was there for two terms. Could you assess his tenure? [Long pause] you are asking for trouble, but I would not succumb. Let other people decide whether he did well? Why would you not want to talk about Obasanjo’s regime? [Voice rising] Because he is too much of a colleague of mine, I do not want to get into this personal conflict. No sir, it is not personal. [Flares up] I am talking about Obasanjo, who you want me to talk about. Yes, but we are talking about his regime, not his person. Well, his regime and himself are the same, and I ask you to shut up. Muhammadu Buhari wants to return as Head of State, do you agree? Does he? Yes. Well, he has not told me. When I see him next time I shall ask him. There is also IBB who ruled for eight years and now wants to return to office. What do you think? I don’t know that he wants to come back. But Babangida happens to be the one I know a little bit about. If for nothing else, I like his sense of humour and I believe that a man endowed with such openness might have something to offer. You think if he wants to come back he is welcome? Oh yes, why not? In fact, anybody who wants to have a shot at the Presidency is welcome, provided they go the right way. Don’t come back to office through the wrong way such as a coup de’tat, then I will tell you that you are cheating. But if you are going to go through the elections, campaigns, and get people to vote for you and they say you are the man, then that’s okay by me. After eight years, IBB and others who had had a shot before can come back if they wish? I would even go further to say that if 16 years were possible, provided the man is healthy and his senses are still intact and his coordination still alright then, he should offer himself for the job, and if the people want him, so be it. What are your general views on the recent ministerial nominees by Acting President Goodluck Jonathan? Generally speaking, my attitude to the names is that there is too much recycling going on and I believe it is not a good thing to recycle people over and over again. Most of the problems that persist in Nigeria derive from this tendency to recycle. There are many people in Nigeria and my advice is that the authorities should look deeper and look round. They will find the men and women who can do the job. What do you hope to see in next year’s elections? We know the constitution. People should go through it and make sure they present themselves the best way. What do I hope to see? I have indicated, for example, that if INEC does what it did in Anambra recently then I look forward to their taking charge again. But if they cannot, then the leadership should move aside. They have done their bit. That’s the way I see it. I would like to see a transparent election. Now, don’t go and slay me on the pages of your newspaper, but I would also want to see an Igbo man emerging winner of that election. Do you think that the Igbo are ready to take the Presidency? Why not? If they are going to take it, which party would provide the platform? I must congratulate you for being persistent. Mark you, I did not say stubborn. What I say is let them have their chance. That’s all. I am certain they would be up to the task provided nobody puts obstacles on their way. Will your party, which at the moment is not doing too well, work hard enough to be that coveted platform? If they do not work hard enough, it would not be for my lack of trying. I will keep pushing that they work hard enough and produce what I expect. People believe the party Ojukwu leads should have been the leading party in the South East. But that has not happened, why? Is that what people think? Then, I say Amen. But that has not happened, why? Let’s wait till 2011 then. |
President Goodluck Jonathan said he received with much sadness and a deep feeling of great national loss news of the passing away of Chief Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu in the United Kingdom. He said Ojukwu lived a most fulfilled life and had in passing on left behind a record of very notable contributions to the evolution of modern Nigeria, which will assure his place in the history of this country. In a statement signed by Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Dr. Reuben Abati, the President said he joined Ojukwu’s family, the government and people of Anambra, his home state, the entire Igbo people of Nigeria and his friends, associates and followers across the country in mourning him. According to the statement, “President Jonathan believes that the late Chief Ojukwu’s immense love for his people, justice, equity and fairness, which forced him into the leading role he played in the Nigerian civil war, as well as his commitment to reconciliation and the full reintegration of his people into a united and progressive Nigeria in the aftermath of the war, will ensure he is remembered forever as one of the great personalities of his time, who stood out easily as a brave, courageous, fearless, erudite and charismatic leader. “He prays that God Almighty will grant Chief Ojukwu’s soul eternal rest from his earthly labours.” A bright, courageous military officer -Gov Uduaghan Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan of Delta State has expressed shock at the untimely death of Ikemba Nnewi, Dim Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu. Governor Uduaghan lamented the death of Chief Ojukwu as a sad loss to the country whose initial news of recovery had gladdened his heart, only for the shock announcement of his demise. Governor Uduaghan in a condolence message to the family, government and people of Anambra State recalled that he was in his lifetime a colossus, who made significant contributions to the growth and development of the country. “Chief Ojukwu was in his lifetime a bright and courageous military officer, politician of immense talent, capable administrator, who even though led a secessionist struggle, came back from exile to participate in deepening the process of healing and reconciliation of the country. “Ojukwu until his death was a strong proponent of handshake across the Niger, a vision he promoted to reconcile the peoples of the South- South and South East as part of efforts to heal the wounds of the civil war. I am sure history will be kind to him,” Governor Uduaghan said. A national icon is gone -Chime Governor Sullivan Chime has expressed profound shock and sorrow over the death of former Biafran leader, Dim Odumegwu Ojukwu, saying his passage has robbed the country of one her most notable historical and political figures. The governor in a statement signed by his Chief Press Secretary, Chukwudi Achife, described Ojukwu as a foremost nationalist and activist whose contributions to the political and constitutional development of the country are not only indelible but in some ways inimitable. He further described the deceased as a symbol of the struggle against injustice, segregation and oppression against any group of people in the country, adding that his epic efforts had helped to lay the foundation for national integration and the sense of equality and unity that prevails in the country today. He said Ojukwu was an icon who, despite his affluent background, was never afraid to speak out on critical national issues or challenge policies that tended to infringe on the rights of the people, adding that this disposition had helped him remain a highly influential and charismatic political figure in his lifetime. “The history of this country cannot be complete without profound mention of the contributions of Dim Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu. He was a vocal and forceful advocate against injustice and oppression, an activist who was prepared to risk all, including his life, to ensure that everyone was accorded his rightful place and due. He was a friend to all who believed in national integration and equality of all races. Nigeria will certainly miss him.” He fought for justice -Sam Egwu (ex gov, Ebonyi State) It is a great loss both to the Igbo and Nigeria generally. He was a man specially created to work for the nation. He fought for justice and was never intimidated. He was Ndigbo’s true leader. We will miss his absence. He was Nigeria’s MC-General -Adegbite He was Nigeria’s MC-General. He was very, very useful to Nigeria, he was always on the side of justice. He never shied away from speaking his mind on any matter concerning the country. It is unfortunate that he died at a time when the country needs honest contributions from people like him. It is really painful -Leo Stan Dim Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu was a great man, he stood for justice, he was a voice to the voiceless. He acted always in the interest of the country and the Igbo in particular. He left a legacy for us to follow. I pray God to grant him eternal rest. It’s a national loss -Tony Momoh He will be remembered as one who registered contempt for injustice in Nigeria. Ojukwu was one of the authors of true federalism. He fought for the unity of Nigeria all the way. The way Ojukwu was treated in the hospital was really disgraceful. It is a challenge for us to honour those who have contributed to the growth of the country. What Ojukwu saw many decades ago is what we are still seeing today. He was a patriot. A man most loved by his people -Etiaba News of Ojukwu’s death is devastating not only to the Igbo race in particular but Nigerians in general. His exit at a time like this is depressing considering that the Nigeria of his dream, where equality, equity, accountability and probity will be enthroned has not crystallized. As a leader, he would go down our history as a man most loved by his people. He represented the aspiration of his people and never compromised their interest. Left a stamp in defence of the Igbo -Ralph Uwechue President-General of Ohaneze Ndigbo, Amb. Ralph Uwechue, has described the death of Biafran warlord, Dim Chukwuemeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu, as the “passing of an age in the chequered history of the Igbo nation.” Uwechue told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in a telephone interview in Enugu on Saturday that the Ikemba Nnewi had left a most significant stamp in defence of the Igbo race. “As a leader, he has left a most significant stamp in the courageous defence of the Igbo nation,” he said. While praying for the repose of his soul, Uwechue said Odumegwu-Ojukwu would be missed by the Igbo, the country and Africa in general. Deserves national burial –Ayogu Eze Chairman of Senate Committee on Works, Chief Ayogu Eze, said the Igbo nation had lost one of its major leaders. “After the unfortunate civil war, he subordinated as a peacemaker, nation-builder, opinion leader, defender of history and stood with the Igbo people till his last breath,’’ Eze said. The senator, however, said he deserved a national burial. A Nigerian hero -Nwadinobi President of Enugu Chamber of Commerce, Industry, Mines and Agriculture (ECCIMA), Mr. Okechukwu Nwadinobi, said Ojukwu was an Igbo icon and a Nigerian hero. According to him, the Ikemba lived an active and eventful life and history will obviously put him in his rightful place. “He was an active political player,’’ he added. Meanwhile, A cross section of Enugu residents have expressed shock over death of the Biafrian in a London hospital. The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that while some doubted the news, others described his demise as a great loss to the Igbo in particular, and Nigeria and Africa at large. Mr. Chimezie Iloka, who hails from Nnewi, the home town of Odumegwu-Ojukwu, described the death as “one death too many”, which has created a big vacuum in Nnewi. “If this is true, you know that Ndigbo have lost their uniting figure, a hero and a man who until his death had continued to champion the cause of the Igbo man. “Ojukwu is a detribalised Nigerian, who believed in equal rights, fair play, justice and respect for the rule of law,” Iloka said. Mrs. Chinelo Ezenekwe, a legal practitioner, said with the death of Ojukwu the nation had lost a rare gem that used his wealth of knowledge to fight injustice. “She described him as an institution that needed to be under-studied to tap his vast knowledge and experience with which he sustained the Igbo during the civil war. ``There is no two Ojukwu in Igboland. He was a man of many parts whose death means the close of an era,’’ Ezenekwe said. Oyinlola mourns Ojukwu Former Osun state Governor, Prince Olagunsoye Oyinlola has also described the death of Ikemba Odumegwu Ojukwu as a great national loss. Prince Oyinlola in his condolence message described Ojukwu as a leader with an immeasurable love for his people. While saying that Ojukwu’s place in Nigerian history is assured, Prince Oyinlola challenged Nigerians to learn lessons from the life of service the late Chief Ojukwu lived. He noted that the fact that Ojukwu was born with a silver spoon never prevented him from pursuing a career in the military which transformed him into a man of history. Prince Oyinlola prayed God to grant the soul of the deceased etrrnal repose and fortitude to all he left behind. |
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