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Joe Igbokwe: When It’s A Crime To Love Buhari, Nigeria And Igbo Land - Politics - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / Joe Igbokwe: When It’s A Crime To Love Buhari, Nigeria And Igbo Land (13707 Views)

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Joe Igbokwe: When It’s A Crime To Love Buhari, Nigeria And Igbo Land by presidency: 9:47am On Oct 22, 2021
JOE IGBOKWE: WHEN IT’S A CRIME TO LOVE BUHARI, NIGERIA AND IGBO LAND

By FEMI ADESINA

There are millions of us round the country who follow Muhammadu Buhari passionately. Some got enlisted in 1984 when the man was military head of state. Others joined along the line as the principal was Chairman of the Petroleum Trust Fund (PTF) in the Gen Sani Abacha years, or when he joined partisan politics in 2002, ran for President a year later, also in 2007, 2011, and 2015, when he eventually coasted to power.

Over the years, some of the Buharists (as we are called), have fallen off, and even joined the opposition. Yet some others have stood sturdy, steady, resolute, as constant as the Northern Star. Stand up and take a bow, Engineer Joe Igbokwe, the man from Nnewi, in Anambra State.

President Buhari is possibly the most credible politician we have seen in the country in contemporary times, with a magnetic pull that draws people to him in droves. That was the point I was making last week in this column, but which an illiterate journalist with an online medium twisted to say I claimed Buhari was better than Obafemi Awolowo, Nnamdi Azikiwe, Aminu Kano etal. He succeeded in his mission: generating hateful comments against me, but I leave him to God. For we shall all stand before the judgment seat of God to answer for what we have done, including all forms of lie against a fellow man. Our profession, or political and ethnic affiliations would no longer matter then.

We were talking of Joe Igbokwe before the brief diversion. Yes, this man loves Buhari to bits. He loves Nigeria, and he loves his native Igbo land. And you know what? That is now a crime in our country. Igbokwe’s life has been severely and severally threatened, his family hounded, and on October 3 this year, his county home in Nnewi was set on fire.

Igbokwe is a nationalist. His education, primary, secondary and even university he had in the Southeast. But since he got posted for national service in Ogun State in 1985, he had remained in the Southwest, identifying with the people, their politics, their ways of life, while not repudiating his love for his roots in Nnewi, and the Southeast generally. No wonder he is popularly called Agbalanze, after that Onitsha cultural association.

When it was not popular for people in the Southeast to follow the Progressives, Igbokwe threw his hat into the ring. From Alliance for Democracy (AD), to Action Congress of Nigerians (ACN), to All Progressives Congress (APC), he stood to be counted. And if you count committed followers of Buhari today, the Agbalanze is in the number.

If there is anything he needs to clarify about government, or our principal, Igbokwe never hesitates to get in touch with me. I give him background information, and he is satisfied.

When some people from his part of the country began to retreat into ethnic cleavages, and wanted the intelligentsia to identify with them, the Special Adviser to the Lagos State Governor on Drainage and Water Resources made it clear he was a nationalist. And he stood by his conviction, speaking out against separatism and an attempt to balkanize the country. At the risk of so much, he opted for one Nigeria.

Igbokwe loves Igbo land. Yes, don’t we all love where we come from? Shouldn’t we? We should, we must, before we can even be good Nigerians. When strange things began to happen in the Southeast, people being decapitated, public buildings being torched, and security agents being murdered in cold blood, Igbokwe stood against it. Mum was the word from majority of the leaders of the region, but for Igbokwe, the man dies in him who keeps quiet in the face of tyranny. He spoke out.

He kept saying building bridges across the length and breadth of the country was the way to go, particularly for Igbo renaissance. He refused to join those who were retreating into ethnic cocoon, and stood for nationalism. It is either Nigeria or nothing! The man earned earned my deep respect. He stood for what was right, fair and just, for centripetal, rather than centrifugal forces in the country.

On October 3, I was in Ethiopia with Mr President, attending the inauguration of that country’s Prime Minister for second term in office, when we saw the sad news online. The regal country home of Igbokwe in Nnewi, where the man often retires for solitude, and where he had a vast library, had been set ablaze. Whodunnit? You know the answer. Unbridled hatred was on display, and a patriot was paying a heavy price for his convictions. When that magnificent white house erupted in smoke and fire, it was innocence that was burning. Patriotism was aflame, and love for motherland was ablaze. Thy glory oh Israel is slain upon the high places.

Gladly, no life was lost, because the attackers couldn’t lay their hands on anyone. But great was the loss, and I sorrowed for my brother Joe, and his wife (he calls her his crush) Dr Grace. What happened is what evil speaking does to a country. The lies and hate peddled by evil hearts have germinated, grown, and brought forth evil fruits.

You would expect a man who had been hounded, reviled, and attacked by arsonists, to return bile for bile, hate for hate. Threaten fire and brimstone. But not our Joe. What did he say?

“We paid the price for the good of Igbo land and Nigeria...By the grace of God, we will rescue Igbo land. It is my turn today, tomorrow it may be the turn of anybody. We must take Igbo land back from the killers and arsonists.”

I say a resounding amen to those prayers. We must take every part of the country from those who mean no good, concocting sorrow, tears and blood. It is Nigeria or nothing! In brotherhood we stand. No other option is acceptable, not even conceivable, otherwise, we would all lose, cutting our noses to spite the face.

*Adesina is Special Adviser to President Buhari on Media and Publicity.

11 Likes

Re: Joe Igbokwe: When It’s A Crime To Love Buhari, Nigeria And Igbo Land by BombAttack(f): 9:49am On Oct 22, 2021
Igbos don't be deceived

They want to wipe out your generations

Just as they are doing in southern Kaduna

Have you EVER seen any of those Unity Beggars

Opening thread to condemn the killings in Kaduna

They are Happy about the killing

and want Igbos to be killed same way

IgweOfNnewi
Exc2000
Farid24224
blinking001
airminem
helinues

simplyleo
seunmsg
Monogamy
NGpatriot
Tinubuadvocate
SangoOlukosoOba

73 Likes 4 Shares

Re: Joe Igbokwe: When It’s A Crime To Love Buhari, Nigeria And Igbo Land by Timoleon(m): 9:52am On Oct 22, 2021
Diarrhea of the mouth.

41 Likes 1 Share

Re: Joe Igbokwe: When It’s A Crime To Love Buhari, Nigeria And Igbo Land by NoFucksToGive: 9:52am On Oct 22, 2021
[s]
presidency:
JOE IGBOKWE: WHEN IT’S A CRIME TO LOVE BUHARI, NIGERIA AND IGBO LAND

By FEMI ADESINA

There are millions of us round the country who follow Muhammadu Buhari passionately. Some got enlisted in 1984 when the man was military head of state. Others joined along the line as the principal was Chairman of the Petroleum Trust Fund (PTF) in the Gen Sani Abacha years, or when he joined partisan politics in 2002, ran for President a year later, also in 2007, 2011, and 2015, when he eventually coasted to power.

Over the years, some of the Buharists (as we are called), have fallen off, and even joined the opposition. Yet some others have stood sturdy, steady, resolute, as constant as the Northern Star. Stand up and take a bow, Engineer Joe Igbokwe, the man from Nnewi, in Anambra State.

President Buhari is possibly the most credible politician we have seen in the country in contemporary times, with a magnetic pull that draws people to him in droves. That was the point I was making last week in this column, but which an illiterate journalist with an online medium twisted to say I claimed Buhari was better than Obafemi Awolowo, Nnamdi Azikiwe, Aminu Kano etal. He succeeded in his mission: generating hateful comments against me, but I leave him to God. For we shall all stand before the judgment seat of God to answer for what we have done, including all forms of lie against a fellow man. Our profession, or political and ethnic affiliations would no longer matter then.

We were talking of Joe Igbokwe before the brief diversion. Yes, this man loves Buhari to bits. He loves Nigeria, and he loves his native Igbo land. And you know what? That is now a crime in our country. Igbokwe’s life has been severely and severally threatened, his family hounded, and on October 3 this year, his county home in Nnewi was set on fire.

Igbokwe is a nationalist. His education, primary, secondary and even university he had in the Southeast. But since he got posted for national service in Ogun State in 1985, he had remained in the Southwest, identifying with the people, their politics, their ways of life, while not repudiating his love for his roots in Nnewi, and the Southeast generally. No wonder he is popularly called Agbalanze, after that Onitsha cultural association.

When it was not popular for people in the Southeast to follow the Progressives, Igbokwe threw his hat into the ring. From Alliance for Democracy (AD), to Action Congress of Nigerians (ACN), to All Progressives Congress (APC), he stood to be counted. And if you count committed followers of Buhari today, the Agbalanze is in the number.

If there is anything he needs to clarify about government, or our principal, Igbokwe never hesitates to get in touch with me. I give him background information, and he is satisfied.

When some people from his part of the country began to retreat into ethnic cleavages, and wanted the intelligentsia to identify with them, the Special Adviser to the Lagos State Governor on Drainage and Water Resources made it clear he was a nationalist. And he stood by his conviction, speaking out against separatism and an attempt to balkanize the country. At the risk of so much, he opted for one Nigeria.

Igbokwe loves Igbo land. Yes, don’t we all love where we come from? Shouldn’t we? We should, we must, before we can even be good Nigerians. When strange things began to happen in the Southeast, people being decapitated, public buildings being torched, and security agents being murdered in cold blood, Igbokwe stood against it. Mum was the word from majority of the leaders of the region, but for Igbokwe, the man dies in him who keeps quiet in the face of tyranny. He spoke out.

He kept saying building bridges across the length and breadth of the country was the way to go, particularly for Igbo renaissance. He refused to join those who were retreating into ethnic cocoon, and stood for nationalism. It is either Nigeria or nothing! The man earned earned my deep respect. He stood for what was right, fair and just, for centripetal, rather than centrifugal forces in the country.

On October 3, I was in Ethiopia with Mr President, attending the inauguration of that country’s Prime Minister for second term in office, when we saw the sad news online. The regal country home of Igbokwe in Nnewi, where the man often retires for solitude, and where he had a vast library, had been set ablaze. Whodunnit? You know the answer. Unbridled hatred was on display, and a patriot was paying a heavy price for his convictions. When that magnificent white house erupted in smoke and fire, it was innocence that was burning. Patriotism was aflame, and love for motherland was ablaze. Thy glory oh Israel is slain upon the high places.

Gladly, no life was lost, because the attackers couldn’t lay their hands on anyone. But great was the loss, and I sorrowed for my brother Joe, and his wife (he calls her his crush) Dr Grace. What happened is what evil speaking does to a country. The lies and hate peddled by evil hearts have germinated, grown, and brought forth evil fruits.

You would expect a man who had been hounded, reviled, and attacked by arsonists, to return bile for bile, hate for hate. Threaten fire and brimstone. But not our Joe. What did he say?

“We paid the price for the good of Igbo land and Nigeria...By the grace of God, we will rescue Igbo land. It is my turn today, tomorrow it may be the turn of anybody. We must take Igbo land back from the killers and arsonists.”

I say a resounding amen to those prayers. We must take every part of the country from those who mean no good, concocting sorrow, tears and blood. It is Nigeria or nothing! In brotherhood we stand. No other option is acceptable, not even conceivable, otherwise, we would all lose, cutting our noses to spite the face.


*Adesina is Special Adviser to President Buhari on Media and Publicity.
[/s]

Enough of politics

Please how much is 12.5 kg gas in your area?

100 Likes 10 Shares

Re: Joe Igbokwe: When It’s A Crime To Love Buhari, Nigeria And Igbo Land by bigdammyj: 9:52am On Oct 22, 2021
Okay
Re: Joe Igbokwe: When It’s A Crime To Love Buhari, Nigeria And Igbo Land by benuejosh: 9:53am On Oct 22, 2021
Buhari is loved by all Igbos and hated by Igbos.

7 Likes 1 Share

Re: Joe Igbokwe: When It’s A Crime To Love Buhari, Nigeria And Igbo Land by Joromi1: 9:53am On Oct 22, 2021
Aboki.

71 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Joe Igbokwe: When It’s A Crime To Love Buhari, Nigeria And Igbo Land by Falseprofet2: 9:55am On Oct 22, 2021
You can't love Nigeria and support Buhari with all the insecurity happening

A govt first role is to secure life and property

I see joe igbokwe regaining his senses if tinubu fails to win apc ticket

61 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Joe Igbokwe: When It’s A Crime To Love Buhari, Nigeria And Igbo Land by janedonez(m): 9:56am On Oct 22, 2021
Femi Adesina, please leave God out of the insincere activities going on in this country, for you to say God will judge all those who lie and are lying brings to fore that you are living a double life, what fascinates me is how you struggle to use the holy scriptures to back up your false postings.
No one hates Joe Igbokwe, but as in every human settings, respect your lane and there won't be any clash.
Let me ask you, are there no other persons from other regions who are members of the Lagos state Exco, how often do they deride their kit and kin to get attention or positions.
You just need to call a spade a spade.

54 Likes 5 Shares

Re: Joe Igbokwe: When It’s A Crime To Love Buhari, Nigeria And Igbo Land by Nobody: 9:56am On Oct 22, 2021
Millions of Igbos are working and making a living in Nigeria while loving their IGBO land like other Ethnic groups.

The onus of the question lies... "if you were not oppurtuned to be close to the seat of power, with your Bill's and expenses being taken care off, would you yourself love the current state of the country
?"...

Should people be happy being Nigerians when a train that its expense has been passed to generations unborn and raised recurrent expenditure to 80%, needs N60b maintenance annual, yet produced only N1bn income has been blown up and grounded?

Should that be a happy Nigerian?

Dont use propaganda to put it on the Igbos as non-patrotic when surviving is a challenge in Nigeria today.

Like someone once said, Igboho and Nnamdi kanu is trending today and winning the hearts of once patriotic citizens because the illusion of life they project has more hope than the Nigerian leaders are...

38 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Joe Igbokwe: When It’s A Crime To Love Buhari, Nigeria And Igbo Land by Jameq: 9:56am On Oct 22, 2021
Timoleon:
Diarrhea of the mouth.

2 Likes

Re: Joe Igbokwe: When It’s A Crime To Love Buhari, Nigeria And Igbo Land by KINGS100(m): 9:57am On Oct 22, 2021
presidency:
JOE IGBOKWE: WHEN IT’S A CRIME TO LOVE BUHARI, NIGERIA AND IGBO LAND

By FEMI ADESINA

There are millions of us round the country who follow Muhammadu Buhari passionately. Some got enlisted in 1984 when the man was military head of state. Others joined along the line as the principal was Chairman of the Petroleum Trust Fund (PTF) in the Gen Sani Abacha years, or when he joined partisan politics in 2002, ran for President a year later, also in 2007, 2011, and 2015, when he eventually coasted to power.

Over the years, some of the Buharists (as we are called), have fallen off, and even joined the opposition. Yet some others have stood sturdy, steady, resolute, as constant as the Northern Star. Stand up and take a bow, Engineer Joe Igbokwe, the man from Nnewi, in Anambra State.

President Buhari is possibly the most credible politician we have seen in the country in contemporary times, with a magnetic pull that draws people to him in droves. That was the point I was making last week in this column, but which an illiterate journalist with an online medium twisted to say I claimed Buhari was better than Obafemi Awolowo, Nnamdi Azikiwe, Aminu Kano etal. He succeeded in his mission: generating hateful comments against me, but I leave him to God. For we shall all stand before the judgment seat of God to answer for what we have done, including all forms of lie against a fellow man. Our profession, or political and ethnic affiliations would no longer matter then.

We were talking of Joe Igbokwe before the brief diversion. Yes, this man loves Buhari to bits. He loves Nigeria, and he loves his native Igbo land. And you know what? That is now a crime in our country. Igbokwe’s life has been severely and severally threatened, his family hounded, and on October 3 this year, his county home in Nnewi was set on fire.

Igbokwe is a nationalist. His education, primary, secondary and even university he had in the Southeast. But since he got posted for national service in Ogun State in 1985, he had remained in the Southwest, identifying with the people, their politics, their ways of life, while not repudiating his love for his roots in Nnewi, and the Southeast generally. No wonder he is popularly called Agbalanze, after that Onitsha cultural association.

When it was not popular for people in the Southeast to follow the Progressives, Igbokwe threw his hat into the ring. From Alliance for Democracy (AD), to Action Congress of Nigerians (ACN), to All Progressives Congress (APC), he stood to be counted. And if you count committed followers of Buhari today, the Agbalanze is in the number.

If there is anything he needs to clarify about government, or our principal, Igbokwe never hesitates to get in touch with me. I give him background information, and he is satisfied.

When some people from his part of the country began to retreat into ethnic cleavages, and wanted the intelligentsia to identify with them, the Special Adviser to the Lagos State Governor on Drainage and Water Resources made it clear he was a nationalist. And he stood by his conviction, speaking out against separatism and an attempt to balkanize the country. At the risk of so much, he opted for one Nigeria.

Igbokwe loves Igbo land. Yes, don’t we all love where we come from? Shouldn’t we? We should, we must, before we can even be good Nigerians. When strange things began to happen in the Southeast, people being decapitated, public buildings being torched, and security agents being murdered in cold blood, Igbokwe stood against it. Mum was the word from majority of the leaders of the region, but for Igbokwe, the man dies in him who keeps quiet in the face of tyranny. He spoke out.

He kept saying building bridges across the length and breadth of the country was the way to go, particularly for Igbo renaissance. He refused to join those who were retreating into ethnic cocoon, and stood for nationalism. It is either Nigeria or nothing! The man earned earned my deep respect. He stood for what was right, fair and just, for centripetal, rather than centrifugal forces in the country.

On October 3, I was in Ethiopia with Mr President, attending the inauguration of that country’s Prime Minister for second term in office, when we saw the sad news online. The regal country home of Igbokwe in Nnewi, where the man often retires for solitude, and where he had a vast library, had been set ablaze. Whodunnit? You know the answer. Unbridled hatred was on display, and a patriot was paying a heavy price for his convictions. When that magnificent white house erupted in smoke and fire, it was innocence that was burning. Patriotism was aflame, and love for motherland was ablaze. Thy glory oh Israel is slain upon the high places.

Gladly, no life was lost, because the attackers couldn’t lay their hands on anyone. But great was the loss, and I sorrowed for my brother Joe, and his wife (he calls her his crush) Dr Grace. What happened is what evil speaking does to a country. The lies and hate peddled by evil hearts have germinated, grown, and brought forth evil fruits.

You would expect a man who had been hounded, reviled, and attacked by arsonists, to return bile for bile, hate for hate. Threaten fire and brimstone. But not our Joe. What did he say?

“We paid the price for the good of Igbo land and Nigeria...By the grace of God, we will rescue Igbo land. It is my turn today, tomorrow it may be the turn of anybody. We must take Igbo land back from the killers and arsonists.”

I say a resounding amen to those prayers. We must take every part of the country from those who mean no good, concocting sorrow, tears and blood. It is Nigeria or nothing! In brotherhood we stand. No other option is acceptable, not even conceivable, otherwise, we would all lose, cutting our noses to spite the face.

*Adesina is Special Adviser to President Buhari on Media and Publicity.
NONSENSE WRITEUP

22 Likes

Re: Joe Igbokwe: When It’s A Crime To Love Buhari, Nigeria And Igbo Land by PerfectlyPerfect(m): 9:57am On Oct 22, 2021
Joe Igbokwe & Femi Adesina are embarrassments unto themselves, their family, the entire Igbo & Yoruba races, Nigeria, Africa and Earth.
They're ready to sacrifice their kinsmen for their own stomach affairs. They're nuisances to the human race

32 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Joe Igbokwe: When It’s A Crime To Love Buhari, Nigeria And Igbo Land by UselessBuhari: 9:57am On Oct 22, 2021
Mumu Adesina. So jobless

18 Likes

Re: Joe Igbokwe: When It’s A Crime To Love Buhari, Nigeria And Igbo Land by tradepunter: 9:58am On Oct 22, 2021
Ok
Re: Joe Igbokwe: When It’s A Crime To Love Buhari, Nigeria And Igbo Land by Nobody: 9:58am On Oct 22, 2021
grin grin stupid Afonja

8 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Joe Igbokwe: When It’s A Crime To Love Buhari, Nigeria And Igbo Land by Siwisheswereesh: 9:58am On Oct 22, 2021
Anybody who loves Buhari without benefitting one way or the other from him should be watched closely and deserves to be hated. angry

Buhari has been a calamity so far. angry

20 Likes 1 Share

Re: Joe Igbokwe: When It’s A Crime To Love Buhari, Nigeria And Igbo Land by jaxxy(m): 9:59am On Oct 22, 2021
Sycophancy on crack undecided after Buhari goes the worship will end and reality of grand stupidity will set in. grin

16 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Joe Igbokwe: When It’s A Crime To Love Buhari, Nigeria And Igbo Land by Baawaa(m): 10:00am On Oct 22, 2021
R
Re: Joe Igbokwe: When It’s A Crime To Love Buhari, Nigeria And Igbo Land by RodgersAkpafu: 10:00am On Oct 22, 2021
It's a democracy
So its not a crime to love Buhari
Ogbonaya Onu and Chris Ngige are Buhari lovers and are his right hand men
Do these men have the level of disdain that people have for you and Hopeless Uzodinma ?

Alex Otti is a Buhari man, Emenike is a Buhari man too
Do they get the level of mud slinging that you get ?

You better do some self reflection and stop playing victim.
You can be a Buhari supporter (which is not a crime really) and not denigrate yourself or your ethnic group

Its also not a crime to love Nigeria
Despite the foolishness of this regime, I still owe my allegiance to this country even tho some people may insult me for it

A word of advice, apply emotional intelligence
Its obvious you have none..........

21 Likes

Re: Joe Igbokwe: When It’s A Crime To Love Buhari, Nigeria And Igbo Land by Ykc2(m): 10:02am On Oct 22, 2021
Femi face your buhari government, buhari will soon leave, then we will remind you how you told us to give farm lands to fulani or die,talking about Joe igbokwe ,Joe igbokwe is lucky his not from South west they would ve killed him like omoboriowo

5 Likes

Re: Joe Igbokwe: When It’s A Crime To Love Buhari, Nigeria And Igbo Land by Otuegbe: 10:02am On Oct 22, 2021
Waiting for them to talk about Buhari boys bombing train.
Imagine that happening in igboland. By now Joe Igbokwe would have been talking.
This guys are not really progressives.
The guys that love Nigeria are those ones that condemned Gej and Buhari bad leadership style.
Sycophants

1 Like

Re: Joe Igbokwe: When It’s A Crime To Love Buhari, Nigeria And Igbo Land by Authoreety: 10:02am On Oct 22, 2021
Ok
Re: Joe Igbokwe: When It’s A Crime To Love Buhari, Nigeria And Igbo Land by Nobody: 10:03am On Oct 22, 2021
When shit hit the fan, he will be reminded where he comes from.
Re: Joe Igbokwe: When It’s A Crime To Love Buhari, Nigeria And Igbo Land by RZArecta(m): 10:04am On Oct 22, 2021
presidency:
[s]JOE IGBOKWE: WHEN IT’S A CRIME TO LOVE BUHARI, NIGERIA AND IGBO LAND

By FEMI ADESINA

There are millions of us round the country who follow Muhammadu Buhari passionately. Some got enlisted in 1984 when the man was military head of state. Others joined along the line as the principal was Chairman of the Petroleum Trust Fund (PTF) in the Gen Sani Abacha years, or when he joined partisan politics in 2002, ran for President a year later, also in 2007, 2011, and 2015, when he eventually coasted to power.
Over the years, some of the Buharists (as we are called), have fallen off, and even joined the opposition. Yet some others have stood sturdy, steady, resolute, as constant as the Northern Star. Stand up and take a bow, Engineer Joe Igbokwe, the man from Nnewi, in Anambra State.

President Buhari is possibly the most credible politician we have seen in the country in contemporary times, with a magnetic pull that draws people to him in droves. That was the point I was making last week in this column, but which an illiterate journalist with an online medium twisted to say I claimed Buhari was better than Obafemi Awolowo, Nnamdi Azikiwe, Aminu Kano etal. He succeeded in his mission: generating hateful comments against me, but I leave him to God. For we shall all stand before the judgment seat of God to answer for what we have done, including all forms of lie against a fellow man. Our profession, or political and ethnic affiliations would no longer matter then.

We were talking of Joe Igbokwe before the brief diversion. Yes, this man loves Buhari to bits. He loves Nigeria, and he loves his native Igbo land. And you know what? That is now a crime in our country. Igbokwe’s life has been severely and severally threatened, his family hounded, and on October 3 this year, his county home in Nnewi was set on fire.

Igbokwe is a nationalist. His education, primary, secondary and even university he had in the Southeast. But since he got posted for national service in Ogun State in 1985, he had remained in the Southwest, identifying with the people, their politics, their ways of life, while not repudiating his love for his roots in Nnewi, and the Southeast generally. No wonder he is popularly called Agbalanze, after that Onitsha cultural association.

When it was not popular for people in the Southeast to follow the Progressives, Igbokwe threw his hat into the ring. From Alliance for Democracy (AD), to Action Congress of Nigerians (ACN), to All Progressives Congress (APC), he stood to be counted. And if you count committed followers of Buhari today, the Agbalanze is in the number.

If there is anything he needs to clarify about government, or our principal, Igbokwe never hesitates to get in touch with me. I give him background information, and he is satisfied.

When some people from his part of the country began to retreat into ethnic cleavages, and wanted the intelligentsia to identify with them, the Special Adviser to the Lagos State Governor on Drainage and Water Resources made it clear he was a nationalist. And he stood by his conviction, speaking out against separatism and an attempt to balkanize the country. At the risk of so much, he opted for one Nigeria.

Igbokwe loves Igbo land. Yes, don’t we all love where we come from? Shouldn’t we? We should, we must, before we can even be good Nigerians. When strange things began to happen in the Southeast, people being decapitated, public buildings being torched, and security agents being murdered in cold blood, Igbokwe stood against it. Mum was the word from majority of the leaders of the region, but for Igbokwe, the man dies in him who keeps quiet in the face of tyranny. He spoke out.

He kept saying building bridges across the length and breadth of the country was the way to go, particularly for Igbo renaissance. He refused to join those who were retreating into ethnic cocoon, and stood for nationalism. It is either Nigeria or nothing! The man earned earned my deep respect. He stood for what was right, fair and just, for centripetal, rather than centrifugal forces in the country.

On October 3, I was in Ethiopia with Mr President, attending the inauguration of that country’s Prime Minister for second term in office, when we saw the sad news online. The regal country home of Igbokwe in Nnewi, where the man often retires for solitude, and where he had a vast library, had been set ablaze. Whodunnit? You know the answer. Unbridled hatred was on display, and a patriot was paying a heavy price for his convictions. When that magnificent white house erupted in smoke and fire, it was innocence that was burning. Patriotism was aflame, and love for motherland was ablaze. Thy glory oh Israel is slain upon the high places.

Gladly, no life was lost, because the attackers couldn’t lay their hands on anyone. But great was the loss, and I sorrowed for my brother Joe, and his wife (he calls her his crush) Dr Grace. What happened is what evil speaking does to a country. The lies and hate peddled by evil hearts have germinated, grown, and brought forth evil fruits.

You would expect a man who had been hounded, reviled, and attacked by arsonists, to return bile for bile, hate for hate. Threaten fire and brimstone. But not our Joe. What did he say?

“We paid the price for the good of Igbo land and Nigeria...By the grace of God, we will rescue Igbo land. It is my turn today, tomorrow it may be the turn of anybody. We must take Igbo land back from the killers and arsonists.”

I say a resounding amen to those prayers. We must take every part of the country from those who mean no good, concocting sorrow, tears and blood. It is Nigeria or nothing! In brotherhood we stand. No other option is acceptable, not even conceivable, otherwise, we would all lose, cutting our noses to spite the face.

*Adesina is Special Adviser to President Buhari on Media and Publicity[/s].
rubbish and nonsense cool

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Re: Joe Igbokwe: When It’s A Crime To Love Buhari, Nigeria And Igbo Land by Nobody: 10:04am On Oct 22, 2021
Ok
Re: Joe Igbokwe: When It’s A Crime To Love Buhari, Nigeria And Igbo Land by EmekaA125(m): 10:07am On Oct 22, 2021
[s]
presidency:
JOE IGBOKWE: WHEN IT’S A CRIME TO LOVE BUHARI, NIGERIA AND IGBO LAND

By FEMI ADESINA

There are millions of us round the country who follow Muhammadu Buhari passionately. Some got enlisted in 1984 when the man was military head of state. Others joined along the line as the principal was Chairman of the Petroleum Trust Fund (PTF) in the Gen Sani Abacha years, or when he joined partisan politics in 2002, ran for President a year later, also in 2007, 2011, and 2015, when he eventually coasted to power.

Over the years, some of the Buharists (as we are called), have fallen off, and even joined the opposition. Yet some others have stood sturdy, steady, resolute, as constant as the Northern Star. Stand up and take a bow, Engineer Joe Igbokwe, the man from Nnewi, in Anambra State.

President Buhari is possibly the most credible politician we have seen in the country in contemporary times, with a magnetic pull that draws people to him in droves. That was the point I was making last week in this column, but which an illiterate journalist with an online medium twisted to say I claimed Buhari was better than Obafemi Awolowo, Nnamdi Azikiwe, Aminu Kano etal. He succeeded in his mission: generating hateful comments against me, but I leave him to God. For we shall all stand before the judgment seat of God to answer for what we have done, including all forms of lie against a fellow man. Our profession, or political and ethnic affiliations would no longer matter then.

We were talking of Joe Igbokwe before the brief diversion. Yes, this man loves Buhari to bits. He loves Nigeria, and he loves his native Igbo land. And you know what? That is now a crime in our country. Igbokwe’s life has been severely and severally threatened, his family hounded, and on October 3 this year, his county home in Nnewi was set on fire.

Igbokwe is a nationalist. His education, primary, secondary and even university he had in the Southeast. But since he got posted for national service in Ogun State in 1985, he had remained in the Southwest, identifying with the people, their politics, their ways of life, while not repudiating his love for his roots in Nnewi, and the Southeast generally. No wonder he is popularly called Agbalanze, after that Onitsha cultural association.

When it was not popular for people in the Southeast to follow the Progressives, Igbokwe threw his hat into the ring. From Alliance for Democracy (AD), to Action Congress of Nigerians (ACN), to All Progressives Congress (APC), he stood to be counted. And if you count committed followers of Buhari today, the Agbalanze is in the number.

If there is anything he needs to clarify about government, or our principal, Igbokwe never hesitates to get in touch with me. I give him background information, and he is satisfied.

When some people from his part of the country began to retreat into ethnic cleavages, and wanted the intelligentsia to identify with them, the Special Adviser to the Lagos State Governor on Drainage and Water Resources made it clear he was a nationalist. And he stood by his conviction, speaking out against separatism and an attempt to balkanize the country. At the risk of so much, he opted for one Nigeria.

Igbokwe loves Igbo land. Yes, don’t we all love where we come from? Shouldn’t we? We should, we must, before we can even be good Nigerians. When strange things began to happen in the Southeast, people being decapitated, public buildings being torched, and security agents being murdered in cold blood, Igbokwe stood against it. Mum was the word from majority of the leaders of the region, but for Igbokwe, the man dies in him who keeps quiet in the face of tyranny. He spoke out.

He kept saying building bridges across the length and breadth of the country was the way to go, particularly for Igbo renaissance. He refused to join those who were retreating into ethnic cocoon, and stood for nationalism. It is either Nigeria or nothing! The man earned earned my deep respect. He stood for what was right, fair and just, for centripetal, rather than centrifugal forces in the country.

On October 3, I was in Ethiopia with Mr President, attending the inauguration of that country’s Prime Minister for second term in office, when we saw the sad news online. The regal country home of Igbokwe in Nnewi, where the man often retires for solitude, and where he had a vast library, had been set ablaze. Whodunnit? You know the answer. Unbridled hatred was on display, and a patriot was paying a heavy price for his convictions. When that magnificent white house erupted in smoke and fire, it was innocence that was burning. Patriotism was aflame, and love for motherland was ablaze. Thy glory oh Israel is slain upon the high places.

Gladly, no life was lost, because the attackers couldn’t lay their hands on anyone. But great was the loss, and I sorrowed for my brother Joe, and his wife (he calls her his crush) Dr Grace. What happened is what evil speaking does to a country. The lies and hate peddled by evil hearts have germinated, grown, and brought forth evil fruits.

You would expect a man who had been hounded, reviled, and attacked by arsonists, to return bile for bile, hate for hate. Threaten fire and brimstone. But not our Joe. What did he say?

“We paid the price for the good of Igbo land and Nigeria...By the grace of God, we will rescue Igbo land. It is my turn today, tomorrow it may be the turn of anybody. We must take Igbo land back from the killers and arsonists.”

I say a resounding amen to those prayers. We must take every part of the country from those who mean no good, concocting sorrow, tears and blood. It is Nigeria or nothing! In brotherhood we stand. No other option is acceptable, not even conceivable, otherwise, we would all lose, cutting our noses to spite the face.

*Adesina is Special Adviser to President Buhari on Media and Publicity.
[/s]
E remain in Lagos residence. He think say IPOB dey joke. Continue ur useless long sermon, Femi Adeshina.
Re: Joe Igbokwe: When It’s A Crime To Love Buhari, Nigeria And Igbo Land by mabea: 10:10am On Oct 22, 2021
Who cares if Igbokwe is hated. He's more of a bastard than he is a son.

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