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Igboland And Its Hidden Tributaries To The Atlantic - Politics - Nairaland

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Igboland And Its Hidden Tributaries To The Atlantic by FarmTech(m): 9:44pm On Mar 25, 2023
It’s often said that a lie told so many times, if unchallenged, may – in the course of time and generations – begin to pass for the truth. One of such is the terrible lie and brazen propaganda, institutionally purveyed (against the Igbo) since the end of the Civil War, to the effect that Igboland is landlocked or has no access to the Atlantic Ocean.

Just recently, this vexatious lie became predominant in the wake of the ethnic baiting of Igbos in Lagos following the dubious 2023 presidential and governorship elections. Igbo, a merchant race, is being taunted again and told to leave Lagos and its seaports and go back to their ‘landlocked’ homeland. In other words, Igbos are being told that they are trapped in Nigeria as if Nigeria is one hellish jail for the Igbo.

The purpose of this essay, therefore, is to rebut this fat lie with some simple historical, geographical and topographical evidence that are in plain view, if you care to dig into the archives or conduct some basic physical explorations of your own. In the same vein, those that mock the Igbo on this account might as well imbibe the truth and pedal back to reason and reality.

Suffice it to say that it is a profound tragedy that entire generations of the immediate post-civil war Igbos never bothered to check but seemingly swallowed this brazen institutional falsehood, line, hook and sinker. They never reckoned that it is aimed at frustrating the merchant spirit of the Igbo. A few older Igbos that knew it to be false just didn’t care anymore, having been weighed down by the debacle of the civil war fought by their generation.

What also unwittingly enabled this lie to persist to this day is that most people don’t take physical geography (or even adventure) that seriously anymore, otherwise they would have easily discovered that Abia, Imo and Anambra states have varying short-distance paths to the Atlantic through Imo, Azumiri, Niger and Urashi Rivers. Igbani island, a diaspora Igbo enclave, corrupted to Bonny by the British, is unarguable.

It’s not really rocket science, as you can easily confirm this if you know how to read Google Earth or you conquer your fear of swamp snakes and walk through these areas on foot. If you try, you will discover that there are many hardly explored waterways and slithering tributaries, including the remote reaches of Oguta Lake and Urashi rivers (at Oseakwa, Anambra state) that meandered through Igbo-delta wetlands to the south-eastern beginnings of the Atlantic waterfront or beachhead.

These rivers have varying lengths of short navigational paths to the Atlantic and in some cases, are far shorter, nautically (and even on footpath) than the Port Harcourt, Calabar and Ibaka seaports are to their sides of the Atlantic. Many of these pathways, including particularly the ones from the outer reaches of Imo and Azumiri Rivers, terminate at the Atlantic at no more than 15 to 30 nautical miles to the beachhead. [/b]To put it in lay language, one nautical mile equals 1.8 kilometres. So, all you need is some old-fashioned dredging that the colonialists did without a whimper generations ago. You don’t need to reinvent the wheel.

[b]Thus, the contiguity of south-east (not even the greater Igboland) to the Atlantic is nautically less in distance than the Atlantic is to the dredged seaports in Calabar, Onne, Ibaka, Lagos and Port Harcourt
. If you discount the territories unfairly excised from Igboland during states creation and the damnable boundary adjustments that followed, it will be far less.

During his tenure as governor of Imo state, Dr Ikedi Ohakim singularly did so much to spotlight this matter in a bid to galvanise the federal authorities to build a seaport that abuts core Igboland. For the avoidance of doubt, seaports are in the exclusive legislative list of the constitution and therefore outside the legislative reach of the states.

To be sure, Ikwerre land or Igweocha which bears the greater portions of the Port Harcourt seaport was dredged up to 50 miles to the Atlantic front through the Bonny River. Onne seaport was dredged up to 60 miles to the Atlantic and Calabar seaport was partially dredged some 45 nautical miles to the Atlantic. Ibaka seaport is about 30 nautical miles to the Atlantic and the Lagos seaport dredged up to about 50 nautical miles to the Atlantic. This is not to say that some dredging was not easier or harder than the other.

Compare all these to Obuaku in Abia state, which is only 25 nautical miles to the Atlantic from the confluence of Imo and Azumiri Rivers, of which Azumiri, on its separate merits, lies not more than 30 nautical miles to the Atlantic beachfront. The less obvious one is the little-known Oseakwa (Urashi) in Ihiala, Anambra state which is mere 18 nautical miles to the Atlantic, all with its 65 feet of natural depth, arguably incomparable to no other River in Nigeria.

Additionally, what is geopolitically known as Igboland today is far smaller than what it was and is constitutionally supposed to be. As far back as 1856, William Balfour Baikie – one of the earliest and most credible geographers of ancient Nigeria, had this to say: “Igbo homeland, extends east and west, from the Old Kalabar river to the banks of the Kwora, Niger River, and possesses also some territory at Aboh, an Igbo clan, to the west-ward of the latter stream. On the north it borders on Igara, Igala and A’kpoto, and it is separated from the sea only by petty tribes, all of which trace their origin to this great race.” If you’re in doubt, google it.

But with that infamous post-war abandoned property policy and the egregious institutional injustices in the subsequent boundary adjustments, coupled with the widespread anti-Igbo gerrymandering, Igbos physically (and even psychologically) lost geopolitical hold of the delta lands that had vested in their ancestors for generations. It was such natural contiguity of Igboland to the Atlantic that enabled Igbo ancestors to behold the Atlantic Ocean and, in wonderment, they named it Oshimiri – The Great Sea or the Infinite Sea.

The post-civil war psychological beat-down and gang-up against the Igbo got so bad and institutionalised to the extent that some of the descendants of these Igbo ancestors (nearest to the Atlantic and now geopolitically lying outside south-east) are no longer sure whether they are Igbo or not. This is how the notion of Igboland being landlocked quickly gained traction and became a weapon used to mock Ndigbo and down their merchant spirit.


The most brazen injustice was in 1976 when the Justice Nasir Boundary Adjustment Commission made a deliberate business of carving out some core Igboland territories into some neighbouring states of the south-south. But they didn’t quite make an absolute success of it. They (luckily for the Igbo) missed the southernmost south-east lands that possess rivers and tributaries that meandered through slices of Igboid or Igbo-speaking south-south territories and terminated at the Atlantic.

For the avoidance of doubt, there’s particularly the Obuaku confluence in Ukwa West (Abia state) that flows through greater Ikot Abasi in Akwa Ibom state (which has slices of Igbo communities) before expanding out and washing into the near-reaches of the Atlantic. You can also reckon with the River Niger which remotely washed into the Atlantic through a vast network of hardly explored delta creeks and mangrove swamps that abut the Bight of Biafra, now officially corrupted to Bight of Bonny (that is: Igbani), after the Civil War. To be sure, Igbani or Bonny is Igbo, whether you deny it or not.

On a side note and in conclusion, it is pertinent to make it crystal clear that the persistent taunts, mockery and ‘ntoor’ that Ndigbo are hopelessly trapped in Nigeria because their native land is landlocked (Buhari called it a ‘dot’), coupled with the misguided refusal to build a seaport into core Igboland are some of the major factors that have justifiably agitated the average Igbo to the point of seeking an alternative to Nigeria.

Ejimakor, a lawyer writes from Alaigbo. He can be reached via aejimakor@gmail.com

Views expressed by contributors are strictly personal and not of TheCable.

https://www.thecable.ng/igboland-and-its-hidden-tributaries-to-the-atlantic/amp

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Re: Igboland And Its Hidden Tributaries To The Atlantic by Solsix(m): 9:52pm On Mar 25, 2023
Pictures or perhaps location where we easily find these would have been better than all these stories.

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Re: Igboland And Its Hidden Tributaries To The Atlantic by ozome15(m): 10:13pm On Mar 25, 2023
The the Igbos truly wake up. It won't be funny

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Re: Igboland And Its Hidden Tributaries To The Atlantic by PoloG: 10:20pm On Mar 25, 2023
Igboland is landlocked forget all this talk nwanne ...

Any attempt to landgrab any other part that is not igboland will be resisted by force cool

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Re: Igboland And Its Hidden Tributaries To The Atlantic by 07kjb: 10:20pm On Mar 25, 2023
APT✔️

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Re: Igboland And Its Hidden Tributaries To The Atlantic by Odingo1: 10:21pm On Mar 25, 2023
PoloG:
Igboland is landlocked forget all this talk nwanne ...

Any attempt to landgrab any other part that is not igboland will be resisted by force cool
Wailing always

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Re: Igboland And Its Hidden Tributaries To The Atlantic by Denoh68: 10:25pm On Mar 25, 2023
IGBOLAND IS NOT LAND LOCKED, WE CAN ACCESS THE SEA THROUGH TWO MAJOR RIVERS,IMO AND NIGER.THE ISSUE HERE IS THAT WE DON'T HAVE COASTLINE LIKE OTHER SOUTHERN ETHNICITIES.

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Re: Igboland And Its Hidden Tributaries To The Atlantic by Denoh68: 10:27pm On Mar 25, 2023
DOES IKWERE HAVE ACCESS TO SEA
Re: Igboland And Its Hidden Tributaries To The Atlantic by mrvitalis(m): 10:48pm On Mar 25, 2023
Denoh68:
IGBOLAND IS NOT LAND LOCKED, WE CAN ACCESS THE SEA THROUGH TWO MAJOR RIVERS,IMO AND NIGER.THE ISSUE HERE IS THAT WE DON'T HAVE COASTLINE LIKE OTHER SOUTHERN ETHNICITIES.
Three you forget afikpo most Igbos don't even know aftikpo have direct access to the ocean

What of orashi river ?

There is also a potential for port in Enugu the British design a port for Enugu

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Re: Igboland And Its Hidden Tributaries To The Atlantic by Nobody: 11:26pm On Mar 25, 2023
If SE don't have DIRECT access to the Atlantic

Then you all should be proud you have Abia, port Harcourt, and Akwa cross

These places has huge potential in hosting a Nigerian modern day ports

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Re: Igboland And Its Hidden Tributaries To The Atlantic by gidgiddy: 11:44pm On Mar 25, 2023
The problem of Nigerians is that they look at the map of Nigeria which rarely shows the water ways.

Abia has access to the sea, Imo has access to the sea, Ebonyi has access to the sea. Anambra already has a River port, and has access to sea

The South East is so close to the sea that it was inevitable that it would have access to the sea due to the tributaries of the river Niger

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Re: Igboland And Its Hidden Tributaries To The Atlantic by Nobody: 11:51pm On Mar 25, 2023
gidgiddy:
The problem of Nigerians is that they look at the map of Nigeria which rarely shows the water ways.

Abia has access to the sea, Imo has access to the sea, Ebonyi has access to the sea. Anambra already has a River port, and has access to sea

The South East is so close to the sea that it was inevitable that it would have access to the sea due to the tributaries of the river Niger
yeah it does!
Still navigable to the Atlantics.

Onitsha port can receive vessels from port Harcourt; FG has to decide that especially on the viability of Port Harcourt seaport onne

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Re: Igboland And Its Hidden Tributaries To The Atlantic by AyakaDunukofia: 12:58am On Mar 26, 2023
The knowledge has been in public domain that Abia state's tributary at Obuaku is nearer to the Atlantic Ocean than the Port Harcourt's. King Jaja actually used the maritime pathway to haul palm oil down the beachhead.

Having stated that, the ports at Port Harcourt and Akwai Ibom, If allowed to operate at maximum capacity, would solve Igbo merchants' problems.
The outcome would be that:

a) the proximity of these ports to the Igbo hinterland is very negligible.

b) the long distance from the east to Lagos which precipitated the need to reside in Lagos would not be there anymore. Most Igbo merchants would enjoy doing their businesses in the comfort of their palatial mansions in the east currently left for the cockroaches.

c) The city of Aba would by default become one of the biggest container terminals in Nigeria given her proximity to Port Harcourt. A distance that is about that of Tin Can Island to Oshodi.

d) Most Igbo businesses would wind down to maintaining subsidiaries in Lagos.

e) Land patronage by the Igbo in Lagos would decline.

f) the need to buy land from these contiguous port cities would not increase from what it currently is.

g) Upsurge in real estate business in Igboland

h) the removal of railtracks from the "Exclusive list" to the "Concurrent" would put SE states under pressure to link the states with rail lines.

i) More air traffic at the well-built Anambra airport. And as well as Imo and Enugu etc.

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Re: Igboland And Its Hidden Tributaries To The Atlantic by Tranquill: 1:02am On Mar 26, 2023
Mr Igbo come and tell your misguided descendants where your land begins and ends o!

They are in Okigwe, Awka, Ohambele and claiming other peoples territories as Igboland.

A Bonny guy just told me few minutes ago “What concerns someone from Awka with Bonny?”

People are now seeing clearly that the Fulani that these Igbo people keep demonising every day and night are learners compared to their greedy inclinations and tendencies to steal lands that do not belong to them.

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Re: Igboland And Its Hidden Tributaries To The Atlantic by AyakaDunukofia: 1:23am On Mar 26, 2023
Denoh68:
DOES IKWERE HAVE ACCESS TO SEA

No direct access. Contrary to what many Igbo think. The PH wharf was built on Bonny River 50 miles to the sea. Ikwerre had to traverse the Kalabari to get to the sea

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Re: Igboland And Its Hidden Tributaries To The Atlantic by ResidentSnitch(f): 8:34am On Mar 26, 2023
Tranquill:
Mr Igbo come and tell your misguided descendants where your land begins and ends o!

They are in Okigwe, Awka, Ohambele and claiming other peoples territories as Igboland.

A Bonny guy just told me few minutes ago “What concerns someone from Awka with Bonny?”

People are now seeing clearly that the Fulani that these Igbo people keep demonising every day and night are learners compared to their greedy inclinations and tendencies to steal lands that do not belong to them.
You're not used to making use of your sense, are you?

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Re: Igboland And Its Hidden Tributaries To The Atlantic by Denoh68: 8:27pm On Mar 26, 2023
mrvitalis:

Three you forget afikpo most Igbos don't even know aftikpo have direct access to the ocean

What of orashi river ?

There is also a potential for port in Enugu the British design a port for Enugu
SIR AFIKPO DOES NOT HAVE ACCESS TO SEA, IT'S VERY FAR FROM ATLANTIC OCEAN.ENUGU IS AN IMPOSSIBILITY.

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Re: Igboland And Its Hidden Tributaries To The Atlantic by mrvitalis(m): 10:29am On Mar 27, 2023
Denoh68:
SIR AFIKPO DOES NOT HAVE ACCESS TO SEA, IT'S VERY FAR FROM ATLANTIC OCEAN.ENUGU IS AN IMPOSSIBILITY.
Lol use Google earth then come back
The afikpo river or ITU river flows straight to the Atlantic Ocean via oron

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Re: Igboland And Its Hidden Tributaries To The Atlantic by Denoh68: 6:53am On Mar 31, 2023
mrvitalis:

Lol use Google earth then come back
The afikpo river or ITU river flows straight to the Atlantic Ocean via oron
IT IS VERY FAR FROM THE SEA,AND YOU HAVE BRIDGES ACROSS THAT RIVER,I HAVE BEEN TRAVELLING THROUGH THAT RIVER FOR A LONG TIME, IT'S USUALLY SHALLOW IN THE DRY SEASON.I AM FROM AROCHUKWU ABIA STATE.

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Re: Igboland And Its Hidden Tributaries To The Atlantic by Denoh68: 6:55am On Mar 31, 2023
AyakaDunukofia:


No direct access. Contrary to what many Igbo think. The PH wharf was built on Bonny River 50 miles to the sea. Ikwerre had to traverse the Kalabari to get to the sea
BUT SHIPS DO COME THROUGH THAT RIVER TO THE WHARF RIGHT.
Re: Igboland And Its Hidden Tributaries To The Atlantic by Odibembem: 7:01am On Mar 31, 2023
mrvitalis:

Lol use Google earth then come back
The afikpo river or ITU river flows straight to the Atlantic Ocean via oron

Through Oron you said. Is Oron Igboland? It's Oron that has access to the sea and Oron is Akwa Ibom

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Re: Igboland And Its Hidden Tributaries To The Atlantic by youngbabaj(m): 7:04am On Mar 31, 2023
This one de mistake rivers for ocean

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Re: Igboland And Its Hidden Tributaries To The Atlantic by franchasofficia: 7:33am On Mar 31, 2023
We all know the post-war policies made to punish Igbos and impoverish Igbos after the war but then they forgot we have a living God that never sleeps nor slumber.



Nigeria as a nation will never witness real progress until Nigerians pacify Igbos.



It is spiritual, it is not ordinary, the brazen injustice against Igbos and the wide approval from even children of today who ought to be seeking for justice and equity is one of the many reasons Nigeria will continue to struggle as a nation.

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Re: Igboland And Its Hidden Tributaries To The Atlantic by pquaver(m): 7:44am On Mar 31, 2023
1. Lekki Seaport was a total Lagos state project.. Uou cannot tell me the 5 igbo states can't come together to build just 1.. Na so Biafra want to be successful?
2. What is thos whole seaport seaport talk like is the only way to success.. No it isn't.. There are eurooeacountries doing well without port... This whole port is being talked about solely for importation in most igbo people head, why not start thinking of exporting.. You want to continue import and export jobs out when we are still under unemployment... Ndigbo should focus on export cos if u continue this your import mentality biafra too will die quicker than Nigeria.. My 2cents

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Re: Igboland And Its Hidden Tributaries To The Atlantic by AustineE1: 7:45am On Mar 31, 2023
COPIED:
*OSEAKWA SEAPORT IHIALA; AN OPTION WITHIN*

It's obvious that Lagos State remains the commercial nerve center of Nigeria and it houses the known biggest seaport in Nigeria hosting million tons of cargoes and containers of goods of private and coperate Nigerians. As a result the biggest physical commercial activities take place in compelling millions of Nigerians especially the people of the Southeast and Southsouth to leave their native states for Lagos in order to better the lots of their business interest/concerns.

What many people do not know however is the existence of a potential seaport at the banks of Urashi ; *THE OSEAKWA RIVER SEAPORT,IHIALA ANAMBRA STATE*.
The almighty Lagos Seaport to Atlantic Ocean is 60 nautical miles, While the Potential OSEAKWA Seaport that was abandoned in 1959 by the Nigeria government is only 18 nautical miles to Atlantic Ocean with a depth of 20mft.


By implication, shipping goods from China to Lagos with Lagos Seaport is very far than shipping goods from China to Oseakwa Ihiala, using the Seaport at Urashi River Ihiala Anambra state.
It also implies that Imo, Abia, Enugu, Ebonyi, Anambra, Rivers, Delta, Edo Beyelsa, Benue, Kogi and Akwaibom business men living in Lagos will find it easy to have their business in south- East and South-south by using Oseakwa seaport when and if it’s dredged.

This potential seaport has the capacity of handling over 35 per cent of marine business in Nigeria. If only the elites, the economic,political and diplomatic icons of Igbo extraction can pursue and complete the seaport, it will also open up over 3,000 square kilometers of the most fertile agricultural land that has one of the highest alluvial deposits which has been in existence for well over a million years.

This deep seaport will create over two million jobs, directly and indirectly, in marine business, oil and gas, power, education, housing, agro-food industry, entertainment, tourism, etc.

*Who Will Bell Bail The Cat?*

*Sir. Ezebuike George (KSJI)*
Travel & Freight Consultant

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Re: Igboland And Its Hidden Tributaries To The Atlantic by peter0071(m): 7:47am On Mar 31, 2023
if the Igbos decide to focus on Imports only, how is that a problem to you? i ask humbly

secondly, to do export, you still need a point of Exit. so when Igbo want to export their own Products, which port should they use?? Laos Ports?? every country needs a point of Product exit. So many products are being exported from Nigeria and Igboland...but most of these products use Lagos Sea Ports are their exit points.

Give them what they want and see the economy boom in that region.

I am Igbo...not Ipob
pquaver:
1. Lekki Seaport was a total Lagos state project.. Uou cannot tell me the 5 igbo states can't come together to build just 1.. Na so Biafra want to be successful?
2. What is thos whole seaport seaport talk like is the only way to success.. No it isn't.. There are eurooeacountries doing well without port... This whole port is being talked about solely for importation in most igbo people head, why not start thinking of exporting.. You want to continue import and export jobs out when we are still under unemployment... Ndigbo should focus on export cos if u continue this your import mentality biafra too will die quicker than Nigeria.. My 2cents

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Re: Igboland And Its Hidden Tributaries To The Atlantic by AwkaFinest: 7:48am On Mar 31, 2023
gidgiddy:
The problem of Nigerians is that they look at the map of Nigeria which rarely shows the water ways.

Abia has access to the sea, Imo has access to the sea, Ebonyi has access to the sea. Anambra already has a River port, and has access to sea

The South East is so close to the sea that it was inevitable that it would have access to the sea due to the tributaries of the river Niger


In other words, Niger, Kogi, Benue and Nasarawa states all have access to the sea...

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Re: Igboland And Its Hidden Tributaries To The Atlantic by AwkaFinest: 7:54am On Mar 31, 2023
Tranquill:
Mr Igbo come and tell your misguided descendants where your land begins and ends o!

They are in Okigwe, Awka, Ohambele and claiming other peoples territories as Igboland.

A Bonny guy just told me few minutes ago “What concerns someone from Awka with Bonny?”

People are now seeing clearly that the Fulani that these Igbo people keep demonising every day and night are learners compared to their greedy inclinations and tendencies to steal lands that do not belong to them.



My Igbo brothers sometimes amaze me. They can go to any length to claim what's not ours. It's sad!

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Re: Igboland And Its Hidden Tributaries To The Atlantic by pquaver(m): 7:54am On Mar 31, 2023
peter0071:
if the Igbos decide to focus on Imports only, how is that a problem to you? i ask humbly

secondly, to do export, you still need a point of Exit. so when Igbo want to export their own Products, which port should they use?? Laos Ports?? every country needs a point of Product exit. So many products are being exported from Nigeria and Igboland...but most of these products use Lagos Sea Ports are their exit points.

Give them what they want and see the economy boom in that region.

I am Igbo...not Ipob

It is a problem to me because i am a bona-fide son of the soil a royal one at that so you get it.. I help lots of people till today, my WhatsApp message and Facebook is loaded with good day bro,. How far how u dey? I do not ask how they are doing anymore.. Cos that initiates the billing direct. So anything to get the employment rate up is good for me.

Secondly having a seaport is good and i never saw where my write up said it is bad so i am saying you dont have to wait for FG. Lagos did it alone and i see no reason the 5 southeast states cannot do it.. If it is that important to us. I also mean for the economy of the southeast. the mentality of importation should be replaced woth exportation.. So please which part of my messages did you not understand?

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Re: Igboland And Its Hidden Tributaries To The Atlantic by Landlord97: 8:06am On Mar 31, 2023
THE LAST THING FULANI AND YORUBA,WILL ALLOW IS THE VIABILITY OF SEAPORT IN THE SOUTHEAST, CAUSE IT WILL CRIPPLE THE ECONOMY OF SOUTHWEST AND PUT AN END, TO THE BILLIONS BOTH YORUBA AND FULANI MAKES IN COLLABORATION.

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Re: Igboland And Its Hidden Tributaries To The Atlantic by okeysoninv: 8:35am On Mar 31, 2023
why do we have to wait for FG to develop sea port in our land. can't all the South Eastern state come together and igbos in diaspora to build one sea port. Everything is not gra gra. so, close down this thread.yes we have deep tributaries to ocean , it's time to develop it.

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