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Nigerian Civil War Was Never Hatred Against Any People, Says Gowon - Politics (4) - Nairaland

Nairaland ForumNairaland GeneralPoliticsNigerian Civil War Was Never Hatred Against Any People, Says Gowon (6139 Views)

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Re: Nigerian Civil War Was Never Hatred Against Any People, Says Gowon by bigcasava1(m): 7:44pm On Jun 08, 2025
Re: Nigerian Civil War Was Never Hatred Against Any People, Says Gowon by bigcasava1(m): 7:46pm On Jun 08, 2025
Anguldi:
It was stubborn Ojukwu that lead his people to Abattoir 🤷shocked
jos people are paying for it on a daily basis, they will feel how it was
Re: Nigerian Civil War Was Never Hatred Against Any People, Says Gowon by Psoul(m): 7:56pm On Jun 08, 2025
achi4u:
Could you imagine the gang up,but today Igbos are doing well again.
They are doing so very well even buying up all the lands (ancestral lands inclusive) of those that ganged against them.
A destiny child can never be stopped.

Joseph was thrown into pit. He survived.
He was sold as slave.
Was lied against.
Was thrown into prison.
When the time came, he became a great king that even fed those that sold him.

That's the story of the Igbos.
Re: Nigerian Civil War Was Never Hatred Against Any People, Says Gowon by Ezzymadu(m): 11:00pm On Jun 08, 2025
Factcheck0001:
It was never hatred against anyone but to put the overdo people where they belong n it worked!!!
Since you put them where them belong . How mkt? how Nigeria now?
Re: Nigerian Civil War Was Never Hatred Against Any People, Says Gowon by nkwoemeka(m): 11:56pm On Jun 08, 2025
And your actions has boomerang against your own people, we hope you live longer. Whatever one sows, he must surely reap.
Re: Nigerian Civil War Was Never Hatred Against Any People, Says Gowon by kettykin: 1:38am On Jun 09, 2025
Psoul:
THE MEETING THAT STOLE A NATION:

HOW THE ABANDONED PROPERTY ACT WAS BORN,
By Khaleed Yazeedu

Port Harcourt, Late 1975.

The Nigerian Civil War had ended five years earlier. The guns were silent. The Biafran flag was lowered. But for the Igbo people, the battle was far from over. The new war was no longer fought on the blood-soaked fields of Enugu or Nsukka. It was a quiet war, fought in offices, courtrooms, and government houses.

In a nondescript room inside the Rivers State Government House, a secret meeting convened behind closed doors. The ceiling fan hummed relentlessly as a group of men gathered around a heavy wooden table strewn with maps, legal documents, and property claims. They were about to forge a legal instrument that would devastate the Igbo people for generations.

At the head of the table sat Navy Commander Alfred Diete-Spiff, then the young and ambitious Military Governor of Rivers State. With him were key figures who would shape one of Nigeria’s most painful post-war legacies:

Justice Ephraim Akpata, Chief Judge of Rivers State

Colonel Anthony Ukpo, liaison officer from the Supreme Military Council

Dr. Okoi Arikpo, federal advisor and Foreign Minister

A Yoruba constitutional lawyer from Lagos (name withheld for privacy) tasked with drafting the legal framework

Senior civil commissioners and property officials from Rivers and Cross River States

The Agenda That Shattered Lives

Their mission was clear but devastating:

1. Declare Igbo properties abandoned and seize them as state assets.

2. Create legal cover to prevent restitution claims.

3. Redistribute these properties to indigenous residents, military officers, and political cronies.

4. Avoid federal interference and silence Eastern political voices.

The Conversation Behind Closed Doors

In the low lit room, voices spoke with calculated certainty.

Diete-Spiff opened the discussion:
“The war may have ended, but we must protect our people from the return of those who fled. These properties are abandoned. The Easterners cannot simply come back and reclaim what is ours.”

Justice Akpata responded:
“Then we must codify what ‘abandoned’ means. If someone leaves during war and does not return within a specified time, the property legally belongs to the state.”

The Yoruba lawyer from Lagos added:
“This can be defended in court if issued as a military edict rather than through legislative processes. We establish a custodian board to manage and reallocate these properties.”

Colonel Ukpo raised a concern:
“What about the federal government? Will they accept this?”

Dr. Arikpo, calm and assured, replied:
“The North will not object. Lagos may have reservations, but as long as there is no Eastern uproar, it will be allowed to pass.”

Diete-Spiff concluded:
“Prepare the draft edict. No public announcements. Implementation only.”

Edict No. 5 of 1976: The Abandoned Property Act

Within weeks, the Edict was signed quietly in Port Harcourt. It created the Abandoned Property Custodian Board, authorized to seize and redistribute properties left behind by fleeing Igbos. The legal definition of abandoned was vague, allowing the board sweeping powers to declare properties vacant if unclaimed within an unspecified period.

In practice, this meant entire neighborhoods in Port Harcourt, from Diobu to D-Line, Oroworukwo to Old GRA, were reallocated to civil servants, military officers, and political favorites. Igbo families who survived the war returned home only to find their houses occupied or sealed off.

Federal Government’s Silent Consent

Though officially a state law, the federal government did not intervene. Why?

The federal Finance Ministry, influenced by Western Nigerian political interests, had already frozen Igbo bank accounts.

The Gowon administration preferred quiet reintegration over reopening war wounds through legal battles.

Yoruba elites, still recovering from political marginalization, tacitly supported policies that curtailed Igbo economic power.

Survivor Testimonies

Chief Nnamdi Okeke, a retired businessman from Port Harcourt, recalls:
"I returned after the war expecting to rebuild. Instead, my family’s three-story home was occupied by a civil servant. We were told the property was abandoned and given away. We fought for years in court but lost every time."

Mrs. Ifeoma Chukwu, a widow from Enugu, shares:
"My late husband’s shop in Balogun Market was reassigned while I was fleeing the war. I had no legal documents to prove ownership, they said I abandoned it. It was heartbreaking to see strangers in our place."

Mr. Emeka Nwosu, an Igbo civil servant, recounts:
"In Lagos, I was denied my housing allocation because my name was removed from lists. I was told the government had ‘reallocated’ the property for security reasons. We lived as second class citizens in our own country."

The Legacy of a Legal Coup

This was not merely a property dispute. It was economic marginalization inflicted through the law.

How does a people rebuild after losing everything, land, homes, businesses, dignity? The Abandoned Property Act systematically erased Igbo presence from key Nigerian cities and economic centers. It decimated an entire community’s wealth and laid the groundwork for ongoing marginalization.

The Cost of One Nigeria:

Post war slogans promised “No victor, no vanquished.” But this legal dispossession said otherwise. It demanded forgiveness without justice. It punished a people for seeking to survive.

Today, descendants of those dispossessed still struggle for compensation, recognition, and healing.

A Call for Truth and Justice

This article is a call for historical honesty, national dialogue, and reconciliation based on facts, not rhetoric. A true unity demands acknowledging past wrongs, restoring dignity, and offering reparations where possible.

"They took their homes and called it unity. But unity without justice is a lie.”

You can factscheck me through these References:

Nigerian Federal Government Gazette, Edict No. 5 of 1976

Achebe, Chinua. There Was a Country: A Personal History of Biafra (2012)

Coleman, James S. Nigeria: Background to Nationalism

Falola, Toyin and Genova, Ann. Historical Dictionary of Nigeria (2009)

Interviews and oral histories collected from survivors in Port Harcourt and Lagos (2018-2024)

Legal Disclaimer

This article aims to present historical facts and survivor testimonies based on verified sources to promote truth and reconciliation. It does not intend to defame individuals or groups. Readers are encouraged to approach this topic with an open mind and seek further scholarly sources for comprehensive understanding.

Khaleed Yazeedu
Student of History and Justice Advocate
At a very young age when I watched movies about the second world War with gross depiction of utter savagery, wickedness and genocide against the jews, I shuddered in shock not realizing that igbos were a victim of a more horrible treatment. To be honest and realistic, Nigeria's judgment can only be imagined.

The Germans were deeply honest about the war, they quickly made atonement and reparations but Nigeria continued deep into their traumatic marginalization antics against igbos. They even jeer igbos with War time pictures of starvation.

May God comfort the Igbo race.
Re: Nigerian Civil War Was Never Hatred Against Any People, Says Gowon by Paulo3ree(m): 9:10am On Jun 09, 2025
Maxymilliano:
https://www.channelstv.com/2025/06/08/nigerian-civil-war-was-never-hatred-against-any-people-says-gowon/?fbclid=IwQ0xDSwKyZXhjbGNrArJldWV4dG4DYWVtAjExAAEeI-1JoIfJ5aBb-Nw-EftHxIbLIawkk8PDzjXat4NuNKmcquLrMHIK4tFs_cY_aem_4cRmh_TStTKPyhmMLk7BvQ
if you fail to manage your home as a man regardless of what is thrown at you in all ramifications, you are termed a weak or irresponsible man.

This man should once please choose one and stop confusing himself
Re: Nigerian Civil War Was Never Hatred Against Any People, Says Gowon by phoenix45(m): 10:45am On Jun 09, 2025
Say that Soviet union soldiers killed the 3million through bombing. Your cowardish nigeria soldiers can't even sustain the war against easterners that's using stone and stick to fight. Cowards.

sreamsense:
What was ojukwu looking at when he marched 3millions to the slaughter ground? If Ojukwu did not start what he couldn't finish, will Nigeria millitary come and kill 3 millions in their houses unprovoked? Don't blame Gowon, blame stubborn ojukwu for that
Re: Nigerian Civil War Was Never Hatred Against Any People, Says Gowon by Psoul(m): 3:02pm On Jun 09, 2025
kettykin:
At a very young age when I watched movies about the second world War with gross depiction of utter savagery, wickedness and genocide against the jews, I shuddered in shock not realizing that igbos were a victim of a more horrible treatment. To be honest and realistic, Nigeria's judgment can only be imagined.

The Germans were deeply honest about the war, they quickly made atonement and reparations but Nigeria continued deep into their traumatic marginalization antics against igbos. They even jeer igbos with War time pictures of starvation.

May God comfort the Igbo race.
The truth is that, Nigeria will keep sinking and getting worst until the spirit of the Igbos are appeased.
The conspiracy against the Igbos are so devilish. Starting from the British colonial matters down to other tribes especially the North and the West.
Re: Nigerian Civil War Was Never Hatred Against Any People, Says Gowon by Ebeano49(m): 3:29pm On Jun 09, 2025
What have Nigeria gained from the Unity?? The unity has brought us nothing but mutual suspicion, poverty and underdevelopment.
The civil war is a war that should never have been fought. The nations forced into Nigeria should have been allowed to part ways peacefully.
Re: Nigerian Civil War Was Never Hatred Against Any People, Says Gowon by T9ksy(m): 5:10pm On Jun 09, 2025
Psoul:
The truth is that, Nigeria will keep sinking and getting worst until the spirit of the Igbos are appeased.
The conspiracy against the Igbos are so devilish. Starting from the British colonial matters down to other tribes especially the North and the West.
Old boy, abeg don't hold your breadth in the hope that nigerians will one day appease the spirits of fallen biafran heros/mugus o, else, you go just die wtongfully "cause i don't believe, any group in that warped contraption is remotely inclined to appease any bl..oo.d.y person/s' spirit, in the country.

If nigeria is sinking, abeg make hin hurry up as the rate at which these fulani terrorists are killing us in our homes,streams, forests, farms, markets etc, there probably won't be much indigenous people left in nigeria.
Re: Nigerian Civil War Was Never Hatred Against Any People, Says Gowon by Ndipe(m): 9:20am On Jun 10, 2025
Who initiated the food blockade against the ibos resulting in famine, kwashiorkor and death?
Re: Nigerian Civil War Was Never Hatred Against Any People, Says Gowon by Yujin(m): 2:33pm On Jun 10, 2025
Psoul:
The truth is that, Nigeria will keep sinking and getting worst until the spirit of the Igbos are appeased.
The conspiracy against the Igbos are so devilish. Starting from the British colonial matters down to other tribes especially the North and the West.
You shouldn't call the British 'colonial masters'. Are they still your master? Were they even your master during the colonial days? Did you invite them to come become your master? They are simply 'colonialists' or 'colonial power'.
The same way you shouldn't call Frederick Lugard a 'lord'. He's not your lord nor is he deserving of that title.
Our education should reflect in our understanding of issues and how we should relay it to others.
Re: Nigerian Civil War Was Never Hatred Against Any People, Says Gowon by achi4u(m): 10:23pm On Jun 11, 2025
nkwoemeka:
And your actions has boomerang against your own people, we hope you live longer. Whatever one sows, he must surely reap.
If only he can turn the hands of time.
His people are going through a lot.
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