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Chimamanda Adichie's Article On The Oba Of Lagos Saga - Politics (11) - Nairaland

Nairaland ForumNairaland GeneralPoliticsChimamanda Adichie's Article On The Oba Of Lagos Saga (59159 Views)

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Re: Chimamanda Adichie's Article On The Oba Of Lagos Saga by GLOBALINF: 9:10am On Apr 11, 2015
ControlX:
Cc Seun Lalastica
ikenna351 afam4eva
Pls do the needful.



***modified***
Hahaha... at last i made fp just 6days to my birthday. [jumps and punches the air with my right hand]
Oooh.. Thank you, Jesus.

I dedicate this fp and ftc to my sweetest mum for all her efforts towards my personal success. Cheers mum.
Meanwhile special thanks to lalastica, seun, ikenna351 and afam4eva and all nairalanders...
Better things are coming.

Now to the topic....
I think what binds many tribes in Nigeria is a common hatred for the Igbos. This hatred i believe is hinged on the purported dominance of Igbos. What is it about Igbo dominance? Here is what a fellow nairalander has to say...

Great point. Fear of Igbo domination as my father
would say is a sign of weakness on the part of
the fearer and lack of confidence in their ability. In
other words, for someone to dominate you in a
non physical way whether economically, socially, educationally, in any way, shape and form as long
as they are not holding you hostage physically
from succeeding but solely by intelligence in a
level playing field, then the conclusion is that
person or group of people are smarter than
you...this has been scientifically proven. So any tribe that fears Igbo domination are less smarter
than the Igbos otherwise compete with them. The
reason why Igbos do better in everything that
they do, which is often mistaken as domination is
because they are smarter than the rest of other
ethnic groups in Nigeria. When I mean "smarter" I
don't mean individually as a Hausa man can be
smarter than a yoruba, yoruba smarter than an
ijaw man an ijaw may be smarter than an Igbo,
e.t.c., however as a whole in terms of an ethnic
group, the Igbos lead the pack in Nigeria and
some tribes see it as a domination but actually it
isn't...they are just more smarter and have more
drive than others. Dr. Thomas Sowell detailed this
in his book and actually mentions Igbos as the
most successful ethnic group in Nigeria despite
the civil war set back.


If Nigeria wants to be truly great, we should not trifle with any tribe, especially the Igbos.




n see the igbos are very smart
That is why they are mostly caught wt drugs at the ports
That is why when 10 armed robers are caught, 7 are igbos,
That is why okija shrine blooms
That is why they cheat even their blood brother and betray their father for money
That is why they are never trusted even within themselves
That is why when u give them one metre, they take ten miles,
Nonsense.....
Was scammed at Ladipo market by this same set of people last week
Very unfaithful dudes
No wonder the hausa's will rather kill them than kill a goat...
Though not all of them are like that BUT never trust them....
Waiting for their response.

Re: Chimamanda Adichie's Article On The Oba Of Lagos Saga by Waspy(m): 9:11am On Apr 11, 2015
francizy:
That is how you people misunderstand things and jump straight to replying.. How does "AFTER THE CIVIL WAR relate or have anything to do with the civil war?

I said

AFTER THE CIVIL WAR,
AFTER THE CIVIL WAR,
AFTER THE CIVIL WAR,

do you now understand that i meant post Civil war and not during Civil war before I move forward and clear your doubts?

What turmoil are the Igbos causing in Yoruba land? How many times have you took to NL, FB or Twitter to unleash the beast on the Fulani people destroying farm lands and killing Yoruba farmers in your own lands? AFTER THE CIVIL WAR, has the Igbos ever rise up in arms against the Yorubas? But the Igbos have done that on several ocassions against the Hausa/Fulanis in the form of reprisal attacks. Have you ever heard that Igbo men went into some plots of land in Lagos, without paying for it and started building? Has the Igbos ever disrupted any of your gatherings? The fact remains that crimes committed in Lagos are shared equally between the Yorubas and the Igbos? So where is and what is the turmoil you're talking about bro?
Read the post nna
Re: Chimamanda Adichie's Article On The Oba Of Lagos Saga by safarigirl(f): 9:11am On Apr 11, 2015
*Seun, my own reply on another similar thread was great and you didn't move that one to FP*sulk*

*As I re-post tongue*

Aunty Chimamanda...they will soon come here and accuse you of making things harder for your kinsmen who refuse to 'abide' to the rules of their 'gracious hosts'.

The hypocrisy in these people is disturbing. So an Ondo man can contest Governorship in Lagos and win a Lagosian, but an Igbo man has no such rights against an Ekiti man in same state. Go and ask those parasites that say Lagos is Yoruba land if a Lagosian has ever been Governor in Osun.

Yet the likes of Tinubu and Fashola who are osun men can outmuscle indigenes....

For too long, those paranoid eediots have been blaming every anti-APC post on Igbos, conveniently forgetting that over 9 million non-Igbos voted against APC in the Presidential elections.

Those baboons who reak of blatant ignorance, the ones who just escaped the jungles they call home and whose fathers do not even own a straw of grass in all of Lagos are the ones yarning dust up and down as if they would lose a thing in thee events that Lagos went to war.

When Lagos is set on fire, those cowards will run back to their mud houses and tatched roofs in the same jungles they emerged from, and guess who gets to mourn lost property in Lagos?

Yes, the same Igbos they say are 'invaders'
Re: Chimamanda Adichie's Article On The Oba Of Lagos Saga by Ymodulus: 9:11am On Apr 11, 2015
illiad:
Lol!
On the contrary it takes an oaf to accord a fellow oaf an accolade on their shared tripe.
Lol.
Morning
Re: Chimamanda Adichie's Article On The Oba Of Lagos Saga by OdenigboAroli2: 9:11am On Apr 11, 2015
Ymodulus:
Hahahahaha lol!

Morning bro. Kedu?
everyone can say kedu, okay olee ihe merenu iji ekwu ka onye egbuwara ishi?
Re: Chimamanda Adichie's Article On The Oba Of Lagos Saga by cmecproblem(m): 9:12am On Apr 11, 2015
Chimamanda hasn't gotten over the 1960s, she should get psychiatric help ASAP.
Re: Chimamanda Adichie's Article On The Oba Of Lagos Saga by chaloner(m): 9:12am On Apr 11, 2015
lygn19:
Dats how they are, in d south east, u wud see a director in a govt institution from Yoruba living in a rented flat when his two months salary can build him a house, check well his family is in lagos and he's d only one der... they go der and think they re deceiving anybody but they don't know they re deceiving themselves and they want miracle to just happen and igbos wud pick them and say come and become our governor... u wud see a Yoruba man dat has never left yoruba land b4 wud be saying if it was in the east yorubas can't hold a post, so they wud be in Yoruba land and igbos wud come from the east to come and Beg them to contest for a political position, they just keep spewing rubbish, apart from Lagos dats Nigerias former capital, how come they don't talk abt other parts of Yoruba land, how many igbos own political post in other parts of Yoruba land... dz ppl just keep talking out of ignorance.
bro I tire , goto aba ! Owerri , anambra and see where hausa and yoruba are livin nd u wil marvel , dis is one decevin himself, nigeria can only knw peace once every tribe start believein we re all one by buildin and developin nd contestin any post in anywhere u re. Believe me everywhere is no mans land in a developed world. Thanks for ur writeup
Re: Chimamanda Adichie's Article On The Oba Of Lagos Saga by Nsonso: 9:13am On Apr 11, 2015
Nwanyi oma u are on point.

When shall i see my home.....all hail BIAFRA.
Re: Chimamanda Adichie's Article On The Oba Of Lagos Saga by Nobody: 9:13am On Apr 11, 2015
lygn19:
me I wonder o, they keep talking as if d igbo's in lagos were given free land, and dat they accomodate them by bringing food to give dem every morning and dash dem money everytime... somebody wud be suffering for over 20years, some of dem start of be hawking things, from there they get blessed and they rent there own shops, from there they get a big business, build a house and get married. and is now comfortable, while dat person was busy running under d hot sun hustling on his own, most times he slept under d bridge, slept in empty stomach this ppl didn't remember them, but once they make it,they wud come and say they made it because yorubas are accommodating. If sm1 goes to Lagos and seats down wud a Yoruba man come and say take my land, I am dashing u.... dz ppl just keep talking out if ignorance.
kiss kiss
Re: Chimamanda Adichie's Article On The Oba Of Lagos Saga by Sibrah: 9:13am On Apr 11, 2015
help3852:
Ymodulus am very disappointed, did ojukwo just stand up and said he was going for war, what led to his decisionhuh

stop this sentiments, Nigeria was merged for selfish reasons, 100years down the line even when the colonial masters have gone the selfish reasons are still being practiced esp by yorubas
When the Yorubas were agitating for a break off of western region in '1957, what was the reaction of the Igbos?
Did Yorubas collectively promise to remain in Nigeria should Biafra break off?
How are the Yorubas promoting selfishness of the colonial master.
Re: Chimamanda Adichie's Article On The Oba Of Lagos Saga by leadersWay00: 9:14am On Apr 11, 2015
Igbos always distorting fact, peddelling lies n half truth just to play d victim card. This lady just lost d respect i v for her
Re: Chimamanda Adichie's Article On The Oba Of Lagos Saga by Nobody: 9:14am On Apr 11, 2015
ControlX:
A few days ago, the Oba of Lagos threatened Igbo leaders. If they did not vote for his governorship candidate in Lagos, he said, they would be thrown into the lagoon. His entire speech was a flagrant performance of disregard. His words said, in effect: I think so little of you that I don’t have to cajole you but will just threaten you and, by the way, your safety in Lagos is not assured, it is negotiable.
There have been condemnations of the Oba’s words. Sadly, many of the condemnations from non-Igbo people have come with the ugly impatience of expressions like ‘move on,’ and ‘don’t be over-emotional’ and ‘calm down.’ These take away the power, even the sincerity, of the condemnations. It is highhanded and offensive to tell an aggrieved person how to feel, or how quickly to forgive, just as an apology becomes a non-apology when it comes with ‘now get over it.’
Other condemnations of the Oba’s words have been couched in dismissive or diminishing language such as ‘The Oba can’t really do anything, he isn’t actually going to kill anyone. He was joking. He was just being a loudmouth.’

Or – the basest yet – ‘we are all prejudiced.’ It is dishonest to respond to a specific act of prejudice by ignoring that act and instead stressing the generic and the general. It is similar to responding to a specific crime by saying ‘we are all capable of crime.’ Indeed we are. But responses such as these are diversionary tactics. They dismiss the specific act, diminish its importance, and ultimately aim at silencing the legitimate fears of people.

We are indeed all prejudiced, but that is not an appropriate response to an issue this serious. The Oba is not an ordinary citizen. He is a traditional ruler in a part of a country where traditional rulers command considerable influence – the reluctance on the part of many to directly chastise the Oba speaks to his power. The Oba’s words matter. He is not a singular voice; he represents traditional authority. The Oba’s words matter because they are enough to incite violence in a political setting already fraught with uncertainty. The Oba’s words matter even more in the event that Ambode loses the governorship election, because it would then be easy to scapegoat Igbo people and hold them punishable.

Nigerians who consider themselves enlightened might dismiss the Oba’s words as illogical. But the scapegoating of groups – which has a long history all over the world – has never been about logic. The Oba’s words matter because they bring worrying echoes of the early 1960s in Nigeria, when Igbo people were scapegoated for political reasons. Chinua Achebe, when he finally accepted that Lagos, the city he called home, was unsafe for him because he was Igbo, saw crowds at the motor park taunting Igbo people as they boarded buses: ‘Go, Igbo, go so that garri will be cheaper in Lagos!’
Of course Igbo people were not responsible for the cost of garri. But they were perceived as people who were responsible for a coup and who were ‘taking over’ and who, consequently, could be held responsible for everything bad.

Any group of people would understandably be troubled by a threat such as the Oba’s, but the Igbo, because of their history in Nigeria, have been particularly troubled. And it is a recent history. There are people alive today who were publicly attacked in cosmopolitan Lagos in the 1960s because they were Igbo. Even people who were merely light-skinned were at risk of violence in Lagos markets, because to be light-skinned was to be mistaken for Igbo.

Almost every Nigerian ethnic group has a grouse of some sort with the Nigerian state. The Nigerian state has, by turns, been violent, unfair, neglectful, of different parts of the country. Almost every ethnic group has derogatory stereotypes attached to it by other ethnic groups.

But it is disingenuous to suggest that the experience of every ethnic group has been the same. Anti-Igbo violence began under the British colonial government, with complex roots and manifestations. But the end result is a certain psychic difference in the relationship of Igbo people to the Nigerian state. To be Igbo in Nigeria is constantly to be suspect; your national patriotism is never taken as the norm, you are continually expected to prove it.

All groups are conditioned by their specific histories. Perhaps another ethnic group would have reacted with less concern to the Oba’s threat, because that ethnic group would not be conditioned by a history of being targets of violence, as the Igbo have been.

Many responses to the Oba’s threat have mentioned the ‘welcoming’ nature of Lagos, and have made comparisons between Lagos and southeastern towns like Onitsha. It is valid to debate the ethnic diversity of different parts of Nigeria, to compare, for example, Ibadan and Enugu, Ado-Ekiti and Aba, and to debate who moves where, and who feels comfortable living where and why that is. But it is odd to pretend that Lagos is like any other city in Nigeria. It is not. The political history of Lagos and its development as the first national capital set it apart. Lagos is Nigeria’s metropolis. There are ethnic Igbo people whose entire lives have been spent in Lagos, who have little or no ties to the southeast, who speak Yoruba better than Igbo. Should they, too, be reminded to be ‘grateful’ each time an election draws near?

No law-abiding Nigerian should be expected to show gratitude for living peacefully in any part of Nigeria. Landlords in Lagos should not, as still happens too often, be able to refuse to rent their property to Igbo people.

The Oba’s words were disturbing, but its context is even more disturbing:

The anti-Igbo rhetoric that has been part of the political discourse since the presidential election results. Accusatory and derogatory language – using words like ‘brainwashed,’ ‘tribalistic voting’ – has been used to describe President Jonathan’s overwhelming win in the southeast. All democracies have regions that vote in large numbers for one side, and even though parts of Northern Nigeria showed voting patterns similar to the Southeast, the opprobrium has been reserved for the Southeast.

But the rhetoric is about more than mere voting. It is really about citizenship. To be so entitled as to question the legitimacy of a people’s choice in a democratic election is not only a sign of disrespect but is also a questioning of the full citizenship of those people.

What does it mean to be a Nigerian citizen?
When Igbo people are urged to be ‘grateful’ for being in Lagos, do they somehow have less of a right as citizens to live where they live? Every Nigerian should be able to live in any part of Nigeria. The only expectation for a Nigerian citizen living in any part of Nigeria is to be law-abiding. Not to be ‘grateful.’ Not to be expected to pay back some sort of unspoken favour by toeing a particular political line. Nigerian citizens can vote for whomever they choose, and should never be expected to justify or apologize for their choice.
Only by feeling a collective sense of ownership of Nigeria can we start to forge a nation. A nation is an idea. Nigeria is still in progress. To make this a nation, we must collectively agree on what citizenship means: all Nigerians must matter equally.

Source:
www.olisa.tv/2015/04/10/chimamanda-adichieoba-lagos/
Instead of this write-up, why not do better by writing about the need for Igbos to go to their states and develop them? Why not write to the lawmakers that every Nigerian can live and contest for any position in any state, or you've have forgotten that Lagos is the state of origin of some people? More so, how can Igbo claim to be patrotic when they are championing creation of BIAFRA? Are you not aware of BIAFRA embassy recently opened in Spain? Finally, I do NOT support the threat made by the Oba of Lagos but your article is biased and divisive than uniting!
Re: Chimamanda Adichie's Article On The Oba Of Lagos Saga by Godwin10123: 9:14am On Apr 11, 2015
illiad:
Dude I don't give a fuckkkk where in hell you come from. Mine is simply to educate you on the economic situation in the country. That we Ndigbo will continue to use your hate as fuel for our growth .
Nwanne u re on point!!! They planned to fustrate igbos but we re still on top. Jealous of our success!!!
Re: Chimamanda Adichie's Article On The Oba Of Lagos Saga by chaloner(m): 9:15am On Apr 11, 2015
LEAFLET:
Five million likes for you....Your comment is so truthful that it hurts...
tnx bro , wish dey wil change nd mak dis country a peaceful one by doin d right tin
Re: Chimamanda Adichie's Article On The Oba Of Lagos Saga by Ymodulus: 9:15am On Apr 11, 2015
OdenigboAroli2:
everyone can say kedu, okay olee ihe merenu iji ekwu ka onye egbuwara ishi?
Walahi, this one is strong
Re: Chimamanda Adichie's Article On The Oba Of Lagos Saga by OdenigboAroli2: 9:15am On Apr 11, 2015
chaloner:
bro I tire , goto aba ! Owerri , anambra and see where hausa and yoruba are livin nd u wil marvel , dis is one decevin himself, nigeria can only knw peace once every tribe start believein we re all one by buildin and developin nd contestin any post in anywhere u re. Believe me everywhere is no mans land in a developed world. Thanks for ur writeup
dangote, with all his billions of dollars does not own a single house or factory in the east of Nigeria, now imagine that.
Re: Chimamanda Adichie's Article On The Oba Of Lagos Saga by superstar1(m): 9:16am On Apr 11, 2015
Point of correction Chimamanda:

The SE purported election result for GEJ was ''tribalistic rigging'' and not voting.
Re: Chimamanda Adichie's Article On The Oba Of Lagos Saga by OdenigboAroli2: 9:16am On Apr 11, 2015
Ymodulus:
Walahi, this one is strong
grin grin good morning to you
Re: Chimamanda Adichie's Article On The Oba Of Lagos Saga by Holesher(m): 9:16am On Apr 11, 2015
I see a chauvinistic behaviour in Igbo nation. Please if all the Igbo in Lagos vote for JK with yoruba voting for Ambode, who will get the simple majority? Please in politics, be aware that, destroy your adversary to strengthen your camp is the game. JK might not be the best candidates for Igbo to prosper as usual in Lagos. Every tribes in Nigerian are all over the country, Igbo in Lagos should just be civil and exercise their right, and if any Igbo man is partisan it should be taken as such to avoid unnecessary generalisation. Not only Igbo extraction are in Lagos, ijaw, urhobo, itsekiri and so on, are equally there.
Re: Chimamanda Adichie's Article On The Oba Of Lagos Saga by OdenigboAroli2: 9:17am On Apr 11, 2015
superstar1:
Point of correction Chimamanda:

The SE purported election result for GEJ was ''tribalistic rigging'' and not voting.
wharreva!
Re: Chimamanda Adichie's Article On The Oba Of Lagos Saga by help3852: 9:17am On Apr 11, 2015
Ymodulus:
The Nigerian Civil War, between the self-declared secessionist nation of Biafra and the independent nation of Nigeria, began on 30 May 1967 and ended on 12 January 1970. Though there were complex multiple causes, the primary cause, as reflected in a statement made by the Igbo Eastern Military Governor, Lieutenant Colonel Chukumeka Odumegwu Ojukwu, was interethnic domination: "The brutal and planned annihilation of officers of Eastern Nigeria origin had cast serious doubt as to whether they could ever sincerely live together as members of a nation" (Ojiako qtd. by The Daily Independent). To compound the underlying ethnic hostilities, a controversial census in 1963, a disputed postindependence election in 1964, and explosive western regional elections in 1965 worsened hostilities, deepened secessionist agitations and triggered first military coup on 15 January 1966, led by Igbo (eastern region) Major Chukwuma "Kaduna" Nzeogwu. Though Nzeogwu's coup killed Nigerian Prime Minister Tafawa Balewa the Sarduana* of Sokoto, Sir Ahmadu Bello, no Eastern Igbos were killed, a fact that triggered the accusation that the coup was not political but rather ethnic and that the Igbos of the east were aiming for ethnic domination over north and south [*the Sarduana, a tribalist leader, opposed "emerging cosmopolitan, federal and democratic conscious" epitomized by the "new generation of Northerners" in favor of tribal traditions and structures (Okechukwu Jones Asuzu, The Politics of Being Nigerian)]. Later in 1966, a countercoup led by Igbo Major-General Johnson Umunakwe Aguiyi-Ironsi abolished the federal structure and introduced a unitary system of government in Nigeria: a unitary form has one central decision making power, with decisions communicated to and implemented by regional and local authorities (in comparison, the US is a federalist republic government while the UK is a unitary government). A "revenge coup" on 29 July 1966 resulted in the assassination of Major-General Aguiyi-Ironsi at Ibadan putting an end to his unitary government.

- BBC , ENUQoutes
so What led to the coup? Is it not tribal sentiments, who started it …, it must have been led by an easterner but Was an agreement reached by all regions, the soldiers sent to kill in the east failed, they will not tell you the truth, the writers will always push blames to minority
Re: Chimamanda Adichie's Article On The Oba Of Lagos Saga by cromz(m): 9:17am On Apr 11, 2015
ControlX:
A few days ago, the Oba of Lagos threatened Igbo leaders. If they did not vote for his governorship candidate in Lagos, he said, they would be thrown into the lagoon. His entire speech was a flagrant performance of disregard. His words said, in effect: I think so little of you that I don’t have to cajole you but will just threaten you and, by the way, your safety in Lagos is not assured, it is negotiable.
There have been condemnations of the Oba’s words. Sadly, many of the condemnations from non-Igbo people have come with the ugly impatience of expressions like ‘move on,’ and ‘don’t be over-emotional’ and ‘calm down.’ These take away the power, even the sincerity, of the condemnations. It is highhanded and offensive to tell an aggrieved person how to feel, or how quickly to forgive, just as an apology becomes a non-apology when it comes with ‘now get over it.’
Other condemnations of the Oba’s words have been couched in dismissive or diminishing language such as ‘The Oba can’t really do anything, he isn’t actually going to kill anyone. He was joking. He was just being a loudmouth.’

Or – the basest yet – ‘we are all prejudiced.’ It is dishonest to respond to a specific act of prejudice by ignoring that act and instead stressing the generic and the general. It is similar to responding to a specific crime by saying ‘we are all capable of crime.’ Indeed we are. But responses such as these are diversionary tactics. They dismiss the specific act, diminish its importance, and ultimately aim at silencing the legitimate fears of people.

We are indeed all prejudiced, but that is not an appropriate response to an issue this serious. The Oba is not an ordinary citizen. He is a traditional ruler in a part of a country where traditional rulers command considerable influence – the reluctance on the part of many to directly chastise the Oba speaks to his power. The Oba’s words matter. He is not a singular voice; he represents traditional authority. The Oba’s words matter because they are enough to incite violence in a political setting already fraught with uncertainty. The Oba’s words matter even more in the event that Ambode loses the governorship election, because it would then be easy to scapegoat Igbo people and hold them punishable.

Nigerians who consider themselves enlightened might dismiss the Oba’s words as illogical. But the scapegoating of groups – which has a long history all over the world – has never been about logic. The Oba’s words matter because they bring worrying echoes of the early 1960s in Nigeria, when Igbo people were scapegoated for political reasons. Chinua Achebe, when he finally accepted that Lagos, the city he called home, was unsafe for him because he was Igbo, saw crowds at the motor park taunting Igbo people as they boarded buses: ‘Go, Igbo, go so that garri will be cheaper in Lagos!’
Of course Igbo people were not responsible for the cost of garri. But they were perceived as people who were responsible for a coup and who were ‘taking over’ and who, consequently, could be held responsible for everything bad.

Any group of people would understandably be troubled by a threat such as the Oba’s, but the Igbo, because of their history in Nigeria, have been particularly troubled. And it is a recent history. There are people alive today who were publicly attacked in cosmopolitan Lagos in the 1960s because they were Igbo. Even people who were merely light-skinned were at risk of violence in Lagos markets, because to be light-skinned was to be mistaken for Igbo.

Almost every Nigerian ethnic group has a grouse of some sort with the Nigerian state. The Nigerian state has, by turns, been violent, unfair, neglectful, of different parts of the country. Almost every ethnic group has derogatory stereotypes attached to it by other ethnic groups.

But it is disingenuous to suggest that the experience of every ethnic group has been the same. Anti-Igbo violence began under the British colonial government, with complex roots and manifestations. But the end result is a certain psychic difference in the relationship of Igbo people to the Nigerian state. To be Igbo in Nigeria is constantly to be suspect; your national patriotism is never taken as the norm, you are continually expected to prove it.

All groups are conditioned by their specific histories. Perhaps another ethnic group would have reacted with less concern to the Oba’s threat, because that ethnic group would not be conditioned by a history of being targets of violence, as the Igbo have been.

Many responses to the Oba’s threat have mentioned the ‘welcoming’ nature of Lagos, and have made comparisons between Lagos and southeastern towns like Onitsha. It is valid to debate the ethnic diversity of different parts of Nigeria, to compare, for example, Ibadan and Enugu, Ado-Ekiti and Aba, and to debate who moves where, and who feels comfortable living where and why that is. But it is odd to pretend that Lagos is like any other city in Nigeria. It is not. The political history of Lagos and its development as the first national capital set it apart. Lagos is Nigeria’s metropolis. There are ethnic Igbo people whose entire lives have been spent in Lagos, who have little or no ties to the southeast, who speak Yoruba better than Igbo. Should they, too, be reminded to be ‘grateful’ each time an election draws near?

No law-abiding Nigerian should be expected to show gratitude for living peacefully in any part of Nigeria. Landlords in Lagos should not, as still happens too often, be able to refuse to rent their property to Igbo people.

The Oba’s words were disturbing, but its context is even more disturbing:

The anti-Igbo rhetoric that has been part of the political discourse since the presidential election results. Accusatory and derogatory language – using words like ‘brainwashed,’ ‘tribalistic voting’ – has been used to describe President Jonathan’s overwhelming win in the southeast. All democracies have regions that vote in large numbers for one side, and even though parts of Northern Nigeria showed voting patterns similar to the Southeast, the opprobrium has been reserved for the Southeast.

But the rhetoric is about more than mere voting. It is really about citizenship. To be so entitled as to question the legitimacy of a people’s choice in a democratic election is not only a sign of disrespect but is also a questioning of the full citizenship of those people.

What does it mean to be a Nigerian citizen?
When Igbo people are urged to be ‘grateful’ for being in Lagos, do they somehow have less of a right as citizens to live where they live? Every Nigerian should be able to live in any part of Nigeria. The only expectation for a Nigerian citizen living in any part of Nigeria is to be law-abiding. Not to be ‘grateful.’ Not to be expected to pay back some sort of unspoken favour by toeing a particular political line. Nigerian citizens can vote for whomever they choose, and should never be expected to justify or apologize for their choice.
Only by feeling a collective sense of ownership of Nigeria can we start to forge a nation. A nation is an idea. Nigeria is still in progress. To make this a nation, we must collectively agree on what citizenship means: all Nigerians must matter equally.

Source:
www.olisa.tv/2015/04/10/chimamanda-adichieoba-lagos/
Who is this.lady to interfere in political matters as she is more tribally sentimental than most Igbo's she how
Re: Chimamanda Adichie's Article On The Oba Of Lagos Saga by Ymodulus: 9:18am On Apr 11, 2015
OdenigboAroli2:
grin grin good morning to you
Morning sir
Re: Chimamanda Adichie's Article On The Oba Of Lagos Saga by geoworldedu: 9:18am On Apr 11, 2015
michelz:
The words of Oba Akiolu will be remembered even in 20 yrs to come whether Nigeria exists or not. It will be passed down from fathers to Children,and it will shape the way Yorubas see Igbos,and vice versa...Except...
how do Igbos see themselves?
Re: Chimamanda Adichie's Article On The Oba Of Lagos Saga by cromz(m): 9:18am On Apr 11, 2015
ControlX:
A few days ago, the Oba of Lagos threatened Igbo leaders. If they did not vote for his governorship candidate in Lagos, he said, they would be thrown into the lagoon. His entire speech was a flagrant performance of disregard. His words said, in effect: I think so little of you that I don’t have to cajole you but will just threaten you and, by the way, your safety in Lagos is not assured, it is negotiable.
There have been condemnations of the Oba’s words. Sadly, many of the condemnations from non-Igbo people have come with the ugly impatience of expressions like ‘move on,’ and ‘don’t be over-emotional’ and ‘calm down.’ These take away the power, even the sincerity, of the condemnations. It is highhanded and offensive to tell an aggrieved person how to feel, or how quickly to forgive, just as an apology becomes a non-apology when it comes with ‘now get over it.’
Other condemnations of the Oba’s words have been couched in dismissive or diminishing language such as ‘The Oba can’t really do anything, he isn’t actually going to kill anyone. He was joking. He was just being a loudmouth.’

Or – the basest yet – ‘we are all prejudiced.’ It is dishonest to respond to a specific act of prejudice by ignoring that act and instead stressing the generic and the general. It is similar to responding to a specific crime by saying ‘we are all capable of crime.’ Indeed we are. But responses such as these are diversionary tactics. They dismiss the specific act, diminish its importance, and ultimately aim at silencing the legitimate fears of people.

We are indeed all prejudiced, but that is not an appropriate response to an issue this serious. The Oba is not an ordinary citizen. He is a traditional ruler in a part of a country where traditional rulers command considerable influence – the reluctance on the part of many to directly chastise the Oba speaks to his power. The Oba’s words matter. He is not a singular voice; he represents traditional authority. The Oba’s words matter because they are enough to incite violence in a political setting already fraught with uncertainty. The Oba’s words matter even more in the event that Ambode loses the governorship election, because it would then be easy to scapegoat Igbo people and hold them punishable.

Nigerians who consider themselves enlightened might dismiss the Oba’s words as illogical. But the scapegoating of groups – which has a long history all over the world – has never been about logic. The Oba’s words matter because they bring worrying echoes of the early 1960s in Nigeria, when Igbo people were scapegoated for political reasons. Chinua Achebe, when he finally accepted that Lagos, the city he called home, was unsafe for him because he was Igbo, saw crowds at the motor park taunting Igbo people as they boarded buses: ‘Go, Igbo, go so that garri will be cheaper in Lagos!’
Of course Igbo people were not responsible for the cost of garri. But they were perceived as people who were responsible for a coup and who were ‘taking over’ and who, consequently, could be held responsible for everything bad.

Any group of people would understandably be troubled by a threat such as the Oba’s, but the Igbo, because of their history in Nigeria, have been particularly troubled. And it is a recent history. There are people alive today who were publicly attacked in cosmopolitan Lagos in the 1960s because they were Igbo. Even people who were merely light-skinned were at risk of violence in Lagos markets, because to be light-skinned was to be mistaken for Igbo.

Almost every Nigerian ethnic group has a grouse of some sort with the Nigerian state. The Nigerian state has, by turns, been violent, unfair, neglectful, of different parts of the country. Almost every ethnic group has derogatory stereotypes attached to it by other ethnic groups.

But it is disingenuous to suggest that the experience of every ethnic group has been the same. Anti-Igbo violence began under the British colonial government, with complex roots and manifestations. But the end result is a certain psychic difference in the relationship of Igbo people to the Nigerian state. To be Igbo in Nigeria is constantly to be suspect; your national patriotism is never taken as the norm, you are continually expected to prove it.

All groups are conditioned by their specific histories. Perhaps another ethnic group would have reacted with less concern to the Oba’s threat, because that ethnic group would not be conditioned by a history of being targets of violence, as the Igbo have been.

Many responses to the Oba’s threat have mentioned the ‘welcoming’ nature of Lagos, and have made comparisons between Lagos and southeastern towns like Onitsha. It is valid to debate the ethnic diversity of different parts of Nigeria, to compare, for example, Ibadan and Enugu, Ado-Ekiti and Aba, and to debate who moves where, and who feels comfortable living where and why that is. But it is odd to pretend that Lagos is like any other city in Nigeria. It is not. The political history of Lagos and its development as the first national capital set it apart. Lagos is Nigeria’s metropolis. There are ethnic Igbo people whose entire lives have been spent in Lagos, who have little or no ties to the southeast, who speak Yoruba better than Igbo. Should they, too, be reminded to be ‘grateful’ each time an election draws near?

No law-abiding Nigerian should be expected to show gratitude for living peacefully in any part of Nigeria. Landlords in Lagos should not, as still happens too often, be able to refuse to rent their property to Igbo people.

The Oba’s words were disturbing, but its context is even more disturbing:

The anti-Igbo rhetoric that has been part of the political discourse since the presidential election results. Accusatory and derogatory language – using words like ‘brainwashed,’ ‘tribalistic voting’ – has been used to describe President Jonathan’s overwhelming win in the southeast. All democracies have regions that vote in large numbers for one side, and even though parts of Northern Nigeria showed voting patterns similar to the Southeast, the opprobrium has been reserved for the Southeast.

But the rhetoric is about more than mere voting. It is really about citizenship. To be so entitled as to question the legitimacy of a people’s choice in a democratic election is not only a sign of disrespect but is also a questioning of the full citizenship of those people.

What does it mean to be a Nigerian citizen?
When Igbo people are urged to be ‘grateful’ for being in Lagos, do they somehow have less of a right as citizens to live where they live? Every Nigerian should be able to live in any part of Nigeria. The only expectation for a Nigerian citizen living in any part of Nigeria is to be law-abiding. Not to be ‘grateful.’ Not to be expected to pay back some sort of unspoken favour by toeing a particular political line. Nigerian citizens can vote for whomever they choose, and should never be expected to justify or apologize for their choice.
Only by feeling a collective sense of ownership of Nigeria can we start to forge a nation. A nation is an idea. Nigeria is still in progress. To make this a nation, we must collectively agree on what citizenship means: all Nigerians must matter equally.

Source:
www.olisa.tv/2015/04/10/chimamanda-adichieoba-lagos/
Who is this.lady to interfere in political matters as she is more tribally sentimental than most Igbo's see how she brainwashed people in half a yellow sun silly woman
Re: Chimamanda Adichie's Article On The Oba Of Lagos Saga by Terenceike(m): 9:19am On Apr 11, 2015
Surprising to see these cowards called yoruba threatening the Igbos. You now act as if you're ready for a war. Remember you didn't say a word when Abiola did win an election but was denied. Instead he was imprisoned and later murdered, his wife followed, yet you didn't raise dust. Just because you feel you've got a collabo with Hausas you're biting more than you chew. Remember this isn't 1967, its not for no reason Igbos are called 'Japan of Africa'
Re: Chimamanda Adichie's Article On The Oba Of Lagos Saga by OdenigboAroli2: 9:19am On Apr 11, 2015
Sibrah:
When the Yorubas were agitating for a break off of western region in '1957, what was the reaction of the Igbos?
Did Yorubas collective promise to remain in Nigeria should Biafra break off?
How did the Yorubas promoting selfishness of the colonial master.
face your front, why did the oba misyarn?
Re: Chimamanda Adichie's Article On The Oba Of Lagos Saga by lynn360: 9:20am On Apr 11, 2015
No doubt about it..
Godwin10123:
Obviously u have a problem!
Re: Chimamanda Adichie's Article On The Oba Of Lagos Saga by happyjuliet(f): 9:20am On Apr 11, 2015
Hmmmmmm wen I heard abt d threat I was surprise shocked how many people (igbo's) he won throw inside ocean hahahahahahahahahah I just pity 4 Abode he has just block his way 4rm entering. Come 2 tink of it self, jimi is d Man 4 lagos state.
Re: Chimamanda Adichie's Article On The Oba Of Lagos Saga by chaloner(m): 9:21am On Apr 11, 2015
OdenigboAroli2:
dangote, with all his billions of dollars does not own a single house or factory in the east of Nigeria, now imagine that.
that's is one nigeria , and emeka anyaoku my bro from east own many houses at SW. If I tel u I'm not tired of one nigeria I'm not sayin d truth . D question is wats dere fear of buuildin nd livin in dere own mansion in SE.... Which someone wil answer me
Re: Chimamanda Adichie's Article On The Oba Of Lagos Saga by OdenigboAroli2: 9:22am On Apr 11, 2015
geoworldedu:
how do Igbos see themselves?
as resourceful, intelligent, law abiding, hard working and life chopping folks, we don't give a flying fvck what any other person thinks.
Re: Chimamanda Adichie's Article On The Oba Of Lagos Saga by SkinnyDude(m): 9:22am On Apr 11, 2015
BuddahMonk:
At the bolded, nobody is responsible for that but the Vultures here in the South who keep fighting internet wars on behalf of their masters.
calling you a mad man is an insult to mad people.
so because of these four lines of rubbish, you had to quote everything.
i dont blame you. i blame your mum for not aborting you.
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