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LiteratureChimamanda Adichie's Father And The Biafran War by writers4hire(op): 6:14pm On May 28, 2017
CHIMAMANDA ADICHIE’S FATHER AND THE BIAFRAN WAR

Up until July 10, 1967, there was serious uncertainty as to when Nsukka and the University would be invaded by the Nigerian troops. Civil defense personnel were instructing people on how to defend themselves just in case there were air raids. As the Nigerian troops advanced, Biafran troops retreated from Nsukka to Opi, leaving the town dangerously unprotected. Alarmed, James Adichie quickly tried to take his young family of his wife and two children (Ijeoma and Uchenna) home to Abba. The Biafran militia stationed at Opi instructed him to go back to the campus, presuming he was panicking. He tried again to evacuate his family but was sent back once more. It was in the third attempt that he succeeded and passed the strong-headed militia. He quickly returned alone to the University campus the following day. Now alone, he felt that Nsukka would not be taken so swiftly after all.

At about 8pm of July 9, 1967, the University Registrar, Vincent Ike, rushed in his Morris Minor car to 617 Odim street where James Adichie was staying and shouted his name severally, asking him to evacuate and leave the campus immediately. The Registrar also drove to Imoke street and shouted at one Emmanuel Ezike to evacuate too. Within thirty minutes, Adichie and his domestic hand, Melitus, rushed portable odds and ends, including his dinner for that night, into his car. He was at a lost what to pick or leave from his vast store of accumulated properties. At the end, they drove homewards towards Abba.

The horde of humanity hurrying to leave Nsukka that night was touching. Some women had their children on their backs while leading others by the arm and carrying heavy loads at the same time. Others dragged goats or other young animals along with them. Indeed, it was with difficulty that Adichie maneuvered his car through the human traffic until he eased through Opi (Adichie, 2013b). A few hours later, the first artillery mortar shell landed and exploded at Nsukka. This was on Monday, July 10. The great stampede to leave Nsukka intensified. (Ike, 1989:41).

Loud sound of shelling in distant places was heard at Abba at the early stages of the war. Because of these loud reports, Adichie put his family again into his car and drove off aimlessly away from there. He drove until he got to Umuna, around Orlu area, and then began to ask about for his colleague back at the University, Emmanuel Ezike.

When the man eventually saw them, he generously accepted them and fed the family as well as started making arrangements for accommodation for them. They were in his village of Umuowa at that time. Luckily enough, the family got accommodated in the man’s brother’s place.

The University of Nigeria had moved from Enugu (when it fell on October 4, 1967) to Umuahia (which was the capital of Biafra at the time). The University remained at Government College, Umuahia from October 1967 until the fall of Umuahia in April 1969. Some offices were at Umudike, a short distance away. The University later moved to Aboh-Mbaise and then to Emekuku Community Technical Secondary School until end of war.

About October 1967, after staying a while at Umuna, Adichie left his family and went to Umuahia to join other staff of the University. He sought for and got accommodation in the house of a kinsman at Umuahia. Meanwhile, many academic staff members had been deployed to various Biafran Directorates to help in the war efforts. James Adichie was in charge of the Manpower Directorate.

The main work of the Directorate was to collate people’s names and where they were working before the war in order to build up a manpower database for the new Biafra. Throughout his stay at Umuahia, he experienced the heavy strafing and bombings from Nigerian war planes. Many people were killed during these air raids.

Adichie was not using his car to go to work, because the war planes targeted moving vehicles quite often. The car was hidden under a camouflage of leaves to escape notice. The problem of feeding was partly solved by the relief material gotten from organizations such as CARITAS. When Umuahia fell in April 1969, James had to flee with other people. He always had made-in-Biafra petrol in his car, ready for evacuation.

Incidentally, his host who had a big motorbike, refused to move. James Adichie had to drag him into his car and out of Umuahia. They drove to Umuna where the Adichie family was staying. This kinsman stayed for only two nights and trekked defiantly to Abba. He was to die some months later.

At Umuna, James made bomb shelter just like everyone else to withstand the constant bombings from the Nigerian war planes. It was very difficult getting money from the banks because no public institutions were really visible and had a direct address.

They were hidden in different places in Biafra. It was at this point towards the end of war that James Adichie was informed that his father had died. News of the death of his father caused in him the greatest shock he ever got during the war. He could not believe that his father could die like every other person. During the early stages of the war, his father had refused to leave Abba.

He had said he would at least kill one Nigerian soldier before they would gun him down. When the situation got worse and Nigerian soldiers were advancing into Abba and surrounding towns, neighbours had to almost drag the man away from his house before he agreed to join them in leaving Abba.

They had first gone to Umunya and then to other places before they settled at Nsugbe in a refugee camp. There was no communication between him and his children, including James. There was a demarcation cutting through the Biafran country, running roughly along the long Onitsha-Enugu route.

One side of the demarcation which was occupied already by Nigerian troops was called “Biafra 1”,, the left side of the demarcation spreading across the rest of the Biafra country in which Biafran soldiers occupied was called “Biafra 2”. While James’ father was in Biafra 1, he was in Biafra 2. It was difficult and dangerous to cross over from one sector to the other.

But when James heard that his father had died, he made desperate efforts to cross over to the other sector. The Biafran soldiers at the trenches along the boundary were not keen on letting him pass through. He pleaded but they were firm in their refusal. He, therefore, was not able to see the remains of his father. The war was almost coming to an end by this time. When it eventually did on January 14, 1970 which was the day that General Philip Efiong officially made a formal declaration of surrender, James Adichie and his family began to drive back to Abba.

There were Nigerian soldiers everywhere and some of them were harassing the returning civilians, sometimes beating them up or even killing them. James and his family had to go through very embarrassing experiences during this time.

Top Biafran government officials were being arrested so people of that cadre were camouflaging themselves in that they were returning in rags rather than in neat clothing. So the absence of the clout of status facilitated easier intimidation by the mostly semi-illiterate Nigerian soldiers. Adichie observed that the fairly educated officers were mostly Yoruba while the largely uneducated rank and file was mostly of northern origin.

The latter were rough in their handling of the returning refugees. At a time, some army men stopped James Adichie and others as they were moving towards Abba and ordered them to begin to remove a pile of cement blocks which blocked off a road. James quietly obeyed the order as others did. He had hidden his car some distance away. His family, including his house help Melitus, was in the car.

Years later, James Adichie observed that without the devotion of Miletus, one or more of his children would have died in the rough circumstances of the time. After executing the “order” from the soldiers, James returned to where he had packed his car and saw that it was gone. He was alarmed. He came back to the officers and told them that his car and his family were nowhere to be found.

Probably because of the way he laid his complaint firmly and passionately, the officers promised to get his car back. They searched around and saw it with the rank and file soldiers. By this time, these soldiers had beaten up a member of the Adichie’s family who was in the car. James swallowed the pains and moved on with his family.

There were other incidences on the way to Abba, including when a rough soldier wanted to sandwich himself into the well-packed car as his own idea of hitch-hiking. James, who had by now gotten fed up with the attitude of these soldiers, firmly insisted that the ruffian got down from the car and that he was ready to be killed if the soldier stuck to his guns. James’ wife pleaded with her husband to calm down. She was not ready to be a widow, not now that the war had ended. Fortunately, the soldier yielded and left the car.

Upon coming home to Abba, the Adichie family had to start from scratch. James Adichie’s mother was sick and it was difficult feeding at this time. Help was to come from a friend who gave the family some money which sustained them for a considerable while.

Some valuables that were brought to the house of the Adichies by their neighbours for safekeeping at the beginning of the war had all gone with wartime looting. Some of the valuables included an elephant tusk. Unfortunately, the owner of this elephant tusk and other people who had kept things at the Adichies strangely suspected the family of stealing those valuables!

This false accusation raged on for many years after the war and had to peter out with the passage of age and time.
James Adichie visited the refugee camp where his father was buried in a mass grave at Nsugbe. Stoically, Adichie quietly scooped up sand from the grave and had it preserved in a polythene bag. On returning home, he kept the memento behind his father’s picture in fond and deep respect of the man who had made sure he got educated.

Adichie had to remain for some time at home before he reported at the University of Nigeria campus to resume his post as lecturer. Amidst the wreckage caused by the war, including the stark reality of having lost very valuable materials such as his PhD academic gown to wartime looting, James settled down stoically. He quietly resolved to move ahead with life, determined to excel in his chosen area of endeavour.

It is instructive that not long afterwards, he and his colleagues were able to achieve the hiving off of the Statistics Department from the Department of Mathematics, Statistics and Astronomy of the University.

Excerpts from:
Animalu, Alex; Uche, Peter and Unaegbu, Jeff. (2013). Biography of Nigeria’s Foremost Professor of Statistics, Prof. James Nwoye Adichie. Abuja: Ucheakonam Foundation (Nig.) Ltd. (132 pages).

(Pix:Prof. James Adichie during his graduation from the University College, Ibadan on December 3, 1960)

REFERENCES:
Adichie, J.N. (2013b). “My Nigerian Civil War Experience”. Second Interview Session granted to Alex Animalu and Jeff Unaegbu, June 15, at Animalu’s residence in Nsukka.

Ike, V.C. (1986). “The University and the Nigerian Crisis: 1966-1970” in Obiechina, E. et al (eds) University of Nigeria 1960-85: An Experiment in Higher Education. Nsukka: University of Nigeria Press.

© Jeff Unaegbu.

PoliticsRe: BREAKING: GDP Contracts As Nigeria’s Worst Recession In 29 Years Continues by writers4hire: 11:31am On May 23, 2017
Hmm. This is serious.
PoliticsRe: OSUMENYI Town......politics And Economy by writers4hire: 11:30am On May 23, 2017
Beautiful
PoliticsRe: How Lagos May Be Underdeveloping The Rest Of Nigeria - Ynaija by writers4hire(op):
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Business. by writers4hire(op):
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PoliticsHow Lagos May Be Underdeveloping The Rest Of Nigeria - Ynaija by writers4hire(op): 1:10pm On May 20, 2017
by Chinedu George Nnawetanma

While much has been said about the diversification of Nigeria’s economy from petroleum, very little has been mentioned about its diversification from Lagos.

About one in every eight Nigerians lives in Lagos, a sprawling metropolis near the southwestern extremity of Africa’s most populous country. Not only is Lagos the economic epicenter of Nigeria, but also virtually every sector of the country’s economy is rooted there: commerce, manufacturing, finance, banking, insurance, healthcare, real estate, information technology, entertainment, media, hospitality, tourism, fashion, arts and sports.

Lagos accounts for about 30% of Nigeria’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and more than 50% of its non-oil GDP, according to the Lagos state government, which goes further to claim that the city accounts for over 80%, 70%, 60% and 50% of the country’s international aviation traffic, maritime cargo freight, industrial and commercial activities and energy consumption respectively. Additionally, the Lagos state government was responsible for about 38.44% of the combined internally generated revenue of Nigeria’s 36 states in 2016.

For a country of over 180 million people and numerous other urban centers, these figures are huge and disconcerting. Unsurprisingly, Lagos’ alluring economic climate has seen economic migrants throng to it from all across Nigeria, in pursuit of economic opportunities that are all but lacking elsewhere. Over 600,000 new residents arrive Lagos on an annual basis, that is, over 1.2 million in two years. By contrast, London, which is arguably the world’s premier global city, welcomes only about half of that, despite possessing the caliber of infrastructure that Lagos can only dream of.

This economic asymmetry wherein Lagos wields such a disproportionate influence over the rest of Nigeria has had pronounced repercussions for both. For Lagos, its exploding population puts an enormous strain on its already overstretched infrastructure, encourages the mushrooming of slums in communities at the fringes of public utilities, widens the gulf between the rich and the poor and surges the crime rate.

Its fragile natural environment has also struggled to cope with the pressure of ever-increasing human activity. Indiscriminate urbanization has disrupted the natural equilibrium within and around the city, making it prone to environmental disasters such as flooding, erosion and sea level rise.

It should therefore come as no surprise that the Economist Intelligence Unit, in the 2016 edition of its Global Livability Index, ranked Lagos as the third worst major city in the world, coming only before the war-ravaged Tripoli and Damascus.

For Nigeria, its Lagos-centric economy has undermined its development everywhere else, leading to the stunted performance of secondary cities like Enugu, Onitsha, Kano, Port Harcourt, Calabar, Warri, Aba, Jos and Ibadan as their human capital are regularly haemorrhaged and absorbed by Lagos. It has also made the entire economy vulnerable to shocks emanating from Lagos; an economic meltdown there can have catastrophic reverberations countrywide.

The bulk of the blame for Nigeria’s skewed economic architecture must be shouldered by its successive federal governments for a consummate failure in national economic planning and the equitable geographical distribution of the mechanisms of development. By accident or design, almost all federal government investments and development projects in Nigeria are channelled into or through Lagos.

This is at variance with what is obtainable in more successful economies like Germany, the United States, Canada, Australia, Brazil, China and even South Africa whose secondary cities receive as much attention as their leading economic hubs, enabling them to remain competitive and complement those first cities.

To engineer the accelerated and uniform development of Nigeria, concerted effort must be made by the federal government to promote investments in other parts of the country, especially in the secondary cities. Among other things, adequate hard and soft infrastructure must be provided to boost their investment readiness and pave the way for the birth of stronger local economies that will generate well-paying jobs and curb the need to migrate to Lagos for gainful employment.

Part of the blame also lies with the governments of the other 35 states that make up the country for failing to put enough effort into utilizing their comparative advantages for sustained economic progress.

Finally, the private sector has a role to play too. They must get out of their comfort zone in Lagos and seek out new opportunities in uncharted economic territories that abound in the country. Nigeria is more than just Lagos.

by Chinedu George Nnawetanma
https://ynaija.com/opinion-lagos-may-underdeveloping-rest-nigeria/
PoliticsRe: NTA Network News Refers To Osibanjo As Vice-president by writers4hire: 11:22pm On May 18, 2017
HE IS STILL THE VICE PRESIDENT SO NTA IS 100% CORRECT. NIGERIANS ARE ALWAYS DABBLING INTO THINGS THEY DONT UNDERSTAND. TUFIAKWA!
PoliticsRe: . by writers4hire(op): 11:02pm On May 09, 2017
.
Politics. by writers4hire(op):
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CelebritiesRe: The Most Popular Nairalanders by writers4hire: 9:48pm On Nov 10, 2013
*yawns* jobless youths. Products of a failed society.
CelebritiesRe: 10 Facts You Didn't Know About Kcee (limpopo King) by writers4hire: 9:45pm On Nov 10, 2013
nice one. such a great and talented musician, unlike Davido that no-one will remember in a few years' time.
CelebritiesRe: MUST READ: An Open Letter To Donjazzy From A Fan by writers4hire: 9:38pm On Nov 10, 2013
Trash! Mr unknown DJ looking for cheap publicity, you should hide ur head in shame
CelebritiesRe: Genevieve Nnaji Releases New Photos by writers4hire: 7:15pm On Nov 10, 2013
All hail queen Genevieve. I love this lady.
CelebritiesRe: Amongst Flavour, Iyanya And Kcee Who Winds His Waist Better? by writers4hire: 9:41pm On Nov 05, 2013
kcee followed by flavour
CelebritiesRe: Waconzy Finally Responds To Davido by writers4hire: 8:58pm On Nov 05, 2013
why is he begging people to retweet?
CelebritiesRe: Photo: Tonto Dikeh And Dbanj Spotted Together At ColourfulWorldOfMore Concert by writers4hire: 8:54pm On Nov 05, 2013
dbanj is not ashamed of himself for his show of shame in Uganda abi na Malawi.
CelebritiesRe: ALINGO, AZONTO SKELEWU, Which Do You Prefer And Which Made More Hit by writers4hire: 6:26pm On Nov 05, 2013
azonto, followed by alingo
CelebritiesRe: Guess Which Nollywood Actress Has This Huge Derriere by writers4hire: 6:24pm On Nov 05, 2013
Shameless woman.
CelebritiesRe: ‘how To Be A Lady 101′ – Karen Igho by writers4hire: 6:22pm On Nov 05, 2013
A lady should also learn how to remain relevant after winning Big Brother Africa.
FashionRe: Omotola Jalade-Ekeinde's Dress To Ebony Vanguard Award (photos) by writers4hire: 6:17pm On Nov 05, 2013
Please when last did omotola star in a movie, not to talk of a successful one?
CelebritiesRe: Omotola Jolade, David Mark To Receive Chieftaincy Title In Ondo by writers4hire: 6:09pm On Nov 05, 2013
Rubbish! Fading, overhyped actress.
Science/TechnologyRe: How To Survive A Lion Attack by writers4hire: 7:44pm On Nov 04, 2013
Please is the OP talking about a lion or a dog? A lion is more than 10 times stronger than any human being and much faster too. A lion attacks anything in its sight: elephants, giraffes, crocodiles, buffalos, hippopotamus etc.
PoliticsRe: Obi Declares 3-Days Of Mourning In Anambra by writers4hire: 9:36am On Nov 04, 2013
hmmm
SportsRe: World Footballer Of The Year, Cristiano Ronaldo by writers4hire(op): 8:53pm On Nov 03, 2013
[quote author=Jona-The-Clown]Mr WriterForHire... It be like say C. Ronaldo hire you to write this post abi? Anyways, you better think twice because the whole world know say na Ribery deserve it better this year. Although I prefer Messi but I think 5 times in a row will be tooooo much for just One Player.[/quote]What has ribery done to deserve it? How many goals has he scored?
SportsWorld Footballer Of The Year, Cristiano Ronaldo by writers4hire(op): 1:26pm On Nov 03, 2013
Give me any reason why Cristiano Ronaldo should not be crowned the World Footballer of the Year.
PoliticsRe: South-East, South-South Professionals Tell Oduah To Quit by writers4hire: 1:34pm On Oct 30, 2013
airmark: ⊂_ヽ
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cool cool cool cool cool
No-one cares about you or what you think. You are simply NOBODY
PoliticsRe: South-East, South-South Professionals Tell Oduah To Quit by writers4hire: 1:31pm On Oct 30, 2013
A propaganda by faceless, hired SE and SS "professionals"
WebmastersRe: Nigerian Institutions Website, Have Your Say by writers4hire: 8:01pm On Oct 29, 2013
Why not contact them? maybe they'll contract it to you.
PoliticsRe: CBN Governor Lamido Sanusi Has 7 Bullet-Proof Cars - CKN by writers4hire: 3:15pm On Oct 29, 2013
Where are the mods? This should be on the front page too.

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