Tag: south east

  • Stop killings in South East, seek dialogue-Jim Iyke

    Stop killings in South East, seek dialogue-Jim Iyke

    Popular Nollywood star, Jim Iyke, has urged youths to avoid acts that would make the south East region look irredeemable.

    Iyke who spoke to Journalists on Saturday in Owerri, Imo state, during
    Social Media Fest program, said that the explosives being thrown in the region were affecting the economy of the zone.

    The movie star noted that instead of violence, government and the upset people should seek dialogue as way to ironing out the differences.

    He urged the youths to amplify their voices on youths that worry them instead of taking to weapons.

    He said, ”We can amplify our voices in so many ways instead of killing ourselves. Don’t forget this destruction is not outside of Igboland it is inside our land. We are killing ourselves by ourselves. A house fighting itself in the same house will only collapse.”

    Iyke also said that the banditry in the region was a reaction to the marginalisation of the zone by the Federal Government.

     

  • People in South East don’t believe Nnamdi Kanu is still alive – Lawyer

    People in South East don’t believe Nnamdi Kanu is still alive – Lawyer

    Ifeanyi Ejiofor, lead counsel for the embattled leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra, Nnamdi Kanu, has said people in the South-East don’t believe that his client is still alive.

    This he said is the reason why they still observe the sit-at-home order issued by IPOB despite the secessionist group announcing its end.

    Ejiofor said this on Wednesday during a press conference on developments ahead of Kanu’s trial coming up on Thursday.

    He said, “We also wish to state that the current tension and regular Monday sit-at-home being observed by our people in the South East, despite the exercise being called off by our Client’s peaceful movement, is steadily gaining momentum because our people are yet to see and believe that our Client Onyendu Mazi Nnamdi Kanu is still alive.

    “This suspicion was further fueled by his non-production in Court on the 26th day of July 2021, for no tangible reason. Our people’s demand for his unconditional release from custody is a well-informed position, which the Government at the centre currently persecuting Mazi Nnamdi Kanu should give a listening ear to, and speedily activate the process towards his freedom, as he has committed no offence known to law.

    “That the Security Agents should avoid any situation that will result to any form of maltreatment to the Lawyers in court (whose constituency is that very court), the media, or those that will be attending Court in solidarity with our Client.

    “The World is watching. The show of shame openly demonstrated by the overzealous Security Agents on the 26th day of July 2021 should never repeat itself.”

    The lawyer warned security operatives against arrest and molestation of the civilians who will turn up in court tomorrow to observe proceedings.

    He said, “We demand justice, fair hearing/trial and fair play, which will not only be done in the open Court but manifestly be seen to have been done by an average person watching from close proximity.

    “On this note, arrest, molestation, rough handling and maltreatment of harmless civilians and sympathisers, who are to be in court in a show of solidarity, should not be allowed.

    “We also wish to advise our client’s supporters to bear in mind that not everybody will be able to access the courtroom on this day. Hence, wherever you find yourselves within the court’s environment, you all must remain civil in your conduct, as you have always been, and continue to supplicate to God Almighty even as the trial goes on.

    “Further note that our objection to the competency or otherwise of the newly amended 7-count charge is now before the Court, and we believe most strongly that there shall be light at the end of the tunnel.

    “We thank you all for being part of this briefing while promising you all that victory shall be ours, and justice shall prevail in the end.”

  • Traditional rulers proffer ways to guarantee peace in South East

    Traditional rulers proffer ways to guarantee peace in South East

    …call on Buhari to de-proscribe IPOB as terrorist org

    …give reasons why there is upheaval in Nigeria

    …call for immediate release of Nnamdi Kanu

    …say IPOB not peculiar to Ndiigbo

    Traditional rulers of the South East States of Nigeria on the platform of the South East Council of Traditional Rulers have called on President Muhammadu Buhari to de-proscribe the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) as a terrorist organization.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports the traditional rulers, who made the call in a statement to Ndiigbo in particular and Nigerians in general on the current troubling situation in the country and especially in the South East, stated that this was part of ways to guarantee peace in the region.

    The traditional rulers also called on President Buhari to act and ensure that the leader of IPOB, Mazi Nnamdi Kanu is released from detention into the hands of the Igbo traditional and religious leaders, in order to deescalate tension in the region.

    While listing other ways to guarantee peace in the South East, the traditional rulers stated that the upheavals around the country are a consequence of the deterioration in leadership at various levels of governance since the unfortunate incursion of the armed forces into the political governance of the country.

    They also stated that the dire situation in the country today calls for statesmanship and open and sincere dialogue in the search for compromises, not growing militarization which may ultimately threaten the very existence of the country as has happened in other parts of the world.

    Read statement by the South East Council of Traditional Rulers below:

    We, the traditional rulers of the South East States on the platform of the South East Council of Traditional Rulers, have watched with utter dismay and sadness the rapid deterioration of affairs in Alaigbo resulting in gruesome killings, destruction of properties, a general atmosphere of fear, and progressive militarization of our homeland. Across the five States of the political zone and other Igbo speaking areas, there is a distinct feeling of disaffection, frustration and distrust, all of which are alien to our nature and tradition as a people.

    2. We affirm, the empirical facts and historical experience corroborate, that it is an age-long character of Ndiigbo to resolve internal conflicts and disagreements peacefully through consultation and constructive engagement, and not by violence and physical conflict. Consequently, our grief and deep concern have become more manifest and compounded due to the existential challengethat now befalls our homeland.

    3. We note that the South East is the latest of the six political zones in the country to experience internal strife. In this regard, we are mindful of the long standing conflicts in the three political zones in the Northern part of the country spearheaded by the Boko Haram movement. We are also mindful of the attacks on innocent persons and communities in the South East and South West zones by armed bandits in the guise of cattle herdsmen. Though. presently calm, the South South zone had her share of turbulence and is presently under significant military presence.

    4. We believe that these upheavals around the country are a consequence of the deterioration in leadership at various levels of governance since the unfortunate incursion of our armed forces into the political governance of the country. The 1999 Constitution, as amended, which was foisted on the nation by the last military regime worsened the situation by concentrating powers in the Federal Government to the detriment of the federating units. This has resulted in the appropriation of most of the institutions of governance by one sub-national group, and the progressive denial of fundamental rights of justice, equity, and fairness to the rest of the populace.

    5. We acknowledge that there is anger in the country stemming from the long running failure of leadership and manifesting in the abuse of time-honoured values, youth unemployment, hunger, injustice, blatant display of wealth in the midst of abject poverty, impunity amongst persons in positions of authority and, concomitantly, the violence that now prevails in the country. This anger metamorphosed into the #EndSARS movement of last year, a peaceful protest by youths, which was unfortunately hijacked by miscreants.

    6. Though no culprits have yet been apprehended by the law enforcement agencies, there is a distinct feeling that the recent upheaval in Anambra State appears to be not unconnected with the State Governorship election on 06 November, 2021. That notwithstanding and, in comparison with other States in the country with more sustained violence, but which held elections successfully, we are disappointed by the recent statement by the Attorney General of the Federation that the government may impose a state of emergency in Anambra State for the purpose of the election. We see the unfortunate statement as another manifestation of the discrimination against Ndiigbo.

    7. The feeling of marginalization by Ndiigbo in the affairs of the country is very palpable in their belief that they have made due sacrifice with blood, sweat and tears towards the unity and development of the country. Despite the near total carnage visited on our people during the Nigerian Civil War, and the consequent confiscation of their assets outside their homeland, they bounced back with uncanny determination and courage such that Igbo investments are the most dispersed around the country today compared to other ethnic nationalities.

    8. We urge that the strong feeling of unending betrayal, neglect, abandonment and hopelessness by our people should therefore be appreciated in the foregoing context. Such feelings are understandably strongest amongst the Igbo youths who have little to show with their good education. Their anger is not only directed against the Federal and State governments, but also against Igbo leaders and royal fathers who, they feel, may have compromised themselves or ineffectively advocated for the rights of Ndiigbo in Nigeria.

    9. We believe that the youths have a point, if the truth must be told. Indeed, it is the vacuum in leadership in Alaigbo that has given vent to the emergence of youth-oriented protest organizations, such as, IPOB with its distinct popularity and followership. We also believe that this situation is not peculiar to Ndiigbo.

    10. We believe in the United Nations Declaration of Human Rights, which Nigeria subscribes to and enshrined in her Constitution, and which guarantee basic rights and freedoms to all individuals and groups, including the right to protest. We also believe that such protests and disagreements should be civil, non-violent, and within the provisions of the laws of the country. We further believe that one’s attempt to assert one’s rights and freedoms should not constrain, impede, or compromise the rights and freedoms of others.

    11. We believe that the dire situation in the country today calls for statesmanship and open and sincere dialogue in the search for compromises, not growing militarization which may ultimately threaten the very existence of the country as has happened in other parts of the world. Indeed, this is not at time to apportion blames, but one for statesmanship, and mutual forgiveness and healing towards the evolution of a more loving nation.

    12. In order to restore genuine peace and normalcy in the South East based on justice, equity, fairness, love, and mutual understanding and respect, we, as traditional fathers of Ndiigbo, call for the following:

    A. All stakeholders in the entire cross section of Alaigbo to sheath their swords and let us rally together for mutual forgiveness and healing so as to re-set our strategic agenda for engaging meaningfully with our fellow citizens in the other parts of the country. Cutting our nose to spite our face does not help our present situation. It is senseless to destroy our homeland, or be an accessory to its destruction, in order to prove our marginalization.

    B. His Excellency, President Muhammadu Buhari, GCFR, to show sagacity, pragmatism, statesmanship, and fatherliness by causing the IPOB to be de-proscribed as a terrorist organization, and Mazi Nnamdi Kanu to be released from detention into the hands of the Igbo traditional and religious leaders. Mr. President should also de-escalate the military presence in the South East Zone as normalcy returns.

    C. IPOB and its affiliate units, and other protest organizations in Alaigbo, to immediately stop all provocative rhetoric and actions that tend to promote violence, fear, or other unlawful actsby their affiliates, sympathizers, and miscreants in the name of such organizations.

    D. As part of creating the enabling environment for reconciliation and peace building, the on-going sit at home on Mondays or any other days in the South East States to end forthwith and normal economic activities resumed without intimidation or molestation by any persons or groups.

    E. The traditional and religious leaders, and statesmen of Alaigbo to urgently convoke a forum for serious dialogue and consultation involving all stakeholder groups in our homeland, including IPOB and other protest groups. Such search for genuine peace, mutual forgiveness and healing, and love should be without preconditions, and geared to restoring our collective strength and self-esteem and re-shaping our strategic position in Nigeria. Our counterparts in other Political Zones should consider a similar approach, leading to a platform for national healing and peace.

    F. Our universities, research institutions, and business and industrial sectors, to urgently convoke a forum for serious dialogue and consultation on the immediate, short, medium and long-term strategic actions to reduce the grinding levels of poverty and youth unemployment, and re-assert the can-do spirit of Ndiigbo.

    G. Mr. President and the Federal Government, and State Governments, to demonstrate faith in the nation’s healing process by listening more to the yearnings of the youths around the country. The effort to do so following the #EndSARS protest seems to have dissipated without any tangible outcome. In particular, the obvious feeling of progressive denials of basic human rights amongst Igbo youths as well as other youths in various parts of the country should be given urgent attention.

    H. In view of the resounding demands from the majority of the citizens of the country, the National Assembly should commence without delay the legislative processes for a bill that will mandate all the Indigenous peoples of Nigeria to begin negotiations for the restructuring of the nation’s Constitution and the restoration of a truly federal governance framework in the manner of the Independence Constitution that our founding fathers painstakingly fashioned and bequeathed to the nation.

    1. Mr. President, the INEC, and law enforcement agencies to ensure a free, fair and transparent election in Anambra State on 06 November, 2021. The political parties, their candidates and supporters must in turn commit not to engage in violence, election rigging and other unwholesome acts that are contrary to democratic process. The electorates on their part should strictly vote according to their conscience as well as hold the winner accountable to implement his election manifesto.

    13. We note the recent statement by the Representatives of Igbo Archbishops and Bishops on Peace and Conflict Resolution and applaud their candour and exemplary leadership.

    14. As a father would do for his child in difficulty, we will send a delegation to attend the court hearing in Abuja on 21 October, 2021 when Mazi Nnamdi Kanu will be arraigned.

    15. We make this statement with every sense of responsibility and belief that our present challenges in Alaigbo and the country are not insurmountable if genuinely addressed with honesty, mutual respect and full recognition that lasting peace, progress and development would come only from dialogue, not through armed conflict and a general atmosphere of fear and intimidation.

    H.M. Eze Joseph N. Nwabeke

    Chairman,

    Abia State Trad. Rulers Council

    H.M. Obi Nnaemeka Achebe, CFR

    Chairman,

    Anambra State Trad. Rulers Council

    H.M. Eze Dr. E. C. Okeke

    Chairman,

    Imo State Trad. Rulers Council

    H.M. Igwe Amb. L. O. C. Agubuzu, OON

    Chairman,

    Enugu State Trad. Rulers Council.

  • Militarization of Igbo land, By Sonnie Ekwowusi

    Militarization of Igbo land, By Sonnie Ekwowusi

    By Sonnie Ekwowusi

    The ongoing militarization of Anambra State and the rest of Igbo land under the guise of combating insecurity is illegal and unconstitutional. Capitalizing on the messy political violence and a few political assassinations in Anambra which claimed the life of Dr. Chike Akunyili and other precious lives, the Federal Attorney-General and Justice of Minister Abubakar Malami (SAN) had announced last week that the Federal government might declare a state of emergency in Anambra State. Not unexpectedly, prominent Nigerians and institutions have been blasting Malami for harbouring and uttering such a wicked statement. Notably among them is the Anambra State governor Chief Willie Obiano. Chief Obiano has said that he had reached President Buhari on the matter who had told him to ignore Malami as the federal government does not intend to declare an emergency rule in Anambra.

    Why is the Federal Attorney-General pressuring the federal government to declare a state of emergency in Anambra when a state of emergency had not been declared in different parts of North East and North West battling deadly terrorism and armed struggle resulting day after day in monumental human casualties and sacking of communities ?. When a people’s dignity, honour, pride, reputation, and existential values are constantly eroded in nauseating fatalistic Fulanization and Jihadization, there is a cause for concern. Being a senior lawyer and a Senior Advocate of Nigeria for that matter, Malami ought to have known that neither he nor President Buhari nor any other political office holder can wake up one morning and unilaterally declare a state of emergency in Anambra. Even though our democracy has been seriously corrupted and abused in recent times, government actions are still governed by the rule of law, especially the provisions of the 1999 Constitution, the supreme law of the land. By virtue of section 305 (1)(2)(3a-g)(4)(5)(6) of the Constitution, President Buhari may through an instrument published in the Official Gazette issue a Proclamation for a State of emergency in Anambra. Thereafter President Buhari shall immediately, after the said publication, transmit copies of the Official Gazette of the Government of the federation containing the Proclamation to the National Assembly which will decide whether or not to pass a resolution approving the Proclamation. Note that President Buhari shall not issue a Proclamation for a state of emergency in Anambra unless there is actual breakdown of public order and public safety or there is a clear and present danger of a breakdown of public order and public safety in Anambra. In a nutshell, President Buhari cannot declare a state of emergency in Anambra without an instrument published in the Official Gazette, and, without issuing a Proclamation to that effect, and, without the concurrence of the National Assembly.

    Apart from Malami’s state of emergence threat, the federal government, under the guise of protecting lives and protecting in Anambra and the South East, has deployed soldiers to invade Anambra State and the rest of the South-East in what has been tagged as “Operation Golden Dawn” (in reminiscent of George Wallace’s Operation Golden Dawn). The latest military offensive which is no different from Operation Python Dance 1 & 11 of 2016-2017, is actually targeted at dislodging IPOB and ESN as well as create the enabling environmental for the federal-assisted Anambra politicians to steal the Anambra Gubernatorial election come November 6. Considering the atrocities committed in Igbo land by soldiers deployed to invade Igbo land under “Operation Python Dance” 1 & 11, it beats the imagination that the government has again deployed soldiers to invade the same Igbo land. You will recall that during the so-called “Operation Python Dance” 1 & 11, several innocent Igbo civilians were either murdered or badly injured or publicly flogged or harassed or hounded by the soldiers. The disturbing video clips of the aforesaid invasions are still available for all to watch.

    The latest deployment of soldiers to invade Anambra State and the rest of the South-East under “Operation Golden Dawn” is illegal and unconstitutional. Section 217(2)(a) (b)(c)(d) of the 1999 Constitution has in no unmistakable terms spelt out the circumstances and conditions under which President Buhari can deploy soldiers to any State of the federation. There are: (i) for the defence of Nigeria from external aggression. (ii) for the maintenance of the territorial integrity and securing the borders of Nigeria from violation on land, sea and air, (iii) for suppressing insurrection and acting in aid of civil authorities to restore order when called upon to do so by the President; subject to such conditions as may be prescribed by an Act of the National Assembly. In other words, whilst President Buhari can freely deploy our military to defend our country against aggression and to maintain our territorial integrity, he cannot dispatch the Nigerian soldiers (acting under “Operation Golden Dawn”) to invade Anambra State and the rest of the South-East in order to combat insurrection and/or other internal armed conflicts in those place without “such conditions as may be prescribed by an Act of National Assembly, and “performing such other functions as may be prescribed by an Act of the National Assembly” as stipulated by section 217(2)(c)(d) of the 1999 Constitution. It is clear that the aforesaid Constitutional provisions were violated when President Buhari deployed the Nigeria soldiers under Operation Golden Dawn” to invade Anambra and the rest of the South East.

    Even a plea of the doctrine of necessity by President Buhari cannot avail him or justify “Operation Golden Dawn”. The doctrine of necessity can only be pleaded upon certain conditions such as; (a) there must exist an imperative necessity arising from danger affecting Anambra State; (b) the action must be proportionate to the necessity (c) action taken to meet the exigency and must be the only available action (d) there must be incapacitation of the State security apparatus which normally maintains security. During the prosecution of “Operation Python Dance 1 & 11 in Igbo land from 2016-2017, the Nigerian soldiers did not comply with the Rules of Engagements (ROE). The soldiers went berserk intimidating, harassing innocent passengers and motorists and unlawfully incarcerating innocent citizens in Igbo land. They also went about killing suspected Biafra agitators and IPOB members and dumping their corpses in nearby bushes. Now, recent reports reaching us attest that the Nigerian soldiers operating under “Operation Golden Dawn” are committing the aforesaid crimes which they committed in Igbo land under “Operation Python Dance 1 & 11. For example, for adorning what arguably passed for a Biafran outfit depicting the Biafran rising sun, prominent actor Chiwetalu Agu was last week publicly molested and humiliated by some soldiers. Other innocent citizens in Igbo land are presently experiencing similar molestation or humiliation.

    This is unacceptable. How can soldiers who are supposed to be combating crimes turn round to start committing their own crimes?. No matter the ugly situation in Igbo land, committing jungle justice in Igbo land cannot be rationalized. Two wrongs cannot make a right. Soldiers cannot do wrong in order to right another wrong. The end does not justify the means. Soldiers cannot employ illegal means to achieve a lawful end in Anambra and the rest of the South East. There should be no repeat of the ugliest atrocities of the soldiers under the previous Operation Python Dance 1 & 11 in the South-East.

  • East Side of Sadness – Chidi Amuta

    By Chidi Amta

    From the Niger Bridge looking East, a canvass of desperate unhappiness spreads out before you. Crossing the ancient creaky Niger bridge into Onitsha and beyond is like a great crossing into a crowded wilderness, another country. At first, it is the specter of neglect and decayed infrastructure. But on every face of every man, woman and child here, there is a certain stoic acceptance of a nameless worry, a reality unchanging and unchanged for the last 50 years. It is a lingering ‘otherness’ by people who fly the Nigerian flag but inhabit this desolate place, this area of sadness they proudly call ‘home’.

    Over the last half a century (yes, fifty one years after the Biafran war!), acceptance of collective neglect has taken the form of aggressive but scraggy entrepreneurship as an escape. It hits you from the Niger bridge, in the jostling army of mobile merchants, hawkers of all manner of inconsequential merchandise. Plastic flowers from Hong Kong. Figurines of the Virgin Mary hurriedly carved in Vietnam. Covid-19 quick fix cure -all concoctions labeled ‘Made in Madagascar’. There is bottled water for the thirsty which is convertible into ‘holy water’ for the spiritually tormented. After all, apostasy is the religion of those permanently locked out of the gateway to heaven. The message is simple: here is a human sea of desperate enterprise humbled by a forced habit of unhappiness, a sense of exile in a place of unrelieved sadness.

    Of late, the South-east has exploded in a new orgy of violence and blood. The zone has added a new dimension to Nigeria’s expanding industry of insecurity. Insecurity in the zone has entered a viral retail stage. Like most things here, crude imitation and a natural ‘me, too, can do it’ spirit greets everything new. Mr. Nnamdi Kanu and Ralph Uwazurike before him have lost the monopoly of the Biafra franchise. It is now an all comers free for all business App. My brother and friend, Senator Enyinnaya Abaribe, has just revealed that there are well over 30 separatist groups parading the same cause of Biafra! IPOB may have become the hottest merchandise on sale in Ochanja and Ariaria markets, having lost its initial voice in a wilderness of unguided anger and unplanned agitation.

    As a worn out franchise in the hands of ambitious thugs and rough entrepreneurs, agitation for Biafra 2.0 has turned into a dangerous nightmare all over the South-east. For Igbos in the diaspora, the obsession with separatism and secession has become a unifying mantra of the lost. In the safety and comfort of their American and European pads and with access to the social media, fanning the embers of Armageddon at home has become a new religion even if some of them have not been to Nigeria for the past decade or more.

    For the sensible, there is now a fierce urgency about the descent into anarchy in the zone. On the scale of Nigeria’s worsening insecurity, senseless violence in the South-east now competes with reckless banditry and jihadist terrorism in parts of the North-east and North-west. A militant secessionist movement spearheaded by Mr. Nnamdi Kanu’s IPOB and its allied Eastern Security Network (ESN) has turned the zone into an area of near permanent danger, the battle field of an undeclared but raging war. Multiple groups under the guise of IPOB and its affiliates are roaming the area in waves of violence and criminality.

    Something new and more sinister has joined the macabre fray. A strange category of ‘unknown gunmen” has been injected. These are militants on a dubious mission armed with military grade weapons and operating with a professionalism that only the state can account for has entered the field. Innocent people are being killed and their homes torched. Thugs are hiding under the blackmail of separatist anger to render a whole geo political zone dangerous and nearly ungovernable.

    A little over a week ago, Dr. Chike Akunyili, husband of the late Director General of the National Agency for Food and Drugs Administration (NAFDAC) was assassinated gangster fashion on the streets in Anambra State. His death has been followed by over half a dozen others of notable and not so notable citizens. In neighbouring Imo State, similar assassinations have taken place of prominent citizens including that of one Reverend Emeka Merenu, an Anglican priest who was killed just outside his parish a fortnight before Dr. Akunyili. Add to these countless arson attacks on both private and public property.

    Only last weekend, the Nnewi country home of Mr. Joe Igbokwe, Lagos State spokesman of the APC and Special Adviser to the Lagos State Governor, was set ablaze by arsonists said to be IPOB operatives. On the same day, the offices of the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) and Department of State Services (DSS) in parts of Anambra State were similarly torched. These attacks have followed in the wake of so many others in parts of Anambra, Imo, Abia, Enugu and Ebonyi states.

    Jolted at last by the spiraling anarchy, governors of the states in the zone met last week in Enugu to acknowledge the threat. That is some progress from their previous lethargy and irresponsible indifference. In a communiqué that reads more like the wake up cry of drunken eunuchs from a long stupor, they seem bent on finally addressing the situation. They will now activate the regional security outfit, Ebube Agu, long conceived and left in abeyance while their more serious South-west counterparts went ahead to activate the very effective Amotekun. Now the enemy is no longer just the criminal Fulani herdsmen. The enemy is now a mix of official insiders and homeboys. A combination of misguided criminal separatists and suspected state enabled rogue spooks are suspected to be the authors of the encircling anarchy.

    Perhaps it is the political threat to their thrones that has woken up the governors. The territory over which they preside has slipped into a lawlessness they can neither understand nor control. The people who voted them into power are obeying a different master. Those of them angling for a shot at the 2023 Nigerian presidency now realise that they cannot take that shot when their backyards are on fire. On the eve of governorship elections in Anambra State, the landscape in the state is riddled with bullets of uncertainty. Candidates cannot campaign freely as aspirants and their supporters live under fear of being abducted or even murdered.

    Mr. Abubakar Malami, political gadfly and Buhari’s commissar for legalisms has threatened Anambra with a state of emergency if the killings do not stop before the elections in November. Buhari is reported to have disowned Malami on this one! We hope Katsina, Zamfara, Kaduna, Borno and even Niger states are receiving Malami’s consideration as well if we use the statistics of killings to measure the qualification of states for regimental overthrow.

    It was the frequency of this series of attacks on private and public assets including police and prison facilities in Imo State that prompted a federal security crackdown on the entire zone some months back. People cried out over the excesses of the security operatives in their flagrant violations of basic human rights. Yet in spite of massive police and military presence and the ever changing nomenclatures of the security operations, the violence and insecurity in the South-east keeps worsening.

    The recent abduction and forceful rendition of Mr. Nnamdi Kanu from Nairobi seems to have aggravated the restless protests and violence. The self -inflicted attacks and disruptions have raised questions as to the real intentions and targets of these disruptive and criminal conducts. It is not just the wave of violent attacks on assets and individuals that are of concern.

    A series of foolish social, work and business disruptions under the guise of a so-called ‘sit at home’ protest has been frequently declared by IPOB and its multiple voices in the zone. These declarations have been enforced by rough vigilantes leading to massive closures of businesses and offices. Huge economic losses in the form of man hours and direct revenue have been recorded as the zone continues to bleed.

    The time has come to sensibly interrogate the basic rationality and political wisdom of the dislocations, violence and disruptions that have recently shattered the peace and progress of the zone. Orderly protests against injustice by any group of citizens remain legitimate and inalienable rights in any democracy. But the jury is out on whether secession is a solution to the problematic relationship between the peoples of the South East and the federal government under Mr. Buhari. Secession remains the most ill advised option for either the South-east or any other part of the federation just on the basis of transient diversity management problems of one presidential dispensation.

    Among the presumably wise populace of the South-east, the rationality of self inflicted criminality and business disruptions as tools of political protest remains questionable. Worse still, to convert the general atmosphere of political anger against ethnic injustices and marginalisation into to an umbrella for murder and other criminal infractions is inexcusable. Targeting police and law enforcement installations and personnel for vicious attacks can only be a strategy in the hands of organised criminal gangs and committed anarchists. The state and its institutions must exist to furnish seekers of justice with an adversary to engage. A wipe-out of the presence of the state will strategically destabilise the zone permanently.

    In any event, the problems of political marginalisation and neglect have become a nationwide idiom. At the bottom of it all is an embarrassing inequality in the horizontal distribution of infrastructure, privileges and patronage among competing interests in a multinational polity. This cannot be righted by a recourse to violence, brigandage and arson. Nor can violence against the very people who are victims of marginalization and neglect right the original wrong of national political and economic injustice. On the contrary, as the victims hurt and bleed, their traducers in Abuja may in fact be having a champagne party!

    A people crying out against injustice cannot wisely embark on large scale self- inflicted destruction of whatever infrastructure or personal assets they have managed to attract or accumulate in the last half a century. Moreover, we are dealing with an area in which it is communal peace and a competitive spirit that governs the creation of wealth among peers. Here, the process of wealth creation is a rigorous gradual one. Every market that is open, every shop that remains open year in year out is a wheel in the engine of wealth and progress. The sense of homeland is shown by illustrious sons and daughters who return home to help the community by investing in homes, hotels, clinics and factories.

    The real victims of the wave of violence and criminality now ravaging the South East are not the bureaucrats in Abuja or the home based political collaborators in the regimes of injustice against which the activists are protesting. The victims are the masses, the very victims of injustice themselves. It is their livelihood that is being disrupted. It is their wealth that is being destroyed. It is their capacity to work that is being eroded.

    Worst of all, for the Igbos, pride in a place called ‘home’ is being defiled and devastated by the criminality keeping the elite away from the homeland. As the end of year season approaches, the annual ritual of ‘homecoming’ is threatened by the fear of violence. The budget year of the average Igbo village is calibrated by the quantum of resource inflows from returning sons and daughters. That augmentation to the homeland economies is now seriously threatened by the raging epidemic of violent insecurity.

    The restoration of sanity and peace in the South-east requires more than pious and sanctimonious preachments. It is now the hour of concerted urgent action. First, the political leadership of the zone, some of whom have themselves invested in thugs and armaments to advance their political interests, must now disarm. Power is nothing if wielded in an anarchy. In a bloody wasteland, there are no powerful men. We are all miserable weaklings, victims of uncertainty and brutishness: those waiting to kill or be killed.

    The zone’s state governors have been over -hyped disasters; an insincere and miserable bunch of bloated power intoxicants. Contentment with the secluded splendor of the governor’s mansion when the adjoining streets are on fire is foolhardy. The merchants of secession and separatism at home and abroad need to think again. It has taken the South East over half a century to scrape together the appearance of recovery that we now see. Inviting the violence of war mongering hegemons from Abuja to come and make Igbo backyards battlefields once again is no sign of wisdom.

    What role for the various traditional institutions, elders and socio -cultural groupings? Perhaps their relevance is over rated in a society where their effectiveness has been overtaken by a modernity that has failed to modernize the minds of the many thugs and hoodlums. This is the time for the socio cultural group Ohanaeze to prove its continuing relevance or simply disappear.

    The federal authorities now need to revise their longstanding security doctrine and strategies which have not yet worked in the zone. The succession of special military and police operations in the zone over the years have yielded nothing beyond seasonal multiple checkpoints and ‘toll gates’ for extorting returning citizens. That business model is now threatened as potential returnees are frightened from going home. These operations have failed because they were never rooted in the republican ethos of the Igbo village authority system. Every criminal or troublesome youth out in the streets of the urban South East hails from a village where their primary loyalty lies. It is in that place that they are someone’s son or daughter. Out in the urban streets or on the highways, they are anonymous miscreants, hard to identify or contain. Security in the South East must therefore now enlist the support and cooperation of elders and community leaders.

    Above all, at no other time has the sincerity and transparency of the federal government been called into greater question than now. First, let Abuja find or recall the “Unknown Gunmen” since only they are equipped to know where they came from. Above all, the body and spoken language of President Buhari must reassure the people of the South East that he has overcome the wartime psychology of a conqueror of the Igbo. Citizens of the Federal Republic of Nigeria must now replace ‘Dots’ in a ‘Circle’. A spreading perception that the South-east is deliberately being escorted or assisted to self -destroy will not help the goal of peace, security and unity in this troubled land.

  • Buhari fond of talking down on South East people – Serving Enugu Senator

    Buhari fond of talking down on South East people – Serving Enugu Senator

    The lawmaker representing Enugu North senatorial district in the National Assembly, Senator Chukwuka Utazi has asked President Muhammadu Buhari to change the way he addresses the people of the south-east region to ease tension in the land.

    Utazi made the call on Tuesday during a programme monitored by TheNewsGuru.com, TNG on Channels Television.

    According to the lawmaker, the President’s language to the Igbos is not good.

    As part of measures to fix the worsening insecurity in the region, the lawmaker advised Buhari to engage the stakeholders to address whatever grievances that may be on.

    While noting that a stable Nigeria is best for the Igbos, Utazi noted that the easterners that make Nigeria home like the Igbos.

    “I want to tell you that Mr President has the magic wand. His attitude, language to the South-East, he has to change it,” the lawmaker said in reaction to the way forward on the agitations in the region. The temperature is high. The way he talks down on our people is not good.”

    When asked if an Igbo presidency in 2023 would fix the problem, the senator neither confirmed nor opposed it.

    He added, “I have said it times without number that changing the Hausa-Fulani cap with red cap does not address the issue.

    “There are fundamental things you need to address. He has to come out and address the Igbos in the language they understand.”

    To the lawmaker, Buhari is a president of every Nigerian, including the Igbo-speaking people, adding that once he devotes time to addressing the easterners, the agitations would come to an end.

    The South-East region has witnessed a high rate of criminality including killings and kidnappings in the last few months.

    Dozens of police officers and other security personnel have been killed since January in targeted attacks in the southeast.

    Raids on prisons have seen scores of inmates freed and weapons carted away.

  • Not all attacks are perpetrated by IPOB; over 30 separatist groups exist in South East – Abaribe

    Not all attacks are perpetrated by IPOB; over 30 separatist groups exist in South East – Abaribe

    Senate Minority Leader, Senator Enyinnaya Abaribe, says there are dozens of separatist groups in the south-east region of the country.

    TheNewsGuru.com, TNG reports that the politician lamented that the media has always focus on the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) whenever an attack happens in the region.

    “One of the biggest problems the media has is that they tag everything IPOB.”

    “In the South-East, you won’t believe that there are more than 30 different separatist organisations – IPOB, the Movement for the Actualization of the Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB), there are so many and each one of them comes back to the same thing.

    “Why you are having separatist agitations everywhere today in the West, in the South, in the South-South, is that some people are unable to manage our diversity, that is just the fact,” the lawmaker spoke on Tuesday on a monitored Channels Television programme.

    Abaribe made the remarks amid heightened calls for secession not just for the breakaway of parts of the South-East, but also for the Yoruba nation.

    He believes those calling for secession are merely protesting the marginalisation of their people and demanding that their grievances be addressed.

    The lawmaker asked the government to dialogue with them to restore calm and peace in various parts of the country.

    According to him, IPOB has clarified that its sit-at-home order is only effective when its leader goes to court and there has been some form of compliance with the directive.

    “It should worry the government if a non-state action is complied with in this manner, it takes us back to what I said at the beginning that there is need to sit and talk with these people,” the senator said.

    “There is nobody from the South-East that I know, who does not feel that the way the people from the South-East are treated today, that there is something fundamentally wrong which should be resolved.”

    He was later asked if he would accept the offer to be the next presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the 2023 elections, and what Nigerians should expect if he is elected to succeed President Muhammadu Buhari.

    Abaribe, in his response, said, “I would if it falls on me. Within six months, all these things (Nigeria’s problems) will be a thing of the past.”

  • Anambra guber election: Insecurity in South East worries INEC

    Anambra guber election: Insecurity in South East worries INEC

    Ahead of the governorship election scheduled to hold in Anambra State on 6 November 2021, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has expressed worries over the state of security in the South East.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports the INEC especially expressed concern about the safety of voters and Election Day staff, including security officials who have also become the targets of these attacks.

    Recall that in May, the State Office of INEC at Awka was attacked and all the non-sensitive materials assembled for the election at the time were destroyed.

    In addition, INEC’s store, collation centre and the main office building were either totally or substantially damaged, with the Commission also losing several vehicles to be used for the election.

    Speaking on Tuesday during an emergency meeting of the Inter-Agency Consultative Committee on Election Security (ICCES), INEC Chairman, Prof Mahmood Yakubu said that although the Commission had recovered from the losses, there are concerns that specific electoral facilities and materials could once more become targets of attack.

    “You would recall that during our last quarterly meeting held about four weeks ago on 9th September 2021, we received briefings and reviewed preparations for the forthcoming Anambra State Governorship election.

    “You may also recall that a major concern raised by members was the security situation in the State in particular and the adjoining States in general and how this might affect preparations and possibly the conduct of the election.

    “Unfortunately, the situation has deteriorated markedly since our last meeting. Many innocent lives have been lost and property destroyed.

    “From the reports we have received, the stated goal of many of the attackers is that the Governorship election scheduled for 6th November 2021 must not hold. This is worrisome for the Commission.

    “Happily, we have almost fully recovered from that attack. The destroyed buildings have either been completely repaired or are nearing completion and we have fully replaced the materials destroyed.

    “This rapid recovery has only been possible because this is an off-season election. We have sourced some of these materials such as the 326 electric generators and vehicles destroyed in the attack from neighbouring States.

    “We are deeply concerned that specific electoral facilities and materials could once more become targets of attack. Should we again lose vital materials and facilities, the ongoing preparations will be adversely affected.

    “The Commission is particularly concerned about the safety of voters and Election Day staff, including security officials who have also become the targets of these attacks.

    “The thousands of young Nigerians that we intend to deploy for the election, most of them National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) members and university students, need to be reassured of their personal safety.

    “At the same time, deployment for the election will involve the movement of huge consignments of sensitive and non-sensitive materials to the 21 Local Government Areas of the State, 326 Wards or Registration Areas and 5,720 Polling Units.

    “That means over 6,000 locations to be protected. If we add that to about 26,000 officials that will be deployed for the election, we begin to appreciate the magnitude of the challenge of securing the Anambra Governorship election which is only thirty-two (32) days from today.

    “Perhaps never before in our history has the importance of election security in a Governorship election been this urgent. The Commission is aware that this is by no means an easy task.

    “We appreciate the enormous challenges that the security agencies are presently facing in Anambra State, which entail not only securing the electoral process, but also enforcing law and order generally. This is particularly worrisome because the security agencies have also become prime targets of these mindless attacks.

    “It is in the light of these recent and seemingly escalating threats to the election that the Commission has convened this emergency meeting. We will continue to work with the security agencies and in consultation with respected opinion leaders in Anambra State and the National Peace Committee to ensure that these hit-and-run attacks do not derail the electoral process.

    “We wish to assure the people of Anambra State that the Commission is determined to proceed with the election as scheduled. To underscore this determination, the Commission is implementing two more activities on the Timetable for the election in the next few days. The register of voters will be presented to political parties in Awka on Thursday 7th October 2021. On the same day, the Commission will publish the final list of candidates for the election.

    “We are confident that at the end of this meeting, we will firm up on specific measures necessary to further guarantee the safety of all persons involved in the election from the voters, election officials, observers, media organisations and the security of election materials,” Prof Yakubu said in his remarks during the emergency meeting.

  • BREAKING: IPOB declares total shutdown of South East on October 1, Nigeria’s Independence Day

    BREAKING: IPOB declares total shutdown of South East on October 1, Nigeria’s Independence Day

    The Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) has declared a total shutdown of the Southeast on October 1.

    The group also announced operation “no Nigerian flag” in all organisations in the region with effect from September 25, 2021, with the exception of commercial institutions.

    In a statement from the Media and Publicity Secretary, Emma Powerful, IPOB stressed that there would be no movement in the zone on that day, calling for strict adherence to the directives to avoid regrets.

    It urged world leaders to use the opportunity of the ongoing United Nations General Assembly, UNGA meeting to discuss the sufferings of the “two persecuted nations of Biafra and Ambazonia.”

    The statement reads: “IPOB has declared 1st of October 2021 total shutdown in Biafra land as a sign of our rejection of the evil construct called Nigeria and there shall be no movement in Biafra land on this day.

    “Also IPOB has declared from today 25th September 2021 that all Nigerian flag mounted anywhere in Biafra land must be brought down, Banks exceptional, IPOB leadership will communicate to Banks directly and give them a reason they must peacefully bring down Nigeria flag in their banking premises before we do it ourselves in our own way.

    “Everybody must strictly adhere to this directive from IPOB leadership, we want to let the world know you that Biafraland is not Nigeria and shall not be. Don’t say I don’t know, a word is enough for the wise.

    It added: “In line with the Memorandum of Understanding, MOU and alliance between Ambazonia and Biafra nations, we the global family of Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) under the command and leadership of our great leader, Mazi Nnamdi Kanu, wish to ask Biafrans to support and celebrate Ambazonia Independence Anniversary on October 1st 2021.

    “It is, therefore, the delight of the Directorate Of State, DOS of our great movement, IPOB, that we inform Biafrans all over the world of this upcoming Independence Day Celebration of our great ally and neighbour, the Ambazonian people billed for 1st of October 2021.

    “We advise Biafrans to stand with Ambazonia people as they celebrate their God-given freedom and independence. We should bear in mind that our brothers and sisters in Ambazonia are passing through persecutions in the hands of murderous Cameroonian Government just like Biafrans are facing similar ordeals in the hands of Fulani controlled federal government of Nigeria that sympathatises with terrorsts but kills peaceful agitators .

    “We, therefore, urge world leaders to use the opportunity of the on-going United Nations General Assembly, UNGA meeting to discuss the sufferings of the two persecuted nations of Biafra and Ambazonia. Our people have suffered enough in the hands of our oppressors who are in bed with terrorists but derive pleasure in crushing peaceful agitators instead of addressing our genuine concerns.”

  • Anambra: Ndigbo must embrace APC now or lose out of 2023 equation – Ogene, Ex-Rep member

    Anambra: Ndigbo must embrace APC now or lose out of 2023 equation – Ogene, Ex-Rep member

    …says the APC bug is burning like harmattan fire across South East

    Former House of Representatives member and chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Hon. Victor Afam Ogene has called upon the people of the South East region to wholly accept the party now, or risk losing out of the permutations for the nation’s presidency in 2023.

    In a statement personally signed by him on Monday, September 20, 2021 in Abuja, Hon. Ogene contended that the forthcoming November 6, 2021 Anambra governorship election has afforded the region an ample opportunity to ingrain itself in the burgeoning national consensus currently being forged.

    “Already, there appears to be a growing national consciousness, that the ruling APC should be supported, once again, to not only complete the myriad infrastructural developments it has embarked upon, but also lead the charge in forging national unity and healing.

    “This message appears to resonate across the polity, leading to the gale of defections into the APC – with serving and former governors, past and present members of the National Assembly, and eminent stakeholders, all catching the APC bug.

    “In deed, with several landmark projects, including the iconic second Niger bridge, the Onitsha – Enugu, Arochukwu – Ohafia – Bende and Enugu – Port Harcourt expressways, completion of the Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe mausoleum, construction of a brand new runway at the Enugu International Airport, the Ariaria Market Electrification project, Onitsha Inland Port project, payment of pension arrears owed ex-Biafran soldiers since their presidential pardon in 2000 and impact of NIRSAL and other loans which promote business, the APC, without a doubt, ought to be a destination of choice for Ndigbo.”

    Describing the recent appointment of Senator Ifeanyi Ararume as chairman of the new Board of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC, and Senator Margery Chuba-Okadigbo as member representing the South east on the same Board, Hon. Ogene urged Ndigbo to take the appointments as an extension of fresh hands of fellowship by the President Muhammadu Buhari administration to the region.

    “With many more of such appointments in the offing, the South east must seize the moment and play a defining role in the politics of the 2023 presidential election.

    “In fact, since it is common knowledge that the rival People’s Democratic Party, PDP would most likely look towards the North for it’s presidential candidate, the right politicking for Ndigbo would be to support the APC win Anambra, and therefrom make a determined bid to produce the party’s standard bearer for 2023,” Hon. Ogene stated.