Friday, March 2, 2012

Ex-Biafra leader Chukwuemeka Ojukwu buried in Nigeria


Ex-Biafra leader Chukwuemeka Ojukwu buried in Nigeria

General Ojukwu in 1970Colonel Ojukwu went into exile for more than a decade after losing the Biafran war

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Thousands of people in south-eastern Nigeria have attended the funeral of former Biafran secessionist leader Chukwuemeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu.
The BBC's Fidelis Mbah, in Col Ojukwu's home town of Nnewi, said well-wishers lined the streets and climbing tall buildings to get the best view.
Col Ojukwu died in the UK last year after a long illness, aged 78.
His 1967 declaration of independence for Biafra sparked a civil war, in which more than a million people died.
He remained a prominent figure in Nigerian politics, running twice as a presidential candidate in the 2000s.
Col Ojukwu went into exile after the Biafrans surrendered in 1970, returning more than a decade later, after he was officially pardoned.
Following his amnesty, he is being granted full military honours at the funeral, with a military band playing at his family home in Nnewi, Anambra state.
'Immense love for his people'
His coffin, draped in a Nigerian flag, has been transported around the country after it was flown back to Nigeria on Monday.

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This burial is burying the civil war and memories”
Alphonsus NwosuEx-Biafran fighter
Our reporter says family members, villagers, politicians and Biafra war veterans took turns to file pass the golden casket which was kept at an open space in the family compound, where female mourners dressed in garments printed with Col Ojukwu's portrait sang.
Security was tight and guests allowed into the compound, decorated with the logos of his political party, the All Progressive Grand Alliance, were screened by the anti-bomb squad.
Outside in the town, young men played their traditional drums and danced along the major roads, while all commercial activity ground to a halt.
Col Ojukwu's death appears to have bridged a gap between opposition political groups as everyone paid tributes to his doggedness and political ideology, our correspondent says.
President Goodluck Jonathan, Nobel laureate Wole Soyinka and former Ghanaian President Jerry Rawlings were among those who went to the funeral.
Following Col Ojukwu's death, the president said it was his "immense love for his people, justice, equity and fairness which forced him into the leading role he played in the Nigerian civil war".
The military was in charge of proceedings during the burial programme, with a parade and military songs performed in the late colonel's honour.
Col Ojukwu's coffin in his family homePeople have been paying their respects to Col Ojukwu around Nigeria this week
He was in the military before declaring independence for south-eastern Nigeria, where Igbo is the most widely spoken language, following the slaughter of thousands of ethnic Igbos in northern Nigeria.
This followed a 1966 coup carried out by Igbo officers, in which Prime Minister Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, a northerner, was shot dead.
Most of the civilians who died during the Biafran war died from hunger.
Former Biafran fighters at the funeral seemed happy with the active role played by the army and the federal government during the burial, our reporter says.
"I was an officer in the Biafran army and saw active battle in the trenches and I keep telling people we were volunteers, we were never conscripted. Ojukwu stood against injustice and pogrom and we all identified [with him]," Alphonsus Nwosu told the BBC.
"This burial is burying the civil war and memories," he said.
Col Ojukwu's Biafran aspirations where supported by Tanzania's first President, Julius Nyerere - the influential African statesman and pan-Africanist.
This support enhanced Col Ojukwu's popularity in East Africa and the conflict captivated the region, says BBC Swahili Service analyst Idd Seif.
Parks and suburbs in East Africa towns bear the name Biafra - one, in Kenya's capital, Nairobi, is known especially for its potent local brew, he says.
Rowdy sections of football stadiums in all East Africa are also known as Biafra.


His place in history


His place in history
By Obi Iwuagwu, PhD
Friday March 02, 2012

•Ojukwu
Photo: Sun News Publishing
 

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The history of Nigeria will definitely not be complete without adequate mention of the person of Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu. That his place in that history is assured is not in doubt, however, the role he played will forever remain a subject of controversy. Indeed, the life and times of Chukwuemeka Ojukwu have continued to raise multiple questions among different people, whether as nationalist or separatist warlord, frontline politician or eminent statesman, thus, making him one of the most controversial Nigerians that ever lived.

In any case, his early life also gives insight into the fearless and outspoken personality that Ojukwu eventually became. Born on November 4, 1933 in Zungeru, Niger State, to Sir Louis Odumegwu Ojukwu, foremost billionaire businessman from Nnewi, Anambra State, he attended King’s College, Lagos; Epsom College; Lincoln College; and, then Oxford University, all in the United Kingdom, from where he earned a first-class as well as a Master’s degree in History, before returning to Nigeria in 1956.
The range of his extra-curricular activities: sprint, rugby, javelin, boxing and discus, immediately presents him as a sportsman in spite of his wealthy background. He was indeed a dogged and strong-willed person, refusing a much more tempting offer to join his father’s booming business consortium, rather preferring to join the Nigerian Colonial Civil Service at the time.
Civil Service and the Nigerian Army
Once he enrolled in the Civil Service in 1956, Ojukwu was posted to Udi in the present-day Enugu State. In fact, his love for his people could be said to have taken roots those days at Udi, where his knowledge of the Igbo language and customs became stronger even as he mixed freely with people at the grassroots. But once he perceived interference by his father, especially with his posting in the Civil Service, and determined to chart a course of his own, as against living under his father’s overbearing influence, he took a radical decision, which would eventually change the course of his life, by joining the Nigerian Army.

His father again tried to frustrate his effort by attempting to prevent him from joining the army as a Cadet Officer, prompting him to rather join as a Private in 1957. In fact, it was only after the British military officers recognised the futility and dysfunction of having a Master’s degree holder from the famous Oxford University joining as a Private in the army, with illiterate persons as contemporaries and even superiors, that his entry was regularised and his father’s wishes overturned.

In spite of this, there is an opposing view that Ojukwu ab initio was in love with power and sought to acquire it by all means and at all costs, having been exposed by his career in history. However, this is not substantiated by available evidence. For instance, it is not in doubt that he would have stayed in the Civil Service, which he appeared to be enjoying, but for his father’s interference with his posting. Again, his actions during the 1966 coup are not consistent with those of a military officer seeking political power. It is equally on record that his early military career was essentially that of a pro-establishment officer who may have seen the army as the only authentic national institution in the midst of Nigeria’s multiethnic and multi-religious divisions.

Once he joined the army and, perhaps, owing to his enviable academic background coupled with his manifest intelligence, he rose fast and by 1963, was already appointed the Quartermaster General of the Nigerian Army. In 1964, he was promoted Lt. Colonel and posted to Kano, where he was put in charge of the 5th Battalion of the Nigerian Army. In fact, he was in Kano when Major Patrick Chukwuma Kaduna Nzeogwu on January 15, 1966 executed and announced Nigeria’s first military coup in Kaduna. It is also to Ojukwu’s credit that the coup lost much steam in the north. He, in fact, supported the forces loyal to the Supreme Commander of the Nigerian Armed Forces, Major-General Aguiyi-Ironisi. Given the circumstance, Major Nzeogwu who was in control of Kaduna, realising that the coup had flopped in other parts of the country, finally surrendered.
Subsequently, General Aguiyi-Ironsi took over the leadership of the country, thus becoming Nigeria’s first military Head of State. Next, he appointed military Governors for the four regions: Lt. Col. Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu (Eastern Region), Lt.-Col. Hassan Usman Katsina (Northern Region), Lt. Col. Francis Adekunle Fajuyi (Western Region), and Lt. Col. David Akpode Ejoor (Mid-Western Region).
The first Coup and the Nigerian Civil War
Ojukwu’s critics are also quick to label him a rebel, a tag he was not in a hurry to dismiss either, as he argued that it is only rebels that change the trajectory of history. However, these critics turn a blind eye to his doggedness in the face of death to keep Nigeria under one government, especially once it became clear to him that it was mainly officers of Igbo extraction that carried out the coup. He, however, stood his ground and refused to relinquish command of the 5th Battalion in Kano. Who knows, if he had, maybe Nigeria’s history would have been written differently for good or bad.

His critics have also blamed him for his role in making Ndigbo unpopular in national politics, several years after the civil war was fought, owing to his actions following the first coup in 1966. Again, a critical assessment of the events before the civil war would show that it was indeed the first coup, which was perceived by Northern soldiers as a calculated effort by the Igbo to eliminate Northern rulers, that ignited the flame of ethnic suspicion and fanned the embers of war. In a way, General Ironsi may have been culpable as he was perceived to have turned deaf ears to all the signs and warnings of a possible counter-coup, which was essentially targeted at the Igbo.
The counter-coup of July 1966 eventually led to the death of Ironsi as well as several other Igbo officers and people, with the authorities almost turning a blind eye to this apparent massacre. Many have argued that the only reasonable thing to have been done in the circumstance would have been to fight back, if only to protect themselves, as it became obvious that no help was forthcoming from the national government. Even Ojukwu, in his position as Governor of the Eastern Region, tried to mediate at least to foster peace, but going by the several accounts as at September 1966, it was obvious that the pogrom, which had now left the barracks into the streets where the Igbo were massively hunted and killed, had destroyed whatever was left as trust and unity in the polity, given that the Igbo were embittered by the humiliations they received from their supposed countrymen.

Expectedly, Ojukwu was vehemently against the counter-coup just as he was against the first coup of January 1966. Neither did he agree with Colonel Yakubu Gowon becoming the Supreme Commander, arguing that it was against established military tradition. According to him, the most senior military officer, in this case Brigadier Ogundipe, should rather fill the vacant position of Head of State following the assassination of Gen. Aguiyi-Ironsi. Many indeed suggest that Ogundipe could not contend with the riotous soldiers; hence he was easily convinced to step out and into the Nigerian High Commission in London. On September 29, the final phase of the planned pogrom was executed, marked by its brutal bestiality. While coping with the mass return of Ndigbo from Northern Nigeria, many of whom were maimed and bruised, Ojukwu still persevered; even when it became obvious to majority of his people that the basis for the continued unity of the country had been irreparably damaged.

The life of Ojukwu in the Nigerian Army did not in any way depict a man with centrifugal tendencies; rather he was every inch a Nigerian nationalist. For instance, he completely rejected colonialism and quite early in life, indeed at the age of 13, was known to have publicly challenged a British colonial teacher who had maltreated a black woman. He equally helped to quash the January 1966 coup essentially because it challenged the Nigerian federation. As a person, he was born in the north; his childhood was in the west, while most of his adult years were spent in the east. He was by every standard a well-rounded Nigerian. Moreover, Ojukwu was also fluent in the country’s three major languages – Igbo, Hausa and Yoruba. Perhaps, it was because of these reasons that many still wonder why he still sought to destroy the very union which he stood for even in the face of death four years before the civil war.
Nevertheless, his tenure as Governor of Eastern Region also portrayed him as a master in the art of governance as well as an eloquent public speaker. As a matter of fact, none who heard him speak could forget the cadence of his speeches, his mellifluous tones, the eloquence of his words, the geniality of his spirit, the charm of his courtesy, vivacity of his wit and in fact, the poetic sensitivity of his mind. All this indeed made him a rare gem.

Some commentators on the civil war that later broke out as a result of further breakdown of law and order are quick to accuse him of being anti-Nigeria, especially for declaring a war against the state. However, critical evidence seems to suggest otherwise. He should rather be seen as a tough soldier who had to take some tough decisions to protect his people, not because he was against the federal union, but more because the federation apparently did not want his people. Available evidence indeed suggests that Ojukwu went to war not because he liked war, but because he had no option, given that the problems he faced defied peaceful solution.

In spite of this, Ojukwu still made additional efforts to keep his people within the federal union by attending the Aburi Conference in Ghana, summoned by then Head of State of Ghana, General Joseph Ankrah. And just when everyone thought that Nigeria was back on the path of peace, Colonel Gowon on May 27, 1967, carved up Nigeria into 12 states, a policy which saw the Eastern Region being split into three states. Three days later, in fact on May 30, 1967 and based on the mandate of the Eastern Nigerian Constituent Assembly, Colonel Ojukwu made the historic declaration that completely changed the course of Nigerian history for the next three years. According to him, “Having mandated me to proclaim on your behalf, and in your name, that Eastern Nigeria be a sovereign independent republic, now, therefore I, Lieutenant Colonel Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu, Military Governor of Eastern Nigeria, by virtue of the authority, and pursuant to the principles recited above, do hereby solemnly proclaim that the territory and region known as and called Eastern Nigeria together with her continental shelf and territorial waters, shall, henceforth, be an independent sovereign state of the name and title of The Republic of Biafra.” What then followed was the civil war.

Would the situation in Nigeria at present have been different if the war had not been fought? Could the war have been averted? Was Ojukwu right in declaring a war at the time given the contending issues of men and materials that were obviously not to his advantage? Thirty-two years after the civil war, could it be truly said that Nigeria indeed learnt something from the war given the country’s present challenges? Obviously, these are mind-boggling questions that will forever beg for answers from eminent historians and Nigerians in general.

The civil war eventually broke out on July 6, 1967 between forces loyal to the Biafran cause and those of the Nigerian government, with both sides making serious use of propaganda against the perceived enemy. It is on record, however, that under Ojukwu’s leadership, the Biafran army, with limited resources but with sheer ingenuity, conceived and produced the Ogbunigwe (one that kills in multitudes), a cone-shaped, sometimes cylindrical cluster bomb that dispersed shrapnel with percussion, often with very telling and destructive effect. Similarly, Biafran scientists built airports and roads, refined petroleum, chemicals and materials, designed and built both light and heavy equipment, researched on chemical and biological weapons, rocketry and guidance systems, invented new forms of explosives, and experimented with new forms of food processing and technology. In fact, the Biafran home-made armoured vehicle, the “Red Devil” was, for instance, a real terror in the battlefield.

All the same, the war lasted 30 months, causing huge losses on both sides in men and materials. It is estimated that up to one million lives may have been lost on both sides. Nevertheless, when the situation became critical for the Biafran forces to continue, Ojukwu was to relinquish command of the army to his second in command and Chief of General Staff, Major-General Phillip Effiong, as he made his way to Cote d’Ivoire, where he had been offered political asylum by President Felix Houphouet-Boigny.

The impact of the civil war, especially on the Igbo, was far-reaching. However, one wonders several years after, whether the very factors that caused the war are still not present in the polity, thus leading many to now suggest that if Ojukwu were still alive today, he would more appropriately have been declared either a visionary or a prophet.
Return from Exile and Participation in Politics
The Nigerian Civil War ended on January 12, 1970. It is, however, important to note that in the second half of 1969, the Federal Government took a decisive step on Biafra with a view to ending the war. It increased the number of men on the lines and reinforced its weaponry. It also changed its field commanders and reorganised its formations. In fact, by the last quarter of 1969, federal victory was almost a reality. However, quite early in January 1970 Biafran surrender was imminent. As we noted earlier, Colonel Ojukwu handed command of the Biarfran army to Phillip Effiong, his second in command and Chief of General Staff, and subsequently left for Cote d’Ivorie, where he had been offered political asylum.

Subsequently, General Effiong broadcast the total and unconditional surrender of the Biafran armed forces to Nigeria on January 11, 1970. Ojukwu was to remain in Cote d’Ivorie until his return following a presidential pardon granted him by Alhaji Shehu Aliyu Usman Shagari, then President and Commander-in-Chief of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, in 1982.

On his return, he joined partisan politics albeit to the amazement of many Nigerians. Even more confounding was his choice of political party, the National Party of Nigeria (NPN). Expectedly, this raised several questions, as many wondered why NPN, instead of the Nigerian Peoples Party (NPP) to which many of the Igbo at the time belonged. Of course, interpretations were many and far-reaching. For some, it was to express his gratitude to Shagari and the leadership of the party, for the state pardon granted him, while others saw it as a display of nationalism, rather than ethnicity. But the man at the centre of the controversy said he rather joined the NPN “to bring the Ndigbo once more into the main stream of Nigeria’s politics” since he was the one that pulled them out in the first place.
However, whatever the reasons were, Ojukwu, to the utmost surprise of everybody, also went straight for elective office. Pundits argue that his choice of active politics may have been motivated by the same factor that influenced him into joining the civil service as an Assistant District Officer – service to his people. It was also the same burning desire that drove him into the Nigerian Army, despite his educational background and later into confronting the Federal Government under the leadership of General Yakubu Gowon. It has equally been suggested that Ojukwu may have been motivated by the lives of Kwame Nkrumah and Jomo Kenyatta of Ghana and Kenya respectively, who had moved into power from prison.

Be that as it may, it is on record that Ojukwu’s participation in active politics opened a new chapter in the politics of the Igbo, nay Eastern Nigeria. He contested the Onitsha senatorial seat on the platform of the NPN in the 1983 elections. In fact, prior to his return, the NPN in Eastern Nigeria, especially under the leadership of Vice President Alex Ekwueme was finding it difficult to penetrate both the old Anambra and Imo states. Hence, the coming of Ojukwu and the founding of his “Ikemba Front” was essentially to checkmate the activities of the NPP in the Southeast.

Nevertheless, and for whatever reasons, Ojukwu lost the senatorial election to Dr. Edwin Onwudiwe of the NPP in 1983, even as the NPN won the governorship election in Anambra State. This has also made some to argue that NPN deliberately sacrificed him because they could not fathom how to handle him, if he eventually entered the Senate at the time. Whatever the reasons may have been, it is on record that although he lost the senatorial election, he still remained in the NPN, until the military struck again on December 31, 1983 under General Muhammed Buhari, thus bringing Nigeria’s Second Republic to an end.

The new administration arrested and kept Ojukwu and several others at the Kirikiri Maximum Security Prisons, Lagos. However, he was unconditionally released from detention on October 1, 1984, alongside 249 other politicians of the period. In ordering their release, General Buhari had noted: “While we will not hesitate to send those found with cases to answer before the special military tribunal, no person will be kept in detention a day longer than necessary if investigations have not so far incriminated him”.

Under the politics of the Third Republic, he joined the National Republican Convention (NRC), but this time aspired to contest the presidency. According to him, “The surest way to show that the civil war had ended and the Igbo fully integrated into the affairs of the nation was to allow the Igbo to become president”. Unfortunately, General Babangida promptly disqualified him and many other “old brigade” politicians. During the General Sanni Abacha regime, he was again one of those elected to the National Constitutional Conference (NCC) of 1994/1995. Remarkably, it was this conference that gave birth to the present geopolitical structure of the country.

At the inception of the Fourth Republic, Ojukwu co-founded the All Peoples Party (APP), now All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP), with Dr. Olusola Saraki, Chief Tom Ikimi, the late Lamidi Adedibu, Chief Emmanuel Iwuanyanwu, among others. He was also a former member of the party’s Board of Trustees (BOT). When the party (APP) lost at the 1999 polls, many of its pioneer members left for the ruling party (PDP), but Ojukwu remained. He later founded the Peoples Democratic Movement (PDM), which was not registered as a political party.
Ojukwu in 2002 co-founded the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) with Chief Chekwas Okorie and others. He was indeed the party’s presidential candidate in both the 2003 and 2007 general elections. Though he lost at the two attempts, but the party won the governorship election in Anambra State. Whereas in the 2003 presidential election, he came third, in that of 2007, he came sixth. He did not participate in the 2011 election mainly due to his failing health. In fact, APGA owes its popularity in the Southeast and its improved performance in both the 2007 and 2011 elections to him.

Although, an ex-soldier, it is self-evident that Ojukwu was a democrat at heart. In fact, he was once quoted to have said that “as a committed democrat, every single day under an un-elected government hurts me. The citizens of this country are mature enough to make their own choices, just as they have the right to make their own mistakes”. He no doubt had an eventful political career. His role in Nigeria’s politics may have also influenced the appointment of his wife, Mrs. Bianca Ojukwu, as Senior Special Adviser on Diaspora Affairs to President Goodluck Jonathan.
It is, however, possible that his main regret in politics may have been that he never lived to see an Igbo man elected and assumed office as president of the Federal Republic of Nigeria given that this would mean the full integration of Ndigbo into the Nigerian polity several years after the civil war, which he led to give the people a sense of belonging, indeed, a better deal in Nigeria.

Nevertheless, it was obvious that his people truly appreciated his efforts and were always in a hurry to show it. In fact, the reception he received upon his return from exile in 1982 was tumultuous. He was at different times showered with numerous traditional titles, including Ikemba Nnewi (the people’s symbol of strength), Eze Igbo Gburugburu (overall king of the Igbo), Dikedioranma Ndigbo (beloved hero), among others.
Ojukwu eventually died on November 26, 2011 at the Royal Berkshire Hospital, London following a protracted illness.
Conclusion
We had earlier noted that Ojukwu’s place in Igbo, nay Nigerian history is assured. There is no doubt that whether you hate or love him, depending on your conviction, his role in Nigeria’s history can never be ignored. Having said that, it will be good also to take a more critical look at his personality before concluding on whether or not he meant well by his activities.

Our historical discourse suggests that all through his life Ojukwu was a firm believer in the Nigeria project. No doubt he fought for a Nigeria where everyone will be seen to be equal. He was also a manifest apostle of good governance and always supported the convocation of a Sovereign National Conference (SNC), essentially to restructure Nigeria into a proper federal state. All through his lifetime, he never shied away from taking a position that will advance equity, justice and fairness in the Nigerian state. Indeed many will remember him more as the conscience of the nation, as a man who fought for what he believed, and as one who insisted on justice and never compromised till the end.
It is equally apparent that Ojukwu was a man of deep conviction. He was not just this individual that you could easily understand, perhaps, owing to his high intellectual fecundity. He was obviously intellectually precocious, well endowed with good judgment and restless with ambition. In place of a life of ease, pleasure and plenty, into which he was born, he opted for one of hardship, danger, glory and virtue, thereby choosing the more difficult but virtuous life. Many have equally identified him with some element of stubbornness. But to this he also had an answer. In one of his last interviews, he said: “I hope I remain stubborn. The important thing is to get things right. If you look around you in Nigeria, we tend to sweep things so much under the carpet, only to come back and start picking them bit by bit. If the verdict is that I am stubborn, then I draw comfort from the fact that Winston Churchill was stubborn, Napoleon Bonaparte was stubborn. I draw consolation that Nelson Mandela is stubborn. All around me, the names that keep coming up are those of very stubborn people. If I am stubborn, then there is just one point I want to make about stubbornness, I believe I was stubborn for the right reason”. Can anybody fault that?
Of course, his bravery, courage and sacrifice will live after him. Nigerians are bound to miss him. Among his people, Ojukwu may have lived and died as the authentic hero, a man who could do no wrong, and one whose word was law. His people will forever remember his gift of oratory, his high-level intelligence and sheer power of persuasion, even as they will eternally appreciate his perceived sacrifice and courage, even in the face of adversity.
Dr. Obi Iwuagwu teaches Economic History, Development Studies and Public Policy in the Department of History and Strategic Studies, University of Lagos, Akoka.

As the Ikemba goes home…


As the Ikemba goes home…By Shola Oshunkeye
Friday March 02, 2012

•Ojukwu
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Before he succumbed to the multiple strokes that sent him the way of all flesh on Saturday, November 26, 2011, Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu, former Head of State of the defunct Republic of Biafra, the Ikemba Nnewi and Eze Igbo Gburugburu (King of Igbo Worldwide) had joined the club of statesmen who lived to read their obituaries. One of such great men was Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe, the Owelle of Onitsha, fondly called the Great Zik of Africa. He had the rare “honour” of reading and seeing his obituary in the nation’s media of mass communications in 1989.
Back to the present. And long before Ojukwu succumbed to the icy clutches of death at 78, and joined his forefathers on that fateful day, in a London hospital, Nigerian newspapers and news magazines had used swathes of newsprint to announce his “passing”.

But like the Phoenix, Ojukwu, Nigeria’s illustrious rebel with a cause (Ademola Oyinlola, writing in TELL), would rebound into the warm embrace of his photogenic wife, Bianca, and make his spokespersons to churn out rebuttals, telling the world: “Ojukwu is not dead.” “Ikemba is alive.” Once, Ojukwu himself responded to one of the rumours of his death with ultimate humour as he told The Spectator, our now rested sister newspaper, that he was “not in a hurry to leave this planet.”
And he meant every word of it. For, even when he was buffeted by multiple cerebro-vascular accident, CVA, or stroke, at the twilight of his time, he fought like a Trojan. He resisted the reaper with every fibre of his being. Like a true General. And just like he did the many battles that dogged his hyperactive life.

This was how Bianca captured her husband’s final battle: “When the doctors would tell us he wouldn’t make it to the morning, he would struggle and in the morning, he would still be there.” And when his mystique life finally ran its full circle, the former Most Beautiful Girl in Nigeria said, “he didn’t struggle; he went peacefully.”
Nonetheless, the nation slipped into a swivel of emotion and deep mourning. Then, came the deluge of tributes, some objective, several subjective.

General Yakubu Gowon, former Head of State, and erstwhile Ojukwu foe, who led the assault against the defunct State of Biafra, said of Ojukwu in an interview with the Voice of America (VOA): “Let me say how sorry and sad I am to hear the passing away of my old colleague and friend and aspirant partner during the period of our crisis. But both of us were reconciled friends in the end. He certainly will be missed by all, especially the family and partisans and friends and other well-wishers. I pray for the repose of his soul and may God grant his soul everlasting rest.”
Although Gowon reportedly condemned the treatment of Igbo at the time as undesirable, he did not believe there were sufficient grounds for the region to secede.

“Let us say that the civil war was for the unity of the country,” Gowon continued in the interview. “If there was no secession, there would not have been a civil war.  Although all men of goodwill to Nigeria will admit that, yes, what happened to the Igbo in Nigeria at the time, it was really bad enough, but I do not think that it should get [to] the stage whereby any leader of a people would wish to take his people out of (the) nation.”

While former President Olusegun Obasanjo believed that “in a way, his (Ojukwu’s death) marks the death of an era,” Nigeria’s incumbent President, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan, in a statement, eulogised him (Ojukwu) for his “immense love for his people, justice, equity and fairness which forced him into the leading role he played in the civil war.”
Well, there may be divergent opinions on who the late Ikemba truly was and who he was not. But one thing that no one can detract from his persona and pedigree is that he was not your ordinary Nigerian. He was a phenomenon, a hero of his people, a Moses who led his people into a 30-month war so they could have a strong voice and claim their Papa’s Land (Sonny Okosuns). Whether you see him as a hero or a villain, that would not colour the prism of history as he bids the world a final bye. As the world celebrates his demise, we devote the following pages as a befitting obituary and memorial to the Eze Igbo Gburugburu, the son from the land of the rising sun, who gave his all so his people may truly live.


Farewell, the people’s General Friday March 02, 2012


Farewell, the people’s General
Friday March 02, 2012

•Ojukwu
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The Igbo icon and leader of the defunct Republic of Biafra, Dim Chukwuemeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu, is being committed to mother Earth today. Since his death on November 26, 2011, no moment has been spared by the Igbo nation in particular and Nigeria in general in ensuring that he is given a burial that befits his gargantuan status. From the activities lined up by the burial committee, it is evident that no Nigerian in living history had, in death, enjoyed as much preeminence and reverence as Ojukwu.

Beyond his legendary image and stature in life, death has even conferred him with a more awesome status. Since his demise, he has been celebrated in major cities of the world, especially in Europe and America. Back home in Nigeria, his journey to the grave has been most momentous. The entire Eastern Nigeria has been pulsating with breath-taking activities associated with his burial. Wherever his remains touched down, ecstasy and deep-seated emotion had ruled the day. His interment today may be the climax of the burial activities, but his funeral ceremonies will go way beyond today.
Undoubtedly, his death has robbed Ndi Igbo, Nigeria and Africa of a forthright leader, a patriot, a dogged fighter of human rights hue and a humanist. Emeka, as he was fondly called by friends, peers and admirers, was a fine soldier, a brilliant historian, an orator, a politician, a charismatic leader of men and an astute manager of resources.

His demise at the age of 78 has elicited an overwhelming outpouring of eulogies in honour and praise of the revered Ikemba Nnewi and Ezeigbo Gburugburu. Eminent Nigerians have described the deceased in superlative epithets and colourful and elegant prose that amply capture his life and times.

In his tribute to the departed iconic and charismatic leader, President Goodluck Jonathan rightly observed that “Ojukwu’s immense love for his people, justice, equity and fairness, which forced him into the leading role he played in the Nigerian Civil War, as well as his commitment to reconciliation and the full integration of his people into a united and progressive Nigeria in the aftermath of the war, will ensure he is remembered forever as one of the great personalities of his time, who stood out easily as a brave, courageous, fearless, erudite and charismatic leader.”
Like Jonathan, most Nigerians have, in their various tributes, depicted the essential Ojukwu mystique and enigma. In fact, all of them are in agreement that his death is a monumental loss to the entire nation. Nigerians will surely miss his political thoughts, actions and influence on the polity.

Born on November 4, 1933 in Zungeru, Niger State, to the late Sir Louis Philippe Odumegwu-Ojukwu, a multi-millionaire business mogul from Nnewi, Anambra State, Ojukwu had an affluent background but he never allowed his father’s wealth to get into his head. Instead, he preferred a life of hard work, integrity, truth, justice and fairness. Ojukwu wanted to carve a niche for himself and make an impact rather than live in his father’s shadow. All this he did by deploying his talents and virtues for the good of the society.

Ojukwu had his early education at St. Patrick’s Primary School, Idumagbo, Lagos; Church Missionary Society Grammar School, Lagos and King’s College, Lagos, before he left Nigeria for Epsom College, Surrey, England at the age of 13. In 1952, he gained admission into Lincoln College, University of Oxford, England, where he bagged his bachelor’s and master’s degrees in Modern History. He returned to the country in 1956.

Ojukwu worked as an Administrative Officer in the former Eastern Nigeria Public Service from 1956-1957. He, against his father’s advice, enlisted in the Nigerian Army and was posted to Nigerian Army Depot, Zaria in 1957. Ojukwu was posted to 5th Battalion, Nigerian Army in 1958. He was instructor, Royal West African Frontier Training School, Teshie, Ghana, 1958-1961: returned to 5th Battalion, Nigerian Army, 1961 and promoted Major in 1961. He was the Deputy Assistant Adjutant and Quartermaster-General, Kaduna Brigade Headquarters, 1961 and served in Congo (Zaire) with the United Nations Peace Keeping Forces, 1962. He attended military courses at Teshie, Ghana, and later at Officers Cadet School at Etom Hall and Infantry School Warminster, England; and Small Arms School at Hythe and Joint Service Staff College, Camberly, England 1962.

He was promoted Lieutenant-Colonel and appointed Quartermaster-General, Nigerian Army 1963-1964; Commander 5th Battalion, Kano, 1964-1966; Military Governor, Eastern Region, 1966-1967, proclaimed Head of State and Commmander-in-Chief, Republic of Biafra, 1967; dismissed from Nigerian Army, 1967; promoted General, Biafran Army, 1968. Some years after his state pardon, his pre-war status in the Nigerian Army was restored.
As a student of modern history, Ojukwu had anticipated the role the military would play in an emerging independent country just fresh from colonialism and wanted to be part of that piece of action. He was among the first few graduates that joined the army, then a preserve of barely educated people. Following the first military coup d’etat of January 15, 1966 that brought Major-Gen. J.T.U Aguiyi-Ironsi to power, Lt-Col. Chukwuemeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu was appointed the military Governor of Eastern Region.

The appointment placed a great historical challenge upon his shoulders. That became clearer with the bloody counter coup of July 29, 1966 that witnessed mass killings of officers of Eastern Nigeria origin in the Nigerian Army and brutal massacre of civilians of the region in Northern and other parts of Nigeria. As a result of that ethnic cleansing and the horrors of headless and mutilated bodies of Igbo killed in Northern Nigeria, Ojukwu was mandated by the people of the region to declare it independent in the bid to protect its people and ward off the pogrom.
In order to reduce the force of a cohesive Eastern Region becoming independent of Nigeria, Yakubu Gowon, the then military leader of Nigeria, unilaterally divided the country into 12 states. That notwithstanding, Ojukwu responded by declaring Eastern Region an independent Republic of Biafra in May 1967.

Consequently, the nation was plunged into a 30-month gruesome and fratricidal war with unprecedented loss of human lives. With bare hands, Ojukwu took his destiny in his own hands and rose to the occasion in defence of his people against all odds after several peace talks on the future political structure of Nigeria failed to placate both sides to the conflict.

He mobilised the people with his oratory and charm and moved them into action. He fought bravely and withstood Nigerian challenge and blockade for three years without assured supply of food and ammunition. In spite of the superior fire power of the federal side and huge support from their foreign backers, Biafra under Ojukwu braved all odds and prolonged the war to almost three years, a war the federal side initially dubbed a “police action.”
Though Biafra lost the war, it was able to make scientific breakthroughs that marveled the international community. The war led to the invention of rockets and other weapons of mass destruction by Biafrans. Ojukwu Bunker at Umuahia and the Uli Airport were among the innovations recorded in war-time Biafra.

It has become a historial fact that Ojukwu took to arms because of the injustices and inequities that were prevalent in Nigeria at that time. He rose in defence of the lives and rights of his people which were trampled upon by Nigerian authorities. He could not watch his people being hounded like rats in Nigeria and refuse to do something. Any other person in Ojukwu’s shoes would have done the same. He demonstrated beyond doubt that leadership is about service to the people. Ojukwu fought and died an Igbo man of the first order. He was the quintessential Igbo leader. He had risen to the pantheon of Igbo deities and future generations will deify him and his resounding impact on the Igbo psyche.

Owing to his mythical image among the Igbo, he was given various traditional titles in almost every part of Igbo land in recognition and appreciation of his selfless service to his people. The most memorable ones remain the Ikemba Nnewi, Ezeigbo Gburugburu, Dike Di Ora Nma, and Odezuligbo. He authored Because I Am Involved. His inimitable biography, Emeka, was written by his friend, Frederick Forsyth. His speeches in Biafra were contained in his compilation, Biafra: Selected Speeches with Journal of Events. His historic Ahiara Declaration (Principles of the Biafran Revolution) remains one of the best political speeches and manifestoes ever made in this part of the world.
In all his public life, Ojukwu led by examples worthy of emulation. He did not go after wealth or acquisitive tendencies common with the Nigerian political elite. He shunned ostentation and interacted with ordinary folks. Ojukwu represented the epitome of Igbo spirit, strength, dynamism and enterprise and his name will forever be etched in Igbo thoughts and philosophy.

It is much more so considering the fact that Ojukwu’s death seems to have returned Nigeria to its darkest days. Ever since the war ended, Nigeria has never witnessed the level of cataclysm being perpetrated by a murderous Islamic group known as Boko Haram. In their action, Nigerians have rudely been reminded of those incongruities and inequities that led to the civil war.

His death at this point in time tells a story. Through his death and the story being woven around him, the ugly facts of Nigerian history have come alive. But as Ojukwu is buried, Nigeria and Nigerians may do well to also put their ugly past behind them and imbibe the timeless truths contained in some of his war declarations.
There are people who suffer today because they fought on the side of Biafra. If the war was actually fought to “keep Nigeria one” and there was “no victor, no vanquished,” nobody or group should be made to suffer on account of the war. Similarly, all the causes of the war should be frontally addressed so that they will not rear their ugly heads again and plunge the nation into another war. We say this bearing in mind that no nation survives two civil wars.
It is a pity that the issues raised by the war are still with us 42 years after. Let us, therefore, use Ojukwu’s death to revisit these and other issues that confront us as a nation.

That is one of the best ways to immortalise him. Although some people misunderstood him and called him a rebel, history has vindicated him and his stand on the war and other national issues. Though dead, Ojukwu lives on in the minds of millions of his people. Let the Igbo use his death to become more united and seek pragmatic solutions to problems plaguing them. While we commiserate with his family, friends and relations, the political class, Ndi Igbo and Nigerians for the irreparable loss, we pray that the Lord will grant his soul eternal rest. Goodnight, Eze Igbo.

Ojukwu raised for specific assignment in Nigeria – Jonathan


Ojukwu raised for specific assignment in Nigeria – Jonathan

on MARCH 2, 2012 · in NEWS
4:04 pm
0   
OJUKWU
Nnewi (Anambra) – President Goodluck Jonathan on Friday described the late Dim Chukwuemeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu as a leader raised by God for a specific assignment in Nigeria.
Speaking at a requiem mass in honour of the ex-Biafra leader in Nnewi, Anambra, Jonathan said Ojukwu was not raised for the Igbo alone but for the entire country.
He said no Nigerian leader had been accorded the respect by Nigerians as Ojukwu had received since he passed on.
The president said that the popularity of Ojukwu could be seen from the way his body had been taken round the south eastern states.
He said such show of acceptance was rare in Africa where the bodies of former leaders were not allowed into their country when they died in exile.
Jonathan also expressed his gratitude to the Igbo for their support for his administration.
Speaking earlier, Gov. Peter Obi of Anambra said Ojukwu fought against injustice so that Nigeria would be liberated from oppression.
Obi said the ex-Biafra leader was a man who lived the life of service for the people and called on leaders in the country to follow Ojukwu’s example so that a better future would be build for Nigerian children.
The governor praised Jonathan for his love toward the late Ikemba, saying that by that singular act, he had ended the Nigerian civil war and integrated the Igbo into the main stream of Nigerian politics.
In his sermon, the Catholic Bishop of Nnewi, Most Rev. Gregory Ochiagha, expressed the hope that by what Ojukwu lived and died for, the present Nigerian leaders would see leadership as a means of service and not an avenue for the acquisition of material wealth.
Ochiagha said Nigerian leaders should show love and concern for the people.
“Anybody who does not have the virtue of goodness, gentleness and self-control should not aspire for leadership position,’’ he said.
He noted with regrets that what was happening in the country was not corruption but gross selfishness.
The service was attended by the president, his wife, Patience, the governors of Anambra, Abia, Cross River, Delta, Ebonyi, Ondo and Kaduna as well as Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu, House Speaker Aminu Tambuwal and hordes of top government functionaries. (NAN)
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Showing 10 of 12 comments

  • President Jonathan is a big dissappointment with these unbalanced statements about Ojukwu..there is no doubt about Ojuku'swas a man of abundant  intelligence.
    Ojukwu led a failed and divisive mission against Nigeria!
  • Folks, this is to call on the editor of this news to correct immediately  this error: The bishop of the Catholic diocese of Nnewi is his Lordship Most Rev. Hilary Odili Okeke. Bishop Ochiagha is the emeritus bishop of Orlu diocese. This news is international and care should be taken to present historical facts correctly. Thanks.
  • mekwise
    @tony you are right the question remains what have the so called leaders learnt,what will they be remebered for,,,,,,,,,,,,,but i belive most of the dont care,,
  • 2354skull1
    The man was mightier than than live due to example, hope our leaders not only in Ngeria but all of Africa can emulate this great man. Now let the man please rest in PEACE.
  • Those who are in doubt of whether Igbos have a king can learn from the demise of the Ikemba. Igbo leadership is attained through selfless and dedicated services to ones people. It is not bestowed by money, family background or political association, compromise or patronage. the Igbo recognition of leadership is not by how much money one has amassed through corrupt and criminal practices, but through ones sacrifice and devotion to the overall good. The great Ikemba, your stock comes once in a century. May the Angel accord you a royal welcome.
  • rest in a well deserve peace of mind in the bosom of the Lord.
  •  Mr president you are missing the point Dim Chukwuemeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu is elder/leader to easterners alone not to the entire Nigerians.
  • engineer nigeria
    Ahmed ojukwu can never be a leader of boko haram people like you  . tufia kwa.
  • Our Hero! Our Pride! The Ijele Ndi Igbo! and OdiNigeriaEgwu!
    Goodbye!!!!!!