The 81 years old novelist, poet, professor, and
critic wrote an article for the Guardian UK which was published on Tuesday 2nd
October. In the article, Professor Chinua Achebe wrote “It is my impression
that Awolowo was driven by an overriding ambition for power for himself and for
his Yoruba people.” He criticized it by
saying:
Read the full article and tell us what you think...
Almost 30 years before Rwanda, before Darfur, more
than 2 million people – mothers, children, babies, civilians – lost their lives
as a result of the blatantly callous and unnecessary policies enacted by the
leaders of the federal government of Nigeria.
As a writer I believe that it is fundamentally
important, indeed essential to our humanity, to ask the hard questions, in
order to better understand ourselves and our neighbours. Where there is
justification for further investigation, justice should be served.
In the case of the Nigeria-Biafra war there is
precious little relevant literature that helps answer these questions. Did the
federal government of Nigeria engage in the genocide of its Igbo citizens – who
set up the republic of Biafra in 1967 – through punitive policies, the most
notorious being "starvation as a legitimate weapon of war"? Is the
information blockade around the war a case of calculated historical
suppression? Why has the war not been discussed, or taught to the young, more than
40 years after its end? Are we perpetually doomed to repeat the errors of the
past because we are too stubborn to learn from them?
The Oxford English Dictionary defines genocide as
"the deliberate and systematic extermination of an ethnic or national
group ...". The UN general assembly defined it in 1946 as "... a
denial of the right of existence of entire human groups". Throughout the
conflict the Biafrans consistently charged that the Nigerians had a design to
exterminate the Igbo people from the face of the earth. This calculation, the
Biafrans insisted, was predicated on a holy jihad proclaimed by mainly Islamic
extremists in the Nigerian army and supported by the policies of economic
blockade that prevented shipments of humanitarian aid, food and supplies to the
needy in Biafra.
Supporters of the federal government position
maintain that a war was being waged and the premise of all wars is for one side
to emerge as the victor. Overly ambitious actors may have "taken actions
unbecoming of international conventions of human rights, but these things
happen everywhere". This same group often cites findings, from
organisations (sanctioned by the federal government) that sent observers during
the crisis, that there "was no clear intent on behalf of the Nigerian troops
to wipe out the Igbo people ... pointing out that over 30,000 Igbos still lived
in Lagos, and half a million in the mid-west".
But if the diabolical disregard for human life seen
during the war was not due to the northern military elite's jihadist or genocidal
obsession, then why were there more small arms used on Biafran soil than during
the entire second world war? Why were there 100,000 casualties on the much
larger Nigerian side compared with more than 2 million – mainly children –
Biafrans killed?
It is important to point out that most Nigerians
were against the war and abhorred the senseless violence that ensued. The
wartime cabinet of General Gowon, the military ruler, it should also be
remembered, was full of intellectuals like Chief Obafemi Awolowo among others
who came up with a boatload of infamous and regrettable policies. A statement
credited to Awolowo and echoed by his cohorts is the most callous and
unfortunate: all is fair in war, and starvation is one of the weapons of war. I
don't see why we should feed our enemies fat in order for them to fight harder.
It is my impression that Awolowo was driven by an
overriding ambition for power, for himself and for his Yoruba people. There is,
on the surface at least, nothing wrong with those aspirations. However, Awolowo
saw the dominant Igbos at the time as the obstacles to that goal, and when the
opportunity arose – the Nigeria-Biafra war – his ambition drove him into a
frenzy to go to every length to achieve his dreams. In the Biafran case it meant
hatching up a diabolical policy to reduce the numbers of his enemies
significantly through starvation — eliminating over two million people, mainly
members of future generations.
The federal government's actions soon after the war
could be seen not as conciliatory but as outright hostile. After the conflict
ended, the same hardliners in the Nigerian government cast Igbos in the role of
treasonable felons and wreckers of the nation – and got the regime to adopt a
banking policy that nullified any bank account operated during the war by the
Biafrans. A flat sum of 20 Nigerian pounds was approved for each Igbo
depositor, regardless of the amount of deposit. If there was ever a measure put
in place to stunt, or even obliterate, the economy of a people, this was it.
After that outrageous charade, Nigeria's leaders
sought to devastate the resilient and emerging eastern commercial sector even
further by banning the import of secondhand clothing and stockfish – two trade
items that they knew the burgeoning market towns of Onitsha, Aba and Nnewi
needed to re-emerge. Their fear was that these communities, fully
reconstituted, would then serve as the economic engines for the reconstruction
of the entire Eastern Region.
There are many international observers who believe
that Gowon's actions after the war were magnanimous and laudable. There are
tons of treatises that talk about how the Igbo were wonderfully integrated into
Nigeria. Well, I have news for them: The Igbos were not and continue not to be
reintegrated into Nigeria, one of the main reasons for the country's continued
backwardness.
Borrowing from the Marshall plan for Europe after
the second world war, the federal government launched an elaborate scheme
highlighted by three Rs – for reconstruction, rehabilitation, and
reconciliation. The only difference is that, while the Americans actually
carried out all three prongs of the strategy, Nigeria's federal government did
not.
What has consistently escaped most Nigerians in this
entire travesty is the fact that mediocrity destroys the very fabric of a
country as surely as a war – ushering in all sorts of banality, ineptitude,
corruption and debauchery. Nations enshrine mediocrity as their modus operandi,
and create the fertile ground for the rise of tyrants and other base elements
of the society, by silently assenting to the dismantling of systems of
excellence because they do not immediately benefit one specific ethnic, racial,
political, or special-interest group. That, in my humble opinion, is precisely
where Nigeria finds itself today.
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