Dear Biafrans- Etcetera Writes

    I have been receiving a lot of mails and phone calls in
    recent weeks requesting that I lend my voice in support of the ongoing campaign
    for the sovereign state of Biafra and to also speak up against the recent shut
    down of Radio Biafra by National Broadcasting Commission. I have decided to
    make my opinion known to those who have been bombarding me with requests to
    support the Biafran movement.

    Yes, I believe that the Igbo have been marginalised in
    Nigeria right from 1970 till date. I also believe that as a people, the Igbo
    have every right to speak out and seek redress. I believe that no tribe or
    ethnic group in Nigeria deserves to be marginalised or shut out by certain
    quarters of government because of an incident of the past. Just like every Igbo
    man, I believe that Biafra was a good dream born out of a necessity at that
    time. It was a good dream which went horribly wrong and became a nightmare for
    us, the Igbo people and the whole of Nigeria from 1967 to 1970, from which I
    believe we have woken up.

    It will be foolhardy to dream the same dream in the
    same way and manner without thoroughly accounting for why and how it turned
    into a nightmare, and factoring in the changes that have taken place in Nigeria
    since the 1960s.

    The thought that the actualisation of the sovereign state of
    Biafra is in itself the solution to all the problems of Ndigbo is to display an
    understandable naivety about human nature and today’s politics. What we need as
    a people is a new vision that will encompass the lessons of the past, the
    changes that have taken place since the end of the civil war, the reality of
    present day Nigeria and demand for a system founded on justice, liberty and
    equality under the rule of law for Ndigbo and non Igbo as well. I believe this
    new vision is attainable.
    They say charity begins at home and in this regard, I
    believe it is time for every honest and sincere Igbo man or woman, to channel
    his or her energy towards actualising good leadership and government in
    Igboland by joining the political process. It is time for every one of us to
    unite against corruption in our land. It is time for Ndigbo to come together to
    reverse this ubiquitous trend of bad leadership ravishing Igboland and put in
    place a system that would enable the best of us to emerge as leaders.
    Great nations are ruled by their best minds and not by a
    band of common thieves without respect for individual liberty and democracy
    that do nothing but devise ingenious ways to looting the treasury and serve the
    vilest and most primitive of human instincts. Without this political and
    cultural change embedded in the concept of our future, Igboland will remain
    underdeveloped, and that in itself, will constitute a gargantuan problem for us
    in the future. Making this necessary change in igboland will ensure that if and
    ever or when Nigeria collapses as a result of our collective idiocy,
    irresponsibility, ignorance and corruption, and the jumbo pay of politicians,
    Ndigbo will be better placed to build a new nation based on justice, equality,
    rule of law, tolerance, development and honesty.
    War has never been the solution to any problem. I didn’t
    witness the civil war but from what I saw in my recent visit to Maiduguri,
    Adamawa and Plateau state, I have become a disciple of dialogue as a means to
    resolve issues. If Biafra will become a reality, it shouldn’t be through the
    barrel of a gun. It is wrong to seek divorce by putting a gun to your spouse’s
    head. We should realise that a divorce from Nigeria is also possible if the
    Nigeria state comes to its natural end because of years of ethnic and religious
    prejudices, injustices, and vision-less irresponsible, corrupt leadership that
    failed to lay the foundation of a viable state and make the necessary social
    investment for its survival. This might be the natural course of events if
    Nigeria continues to sleep walk into disaster and neglect honest nation
    building.
    We shouldn’t continue to pursue the Biafra dream in the way
    and manner some people and groups are doing at the moment without regard to the
    present reality. It can only undermine the whole essence of the struggle. As an
    Igbo man, there is nothing I want for Igbo that I do not want for other ethnic
    groups. There is nothing I wish for my fellow Christians that I do not wish for
    Muslims. We are all humans after all. We are all brothers and sisters divided
    by language, skin colours and religion. I believe that enlightenment is
    recognition of this basic facts, and that underneath our skins, flows blood of
    the same colour and minds that can think alike and able to overcome the
    prejudices which our difference try to impose on our judgment. There is nothing
    that can justify the killing of a fellow man. I can only lend my voice to a
    vision that doesn’t entail the destruction of lives and property.

    I am sorry to say that the continuous clamour for the
    recognition of Biafra by America may not yield much because of the selfish
    nature of America’s foreign policy. If there is nothing in it for America,
    America won’t get involved. We are a great and industrious people. For a start,
    won’t it be better to seek economic independence and have Nigeria and the rest
    of the world depend on us for something? Today, Africa has gone from car
    assemblage to total manufacturing. I am proud that I am alive to witness this
    history, that a Nigerian made car can actually be better that the Toyotas and
    Hondas of this world, and it is all due to the ingenuity of an Igbo man.
    Ndigbo, this can be a place to start. Igbo kwenu!!

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