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Igbo And Yoruba Can Save Nigeria If They Bury The Hatchet For Once. - Politics - Nairaland

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Igbo And Yoruba Can Save Nigeria If They Bury The Hatchet For Once. by WIZGUY69(m): 12:34am On Oct 14, 2014
If you are a frequent visitor to the African Forum
website pioneered and moderated by a Nigerian
and a Yoruba man named Martin Akindana, you
will clearly see why the endless rivalry between
the Igbos and the Yorubas has now become a
concern for some of us. I give credit to Mr.
Akindana for creating that forum and effectively
using it as a platform for Nigerians to freely
express their views without the need to always
put names to what they write. However, hat
anonymity has afforded many Nigerians the
freedom or the opportunity to criticize and abuse
others using fictitious names and appellations.
Mr. Akindana, the President and CEO of Chat
Afrik and African World Forum, lives in Maryland.
He has been a leader in internet journalism just
like Chuck Odili, the President and CEO of the
Nigeria World website and Omoyele Sowore, the
President and CEO of Sahara Reporters and
Sahara Television based in New York.
Two out of these three distinguished Nigerians
are Yoruba men and the great majority of their
writers and columnists are either Yoruba or Igbo.
The Yorubas and Igbos quite often collaborate in
America to do great things. Their brothers and
sisters back home have so far failed do what
they are doing abroad with great success.
Omoyele and Rudolf Okonkwo are two Nigerians
who have worked together to make
SaharaReporters the envy of social media and
internet journalism in the greatest city in the
world, to borrow a cliché from Dr. Damages of
Sahara Television. I can testify to that as a
volunteer in their organization.
Re: Igbo And Yoruba Can Save Nigeria If They Bury The Hatchet For Once. by WIZGUY69(m): 12:36am On Oct 14, 2014
[b]°°° You hardly find any Hausa/Fulani Nigerian in the
Diaspora blazing that kind of trail for other
Nigerians to follow. In my opinion, any Hausa/
Fulani man with that kind of drive and
motivation would have returned home to be
made a federal minister or a state commissioner
or an adviser to the president or state governor,
because northerners, as a rule, don’t have to
work hard to make it in Nigeria. Some of them
claim they are born to rule, because they know
the Igbos would forever side with them to rule
Nigeria knowing the Yorubas and the Igbos don’t
get along and probably never will.
If Omoyele Sowore or Rudolf Okonkwo or Chuck
Odili or Martin Akindana were to be Hausa/
Fulani, they would have been appointed the MD
and CEO of Daily Times or NTA or Minister of
Information in a heartbeat. SaharaReporters has
become a leading source of breaking news on
Nigeria while two of its ace reporters, Rudolf
Okonkwo, otherwise known as Dr. Damages, and
Adeola Fayeun of “Keeping it Real” have become
very popular on YouTube because they are very
good in what they do. Omoyele is doing
something news-worthy in America, producing
new generations of television reporters, camera
men, production managers, moderators, and top-
notch comedians and anchormen, not just for
Nigeria but for many countries in Africa.
I am doing this article because I now know for a
fact that the never ending feud and distrust
between the Igbos and the Yorubas has become
a major obstacle to Nigeria’s progress. If the
two tribes had maintained the collaboration
passed on to them by Herbert Macauley as the
first leader of the Nigerian Youth Movement,
Nigeria would have made so much progress by
now. Herbert Macauley on his death bed had
named Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe, an Igbo man, as his
successor. He could have picked a Yoruba man
to succeed him but he wisely chose Azikiwe. Dr.
Azikiwe, a very powerful journalist at the time
and one of the leading pan-Africanists of his era
was a very good choice. °°°°°°°°°°°[/b]
Re: Igbo And Yoruba Can Save Nigeria If They Bury The Hatchet For Once. by WIZGUY69(m): 12:37am On Oct 14, 2014
•••••••••••••• The Nigerian Youth Movement was out to
champion the cause of the people and to fight
British Imperialism. Dr. Azikiwe did very well, to
begin with, but he made his first mistake when
he turned the movement to a political party he
subsequently named as NCNC (National Council
of Nigeria and the Cameroons). It did not take
long before former members of the Youth
Movement, who found themselves in the NCNC
began to feel they have been marginalized as
most of the important positions in the party were
taken over by the Ibos. The party became an
Igbo party. Awolowo, a staunch member of the
movement, read the hand writing on the wall. He
quickly moved on to form the “Egbe Omo
Oduduwa” in London which later metamorphosed
into the Action Group, with Ooni Risa Adesoji
Aderemi as its first grand patron.
The NCNC under Azikiwe began to view Awolowo
and the Action Group as competitors and rivals
from that point on. Sardauna Bello around the
same time had created his own party which he
called “Northern People Congress” meaning that
only northerners were welcome to the party.
Sardauna Bello was not as politically-savvy as
Azikiwe and Awolowo, who were more educated
and knew right away that a parliamentary
system like the one Nigeria has embraced could
hardly thrive with a tribal party like the NPC.
Those who called the Action Group the first tribal
party in Nigeria were being disingenuous. The
first tribal party in Nigeria was the NPC. The
mere fact that Azikiwe would agree to form a
coalition government with the NPC could only
mean that Azikiwe and the NCNC’s tolerance
level for tribalism was far more strident than they
were prepared to admit.
Once partisan politics took hold in Nigeria, the
two dominant tribes in the Christian South began
to drift apart. You would have thought the Igbos
and the Yorubas were natural allies because the
Igbos were predominantly Catholic while the
Yorubas were also Christian but with many more
denominations like Catholic, Anglican, Methodists
and Baptist, while some Yorubas in a few Yoruba
cities like Ogbomosho, old Oyo Alaafin, Ibadan,
Oshogbo and Ede, Abeokuta, Ijebu, and Lagos did
embrace Islam. The Igbos and the Yorubas as
Christians should have formed a coalition to rule
Nigeria after independence, but their rivalry
would not permit that. •••
Re: Igbo And Yoruba Can Save Nigeria If They Bury The Hatchet For Once. by WIZGUY69(m): 12:39am On Oct 14, 2014
°°°° When two elephants fight it is the grass that
suffers. The grass in the metaphor is Nigeria and
generations of Nigerians yet unborn. The
Nigerian nation under the Hausa/Fulani and their
Igbo coalition has always been one step forward
and two steps backwards. The Igbos and the
Yorubas working together may well have been
the key to the nation’s steady progress, but the
two tribes are ever so distrustful of each other.
Nigeria at 54 is a nation kept alive on life
support and compromise, which thrives on
mediocrity rather than merit. The best candidate
has never won a electios in Nigeria. We always
vote for the worst candidate and because we are
insane, we expect that weak choice to work
miracles. We keep repeating the same mistake
but expecting a different result.
A chain is as strong as its weakest link.
Nigerians for some strange reason always settle
for that weakest link in our chain. Balewa or
Azikiwe or Awolowo could have become Nigeria’s
first Prime Minister after our independence.
Nigeria ended up picking Tafawa Balewa the
grade II teacher from Bauchi because the man
belonged to the senior partner in the NPC/NCNC
coalition government. Azikiwe and Awolowo knew
Tafawa Balewa was the least qualified for the
job, but since the predominantly Catholic Eastern
Nigeria would rather go with the Muslim North
than go with the predominantly-Christian
Western Region, Nigeria lost out by picking
Balewa.
Awolowo actually offered to step down for
Azikiwe to become Prime Minister, but Azikiwe
and his kith and kin preferred the NPC. Azikiwe
and his people believed that the Yorubas were
too smart and too clever and sneaky. They were
convinced the northerners could not out-
maneuver them if the push came to shove.
Azikiwe became ceremonial governor-general
whose main function was to attend funerals of
fellow heads of state around the world, while
Tafawa Balewa became Prime Minister with all
the power in his hands. Balewa as Prime Minister
had to compete on the world stage with black
leaders like Osagyefo Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana,
Sekou Toure of Guinea, Professor Leopold
Senghor of Senegal, Jomo Kenyatta of Kenya and
Julius Nyerere of Tanzania, to mention a few.
Nigeria immediately began to lose its focus and
his leadership position among African nations
because we had a leader who evidently suffered
from an inferiority complex when he had to meet
with his counterparts in other countries. How for
goodness could a grade II teacher from Bauchi
have competed with a Dr. Nkrumah or a Leopold
Senghor or Sir Eric Williams of Trinidad and
Tobago, or Dr. Burnam of Guyana, to mention a
few of them who were all products of institutions
like Cambridge, Oxford, and Lincoln University in
the United States? I know education alone is not
all that is needed in a good leader, but during
Balewa’s time and even up till now education is
something we cannot discount. It is true that
Jonathan has a Ph.D. but can hardly compare
himself with an Obama. However, the mere fact
that he has a Ph.D. on merit from Port Harcourt
is something Nigeria should be proud of. ′
Re: Igbo And Yoruba Can Save Nigeria If They Bury The Hatchet For Once. by WIZGUY69(m): 12:41am On Oct 14, 2014
•••••••• It was true that Tafawa Balewa spoke English
with a nice accent. He was clearly an eloquent
speaker but there was no way to compare his
vision, his charisma, and ability with that of
Kwame Nkrumah or Leopold Senghor. Balewa
was clearly intimidated by some of those leaders
just like Yakubu Gowon was outgunned and
clearly intimidated by the Oxford-trained
Odumegwu Ojukwu at the Aburi Summit in
Ghana. Either Azikiwe or Awolowo would never
have suffered from the same kind of inferiority
complex that Tafawa Balewa had to confront.
Azikiwe went with the NPC in 1959 because he
knew that most of the powerful ministries that
require a university education and some technical
knowledge to run would naturally go to the Igbos
in the NPC/NCNC government. If the Igbos had
gone with the Action Group, the big advantage
the Igbos thought they were going to get over
the northerners would have been lost. The Igbos
were thinking more about themselves than the
best interest of the nation. “I before others,”
which Sardauna Bello once used to describe
them, definitely had some validity.
The Action Group led by Awo could easily have
joined the NPC to push the NCNC into the
opposition because the Yorubas could claim they
had more in common with the Hausa/Fulani/
Kanuri tribes, as a good number of Yorubas were
Muslims like the Northerners. The Yorubas have
hereditary monarchies and traditional
institutions. The Igbos had none of those
commonalities. Anybody could become an “Igwe”
or “Eze Igbo” in Igboland. Not so in the North
and Yorubaland. Awolowo could not get the
Action Group to work with the Hausa/Fulani NPC
because of their open disdain for education which
is a major platform in the Action Group
Manifesto. Awolowo would have had to abandon
his free education and free medical coverage for
all Nigerians, because the NPC, the senior
partner in the coalition would have blocked such
a policy. They saw Awolowo as a revolutionary
who was going to instigate the “Talkawas” to
throw off their yoke of Feudalism. Sardauna
never forgave Awolowo for dragging him out of
his Palace to go canvass for votes from the
commoners.
To Awolowo, free education was non-negotiable.
Awolowo could not associate with a party with
the NPC kind of mindset. That was why he
preferred to go with the Igbos and was not ready
to go into any coalition with the Hausa/Fulani.
Azikiwe on the other hand was willing to play
ball with the North because he figured it out that
the Igbos were going to dominate their senior
partner. If he had to choose between his
peoples’ interest and the greater interest of
Nigeria, the choice was clear for Zik. Most Igbos
still share the same mindset till now. They would
rather go with a party led and dominated by the
northerners than the one dominated by the
Yorubas. I don’t care what promises the Igbos
make to the APC today, the great majority of
them are going to vote for the PDP because they
are scared of the Yorubas. In my opinion, they
want the Yorubas to experience the same
genocide they have endured but the Yorubas are
too smart for that. It is not going to happen.
Awolowo was misunderstood when he told
Nigerians he could not be a good Nigerian if he
was not first and foremost a good Yoruba man.
What he was saying was that his “Yorubaness”
is not necessarily in conflict with his idealism as
a patriotic Nigerian. Azikiwe would tell you he
was the first nationalist Nigeria has produced. If
you believe that crap, you will believe anything.
Azikiwe was only a nationalist in name. Many of
his actions or behavior did not support that
claim as I would show with the remaining
segment of this article.
When Awolowo and the Akinloyes of this world
conspired to stop Azikiwe from becoming the
first Premier of the Western Region in 1954,
Azikiwe wasted no time rushing back to the East
to force Eyo Ita from Calabar to shelve his
ambition to become the first Premier of Eastern
Region. If he had allowed Eyo Ita to have his
wish, most Nigerians, myself included, would
have been singing his praise today as the first
nationalist in Nigeria and he would have been
right to condemn Awolowo for stopping him from
becoming the first Premier of Western Region.
When Azikiwe had a chance to discourage
Biafrans from breaking away from Nigeria, he did
not do it because the move was very popular
among the Igbos at the time. He not only
encouraged Biafra to go for secession, he
actually wrote the Biafran National Anthem. But
when he realized that Biafra was going to lose
and lose very badly, he gave an excuse he was
going for medical check-up overseas. Instead of
going overseas he headed straight to Dodan
barracks to denounce Biafra and to pledge his
loyalty to General Yakubu Gowon, who welcomed
back to Nigeria with open arms. How could such
a man tell us that Awolowo was wrong to stop
him from becoming the first Premier of the
Western Region?
Biafra never recovered from the betrayal and that
was one of the events that elevated Odumegwu
Ojukwu as the reluctant successor to Azikiwe,
even before Azikiwe died. If you ask most Igbos
today who was their greatest leader, 7 out of 10
of them would tell you it was Ojukwu. The
remaining three may still have some respect for
Zik because the Igbos, as a rule, never disown
their own which is good. They are far better than
the Yorubas on that.
Part II of this piece will address in some detail
what the Yorubas have done to show that they
do in fact love the Igbos more than the Igbos
love them. It will explore in all its ramifications
what Nigeria stands to gain from Igbo and
Yoruba collaboration. It will make the case for
why the Igbos and the Yorubas need to put the
past behind them and to move forward for the
sake of Nigeria.
Now that Azikiwe, Ojukwu, Awolowo and
Benjamin Adekunle have all been retired by
death, it is time for the Igbos and the Yorubas to
form a coalition to push the northerners to the
opposition for once in our history.
Democracy demands such a change because in
politics, there is no permanent friend or enemy,
there is only a permanent interest. A one-party
dictatorship, however benevolent cannot serve
the best interest of Nigeria. I urge Nigerians to
throw the PDP out of power in 2015.
Stay tuned for part II. ••••••
Re: Igbo And Yoruba Can Save Nigeria If They Bury The Hatchet For Once. by Anezy(m): 1:06am On Oct 14, 2014
I believe DAT one day the igbos and Yorubas will form I coalition to out root d Hausa/Fulani but it will take time for DAT to happen
Re: Igbo And Yoruba Can Save Nigeria If They Bury The Hatchet For Once. by solgee(m): 1:14am On Oct 14, 2014
It will definitely take time and not impossible

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