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January 15 1966: The Day That Changed Nigeria - Politics - Nairaland

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Prophecy That Changed The Life Of Yemi Osinbajo / January 15,1966 Coup: Conversation Between Lt. Col Pam And His Murderers / JANUARY 15 1966..the Day That Changed NIGERIA. (2) (3) (4)

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January 15 1966: The Day That Changed Nigeria by Adesiji77: 6:27am On Jan 16, 2016
For the archives...

January the 15th, 1966 is no ordinary date in Nigeria’s history. On this fateful day, precisely fifty years ago, Nigeria socio-political and economic landscape was changed for good. It was the day a group of mutinous officers in the Nigerian Army, led by Major Kaduna Chukwuma Nzeogwu, staged the country’s first coup d’etat, leading to the assassination of key Nigerian leaders, senior officers in the army, and the abduction of three others. It was the day whose events set off the collapse of the First Republic, resulted in a counter-coup six months later, led to the Nigerian Civil War, and ushered in 30 years of military interventions in Nigerian politics from which the country is yet to fully recover,


Among others, the coup plotters abducted the Prime Minister of Nigeria, Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, the country’s first Minister of Finance and Chief Festus Okotie-Eboh; killed the Premier of the Northern Region and Sarduana of Sokoto, Sir Ahmadu Bello; and killed the Premier of the Western Region, Chief Samuel Ladoke Akintola. The dead bodies of Balewa and Okotie-Eboh were discovered six days later at a roadside near Lagos. Other notable persons that were killed included Brig-Gen. Samuel Ademulegun and his wife, Brig-Gen. Zakariya Maimalari, Col. Kur Mohammed, Col. Shodeinde and Lt.-Col. Abogo Largema.


Notably, five out six of the coup plotters were of Igbo extraction, while all those killed were of either northern or Yoruba extraction. The act of overthrowing a constitutionally elected government was compounded by the fact that one of the officers, Lieutenant Oguchi, dispatched to “take care” of the Premier of the Eastern Region, Dr. Michael Okpara, arrested him, while Mr. Nwafor Orizu, who was the Senate President and also the acting President of the country in the absence of Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe, who was out of the country on the day of the coup, capitulated by handing over the reins of government to the most senior person in the Armed Forces at the time, Major-Gen. Johnson Aguiyi-Ironsi, yet another Igbo man.


Although the coup plotters, who attacked the cities of Lagos, Kaduna and Ibadan while also blockading the Rivers Niger and Benue for two days, claimed that the civilian leadership at the helm of affairs of the First Republic were running the country aground through corruption, the killing of only northerners and Yorubas served to deepen the ethnic divide in the country and suspicion against the Igbo tribe which had already been branded by the late Sarduana as “domineering”. It was feared that the Igbo had set out to take control of the country and in the north of Nigeria the fear of Igbo dominance became intense.


On 29 July 1966, northern officers carried out a counter-coup in which, 240 southern officers and men, three-quarters of whom were Igbo, including Aguiyi-Ironsi as well as thousands of civilians of eastern origin living in the north were systematically killed. In the aftermath, Lt.-Col. Yakubu Gowon, a northerner assumed command of the military government.


It was within this context that increasing ethnic rivalries led to further massacres of mostly people of the Igbo ethnic group. The massacres were widely spread in the north and peaked on May 29, July 29 and September 29, 1966. The massacres were led by the army and replicated in various northern Nigerian cities. Although Colonel Gowon gave guarantees of safety to the Igbos living in the north, the intention was to extract revenge for the January 15 coup.


The pogroms in the north led Col. Chukuwemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu, whom Gowon had made the military administrator of the defunct Eastern Region, to breakaway from Nigeria, creating the Republic of Biafra and the 30-month Nigerian Civil War that resulted in the death of over 2 million people in the east.


Since the events of January 15, 1966, Nigeria has never been the same. It lost its innocence and the lofty ideals, which the founding fathers of the republic who fought for Nigeria’s independence from the British colonial administration, were all abandoned. Today, Nigeria continues to totter from the effects of that coup. Corruption – one of the reasons given by the coup plotters for overthrowing the civilian government – is at its worst. Its development remains stunted and the ethnic and religious divide deeper than ever.


It’s like nothing has changed in the fifty years since the coup. Perhaps by remembering this day, Nigerians will pull themselves by the bootstraps and chart a new course for the country that will make January the 15th, 1966 a footnote in its checkered history.
http://www.thisdaylive.com/articles/january-15-1966-the-day-that-changed-nigeria/230363/
Re: January 15 1966: The Day That Changed Nigeria by afeesalau(f): 6:32am On Jan 16, 2016
Ibos n their cunny way of life

3 Likes

Re: January 15 1966: The Day That Changed Nigeria by Pavore9: 7:03am On Jan 16, 2016
That coup did not help Nigeria.

1 Like

Re: January 15 1966: The Day That Changed Nigeria by EazyMoh(m): 7:16am On Jan 16, 2016
The law of Moses, an eye for an eye!

1 Like

Re: January 15 1966: The Day That Changed Nigeria by Tolexander: 7:25am On Jan 16, 2016
No new thing here jare!
Re: January 15 1966: The Day That Changed Nigeria by Nobody: 8:13am On Jan 16, 2016
Changed Nigeria ?
Hmmm
Re: January 15 1966: The Day That Changed Nigeria by ibedun: 10:40am On Jan 16, 2016
Igbo coup !!!

1 Like

Re: January 15 1966: The Day That Changed Nigeria by SweetSoup(m): 12:47pm On Jan 16, 2016
Na dem start am, na dem dey shout marginalisation..

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Re: January 15 1966: The Day That Changed Nigeria by kingzizzy: 12:56pm On Jan 16, 2016
So January 15th changed Nigeria? How come those who later took over haven't managed to chage it back in 50 years?
Re: January 15 1966: The Day That Changed Nigeria by Goke7: 1:20pm On Jan 16, 2016
SweetSoup:
Na dem start am, na dem dey shout marginalisation..

I watched a documentary yesterday and its amazing that those who wants true federalism now were actually the ones who destroyed it when it was working perfectly.

Its High time some fellows own up and confess their sins of the past but alas chest beating and playing the victim when pushed to a corner is their game.

5 Likes

Re: January 15 1966: The Day That Changed Nigeria by coolzeal(m): 2:20pm On Jan 16, 2016
It was the wives of Awo and Akintola in the West that spark up chaos that caused the coup.

https://www.nairaland.com/2867045/battle-between-awolowo-akintola-led
Re: January 15 1966: The Day That Changed Nigeria by gurnam: 2:30pm On Jan 16, 2016
coolzeal:
It was the wives of Awo and Akintola in the West that spark up chaos that caused the coup.

https://www.nairaland.com/2867045/battle-between-awolowo-akintola-led

How?what is the business of army officers with issues between civilians? You Igbos should own up and apologise for causing the confusion and mess that Nigeria is in.

2 Likes

Re: January 15 1966: The Day That Changed Nigeria by jayloms: 2:31pm On Jan 16, 2016
Whatever makes a human being think his fellows are less humans all because they don't share same language and culture. This is one aspect I still cannot wrap my head around, or, perhaps, another explanation can be made available to clear up d reason for that lopsided attack.

Suddenly, it became apparent to them that, only nationals from other part of the divide were corrupt and needed to be cleaned out of d society.

I somehow wish the events of 1966 will not be recounted, cause, while it should foster national cohesion, I fear it will only reawaken the hurt and betrayal that were the aftermath feelings of d events and furthermore, it may make us more suspicious of one another.

Let this past! remain in the past.

2 Likes

Re: January 15 1966: The Day That Changed Nigeria by andei: 2:33pm On Jan 16, 2016
what then was the benefit of this coup that resulted to the loss of so many persons.

1 Like

Re: January 15 1966: The Day That Changed Nigeria by coolzeal(m): 2:40pm On Jan 16, 2016
gurnam:


How?what is the business of army officers with issues between civilians? You Igbos should own up and apologise for causing the confusion and mess that Nigeria is in.
Igbo's tenacity to overcome life challenges were acutely an affront to both the Sardauna of Sokoto and the British occupation in Nigeria. The North organised a pogroms against Igbo's in Jos and Kano respectively. Hundreds of Igbo were murdered during the pogroms and tens of thousands of pounds sterling worth of their property were looted and destroyed at the time. Each pogrom was carried out because of the Igbo role in the restoration-of-independence movement to free Nigeria from the British conquest and occupation. North Nigeria's sociopolitical leaderships, effectively British regional clients, were opposed to the restoration of African freedom. They, indeed, were disposed to the continuing British occupation of Nigeria.
As a result, the regime did not apprehend or prosecute anyone for either the 1945 or 1953 pogroms and the outrages became the "dress rehearsals" for the 29 May 1966-12 January 1970 Igbo genocide when the Nigeria state (as a whole) with full Britain involvement, and others, murdered over 3.5 million Igbo or one-quarter of this nation's population. Britain, nor indeed any of the other pan-European conquerors of Africa (France, Portugal, Belgium, Spain, Germany), did not create a Nigeria, or whatever names these "Berlin states" in Africa are called, as precursor for African emancipation. On the contrary, the Nigeria's of Africa are more of replicas of the enslaved plantations of the Americas (in the previous epoch of nearly 300 years) to perpetuate European control and exploitation of Africa and Africans in perpetuity.

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Re: January 15 1966: The Day That Changed Nigeria by SweetSoup(m): 2:40pm On Jan 16, 2016
Goke7:


I watched a documentary yesterday and its amazing that those who wants true federalism now were actually the ones who destroyed it when it was working perfectly.

Its High time some fellows own up and confess their sins of the past but alas chest beating and playing the victim when pushed to a corner is their game.
My bro it's in their blood, arrogance and pride is their natural state of being. They will never acknowledge their wrong, but will be quick to play the victim card anytime things don't go their way. They didn't agitate for Bi-afra when they held most of the juicy position in Jonathan's govt...

2 Likes

Re: January 15 1966: The Day That Changed Nigeria by T8ksy(m): 4:19pm On Jan 16, 2016
SweetSoup:
My bro it's in their blood, arrogance and pride is their natural state of being. They will never acknowledge their wrong, but will be quick to play the victim card anytime things don't go their way. They didn't agitate for Bi-afra when they held most of the juicy position in Jonathan's govt...


It is their way! The same way they did not conceive Biafra when their homie Ironsi was in power. In fact, they abolished true federalism that was in existence then and foisted One united nigeria on the rest of us without even asking for our consent. This, after their boys in the army had just murdered the elites of the other regions!

Ojukwu, who was to later champion the creation of their so-called "land of the rising sun" was seen the day after Decree 34 was promulgated by his kinsman, dancing to the discordant tune of "One Nation under the groove", like an inebriated newt whilst promising to export his greedy folks to the northern part of the country to take up all available civil posts due to their higher educational achievements in comparison to the indigenes. After all, their homeboy has just murdered the sardunna of sokoto who had instituted the Northernisation policy a few years before to wade off such an aberration.

Na only dem get sense pass.

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Re: January 15 1966: The Day That Changed Nigeria by Nobody: 4:55pm On Jan 16, 2016
Thread closed
Re: January 15 1966: The Day That Changed Nigeria by Nobody: 4:56pm On Jan 16, 2016
afeesalau:
Ibos n their cunny way of life
Yoruba man was part of the coup and later wrote ==>

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Re: January 15 1966: The Day That Changed Nigeria by T8ksy(m): 5:35pm On Jan 16, 2016
No doubt but all the others coupists, were ibos. He was also the last to join, probably as a after-thought.


quid:

Yoruba man wrote ==>

. In August 1965, three officers, Major Okafor, Major Ifeajuna and Captain Oji who were already dissatisfied with political developments in the Federation and the impact of these developments on the Army, held series of discussions between them about the matter and set about the task of searching for other officers who held views similar to their own and who could, eventually, be trusted to join them in the enterprise of staging a military coup d'Etat.

14. In September 1965, Major I. H. Chukwuka of Nigerian Army Headquarters Lagos was persuaded to join the group of conspirators, followed in October 1965 by Major C. I. Anuforo, also of the Army headquarters. Major C. K. Nzeogwu was brought in around that time through the efforts of Major Anuforo, an old friend of both Majors Nzeogwu and Okafor. Major Nzeogwu in turn secured the support for the plan of Major A. Ademoyega who had worked with him in the Nigerian Army Training College Kaduna.

15. By early November the recruiting activities of the group were completed and an inner circle of conspirators emerged, consisting of the following officers:

Major CK Nzeogwu

Major A. Ademoyega

Major EA Ifeajuna

Major CI Anuforo

Major IH Chukwuka

Major D. Okafor

Captain O. Oji

Planning for the execution of the plot started in earnest in early November 1965 at a meeting of the inner circle which took place in Major Ifeajuna's house in Lagos.



source: SPECIAL BRANCH REPORT: Military Rebellion of 15th January 1966.

Forwarded By

Nowamagbe Omoigui

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