Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,209,333 members, 8,005,663 topics. Date: Monday, 18 November 2024 at 09:18 AM

What Is Wrong With Biafra Quest To Secede? How Far Can They Go. Nneka Writes - Politics - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / What Is Wrong With Biafra Quest To Secede? How Far Can They Go. Nneka Writes (926 Views)

Amotekun: Fayemi Says South-West Has No Plans To Secede / People In Jewish Attire Storm Umuahia Streets With Biafra Insignia (Photos) / Northern Youths Write Osinbajo, Beg Him To Allow Igbo Go With Biafra (2) (3) (4)

(1) (Reply) (Go Down)

What Is Wrong With Biafra Quest To Secede? How Far Can They Go. Nneka Writes by Built2last: 9:28pm On May 30, 2017
Nneka Aroh writes

I was speaking with a very young pharmacist from the South East yesterday. I advanced the restructuring/true Fiscal Federalism as what I believe is the way out of Nigeria's muddle. He would not buy it.
"Forget it ma'am. It's better we just go. Give us ten-fifteen years and see how Biafra would be transformed." He spoke with conviction. His eyes shone with what I thought was longing. "Just forget it. There is no need dragging this thing with them," he concluded.
A good number of Igbos, and I dare add, other young Nigerians, are totally not understanding Nigeria as it is right now. It is not enough to make dismissive remarks like "They were not even born when the war happened." Or remarks like "They don't understand what they're asking for."
Make them understand. That is, if you understand what you're asking them to understand. If it makes sense to you. It even gets more annoying when you hear the older ones, the actors and spectators of the unfortunate war, urge the younger ones to learn from history.
According to Osibanjo, "experience is the best answer for a fool. History is a much gentler teacher.'
I agree.
But comments like that could even draw the ire of the young ones who have today been denied history classes in school. Who keeps a people ignorant of their history? But even more annoying is the fact that those who urge this learning have themselves not only failed to learn from experience, but have bluntly refused to learn from history, the much gentler teacher.
And what is there to learn? What is there to understand?
That a boy from Anambra State aspiring to get some education at the prestigious Unity schools has to score about 139 marks in the entrance examination while his counterpart, perhaps even his classmate or neighbour from Zamfara State would only have to score 4 marks. And that it takes an even weirder turn when they're done with school, at which point the Zamfara boy would have over 80% more chance at a federal job than the 80% more studious boy from Anambra. How do you explain that to a young Nigerian so that he may understand?
How can they understand that a State like Kano, created at about the same time as one like Lagos, has about 44 local govt areas while Lagos State has a paltry 20 constitutionally recognized local govt areas. Bear in mind that Kano state has long been sub divided into two states of Kano and Jigawa. Jigawa alone has 27 LGAs of its own. You can say that the old Kano State has 71 LGAs while Lagos still lags behind with 20. And that the entire South East of five states has only about 94 local govt areas? Did it strike you that the South East is the only region still dawdling with five states? It would not have mattered of course if the National cake wasn't shared on the basis of local governments. Only if it was baked on that same basis. How would any young person without a brain for understanding twisted things get this?
How can they understand that in the present Govt, the entire South East has no representation in the security body of the country. So when the security chiefs sit to discuss security, the primary role of any govt, there is nobody from the entire SE region in attendance. How can anyone understand this.
How can even a gentle teacher make anyone understand that a South South youth would die for daring to steal crude oil from what used to be his fertile and arable farmland, while his Northern counterpart can freely mine minerals from his backyard. We only get to hear anything about it when lead poisoning begins to ravage communities.
How do you understand that we have Petroleum Equalization Fund which ensures that petroleum products get to the people in the North at the same price at which it gets to those in the South but we do not have Tomato Equalization fund or Carrot Equalization Fund to trim the cost for people in the South? Break it down for me so that I may understand since I didn't witness the war.
How do you break down the brazen massacres of Igbos, Christians and other innocent Nigerians any time the North wakes up from the wrong side of the bed? Or when an artist draws a denigrating sketch of Mohammed in countries some of the victims have never heard of? Or when a group of girls decide to bare their bodies in beauty pageants? Or when a man cannot win elections? Or when a farmer must till his farmland? Or just about when anything... Just unbelievable impunity. And no one ever gets justice.
But we can start by explaining how Katsina State alone just got allotted more slots that the entire SS, than the entire SW, than the entire SE, than the entire N.Central in the ongoing (or is it completed?) recruitment by the DSS.
And a host of flustering matters.
So what is it you want History to help you teach? That the oppressed should stay calm and "ask nicely" like Obasanjo put it? They should ask nicely for their share of a piece of cake jointly baked by all? They should treat Nigeria with love like Obasanjo again suggested. It shouldn't matter that they get only rebuffs in return. I don't blame Obasanjo. It's probably the way he knows love and reconciliation...one sided. Any wonder his daughter would literally disown him publicly?
I listened to all the speeches made at the Biafra@50 event. They were all rich in flowing grammar, beaming with rhetorics but glaringly bare on commitment. Nobody but Nwodo dared point a way out. Osibanjo's speech had no mention of restructuring, something I can bet my last finger that he believes in. It would seem like we don't want to find a way out of our predicament yet.
Make no mistake, the clamour for Biafra is getting more tumultuous by the day that I fear that the voices of some of us preaching 'restructure' may soon be drowned.
And this house may come crashing on us all.

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: What Is Wrong With Biafra Quest To Secede? How Far Can They Go. Nneka Writes by Nobody: 9:34pm On May 30, 2017
.

3 Likes

Re: What Is Wrong With Biafra Quest To Secede? How Far Can They Go. Nneka Writes by emerazz(m): 9:41pm On May 30, 2017
go and ask d south Sudanese how far, then come back lets talk...
Re: What Is Wrong With Biafra Quest To Secede? How Far Can They Go. Nneka Writes by DerideGull(m): 9:42pm On May 30, 2017
Built2last:
Nneka Aroh writes

I was speaking with a very young pharmacist from the South East yesterday. I advanced the restructuring/true Fiscal Federalism as what I believe is the way out of Nigeria's muddle. He would not buy it.
"Forget it ma'am. It's better we just go. Give us ten-fifteen years and see how Biafra would be transformed." He spoke with conviction. His eyes shone with what I thought was longing. "Just forget it. There is no need dragging this thing with them," he concluded.
A good number of Igbos, and I dare add, other young Nigerians, are totally not understanding Nigeria as it is right now. It is not enough to make dismissive remarks like "They were not even born when the war happened." Or remarks like "They don't understand what they're asking for."
Make them understand. That is, if you understand what you're asking them to understand. If it makes sense to you. It even gets more annoying when you hear the older ones, the actors and spectators of the unfortunate war, urge the younger ones to learn from history.
According to Osibanjo, "experience is the best answer for a fool. History is a much gentler teacher.'
I agree.
But comments like that could even draw the ire of the young ones who have today been denied history classes in school. Who keeps a people ignorant of their history? But even more annoying is the fact that those who urge this learning have themselves not only failed to learn from experience, but have bluntly refused to learn from history, the much gentler teacher.
And what is there to learn? What is there to understand?
That a boy from Anambra State aspiring to get some education at the prestigious Unity schools has to score about 139 marks in the entrance examination while his counterpart, perhaps even his classmate or neighbour from Zamfara State would only have to score 4 marks. And that it takes an even weirder turn when they're done with school, at which point the Zamfara boy would have over 80% more chance at a federal job than the 80% more studious boy from Anambra. How do you explain that to a young Nigerian so that he may understand?
How can they understand that a State like Kano, created at about the same time as one like Lagos, has about 44 local govt areas while Lagos State has a paltry 20 constitutionally recognized local govt areas. Bear in mind that Kano state has long been sub divided into two states of Kano and Jigawa. Jigawa alone has 27 LGAs of its own. You can say that the old Kano State has 71 LGAs while Lagos still lags behind with 20. And that the entire South East of five states has only about 94 local govt areas? Did it strike you that the South East is the only region still dawdling with five states? It would not have mattered of course if the National cake wasn't shared on the basis of local governments. Only if it was baked on that same basis. How would any young person without a brain for understanding twisted things get this?
How can they understand that in the present Govt, the entire South East has no representation in the security body of the country. So when the security chiefs sit to discuss security, the primary role of any govt, there is nobody from the entire SE region in attendance. How can anyone understand this.
How can even a gentle teacher make anyone understand that a South South youth would die for daring to steal crude oil from what used to be his fertile and arable farmland, while his Northern counterpart can freely mine minerals from his backyard. We only get to hear anything about it when lead poisoning begins to ravage communities.
How do you understand that we have Petroleum Equalization Fund which ensures that petroleum products get to the people in the North at the same price at which it gets to those in the South but we do not have Tomato Equalization fund or Carrot Equalization Fund to trim the cost for people in the South? Break it down for me so that I may understand since I didn't witness the war.
How do you break down the brazen massacres of Igbos, Christians and other innocent Nigerians any time the North wakes up from the wrong side of the bed? Or when an artist draws a denigrating sketch of Mohammed in countries some of the victims have never heard of? Or when a group of girls decide to bare their bodies in beauty pageants? Or when a man cannot win elections? Or when a farmer must till his farmland? Or just about when anything... Just unbelievable impunity. And no one ever gets justice.
But we can start by explaining how Katsina State alone just got allotted more slots that the entire SS, than the entire SW, than the entire SE, than the entire N.Central in the ongoing (or is it completed?) recruitment by the DSS.
And a host of flustering matters.
So what is it you want History to help you teach? That the oppressed should stay calm and "ask nicely" like Obasanjo put it? They should ask nicely for their share of a piece of cake jointly baked by all? They should treat Nigeria with love like Obasanjo again suggested. It shouldn't matter that they get only rebuffs in return. I don't blame Obasanjo. It's probably the way he knows love and reconciliation...one sided. Any wonder his daughter would literally disown him publicly?
I listened to all the speeches made at the Biafra@50 event. They were all rich in flowing grammar, beaming with rhetorics but glaringly bare on commitment. Nobody but Nwodo dared point a way out. Osibanjo's speech had no mention of restructuring, something I can bet my last finger that he believes in. It would seem like we don't want to find a way out of our predicament yet.
Make no mistake, the clamour for Biafra is getting more tumultuous by the day that I fear that the voices of some of us preaching 'restructure' may soon be drowned.
And this house may come crashing on us all.

What in goodness are you restructuring? When did the so-called restructuring become the sources of unity? I do not believe in short measure such as the idiotic restructuring or false federalism. I had rather have a country different from Nigeria and the nation will decide what form of government to embrace. Who said the so-called false federalism shall be the caretaker of idiocy that has grandmother in Nigeria?

1 Like

Re: What Is Wrong With Biafra Quest To Secede? How Far Can They Go. Nneka Writes by donsmall94(m): 9:43pm On May 30, 2017
Where dose NCAN
Re: What Is Wrong With Biafra Quest To Secede? How Far Can They Go. Nneka Writes by ESDKING: 9:43pm On May 30, 2017
All lovers of freedom must get their heart desires, all haters of freedom will keep sniffing @bokis @ss even when abokis treat them like shiiiit.



SLAVERY IS VERY BAD.

1 Like

Re: What Is Wrong With Biafra Quest To Secede? How Far Can They Go. Nneka Writes by Nobody: 9:53pm On May 30, 2017
grin grin
Re: What Is Wrong With Biafra Quest To Secede? How Far Can They Go. Nneka Writes by Customer80: 9:57pm On May 30, 2017
emerazz:
go and ask d south Sudanese how far, then come back lets talk...
what if we ask Czech Republic and Slovakia? Why must it be South Sudan only?

10 Likes

Re: What Is Wrong With Biafra Quest To Secede? How Far Can They Go. Nneka Writes by modik(m): 9:58pm On May 30, 2017
Suffice it to say that Nigeria needs Igbo badly to survive.

Does Igbo Need Nigeria badly to survive?

Honest response pls.

1 Like

Re: What Is Wrong With Biafra Quest To Secede? How Far Can They Go. Nneka Writes by Trut(m): 9:59pm On May 30, 2017
Customer80:
what if we ask Czech Republic and Slovakia? Why must it be South Sudan only?

Good question

7 Likes 1 Share

Re: What Is Wrong With Biafra Quest To Secede? How Far Can They Go. Nneka Writes by EmeeNaka: 10:02pm On May 30, 2017
emerazz:
go and ask d south Sudanese how far, then come back lets talk...
I will instead tell you about Malaysia versus Singapore, India vs Pakistan, the Soviet Union. Don't you like learning anything from them?

7 Likes

Re: What Is Wrong With Biafra Quest To Secede? How Far Can They Go. Nneka Writes by ecokebaram44(m): 10:03pm On May 30, 2017
Hmm oya nigeria govt come and answer
Re: What Is Wrong With Biafra Quest To Secede? How Far Can They Go. Nneka Writes by Built2last: 10:06pm On May 30, 2017
emerazz:
go and ask d south Sudanese how far, then come back lets talk...

Expand your mind. Over 30 countries have either seceded, emerged through referendum or broken into pieces.

All of them is not like South Sudan.

You just need to travel out a little and see countries who took their destinies in their hands and they are mostly landlocked

Let me help you.


March 21, 1990: Namibia became independent of South Africa. Previously, Namibia was known as South West Africa when it was a German territory.

January 1, 1993: The Czech Republic and Slovakia became independent nations when Czechoslovakia dissolved.

May 25, 1993: Eritrea was a part of Ethiopia but seceded and gained independence.

October 1, 1994: Palau was part of the Trust Territory of Pacific Islands (administered by the United States) and gained independence as a former colony.

May 20, 2002: East Timor (Timor-Leste) declared independence from Portugal in 1975 but did not become independent from Indonesia until 2002.

June 3, 2006: Montenegro was part of Serbia and Montenegro (also known as Yugoslavia) but gained independence after a referendum. Two days later, Serbia became its own entity after Montenegro split.

February 17, 2008: Kosovo unilaterally declared independence from Serbia. The representatives of the Kosovo people unanimously agreed the country would be independent of​ Serbia despite eleven of the Serbia minority boycotting this.

July 9, 2011: South Sudan peacefully seceded from Sudan following a January 2011 referendum. Sudan itself was the first to recognize South Sudan and did so one day early.

2 Likes

Re: What Is Wrong With Biafra Quest To Secede? How Far Can They Go. Nneka Writes by Aufbauh(m): 10:22pm On May 30, 2017
They can have their Utopia country anytime who cares, but surely not in Buhari's regime. cheesy
Re: What Is Wrong With Biafra Quest To Secede? How Far Can They Go. Nneka Writes by Nature8(m): 10:24pm On May 30, 2017
emerazz:
go and ask d south Sudanese how far, then come back lets talk...





undecided
Re: What Is Wrong With Biafra Quest To Secede? How Far Can They Go. Nneka Writes by conductor2: 10:28pm On May 30, 2017
Customer80:
what if we ask Czech Republic and Slovakia? Why must it be South Sudan only?
You don't expect a man who has made up his mind to be an armed robber to change. Leave him alone, he's telling you the countries Nigeria is following their template. cheesy

4 Likes

Re: What Is Wrong With Biafra Quest To Secede? How Far Can They Go. Nneka Writes by emerazz(m): 12:33am On May 31, 2017
Built2last:


Expand your mind. Over 30 countries have either seceded, emerged through referendum or broken into pieces.

All of them is not like South Sudan.

You just need to travel out a little and see countries who took their destinies in their hands and they are mostly landlocked

Let me help you.


March 21, 1990: Namibia became independent of South Africa. Previously, Namibia was known as South West Africa when it was a German territory.

January 1, 1993: The Czech Republic and Slovakia became independent nations when Czechoslovakia dissolved.

May 25, 1993: Eritrea was a part of Ethiopia but seceded and gained independence.

October 1, 1994: Palau was part of the Trust Territory of Pacific Islands (administered by the United States) and gained independence as a former colony.

May 20, 2002: East Timor (Timor-Leste) declared independence from Portugal in 1975 but did not become independent from Indonesia until 2002.

June 3, 2006: Montenegro was part of Serbia and Montenegro (also known as Yugoslavia) but gained independence after a referendum. Two days later, Serbia became its own entity after Montenegro split.

February 17, 2008: Kosovo unilaterally declared independence from Serbia. The representatives of the Kosovo people unanimously agreed the country would be independent of​ Serbia despite eleven of the Serbia minority boycotting this.

July 9, 2011: South Sudan peacefully seceded from Sudan following a January 2011 referendum. Sudan itself was the first to recognize South Sudan and did so one day early.




Nw I'll urge y to go and read abt all dis succession.. ull notice one thing... the people carrying out the succession had one leader and one movement and dey cooperated to archive it.. nw look at d case of dis ur Biafra..THE IPOB ARE NOT IN SUPPORT OF D MASSOB THE NDIGBO CHIEFTAIN ARE NOT IN SUPPORT OF D IPOB THE MASSOB ARE NOT IN SUPPORT OF D NIDIGBO CHIEFTAIN THE MASSOP EVEN DENIED NNAMDI KANU WHEN I JAIL SAYING THE DONT KNW HIM OR WAT HIS STRUGGLE PROPOUNDS THE NAIJADELTA ARE NOT WITH ANY OF DEM IPOB,MASSOB,NDIGBO OR BIAFRA AT LARGE..

MY BRODA WERE DO U WANT TO START FROM.. EVERYBODY FORMING HIS OWN FOR HIS OWN SELFISH INTEREST..

(1) (Reply)

How Nigeria Military Escaped Ipob!massob / These Photos Are Trending Online - How Politicians Behave If They Want Your Vote / PDP Suffers Huge Setback In River State As Over 2000 Defect To APC

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 60
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.