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Can Bakassi Peninsula Be Retrieved From Cameroon? - Politics (5) - Nairaland

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Re: Can Bakassi Peninsula Be Retrieved From Cameroon? by middlebelter(m): 2:28pm On Jan 12, 2020
Nigeria can arrange to buy it back from Cameron.
Re: Can Bakassi Peninsula Be Retrieved From Cameroon? by Nobody: 2:29pm On Jan 12, 2020
LabDNA:


See the way you are jubilating and ejaculating because your brother insulted and mocked dead Igbos. When the tables turn and you get hammered, hope you won't lament about 'Ibo hate' and start preaching 'tolerance and unity'? grin
Don't mind the cow. Nairaland is a place where the igbos are mocked a lot. But one day we will show them the screenshots when their roof is on fire. By then we will be The one to laugh last. Let them continue. People with solid plans don't make too much noise

5 Likes

Re: Can Bakassi Peninsula Be Retrieved From Cameroon? by kayusely70(m): 2:32pm On Jan 12, 2020
Gwilym:
Re Bakasi.

If there was a mistake, it was made by the Abacha administration's decison to go to the ICJ when the fact was that our case for retaining Bakassi was poor to begin with (see my previous post upthread).

What we should have done was held onto the Bakassi, while arguing for a second referendum/plebiscite..under UN auspices. (A longshot, with all sorts of possible consequences, but might have worked.)
He even rejected a team of brilliant lawyers, describing them NADECO members most members of the team he approved were incompetent just there for jamboree and free estacode.
Re: Can Bakassi Peninsula Be Retrieved From Cameroon? by frowland(m): 2:34pm On Jan 12, 2020
PrecisionFx:



Stop fleeing from the question.

Why did Nigeria give away bakassi peninsula to Cameroon?

Oga, I picked up the secret part of your comment and that's my concern but if you think you know, then it's no longer a secret, is it?
Re: Can Bakassi Peninsula Be Retrieved From Cameroon? by Nitah1: 2:38pm On Jan 12, 2020
giftedben:


Bakassi Peninsula was sold by General Yakubu Gowon to Cameroon in 1968. Yes, Yakubu Gowon in August 1968, had been requested by Ahmadu Ahidjo, the then President of Cameroon to sell part of Nigeria, especially the Bakassi Peninsula to Cameroon as the condition for supporting Nigeria to win the civil war against Biafra. Recall that before then, Bakassi was used as the outlet to the Atlantic to bring in food to the Easterners. The then Finance Minister, the very Obafemi Awolowo had asked Gowon: how long do you continue to feed your enemies?

Rattled by the question, Gowon, Murtala Mohammed, Olusegun Obasanjo, Martin Adamu, Theophilus Danjuma, Hassan Katsina with the tacit approval of Sultan Mohammed II and Ado Bayero, the Emir of Kano swung into action. Gowon wanting to score a point did not even discuss this with the then Supreme Military Counsel, though they quietly approved of it.

He contacted Alhamadu Ahidjo, and the Meeting was scheduled in Marua Town of Southern Cameroon in August 1968, that day Gowon, using stone, standing on Cameroon side “threw a stone” saying that wherever the stone landed should be given to Cameroun, west ward to the Peninsula. The stone landed at the very point of entry of the Peninsula called Reo Del Ree.

Hence, General Yakubu Gowon, on the advice of Obafemi Awolowo, used a stone to sell Bakassi Peninsula to Cameroon. Others is history.
I don't want to offend you but just a question.
Why the version of Gawaon sold Bakassi to Cameron was not argued at the Hague ❓
And why only igbos has the knowledge of this version ❓

1 Like

Re: Can Bakassi Peninsula Be Retrieved From Cameroon? by indoorlove(m): 2:41pm On Jan 12, 2020
Flyingngel:
Annexation of Bakassi always pain me. OBJ did not try at all.
International politics is more complex and fill with intrigue than the national one; but then he shld have put up a fight.
One day Calabar will get back that which belong to them.
His hands were tied. Nigeria as a country is surrounded by unfriendly francophone neighbours who are eager to see the disintegration of the country, for regional economic dominance . This and many others is what stop OBJ from putting up a good fight.
Re: Can Bakassi Peninsula Be Retrieved From Cameroon? by chrisxxx(m): 2:45pm On Jan 12, 2020
kettykings:


Nigeria sacrificed more than 400,000 soldiers to get back biafra why is Nigeria not pulling a trigger to get back oil rich bakassi peninsular
Come oh! Did Nigeria lose up to 400000 soldiers?
If this is true they actually never win the war.
Re: Can Bakassi Peninsula Be Retrieved From Cameroon? by semyman: 2:48pm On Jan 12, 2020
Only if obasanjo can return what he collected from Cameroon
Re: Can Bakassi Peninsula Be Retrieved From Cameroon? by livebyday(m): 2:52pm On Jan 12, 2020
tsdarkside:


that is a complete lie....!!
bakassi incedence happened years later after biafran civil war was over....!!

and nigerian goverment back then tried to challendge it....

bakassi was not givin to cameroon because of biafran war....!!

It was actually, He is right

Why do people on this forum argue about what they don't know with so much confidence?

undecided

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Re: Can Bakassi Peninsula Be Retrieved From Cameroon? by livebyday(m): 2:53pm On Jan 12, 2020
tck2000:
I have thought about something similar to that but mine is wanting Nigeria to buy part of Northern cameroon,Southern CAR,Northern DRC,Southern Chad,Southern Niger without their citizens joining Nigeria.Though it would be very expensive to undertake,Start industrialization,re-shuffle the masses by depopulating some populated state and creating up to 50 states.If you notice,most of the world power have a large expanse of land but Africa is a place where those who have ideas aren't in power and those who are in power have no idea.If Africa's intelligent & selfless men could attain power,at least 3 world powers would emerge from Africa.

The Rwandan president is amazing though
Re: Can Bakassi Peninsula Be Retrieved From Cameroon? by trilobite: 2:53pm On Jan 12, 2020
giftedben:


Bakassi Peninsula was sold by General Yakubu Gowon to Cameroon in 1968. Yes, Yakubu Gowon in August 1968, had been requested by Ahmadu Ahidjo, the then President of Cameroon to sell part of Nigeria, especially the Bakassi Peninsula to Cameroon as the condition for supporting Nigeria to win the civil war against Biafra. Recall that before then, Bakassi was used as the outlet to the Atlantic to bring in food to the Easterners. The then Finance Minister, the very Obafemi Awolowo had asked Gowon: how long do you continue to feed your enemies?

Rattled by the question, Gowon, Murtala Mohammed, Olusegun Obasanjo, Martin Adamu, Theophilus Danjuma, Hassan Katsina with the tacit approval of Sultan Mohammed II and Ado Bayero, the Emir of Kano swung into action. Gowon wanting to score a point did not even discuss this with the then Supreme Military Counsel, though they quietly approved of it.

He contacted Alhamadu Ahidjo, and the Meeting was scheduled in Marua Town of Southern Cameroon in August 1968, that day Gowon, using stone, standing on Cameroon side “threw a stone” saying that wherever the stone landed should be given to Cameroun, west ward to the Peninsula. The stone landed at the very point of entry of the Peninsula called Reo Del Ree.

Hence, General Yakubu Gowon, on the advice of Obafemi Awolowo, used a stone to sell Bakassi Peninsula to Cameroon. Others is history.

Very interesting!! Thanks.
Re: Can Bakassi Peninsula Be Retrieved From Cameroon? by tommy589(m): 2:58pm On Jan 12, 2020
Gwilym:




N.B I am not here to argue for or against Biafra or to label Gowon a good or bad leader....just to correct some mistakes...

Gowon and Bakassi
By Dr. Nowa Omoigui
To the Editor, Guardian Newspapers, Lagos, Nigeria
Sir
In a recent article titled "Gowon, the Queen and the stolen bronze", Reuben Abati raised
interesting questions about the alleged expropriation of an original piece of Benin
artwork from the National museum by General Gowon enroute to Britain in 1973 for a
State trip.
I understand the sentiment he projected and agree with the moral outrage over the
museum matter.
However, I was bothered by his attempt to link the issue of the Benin Bronze gift to the
Bakassi question. A journalist of Abati's stature ought to be much more familiar with the
truth about the Bakassi issue. The media should refrain from sensational publications
which can smear people unnecessarily and/or push government into an untenable
domestic political corner in dealing with complex external affairs issues.
Again and again, over the years (since the July 1975 coup) this false story has been
peddled around that Gowon gave away Bakassi to Cameroun as a gift. It is one of the
bigger lies of the modern Nigerian generation - a lie which has affected Nigeria's
approach over the years to the Bakassi dispute and has even unnecessarily cost the lives
of Nigerian soldiers.
Briefly, let me point out that:

1. Treaties between Britain and Germany dating back to 1913, official Nigerian regional
border delineation (eg The Legal Notice No. 126 of 1954), as well as British-Nigerian
and Nigerian-Cameroun exchange of diplomatic notes (1960-2) all clarified the matter
LONG BEFORE Gowon ever came to power in 1966.


2. Administrative maps of Nigeria have continued to reflect these realities, showing
Bakassi inside Cameroun, except the few that were reprinted in 1991 (during the
Babangida/Aikhomu regime) to try to reinvent the wheel. A courtesy visit to most
Government ministries in Nigeria, which often pin Nigerian maps up on walls, will
confirm this observation. Pay particular attention to the South-east corner and notice
where the maps claim Bakassi is.

3. During the Cameroon/Nigeria plebiscite of 1961, 21 polling stations were physically
located in the Bakassi peninsula. UN records clearly show that approximately 73% of the
people living there AT THAT TIME voted NOT to be administered under independent
Nigeria.
This is fairly easy to confirm either from the UN itself or Ambassador BA Clark
who was Deputy Permanent Secretary External Affairs in 1970/71.
The precise number
of polling booths and their exact locations is a matter of public record. It is fair to assume
that the vote was binding on future generations in the area. The question of whether it
could have been different - as was the case with Northern Cameroons - is one of the more
fascinating but unexamined aspects of Nigeria's history from that period. Whether the
vote meant that the people of Southern Cameroons should form their own country or be
fused with French Cameroun is another curious angle that has recently surfaced.



4. General Gowon was guided in his approach to the Nigeria-Cameroun border question
by a formal legal opinion prepared in 1970 by the late Teslim Elias, Nigeria's former
Attorney General and, incidentally, later a Judge of the ICJ. Elias prepared a well thought
out formal brief for then Commissioner for External Affairs, Okoi Arikpo, (who was of
South Eastern State origin), in which he clearly stated that Nigeria had no legal claim to
the Bakassi peninsula. Elias also advised that given the legal and historical precedents, as
well as the good relations between both countries, and the role Cameroun played during
the civil war, it was not wise, fair nor right for Nigeria to press the issue. This document
is available.



5. In 1969, even before the Elias opinion - and long before Gowon ever met with Ahidjo
to discuss the border, the office of the Geographer, US State Department, came to the
same conclusion about the Nigeria-Cameroun border. This document is also available.

6. Although some indigenes of the area, local politicians and misguided national
commentators have raised dust over the years, the real dispute between Nigeria and
Cameroun was not originally about the shrimp rich Bakassi peninsula per se. As a
consequence of language in the original Anglo-German Treaty, the dispute was about the
OFFSHORE border and precise delineation of the APPROACH CHANNEL to the
Calabar Port. Why? Because the treaty stated that the NAVIGABLE portion of the
channel was to lie wholly within Nigeria while the peninsula itself was to lie wholly
within Cameroun - even if the Akpa Yafe river was to change its course and flow into the
Rio del Rey. The issue, therefore, was to define the navigable channel. This became more
sensitive when oil was discovered offshore.

7. General Gowon relied on experts from the Federal Survey Department in the Ministry
of Works on what the offshore delineation of the approach channel to the Calabar Estuary
should be - up to the 3-mile limit. The Nigerian civil servant (not Gowon) who actually
decided the offshore eastern border of the navigable channel - which formed the basis of
what became known as the Coker-Ngo line - was Chief R. Oluwole Coker, Director of
Federal Surveys. Accompanied by a group of civil servants from then South Eastern
(later Cross-River) State, including SJ King who had previously served as Consul
General in the Nigerian mission at Buea, the Solicitor General and Permanent Secretary
for Justice of the South Eastern State (Mr. Ukot) at that time was party to it and cosigned
the declaration. It is not, however, clear whether the Permanent Secretary of the Federal
Ministry of Works, Gray Longe, or the Federal Commissioner, Femi Okunnu, were aware
of the details. The Governor of the South Eastern State, Col. UJ Esuene was certainly in
the delegation, as was Colonel Musa Usman of the North Eastern State. Mr. U Ekaette,
now Secretary to the Obasanjo government, was also there as one of Gowon's key
assistants. Surveyor Adeleye was in attendance.



What Gowon and Ahidjo did was to sign on either side of the Coker-Ngo line. When
Ahidjo asked Gowon to draw the line, Gowon in turn turned to Chief Coker and asked
him to define it. Gowon did not order anyone to give anything away to Cameroun, nor
did he do so himself. The specifics of this line were certainly previously fiercely debated
internally within the Survey Department at a technical level, and there were some who
felt it ought to have been further toward the Cameroun side, but it is wrong to suggest
that General Yakubu Gowon "gave away Bakassi". The issue of Bakassi itself was sealed
by the Ministry of Justice legal opinion, supported by Okoi Arikpo of External Affairs,
based on decades of legal and political precedent. If the people of the Bakassi peninsula
had either boycotted the Cameroon plebiscite altogether or had voted along with the rest
of Southern Cameroons to stay in Nigeria, the matter would have been much less
complicated - although it could still have been an internal border problem between states.
To compound issues, the late Alhaji Malabu, one time Nigerian Ambassador to
Cameroun used to say some people in the area often paid taxes to both countries. There
are unconfirmed reports that some of the local residents also kept taking part in voter
registration and elections in Nigeria AFTER voting overwelmingly to leave!


8. In reaching an agreement with Ahidjo about the Coker-Ngo "navigable channel"
border, the question of whether Gowon had the authority to do so without subsequent
ratification by the SMC was also the subject of another legal opinion by the Nigerian
Ministry of Justice of that era. Gowon's authority (as confirmed by the Justice Ministry)
derived from a decree originally promulgated by the Ironsi regime. It will be recalled that
the Supreme Military Council - under this decree - was only an advisory body to the
Head of State. Neither Ironsi nor Gowon after him required legal ratification for anything
from the SMC. This is why, for example, Ironsi was able to promulgate the unification
decree of 1966 without formal SMC approval.
Gowon's powers after July 29, 1966, (in continuation of Ironsi's powers) were the subject
of discussions at Aburi in January 1967, and led to the controversial Decree No. 8 of
1967. This decree was never, however, formally codified because Ojukwu rejected it in
the run down to the outbreak of the civil war in July 1967. It will be recalled that in late
May 1967 Gowon declared a State of Emergency and assumed full powers after the


Ojukwu-appointed Eastern Regional Assembly mandated Ojukwu to declare secession. In
1969, after Colonel Obasanjo refused to cooperate with Colonel Muhammed to delay the
end of the civil war in order to force Gowon to "share power" with other officers, there
was no further opportunity (or interest) after the war to change the powers assumed in the
original Ironsi decree. The decree and Gowon's "supreme commander" like legal status
was thus in effect when the Nigerian-Cameroun Boundary commission was doing its
work in the early seventies.

9. When Brigadier Muhammed came to power in July 1975 he initially wanted to retain
this "sole power" arrangement but was overruled by the middle ranking officers
(Yar'Adua, Garba, Abdul Mohammed, Taiwo etc) who carried out the coup. This is why
he had to agree to share power with Brigadiers Obasanjo and Danjuma in a trioka. This is
also why the new decree reconstituting the new SMC in 1975 (after Gowon was
overthrown) enhanced the authority of the SMC and made it more than an advisory
council. It was in the context of this newly enhanced power for the post-July 1975 SMC
that questions were raised (retrospectively) about Gowon's authority to sign the Coker-
Ngo line. However, AT THE TIME he did, Gowon was well within his legal powers no
matter what we may feel today. However, whether the civil servants who advised him to
accept the precise location of the Coker-Ngo line, advised appropriately, is a different
issue. Whether ANY military government can sign ANY agreement whatsoever for the
country is another. The latter is a fundamental point that affects many laws, agreements
and treaties signed by Nigerian governments during the long period of military rule.


10. The sensitive question of arbitrary colonial borders in Africa affects many countries.
There are Yoruba speaking communities which are split between Nigerian and Benin
republic. There are Ewe speaking communities split between Ghana and Togo. The
question of communities split between Nigeria and Cameroun is unfortunate but not
unique. Nigeria, in ratifying instruments which established the OAU in 1963, agreed to
respect the inviolability of colonial borders. This was reflected in the 1964 OAU Cairo
Declaration on Border Disputes among African States.


11. Very interestingly, it came to light during the Buhari regime that several years
AFTER Gowon left office the precise location of the Coker-Ngo line and the navigation
beacons for approaching the Calabar Estuary were shifted even further westwards toward
Nigeria making our case worse. This shift (which was done either during the Obasanjo or
Shagari regimes) may have been done without authority or proper research by the
Nigerian Ports Authority - another consequence of the frequent turn-overs of
governments in Nigeria and lack of collaboration between various pre and post-coup
regimes. Or perhaps it was done to create a reason to award a contract to dredge the area.
Who knows?

12. I humbly advise Reuben Abati (and others) to review original documents or talk
directly to those civil servants WHO WERE THERE AT THAT TIME before he (and
others) write further on the Bakassi matter, confusing Nigerian policy makers and the
public and potentially exposing our soldiers to unnecessary risk. Some of those in the
know are dead but there are others who are not.


13. Like other Nigerians, I hope the judgement of the ICJ helps to settle this issue or
create a framework for bilateral and trilateral discussions to resolve the dispute - for the
sake of those who live there and for the sake of the rest of us. I am also eager to see how
the ICJ reacts to the interesting arguments put forward by Chief Richard Akinjide and his
legal team.


14. However, in the meantime, journalists should stop repeating the lie that Gowon gave
away the Bakassi peninsula. He may have given away an original piece of Benin Bronze
to the Queen of England. But he did not give away Bakassi to Cameroun.

Nowa Omoigui
Columbia, South Carolina


The truth of the matter is, Bakassi never did belong to Nigeria, or Biafra, nor did Gowon give it away. Enough of partial truths.
https://www.nairaland.com/161768/did-gowon-give-bakassi-cameroon

To OP...we cannot get Bakassi back. It's gone. Except by war.

Thank you
Re: Can Bakassi Peninsula Be Retrieved From Cameroon? by Mrquote: 3:02pm On Jan 12, 2020
tribalmall:
What is there to hide that is not exposed already ?! Is it the fact that 2 million foolish Igbos have to perish cos they believe in the foolishness of Ojukwu or what else is there to hide ?!

information about history is important, I don't think you have any right to call him a foolish man. When some one kill your brother, folder because you want peace.
Re: Can Bakassi Peninsula Be Retrieved From Cameroon? by Balyz: 3:11pm On Jan 12, 2020
giftedben:


[s]Bakassi Peninsula was sold by General Yakubu Gowon to Cameroon in 1968. Yes, Yakubu Gowon in August 1968, had been requested by Ahmadu Ahidjo, the then President of Cameroon to sell part of Nigeria, especially the Bakassi Peninsula to Cameroon as the condition for supporting Nigeria to win the civil war against Biafra. Recall that before then, Bakassi was used as the outlet to the Atlantic to bring in food to the Easterners. The then Finance Minister, the very Obafemi Awolowo had asked Gowon: how long do you continue to feed your enemies?

Rattled by the question, Gowon, Murtala Mohammed, Olusegun Obasanjo, Martin Adamu, Theophilus Danjuma, Hassan Katsina with the tacit approval of Sultan Mohammed II and Ado Bayero, the Emir of Kano swung into action. Gowon wanting to score a point did not even discuss this with the then Supreme Military Counsel, though they quietly approved of it.

He contacted Alhamadu Ahidjo, and the Meeting was scheduled in Marua Town of Southern Cameroon in August 1968, that day Gowon, using stone, standing on Cameroon side “threw a stone” saying that wherever the stone landed should be given to Cameroun, west ward to the Peninsula. The stone landed at the very point of entry of the Peninsula called Reo Del Ree.

Hence, General Yakubu Gowon, on the advice of Obafemi Awolowo, used a stone to sell Bakassi Peninsula to Cameroon. Others is history. [/s]
100% lies

1 Like

Re: Can Bakassi Peninsula Be Retrieved From Cameroon? by DAYOODS(m): 3:17pm On Jan 12, 2020
giftedben:


Bakassi Peninsula was sold by General Yakubu Gowon to Cameroon in 1968. Yes, Yakubu Gowon in August 1968, had been requested by Ahmadu Ahidjo, the then President of Cameroon to sell part of Nigeria, especially the Bakassi Peninsula to Cameroon as the condition for supporting Nigeria to win the civil war against Biafra. Recall that before then, Bakassi was used as the outlet to the Atlantic to bring in food to the Easterners. The then Finance Minister, the very Obafemi Awolowo had asked Gowon: how long do you continue to feed your enemies?

Rattled by the question, Gowon, Murtala Mohammed, Olusegun Obasanjo, Martin Adamu, Theophilus Danjuma, Hassan Katsina with the tacit approval of Sultan Mohammed II and Ado Bayero, the Emir of Kano swung into action. Gowon wanting to score a point did not even discuss this with the then Supreme Military Counsel, though they quietly approved of it.

He contacted Alhamadu Ahidjo, and the Meeting was scheduled in Marua Town of Southern Cameroon in August 1968, that day Gowon, using stone, standing on Cameroon side “threw a stone” saying that wherever the stone landed should be given to Cameroun, west ward to the Peninsula. The stone landed at the very point of entry of the Peninsula called Reo Del Ree.

Hence, General Yakubu Gowon, on the advice of Obafemi Awolowo, used a stone to sell Bakassi Peninsula to Cameroon. Others is history.

Bros,Gowon threw stone, which History book did you read?

1 Like

Re: Can Bakassi Peninsula Be Retrieved From Cameroon? by Antoeni(m): 3:17pm On Jan 12, 2020
Atiku will not Allow that to Happen
Re: Can Bakassi Peninsula Be Retrieved From Cameroon? by chewwie(m): 3:20pm On Jan 12, 2020
BeachLife:
Africa is an ethnic continent just like Europe and Asia. Why would anyone conceive the horrible idea of buying up an ethnic national land, and not only that ,expel the natives ?
Nigeria is a colonial entity. Calabar(Akwacross) Yorubaland,Igboland,Hausaland,etc. are ethnic nations like Sweden,Norway or Japan, not like The US,Canada,Australia,New Zealand etc.
.
Same thing I've been saying for YEARS! Europe is the strongest continent on earth due to the homogeneity of her nations. All forms of heterogeneous cohabitation FAILED, from the British empire, to the Roman empire then the Ottoman empire.
Imagine an Africa where the Fulanis have their own nation, same as the Yorubas, Igbos, Hausas, Zulus, etc. We'd succeed! The Colonialists knew this.

1 Like

Re: Can Bakassi Peninsula Be Retrieved From Cameroon? by Armaggedon: 3:21pm On Jan 12, 2020
otuekong1:

Oga,Bakassi doesn't fall under the jurisdiction of Biafra but it can be retrieved if south western Cameroon (Anglophone) successfully secede
I don't have much problem if it falls under an independent ambazonia. Biafra will co-operate with ambazonia than Nigeria.
Re: Can Bakassi Peninsula Be Retrieved From Cameroon? by anzaku47(m): 3:22pm On Jan 12, 2020
giftedben:


Bakassi Peninsula was sold by General Yakubu Gowon to Cameroon in 1968. Yes, Yakubu Gowon in August 1968, had been requested by Ahmadu Ahidjo, the then President of Cameroon to sell part of Nigeria, especially the Bakassi Peninsula to Cameroon as the condition for supporting Nigeria to win the civil war against Biafra. Recall that before then, Bakassi was used as the outlet to the Atlantic to bring in food to the Easterners. The then Finance Minister, the very Obafemi Awolowo had asked Gowon: how long do you continue to feed your enemies?

Rattled by the question, Gowon, Murtala Mohammed, Olusegun Obasanjo, Martin Adamu, Theophilus Danjuma, Hassan Katsina with the tacit approval of Sultan Mohammed II and Ado Bayero, the Emir of Kano swung into action. Gowon wanting to score a point did not even discuss this with the then Supreme Military Counsel, though they quietly approved of it.

He contacted Alhamadu Ahidjo, and the Meeting was scheduled in Marua Town of Southern Cameroon in August 1968, that day Gowon, using stone, standing on Cameroon side “threw a stone” saying that wherever the stone landed should be given to Cameroun, west ward to the Peninsula. The stone landed at the very point of entry of the Peninsula called Reo Del Ree.

Hence, General Yakubu Gowon, on the advice of Obafemi Awolowo, used a stone to sell Bakassi Peninsula to Cameroon. Others is history.
I love history.. Thank you Historian
Re: Can Bakassi Peninsula Be Retrieved From Cameroon? by chewwie(m): 3:22pm On Jan 12, 2020
Why bother? Oil rich oil rich. The whole country is oil rich, how has it improved our lives? It's just a piece of land.
Re: Can Bakassi Peninsula Be Retrieved From Cameroon? by Nobody: 3:25pm On Jan 12, 2020
-

1 Like

Re: Can Bakassi Peninsula Be Retrieved From Cameroon? by Nobody: 3:29pm On Jan 12, 2020
tsdarkside:


that is a complete lie....!!
bakassi incedence happened years later after biafran civil war was over....!!

and nigerian goverment back then tried to challendge it....

bakassi was not givin to cameroon because of biafran war....!!
the dispute over bakassi began many years before the war. originally between the French and English. During the war, Nigeria quietly ceded the territory to Cameron. Why? it is claimed that France supported biafra -which is a misnomer. Cameroon would have served as a training and logistics point for the biafran Forces. Nigeria wouldn't have been able to invade Cameroon to rout out the biafrans, while the biafrans would get arms, mercenaries and other support from Cameroon .To forestall the above, Nigeria surrendered bakassi.to ensure Cameroon helps in a future war, obasanjo allowed the judgement to stand.
Re: Can Bakassi Peninsula Be Retrieved From Cameroon? by freetheking: 3:33pm On Jan 12, 2020
tsdarkside:


that is a complete lie....!!
bakassi incedence happened years later after biafran civil war was over....!!

and nigerian goverment back then tried to challendge it....

bakassi was not givin to cameroon because of biafran war....!!
If not because of camaroon helping Nigeria to fight Biafra war,then tell us what you know about it and stop quoting someone who knows about it.
Re: Can Bakassi Peninsula Be Retrieved From Cameroon? by kiddkash(m): 3:35pm On Jan 12, 2020
Flyingngel:
Annexation of Bakassi always pain me. OBJ did not try at all.
International politics is more complex and fill with intrigue than the national one; but then he shld have put up a fight.
One day Calabar will get back that which belong to them.
you were obviously born in 1990's you weren't born during the time of the civil war
read chinua achebe there was once a country. you could learn
Re: Can Bakassi Peninsula Be Retrieved From Cameroon? by Geonigga(m): 3:37pm On Jan 12, 2020
Is not possible for the Bakassi Penusula land to be retrieved back to Nigeria in view of the international court of justice judgment ceasing the land to Cameroon and the time for Nigerian Govt to appeal the judgement has also elapsed long ago since 2010.

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