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Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / Ohanaeze urges Southeast residents To Ignore IPOB’s Sit-At-Home Order (15597 Views)
Igbo Traders In Port-Harcourt Auto Market Ignore IPOB Sit-At-Home (Video, Pics) / Sit-at-home Order: Enugu Residents Ignore IPOB / Concede VP Slot To Southwest, George Urges Southeast (2) (3) (4)
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Re: Ohanaeze urges Southeast residents To Ignore IPOB’s Sit-At-Home Order by Okoroawusa: 8:53am On Aug 07, 2021 |
If dem like make dem siddon for everyday of the week. It's like hunger strike. Body go tell you 3 Likes |
Re: Ohanaeze urges Southeast residents To Ignore IPOB’s Sit-At-Home Order by Sharpsecret01: 9:07am On Aug 07, 2021 |
Aboks:ipob has spoken and ohaneze too have spoken....sit back relax and see who the masses will listen to....i thought u guys say ipob is not in control of the east....as for me and my family a day or two in hunger is not too much for my mnk...i will sit if i die of hunger is no ones business...but by the time we finish the sit at home...a dollar will be 5000 naira...u are not ashamed...ur president went to london and was hidding from his people..he couldnt come out to address them...he is only safe in nigeria where bokoharam bandits and herdsmen run the show...ur president is only safe in a terrorist country nigeria...make him go london or u.s and waka anyhow 4 Likes |
Re: Ohanaeze urges Southeast residents To Ignore IPOB’s Sit-At-Home Order by Commentor: 9:11am On Aug 07, 2021 |
shugamummy: So na only joke una dey do since? Una never serious then. |
Re: Ohanaeze urges Southeast residents To Ignore IPOB’s Sit-At-Home Order by Emergingnation(m): 9:11am On Aug 07, 2021 |
Okoroawusa:says Typical Aboki, Renown unity beggar ! They're saying they don't want to be part of this contraptions again, what's the problem about that Married isn't by force, self determination is a right ! Force marriage can never work... your Fulani government should stop forcing people against their well... 7 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Ohanaeze urges Southeast residents To Ignore IPOB’s Sit-At-Home Order by Aboks(m): 9:12am On Aug 07, 2021 |
Sharpsecret01: wetin concern us 1 Like |
Re: Ohanaeze urges Southeast residents To Ignore IPOB’s Sit-At-Home Order by Coronavirus1: 9:12am On Aug 07, 2021 |
IPOB is a government of his own by giving orders and people obey wonderful. 1 Like 1 Share |
Re: Ohanaeze urges Southeast residents To Ignore IPOB’s Sit-At-Home Order by Nobody: 9:18am On Aug 07, 2021 |
Emergingnation: parasites cant let go of there host- Ihe nka gwuru m Ike . 1 Like 1 Share
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Re: Ohanaeze urges Southeast residents To Ignore IPOB’s Sit-At-Home Order by showafrica(m): 9:24am On Aug 07, 2021 |
agulion: Lol, this one go touch some people for liver. If Mohammed promise them 72 virgins, they will swallow it hook line and sinker. Ordinary one day sit at home by ipob Mohammed, na him everybody dey para. Ohaneze ndi oshi and afonja ndi ama 3 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Ohanaeze urges Southeast residents To Ignore IPOB’s Sit-At-Home Order by EbenezerTriumph: 9:25am On Aug 07, 2021 |
[s] shugamummy:[/s] dumb ass.. or you coward forgot what happened on September 14 2017 when his home was raided and you cowards abandoned him and Usain bolted? Keep chest beating online |
Re: Ohanaeze urges Southeast residents To Ignore IPOB’s Sit-At-Home Order by EbenezerTriumph: 9:27am On Aug 07, 2021 |
mzBEAM:shut up Kanu zombie |
Re: Ohanaeze urges Southeast residents To Ignore IPOB’s Sit-At-Home Order by EbenezerTriumph: 9:28am On Aug 07, 2021 |
[s] meolaniyi:[/s] dumb ass |
Re: Ohanaeze urges Southeast residents To Ignore IPOB’s Sit-At-Home Order by BeLookingIDIOT(m): 9:30am On Aug 07, 2021 |
shugamummy:You want to go hungry to project your demand on the people who would like that you starve Explain this una logic? |
Re: Ohanaeze urges Southeast residents To Ignore IPOB’s Sit-At-Home Order by netsurfer01(m): 9:39am On Aug 07, 2021 |
Sharpsecret01:Omo, you're a moŕon. Chai, which kind of brainwashing will make someone think like this? Holy Christ. I'm igbo but this your level of stupid is outstanding. |
Re: Ohanaeze urges Southeast residents To Ignore IPOB’s Sit-At-Home Order by shigishege: 9:43am On Aug 07, 2021 |
The only issue I see with this IPOB is that they don't discuss with there elders before taking dicision. They are only been overwhelmed with youth exuberance. Sit at home is not way forward. Disturbing already fragile and not-doing-good economic activities of people will only paralyze thier chances of progress and development which they really need to librate themselves from this tyrannical quota system of government. 1 Like |
Re: Ohanaeze urges Southeast residents To Ignore IPOB’s Sit-At-Home Order by Nobody: 9:45am On Aug 07, 2021 |
'Nigeria cannot defeat the Igbo and Yoruba at the same time" Published By: Kazeem Ugbodaga 11th July, 2021 By Akinyemi Onigbinde The greatest thing Nigerians accomplished in the last thirty years was electing Muhammadu Buhari as president. If he had lived and died without being president, no one would push back when politicians fall over themselves to deliver tributes and call him the greatest president that Nigeria never had. After six years of Buhari’s administration and with only two more years to go, all is settled about the rhymes and stanzas of Buhari’s elegy. Some thirty years from now, people will stone anyone who attaches “greatest ” to any tribute at Buhari’s funeral. You may ask if anything is worth the cost of having Buhari as president? Before you do, there is another reason why his election was the greatest accomplishment of the Nigerian electorate in the last 30 years. If Buhari had not been president, if his incompetence had not been exposed to the uninitiated, Nigeria would have continued its zigzag path. The one-step-forward, two-steps-backwards trajectory would have continued unabated. Thus, Buhari helped the unrestructured Nigeria to confront its foreseeable future. That is Buhari’s first legacy. Here is Buhari’s second legacy: It may not be clear yet to the Fulani people, but Buhari’s presidency has damaged them more than any other group in Nigeria. Buhari’s inability to have an objective view of what leadership entails in a diverse country like Nigeria and his propensity to side with his Fulani people even when every donkey could see the bias undermined the Fulani deeply. He diminished whatever legitimate claim they have in what is clearly a fast-moving degenerative Nigeria’s structural carnage. The Fulani were better off in Nigeria six years ago than they are today. That is Muhammadu Buhari’s second legacy. In the context of Nigeria’s nationhood, Buhari’s second coming was a necessary evil: He came, he saw, and he hastened its ruination for everyone. If Buhari had not been president, Nigeria would have been ‘managing.’ The Peoples Democratic Party of Goodluck Jonathan and Sambo Dasuki and Diezani Allison-Madueke would have been paying Dangote to rob Otedola, even as the country continued the slide down the valley of death. Buhari accelerated the collapse by taking the country on a bungee jump down the deepest part of the valley using a frayed rope. The rope is breaking. Anyone with functioning ears can hear the splitting threads from miles away. High above the deepest part of the valley, Nigeria barely holds on to Buhari’s back. Two things will happen: Either Nigeria loses its grip on Buhari’s back and falls into the valley of death, or the rope rips and both Nigeria and Buhari plunge down the valley. Either way, death is the expected end. The only miracle on the horizon is to get Nigeria to a place where it cannot fight the Igbo and the Yoruba nations simultaneously. Buhari salutes octogenarian Maj-Gen. Paul Tarfa Buhari hails BUA Chairman Abdulsamad Rabiu Buhari sympathises with Abiodun over father's death In a one-on-one fight, Nigeria may defeat any of its components. Nigeria may defeat the Igbo. Nigeria may run over the Yoruba. Nigeria may crush the Ijaw, the Ibibio, the Tiv, the Ijaw, the Kanuri, the Fulani, the Bachama, the Idoma, the Urhobo, etc. Nigeria cannot defeat the Igbo and the Yoruba at the same time. In a fight between Nigeria on one side and an Igbo-Yoruba alliance on the other, many ethnic minority groups will take the side of the alliance. Whether the fight is in the physical or spiritual realm, whether it is in the democratic realm or the ideological realm, Nigeria has no chance of winning a fight against the combined forces of the Igbo and the Yoruba. For a table with three legs, one leg has no chance of keeping the table standing when the other two legs take a knee. The Igbo and Yoruba need to take a combined knee. That is the ultimate way to shake the table called Nigeria. Nigeria needs to get to a point where it faces the prospect of fighting a united Igbo and Yoruba power. It needs to happen now. That reality needs to be clear, concrete, and ironclad. It is the only magic wand that can save Nigeria. Is it easy to achieve? No. Is it possible? Yes. What will it take to get Nigeria to that place where it risks fighting the Igbo and the Yoruba simultaneously? The way to achieve this is for the Igbo and the Yoruba to embrace Thomas Jefferson’s greatest philosophy. The man who drafted the U.S. Declaration of Independence said, “I admire the dreams of the future more than the history of the past.” The Igbo and the Yoruba must admire the dreams of the future more than the history of the past. They must do it not just for their children’s children but also for all those children from East to West, North to South, trapped in prisons of mediocrity and death, which are the only gift of an unfair, unjust, and dysfunctional Nigeria. The Igbo and the Yoruba owe this to future generations of the people currently trapped in Nigeria. It is their responsibility. Posterity will blame the Igbo and the Yoruba in Nigeria if they fail to catch the wave. Thanks to Buhari’s misadventures, the awareness of today is total and overwhelming. Severe penalties await the Igbo and the Yoruba if they fail to act now and free unborn generations from the manacles of Muhammadu Buhari’s. By Akinyemi Onigbinde Email: info@pmnewsnigeria.com
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Re: Ohanaeze urges Southeast residents To Ignore IPOB’s Sit-At-Home Order by stanluiz(m): 9:51am On Aug 07, 2021 |
Only jobless ipob brainwashed members will sit at home because they are useless, frustrated and irresponsible and they don't contribute any thing good and positive to the South East. Jobless Igbos can continue to sit at home till Jesus comes after all they are mostly Thugs, touts and miscreant who add nothing to south East economy. But they should remember one thing, that they supleme dilector will rot in Jail. So the joke is one them. Security forces should make sure no miscreant disrupt people freedom of movement. Anybody that want to forcefully enforce people to sit at home should be dealt ruthlessly by the security forces. 1 Like |
Re: Ohanaeze urges Southeast residents To Ignore IPOB’s Sit-At-Home Order by GeneralPula: 10:01am On Aug 07, 2021 |
shugamummy: Do you have a business that will be on lockdown in SE? 1 Like |
Re: Ohanaeze urges Southeast residents To Ignore IPOB’s Sit-At-Home Order by Nobody: 10:04am On Aug 07, 2021 |
Why The Fulanis And Igbos Still Hate Each Other: Nigeria is a nation with over 1150 dialects and ethnic groups. The country has 527 languages, seven of them are extinct. The six largest ethnic groups are the Hausa and Fulani in the north, the Igbo in the south East, and the Yoruba in the south West, Efik - Ibibio, and Ijaw of the south. The Hausa-Fulanis and Igbo are the most predominant. According to Wikipedia, “Hausa–Fulani are collectively the Hausa and Fulani people of Africa. The two are grouped together because since the Fulani War, their histories have been largely intertwined within Nigeria, while ‘Igbo’ as an ethnic identity developed comparatively recently, in the context of decolonization and the Nigerian Civil War. The various Igbo-speaking communities were historically fragmented and decentralized. In the opinion of Chinua Achebe (2000), Igbo identity should be placed somewhere between a "tribe" and a "nation". Since the defeat of the Republic of Biafra in 1970, the Igbo are sometimes classified as a "stateless nation" The compound word “Hausa-Fulani” is not a reference to an ethnic group because the Hausa and the Fulani are distinct ethnic, linguistic and cultural groups that cannot be conflated sociologically. There was, however, a historic meeting point in 1804 when the Jihad movement led essentially by Fulani Ulema (clergy) conquered Hausa land and established the Caliphate and ruling Fulani lineages all over Hausa land, the exceptions being Abuja (Suleja) and Bauchi. At the turn of the 20th Century, the British conquered the Caliphate and under the leadership of Lord Lugard, the system of indirect rule was established in which the “natives” were ruled through their “traditional rulers”. For the British, the stars of indirect rule were the Fulani ruling classes of the Hausa people and henceforth, the compound word Hausa/Fulani was inevitable in the political lexicon. It did not matter that the Fulani ruling classes had become culturally Hausa and that the great majority of the Fulani people were not part of this narrative. Africa’s literary giant and celebrated writer Chinua Achebe has claimed that Nigerians, especially the Fulanis, do not like the Igbos because of their cultural ideology that emphasizes ‘change, individualism and competitiveness.’ He made this claim in his new book; There was a Country, which has generated controversy for his onslaught on the role of Obafemi Awolowo as the federal commissioner of finance during the Nigeria civil war. He accused Awolowo of genocide and imposition of food blockade on Biafra, a claim that has drawn rebuttals and contradictions of emotional intensity from some southwest leaders and commentators. “I have written in my small book entitled ‘The Trouble with Nigeria’ that Nigerians will probably achieve consensus on no other matter than their common resentment of the Igbo,” he wrote under the heading, a ‘History of Ethnic Tension and Resentment’. He traced the origin of “the national resentment of the Igbo” to its culture that “gave the Igbo man an unquestioned advantage over his compatriots in securing credentials for advancement in Nigerian colonial society.” He observed that the Igbo culture’s emphasis on change, individualism and competitiveness gave his ethnic group an edge over the Hausa/Fulani man who was hindered by a “wary religion.” He therefore described the Igbo, who are predominantly Catholic, as “fearing no god or man, was custom-made to grasp the opportunities, such as they were, of the white man’s dispensations. And the Igbo did so with both hands.” “The increase was so exponential in such a short time that within three short decades, the Igbos had closed the gap and quickly moved ahead as the group with the highest literacy rate, the highest standard of living, and the greatest of citizens with post-secondary education in Nigeria,” he contended. He said Nigerian leadership should have taken advantage of the Igbo talent and this failure was partly responsible for the failure of the Nigerian state, explaining further that competitive individualism and the adventurous spirit of the Igbo was a boon Nigerian leaders failed to recognize and harness for modernization. “Nigeria’s pathetic attempt to crush these idiosyncrasies rather than celebrate them is one of the fundamental reasons the country has not developed as it should and has emerged as a laughing stock,” he claimed. He noted that the ousting of prominent Igbos from top offices was a ploy to achieve a simple and crude goal. He said what the Nigerians wanted was to “get the achievers out and replace them with less qualified individuals from the desired ethnic background so as to gain access to the resources of the state.” Achebe, however, saved some criticisms for his kinsmen. He criticized them for what he described as “hubris, overweening pride and thoughtlessness, which invites envy and hatred or even worse that can obsess the mind with material success and dispose it to all kinds of crude showiness.” He added that the “contemporary Igbo behavior can offend by its noisy exhibitionism and disregard for humility and quietness.” The Igbos continue to yearn for succession from the Nigeria they believe is controlled by the Fulani. Today, their agitation is rising to its peak now that a Fulani man is at the head of the Nigerian government (and he seems to be appointing more Fulanis in key government positions). But should the Igbos breakaway from the country, the chance of other regions or ethnic groups doing the same would drastically increase. And the Fulanis believe the division of the country would be to their disadvantage, probably because they would no longer directly benefit from the other region's resources and wealth. The chance of the Igbos staying happily in the present Nigeria is very slim because of their history with the Fulanis, their many reasons for hating them and their present state in the country. And should the Igbos move succeed, the Fulanis, would definitely move to stop them in the name of protecting the unity of the country. With this it is clear that a fight between the Igbos and the Fulanis led Nigeria is imminent. You can begin to understand why notable Igbos won't come out today to say they support succession of the Igbos. They know that if all Igbos say that they want succession it will result in a fight between them and the Fulanis led Nigeria. It is only some Igbos that will come out and say even if the path of succession will lead to a fight, they will still pursue it. It is not because they are fight loving people. You can also now see the reason people in Nigeria condemn the Igbos and label them a violent group is because they wish for things to continue as they are in Nigeria. But a Nigeria where a particular group is forced to stay is not a true one Nigeria. You can't force others to do as you please because of your selfish reasons. And if the Igbos clan isn’t allowed self-determination then they are no different from being in bondage. All this has made clear the fact that while the path of Igbos may lead to a fight between them and the Fulanis led Nigeria; the Fulanis led Nigeria are the ones that will initiate any fight that may result. The Yoruba’s are mostly to be blamed though, because they are the ones that are supposed to checkmate these two major ethnic groups, they being the third major ethnic group. If the Yoruba would exercise their power as one of the major ethnic group and insist that the Fulanis do the right thing (not forcefully stop the Igbos from succeeding) instead of siding with the Fulanis, Nigeria won't be standing on this landmine today. To stop the plight of the Igbos will not result in lasting peace in Nigeria. Years later the Igbos will still be aching to separate from the Fulanis. The way to ensure lasting peace for the Igbos is to allow them to succeed peacefully. One thing is certain though, the Fulanis won't let the Igbos succeed unless they are forced to by the Yoruba and other ethnic groups in Nigeria. But will the Yoruba choose to do the right thing? Author Kezia Koburungi 1 Like
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Re: Ohanaeze urges Southeast residents To Ignore IPOB’s Sit-At-Home Order by Educationalserv: 10:06am On Aug 07, 2021 |
adenigga:ohaneze are traitor. ESN will get your dicapited head and display in inewi. |
Re: Ohanaeze urges Southeast residents To Ignore IPOB’s Sit-At-Home Order by Abubauchi: 10:30am On Aug 07, 2021 |
agulion:see another ARNE no wahala stay at home till de end of this world IGBO is our slave we hausa and yoruba. IGBO are useless ppl. |
Re: Ohanaeze urges Southeast residents To Ignore IPOB’s Sit-At-Home Order by Abubauchi: 10:34am On Aug 07, 2021 |
meolaniyi:mark me if Nigeria didn't go down u INGYAMURI will go down |
Re: Ohanaeze urges Southeast residents To Ignore IPOB’s Sit-At-Home Order by Ekealterego: 10:43am On Aug 07, 2021 |
Abubauchi: I know you guys are not renowned for your intellect and you have the lowest IQ in the world but by gawd tell me in what world a slave richer than a "master"? Mehn, your brains ought to be studied... When it comes to logic you guys are bothering on the spectrum of "special needs". 3 Likes |
Re: Ohanaeze urges Southeast residents To Ignore IPOB’s Sit-At-Home Order by Malawian(m): 10:46am On Aug 07, 2021 |
Even Ohaneze will observe the ghost town. 2 Likes |
Re: Ohanaeze urges Southeast residents To Ignore IPOB’s Sit-At-Home Order by prinsoo: 10:50am On Aug 07, 2021 |
EVEN THE OHANAEZES MUST STILL OBEY THE SIT-AT-HOME IN THE ENTIRE REGION. TAKE IT OR LEAVE IT, IPOB RULES THE LAND. "EVIDENCE IS THE END OF AUGUEMENT" 1 Like |
Re: Ohanaeze urges Southeast residents To Ignore IPOB’s Sit-At-Home Order by Nobody: 11:13am On Aug 07, 2021 |
Abubauchi: Which tribe in Nigeria is the richest? Igbo people are considered to be the richest people in the whole Nigeria. Some of them are the most popular people in Nigeria. Linda Ikeji and almost 70% of Nollywood are Igbos. Most Igbo people prefer to own their own businesses instead of working on somebody. They also prefer to be very popular. Igbo people really like their business, and they also love producing things. An Igbo person has a mind to produce shoes, bags, and cloth. You can also find that Igbo people like repairing things. You can find how they sell electronics and repair them on their own. Just check your nearest electronic repair center, most of the people working there are Igbos. There is also one drawback in the policy of Igbo people. They do not work with politics much. They desire to go after the riches instead of political power. That’s the reason why they prefer to stay out of politics. Conclusion Which tribe is the richest in Nigeria? Now you know the answer to this question. Igbo people get the most affection in business, while Hausa prefer politics. Therefore, most of the political leaders come from Hausa, while most of Igbo people prefer to get into business and fame. At the same time, Yoruba people prefer to work their way through the career to get rich! 1 Like
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Re: Ohanaeze urges Southeast residents To Ignore IPOB’s Sit-At-Home Order by shugamummy: 11:16am On Aug 07, 2021 |
There is something all you fools are not getting. You think that IPOB or demand for Biafra begins and ends in MMK. Get this straight Niggas, Biafra is an ideology, it's beyond MNK. It's a demand for a living carved out of equality and freedom of co-existence and business. So you see why the death of MNK would not end the struggle but will add more reason to intensify the struggle. I took my little time to educate you fools but as fulainized beings, you guys lack basic comprehension and understanding of the layers of the struggle. Now ask your elder because I know you kids have not been around for a long time to understand what flows in the blood of an Igboman since the inception of this contraption EbenezerTriumph: 3 Likes |
Re: Ohanaeze urges Southeast residents To Ignore IPOB’s Sit-At-Home Order by Buckeyemedia1: 11:17am On Aug 07, 2021 |
shugamummy:Shut up, Empty Barrel. |
Re: Ohanaeze urges Southeast residents To Ignore IPOB’s Sit-At-Home Order by Buckeyemedia1: 11:19am On Aug 07, 2021 |
shugamummy:Rubbish your imagining an Utopia, your number 1 enemies are your own kinsmen, you cannot run away from yourself, you are accusing shadows of yourself of the nonsense you think you are exclaiming. 1 Like 1 Share |
Re: Ohanaeze urges Southeast residents To Ignore IPOB’s Sit-At-Home Order by focus7: 11:39am On Aug 07, 2021 |
Aufbauh: |
Re: Ohanaeze urges Southeast residents To Ignore IPOB’s Sit-At-Home Order by focus7: 11:43am On Aug 07, 2021 |
They should lockdown the whole of South East for three months nobody cares, Kanu will remain captive in cage. 1 Like 1 Share |
Re: Ohanaeze urges Southeast residents To Ignore IPOB’s Sit-At-Home Order by StreetMedia: 11:54am On Aug 07, 2021 |
Ohaneze ndi ara... You guys are just following orders from your paymasters. Igbo bu Igbo! Bigger than them. 1 Like |
Re: Ohanaeze urges Southeast residents To Ignore IPOB’s Sit-At-Home Order by Indispensable85(m): 12:58pm On Aug 07, 2021 |
They know who to obey |
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