■Igbos are one of the oldest Nation in the world.
■Igbos have a political system that is decentralised since ancient times. This means,its a well structured system where everyone have an opinion. The system ensured checks and balances and they are the first to practice democracy in the world . We call it Umunna.
■There is no "absolute monarchy " in Igboland,there is no emperor, there is no overlord. It was and it is still well organised.
■The highest title in iIgboland is the Ozo title and this is the oldest title. Initiation into the aristocratic Nze na Ozo society marks the person as nobility. They sometimes bear the Ichi facial scarifications, described by Olaudah Equiano in 1745 as " Embrenche " or mburichi "
■Igbos received refugees fleeing from two overlaying kingdoms, Benin to the south and igala to the north.
■Because of there early spread,Igbo descendants are found in most parts of southern Nigeria (Rivers,Southern Benue, Edo,isoko,.Anioma, southeast, Part of akwa ibom and cross River.),Also, Eboe town Jamaica, Virginia, equatorial guinea .
■Igboland extended from the confines of Benin (igbanke) on the south,Igala to her northern boundary, to the east the ibibios and ijaw there immediate southern Neighbours.
■As with most ancient tribes, the time Igbos settled or evolved is lost to human mind. However Uranium studies of archeological tracings have identified human activities in Igboland from a period between 250,000 to 100,000 years.
Ndi Igbo are very industrous,and known to be very hard working wherever they reside. You see that grace upon them. Igbos prosper wherever they are.
Igbos love freedom, justice and onye ahala nwanne ya ( are brother's keepers).
■Igbos are peace loving people, who value life,and are recalcitrant to oppression and highly driven for success.
■Igbos have the highest female literacy rate in Nigeria.
©IGBO HISTORY
Kamsiyochukwutv https://www.facebook.com/share/QLQ1DJ3oLdFUqJz6/?mibextid=oFDknkIgbo in NigeriaProfile Igbo make up around 18 per cent of Nigeria’s population. Their traditional homeland straddles the Niger River in the south-east and is one of the most densely populated areas of the African continent. Igbo are predominantly Christian. Traditionally, Igbo were subsistence farmers of yams, taro and cassava. Today many are well educated and work as civil servants and in business. Over a period of many years, over 1 million Igbo have migrated to other parts of Nigeria.
Historical Context Igbo are believed to have originated as a people several thousand years ago in the area where the Benue flows into the Niger River. The Igbo were active slave traders, selling captives from the interior to European traders. The British established control over the region in the 19th century, made easier by the Igbo’s decentralized political organization. Christian missionaries also found Igboland to be fertile ground for proselytizing.
Regional tension in Nigeria became acute after independence as politicians fought ruthlessly for the spoils of office. The problem was exacerbated by the discovery of large oil deposits, and many Igbo came to fear that oil-producing areas would be carved out of their area of control.
In January 1966, Igbo army officers carried out a coup. There were reprisal killings of Igbo in majority Hausa areas of northern Nigeria, and six months later, a counter-coup brought a northerner, General Yakubu Gowon, to power. In September 1966, Radio Cononou in neighbouring Benin broadcast a rumour that northerners had been killed in the Igbo-dominated south-east. Northern mobs went on a rampage, brutally killing thousands of Igbo civilians, while Igbo soldiers were hacked to death in army barracks. Those who survived fled east, many injured and destitute, posing massive problems of relocations.
There followed a major exodus of skilled Igbo from other parts of Nigeria towards the east. The federal government made little effort to heal the wounds or condemn the atrocities. Rather, President Gowon presented a plan to replace the four regions with twelve new states, meaning the break-up of the Igbo-dominated east. Control of rich oil deposits would be placed in the hands non-Igbo minorities.
In 1967, the Igbo, under the leadership of Odumegwu Ojukwu, declared the independence of the east as the Republic of Biafra. The federal government responded with full military force and isolated the Igbo in their heartland. The violence and starvation led to the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Igbo before Biafra surrendered in January 1970. Following their defeat, Igbo have been excluded from significant representation in the higher echelons of the military and government.
In May 1997, the International Crisis Group (ICG) reported that the failure of the electoral process has deepened the separatist sentiment in the south-east. In a year which marked the 40th anniversary of the outbreak of the Biafran war, ICG said that perhaps more than any other region, the poll in the Igbo heartland was ‘poorly conducted and mindlessly rigged’.
This boosted the position of the separatist group, Movement for the Actualisation of the Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB), that Igbos would never ‘realise their political aspirations with the Nigerian federation’. However, there was a question-mark over the MASSOB’s tactics, after a ‘sit-at-home-strike’ failed to mobilize widespread support, showing that many Igbos did not want to publicly associate themselves with the separatist cause.
The 1960s Igbo separatist leader, the now-elderly Odumegwu Ojukwu, contested the 2007 presidential elections, coming sixth. He later told the BBC that the Igbo had more reason than ever to seek independence – basing his comments on the widespread electoral irregularities. Throughout 2007, there were protests from Igbo associations that Chief Ralf Uwazuruike, leader of MASSOB, remained in jail – although other separatist or rebel leaders had been released. Uwazuruike and other alleged MASSOB supporters had been arrested in 2005, charged with treason. But at the end of October 2007, Uwazuruike was released from detention.
Current Issues Secessionist sentiments among Igbo have persisted, despite the government’s crackdown. Following President Buhari’s election in 2015, demonstrations by pro-independence protestors were met with harsh measures by the security forces, with scores of demonstrators reportedly killed and some activists arrested. The leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) group, Nnamdi Kanu, was charged with conspiracy and treasonable felony along with three other men. A number of the charges were struck by the judge in March 2017, and Kanu was released on bail in May 2017.
While Boko Haram activity in the north-east continued to garner most attention, a number of experts highlighted the significance of the re-activation of the pro-independence movement in the south-east. Aside from the reported deaths and numerous arrests of protestors by the authorities, hostility also grew amongst some segments of the population elsewhere in the country. In June 2017, activists in the northern city of Kaduna called for the eviction of Igbo residing in the state. Arrest warrants were issued for the protest leaders. https://minorityrights.org/communities/igbo/ nlfpmod |
■Because of there early spread,Igbo descendants are found in most parts of southern Nigeria (Rivers,Southern Benue, Edo,isoko,.Anioma, southeast, Part of akwa ibom and cross River.),Also, Eboe town Jamaica, Virginia, equatorial guinea . |
Prof. Okoronkwo Kesandu Ogan(1919-1980) and family in the 1960's. Professor Ogan was the first Nigerian to qualify as an Obstetrician/Gynecologist. He was the pioneer president of the Society of Gynecology and Obsterics of Nigeria which was formed in Lagos in 1965. https://www.facebook.com/share/Kz566dxFokkX8Mde/?mibextid=oFDknk "Nigerian-Born Kelechi Ndukwe Promoted To Captain In U.S. Navy, To Command Warship."
A 2002 graduate of the University of Notre Dame, Ndukwe has also worked in the office of the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (CJCS), the highest-ranking military position in the United States.
From 2013 to 2015, the chemical engineering graduate was the commanding officer of the USS Devastator (MCM 6), a minesweeper based in Bahrain. In 2021, Kelechi Ndukwe assumed command of the USS Halsey (DDG-97), an Arleigh Burke-class guided missile destroyer.
The new position marks the pinnacle of his more than 20-year career in the US Navy, which began in 2003 as an auxiliaries officer. This was a year after he earned a master’s degree in national security and strategy studies from the US Naval War College.
A hearty congratulations to Navy Captain Kelechi R Ndukwe who has been promoted to the rank of Navy Captain from Commander, in the US NAVY. He is the first Nigerian American to Command a US warship. https://saharareporters.com/2024/08/30/nigerian-born-kelechi-ndukwe-promoted-captain-us-navy-command-warship Rear Admiral Allison Amaechina Madueke is a retired Nigerian naval officer. He was appointed military governor of Anambra State from January 1984 to August 1985, and then of Imo State until 1986. He later became Chief of Naval Staff.
This man risked execution at the hands of Abacha to protest the treatment of MKO Abiola during the June 12th crisis. He was the only member of Abacha's cabinet to stand up to him at meetings during the crisis, and say ''NO. THIS CANNOT GO ON. THIS IS NOT RIGHT.''
An Admiral of the first order who specialized in communications.He at one point in the early nineties, was in charge of the most powerful warship then commanded by a black man in the world, Nigeria's flagship frigate NNS Aradu. He led the ship with distinction, attending several successful naval exercises and combat training missions worldwide.
It is believed the only reason Abacha did not eliminate him was Abacha's own reluctance to lose one of the nation's finest and most internationally respected naval officers of the period. The Igbos have been striving to attain and maintain excellence and intelligence from the beginning of time. I am just but proud to be part of them. nlfpmod |