Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,179,214 members, 7,907,270 topics. Date: Thursday, 01 August 2024 at 07:24 AM

Radio Biafra And The Biafran Narratives - Politics - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / Radio Biafra And The Biafran Narratives (1030 Views)

Opinion: Concerning Biafra And The Igbo Agitation For Secession / The Budget 2016: Narratives For The Dummies. / Breaking; Radio Biafra Director, Nnamdi Kanu Arrested (2) (3) (4)

(1) (Reply) (Go Down)

Radio Biafra And The Biafran Narratives by senier007(m): 9:34am On Jul 23, 2015
One of the concerns about liberal democracy in fragile states is its tendency, in the short to medium terms at least, to aggravate the structures of conflicts in such societies, compounding the challenges in the nation-building process, and even threatening the democracy project itself. 
The current democratic dispensation in the country has indeed witnessed an upsurge in the number of groups, which in different ways call attention to their alienation from the Nigerian state. I have elsewhere called this phenomenon a ‘de-Nigerianization’ process - the tendency for a number of groups to delink from the Nigerian state into certain primordial identities from where they seek to construct meanings for their existentialist crises. For such groups - Boko Haram, OPC, MASSOB and now Radio Biafra - the Nigerian state is the enemy.
My aim in this piece is to show that the hysteria that some non-Igbos feel whenever the word ‘Biafra’ is mentioned is unnecessary because  such people appear to be  wedded to only one Biafran narrative (that of secession) whereas the word Biafra actually evokes several narratives. The fact that Biafra embodies several, sometimes conflicting narratives, is one reason why it often evokes powerful feelings among the Igbos - from pacifists whose parents were [/b]born after the civil war to those who did not feel that war was the only option left to the Igbos at the time.
Biafran narratives
The most common Biafran narrative among non- Igbos is that of a people who tried to secede from Nigeria. This is a fact of history. But it is also a narrative that is cast in the simplistic binary of the ‘good guys’ versus the ‘bad guys’. Since history is usually written from the perspective of the winners, [b]the ‘good guys’ in this narrative are those who were on the federal side while the ‘bad guys’ are those who were on the Biafran side.

Biafra is equally a metaphor for alienation from the Nigerian state -without necessarily implying a real desire to delink from the state. When some Igbo talk of Biafra with nostalgia, they could be using it as a code for expressing their alienation from the Nigerian state. I have in several write ups argued that the fundamental problem of the country is the crisis in the country’s nation-building, which has led to a rapid ‘de-Nigerianization’ process.   Here the tendency would often be to romanticize Biafra by talking of the El Dorado it would have been if it had succeeded or by exaggerating the innovations and survival strategies in the short-lived Republic.  But I do not believe that alienation from the Nigerian state necessarily leads to a desire to de-link from that state - even if the alienated group proclaims secession as its objective.  I believe that many separatist groups in the country have a rather  inchoate agenda and that threats of separation are sometimes stratagems employed by several groups in the country for bargaining or to call attention to certain conditions. In this sense, part of the Biafran narrative is calling attention to frustrations - without necessarily seriously wanting to de-link from the Nigerian state.
I was born in Otukpo, Benue State. At the end of the war, my mother returned to Otukpo to sell our house there. I recall her telling us stories of how the rents collected in the house were handed over to her, how her friends gathered to cry and laugh with her when she returned after the war and how various sums of money were raised by her old community in Otukpo to help her make a fresh start.  [/b]There are several such stories of compassion all over Nigeria at the end of the war to help the Igbos, who were then severely disadvantaged to make a new beginning.  This too is part of the Biafran narrative. 
[b]Biafra is also about the defeat in war of a hugely proud people, who consider themselves extremely resourceful, if not invincible
. Every group of course believes it is the best in several things or has the best culture. But among the Igbos, achievement is revered - which is why it is often called an achievement-oriented culture. In this type of culture, failure is not regarded as an option. This obviously has its flipsides such as a desire to succeed or to be seen to be succeeding by fair or foul means.  For instance, if you return home say from Europe or Lagos and say you failed in your business because the people there were hostile, your relatives are likely to retort: “Are you not an Igbo man?”, meaning that you ought to be smart enough to find a way of overcoming that obstacle. For a culture that is driven by such need to achieve and be seen to have achieved, it could be argued that part of the Igbos aggressive drive to succeed after the war was a need to compensate for that defeat. In this sense, when the word ‘Biafra’ is brandished, it is a cruel reminder of defeat for a group that sees itself as extremely resourceful. It is like flashing a warrior’s annihilation before his face. For cultures that prioritize other values - such as community or taking life easy, defeat will not be as humiliating and traumatizing as it is for a group that is driven by the need to achieve and excel.  [b]This is perhaps why you also have several Igbos who do not even want to hear the word ‘Biafra’ (whether from their fellow Igbos or not). [/b]This too is Biafran narrative.
‘Biafra’ could also be a code for invoking solidarity among Igbos and others who fought on the Biafra side - similar to the way the Yoruba trace their ancestry to the mythical Oduduwa or the way African Americans try to use slavery and blackness to create a sense of solidarity and fellowship among one another or the way some invoke ‘the north’ to galvanize solidarity among people from the north or a sense of nostalgia for a supposed solidarity of the region in the past. 
Biafra could equally be used in a neutral, non-ideological and non-political manner to indicate a dark period in our political history in which the former Eastern region tried to secede. Used in this manner, people eschew the ‘good guys’ versus ‘bad guys’ binary by recognizing that both in the events that led to the war and in the prosecution of the war itself, blames could actually go round. Those who use Biafra in a neutral sense are often uncomfortable discussing the war, knowing that war is a nasty business, that stuffs happen during wars and that it is perhaps best not to activate certain memories - on both the sides of the divide. For Biafran narrative from this perspective, one is often advised not to be trapped in the past but to learn useful lessons from the war and move on. For people who see Biafra from this perspective, it is not even necessary for Biafra to be used at all. Everyone should try to forgive and forget and move on.
What is obvious from the above is that the contemporary appropriation of Biafra goes beyond the secessionist bid by the people of the former Eastern Nigerians. Unfortunately for many Nigerians, the only Biafran narrative they know is that of secession and it tends to imbue special suspicion on any group that includes the word ‘Biafra’ in its name. Radio Biafra - just by having the Biafra in its name - on top of the hate speech it is said to spew - panics many. But it is wrong to believe that any group that appropriates the Biafra name is speaking on behalf of the generality of the Igbos or that the majority of Igbos subscribe to the version of Biafra narrative such a group chooses to espouse because there are simply several Biafran narratives.
“Radio Biafra”
I have never listened to Radio Biafra (I am not much of a radio person anyway). However my opinion of several separatist groups and those who use hate speech to call attention to grievances they appointed themselves to articulate is that they are often attention seekers who are able to mobilize those that are alienated from the Nigerian state. I had never heard of Mazi Nnamdi Kanu - the assumed proprietor of Radio Biafra - before the hullabaloo. Thanks to too much hysteria and undeserved media attention, the man has become a celebrity of sorts.
In assessing the official response to Radio Biafra, it is important to make a distinction between a separatist or secessionist groups (those who advocate secession and often employ violent means to achieve their objectives) and those who broadcast materials that could be seditious or use hate speech to mobilize support without being violent. Radio Biafra belongs to the latter. The Nigerian Broadcasting Service, the broadcast regulator, could simply have done its work quietly without the media hysteria.
Radio Biafra - despite its unacceptable methods - calls attention to the crisis in the country’s nation-building process. It also raises question about appropriate ways of dealing with hate groups without turning the leaders of such groups into heroes/heroines or driving their ideas underground. 
The truth is that there are several groups that have literally de-linked from the Nigerian state across the country and which regards the Nigerian state as the enemy.
Unless the crisis in the country’s nation-building process is resolved, solutions thrown at the country’s several problems will either be misunderstood or become also part of the problems

Source: http://dailytrust.com.ng/daily/index.php/columns/thursday-columns/60663-radio-biafra-and-the-biafran-narratives
Re: Radio Biafra And The Biafran Narratives by Nobody: 9:36am On Jul 23, 2015
undecided
Re: Radio Biafra And The Biafran Narratives by Nobody: 9:39am On Jul 23, 2015
op, in three sentence, summarize your write-up...
Re: Radio Biafra And The Biafran Narratives by yang(m): 9:58am On Jul 23, 2015
Another one zoo idiot

Trying to shape an ideoology of our fore fathers

Who are you to say what Biafra should be and not be

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Radio Biafra And The Biafran Narratives by cheruv: 9:59am On Jul 23, 2015
Agaenniya?
































































Yae grin
Re: Radio Biafra And The Biafran Narratives by babyfaceafrica: 10:01am On Jul 23, 2015
Its too long..am sure even the OP did not read it...
Re: Radio Biafra And The Biafran Narratives by Nobody: 10:03am On Jul 23, 2015
Biafra rising!
Re: Radio Biafra And The Biafran Narratives by Vicotex2: 10:04am On Jul 23, 2015
yang:
Another one zoo idiot

Trying to shape an ideoology of our fore fathers

Who are you to say what Biafra should be and not be
I tire for the guy o.
dem wan dictate how we wan live our lives.
Live and lets live, is too deep for them to understand
Re: Radio Biafra And The Biafran Narratives by senier007(m): 10:49am On Jul 23, 2015
Vicotex2:
I tire for the guy o.
dem wan dictate how we wan live our lives.
Live and lets live, is too deep for them to understand
Check the writer is not from the "zoo" but from the "zombies" AKA biafrans, yes the write up is long but it has achieve it aim of dissecting the root cause of the "aliens" demands and also the main reason why the "zoos" can't trust the "zombies" with any sensitive position hence the blackmail of the so called zombir Mazi Kanu, a scammer and attention seeker, the NBC has finally put his scam to a hold he can no longer voice his hate speech in our land, even online it's just a matter of time, why did u participate in the lst election if you people really want to leave? Why didn't you bycot the last election? Bad looser has a way of behaving in their own zombie land? Wonder why there is no single protest after the jamming of the radio station if truly they speaking the mind of the ndigbo?
Re: Radio Biafra And The Biafran Narratives by oduastates: 10:51am On Jul 23, 2015
No matter the number of attempts to rewrite history , Nigerian history will never be allowed to be rewritten.
1 The British left Nigeria with 3 region despite the fact that the minorities wanted breathing space ( their own region )
At this stage , cocoa was the principal export and chief forex earner of the country . Other produce like rubber , oil palm, groundnut contributed but not as much

2 As the British were leaving , Igbo elites calculated that since the Hausa/ Fulani were mostly illiterate, they were going to be able to manipulate them and use that as a platform to dominate. At this time , the Northern civil service was dominated by the SE and they felt They can replicate this at the federal level( as amhadu bello was scheming , so also were they ). The two regions were conservative societies after all.so the romance was natural.

3 They ganged up against the western region by creating the Midwest without creating the ogoja region , Carlsbad region , central region etc( only the itshekiris voted no in the referendum)

4 they put Awo in prison and proceeded to share the loot .out of 11 ministerial positions , azikwe gave the western region only 2 ( the same pattern was repeated under Jonathan) .

5 you all know what happened when ahmadu bello showed his hands .

6 Not only did he nothernize the North by replacing their conservative soul mates ( igbos) in the northern civil service , he went ahead and started giving all the juicy bits ( projects and all ) to the northern region .
What came next was an Igbo coup to reclaim what they thought was theirs , a country to dominate.
For that 6 months Ironsi was at the top , all was good (or so they thought)

7Ironsi immediately moved to turn Nigeria into a unitary state and began assembling all the tools for ethnic domination. All the while , the igbos were mocking the Hausa on the street .

8 the Hausa /Fulani launched a counter coup and were shouting Araba all over the place until the British ambassador pulled them aside and told them of the economic implications of independence. They resolved to use those tools of ethnic domination for themselves.

9 a program was launched in the north targeting outsiders ( not only igbos ) . Yorubas ,igbirras, calabar ,
Itshekiri, urhobo died too in those progroms even though the igbos had the largest casualties.

10 20,000 people died in those northern progroms

11 the igbos too killed 5,000 northerners residing in the east

12 less than a million people died in the Biafra war (civilians and all )on all sides even though the Igbo civilians suffered the most.

13 there were Igbo POW who lived through to see the end of the war. All Nigerians captured during the war were butchered

14 war crimes were committed on all sides
Re: Radio Biafra And The Biafran Narratives by senier007(m): 10:51am On Jul 23, 2015
Dharniel:
op, in three sentence, summarize your write-up...
Have highlighted the important points cuz the write up tries to explore all school of though and also tries to evaluate both the ad and dis of such schools. Sorry for that
Re: Radio Biafra And The Biafran Narratives by senier007(m): 10:57am On Jul 23, 2015
jcmaiah:
Biafra rising!
Are u post or pre-biafra war?
If you are pre, don't know what you doing here, cuz what u couldnt achieve when all of you speaks with one voice don't know how you can achieve that, if you post, I believe you are under the influence of either tv game or American fantasy series, in real life, you must be willing to sacrifice you life and to die not just type behind a key board and think such thing will happen over night.
I suggest you reads books like "last train to baifra", "then there was a country" "memoir of a Biafran soldier" and also elders on how the war was won and lost at same time, and also ask them about the human cost and the economical, political effect of that war.
Re: Radio Biafra And The Biafran Narratives by senier007(m): 11:02am On Jul 23, 2015
yang:
Another one zoo idiot

Trying to shape an ideoology of our fore fathers

Who are you to say what Biafra should be and not be
The last time I checked nairaland still belongs to the "zoo", don't know why you people preach one thing and did another thing, there is biafratimes and many more publications coming out from the "land of the rising sun", go and discuss with your fellow "zombies" and live the "zoo" as it is.
Re: Radio Biafra And The Biafran Narratives by DaBullIT(m): 11:02am On Jul 23, 2015
Maa Sidon abeg leg dey pain me
Re: Radio Biafra And The Biafran Narratives by Nobody: 11:06am On Jul 23, 2015
senier007:

Are u post or pre-biafra war?
If you are pre, don't know what you doing here, cuz what u couldnt achieve when all of you speaks with one voice don't know how you can achieve that, if you post, I believe you are under the influence of either tv game or American fantasy series, in real life, you must be willing to sacrifice you life and to die not just type behind a key board and think such thing will happen over night.
I suggest you reads books like "last train to baifra", "then there was a country" "memoir of a Biafran soldier" and also elders on how the war was won and lost at same time, and also ask them about the human cost and the economical, political effect of that war.
Don't worry, we know why we failed. This time its different. moreover, arms would be the last resort and if it comes to that we will not be afraid to try again! Quitters never win
Re: Radio Biafra And The Biafran Narratives by senier007(m): 11:18am On Jul 23, 2015
jcmaiah:

Don't worry, we know why we failed. This time its different. moreover, arms would be the last resort and if it comes to that we will not be afraid to try again! Quitters never win
talk is cheap as they said, they have successfully denied you your radio biafra and yet I didn't see a single face out there protesting, why? Cuz it's a sham and a scam, and gullible people like you think its a reality. Hmmm, who is fooling who? Mazi kanu that is living outside biafra or a moniker typing gibberish from a comfort of zoo?
Re: Radio Biafra And The Biafran Narratives by zendy: 11:38am On Jul 23, 2015
I had a dream that I was applying for my Biafran passport in 2016. May Chukwu bi n'igwe, Chukwu okike and Chukwu okachasi n'elu n'ala make this dream a reality.

Amen
Re: Radio Biafra And The Biafran Narratives by Nobody: 11:42am On Jul 23, 2015
senier007:
talk is cheap as they said, they have successfully denied you your radio biafra and yet I didn't see a single face out there protesting, why? Cuz it's a sham and a scam, and gullible people like you think its a reality. Hmmm, who is fooling who? Mazi kanu that is living outside biafra or a moniker typing gibberish from a comfort of zoo?
Please say what you are sure of, not what junk news feeds you! Radio Biafra still airs even till tomorrow. Talk is cheap indeed..
Re: Radio Biafra And The Biafran Narratives by ArodewilliamsT: 12:46pm On Jul 23, 2015
oduastates:
[s]No matter the number of attempts to rewrite history , Nigerian history will never be allowed to be rewritten.
1 The British left Nigeria with 3 region despite the fact that the minorities wanted breathing space ( their own region )
At this stage , cocoa was the principal export and chief forex earner of the country . Other produce like rubber , oil palm, groundnut contributed but not as much

2 As the British were leaving , Igbo elites calculated that since the Hausa/ Fulani were mostly illiterate, they were going to be able to manipulate them and use that as a platform to dominate. At this time , the Northern civil service was dominated by the SE and they felt They can replicate this at the federal level( as amhadu bello was scheming , so also were they ). The two regions were conservative societies after all.so the romance was natural.

3 They ganged up against the western region by creating the Midwest without creating the ogoja region , Carlsbad region , central region etc( only the itshekiris voted no in the referendum)

4 they put Awo in prison and proceeded to share the loot .out of 11 ministerial positions , azikwe gave the western region only 2 ( the same pattern was repeated under Jonathan) .

5 you all know what happened when ahmadu bello showed his hands .

6 Not only did he nothernize the North by replacing their conservative soul mates ( igbos) in the northern civil service , he went ahead and started giving all the juicy bits ( projects and all ) to the northern region .
What came next was an Igbo coup to reclaim what they thought was theirs , a country to dominate.
For that 6 months Ironsi was at the top , all was good (or so they thought)

7Ironsi immediately moved to turn Nigeria into a unitary state and began assembling all the tools for ethnic domination. All the while , the igbos were mocking the Hausa on the street .

8 the Hausa /Fulani launched a counter coup and were shouting Araba all over the place until the British ambassador pulled them aside and told them of the economic implications of independence. They resolved to use those tools of ethnic domination for themselves.

9 a program was launched in the north targeting outsiders ( not only igbos ) . Yorubas ,igbirras, calabar ,
Itshekiri, urhobo died too in those progroms even though the igbos had the largest casualties.

10 20,000 people died in those northern progroms

11 the igbos too killed 5,000 northerners residing in the east

12 less than a million people died in the Biafra war (civilians and all )on all sides even though the Igbo civilians suffered the most.

13 there were Igbo POW who lived through to see the end of the war. All Nigerians captured during the war were butchered

14 war crimes were committed on all sides [/s]





You are a dishonorable revisionist and a juandiced student of history.

1.) You claimed CEREMONIAL President Zik appointed only 2 yoruba ministers. I thought he was ceremonial, Isn't the appointment of ministers an executive of the Prime minister Balewa who had executive powers.(I am not surprised here, a good slave should protect the name of his master)

2.) You claimed 5,000 Hausas were killed. I have video evidence of riots in the north with Igbo corpses littering the streets, they even on Youtube. Can you show us any evidence of Igbos killing Hausa. Before you deceive gullible people it is 100% documented by National and international media that Gen. Ojukwu allowed the northerners to leave Igboland unhurt. Many Igbo returnees from the north who lost relatives was angry with him for that.

Awolowo was a power thirsty who believed that he can only survive if he outcompetes the Igbos who were the most progressive Nigerians.
Go and read his Autobio. Written and published before the War and understand his mindset. He envied everything Igbos, even the lovely haircuts of Igbo students in lagos(What a lame clown he was). Lmao!

(1) (Reply)

Buhari Remove Biafra"terrorist" War Lord Ambassador To Canada / Buhari Appoints Lagos LIRS Boss As FIRS Chairman / AKS APC Deputy Governorship Candidate, Mr. Ben Ukpong Did Not Resign At FCDA

(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. 72
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.