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Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / What The Igbo Can Learn From The Yoruba And Fulani About Power By Reno Omokri (2859 Views)
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Re: What The Igbo Can Learn From The Yoruba And Fulani About Power By Reno Omokri by LRNZH(m): 12:42am On Jun 04, 2017 |
Lalasticlala... see news o |
Re: What The Igbo Can Learn From The Yoruba And Fulani About Power By Reno Omokri by Blue3k(m): 4:22am On Jun 04, 2017 |
The history is interesting. I don't agree with alot of his opinions about Igbo collective. The Igbos I know don't act like he describes. The people he talks about are nairaland loud mouths. Honestly we don't believe believe in prostration. Alot of world dosent practice that in same manner. Some yurobas like my in law are not passing that on to children. |
Re: What The Igbo Can Learn From The Yoruba And Fulani About Power By Reno Omokri by savage76(m): 7:10am On Jun 04, 2017 |
PFRB:You mean Fajuyi was part of the 1966 coup??poor student of knowledge. |
Re: What The Igbo Can Learn From The Yoruba And Fulani About Power By Reno Omokri by classicblue234(m): 9:37am On Jun 04, 2017 |
I have been following reno omokri on various social media platform and I can tell you he is one of the few people from the south that understand this country very well especially the north. he maybe wrong in some of his write ups but he is among the best investigative journalists we have in nigeria. my respect to reno omokri. if you want to know more look for me. |
Re: What The Igbo Can Learn From The Yoruba And Fulani About Power By Reno Omokri by pazienza(m): 1:41pm On Jun 04, 2017 |
savage76: Yes, Fajuyi supported and mentored Nzeogwu and co. Including giving them advice on her to go about the coup. He also was the one who continuously pleaded on the behalf of Nzeogwu and co before Ironsi, when the North wanted them killed for the coup. The North never forgave him. He was a marked man for death by the counter coup plotters, he didn't die pleading for Ironsi life. He died because he was marked for death. The story of Fajuyi dying for Ironsi was a falsehood concocted by Lagos-Ibadan press. 1 Like |
Re: What The Igbo Can Learn From The Yoruba And Fulani About Power By Reno Omokri by Guestlander: 1:45pm On Jun 04, 2017 |
pazienza: This is a blatant lie. Please provide one evidence linking Fajuyi to any coup. Lying is fast becoming your stock in trade for your mickey mouse agitation. Tell all Nigerians today what they didnt know earlier about their country, provide just anything linking Fajuyi to Nzeogwu's coup. 2 Likes |
Re: What The Igbo Can Learn From The Yoruba And Fulani About Power By Reno Omokri by pazienza(m): 1:49pm On Jun 04, 2017 |
Guestlander: I'll be back with proofs. Have a business to take care of now. 1 Like |
Re: What The Igbo Can Learn From The Yoruba And Fulani About Power By Reno Omokri by Guestlander: 1:51pm On Jun 04, 2017 |
pazienza: Of course. This is usually the part when something comes up. |
Re: What The Igbo Can Learn From The Yoruba And Fulani About Power By Reno Omokri by IamaNigerianGuy(m): 2:00pm On Jun 04, 2017 |
Guestlander: That guy is dangerous. He is worse than Lai Mohammed. Just conjuring stories from thin air. |
Re: What The Igbo Can Learn From The Yoruba And Fulani About Power By Reno Omokri by Guestlander: 2:11pm On Jun 04, 2017 |
IamaNigerianGuy: Why Fajuyi of all people? The reason is obvious, if they can soil his name then they can claim he had no other choice than to die with Ironsi. I am amazed at how low some of them are willing to go. We have not only Fajuyi and Victor Banjo but many other Yorubas who had put put their lives on the line for the ibos, today these kids are desperately trying to tarnish their names. |
Re: What The Igbo Can Learn From The Yoruba And Fulani About Power By Reno Omokri by pazienza(m): 5:19pm On Jun 04, 2017 |
How Ironsi was killed, by his ADC By PETRUS OBI, Abakaliki Monday, June 28, 2004 • Senator Andrew Nwankwo Photo.Sun News Publishing Senator Andrew Nwankwo from the Izzi clan in Abakaliki, Ebonyi State, was a captain in the Nigeria Air Force before the January 1966 coup that made way for Major General J. T. U Aguiyi Ironsi to emerge as Head of State. He became Ironsi’s Aide-De-Camp through the recommendation of Brigadier George Krubo who was then in-charge of the Air Force and subsequently supervised the late Head of State’s security. Capt. Andrew Nwankwo (rtd) said he was to die with his boss, but for fate. He was present when both Ironsi and Fajuyi were shot dead. Tracking the 61-year-old former ADC down in his one story building residence in Abakaliki was not as difficult as getting him to recall the events that led to the death of his master 38 years ago. He would start by taking you down memory lane when he served as a courier to late Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia, "I was manning the octopus-a helicopter that carries 105 artillery gun and six other machine guns. "So when Ethiopia was at war with Somalia in 1964/65 we formed the defence group of the emperor, we also formed an attack force. When the emperor is going to the frontline to see what is happening, we ring him round to clear the way for him". It was part of these that Ironsi saw and handed over his security to the young captain. "It was cool working with Ironsi, he understood everything about what I should do because he had commanded the UN forces in Congo, and that exposed him to the type of people he needed". 1 Like |
Re: What The Igbo Can Learn From The Yoruba And Fulani About Power By Reno Omokri by pazienza(m): 5:21pm On Jun 04, 2017 |
The coup Recalling the events of that night, July 29, 1966, Nwankwo noted that they were in Ibadan, "we had a small detachment of 106 Artillery, Commanded by one Walbe from Plateau" The Head of State had the previous day hosted traditional rulers from all parts of the country in the Ibadan Government House. "He wasn’t feeling quite well, he had a knee problem and had to go to bed early. "Lieutenant Sanni Bello was the army ADC, and we were very close. So, we left that night to go and look out and came back late. Lt. Adamu who was the ADC to Fajuyi, Sanni Bello, Walbe and myself, we all slept together in one room that night". "At about 4a.m the telephone rang, I picked it up and that was Adeola, the then commissioner of police, Ibadan he said he wanted to speak with Ironsi, I said I was the ADC, he said he wanted to speak with him because there was a coup and he gave me some names Orok and two others that had been killed in Abeokuta. "Immediately, I made a mental picture of it, and I knew that it was the northerners that were responsible. So, I handed the phone to Ironsi and they talked. I then alerted Adamu and Sanni Bello and said look, there is a coup and the trend is this way. "Bello assured me that if it is his own people he will protect me, because, there was tension in the land such that we knew a coup was imminent. So, we agreed to protect each other depending on where it will be coming from. I later discovered that Walbe who was sleeping with us was part of the coup; he later became ADC to Gowon. "Around 5:30 we heard gunfire, then Ironsi had called Col. Njoku to tell him about the coup. As Njoku was going out, he was short at, but he escaped with bullet wounds. It was Njoku, who was the commander of Lagos Garrison that alerted others outside the Government House, Ibadan. "Fajuyi later sent me outside the government House to find out what was happening. I met Danjuma, who was then a major and he was my friend. He pretended he didn’t know what was happening, he was asking me, and I said I didn’t know. While I was trying to go back, one sergeant from Benue almost shot me, but Danjuma stopped him and spoke to him in Hausa. Danjuma later told me that he would like to see Ironsi, so that he could tell them what to do. 1 Like |
Re: What The Igbo Can Learn From The Yoruba And Fulani About Power By Reno Omokri by pazienza(m): 5:24pm On Jun 04, 2017 |
"It was then that Fajuyi came out to find out what was holding me, and there inside the Government House Danjuma ordered for his arrest and mine too. That was when I saw Walbe. Then Fajuyi asked me to take him to Ironsi so that they will obey him, that there should be only one person in charge. So, I took them to Ironsi, and major Newman, immediately he saw Ironsi, he seized his crocodile swagger stick, and then they started asking him about the January coup, he said he didn’t know about it that he only agreed to be Head of State so that he can restore confidence and normalcy. It was immediately they arrested Ironsi that they turned violent". The road to the valley of death They marched us down, Ironsi and myself, to where Fajuyi was. They used telephone cable to tie my hands behind and my legs, with a little space to walk. Same they did to Ironsi, but they removed his shirt, he wore only trousers, they also tied Fajuyi. Ironsi was in a Land Rover, Fajuyi in a mini bus and myself in another bus. They drove us towards Iwo Road, 10 km from Ibadan, there was a small forest were they stopped, marched us to the right hand side of the bush, Fajuyi was leading and as he tried to cross a small stream, he fell down, the soldiers were unruly, it appeared some of them had for the first time taken Indian hemp, so when he fell down some of them started beating him. 1 Like |
Re: What The Igbo Can Learn From The Yoruba And Fulani About Power By Reno Omokri by pazienza(m): 5:26pm On Jun 04, 2017 |
My escape As Fajuyi fell down and they were beating him, Sanni Bello came to me and tapped me and said, we could do something now. It was providence, may be I was not destined to die. I took a few steps from them and jumped into a nearby ditch, all in a split of a second, Bello came and stood by the ditch and was shouting that I had escaped pointing at another direction. So the soldiers ran around that direction shooting into the bush, and when they felt they must have killed me, they shot Fajuyi and then Ironsi there, by the side of the stream. So Bello made sure that he was the last to leave the place. The ADC, who was later elected senator in 1983 stated that the former Head of State could have escaped if not that he wanted to make sure that there was no bloodshed. He said if he sacrificed his life and prevented bloodshed in Nigeria, it’s better for him. Even his chaplain urged him to escape but he said No. Also many of his officers who were contacted instead of taking action ran away. The ADC denied the prevailing story that Ironsi was tied to a Land Rover and dragged along the road. He maintained that he saw Ironsi and Fajuyi shot dead. "They shot him on the chest and it was a burst, so he would have died after the first shot". 1 Like |
Re: What The Igbo Can Learn From The Yoruba And Fulani About Power By Reno Omokri by pazienza(m): 5:32pm On Jun 04, 2017 |
The above was an eye witness account of Fajuyi and Ironsi final moments on earth by Nwankwo Andrew, Ironsi ADC. Notice nowhere in the story was Fajuyi pictured begging for Ironsi life. This couldn't have happened, because Fajuyi himself was marked for death by the Northern counter coup plotters. The story of Fajuyi being a martyr who died begging for Ironsi life was a propaganda, a falsehood manufactured by Lagos-Ibadan press. I will write more on that later. Now, the question is why was Fajuyi marked for death by the mutineers? 1 Like |
Re: What The Igbo Can Learn From The Yoruba And Fulani About Power By Reno Omokri by DerideGull(m): 5:33pm On Jun 04, 2017 |
StateNews: Please can somebody tall this loafer that Biafran issue or agitation does not predicate on the power to govern the cesspit called Nigeria. It is about compatibility or lack thereof. |
Re: What The Igbo Can Learn From The Yoruba And Fulani About Power By Reno Omokri by pazienza(m): 5:43pm On Jun 04, 2017 |
Lt Walbe: As far as I am concerned it was a lie(Yoruba publications). We arrested him as we arrested Ironsi. We suspected him of being party to the January coup. You remember the Battle Group Course which was held at Abeokuta . . . Fajuyi was Commander of the Battle Group course. He ran the course. All those who took part in the January coup were those who had taken part in that course. It gave us the impression that the Battle Course was arranged for the January Coup, so he had to suffer it too . I am sorry about that but that is the nature of the life of the military man 1 Like |
Re: What The Igbo Can Learn From The Yoruba And Fulani About Power By Reno Omokri by pazienza(m): 5:45pm On Jun 04, 2017 |
Now we have heard from the man on ground who was rumoured to have killed Ironsi and Fajuyi, on why Fajuyi was marked for death. 1 Like |
Re: What The Igbo Can Learn From The Yoruba And Fulani About Power By Reno Omokri by agaba77: 5:57pm On Jun 04, 2017 |
Non igbo nigerians simply do not understand the fundamental igbo psyche, this is the reasons they keep advising ndigbo on how to play politics. Unlike most human beigns on this planet, igbo people do no like politics in all its ramimifications. Igbo mindest is diametrically opposed to politics and polititicking. Politics requires the ability to lie and deceive constantly, it requires the ability to be two faced and treacherous. Governement requires an individual to be under a leader. Igbo enwe Eze is a common refrain. Igbo believe in self government and we are republicans in nature. The less government the better. We do not want to learn how to be better politicians, rather we want government to get out of the way so we can pursue our God given talents. This is the fundeamental difference. 1 Like |
Re: What The Igbo Can Learn From The Yoruba And Fulani About Power By Reno Omokri by DerideGull(m): 5:59pm On Jun 04, 2017 |
savage76: Please read and get factual facts. Lt Col Francis Fajuiyi led the battle course that produced the coup leaders of Jan. 15, 1966. Anybody who has stepped onto a parade ground knows very well that in coup options are not given to the targets. The Lt. Col Fajuiyi crap was the idiotic propaganda unleashed by western Nigeria regional publication of 1967. It was joke then and it still remains a joke today unless to the foolish gullible dumbass Nigerians. One poster has published an excerpt from Eligwu's Gowon Biography where Lt. Gadbang William Walbe who was one of the principal actors in government house in Ibadan categorically labeled the Yoruba's crap about Lt Col Francis Fajuiyi wanting to die with Ironsi as am imbecilic falsehood. In fact, Flt Lt. Andrew Nwankwo the bravest soldier during the arrest of Ironsi and Fajuiyi stated the same thing as did Lt. Walbe. |
Re: What The Igbo Can Learn From The Yoruba And Fulani About Power By Reno Omokri by DerideGull(m): 6:01pm On Jun 04, 2017 |
savage76: Please read and get factual facts. Lt Col Francis Fajuiyi led the battle group course that produced the coup leaders of Jan. 15, 1966. Anybody who has stepped onto a parade ground knows very well that in coup options are not given to the targets. The Lt. Col Fajuiyi crap was the idiotic propaganda unleashed by western Nigeria regional publication of 1967. It was a joke then and it still remains a joke today unless to the foolish gullible dumbass Nigerians. One poster has published an excerpt from Eligwu's Gowon Biography where Lt. Gadbang William Walbe who was one of the principal actors in government house in Ibadan categorically labeled the Yoruba's crap about Lt Col Francis Fajuiyi wanting to die with Ironsi as am imbecilic falsehood. In fact, Flt Lt. Andrew Nwankwo the bravest soldier during the arrest of Ironsi and Fajuiyi stated the same thing as Lt. Walbe did. |
Re: What The Igbo Can Learn From The Yoruba And Fulani About Power By Reno Omokri by pazienza(m): 6:01pm On Jun 04, 2017 |
Isawa Elaigwu: On 29th July, Lt Walbe and Major Danjuma were in effective contact at the State House after the change of guards. It was then that both officers walked up to Ironsi, saluted, and brought both Ironsi and Fajuyi downstairs. they were handed over to Lt Walbe(by Major Danjuma) to take charge. Lt Walbe and his troops took the two men to an area of bush at Ibadan where they subjected Ironsi to questions about the January coup and the Northern leaders and officers who died then. From the accounts of those who were there, Ironsi played the part of a very good soldier. Contrary to many publications suggesting that he made confessions, there seem to be no evidence of such confessions. Similarly there was no evidence that Fajuyi was killed because he interceded for his host or that he refused to 'abandon his guest,' as reported by some publications. He was reported to have been very scared, and had been one of those marked down for elimination. By the time Major Akahan phoned Gowon in Lagos and received instructions to ensure that nothing happened to Ironsi, it was late. Even Major Akahan and Major Danjuma(then at Ibadan) had lost control over their boys. 1 Like |
Re: What The Igbo Can Learn From The Yoruba And Fulani About Power By Reno Omokri by pazienza(m): 6:18pm On Jun 04, 2017 |
Why was it expedient for the Yorubas( Lagos-Ibadan) to concoct the falsehood of Fajuyi being a martyr who died for Ironsi? I had reasoned this, and factored all the variables into the equation, I came to two realizations: 1. It was a needed lie, if the propaganda of Igbo coup must survive. The Lagos-Ibadan press were already on the forefront of that propaganda, the acceptance of the fact that Fajuyi did play a role in the coup by mentoring and advising Nzeogwu and co on how to go about the coup, would put a hole on their Igbo coup balloon. They needed a cover up. 2. With the new formed Awolowo-Gowon alliance, accepting that the Northern coup plotters killed a Yoruba governor in Yorubaland would make them appear silly and naive, it was better to hype the killing of Akintola by Nzeogwu and co, and blame it on the Igbo, that way, it provides them with a perfect justification for teaming up with Gowon. Fajuyi real story would rock their boat, they needed a lie. And so the lie was passed from generation to generation, using the control of the Nigerian press, until the Internet happened, and boom! The lie have been bursted! 1 Like |
Re: What The Igbo Can Learn From The Yoruba And Fulani About Power By Reno Omokri by pazienza(m): 6:42pm On Jun 04, 2017 |
Reno omokri article is quite verbose and full of many propaganda that had been repeated often that they started taking the form of the truth. I would pick them one by one when I have time and burst them. The mods should take this topic to the front page. We would need as many Yoruba and Nigerian audience as we can get for a lively hot discussion. 1 Like |
Re: What The Igbo Can Learn From The Yoruba And Fulani About Power By Reno Omokri by pazienza(m): 7:03pm On Jun 04, 2017 |
[b][Awolowo was in prison because of his people and he could have been released had he compromised his beliefs but he stoutly refused. That is courage not cowardice./b] Again, this is yet another Lagos-Ibadan propaganda. Awolowo was not in prison because of his people. He was in prison because he was found guilty of misappropriation of funds and treasonable felony and was duely and rightly jailed. Awolowo was not the only corrupt politician then, almost all of them were corrupt, because it was almost impossible to fund the party activities without dipping hands into the region fund. It was Awo greed and lust for power that made him Alienate Akintola, remember that Awo and Akintola wives were also fighting over the sole distributorship of coca cola . Such greed. Awolowo couldn't manage power, Akintola greed also made him to seek for Saraduna and Balewa help in emasculating Awolowo. The political naivety and immaturity of Awolowo and Akintola led to political turmoil in the West, setting the stage for the coup. On the contrast, Zik managed power better in the East, Never was there any struggle for power with Okpara. The row with Eyo ita was diplomatically resolved. The East was the most politically stable and mature region before the coup. So, Reno or whatever he calls himself should better go and check his mental status. It is Awolowo and the West who should learn from the East, not the other way round. Lest I forget. Awolowo also left his people by taking his own life when he maneuvered himself into a political cul de sac at the hands of IBB. Ojukwu by contrast, stayed alive to bring hope to his people, after having battled for 3years. Saddam was caught running in his hole. He left when it was too late. Ghadaffi was also caught in a tunnel, he was also running, but he left it too late. 1 Like |
Re: What The Igbo Can Learn From The Yoruba And Fulani About Power By Reno Omokri by pazienza(m): 7:12pm On Jun 04, 2017 |
And even at that he did not cry or beg! Ndi'Igbo may do well to remember how Wole Soyinka, at great risk to himself, traveled to Enugu during the height of the civil war crisis to persuade Ojukwu against secession. Soyinka had nothing to gain. He did what he did as a humanitarian in support of the Igbos, an act for which he was arrested by the Gowon led Federal Military Government and thrown in jail for 26 months, 22 of which he spent in solitary confinement. How is this bravery? Rather than go and tell Gowon and his Awolowo brother who were promoting starvation policy in Biafra to return their soldiers to Lagos and be comfortable with their Arewa-Oduanistani republic, Soyinka decided to come to Biafra to persuade Biafrans to stop fighting and accept Gowon and Awolowo tyranny, and when even the likes of Okigbo and Achebe turned him and his request away, he was arrested by Gowon who suspected his movements when he returned to Nigeria. Soyinka didn't come to Biafra to support Biafrans, he came to persuade Biafrans to accept Gowon and Awolowo tyranny without puting up a fight. How exactly does that translate to helping Biafrans or bravery? 1 Like |
Re: What The Igbo Can Learn From The Yoruba And Fulani About Power By Reno Omokri by pazienza(m): 7:25pm On Jun 04, 2017 |
Ndi'Igbo erroneously believe all strength is physical. They do not seem to realize that strength is your ability to assert your will on earth and that that ability may not always be physical. The proverb-discretion is the better part of valor-is not understood by the Igbo. They tend to be reactionary and consider pausing to study a situation before you respond (not react) as cowardice. One or two of them may get it, but as a race in general they do not. They do not consider diplomacy as a first step This again is silly coming from Omokri. Omokri is attempting to teach diplomacy to a people who had evolved a complex form of mini republics ran on democracy, before the whites set foot on Africa. A people who had mastered the delicate act of peaceful resolution of conflicts with each other through diplomacy, so much that wars were not many and they were able to live in relatively peace and became densely populated in a relatively small land mass. This man posits that such a people should learn diplomacy from a people who couldn't live in peace with each other, who were fighting many precolonial battles termed Kiriji wars amongst themselves. A people who lack of diplomacy led political war between Awolowo and Akintola factions which set their region on fire in independent Nigeria. A people whose lack of diplomacy led to the Midwest secession from the Western region through a democratic referendum. Omokri needs mental examination. Has he heard of Aburi accord before? Was that not Ojukwu attempt at diplomacy which Gowon reneged on. 2 Likes |
Re: What The Igbo Can Learn From The Yoruba And Fulani About Power By Reno Omokri by Kemperor: 7:32pm On Jun 04, 2017 |
Afonjas are cowards.... Full stop . |
Re: What The Igbo Can Learn From The Yoruba And Fulani About Power By Reno Omokri by pazienza(m): 7:34pm On Jun 04, 2017 |
As a general rule, Ndi'Igbo have very little humility and are very proud individually though there are few exceptions and I must single out my friend Emeka Maduewesi as one of those exceptions. An epitome of a gentleman! Another example would be Uche Chuta. May God throw up leaders like Uche in Igboland! It's obvious this man is roaming. I can't believe some Igbos call this man their friend, look at him playing his divide and conquer rule by singling out his so called Igbo friends out from rebuke, while he castigates the entire Igbo race. What humility does this man Speak of? Igbos are proud? What exactly is that supposed to mean? 1 Like |
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