Re: Reply To Chinua Achebe's There Was A Country. By Alabi Isama. by Nobody: 3:45pm On Dec 15, 2017 |
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Re: Reply To Chinua Achebe's There Was A Country. By Alabi Isama. by ipodstinks: 3:46pm On Dec 15, 2017 |
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Re: Reply To Chinua Achebe's There Was A Country. By Alabi Isama. by Duru1(m): 3:49pm On Dec 15, 2017 |
ipodstinks: Chief (Dr) Chinua Achebe wrote a book titled “There Was a Country” which had sparked a lot of discussion on the pages of many of our National Newspapers of the resent. The pity of it was that Achebe had touched on the raw parts of the Yoruba People of this country and many had commented promptly and appropriately.
My comment to you today, has very little or nothing to do with the tribal issues but as affecting the military, the 3MCDO operation area during the civil war and to Sector 3 of 3MCDO of which I was the commander in particular, from 1967 to 1969. I was also the Chief of Staff of 3MCDO during this same period.
This book will be out there forever, and I need to defend myself and my actions during the civil war for posterity. Nothing but the truth will be good enough for today and tomorrow. My account therefore will not be what I was told or what I heard as contained in many parts of Achebe's book. This is on the spot account of events described in Achebe's book. I have just completed reading it. Chief Achebe wrote about the following military situations, which I know are inconsistent with the truth:- a Asaba Massacre – Page 133 b The Calabar Massacre - Uyo – The brutality and blood lust of the Nigerian Soldiers Page 137 c. The capture of Afikpo d The Capture of PH - After several weeks of sustained air, land and sea pounding, a period reportedly characterized by military atrocities - rapes, looting, outright brigandry – Port Harcourt fell to the Nigerians on May 12, 1968. – Page 137 e. The Economic Blockade and starvation- pages 209 – 210 I will therefore take these issues one by one and expect that there will be questions at the end of my discussions with you on the points made or generally on the book, since I have read it.
Asaba Massacre.
This was on the night of 8th August, 1967 at about 10pm. I was the commander of the Federal troops of 4th Area Command at Asaba. The Biafran troops broke the barricade on Niger River bridge and went straight to a place called “Ogbe Hausa” at the cable point; where the Hausa community lived. Biafran troops pounced on them and killed many of them. The few that escaped were moved down at Onitsha end, the people jubilated. Before my troops could reach me to report the situation, about 20 Biafran troops attacked me at the catering Rest House where I was living at the time. I fought my way through, and overpowered the 20 Biafran troops and reported the situation to my boss Major Henry Igboba at Agbor. The story of how I did that is contained in my book. b) When the tide turned and the Federal Troops recaptured the Midwestern Region and Asaba, the Hausas among them retaliated by killing the people at Asaba. The Hausa who were there had never denied doing that. c) Please read the excerpts of this story in a book written by a Midwestern Asaba Ibo author titled “The Blood on the Niger” - pages 28 and 62
[b]Excerpts[/b]: Lieutenant Wokocha of the invading forces awakened one of the commanders of the Midwest Fourth Area Command in Asaba, Major Alabi Isama from sleep at the Catering Rest House. Major Alabi escaped arrest by shooting his way through and headed straight to Agbor......
Elsewhere at the ’Ogbe Hausa’ settlement (the equivalent name to the northern ‘Sabon Gari’ residential quarters of migrant elements living in the traditional Muslim Hausa states), a former teacher of 35 years experience, tells an equally hair-raising story. But before then, let us backup to the scenario at Ogbe Hausa the day Biafrans crossed the Niger. The Hausa settlement at the end of Cable Point is as old as Asaba Township itself. It developed during the trading boom of the Royal Niger Company. Trade on the Niger had brought a lot of Nigerians together buying, exchanging and selling goods. Most of these stranger elements from the North – Hausas, Fulanis, Nupes, Tivs and Igalas decided to stay on in Asaba. Many were born there and did not have deeper ties with their own Northern roots, and during the crisis, did not quite know where to run back to. These were the Nigerians that a group of brigands from Onitsha fell upon on the morning of 9th August, 1967. These youths, mainly aggrieved refugees from the North apparently had not forgotten the 1966 debacle in the North. In vengeance, they accompanied the Biafran Brigade and before the Asaba indigenes knew what was happening, a lot of damage had been done in Ogbe Hausa. Many were rescued and given safe conduct through Auchi by road while others proceeded by boat through the river Niger. This group never made it, for they were ambushed at Onono near Onitsha and dealt with. This was the situation as the Federal troops, now on the offensive and in command, approached Ogbe Hausa quarters, Asaba * In short the Hausas were all killed. The rest of the story is in my book now being published which hopefully should be launched in January / February 2013. The Calabar Massacre – page 137 of Achebe’s book. I was the Chief of Staff of 3MCDO and Col Benjamin Adekunle was the commander. Achebe’s story here was that the Nigerian forces over ran Calabar in early 1968 without much resistance or investment. He further wrote that the Nigerian Forces decided to purge the city of its Igbo inhabitants and that by the time the Nigerians were done, at least 1,000 and perhaps 2,000 Ibos had been killed.
a. This is a very unfortunate comment. Intelligence report showed that Biafran troops had alienated the Efik people of Calabar, did not recruit many into the Biafran Army and had lousily defended the town and the beach area of Atimbo. 3MDCO therefore led by Col Adekunle had an amphibious landing at Calabar which proved that the town and the beaches were not defended by Biafran troops with the seriousness that it deserved; and the natives welcomed 3MCDO with all the enthusiasm and the support it deserved. b. I landed 3 days after the amphibious landing and the natives gave us all the support we needed – medical, casualty evacuation, food, off loading the ship of our supplies and heavy weapons. These stories and relevant pictures are contained in my book. c. Achebe then said, on the same page 137 that the Nigerian forces opened fire and murdered fourteen nurses and the patients in the wards in Uyo. Here is an excerpts from a book titled “The Nigerian Revolution and the Biafran War” by AlexanderA. Madiebo, the commander of Biafran Forces on page 240 and 242 of his book.
....On the 9th of March the enemy landed at Oron and then on, no one including the Brigade Commander Aniebo, really knew what was happening until Ikot-Ekpene, 50 miles from Oron, also fell. However, within hours of enemy landing, there was firing in many towns and villages between Oron and Uyo. Thereafter, wherever our troops tried to deploy in the area, they fell into an ambush. That confusion continued until the 11th when firing started inside Uyo town and we soon discovered that the “enemy,” whoever he might be, was there. In short Uyo had fallen! Our own troops were pulling back in disarray, absolutely unable to establish a defensive position anywhere along the route. Having lost complete control of his brigade with no prospects of regaining it, Colonel Aniebo was dismissed from command and summoned to appear before the Head of State, Ojukwu...
Here also is an excerpt of the book titled “Nigeria and Biafra my Story” by Phippip Effiong, the Chief of Defence Staff of the Biafran Armed Forces on page 220 and 221 of his book:
.....When I visited the Brigade shortly before the invasion, particularly in Uyo and Calabar areas, I received a lot of complaints from the local people about unsavoury treatment by our (Biafran) troops. I drew Colonel Eze’s attention to these complaints and urged him to improve relations with the civilians. At Uyo, military/civilian relations were so strained that I had to personally intervene to release a local newspaper editor from detention. Such acts on my part were not just a question of feeling alone for my people, but also a question of justice and sense of belonging in an emergent Biafran State. Were these arrests, false accusations, and detentions a sign of things to come in an independent Biafra? These issues bothered me as they would anyone else in my position then..... ..... With the fall of Calabar, Itu , Uyo and Ikot Ekpene the rest of the mainland was militarily threatened. Before this threat became imminent, I had strongly suggested to Ojukwu that as Ikot Ekpene was a vital junction town. It should be strongly defended. All he did was to sarcastically remind me that in fact we should also put a battalion at Nnewi. Nnewi was Ojukwus’s homerown as Ikot Ekpene was supposed to be mine, because I lived and grew up there. However, I am from Ibiono in Itu, and not Ikot Ekpene. After I received his sarcastic message, I did not mention the subject again. As it eventually turned out, the fall of Ikot Ekpene hastened the collapse of the Biafran 12th Division and, consequently, of Biafra....
d) More of the story and pictures of the capture of Calabar, Uyo Ikot – Ekpere are contained in chapter 5 of my book. 1. (Pictures) – Building Bridges – Page 85 of my book. 2. (Picture) Natures helping to build the roads and bridges – page 86 of my book. 3. Map for the capture of Obubra – page 87 of my book.
The major thing to bear in mind about the above crap is the date of 8th August, 1967. It was the day Biafra launched operation to capture Lagos and the troops were Benin in few hours of the operation. Some folks write recorded event in manner that suggests that they have monopoly on the facts or nobody knows anything about military operation but them. This dumbass donkey named Alabi-Isama stated he overpowered 20 Biafran soldiers. How did he overpower 20 men? He claimed the Biafrans took Hausa peeps back to Onicha when in fact the Biafrans were in Warri, Sapele and Benin within 12 hours of the liberation operation which started on 8th August, 1967. It is so funny that Alabi-Isama was in hurry to receive accolades that he forgot the doctrine of military parlance. Major Alabi-Isama was sector commander but the Chief of Staff of 3MCDO. There were superior officer in 3MCDO at the time such as Lt Col Ayo Ariyo. |
Re: Reply To Chinua Achebe's There Was A Country. By Alabi Isama. by Nobody: 3:49pm On Dec 15, 2017 |
ipodstinks: More More rantings from General Olodo Isama |
Re: Reply To Chinua Achebe's There Was A Country. By Alabi Isama. by ipodstinks: 3:55pm On Dec 15, 2017 |
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Re: Reply To Chinua Achebe's There Was A Country. By Alabi Isama. by Nobody: 3:57pm On Dec 15, 2017 |
ipodstinks: The truth shall prevail no matter the lies Achebe put down on the war he never participated or he said himself he was told. General Olodo Isama is an idle broke man that cannot pay house rent. |
Re: Reply To Chinua Achebe's There Was A Country. By Alabi Isama. by ipodstinks: 4:03pm On Dec 15, 2017 |
imhotep:
General Olodo Isama is an idle broke man that cannot pay house rent.
Ok, he's a broke man. But has been able to send his wards to schools abroad. How broke can pass that one. He debunk your lying Achebe in 2012 and challenged him to come out to confront him but your lying boss couldn't cos he won't be able to defend himself. He even lied about when PH was captured. 3 Likes |
Re: Reply To Chinua Achebe's There Was A Country. By Alabi Isama. by Nobody: 4:05pm On Dec 15, 2017 |
ipodstinks: Ok, he's a broke man. But has been able to send his wards to schools abroad. How broke can pass that one. He debunk your lying Achebe in 2012 and challenged him to come out to confront him but your lying boss couldn't cos he won't be able to defend himself. He even lied about when PH was captured. tell your dull@rd general to go back and complete his education 2 Likes |
Re: Reply To Chinua Achebe's There Was A Country. By Alabi Isama. by konoplyanka: 4:45pm On Dec 15, 2017 |
imhotep:
tell your dull@rd general to go back and complete his education Typical ibo man. Any truth not confirming to your lies is a lie. Any lie said by fellow iboe man is the ultimate truth. You must think everyone else is daft like you. Mere reading Achebe's book, one would know it's full of lies, distortion of facts, an attemp to rewrite history and bitterness. Achebe died a sadist. 6 Likes 2 Shares |
Re: Reply To Chinua Achebe's There Was A Country. By Alabi Isama. by Nobody: 4:47pm On Dec 15, 2017 |
konoplyanka:
Typical ibo man. Any truth not confirming to your lies is a lie. Any lie said by fellow in man is the ultimate truth.
You must think everyone else is daft like you. Mere reading Achebe's book, one would know it's full of lies, distortion of facts, an attemp to rewrite history and bitterness. Achebe died a sadist. Achebe remains a world acclaimed writer and scholar. Alabi Isama needs to go and weed his cocoyam farm before famine strikes his kindred 2 Likes |
Re: Reply To Chinua Achebe's There Was A Country. By Alabi Isama. by ipodstinks: 4:53pm On Dec 15, 2017 |
imhotep:
tell your dull@rd general to go back and complete his education One thing I love about the guy is the pictures he used to killed the lies told by Achebe about an event he never participated in. 4 Likes |
Re: Reply To Chinua Achebe's There Was A Country. By Alabi Isama. by Nobody: 4:55pm On Dec 15, 2017 |
ipodstinks: One thing I love about the guy is the pictures he used to killed the lies told by Achebe about an event he never participated in. fake pictures with fake captions. Do not let the illiterate general deceive you |
Re: Reply To Chinua Achebe's There Was A Country. By Alabi Isama. by patrick89(m): 4:56pm On Dec 15, 2017 |
There is no prove to show those random pictures... ipodstinks: One thing I love about the guy is the pictures he used to killed the lies told by Achebe about an event he never participated in. |
Re: Reply To Chinua Achebe's There Was A Country. By Alabi Isama. by ipodstinks: 5:00pm On Dec 15, 2017 |
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Re: Reply To Chinua Achebe's There Was A Country. By Alabi Isama. by Nobody: 5:02pm On Dec 15, 2017 |
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Re: Reply To Chinua Achebe's There Was A Country. By Alabi Isama. by ipodstinks: 5:04pm On Dec 15, 2017 |
patrick89: There is no prove to show those random pictures... Why will there a prove. But if it was Achebe that posted the pictures, there would be enough prove . Even with the one having guest house having aba in the pics. No be ipob again, they will be saying fake but will never bring facts to destroy the fake post. Just negodu 3 Likes |
Re: Reply To Chinua Achebe's There Was A Country. By Alabi Isama. by konoplyanka: 5:06pm On Dec 15, 2017 |
imhotep:
Achebe remains a world acclaimed writer and scholar. Alabi Isama needs to go and weed his cocoyam farm before famine strikes his kindred How I wish Alabi Isama could not buy your whole generation including Achebe's. Poor people like you think everyone else is poor. 3 Likes |
Re: Reply To Chinua Achebe's There Was A Country. By Alabi Isama. by Nobody: 5:07pm On Dec 15, 2017 |
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Re: Reply To Chinua Achebe's There Was A Country. By Alabi Isama. by ipodstinks: 5:09pm On Dec 15, 2017 |
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Re: Reply To Chinua Achebe's There Was A Country. By Alabi Isama. by ipodstinks: 5:10pm On Dec 15, 2017 |
konoplyanka:
How I wish Alabi Isama could not by your whole generation including Achebe's.
Poor people like you think everyone else is poor. What does he know. Can he stand his last kid. 1 Like |
Re: Reply To Chinua Achebe's There Was A Country. By Alabi Isama. by Nobody: 5:14pm On Dec 15, 2017 |
ipodstinks: Isama was in the war front, he was never told. He is in the picture. Was Achebe that stired lies for you to drink ever been to the war front. He wrote bullshit story based on hearsay. I was told this, was told that. Chai. This is so laughable. Even as isama said his own, we here never believed him totally despite been at the war front. But you people. Make i close mouth as I dey shame for una Olodo Isama is a pained foot soldier that has nothing tangible to say. He should return to his cassava plantation before hunger takes him. |
Re: Reply To Chinua Achebe's There Was A Country. By Alabi Isama. by Guestlander: 5:17pm On Dec 15, 2017 |
ipodstinks: You think I am a fool like you that digested what Achebe told you. He's not even ashamed, he still said, 'I was told', ' we were told'. And the way he packaged the lies, one would think he was on the war front. People forget Achebe was the propaganda minister of Biafra. 5 Likes |
Re: Reply To Chinua Achebe's There Was A Country. By Alabi Isama. by Nobody: 5:21pm On Dec 15, 2017 |
Diiet: Achebe was a tribalist and his books are full of lies.His books contribute a lot to the confrontations we are seeing today between yorubas and ibos. I won't say more than this because he's now dead. No, you already started...judged the book as evil and the cause of tribal wars So do not stop now, go ahead, knock yourself out Your comment implying you are respecting the dead is not necessary...honestly, he will not mind though, since he already asked you to write your own story if you do not buy his Dodgy.com |
Re: Reply To Chinua Achebe's There Was A Country. By Alabi Isama. by ipodstinks: 5:26pm On Dec 15, 2017 |
imhotep:
Olodo Isama is a pained foot soldier that has nothing tangible to say. He should return to his cassava plantation before hunger takes him. Is this the best weapon you have . Even your revisionist Achebe never mentioned the bombing of casino in Lagos by biafrans. He only shout what he was told. I shame for that man. Still wondering why he refused to come out when isama dared him to come out in 2012 so they can confront themselves. 3 Likes |
Re: Reply To Chinua Achebe's There Was A Country. By Alabi Isama. by Nobody: 5:33pm On Dec 15, 2017 |
ipodstinks: Is this the best weapon you have . Even your revisionist Achebe never mentioned the bombing of casino in Lagos by biafrans. He only shout what he was told. I shame for that man. Still wondering why he refused to come out when isama dared him to come out in 2012 so they can confront themselves. So you expect a world acclaimed Prof Achebe to "debate" with a korofo quota-system recruit known as Isama ? Kai, Nigger Area. 3 Likes |
Re: Reply To Chinua Achebe's There Was A Country. By Alabi Isama. by mayorchelsea(m): 5:43pm On Dec 15, 2017 |
We were all guilty for the war. 4 Likes |
Re: Reply To Chinua Achebe's There Was A Country. By Alabi Isama. by T9ksy(m): 6:07pm On Dec 15, 2017 |
Guestlander:
People (conveniently chose to) forget Achebe was the propaganda minister of Biafra. LOBATAN!!!
How can such a person who is also a world accalimed "Story teller" be expected to write the absolute truth about the biafran war without his bias rearing its ugly head? He can't as it is a natural human phenomenon ! However, our brothers swalliwed achebe's BS, hook, line and whole stinker even when most of his "story telling" account were from 2nd unveriable sources but are quick to debase Alabi's 1st hand account, as pure lies.
Hmmmmm i sincerely bow to ibo's logic 101 3 Likes |
Re: Reply To Chinua Achebe's There Was A Country. By Alabi Isama. by ipodstinks: 6:12pm On Dec 15, 2017 |
imhotep:
So you expect a world acclaimed Prof Achebe to "debate" with a korofo quota-system recruit known as Isama ?
Kai, Nigger Area. World acclaimed that Swim in lies and deceit ko? |
Re: Reply To Chinua Achebe's There Was A Country. By Alabi Isama. by Olabestonic001(m): 6:13pm On Dec 15, 2017 |
Guestlander:
People forget Achebe was the propaganda minister of Biafra. Your head dey there! That's why I never took his account of that war serious. It's like Gobachev telling us the account of WW2 Believe a Propaganda Minister at your own peril! 1 Like |
Re: Reply To Chinua Achebe's There Was A Country. By Alabi Isama. by Nobody: 6:15pm On Dec 15, 2017 |
ipodstinks: World acclaimed that Swim in lies and deceit ko? Just admit that you hate Chinua Achebe and be done with it. Your arguments are rather weak. |
Re: Reply To Chinua Achebe's There Was A Country. By Alabi Isama. by ipodstinks: 6:16pm On Dec 15, 2017 |
T9ksy:
LOBATAN!!!
How can such a person who is also a world accalimed "Story teller" be expected to write the absolute truth about the biafran war without his bias rearing its ugly head? He can't as it is a natural human phenomenon ! However, our brothers swalliwed achebe's BS, hook, line and whole stinker even when most of his "story telling" account were from 2nd unveriable sources but are quick to debase Alabi's 1st hand account, as pure lies.
Hmmmmm i sincerely bow to ibo's logic 101 I just weak for them. Achebe that always put in his book 'I was told'. Saying someone that was in the war front is lying but beloved in I was told someone. 1 Like |
Re: Reply To Chinua Achebe's There Was A Country. By Alabi Isama. by russellino: 6:16pm On Dec 15, 2017 |
[quote author=ipodstinks post=63309822][/quote] Is that all? I thought you would show pictures of alabi-isama singlehandedly defeating 200 biafran soldiers with his bare hands Lies lies lies kontinu |