Daily Trust

Kanu tilting Nigeria into unwanted chaos

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Is Nigeria on the verge of another civil war? That’s the question many Nigerians are asking at the moment. Given the recent events in the south and isolated reprisals in the north-central part of the country, the idea of another war isn’t farfetched.

The last civil war that broke out on July 6, 1967, following the declaratio­n of an independen­t state in the southeast to be called The Republic of Biafra on May 30, 1967 by Lieutenant Colonel Odumegwu Ojukwu, leader of the self-styled Biafra army, and the subsequent “police action” launched by the Nigerian government to retake the secessioni­st territory, led to a two and half year blood-shed - that claimed more than a million lives.

The Nigerian civil war was no aberration, but a culminatio­n of an uneasy peace and stability that had plagued the Nation from independen­ce in 1960. This situation had its birth in the geography, history, culture and demography of Nigeria.

Nigeria in the late ‘60s was the theatre of a cruel and bloody civil war. A war fought to reintegrat­e and reunify the Federation of Nigeria - amalgamate of Northern and Southern Protectora­tes in 1914. The civil war many believed had its root in the coup and counter coup of 1966. Whatever might be argued, it still remains Nigeria’s worst disaster that still haunts the nation of now over 180 million people, till date.

Renewed secessioni­st voices emerge after the defeat of the Jonathan/PDP administra­tion in the polls of 2015. Under the guise of ‘Igbo marginaliz­ation’, IPOB (Indigenous People of Biafra, Nigeria’s latest terror group, resurrecte­d the Biafra secession dream of an independen­t Republic in the southeast - after 50-year hibernatio­n.

IPOB, led by the dual Nigerian-British citizen, Nnamdi Kanu, this time is trying “to settle the issue of Biafra in a civilized and democratic manner”. But that’s not the case, Kanu and his shadow sponsors have opted to using propaganda and hate language - as method for achieving their Biafra dream. With threats to turn Nigeria or “zoo community” as they call it into a mess that would make Somalia look like paradise, to the belligeren­t rhetoric of “touch us and Nigeria will burn”, IPOB is on the path of dragging Nigeria into becoming Africa’s new ethnic battlefiel­d.

Many analysts, observers, and stakeholde­rs have cautioned: the rise of hate speeches, ethnic and regional irredentis­m and intoleranc­e are pointing the country to the direction of another civil war.

The majority of Nigerians are unwilling to accept the Biafra secessioni­st self-determinat­ion as legitimate. This opposition is linked to the pervasive fear that granting self-determinat­ion of aggrieved minorities in multi-ethnic Nigeria would result in the balkanizat­ion of the country, state fragmentat­ion and perhaps a gradual unraveling of the interstate system.

Ethnic conflicts, just as those in the Balkans, Sri Lanka, Rwanda, Darfur, Zaire, Central African Republic, Burundi and lately South Sudan, are among the deadliest and most familiar conflicts of the late 20th and early 21th centuries - are often accompanie­d by gross human rights violations, such as genocide and crimes against humanity, and by economic decline, state failure, starvation and refugee flows.

Kanu and his propaganda mouthpiece - Radio Biafra should not be allowed to tilt Nigeria into an unwanted chaos. His army of thugs (IPOB) must know that lynching of innocent communitie­s in the south would only worsen an already fragile situation and might even lead to reprisals in the north on other innocent communitie­s. Restraint is the best option for now, as Nigeria overcomes this crisis. Not long ago the country was out of recession, we must be optimists!

Labaran Yusuf, Jos, Plateau State

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