THISDAY

IKPEAZU, IPOB AND DOOMSDAY PROPHECY

- –– Mayowa Tijana, Lagos.

Icannot explain the relief I felt on October 4, 2017, when it finally dawned on me that Nigeria’s independen­ce celebratio­ns had actually come and gone and the country was intact. The celebratio­ns by individual­s and institutio­ns across the world were beautiful, all the doomsday prophets were silent and locked away in their shameful caves.

In all of my adult life, I have not seen a year as dramatic and precarious for Nigeria as 2017. I really thought 2015 strained the cords of our unity, but 2017 came with more threats to Nigeria’s harmony. Arewa youths had promised doomsday for October 1. The Niger Delta militants assured us retaliatio­n and reprisal attacks. To aggravate the issues at hand, the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) took a pledge to rain brimstone and fire on the Nigerian state.

In my opinion, the federal government did not handle it well. As all these regional tensions raged on, President Muhammadu Buhari sent a voice note to Nigerians, celebratin­g the end of the Ramadan season in Hausa language. The president’s speech — rather than douse tensions — added some heat to the polity. The rest of Nigeria felt left out by the president’s deliberate segregatio­n.

Upon return to the country, the president made another address, where he said Nigeria’s unity was not negotiable. This time around, the president went beyond words to show his leadership as the commanderi­n-chief of the armed forces. Three weeks to the October 1 “doomsday” we had operation Python Dance II in place; and in no time, the military was already clashing with civilians in a democratic state like Nigeria.

As October 1 drew nearer, the tensions got more palpable, and the uncertaint­y of a country’s unity was playing out in the South-east more than in any other part of the country.

In all of these, very few politician­s stood out for me: Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, the acting president of the country at that turbulent time, and Okezie Ikpeazu, the governor of Abia State, who I see as the man who kept peace in the midst of a raging storm of disunity.

Ikpeazu particular­ly vied for peace, despite every incentive to let violence reign. At a time when Arewa youths were busy giving ultimatums and IPOB was keen to match violence-for-violence, the governor maintained the message our founding fathers held dear: unity and faith, peace and progress.

For him, there was pressure from the federal authoritie­s to handle the Abia crisis like the military was doing, leading to avoidable deaths. There surely was pressure from IPOB and Nnamdi Kanu, who had gained so many foot soldiers in the last two years. There was also pressure from the anti-IPOB camp within the same state he governs. In the midst of all that, Ikpeazu still hosted northern governors and said the country is one and “we won’t allow an infinitesi­mal few to separate us”.

Calling for conversati­ons around marginalis­ation and infrastruc­tural deficienci­es in the South-east, the governor still placed necessary attention on Nigeria’s fragile peace.

“I want to announce that the population of Igbo outside the Igbo enclave is about 11.6 million; you don’t play with the lives of 11.6 million people,” he had said.

“We all have to be careful, the press, the leadership at the state level and at the federal level, everybody. We are still working on stabilisin­g and sustaining the fragile peace that we enjoy now.

“I swore with the Bible to protect lives and property; because I take such oath very seriously, I will continue to protect the lives and property of our brothers and sisters irrespecti­ve of where they come from.”

In an interview with Osasu Igbinedion on The Osasu Show while the potential crisis of October 1 had been averted, Ikpeazu revealed that despite his position as the governor and chief security officer of Abia State, he was not privy to the incursion of the army in Abia State.

He said he had a letter that the military were coming for operation Python Dance on Friday, “but they decided to test their pieces of equipment on Sunday,” earlier than the agreed date. He added that he had discussion­s with high-profiled military officers who assured him that the military will withdraw troops from Abia State, only to be countered by the same military, less than 24 hours after.

Despite all this and the political underlinin­g of the Python’s Dance, the governor knew he had only one job which he said “is to secure life and property of not only Abians but everybody that is doing business within the geographic­al space called Abia.

“So at that time, I should protect even those agitating for an independen­t country called Biafra. I come from a part of the country where the lives and property of wvisitors within your gate is perhaps more important than your own life.

“My duty and my responsibi­lity are to make sure that I avert bloodshed of monumental proportion­s.”

Nigeria’s recent political history teaches that as a governor in the Peoples Democratic Party — a party at variance with the party at the federal level — Ikpeazu was expected to politicise the crisis in favour of his political ambitions or that of his party. But rather than do that, he supported the proscripti­on of IPOB, that peace may reign.

In all, I’m delighted that the October 1 doomsday prophecy is now behind us, but we all must work together towards a peaceful and united Nigeria.

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