Rising political tension and echoes of war in Nigeria
The amalgamation of northern and southern protectorates by Lord Lugard in 1914 was a marriage of convenience, which has become very tempestuous. He did not consult the ethnic leaders in the country to get their consensus before embarking on the complex undertaking of cobbling the two protectorates together. Sadly, over the years, that marriage has proved to be a grave mistake as the country is continuously and eternally embroiled in political conflicts and religious crises.
However, on the African continent, most heterogeneous countries, which experienced colonialism by white people, do quake with bloody ethnic crises and violent religious uprisings. Sudan, which has the same colonial master as Nigeria, broke up into two countries, namely Sudan and South Sudan. Eritrea pulled out of Ethiopia after years of having political trouble with Ethiopia. In Kenya, the Kikuyu and Luo ethnic groups are fiercely engaged in bitter rivalry and fight for political power and dominance in that country. And the Englishspeaking people of Cameroun have
been fighting tirelessly to achieve self-determination.
Back home, in Nigeria, our problem of ethnic rivalry and political and religious troubles came to a head when Nigeria descended into a civil war, which raged between 1967 and 1970. However, before we got our political freedom in 1960, the seed of ethnic nationalism, which sparks off ethnic rivalry in heterogeneous countries, had been sown in Nigeria.
The promotion of ethnic nationalism and ethnocentrism by Nigeria’s ethnic champions cum politicians is a centrifugal force which has continued to undermine our national cohesion and unity. So, when the northern people threatened secession in their nine point programme in 1953, it signposted that the country has been set on the trajectory of ethnic suspicion and rivalry.
In the first republic, after we became politically independent, the north with its demographic superiority, political sophistication, and aided by the British colonialists, produced the Prime Minister of Nigeria, Alhaji Tafawa Balewa. However, the first republic politicians couldn’t pilot the affairs of the country well. Consequently, corruption became pervasive in the country, and the western region was embroiled in a bloody political crisis, which emanated remotely from Awolowo-akintola clash of personality.
In order to arrest Nigeria’s drift to anarchy, the soldiers executed the January 15, 1966 putsch, which was botched. The intention of the coupists was to release Chief Awolowo from prison and install him as the leader of the country. Unfortunately, their plan misfired and set in motion the happenings of unintended events, the chief of which was the eruption of the Nigeria-biafra civil war.
Because some non-igbo people, who were chief political players in the country, were killed in the January 15, 1966 coup, and because the lives of Nnamdi Azikiwe, Chief Michael Okpara, and the lives of other prominent Igbo politicians were spared, the January 15, 1966 coup was tagged an Igbo coup. More so, Aguiyi Ironsi’s ascension to power following the botched January 15, 1966, and his moves to make Nigeria a unitary state reinforced the belief among Nigerians from diverse ethnic groups that the Igbo people wanted to foist Igbo hegemony and suzerainty on the country. Consequently, there was the revenge and counter-coup of July 1966, which eventuated to the pogrom of Igbo people in the north and snowballed into the Nigeria- Biafra gratuitous civil war.
Today, the situation and happenings in Nigeria bring back sad remembrances and echoes of the events preceding the Nigeria- Biafra civil war. Now, the Boko Haram group, which is implacably opposed to girls’ acquisition of western education, abducts school girls. And members of the deadly Boko Haram insurgent group do strap bombs on their bodies and detonate them among people to kill them. It’s obvious to us that the Boko Haram group is intent on installing Islamic theocracy in Nigeria without considering the religious sensibilities of millions of other Nigerians, who are