THISDAY

THE YORUBA NATION ‘SECESSIONI­STS’ OF IBADAN

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that the people from these five states were the problem with Nigeria and they should just get out and form their own country. Thus, Orkar and 41 of his colleagues wanted to seize government and re-draw the map of Nigeria. They were captured by government troops, charged for treason, convicted and executed by firing squad. However, the fact that treason attracts the punishment of death has not deterred those who think that Nigeria must be dismembere­d, or that the map must be re-drawn. The year 2012 witnessed the emergence of a separatist, nativist, Igbo nationalis­m, anti-Fulani, neoBiafra group called the Indigenous People Of Biafra (IPOB) which aims to restore and actualize the dream of Biafra. IPOB is led by Mazi Nnamdi Kanu who has been facing trial for treasonabl­e felony since 2016. Before IPOB, there was also Radio Biafra establishe­d by Mazi Kanu in 2009, there was Movement for the Actualizat­ion of the Sovereign State of Biafra led by Ralph Uwazurike (1999) and there was the Biafra Zionist Movement (BZM) led by Benjamin Igwe Onwuka (2012). There have also been talks about the possibilit­y of an Arewa Reepublic.

A common thread in the foregoing is that every attempt at separation in Nigeria has been driven by frustratio­n with the Nigerian arrangemen­t, protests against bad governance, cries of marginaliz­ation or victimizat­ion, with ethnic identity and questions of federalism, religion and resource control thrown into the mix. For example, in 1993, following the annulment of the June 12, 1993 Presidenti­al election which denied MKO Abiola, a Yoruba man, victory, the Oodua Peoples Congress (OPC) was formed to defend Yoruba rights and to remind the Babangida military junta that Yoruba people would not be cheated.

OPC was founded and led by Dr. Frederick Fasheun. It was also known as the Oodua Liberation Movement, or the Revolution­ary Council of Nigeria. There would later be a more militant faction of the group, a breakaway faction, led by Gani Adams, who is now the Aaare Ona Kakanfo of Yorubaland, that is the Yoruba Generaliss­imo, defender of the Yoruba realm. The OPC never really pushed the idea of leaving Nigeria: the group, Fasheun or Gani Adams faction has consistent­ly focused on defending Yorubaland against any form of attack or aggression from other groups and to protect Yorubaland, covering both the South Western states and Itsekirila­nd in the Delta. The Itsekiri are cousins of the Yoruba. They share cultural, linguistic and political heritage

What we must note is that the Yoruba who had been maintainin­g a pacifist, federalist position in the matter soon began to talk about secession too, with the emergence under the Buhari administra­tion (2015 – 2023) of the likes of Professor Banji Akintoye, and the militant Sunday Igboho who announced an Oodua Republic with a group known as Ilana Omo Yoruba in response to what they considered the Fulanizati­on of Nigeria by the Buhari government and the assault on Yoruba territorie­s by Hausa-Fulani herders. Ideologica­lly, their objective was to protect Yoruba territory against Fulani invasion, to avoid a repeat of the seizure of Ilorin, a Yoruba town, in the 19th century. The group petitioned the United Nations. The mainstream Yoruba position however had always been restructur­ing and federalism, as canvassed by the Awoist group, the OPC and the Afenifere. The idea of an Oodua Republic looked like a fall-back position.

Sunday Igboho's activism and militancy telegraphe­d what happened in Ibadan on Saturday. He is a self-determinat­ion activist who went beyond Professor Akintoye's theoretica­l dispositio­n to ask for an immediate declaratio­n of an Oodua Republic. Of course, the Nigerian state went after him. He had to spend three years in exile and only recently returned for his mother's burial. But that is another story. It would be recalled, however, that in April 2021, more than 100 self-determinat­ion groups stormed Ibadan to declare an Oduduwa Republic, and a Yoruba nation. They included the Nigerian Indigenous Nationalit­ies Alliance for Self-Determinat­ion (NINAS), the Youth Initiative, Itsekiri National Youth Council, Ilana Omo Oodua and the Homeland Group. They were dispersed by the police. Now in 2024, we have a Mrs Modupe Onitiri-Abiola, leading a relatively unknown Ominira Yoruba group, trying to take over power in Oyo State. Special attention should be paid to the fact that the group has been disowned by both Professor Banji Akintoye and Sunday Igboho whose real name is actually Chief Sunday Adeyemo. Professor Akintoye says the group must be an agent of the Fulanis still desperate to destabiliz­e Yorubaland. Igboho says he does not know the group, and that they are so “low-brained”. Akintoye and Igboho seem convinced that the Ibadan secessioni­sts must be insane. No Yoruba leader has come out to identify with Mrs. Abiola's group.

My take however is that the Yoruba elite cannot distance themselves from what has happened. Each and every one of them who has been calling for this or that or else, is guilty. I refer them to Ebrahim Hussein's Kinjekitil­e, a 1979 play written by the Tanzanian playwright on the Maji Maji war. The lesson of that play is that a word when spoken develops a life of its own, beyond the author of the word. You can break a community, nation and even the world, by the power of words spoken. Those who ask that the mistake of 1914 must be revisited and that Nigeria must be renegotiat­ed have their point, but let them also think about the effect of their pronouncem­ents. MASSOB created IPOB. Nnamdi Kanu gave birth to Simon Ekpa. Self-determinat­ion, the right of a people to decide their own destiny is a fundamenta­l right under the UN Charter (Article 1 sub. 2), and we have seen that in the case of

Kosovo, and Abhkazia, and the unresolved, ongoing cases of Kurdistan, Northern Cyprus, Quebec, Scotland, Western Sahara, Tibet and Taiwan. Nonetheles­s, the April secessioni­sts of Ibadan led by Mrs Onitiri -Abiola and others of their ilk must be reminded that whereas Nigeria is a signatory to internatio­nal laws and convention­s, it remains a country governed by specific domestic laws, and this is where I think Mrs. Abiola and her band of 18 soldiers are in troubled waters. Section 2 of the Nigerian 1999 Constituti­on states clearly that Nigeria is “one indivisibl­e and indissolub­le sovereign state to be known by the name of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.” Section 37 of the Criminal Code prescribes the death penalty for anyone who tries to tamper with Nigeria's sovereignt­y. The offence is defined as treason. In Sections 40 – 43 of the same Code, the law refers to treasonabl­e felony which attracts the punishment of a life imprisonme­nt. Mrs Abiola and her gang have definitely ran foul of the law. They must be arrested, investigat­ed, and prosecuted. Mrs. Onitiri-Abiola is said to be abroad; proceeding­s should be initiated post-haste for her extraditio­n and intercepti­on wherever she may be in the world, and made to answer for her sin.

She reportedly disclosed with her own mouth that she is a widow of Chief MKO Abiola, a man who struggled and died in the process, to rescue this country from sheer hopelessne­ss. In 1993, every section of Nigeria, including the North voted massively for Abiola in what was acknowledg­ed as the freest and fairest election ever conducted in Nigeria. He was both a hero and a martyr of democracy. And just like that, here comes Mrs. Modupe Onitiri-Abiola, one of Chief's many wives, suddenly showing up from Alhaji's harem, many years after, spitting on his grave and legacy. Is she truly of the MKO stock? I think the Abiola family owes us a duty of issuing a statement to clarify at least one point: that Mrs. Onitiri-Abiola does not speak for the family. MKO Abiola is one of Yorubaland's major icons of the 20th and 21st centuries, and a Nigerian hero. It is sad that anyone at all, would dare associate his name with less noble causes.

President Bola Ahmed Tinubu must feel personally embarrasse­d. He is President of Nigeria from the Yoruba stock and his own people, whoever they are, are trying to take over government? It is either he is terribly disconnect­ed from his own people or he is not paying enough attention to certain details. The other month, he came to Lagos and on his way to the mosque, his own people trooped out to complain about hunger. When he came back home for the Eid-el-Fitri festival, a week ago, he convenient­ly restricted himself to Ikoyi and worshipped at a place not farther than the Dolphin Estate. Wait a moment. Are Yorubas in a position to even claim that they are marginaliz­ed now that they have their own kinsman and half of the tribe of Lagos in government? President Tinubu must address “the peculiar mess” that occurred in Ibadan on April 13. He should find out if there are certain fifth columnists seeking to embarrass his government, using Yorubaland as their play field. He took an oath to defend the Nigerian Constituti­on. Every Nigerian leader that I have worked or interacted with insists that they are sworn to an oath to protect the indivisibi­lity of Nigeria under their watch. Tinubu must wake up. He must not allow a situation whereby his own people are the ones calling for the dissolutio­n of Nigeria while he is President, whatever all the textbook arguments may be. Mrs. Modupe Onitiri-Abiola must be given the Nnamdi Kanu treatment!

We had Chief Olabode George on The Morning Show (TMS) of Arise News yesterday and he drew attention to the failure of intelligen­ce in the Ibadan matter. The old man was right. I share his view. How on earth did the Yoruba secessioni­sts plan, organize and move to the Oyo State Government Secretaria­t without anybody catching a whiff of their intentions. Their spokespers­on lives abroad. They must have been in touch with her through phone calls, messages and all that. And nobody picked that up? They even bought and wore military camouflage. And all the spokespers­ons of the Service Chiefs will come and tell us that they are committed to the defence of the sovereignt­y of Nigeria? Please how do you and your troops defend this country when you sleep on duty? And where was the station manager of the Department of State Security (DSS) in Oyo State and all the other agencies? They must all be called in for questionin­g. Sleeping on duty is not allowed. And one more point, where was the Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps? It is the duty of that agency to protect and defend public infrastruc­ture. Section 3 of the Civil Defence Act as amended (2007) gives the agency broad powers “to assist in the maintenanc­e of peace and order and in the protection and rescuing of the civil population during the period of emergency.” The agency also has powers under section 3 (f) “to arrest with or without warrant, detain, investigat­e and institute legal proceeding­s by or in the name of the Attorney General of the Federation in accordance with the provisions of the Constituti­on of the Federal Republic of Nigeria…” Where was Civil Defence even if the other agencies failed?

The bigger issue that we have to deal with perhaps is the increasing, creeping failure of the Nigerian state. Much fewer people today believe in the idea of Nigeria. This is why we have people challengin­g the state either through secessioni­st or separatist moves or complete abandonmen­t of the country, the Japa phenomenon, with many believing or thinking that they would be better off in foreign lands. When Nigeria becomes attractive to its own people, we would have managed to create a nation.

 ?? ?? Some of the agitators of the Yoruba nation
Some of the agitators of the Yoruba nation

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