Thursday 28 August 2014

FG to male survivors of Ebola: Don’t have sex for seven weeks

Dr. Bridget Okoeguale, the Director of the Department of Public Health, gave advice during interview with the News Agency of Nigeria in Abuja on Wednesday that the Federal Ministry of Health has advised men who were treated and discharged of the Ebola virus to avoid sexual intercourse for at least seven weeks.
Okoeguale said this was in line with protocols issued by the World Health Organisation.
She said: “There are many literatures that say that after men are infected and the virus is not found in the blood, it tends to stay in the semen for about seven weeks to three months.
“We advice them to abstain from sex but where they cannot abstain, they are provided condoms and after the (abstinence) period, we double test to make sure they are free.”
On the treatment of Ebola patients, Okoeguale said no drugs or vaccinations were given to them, adding that health authorities had complied with WHO treatment protocol.
Okoeguale said everybody had his/her own body reaction, “so our own is to help build their immunity, give them fluid to replace lost fluid through vomiting and diarrhoea”.
She explained that the patients were also placed on electrolyte by intravenous fluid to avoid dehydration, adding that those who were anaemic had blood transfusion and that the supportive care that has helped us to be able to discharge more than five people,” 
The director also advised the general public to avoid crowded social gathering.
She said: “We are not advising people not to go to club or bar but if you have to just remember that you must keep your hands clean, avoid contact with as many people as possible.”
She urged Nigerians not to consider the disease as a death sentence and that recent cases had shown survival rates for patients were high with early detection and treatment.

Cameroon kills 27 Boko Haram militants in border clashes

The Boko Haram fighters were reported to have crossed Nigeria’s border into Cameroon earlier this week after attacking a military base and police station in Borno State, north east Nigeria.                  The attack was said to have apparently sent some 480 Nigerian troops retreating across the frontier.             
“Cameroon soldiers have killed 27 Boko Haram elements during an attack in a locality near Fotokol in the far-north,
It added that the deaths occurred on Monday and Tuesday but there was no word on any Cameroonian casualties.
A Cameroonian soldier in the region said the militants had been pushed back into Nigeria, with calm returning to the area on Wednesday.
In recent weeks, Boko Haram, which is seeking to carve out a de facto Islamic state in northern Nigeria, has stepped up attacks in Cameroon.
It has forced the central African country to increase deployments along its jungle border.
But Cameroon has not always been successful in fending off Boko Haram raids.
Last month, President Paul Biya dismissed two senior army officers following attacks in which at least seven people were killed and the wife of the vice prime minister was kidnapped.
 

Tuesday 26 August 2014

Ebola: Another infected Nigerian for discharge on Wednesday

Patrick Sawyer One of the primary contacts of the index case of Ebola Virus Disease in Nigeriais is to be discharged from his isolation ward on Wednesday.
This followed the successful recovery of the victim, who was infected by the Liberian-American.
The Minister of Health, Prof. Onyebuchi Chukwu, who confirmed this on Monday, said so far Nigeria has 13 recorded cases of the EVD.
Chukwu said the reduction in the number of cases from 14 to 13 was as a result of the fact that one of those initially counted as having come down with the disease had tested negative.
Speaking through his media aide, Dan Nwomeh, the minister said: “One Ebola patient under treatment has recovered and almost ready for discharge.
Nwomeh, who made the announcement via his Twitter handle, further said: “Explanation for reduction from 14 to 13 is that the 14th case initially announced as positive turned out to be a false positive." Chukwu put the statistics for the EVD in Nigeria as five dead, five discharged and three undergoing treatment at the isolation ward run by the Lagos State Government in Yaba area of the state.
Nwomeh said Nigeria now has only three Ebola patients under treatment at the isolation ward with one of them to be discharged on Wednesday.”

OJB escapes death in Lagos auto crash

Top music producer OJB Jezreel, has again cheated death for the second time month after a successful surgery in India. 
This time it was in a car accident that occurred along the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway.
It was learnt  that the accident occurred on August 10, while OJB was returning from a trip with his friend.
An eyewitness account reaching us indicate that he drove the car and lost control.
The car was reportedly shattered and damaged beyond repair, while both occupants sustained degrees of injuries.
After their treatment at an undisclosed hospital, OJB, we were told, has been on crutches.
He is however said to be recovering fast and would soon drop the crutches.

Ebola kills Liberia doctor despite ZMapp treatment

A Liberian doctor has died despite taking an experimental anti-Ebola drug.
Abraham Borbor was one of three doctors in Liberia who had been given ZMapp and were showing signs of recovery.
ZMapp has been credited with helping several patients recover, including two US doctors.
More than 1,400 people have died from Ebola this year in four West African countries – Guinea, Liberia, Nigeria and Sierra Leone.
Borbor “was showing signs of improvement but yesterday he took a turn for the worse,” Liberian Information Minister, Lewis Brown, told the BBC.
“What this means for the drugs, I don’t know,” the minister added, without giving further details.
It is believed Dr. Borbor died in the capital Monrovia.
Dr. Borbor was the deputy chief medical doctor at the country’s largest hospital.
Liberia has recently imposed a quarantine in parts of Monrovia to try to stop the spread of the virus.
Last Thursday, police fired live rounds and tear gas during protests among residents of the city’s West Point slum.
Liberia has seen the most deaths – more than 570 – in what is now the worst Ebola outbreak in history.
UK isolation case
In a separate development on Monday, a UK volunteer nurse is being treated at a London hospital after contracting Ebola in Sierra Leone – the first confirmed case of a Briton contracting the virus in the current outbreak.
William Pooley, 29, returned to the UK on Sunday and is being kept in a special isolation unit.
Supplies of Zmapp are thought to have been used up and he is not currently being treated with the drug.
However, officials have not ruled the use of Zmapp or similar treatments.
His family said he was receiving “excellent care”.
Meanwhile, Japan said it was ready to allow shipments of an experimental anti-viral drug to help combat the Ebola outbreak.
It is not clear whether T-705 (or Avigan) will actually work against Ebola, and no monkey or human trials of the drug have been done, the BBC’s Rupert Wingfield-Hayes in Tokyo reports.
T-705 was developed by Japan’s Toyama Chemicals company for use against new strains of influenza.
It was approved by the Japanese government earlier this year.
Japan says it is ready to ship Avigan even without approval by the World Health Organization.
Prison term warning
Ebola is spread between humans through direct contact with infected body fluids and several doctors and health workers have died.
It is one of the world’s deadliest diseases, with up to 90 per cent of cases resulting in death, although in the current outbreak the rate is about 55 per cent.
The speed and extent of the outbreak was “unprecedented”, the World Health Organization said last week.
An estimated 2,615 people in West Africa have been infected with Ebola since March.
On Saturday, Sierra Leone’s parliament passed a new law making it a criminal offence to hide Ebola patients.
If approved by the president, those caught face up to two years in prison.

Monday 25 August 2014

Iran nuclear probe reaches deadline, no word yet on outcome

  deadline for Iran to answer U.N. nuclear watchdog questions about suspected atomic bomb research was reached on Monday without any immediate word on whether Tehran had provided the information.

Western officials have long said Iran must address the U.N. agency's suspicions about its work and that this would be an important boost for parallel diplomatic efforts to end a decade-old dispute over the country's nuclear programme.

Washington and its allies have accused Iran of working to produce an atomic weapons capability, raising fears of a new Middle East war. Iran has dismissed the accusations, saying its work is focussed on generating electricity and other peaceful projects.

Diplomats told Reuters last week that the long-running inquiry by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) appeared to be making only slow headway, casting doubt on whether Iran would fully meet the Aug. 25 target date.

They said there was still time for Iran to respond to the questions, noting that it had occasionally waited until the last minute to make concessions in the past. Officials said Tehran might also provide the information a few days late.

There was no immediate comment from Tehran and the IAEA said it would not comment on the issue on Monday. Diplomats say the watchdog may only release details of any Iranian response in its next quarterly report, expected in early September.

The Islamic republic has promised to cooperate with the IAEA since Hassan Rouhani, widely seen as a pragmatist, was elected Iranian president in mid-2013.

Tehran agreed in May to take five steps by late August, including information on alleged explosives experimentation, and studies related to calculating nuclear explosive yields.

Western diplomats say Iran needs to help clear up the IAEA's suspicions if it wants to reach a broader diplomatic deal in the separate negotiations with the United States, France, Germany, Britain, China and Russia.

Those talks are focussed on persuading Iran to curb its atomic activities in exchange for a lifting of sanctions that are hurting its oil-dependent economy.

With major gaps remaining over what will be permitted in Iran's uranium-enrichment programme - activity which can have both civilian and military uses - those talks were extended in July until Nov. 24.

After years of what the West saw as Iranian stonewalling, Iran as a first step in May gave the IAEA information about why it was developing exploding bridge wire detonators, which can be used to set off atomic explosive devices. Iran says they are for civilian use.

The areas that the IAEA wants Iran to address were listed in a report published in the watchdog in 2011 that included a trove of intelligence indicating a concerted weapons programme that was halted in 2003, when Iran came under increased international pressure. The intelligence also suggested some activities may later have resumed.

Japan ready to offer flu drug for Ebola treatment

 Japan said Monday it is ready to provide a Japanese-developed anti-influenza drug as a possible treatment for the rapidly expanding Ebola outbreak.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga told reporters that Japan can offer favipiravir, developed by a subsidiary of Fujifilm Holdings Corp., at any time at the request of the World Health Organization.

Suga said Japan is watching for a decision by WHO that would provide more details on the use of untested drugs. In case of an emergency, Japan may respond to individual requests before any further decision by WHO, he said.

WHO said earlier this month that it is ethical to use untested drugs on Ebola patients given the magnitude of the outbreak.

The drug, developed by Fujifilm subsidiary Toyama Chemical Co. under the brand name Avigan to treat new and re-emerging influenza viruses, was approved by Japan's health ministry in March. Fujifilm is in talks with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration on clinical testing of the drug in treating Ebola, company spokesman Takao Aoki said.

The company has enough stock of favipiravir for more than 20,000 patients, Aoki said.

He said Ebola and influenza viruses are the same type and a similar effect can theoretically be expected for Ebola.

Several drugs are being developed for the treatment of Ebola. They are still in the early stages and there is no proven treatment or vaccine for the often fatal disease.

Favipiravir inhibits viral gene replication within infected cells to prevent propagation, while other anti-viral drugs often are designed to inhibit the release of new viral particles to prevent the spread of infection, the company said.

Recently, two American doctors recovered from Ebola after being treated with the experimental drug ZMapp, though it was unclear whether they were cured by the drug.

ZMapp, developed by Mapp Biopharmaceutical Inc., had never been tested on humans, although an early version worked in some Ebola-infected monkeys. It is aimed at boosting the immune system's efforts to fight off Ebola.

Ebola has killed more than 1,400 people in West Africa in the latest outbreak.

Five-year-old demands gun to shoot suspect

Policemen attached to the State Criminal Investigation Department, Yaba, Lagos State were stunned on Friday after a five-year-old girl demanded a gun from the police so that she could shoot the man who sexually defiled her.
The suspect, Okafor, 22, was said to have taken the girl, Chimuanya, into an uncompleted building at Dansa area of Badagry and sexually defiled her.
The minor was with her mother who was a trader when Okafor told her to come.
A police source at the SCID revealed that the suspect took the girl to the building and pulled her down, leaving her with bruises.
The suspect so much penetrated the girl that he left her bleeding and leaping.
Apparently in fear and hurry to return the girl to her mother, he didn’t bother or noticed enough to clean the blood dripping down her legs.
A police inspector disclosed that if the child was given a gun, she would have shot the suspect dead because she meant what she said.
He said the girl bled so much that her parents had to ask her what happened and she opened up.
When the suspect was arrested and taken to the SCID, the girl asked a policewoman to give her a gun so that she would shoot the suspect dead because “he wound me”.

Ibori’s kinsmen back Ndokwa man as Uduaghan’s successor

 Political leaders of the Delta Central Senatorial District have started to soft pedal on power shift to Delta North Senatorial District of the state.
Prior to this development, the race to succeed Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan next year had assumed a battle royale among the three senatorial districts of the state.
The two mouth-piece of the largely populated district – the Urhobo Political Forum and Urhobo Political Congress – at the weekend in a separate remarks expressed preference to support power shift to Anioma ethnic nationality, comprising the Ibo speaking axis of the state.
The pressure groups categorically rejected the choice of an Ika man succeeding Governor Uduaghan next year.
The leadership of the groups, led by the Senior Political Adviser to Governor Uduaghan, Chief Ighoyota Amori, a staunch loyalist of the former Governor James Ibori, and the Commissioner representing Delta State on the board of the Niger Delta Development Commission, Sir Tom Amioku, also Ibori’s man, gave reasons why an Ndokwa man must succeed Uduaghan next year against all odds from Ika axis of Delta North Senatorial District.
In the Ika axis of the state alone, no fewer than five aspirants, including Senator Ifeanyi Okowa; the Chief of Staff to the Governor, Dr. Festus Okubor; former Acting Governor of the state, Hon. Sam Obi; and the Permanent Secretary, Government House, Asaba, Anthony Obuh, have declared interest.
Receiving a Peoples Democratic Party governorship aspirant, Chief Johnson-Ossai-Opone, at Mosogar, Chief Amori said the Urhobos would back Delta North Senatorial District’s ambition if their candidate is from Ndokwa, compsiring Ndokwa/Ukwuani Federal Constituency.
According to him, since Asaba has the state capital, which forms part of the old Benin Province, “it was only fair to concede the 2015 governorship to Ndokwa, which though is part of Delta North, but was originally in the old Delta Province.
“In the interest of equity and fairness, Ndokwa area that produces the bulk of the oil and gas in Delta North Senatorial District should be favoured, at least to give the area a sense of belonging.”
Speaking for UPC, Sir Amioku, who received Ossai-Opone at Egborode Community in Okpe Local Government Area, acknowledged that the Urhobos of Delta Central Senatorial District, were at home with Ndokwa because of several years of convivial relationship through inter-marriage, culture and language in the old Delta Province.
Chief Amioku said the UPC and indeed the Urhobos were encouraged by the quality governorship aspirants emerging from Ndokwa nation, even as he underscored the track records and pedigree of O ssai-Opone.                                                                                                                                  However Ossai-Opone assured Delta Central Senatorial District stakeholders of his capability as a celebrated Chartered Accountant to give Delta State a well structured, sustainable and equitable development.

Sunday 17 August 2014

Ebola: How US lab dumped infectious monkeys in Liberia

An island, Farmington Island, with over 60 infected chimpanzees, has been been brought to the fore in Liberia following the outbreak of the Ebola Virus Disease.
The island, popularly called Monkey Island, by Liberians, has been in existence for several years.
However, with the outbreak of the EVD, which has monkeys as one of the primary sources of infection, eyes are turning in the direction of the Island.
The EVD has killed over 1,069 persons in its recent outbreak in West Africa.
Greatly affected by this outbreak are Liberia and Sierra Leone.
Nigeria has so far recorded four deaths from the fast spreading EVD.

An island, Farmington Island, with over 60 infected chimpanzees, has been been brought to the fore in Liberia following the outbreak of the Ebola Virus Disease.
The island, popularly called Monkey Island, by Liberians, has been in existence for several years.
However, with the outbreak of the EVD, which has monkeys as one of the primary sources of infection, eyes are turning in the direction of the Island.
The EVD has killed over 1,069 persons in its recent outbreak in West Africa.
Greatly affected by this outbreak are Liberia and Sierra Leone.
Nigeria has so far recorded four deaths from the fast spreading EVD.
According to information provided in a video by a researcher who visited the Island, the monkeys were used for researches and then released into the Island.
Liberians themselves avoid going to the Island.
A 40 minutes drive outside of the town by road and then a boat ride gets a visitor to the Island.
The island is said to be 40 miles from Monrovia, the capital of Liberia.
The chimpanzees are described as “super aggressive” by the presenter.
The chimpanzees were said to have been used for medical researches at the Liberian Institute for Bio-Medical Research, hence it was not strange before the outbreak of the EVD in Liberia so see so many Liberians with monkeys.
The research was said to have been sponsored by the New York Blood Centre.
The chimpanzees, according to the report, were infected with Hepatitis and River Blindness among other diseases.
Betsy Brotman was the Director of the centre, VILAB, which came into existence in 1974.
An article by the New York Times on July 17, 1984, said one in four out of the chimpanzees used in hepatitis research becomes an asymptomatic carrier and as such must stay in captivity.
Yet, there was the need to release them back into the forest so they could live their normal lives again, Brotman said.
The first set of such chimpanzees were released into the Asagny National Park in the Ivory Coast.
According to Brotman, they did humanity a favour and as such should be given their lives back.
The full article on the subject in the New York Times of July 17, 1984 reads:
Robertsville, Liberia: Standing on the bow of the outboard motor boat rocking in the brown water of the Little Bassa river, Betsy Brotman cupped her hands around her mouth and bellowed toward the jungle island. “Char-lie! Char-lie!”
She turned to a passenger in the boat. “Wait till you see Charlie,” she whispered. “He’s fantastic.” She shouted again: “Char-lie! Char- lie!”
For a while it seemed no one was listening. Then, finally, a small, dark, hulking chimpanzee emerged from the dense bush. He lumbered across the beach and waded thigh-deep into the water. Scowling, he raised his right hand and let fly a rock in the direction of the boat. It plopped into the river several inches short of its target.
“That’s Charlie,” Miss Brotman explained. “Didn’t I tell you? Isn’t he fantastic?”
Charlie is one of about 200 chimpanzees in Liberia who have “retired” as research animals in studies of hepatitis viruses, research that now appears to be close to a successful conclusion. He is the dominant chimp on Red Deer Island, a sort of halfway house for a select group of experimental animals that are in the process of being reintroduced to the wild.
“They did human society a favor,” said Miss Brotman, head of Vilab II, a research facility operated by the New York Blood Center in association with the Liberian Institute for Biomedical Research. “It’s our responsibility to try to pay them back by letting them live out their lives in their natural environment.”
Vilab II, a complex of laboratories, staff housing and screened-in chimp bungalows set in the rain forest about 40 miles from Monrovia, is one of several hepatitis research institutes that are attempting the difficult task of returning “retired” chimpanzees to the wild in Africa. It was established 10 years ago, and about 50 chimps were captured to serve as an initial experimental and breeding colony.
Young chimps are excellent models for hepatitis research because they are so genetically close to humans and exhibit the same biochemical changes from the hepatitis viruses, yet they do not contract the clinical disease that makes tests on humans so risky. Miss Brotman emphasized that no experiment performed at Vilab has ever resulted in the death or disablement of a chimp.
But the chimps lose their value as research animals by the time they reach about four years of age. Since a chimp may live for 40 years, that leaves a long retirement.
Some can be put into zoos or used in breeding programs, but for the rest the prospects are bleak. It is expensive to keep an adult chimpanzee in captivity, and chimps that have outlived their research usefulness are often put to death. Until recently they have not been able to be returned to the wild because they never learned survival skills; most were bred in captivity, but some were taken by poachers who killed the mother and sold the baby for $15,000 or more.

1,500 chimps in US laboratories
With that in mind, Miss Brotman and Alfred M. Prince, the New York- based director of the Vilab project, began in 1978 to try to develop a program to return the chimps to the wild.
Though that may sound like a simple and logical idea, only a few laboratories have set up such programs. There are currently as many as 1,500 chimpanzees in American labs, breeding facilities and zoos. Almost all of them will spend their entire lives behind bars.
About one chimp in every four used in hepatitis research becomes an asymptomatic carrier. These must stay in captivity.
Vilab’s rehabilitation program begins by placing groups of about 10 chimps between 5 and 10 years of age on an island downriver from the institute.
On the island, the chimps are provided with some supplementary food and their progress is carefully monitored. Any animals that are not adjusting to freedom – for example, those that are not eating or are being frequently beaten up by other animals – can be returned to the protection of civilization.
Most of the chimps, however, do appear to gradually become accustomed to life in a natural habitat, Miss Brotman said. They learn to forage for food, build nests in the trees, have sexual relations, give birth – in the last two and a half years four babies have been born on Red Deer Island – care for the young and form a closely knit troop with a normal social hierarchy.
“Many of these animals lived in my house and slept in my bed as infants,” Miss Brotman said. But after they have been two to three years on the island, she added, “even I can’t walk among them safely. An adult male chimp weighs in at about 150 pounds, is stronger than a man and far more aggressive than a gorilla.”

Life without groceries
The process does not end there, however. After five or six years on the island, the chimps need to be transferred to a game reserve where they will have enough space, roughly one acre per chimp, to fend for themselves without anyone bringing them groceries. The area into which they are released must also not have other chimpanzee troops too close by, since that could lead to conflicts that the tenderfoot chimps, unused to the laws of the jungle, would probably lose.
A first group of 10 chimpanzees is scheduled to be released this summer in the Asagny National Park in the Ivory Coast, one of only a handful of reserves in West Africa that conservationists consider reasonably well- protected from poachers and other forms of human encroachment.
For their first year or so in the wild, the chimps will wear radio telemeters on collars, each with its own frequency, so that every individual’s whereabouts and progress can be monitored. Within two years, the collars will disintegrate.
While there is no guarantee that everything will work out as planned, there are encouraging signs, such as Charlie throwing the rock at Miss Brotman, an aggressive display that suggests that Charlie has become a true troop leader and is no longer anyone’s pet.
“The point is to give them a quality of life they couldn’t have in even the best facility,” Miss Brotman said. ”It’s only right. They really are near human, you know.”

Wednesday 13 August 2014

Breaking News: Ebola: 21 quarantined in Enugu

Another set of 21 Nigerians suspected to have been infected with the deadly Ebola virus have been quarantined in Enugu, Enugu State, the Minister of Information, Labaran Maku, has confirmed.
Briefing State House correspondents after the weekly Federal Executive Council meeting presided over by President Goodluck Jonathan on Wednesday, Maku blamed the development on a nurse who defiled medical directives and travelled from Lagos to Enugu.
Consequently, all the 21 people had to be quarantined since they have secondary contact with the Liberian, Patrick Sawyer, who imported the deadly virus into Lagos, Nigeria.
The Minister noted that Federal Government had begun sensitization of Nigerians long before the index case was recorded.
He, therefore, advised Nigerians and warned those who have contacts with the victim to obey government’s directives to limit their movements so as to reduce the spread of the disease.
According to Maku, the measures put in place by government to curb the spread of the virus have passed the test of the international organisations operating in the country, including the American International Agencies for Disease Control, the World Health Organization, the United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund, UNICEF and other relevant bodies.
Maku said: “The international organizations have no need to panic as government is making strong efforts to bring the situation under control.
“The measures we have put in place show professionalism and confidence to ensure that this virus does not spread beyond where it is today.
“Even the World Health Organization has expressed satisfaction with the measures that we have put in place so far, so there should be no need for any anxiety over the existence of the virus in Nigeria.
“There is a strong team in place that has been working and tracing the secondary cases.
“So far, a total of 198 persons have been isolated, with 177 in Lagos alone and 21 persons in Enugu State, that have been quarantined.
“Part of measures being put in place is collaboration with transport owners and operators to prevent the transmission of the virus through the nation’s land borders while protective materials are being provided.”

Tuesday 12 August 2014

Northern elders to Jonathan: Free our girls or forget 2015

The Northern Elders Forum has asked President Goodluck Jonathan to end insurgency in the North and ensure release of the Chibok girls latest by October ending or forget Northern support in 2015.
In a statement issued in Kaduna on Monday, the Forum posited that the twin demands remain the only conditions by which the President could enjoy Northern backing if he decides to run in 2015.
The statement, signed by Solomon Dalung and Dr. Hakeem Baba-Ahmed, lamented the increasing wave of insecurity, expressing reservation that it poses serious threat to the survival of the nation as well as the conduct of credible elections in 2015.
The statement reads: “The circumstance under which our fellow citizens in and around Gwoza in Borno state in particular live and die will not be tolerated by any people who have a government and a leader sworn to defend them, and they must be reversed immediately.
“In the light of our firm conviction that the insurgency and related security challenges pose threats to the 2015 elections and the survival of our nation, we strongly advise President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan to bring an end to the insurgency in all its manifestations and produce the Chibok girls before the end of October 2014,”
“In the event that President Jonathan fails to do this, Nigerians will be left with the only conclusion that he has forfeited his right to ask for our mandate beyond 2015.
“It is no secret that the vast majority of northerners lament their marginalization, insecurity and poverty, and blame it in large part on the inability or unwillingness of its past and present leaders to utilize all access to power which they enjoyed to bring us redress and relief.
“The NEF joins millions of northerners in appealing to these leaders, General Yakubu Gowon, Alhaji Shehu Shagari, General Muhammed Buhari, General Ibrahim Badamosi Babangida, General Abdulsalam Abubakar, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar and Nnamadi Sambo and all retired Chief Justice of Nigeria from the north to raise their level of involvement in (the) fortunes of our region.
“If these leaders cannot visibly help to transform the fortunes of the north in the next few months, they will live northerners with the damaging impression that they have abandoned the region and the people to its seemingly irreversible decline and ultimate destruction.”
About four months ago, the insurgents, Boko Haram, about 300 school girls from Chibok, Borno State.
Despite international condemnation that greeted the abduction and promises by World leaders, the girls are still in captivity.

Monday 11 August 2014

Suspected Ebola virus victim discovered in Lagos estate

A suspected Ebola virus victim has been discovered in the Lagos State Property Development Corporation estate in Isheri area of Lagos State.
The estate shares a close boundary with Ogun State in the Isheri area.
The man, identified to be from Niger Republic, was dropped on Saturday by the gate of the estate by a commercial motorcyclist, popularly called okada, who sped off after doing so.
The man, who could no longer talk, had blood all over his nose and mouth, without signs of having been beaten.
He was coughing out blood.
The residents of the estate immediately raised the alarm, suspecting Ebola.
This was more so as the okada man who brought him sped off.
The residents of the estate immediately put a call through to the Lagos State Emergency Management Service and the federal authorities for help.
It took several hours before the man was picked up by the health authorities.
The residents, sequel to the development, have resolved to avoid taking commercial motorcycles until the case is proven not to be Ebola.
The fear is that if it is a case of Ebola, the likelihood of the okada man having become infected could not be ruled out.
The estate residents called a meeting where the resolutions were taken.

Monday 4 August 2014

Lagos doctor who treated dead Liberian Ebola patient infected

One of the doctors of First Consultant Hospital, Lagos, who treated late Liberian Ebola victim, Patrick Sawyer, has been confirmed infected with the virus.
The Minister of Health, Prof. Chukwu Onyebuchi, stated this on Monday.
Chukwu also revealed that two of those already quarantined are showing symptoms of the disease.
He, however, said it was not certain if they have contacted the Ebola virus.
He said out of the 70 persons that had contact with Sawyer, eight have been quarantined.

Sunday 3 August 2014

Now that Boko Haram has infiltrated Lagos, by Juliana Francis


I breathed a sigh of relief after the Boko Haram psychopath leader, Abubakar Shekarau, declared on Sunday that he and his members were behind the twin explosions, which rocked Creek Road on June 25, 2014.
Journalists who visited the scene of the explosions knew it was a bomb, but since every security agent and all agencies kept a sealed lip on the matter, it was pretty difficult to write based on speculations, since we’re no bomb experts.
Most importantly, nobody wished to be whisked off by unknown security personnel to undisclosed destination, to face interrogation on how you got to determine it was a bomb. Who are you working for? Why are you trying to generate panic in Lagos State and heat up the polity? Such questions would be fired at you like missiles.
All tactics to instil the fear of God into you and make your fingers tremble the next time you attempt to become adventurous while doing your job! I guess like me, many journalists were faced with the dilemma of the moral obligation of a journalist towards members of the public and the bigger issue of creating panic in the state.
I felt it was necessary for us, as journalists, to reveal the fact: that it was a bomb blast that occurred at Creek Road and with that galvanize citizens in Lagos State to become vigilant and security conscious. But there was the dilemma of paralysing the state with fear, which either or not could affect the socioeconomic system of the state.
Thank God the dilemma was wrest out of my hands. I was becoming heartily sick and tired of dancing round the issue. Writing without nailing the issue on the head. Baring the bones, while hiding the meat. But now that Boko Haram has finally infiltrated Lagos State, what is the next thing for us to do as Lagosians?
This is what I had been telling many of my security personnel friends since the explosions at Apapa. Alert Lagosians and let them get involved in security of the state!
Whether you’re from Ogun State, Abia State or Kogi State is no longer the issue here. Lagos is our home! Our homes are in Lagos!
Our children are here! And everyone of us work here. We need and must do everything within our power to safeguard Lagos. If we scurry into our hiding corners, it won’t keep the bogyman away. You can’t hide in your house forever, just to avoid a bomb blast. But you can shine your eyes!
Nobody can hide from death. Death is a faithless mistress; she has no lasting friend or enemy. Security agencies can’t do it alone! This is the time to join hands together and protect our homes. We must not allow Boko Haram, like the ghost of Christmas past, to chase us out of our markets, our homes, churches, mosques, shopping mall, motor parks and other places.
We must not allow them to turn us into hermits! We’re citizens of Nigeria and as such, have the fundamental rights to live and work in any part of the country. What must we do? Security agents should immediately commence an enlightenment campaign. They should embark on radio jingles and media adverts to educate citizens on what to look out for and what to do.
They should advertise their toll free emergency/distress call numbers. Security agencies should also drum it into the ears of their personnel to always pick calls from these toll free lines at the first ring. Those who bombed the shopping plaza at Abuja were sighted by a man. He was one of the traders at the plaza. He said he closed late that night and saw three men.
One was huge and behind the steering of a car, while two were walking furtively around the plaza, and kept going back to feed information to the huge guy in the car. He sensed they were bombers. According to him, his first thought was to alert the police, but sadly, he didn’t have any police number. He was frantic.
Then he remembered that he had a radio station phonein programme number on his phone. He called and asked for police number, after explaining about the suspicious movement of the men.
The radio people promised to send him the police number. They did; but it was two or three days after the bombing of the plaza. Imagine the number of lives he would have saved if he had just one single police emergency number. I know what you’re going to say.
That the police numbers don’t work. That the police don’t pick. Believe me; this is a different ball game. We know it. The police know it.
Why not get these numbers and call first before you draw conclusions? There’s no harm in trying, but a lot to be gained. Dr. Abubakar Tsav, a former Lagos State Commissioner of Police, said: “By this latest video, Boko Haram is telling us that we must be vigilant and security conscious.
They’re telling us that they can infiltrate anywhere. If they can infiltrate Lagos, it means they can infiltrate anywhere! It’s a very serious issue. But it’s sad that the government of Goodluck Jonathan is not taking the issue very serious or it would have done and finished with Boko Haram!
Look at the case of the Chibok girls. For the first 18 days after they were kidnapped, nothing was done until more girls were kidnapped.
“Everybody should now become security conscious. Let’s adopt operation know your neighbours. If strangers come into the community, we should alert security agencies. Let’s not leave it in the hands of the security agencies. They can’t do it alone. We should all be involved.” Emergency/Distress calls: toll free lines-767, 112.
Others: 08060357795080651543380806329926408039344870. It would be fitting to save these numbers on your phones. You never can tell. Its times like these that I wish we had numbers like the 911. We’ll get there.
SMS only: 08189679439.

How YAKUBU Gowon Caused The Nigeria-Biafra War by Lawrence Chinedu Nwobu

Introduction:

One of the greatest enduring myths in Nigeria is the lie that Yakubu Gowon fought the Nigeria-Biafra war to keep Nigeria united, whereas in reality not only did Yakubu Gowon whose Northern region had originally intended to secede (Araba) after the July 1966 counter-coup cause the unnecessary war through his failure of leadership, his aim for fighting the war was never in the least a genuine desire to keep Nigeria united but purely because of Northern economic interests. The economic interests of the hitherto secessionist North became the principal reason for the volte face from secession to “one Nigeria” after the British government advised the Northern leadership of the economic disadvantages of secession. Thus unlike most civil wars where there is a genuine desire to keep the nation united for patriotic reasons, the Nigeria-Biafra war was an opportunistic war instigated by Yakubu Gowon and the North; not out of a genuine desire for a united Nigeria but for the selfish aims of British imperialism and Northern economic interests which remains the reason and reality of their presence in Nigeria to date.

Every conflict is dogged by lies and propaganda, but history always waits out the intrigues of war in the knowledge, that the truth; no matter how suppressed and how long it waits, will eventually prevail. In the midst of the historical lies and propaganda that trailed the conflict the long suppressed truth is beginning to find life. One emerging fact is the true causes/ intentions of the conflict and the fact that the conflict has by all accounts been considered a needless war. It is already deemed by some to be the most avoidable war of the 20th century. Unlike many unavoidable conflicts, there were many opportunities to avoid the Nigeria-Biafra war which needlessly consumed the lives of some 3 million people, entrenched an un-healing generational bitterness and caused severe social, political and economic dislocation from which the nation is yet to recover. Wars carry with them the worst of human tragedies and scars that endure for all time. It is an evil that must be avoided except it is absolutely necessary.

Nigeria Ex-Military Head of State Yakubu Gowon

Photo Above: Nigeria Ex-Military Head of State, Yakubu Gowon leaving after attending Late Nigerian President Umaru Yar'Adua's funeral in Katsina, Katsina State May 6, 2010.

In the case of Nigeria-Biafra; there was nothing that made the war in the least necessary. Nigeria as a nation never existed until the British colonialists patched up the contraption of disparate ethnic and religious groups into an unworkable nation to service her imperial interests. From the onset it was obvious Nigeria would be inhibited by her contradictions and consequently doomed to failure. Thus when the pogrom/genocide of 1966-67 demonstrated beyond all reasonable doubts the impossibility of Nigeria, the legal route under international law as enshrined in the United Nations charter was to hold a plebiscite or referendum to determine by democratic means the choice of the majority as it concerns self determination for Biafra.

That route would have solved the problem in a legal and civilised manner as “no war no matter how desirable for the purpose of keeping a nation together is justifiable.” It defies all logic and natural justice to kill people in other to keep them in a nation. It is like killing a woman’s children in order to forcefully keep her in a marriage from which she seeks to exit. Freedom and self determination are inalienable God given rights and nations must be constructed and preserved through democratic consent and not through the barrel of a gun. Any act otherwise, to forcefully create or preserve a nation without the democratic consent of the indigenous peoples is an act of colonialism. Every ethnic group within the Nigerian geographical expression ordinarily retains the same right for which we struggled for independence from the British colonial government. It is thus a usurpation of the right to self determination and independence for any group or groups within Nigeria to wage war or forcefully coerce another into the nation against their will. To that extent the war against Biafra must be understood for what it really was; a war of aggression and colonialism.

Thus for the purposes of history and for generations yet unborn, I have decided to put on record for all time; the truth and injustice of the needless war of colonialism Yakubu Gowon and his allies instigated against Biafra on the lie of a war of unity.

Historical Antecedents:

Eastern Leadership And The Historical Championing of One Nigeria

One of the ironies of the Nigeria-Biafra war is how the East and her leadership under Dr Nnamidi Azikiwe who relentlessly championed the very idea of a united Nigeria as against the Northern leadership that harboured deep anti-Nigeria sentiments were forced by circumstances resulting from the pogrom/genocide to exercise the fundamental right of self preservation and opt for secession.

When in 1957 the British colonial authorities offered independence individually to the regions provided two out of the three regions accepted the offer, the Northern region declared they were not ready for that level of political and economic independence, the Western region declared their readiness for independence, the East became the tie to make or break Nigeria; Dr Nnamidi Azikiwe in a historic move, rejected the offer by declaring that “although the Eastern region was ready to assume the responsibilities of regional independence, its attainment without the North would lead to the balkanization of the Nigerian nation and conceivably a break-up of the country. The Eastern region would rather suppress its appetite for independence and the obvious gains it would entail until the Northern region was ready.” By this momentous and in my own opinion mistaken decision, Dr Nnamidi Azikiwe prevented the break-up of Nigeria as offered by the then colonial authorities in 1957. He also stridently opposed the Northern proposal for a right of self determination in the constitution in subsequent constitutional conferences.

These feats alongside the emergence of a Northerner “Mallam Umaru Altine” as the first mayor of Enugu in 1956, amongst so many other sacrifices made by Dr Azikiwe and other Eastern leaders in the course of the evolution of the nation to accommodate the historically “secessionist” North underscores the role the East played in being the biggest champions of a united Nigeria. Dr Nnamidi Azikiwe was not only an advocate of Nigerian unity; he was also highly invested in Pan-Africanism and the campaign for a United States of Africa. It is also noteworthy that in spite of the fact that crude oil was discovered in the then Eastern region in 1956 which gave overwhelming advantages to the East, not a single Eastern leader ever mentioned crude oil in any of their political narratives or sought to take undue advantage of it. Indeed Dr Nnamidi Azikiwe and even the short-lived military administration of General Aguiyi Ironsi demonstrated a diehard commitment to a united Nigeria for which the later ironically paid with his life; killed by the same Northern hypocrites who after accusing him of introducing the unitary system (which he did in his genuine desire to unify the country) ended up consolidating, sustaining and defending to date, the same unitary system for which they killed General Aguiyi Ironsi.

Historical Northern Rejection Of Nigeria

Historically, the North and her leadership were the greatest opponents of the very idea of Nigeria and Nigerian unity. Northern leaders such as Ahmadu Bello, Alhaji Abubakar Tafawa Balewa amongst others never hid their disdain for Nigeria. The rejection of Nigerian unity at a point became the political ideology of Northern leaders which they variously expressed in public declarations and in the exclusionist policies formulated in the Northern region. In 1948 while addressing the legislative council, Abubakar Tafawa Balewa declared that “Since 1914 the British Government has been trying to make Nigeria into one country, but the Nigerian people themselves are historically different in their backgrounds, in their religious beliefs and customs and do not show themselves any sign of willingness to unite. Nigerian unity is only a British intention for the country.” Undisguised disdain and rejection of the very idea of Nigerian unity is aptly demonstrated by this speech as presented by Tafawa Balewa.

The foremost Northern leader, Sir Ahmadu Bello was even more resentful of Nigeria. In his book and autobiography “My Life” published a year after independence in 1961, he famously castigated the amalgamation of Northern and Southern Nigeria as “the mistake of 1914.” Being the premier of the Northern region Ahmadu Bello further demonstrated his opposition to Nigeria by using his administrative powers to create an “Apartheid Northernization policy” which decreed that all available jobs in the North must go to a Northerner and in the event that there is no qualified Northerner should go to Europeans/ Arabs rather than Nigerians from the South. Nothing better demonstrates Ahmadu Bello’s hatred and rejection of Nigeria than his Apartheid Northenization policy that gave preference to Europeans, Arabs and other foreigners than to fellow Nigerians from the South. Segregation of southerners into areas known as “Sabon gari” was also a segregationist policy of Ahmadu Bello designed to keep Northerners separate from Southerners that endures to this day. The whole strata of the North and her leadership was thus never historically interested or invested in the idea of a United Nigeria from the dawn of colonial Nigeria.

The hostility and rejection of Nigeria by the North is also noted in the first riots directed at southerners in Jos in 1945 and subsequently in 1953 in Kano when an anti-independence riot was sponsored by the Northern leadership against Southerners living in Kano. Both of these riots resulted in the deaths of hundreds of Southerners and set the precedent for future riots that later became routine. Most importantly, the riots underscore the historical context of the hostility of the North to the very idea of Nigeria.

Post Independence Crisis:

Perhaps; because the duo of Tafawa Balewa and Ahmadu Bello harboured so much disdain for Nigeria, they had no incentive to invest in nation building or to make the necessary sacrifices to consolidate the fledgling republic in her most critical foundational years. They demonstrably advanced only narrow regional and sectional interests at the expense of the rule of law and good governance, thus by 1962 there was already a crisis of rigged census results and infighting in the West that led to the declaration of a state of emergency in the Western region. By 1963, Chief Obafemi Awolowo was arrested and convicted for alleged coup plotting. By 1964, a coalition between Ladoke Akintola the premier of the Western region and Tafawa Balewa resulted in massively rigged elections in the Western region which sparked off violent riots and disturbances (wetie).

In the Tiv Division riots had also been violently put down by Tafawa Balewa’s government using the military, however in the Western region the violence continued unabated until 1966 when the military reacting to the corruption, election rigging, thuggery, tribalism and the sustained violence in the Western region unfortunately struck at dawn in January 1966.

The Pogroms/Genocide And Yakubu Gowon’s Inaction/ Complicity:

A leader must be judged and held accountable for what happens under his watch. Following the injection of tribalism into the January 1966 coup, the North staged a secessionist counter (revenge) coup in July 1966 in which the then Head of state General Aguiyi Ironsi, Colonel Fajuyi the military governor of the Western region and some three hundred Eastern officers were assassinated. Yakubu Gowon who had been the chief of army staff consequently emerged head of state. “The most important constitutional duty of a head of state all over the world is the protection of life and property of the citizenry under all circumstances.” Yakubu Gowon abdicated his most fundamental constitutional responsibility to protect lives and property when he did absolutely nothing while officers and men of the Nigerian army and police who were supposed to protect life and property crossed over from their coup to attack and massacre thousands of Eastern civilians including women and children in the premeditated genocide in the North.

As the mass killings of innocent civilians went on by cowardly Soldiers who crossed over from a political coup to target and kill defenceless civilians, Yakubu Gowon did nothing. He didn’t send in troops or the police to try to calm the situation, he neither imposed a state of emergency nor a dusk to dawn curfew, he also never set-up any investigative panel to probe the killings. To make matters worse, even though the officers and men who were carrying out such heinous crimes against humanity were well known, Yakubu Gowon never reprimanded, arrested, court marshalled or punished any of them, rather the officers were all promoted. It became obvious by his inaction and promotion of the implicated officers that Yakubu Gowon was complicit in both the coup and genocide.

There is no circumstance that can justify the mass murder of innocent civilians while Yakubu Gowon who has a duty to protect life and property under all circumstances refused to act. It is unthinkable to imagine that at the height of the provocation of the 9/11 terrorist attacks that killed more than 3000 Americans by Islamic terrorists; President George Bush would allow the massacre of innocent Muslims in the US. An estimated 50,000 innocent civilians were brutally murdered while Yakubu Gowon as head of state did nothing and indeed tacitly supported the mass killings. It is exactly for those types of crimes that the international criminal court in the Hague and Geneva Convention were established to bring to justice those who commit acts of genocide and other human rights violations. The killings only stopped when there was no one left to kill. Yakubu Gowon failed in his most fundamental duty to protect life and property and this failing created the self preservation scenario that necessitated self determination and consequently Biafra by the East. Since Yakubu Gowon as head of state could do nothing while thousands of innocent civilians were being hacked to death by Soldiers and Police officers who were supposed to protect life and property, the very idea of Nigeria died from that point and the East like any group had no choice but to undertake the natural right of self preservation and thus self determination.

(Araba): Intent Of Northern Secession And the British Government Advice That Changed the equation

The propaganda of Nigerian unity for which Yakubu Gowon and his goons premised their war was patently false for the simple reason that the Northern counter-coup christened “Araba” which means separation in Hausa language was a secessionist coup originally intended to finally break the North from Nigeria. Indeed the flag of the new republic had already been hoisted preparatory to the announcement of secession by the North. Yakubu Gowon informed the then British high commissioner Sir Cumming Bruce of the intention of the North to secede and it was the British in line with their imperialist interests that advised against Northern secession and made strident efforts to dissuade the North from seceding.

In his book “The Biafran War” Micheal Gould p.43 stated: “Cumming –Bruce was able to persuade the Emirs that secession would be an economic disaster”. As the British high commissioner Sir Cumming Bruce himself testified p.43 “it wasn’t on the face of it easy to get them (the North) to change, but I managed to do it overnight. I drafted letters to the British Prime Minister, to send to Gowon as Nigerian Head of State, and for my Secretary of State (Micheal Stewart) to send letters to each of the Emirs. I wrote an accompanying letter to each of them because I knew them personally. I drafted all these and they all came back to me duly authorised to push at once. The whole thing was done overnight and it did the trick of stopping them (the North) dividing Nigeria up.” From the testimony of the then British high commissioner Sir Cumming Bruce in regards to the effort he made to persuade the North not to secede, the deceit, propaganda and opportunism of Yakubu Gowon and his crowd as they lied through their teeth in their false claim of fighting for Nigerian unity when in reality they had originally intended to secede and only changed their mind on the prompting of the British government becomes self evident.

For all the false propaganda spewed to prosecute the needless war and the consequent tragic bloodletting, the British high commissioner’s testimony proves that Yakubu Gowon and the North were never genuine or interested in Nigerian unity. They were only opportunists who turned around to claim one Nigeria because of economic interests linked to crude oil which remains the reality of their presence in Nigeria to date. Had Yakubu Gowon and the North spared us the lie and kept their original plan to secede, the nation would have been better for it as more manageable homogenous units would have emerged and the nation would have been spared the needless conflict that was fought on the great lie of Nigerian unity.

Yakubu Gowon Reneges On Aburi Accord:

“My word is my bond” is a famous phrase that underlines the importance of honesty. For a leader the most important test of character is standing by his word. Yakubu Gowon failed this important test of character when he reneged on an agreement he personally participated in reaching in Aburi. On the 4th and 5th of January 1967 a genuine and final opportunity presented itself to resolve the simmering crisis through a conference in Aburi Ghana at the instance of General Ankrah. Notably Aburi was chosen because following the events of 1966 and the practical disintegration of the army, the security of Odimegwu Ojukwu and other Eastern dignitaries could not be guaranteed anywhere in Nigeria.

Yakubu Gowon, together with his advisers, secretaries and the military governors of the North, Midwest and Western regions were in attendance while Colonel Odimegwu Ojukwu being military governor of the East together with his aides also attended. Given the dire situation at that time, the meeting deliberated exhaustively on the structure of Nigeria. The next day the meeting continued and affirmed a final agreement known as the “Aburi Accord.” Thus for two days, Yakubu Gowon and his aides together with all the regional governors constituted the supreme military council which incidentally is the highest ruling body and reached agreement on all the critical issues, but as soon as Yakubu Gowon arrived in Nigeria he began the process of dilly dallying and reneging on an agreement freely negotiated and entered into in Aburi Ghana.

The question of building good faith and confidence was just as important as the conference itself as a bridge building measure given recent events. Unfortunately Yakubu Gowon almost immediately truncated the opportunity of building good faith by not respecting one of the agreements reached in Aburi concerning the temporary payment of salaries and recovery of properties of Eastern civil servants who had been forced to leave their jobs through no fault of theirs. Decree No. 8; later issued in May, a considerably long time for a conference held on the 4th and 5th January, which to a large extent is evidence of Yakubu Gowon’s dilly dallying and subterfuge, went further by ignoring the security sensitivities of the times, particularly for the Easterners by reneging on the most basic fundamental of Aburi accord which requires concurrence of all 4 military governors in all matters affecting the country when he sneaked in the powers to declare a state of emergency in the country with concurrence from only 3 out of the 4 military governors. The implication of this breach means that Yakubu Gowon and his cabinet could suddenly with concurrence from the other 3 military governors declare a state of emergency in the East and subject the region to military invasion.

Given the context of the time with a mutinous and dysfunctional Nigerian army whose officers and men instigated and actively participated in the genocide that killed officers and civilians including women and children of Eastern origin and while none of the officers or men in the Nigerian army or Police who committed such atrocities were either arrested, prosecuted or removed from the army or Police, it was natural that the Governor of the East needed enough safeguards and guarantees even if temporarily through collective concurrence of all four military governors on issues of national importance as agreed in Aburi to avoid suddenly becoming a victim of a state of emergency and other such insidious plots by the mass killers that still abounded in the Nigerian army/ Police until at least such a time that security and confidence is adequately restored.

It is ironical that the powers to declare a state of emergency which Yakubu Gowon never exercised when it was most necessary during the genocide to stop the mass killings which would have prevented the crisis in the first place was suddenly sneaked into Decree No. 8 with consent of only 3 out of the 4 military governors required in breach of the Aburi accord that recommended consent of all 4 military governors in such matters. Except Yakubu Gowon and his advisers had some ulterior motive as was suspected in the East, there is no reason why concurrence of all 4 military governors as agreed in Aburi for the declaration of a state of emergency in situations of riots or strife should be a problem for a temporary period until trust, confidence and a measure of reconciliation is achieved.

Indeed, reneging on the Aburi accord over the state of emergency issue by Yakubu Gowon was unnecessary as being a military regime, he still ultimately retained the powers under the “doctrine of necessity” in exceptional circumstances to issue an emergency decree that enables the declaration of a state of emergency in the extreme and very unlikely situation where he is unable to get consent of all 4 military Governors for the declaration of a state of emergency. There was thus no practical or logical reason for Yakubu Gowon to renege on the most sensitive and fundamental aspect of Aburi accord that was designed to be a temporary safeguard given the genocide, disintegration of the army and lack of trust until security and confidence is restored.

By disregarding the morbid fear and trauma which the pogroms/genocide had incited in the East thus reneging on the most fundamental aspect of the Aburi accord which would have given the necessary safeguards and created the environment for reconciliation and a permanent resolution of the crisis Yakubu Gowon proved incapable or unwilling to make any temporary sacrifices for peace. As a leader he failed to keep an agreement which he himself had personally participated in negotiating in Aburi Ghana. This failure of leadership and bad faith finally set the nation on the part of an unnecessary war and bloodletting. As a further demonstration of bad faith and insincerity, it is also important to note Yakubu Gowon’s unusual delay from January to May before he issued the diluted version of Aburi accord. This five month delay more than anything else serves as an undeniable indication of Yakubu Gowon’s insincerity in resolving the crisis and his preference for war.

Colonialism And The Right To Self Determination

Colonialism is generally regarded as the total or partial loss of autonomy of indigenous peoples to the coercive or forceful establishment of exploitative/oppressive governing authorities on unequal terms by a people, group or colonial power not ordinarily or historically linked culturally, geographically or linguistically to the colonised. Any group that therefore forcefully subjects another to their authority without democratic consent of the indigenous peoples through a plebiscite or referendum is an act of colonialism. There was nothing like Nigeria until the British in trying to consolidate the commercial interests of Taubman Goldie a British trader whose forays brought him to the region put together a people who mostly never had any cultural, geographic, linguistic or ethnic links with each other. It was from the onset an impossible nation created not for the harmonious existence or interests of the unfortunate subjects who made up the strange and unworkable contraption but for the servicing of British trading interests.

Following strident agitations and the increasing enforcement of the right to self determination as enshrined in the United Nations charter, Nigeria gained independence in 1960 but the subjects within the Nigerian space who had no hitherto cultural, geographic or linguistic links faced their own colonialism within the “geographical expression known as Nigeria” for the many tribes and cultures within Nigeria where just as alien to each other as the British were to them. The manifest injustice of colonialism led to the adoption of the right to self determination in the United Nations Atlantic Charter in 1941 and further consolidated in 1945. It established the right under international law for all indigenous peoples to seek independence through democratic means.

The Nigerian crisis and pogrom/genocide of 1966/67 established beyond all reasonable doubts the incompatibility of Nigeria and opened the opportunity for the application of international law to peacefully determine the status of Biafra through a plebiscite or referendum administered by the United Nations. Nigeria being a nation of alien tribes, Biafra reserved the same right of independence with which Nigeria won independence from Britain on the basis of colonialism. But Yakubu Gowon refused to allow a referendum in line with the dictates of international law as established in the United Nations charter which would have resolved the impasse through a legitimate democratic method that respects the inalienable rights of indigenous peoples to self determination and freedom from internal or external colonialism.

To the extent that the people of Biafra were never allowed to freely and democratically express their choice and right to self determination through a plebiscite, Yakubu Gowon’s war against Biafra and consequent coercive subjugation of the people to the governing authorities of Nigeria was and remains for all practical purposes an act of colonialism.

The Conduct And Aftermath Of War Reveals The Lie Of War Of Unity

7th of July 1967, the Nigerian army attacked Biafra and began the onslaught on an aggrieved and beleaguered people who had in exercising their legitimate and natural right to self defence/preservation opted for self determination in the aftermath of the genocide against innocent Eastern civilians while the head of state refused to act. In prosecuting the war Yakubu Gowon proved his complicity in the genocide by fielding the likes of Murtala Muhammed, Shehu Yar’Adua, Theophilus Danjuma, Mohammed Shuwa and others who ironically are the same cowardly officers who perpetrated the genocide against civilians that created the crisis in the first place. These officers were not just mass murderers they were also rapists who serially committed crimes against humanity in the course of the conflict.

To decipher the true motive for the conflict, certain fundamental questions must be asked; If Yakubu Gowon was genuine about Nigerian unity as the true reason for his war why the North was originally intent on secession until the British authorities advised them not to because of economic interests / crude oil? Why did Gowon as head of state abdicate his constitutional responsibility and stood by when thousands of innocent Eastern civilians were being massacred? Why was Gowon so unwilling to make any sacrifices for the interest of peace and why did he renege on an accord he agreed in Aburi? Why did it take him so long from January to May to issue a decree on the diluted version of Aburi accord? Why was the Nigerian army so invested in massacres, rape and arson as they did in Benin, Asaba, the apostolic church Onitsha and practically all theatres of the war? Why were officers and men of the Nigerian army like Benjamin Adekunle and others making inflammatory statements of their intent on genocide in a supposed war of unity? Why was the notorious radio Kaduna making atrocious statements that urged rape and genocide in a supposed war of unity? Why did balkanisation of Igboland, abandoned property, divide and rule and the seeds of division instead of reconciliation become the policy of Yakubu Gowon’s government before and after the war? Why did Apartheid policies of marginalisation/exclusion become federal government policy after the war if it was genuinely a war of unity as Yakubu Gowon repeatedly lied?

In nations that went through a civil war, driven by a genuine patriotic desire for unity, the end of such conflicts is not followed by policies of balkanisation, abandoned properties, exclusion and marginalisation as has been the case in Nigeria but swift and total reconciliation, reconstruction and re-integration. Vietnam, Angola and post-genocide Rwanda are just some examples of nations that achieved total reconciliation and re-integration in the aftermath of conflict because of a genuine desire for unity.

Conclusions:

In the case of Nigeria, the events before, during and after the war in itself provides sufficient evidence for the true intentions of the conflict as a war not borne out of patriotism and a genuine desire for Nigerian unity/ nation building but of economic interests, subjugation and colonialism. On his own part, Yakubu Gowon by not following through with the original intent of the North to secede, by his repeated bad faith, by abdicating his most fundamental constitutional responsibility to protect the lives and property of citizens thus allowing and even enabling mass killings of genocidal proportions under his watch, by reneging on an agreement he personally participated in negotiating in Aburi and by usurping a people’s inalienable right to self determination through democratic means (plebiscite or referendum) as enshrined in the United Nations charter amongst other excesses personally and deliberately caused the avoidable and unnecessary Nigeria-Biafra war and the attendant tragedies associated with the conflict just seven years after independence.

Not only did Nigeria by the events before and during the war pioneer genocide in Africa, the first images of starving children which has now become a permanent fixture of Africa also began from Nigeria. The pogrom and the war more than anything else have come to define Nigeria as a land of monumental injustice and impunity. The war itself was an illegal war and a violation of international law which established since 1945 the right of self determination in Chapter 1, Article 1, part 2 which states that the purpose of the UN Charter is: "To develop friendly relations among nations based on respect for the principle of equal rights and self-determination of peoples, and to take other appropriate measures to strengthen universal peace." As each successive generation discovers the truth and injustice of that needless conflict, the bitterness is sure to remain Nigeria’s deepest enduring divide.

Nigeria continues to suffer severe social, economic and psychological dislocations as a result of the needless conflict. The nation has since become a disharmonious, dysfunctional and strife torn chaotic failed state Nigeria. Courtesy of Yakubu Gowon, crude oil that was hitherto not an issue during the time of Dr Nnamidi Azikiwe is now an obsessive object of national importance and the only mainstay of the economy. Gowon took away all aspects of federalism and consolidated the unproductive parasitic unitary system together with the creation of unviable states/local governments (without plebiscites) that are dependent only on crude oil allocations at the expense of industrialisation and other productive initiatives, which has in turn encouraged corruption and led to the collapse of the economy.

As the truth of the conflict continues to emerge and as the nationwide campaign for a sovereign national conference gathers steam in a nation that has been awakened to the lie of Nigerian unity, Emeka Ojukwu has been vindicated by Nigeria’s increasing strife, failure and impossibility as a nation. Yakubu Gowon was ultimately an unprincipled, incompetent, bigoted and opportunistic leader whose failure of leadership unleashed the pogroms and unnecessary war that spilled enough blood to fill the bowels of the Niger River. He and his cabinet members who so callously plunged the nation into an atrocious bloodletting will have to live and die with their conscience haunted by the millions of lives they took on the premise of a great lie. Their successive generations will also not be spared.