Buhari: What Do Igbos Want? A Response From Obi Nwakanma To Buhari.
During the presidential media chat on Wednesday 30th December 2015,
Nigerian President Muhammed Buhari said that Igbos were not maltreated,
and should stop screaming marginalization. Speaking of the continue
protests and struggle for the realization on Biafra Republic in parts of
the South East and South South, the former military head of state said:
“Why does it have to worry me, when I have militants, Boko Haram and
other. They said they are being marginalsed but they haven’t defined the
extent of their marginalisation. Who marginalised them? How? Where? Do
you know?,” he queried.”Who is the minister of state for petroleum, is
he not Igbo? Who is the Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria? Is he
not Igbo? Who is minister of labour, science and technology? What do the
Igbos want?”
And now, Obi Nwakanma, a Poet, journalist, biographer and literary
critic, has written an article in answer to the question, “What do the
Igbos want?”
In Biafra, under three years, they were making their own rockets and
calculating its distances; distilling their own oil and making aviation
fuel, creating in their Chemical and Biological laboratories, new cures
for diseases like Cholera, shaping their own spare parts, and turning
the entire East into a vast workshop, as Ojukwu put it.
At the end of the war, the Ukpabi Asika regime brought together these
Biafran scientists and set up PRODA. The initiative led, in the first
five years between 1970-1975 under the late Prof. Gordian Ezekwe and
Mang Ndukwe, to designs of industrial machinery models and prototypes
for the East Central State Industrial Masterplan, which remain
undeveloped even today. The Murtala/Obasanjo regime took over PRODA in
1975 by decree, starved it of funds, and basically destroyed its aims.
2ndly, Federal government policies centralized all potentials for
innovation and entrepreneurship. Before 1983, states had their
Ministries of Trade and Industry. These were charged with local business
registration, trade, and investment promotion, and so on. But today in
Nigeria, if you wish to do any business, you’d have to go to Abuja (it
used to be Lagos) to register under the Corporate Affairs Commission. It
used to be that local business registration was state and municipal
functions. The concentration of the leverage for trade utterly limited
Igbo entrepreneurs, particularly in the era of import licensing, once
your quota was exhausted, you could not do business.
Obi Nwakanma
This affected the old Igbo money in Aba and Onitsha, who were the
arrow-heads of innovation and traditional partners in the advance of
Igbo industrial economy. It is remarkable that as at 1985, a least by a
book published by the Oxford Economist Tom Forrest in 1980, The Advance
of African Capital, the Igbo had the highest investment in machine tools
industries in all of Africa, and the highest depth of investment in
rural, cottage industries. In his prediction in 1980, if that rate of
investment continued, according to Forrest in 1980, the Igbo part of
Africa would accomplish an industrial revolution by 1987. Now, by
1983/85, Federal government policies helped to dismantle the growth of
indigenous Igbo Industry through its targeted national economic
policies. As I have said, there is a corollary between industrial
development and innovation.
3rdly, the severe, strategic staunching of huge capital in-flow into
the East starved Igbo businesses and institutions of the capacity to
utilize or even expand their capacities. There were no strategic Federal
Capital projects in the East. There were no huge infrastructural
investments in the East. The last major Federal government investment in
Igbo land was the Niger Bridge which was commissioned in 1966. Any
region starved of government funds experiences catatony and attrition.
Private capital is often not enough to create the kind of synergy
necessary for innovation. Rather than invest in the East, from 1970 to
date, the Federal government has strategically closed down every
capacity for technological advancement in the East and stripped that
region of its capacity.
By 1966, the Eastern Nigerian Gas masterplan had been completed under
Okpara. But in its review of a Nigeria gas masterplan, the Federal
government strategically circumvented the East. Oil and Gas are under
Federal oversight. The Trans-Amadi to Aba Industrial Gas network/linkage
had been completed in 1966, to pipe gas from Port-Harcourt to Aba. The
Federal government let that go into abeyance and uprooted the already
reticulated pipes. The East was denied access to energy with the
destruction of the Power stations during the war.
The Mbakwe government sought to remedy this by embarking on two
highly critical area of investment necessary for industrial life: the 5
Zonal water projects, which were 75 completed by 1983, and set for
commissioning in 1984, which was to supply clean water for domestic and
industrial use to all parts of the old Imo state, and the Amaraku and
Izombe Power stations, under the Imo Rural Electrification Project.
These were the first ever massive independent power projects ever
carried out by any state government in Nigeria which would have made
significant part of Igbo land energy independent today. The supply of
daily electricity was possible in Imo as at 1984. The Amaraku station
had come on stream, and the Izombe Gas station was underway, when Buhari
and his men struck.
The first order of business under the Buhari govt in January 1984,
was to declare all that investment by Mbakwe “white elephant projects.”
They were abandoned, and left to decay.
Ground had already been acquired and cleared on the Umuahia-Okigwe
road to commence work by the South Korean Auto firm, Hyundai, under a
partnership with Imo for the Hyundai Assembly plant in Umuahia, to cater
to a West African market. The first order of business under the Buhari
government in January 1984, was to declare all that investment by Mbakwe
“white elephant projects.” They were abandoned, and left to decay. The
equipment at the Amaraku power station was later sold in parts by Joe
Aneke during Abacha’s government. Some of the industries like the Paint
and Resins company, and the Aluminium Extrusion plant in Inyishi were
privatized, and sold. Projects like the massive Ezinachi Clay &
Brick works at Okigwe are at various stages of decay, as memorial to all
that effort.
4thly, you may not remember but Odumegwu Ojukwu founded and opened
the first Nigerian University of Technology – the University of
Technology Port-Harcourt in 1967, under the leadership of prof. Kenneth
Dike. He had also compelled Shell to establish the First Petroleum
Technology Training Institute in Port-Harcourt in 1966. All these were
dismantled. The PTI was take from Port-Harcourt to Warri, while
University of Tech, P/H was reduced to a campus of UNN, until 1975, when
it became Uniport. You will recall that for years, up till 1981, the
only institutions of higher learning in Central Eastern Nigeria were the
University of Nigeria, Nsukka, IMT Enugu and Alvan Ikoku College of Ed,
in Owerri. There is no innovation without centers of strategic
research.
Mbakwe and Jim Nwobodo changed all that in 1981, when they pushed
through their various states Assembly, the bills establishing the old
Anambra State Univ. of Tech (ASUTHECH), under the presidency of Kenneth
Dike, and the IMOSU with its five campuses under the presidency of Prof
MJC Echeruo. The master plan for these universities as epicenters of
research and innovation in the East were effectively grounded with the
second coming of the military in 1984, and the diminution of their
mission through underfunding, etc. As I have said, I have given you the
very short version. After a brief glimpse of light between 1979-83, Igbo
land witnessed the highest form of attrition from 1983- date, and the
destruction of the efforts of its public leadership to restore it to its
feet has been strategic.
Some have been intimidated, and the Igbo themselves have grown very
cynical from that experience of deep alienation from Nigeria. I think
you should be a little less cynical of Igbo attempts to re-situate
themselves in the Nigerian federation: starved of funds, starved of
investments, subjected to regulatory strictures from a powerful central
government which sees the East in adversarial terms, and often
threatened, the Igbo themselves grew cynical of it all. You may recall,
the first move by the governors of the former Eastern Region to meet
under the aegis of the old Eastern Region’s Governors Conference in
1999, was basically checkmated by Obasanjo who threatened them after
they called for confederation in response to the Sharia issue in the
North.
Their attempts to establish liaison offices in Enugu and create a
regional partnership was considered very threatening by the federal
government under Obasanjo, that not too long after, they abandoned that
move, and that was it. If people cannot be allowed to organize for the
good of their constituents, then it only means one thing: it is not in
the interest of certain vested interests in Nigeria for a return of a
common ground in the Eastern part of Nigeria because establishing that
kind of common ground threatens the balance of power. It is even
immaterial if such a common ground leads to Nigeria’s ultimate benefit.
There are people who just find the idea of a common, progressive
partnership of the old Eastern Region threatening to their own long term
interests. This is precisely what is going on – its undercurrent. This
of course cannot be permitted to go on forever. A generation arises
which often says, “No! in Thunder.”
The Trans-Amadi to Aba Industrial Gas network/linkage had been
completed in 1966, to pipe gas from Port Harcourt to Aba. The FG let
that go into abeyance and uprooted the already reticulated pipes.
Igbo population is quite huge, and people who truly know understand
that the Igbo constitute the single largest ethnic nation in Nigeria.
Much has been made about how this so-called “small” Igbo land space
could accommodate the vast Igbo population. But People also forget that
Igbo land accommodated Igbo who fled from everywhere else in 1967. So,
the question of whether Igbo land is large enough to contain the Igbo is
a non-issue. In any case, Biafra is not only the land of the Igbo. It
goes far beyond Igbo land. But even for the sake of building scenarios,
we stick to Igbo land alone – the great Igbo cities of Enugu,
Port-Harcourt, Owerri, Aba, Onitsha, Asaba, Abakaliki, Umuahia, Awka and
Onitsha are yet to be reach even 30% of their capacities.
New arteries can be built, facilities expanded; there are innovative
ways of moving populations through new transportation platforms
-underneath, above, on the surface, and by waterways. The East of
Nigeria has one of the most complex and connected, and largely disused
system of natural river waterways in the world. New, ecologically
habitable towns can be expanded to form new cities from the Grade A
Townships – Agbor, Obiaruku, Aboh, Oguta, Mgbidi, Orlu, Ihiala,
Amawbia/Ekwuluobia, Elele/Ahoada, Owerrinta, Bonny, Asa, Arochukwu,
Afikpo, Okigwe, and so on. The Igbo will be fine. The Japanese and the
Dutch, for example, have proved that there are innovative ways of using
constricted space.
As for the economy: it is supply and demand. New economic policies
will integrated Igbo economy to the central West African and West
African Markets. The Igbo will create a new vast export network,
unhindered by idiotic economic and foreign policies. The re-activation
of the PH port systems will for e.g. open the closed economic corridor
once and for all to global trade. As anybody knows, it might take a fast
train no more than 45 minutes to move goods from the Warri or Sapele
ports to Aba and even in less time to Onitsha. As Diette Spiff once
observed while playing golf at Oguta, all it would take to connect Warri
and Oguta is just a long bridge, and the vast economic movement will
commence between Warri and its traditional trading areas of Onitsha and
the rest of the East.
The quantum of economic activity will see the growth of that corridor
between Aba-Oguta- Obiaruku down to Warri as the crow flies. The impact
of trade between the Calabar ports and Aba will explode. In fact, the
old trading stations along the Qua-Iboe River (the Cross River) at
Arochukwu, Afikpo, down to Oron and Mamfe in the Cameroons will explode
and create new prosperity and new opportunities. I am giving the short
version. So, the Igbo will be alright. They would simply be just able to
define their own development strategies, deploy their highly trained
manpower currently wasting unutilized, and the basis of its vast middle
class will create new consumers, and generate an internal energy that
will thrive on Igbo innovation, industry, and know-how, which Nigeria
currently suppresses. This is exactly one very possible scenario.
So, Tanko Yakassi is wrong. May be if the Igbo leave Kano, the Emir
will no longer need to buy his bulb from an Igbo trader in Kano. He will
have to buy it either from an Hausa, a Fulani, a Lebanese, or some such
person. But those will have to come to Igbo land to buy it first before
selling to the Emir. There was a time when all of West Africa came to
Onitsha or Aba to buy and trade because it was safe, and those cities
were the largest market emporia in the continent. People came from as
far away as the Congo to buy stuff in Aba and sell in the Congo. It
could happen again, only this time on a vaster, more controlled scale.
The network of Igbo global trade will not stop if they left Nigeria. In
fact, they will have more access to an indigenous credit system that
would expand that trade, currently unobtainable and unavailable today to
them, because Nigeria makes it impossible for Igbo business to grow
through all kinds of restrictions strategically imposed on it, including
port restrictions.
However, although I do think that the Igbo would do quite well alone,
they could do a lot better with Nigeria, if the conditions are right.
This agitation is for the conditions to be made right; for Nigeria and
its political and economic policies to stop being a wedge on Igbo
aspirations. And Igbo aspiration is quite simple: to match the rest of
the developed world inch by every inch, and not to be held down by the
Nigerian millstone of corruption, inefficiency, and inferiority. The
Igbo think that control of their public policies on education, research
and innovation, economic and monetary policies, and recruitment, control
and deployment of its own work force both in public and private sectors
will give them the leverage they need to build a coherent and civilized
society.
ALSO READ: Domination Plot Of The ‘North’ Against The South-East / South-South Revealed (Audio Inside)
They point to the example of Biafra, where under three years, they
were making their own rockets and calculating its distances; distilling
their own oil and making aviation fuel, creating in their Chemical and
Biological laboratories, new cures for diseases like Cholera, shaping
their own spare parts, and turning the entire East into a vast workshop,
as Ojukwu put it, while Nigeria was busy doing owambe, importing even
toothpick, and creating new wartime millionaires from corrupt
contracting systems by a powerful oligopoly. It is a fallacy much driven
by ignorance that Igbo will not thrive and that Igbo land will not
accommodate Igbo population if they leave. That is not true. There is no
scientific basis for it.
The dynamics of human movement will take great care of all that. It’s
a lame excuse. What people who wish for Nigeria to stay together should
do is not to make such puerile statements, because it is meaningless.
What we should all do is to find the strategic means of containing Igbo
discontent by LISTENING to the Igbo, and seeking peaceful and productive
ways of fully freeing their energy to instigate growth both of
themselves and of Nigeria within Nigeria for everyone’s benefit.
Threatening them will not work. It has never worked, and it is important
to understand a bit of Igbo cultural psychology: the more you threaten
him, the more the Igbo person digs in very stubbornly. Igbo, with a long
tradition of diplomacy, thrive on consensus not on threat of the use of
force, or the like.
Frankly, those who continue to think that the Igbo have no options
are yet to understand the complexity of this movement as we speak. They
still look at the surface of events while the train is revving and about
to leave the station. We need to work very carefully on this issue. I
myself, I prefer Nigeria. I like its color of many peoples and cultures.
That in itself is the very condition for growth and regeneration. A
single Igbo nation may be more prosperous, but will be less interesting,
and that is the more valid argument.
No comments:
Post a Comment