The day was 6th July
1967. In the early hours of the day, as usual, a civil servant on the streets
of Onitsha and Aba would have his flat file strapped under his arms to board
the next train to his office.
A school master would be on his
White Horse bicycle, cycling his way to the school to wait on late-coming
students to whip with the cane, inculcate the culture of true citizenship,
discipline and teach the future leaders.
A collage kid in the Western
Nigeria would be up to school with his pen and brain to have a fair share of
the unparalleled and exclusive scholarship which the Western leader, Obafemi
Awolowo hugely lavished.
In the wake of a new Nigeria, on
that fateful day, while all was well and wobbling with the fresh evergreen of
the Nigerian grass and water, a 33 year old young man, Lt. Col. Yakubu Gowon as
was then known and called, lifted up his military staff, declared to be
mobilized, a legion of army for warfare against a peaceful land peopled by
unarmed and unsuspecting civilians in the Eastern Nigeria.
Lt. Col. Gowon, a man born from
the blood lines of the Plateau raped the peace of Nigeria at a time when young
Nigeria was sucking the breast of new democracy; at a time when the states were
weak, people’s minds were young about state governance, government and
politics. Like a little baby born and thrown into the red oil, so was Nigeria
born and thrown into the heat of Nigerian Civil War by the northerners who
claimed to be leaders and lovers of Nigeria.
Lives were lost up to millions.
Children, women, men, young and old were squashed to the grave beyond by the
outrageous masculinity of a man who is currently old and stricken in age.
To digress a little, the first
and the last time I met with Yakubu Gowon was 1st December 2012,
during the Worlds Aids Day celebration organized by Coca Cola Company which I
had a free ticket to attend and watch Nigeria Superstars play a football match
at Lagos. When I saw him, I could not believe. He was such an old. Never looked
like the Lt. Col. Gowon that could lift a barrel. Never looked like the man I
read in my government text book who marshalled a host of military forces during
the Nigeria civil war.
Today, Boko Haram is hitting the butts
of Nigerians, sorry, Northern Nigerians. It is playing out every day. The
stories go into the local and international air waves. Tremor, terror and
tribulation trickle down every now and then.
Anyone who thinks of Boko Haram
thinks of a group of masked Negroes with amours and weaponry tightly clamed on
the thighs, arms and shoulders. Or better still, everyone thinks of a well
dressed fellow wired with an IED (Impoverished Explosive Device) or what we
know as a bomb, ready to detonate in the midst of a huge crowd.
But for some time now, no one has
thought about the other side of the mayhem. What I call ‘the other side’ is what I will explain using a universally accepted,
naturally applicable and involuntary operational law which is called The Law of
Karma.
The Law Of Karma
In summary the Law of Karma has
12 points but I will pick the first point which is more important and of course
the summery of the whole.
“As you sow, so shall you reap”.
This is also known as the Law of Cause and Effects. The law has
it that whatever you put in the universe is what comes back to you, whether
good or evil. If you bend down to sown, you stand up to reap.
I started by giving an
illustration of the Nigerian Civil War. The dreadful incident took place under
the administration of a northerner. The Nigerian army, hugely manned by the northerners
were massively employing strategies to maliciously deal with the peace of the Easterners
who were mainly Igbos. They killed and maimed innocent citizens who knew
nothing about the state politics. There was unbridled looting and theft
everywhere.
Colonel Shuwa (a northerner) took
the lead of the war by lunching a first attack on the North side of Biafra with
the 1st Infantry Division.
Murtala Mohammed (also a
northerner) was working hand-with-hand with Gen. Gowon. During the war,
Mohammed formed the 2nd Infantry Division that swept off the Biafran
forces from the mid west. This Infantry was led mostly by northern solders. The
3rd Infantry was led by Benjamin Adekunle, who is the only Yoruba in
the ally.
The Northerners calculated and
executed the Nigerian Civil war, killing and maiming innocent Easterners. They
were the cause and existence of Civil war. They participated in it much more
than the Yorubas. Lagos was definitely afar from the view. The Yorubas were
into education, feeding well, doing their trade without many disturbances. The
northern Nigeria was very peaceful. No mines, no bombs, no shelling. The East
was a hell of war.
Early in 1967, a peace negotiating meeting of the
Supreme Military Council of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and the Eastern
Region Military Governor, Lt. Col. Ojukwu was called under the auspices of Gen.
Ankrah of Ghana in Aburi, Ghana.
All efforts to intervene by eminent Nigerians and
well - wishers to Nigeria like Gen. Ankrah, late Emperor Hallie Selassie of
Ethiopia and the late Dr Martin Luther King proved abortive.
In May 1967, an act came by a
decree from the Federal Government dividing the country into 12 states without
consultation with the regional heads. Some believed it was a tactic to dissuade
the rumoured secession of the Eastern Nigeria.
Soon, the war started.
The northerners’-led Federal government was hell
bent on engaging a series of brutish and violent death row in Eastern Nigeria. They
were never wanting for peace.
Down in the East, there was famine, hunger,
starvation. Women and children were dying at random. The Nigerian Army was deliberately
mapping out strategies to unleash mayhem on the East to if possible, crush the
people, the land and the cities therein.
Before the war, in Sept. 1966, the Northerners
were already revealing their violent and riotous school of thought. Lt.
Col. Gowon, in a
broadcast that year said: “I receive complaints daily that up till now
Easterners living in the North are being killed and molested and their property
looted. It appears that it is going beyond reason and is now at a
point of recklessness and irresponsibility.
Far in the North, Easterners were passing through
hell while the Northerners down in the East were living in heaven. No
molestation. No harassment. No abuse of human right.
Today, the reverse is the case.
The fact remains that if Boko
Haram exists, South-South, South-East and South-West Nigerians do not know. The
economy is booming. Trade, commerce, market and industry is effectively booming
and the cash exchange matrix is beaming green everyday in the eastern Nigeria.
Our kids are in collage, going to
school without been kidnapped. No curfews, red alarms. No bloodbath, no
famines, no threats or terrors.
Recall that about 50 years ago
when Northerners were unleashing terror in the East and Southern Nigeria, it
was clearly channelled in the religious trajectory. Anyone who was a Christian
was looked at as an opponent to the Muslims. That was the spirit, culture,
orientation and character which the Northerners have made everyone from 19th
century till date to have.
Well, I detest such a belief. I
have a lot of Muslim friends. In fact, my Editor is a Muslim. He is such nice
and gentle that I was shocked when he told us he is a Muslim.
Boko Haram is not about Muslim,
it is about the Northerners whose life style, character and spirit is imbued
with violence.
The Law of Karma is playing out
in Northern Nigeria. For about a decade, Boko Haram has been on the news
killing men and women in cold blood. I haven’t ever witnessed it; only in news,
Facebook, etc.
The tribulation and terror is
gradually chipping down in few pieces on the northern children. It is a
consequence of the primordial and pure savagery which their fathers unleashed on
the innocent Eastern Nigerians; no thanks to Boko Haram.
Why we unanimously mourn with the
northern brothers and sister, this is time for them to call upon Allah and ask
for forgiveness. Not only that, it is time for them to tear-off the flesh of
violence, learn to admit that people from other tribes, religions, states in
Nigeria are their brothers and sisters.
This is time for northerners to
admit that Nigeria is one indivisible country which is bounded by Law dating
far back 1960; that any individual whether from North, South, East or West is
empowered by the Nigerian constitution to be the President of this country.
It is a time of reconsolidation. It
is time when northern children, should be taught that their fathers have erred
by planting seed of discord and bitterness between them and other people in
Nigeria.
This should be a time for northern
mothers to teach their children that leadership of Nigeria is not cultured into
any tribe. It is a time for them to teach their children to know the language
of peace, understanding, and unity to support whoever that is in power and make
Nigeria a place where everyone can leave together.
Emmanuel Shebbs
True talk my brother. These people are so wicked
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