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When a people destroy themselves

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By Toyyib Olaniyi Musa-Omoloja

Few people, today, will not marvel at the self destruction going on in the Southeast of Nigeria. The insanity which started with attacks on symbols and institutions of democratic government associated with Nigeria has continued to grow in amperage. The audacity of it all is now yielding to monstrosity and incredulity as to how a people can be so vicious and uncircumspect about their own good.

Last Sunday, October 3, 2021, a house belonging to Joe Igbokwe who is a Special Adviser to Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu of Lagos State was razed in Nnewi, Anambra State. That same day, the house of Dr. Chu Okongwu was also torched in the same Itolo Nnewi.

Dr. Chu Okongwu, 87 years old, was a Minister of Finance between 1986 and 1990 during the regime of General Ibrahim Babangida. Prior to that, he was also the Minister of National Planning between 1985 and 1986. The house of this octogenarian was also razed. You wonder what the anger is all about!

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Shortly before these atrocious acts, Dr. Chike Akunyili, spouse of the late Information Minister under President Umaru Yar’Adua was gruesomely murdered on his way back from the commemorative lecture held in honour of his late wife, Dora.

Doctor Akunyili was based in Enugu State where he ran a hospital reputed to be one of the best in the state. This gruesome murder was coming at a time the Nigerian health system is under immense stress and strain occasioned by multifaceted challenges including brain drain. While the World Health Organisation (WHO) recommended a doctor-patient ratio of 1:600, what is obtainable in Nigeria is 1:6000. That murder was so unconscionable!

Within the same week, there were reported attacks on the offices of the Directorate of State Service ( DSS) and Federal Road Safety Commission ( FRSC).

In all of these senseless attacks and killings, IPOB denied involvement, and suddenly, it is now the reign of ‘invisible forces’ called unknown gunmen (UGM). These gunmen are not human beings. They are not recognisable. In fact, they seem to be extra terrestrial beings. What a wallow in self-deceit!

Students writing the last SSCE examination were prevented from sitting for the examination all in the name of enforcing compliance with certain self-destructive directives from IPOB. The situation is growing so badly in the Southeast that increasingly, it is becoming difficult to demarcate between Boko Haram and what these people causing mayhem and destruction stand for.

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Much of this inanity is linked to the agitation for Nnamdi Kanu’s release from detention. IPOB founded in 2014 by the detained secessionist has been at the forefront of this agitation.

Everything about Nnamdi Kanu and his creations like IPOB and ESN is a manifestation of failed leadership both at national and regional levels. Prior to 2009, Nnamdi Kanu was still an obscure figure in Nigeria. Ralph Uwazuruike, leader of MASSOB ( Movement for the Actualisation of the Sovereign State of Biafra) made him Director of Radio Biafra, a platform which he used to dispense hate filled rhetorics about Nigeria and other nationalities except Igbo, that made up the country.

All along, the radio was actually transmitting from London. How it took the Nigerian government so long to jam that radio can only beat one’s imagination. And by 2017, three years after he founded IPOB, a self- determination organisation, the group was designated a terrorist organisation. Here comes some of the contradictions and failure of leadership that continue to haunt us as a country.

At the time IPOB was designated a terrorist organisation, it has not done anything so unusual other than its gibberish and sewer language deployed against Nigeria. Yet, during this period, the country has been groaning under the onslaught of the ubiquitous herdsmen and bandits that held the country by the jugular. As I’m typing this, the National Assembly is even begging the President to call them their proper name: terrorists.

The Eastern Nigeria Security Network was formed in December, 2020 as an armed wing of the proscribed IPOB, largely in response to the rampages of fulani herdsmen in the Southeast and perhaps, as a response to the killing of 21 of its members at a meeting in August of 2020. Two police officers were said to have died in that confrontation but since then, violence has escalated in the southeast.

The real lionization of Nnamdi Kanu probably occured in 2015 when he was arrested by operatives of DSS. Following that arrest, protests broke out in most part of Southeast and South-south and from then on, he has continued to contest fairly successfully with elected public officers in the Southeast for the loyalty of people of the region.

Nnamdi Kanu’s popularity would not have soared nor his message resonated with his people if President Muhammadu Buhari has not been seen as a divisive leader. Buhari’s leadership that tends to amplify the fracture lines in our polity contributed in large measure to gifting Nnamdi Kanu and his ilk a heroic appeal.

However, no matter the grievances of IPOB or ESN that has now mutated to the ‘invisible forces’ called unknown gunmen, destroying the Southeast cannot be a reasonable and justifiable option. The amount of money lost each time people in the region were forcibly shut in to prove a point, no matter how jejune, can only be colossal. Each time this occurs, the region bleeds economically and it affects the country too. Billions of naira are lost, and soon enough, people in the region will begin to understand the meaning of this economic drainage.

In all of this, Southeast leaders need to engage in introspection, and tell themselves the truth. Losing the support of their people at home, and also working against the interest of their region politically does not attire them in beautiful toga. The last Southern Governors meeting that was hosted by Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi, Governor of Enugu State, revealed so much about the political sophistication of the Southeast.

Except the host, all the Southeast Governors stayed away from that crucial meeting which held in their region. Presidential politics is too serious to be approached half heartedly, and Nigeria’s heterogeneity and the fierce competition it engenders does not require such lukewarm attitude of Southeast political leaders. The displayed narcissism is more injurious to the political health of their people.

There is no gainsaying the fact that the emergence of Nnamdi Kanu, and even Sunday Igboho speaks to failure of leadership in the polity. These people are just filling the vacuum created by the dearth of heroes and inspirational leaders in our country.

Above all, solving the problem of the Southeast requires them to love themselves truly without necessarily hating others, emplacing leadership that put the people first, and a Nigeria that is truly run like a federation.

Toyyib Olaniyi Musa-Omoloja writes from Akure, Ondo State

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