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To those who want Nigeria dead (1)

On the sixtieth anniversary of Nigeria’s freedom from British colonial rule when we should reflect deeply on the journey so far into our nationhood and what we need to do strengthen ourselves for the journey ahead, some groups are however wishing and plotting the death of this country that has sustained us all through the years. Their argument is based on the outworn shibboleth that Nigeria was a forcible creation of unwilling and incompatible peoples by the British deliberately skewed as it were in favour of a poor and backward northern Nigeria at the detriment of a rich, prosperous and progressive southern Nigeria.

So as the narrative goes further, having come this far with ‘’this Lugardian contraption’’ which appears not to be working, it was better to dissolve the union and let the incompatible components go their own ways in furtherance of the principle of self-determination as enshrined in the United Nation’s charter.

This has been the rallying cry of some groups in south east of the country in their quest for a ‘’Republic of Biafra’’ of indeterminate and unconvincing boundaries whose quixotic leader Nnamdi Kanu and his Indigenous Peoples of Biafra (IPOB) is driving from a drab council flat in the run down London district of Peckham. He hopes to achieve this through foul mouthed rants at leaders of the ‘’zoo’’ as he calls Nigeria sparing not even the present elected and appointed leaders from the area of his dream ‘’Biafra Republic’’.
Of late he has been joined by another agitation for a mythical ‘’Oduduwa Republic’’ encompassing the south west region of Nigeria also of indeterminate and unconvincing boundaries, led by an octogenarian former history professor, Banji Akintoye, and his Yoruba World Congress (YWC).
Although both agitations seem to enjoy a lot of publicity from an uncritical but vocal section of the media more perhaps for the sensation they create and the circulation and sales they generate, there are however some salient issues these agitators seem either to have glossed over or are ignorant of in pursuit of their causes.

These are the legal, diplomatic and military imperatives of their agitations.
When the British came to these shores on their mission to conquer and colonise, the entities they met were not recognised by the existing laws of the time. And in any case those that claimed any rights to statehood at the time had signed treaties of ‘’protection’’ with the British which in practical terms ousted their sovereign rights. The mark of a state was to legally prove its existence by functioning administrative structures and institutions, recognised boundaries and a credible military to defend the state. There were no such states in the area which came to be known as Nigeria.

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Any group or part of Nigeria in our present age that seeks to pull out of the country on the basis of a state or entity that purported to exist before the coming of the British must prove the legality of the existence of that state in history.

To the best of our knowledge, there was no central Igbo political entity existing before the coming of the British. The Aro Igbo sub group which were the nearest thing to such in Igboland were mainly itinerant merchants who never came round to developing any centralising administrative structures and institutions.

And in the southwest, the Oyo Empire had long disintegrated before the coming of the British. Indeed the British arrived to find the entire southwest engulfed in an internecine warfare pitting Ibadan the successor state to the Oyo Empire and the other Yoruba communities, which had raged for sixteen years, and which they intervened to stop in September 1866.
So on which pre-colonial entities will the two secessionist groups establish their quest to restore as reason for their cause?

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If they cannot prove the existence of these entities both in historical and legal terms, it stands to reason that they would find it difficult to gain any diplomatic mileage for their cause.

Which world power or serious state will recognise and support an agitation that has no concrete historical and legal basis?
The agitators should not take it to heart that some fringe groups and individuals in some western countries have purported to stand by them. But this is for the optics only. When it matters, those with the responsibility to decide will be guided by cold, hard reality and interests, not by emotions and sentiments.

At some point, the secessionists may want explore the military option. In this regard, they will soon experience what other separatist movements like the ‘’Biafra’’ of Odumegwu Ojukwu, the Irish Republican Army (IRA) in Northern Ireland, ETA Basques separatists in Spain and Jonas Savimbi’s UNITA in Angola went through for years and came out with nothing tangible for their years of self-destructive armed agitation for separation.
Our separatists also cite the principle of self-determination for their agitations as well as the argument that the amalgamation of 1914 which fused the northern and southern protectorates of Nigeria into one colony had duration of hundred years, implying that it would have ended in 2014.

One of the major determinants for the validity of claims for self-determination requires agitators to establish that they have been denied democratic representation. On this score we all know our secessionists will be hard put to convince the International community that they have a case worthy of attention.

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The 1914 amalgamation was not a treaty between Britain and any existing entity or entities in Nigeria; it was an administrative measure for the convenience of the colonial power over his long conquered subjects that did not require the latter’s consent or objections.

In any case with Independence in 1960 and republican status in 1963, all issues relating to our colonial status were deemed to have lapsed. We became a new country, whose boundaries, statutes and symbols were recognised by International law.

The time to have opted out of the future Nigeria was during the pre-Independence talks in which all parts had the opportunity to make their case. Having signed the instruments of the new Independent state of Nigeria, all the regions, provinces and the peoples etc of pre-Independent Nigeria became subsumed under the new sovereign state of Nigeria which was vested with the power to exercise its full rights over the new state constituting about one million square miles and multitude of ethnic groups.

But does this mean that Nigeria as constituted is cast in stone and cannot be challenged by those who feel aggrieved about developments in the country?
Nigeria is work in progress. There are a lot of unresolved issues of national import that have been left unattended to by reasons of commission and omission by those saddled with the responsibility to do so. The sense of frustration and disappointment over the state of things in the country is palpable all over. Nigerians have every right to entertain thoughts as to whether as things are and as presently constituted the country should continue to exist.

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But legitimate as these concerns are, we must examine whether the solution to the existential challenges of the country is to break it up as is being canvassed currently by some groups.

In this regard, the question that readily comes to mind is have we reached the point where the break-up of the country is the only answer to the challenges of our times and if so how can that materialise from the mainly media campaign currently being waged on the issue to reality? And if the break-up of Nigeria becomes inevitable how will it pan out for the seceding parts and the country in general?

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Like the overwhelming majority of Nigerians, I do not believe that we have exhaustively reached the point where the only option left to resolve the problems of Nigeria is for the component parts of the country to seek to break it up. Nor do I believe that even in the unlikely event of one part of the country deciding to secede, it will be a cake walk as some erroneously think.
But if some are led to believe truculently that secession is the preferred option, then it is necessary to examine the merit of the issues.

For the agitators for an Oduduwa republic, the underlying economic basis is principally hedged on the economic status of Lagos which is geographically located in the putative Oduduwa area. They are well aware that Lagos is the principal economic hub of West Africa which by most parameters is bigger than a number of African countries. The quantum of economic activities generated in Lagos alone is almost one third the size of the Nigerian economy.
So the reasoning is that with access to the sea and with such a viable economic zone, the Oduduwa republic can hope to stand alone economically if it secedes from Nigeria. And there is an element of economic blackmail in it too in that the putative Oduduwa republic could block imports and exports from and to other parts of Nigeria or subject them to higher and arbitrary charges.
But this assumption however pales when considered against the reality. Between 40 to 60 per cent of the total economic activities in Lagos are generated by persons from outside the south west. Will the Oduduwa Republic ask such persons to go or subject them to different economic status as they will now be considered economic aliens? Will such persons consider it economically worthwhile to stay on in Lagos seeing that things have now changed? Will they decide to liquidate their businesses in Lagos and move them elsewhere conducive to their citizenship and business status?
Secondly can Lagos which is principally an entreport with the prevalence of mainly light industry and not known to be a hub of heavy industry and manufacturing, cope with the massive loss of jobs as a result of the possible relocation of businesses by business owners from areas outside the south west? Can the Lagos political and business elite rely on and trust the government of the Oduduwa republic to protect the special interest of Lagos as an economic hub that lays the golden egg for the country? Or will the Lagos elite in considering the exclusive economic status of Lagos decide to opt out or seek an alternative arrangement with both the Oduduwa republic and other parts of Nigeria?

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The political issues that will confront the putative Oduduwa republic would be no less complex.
First of all, the boundaries. Will the Oduduwa republic include Kwara and some parts of Kogi? Will it be by force or by negotiation? The argument that they are Yoruba speaking will not hold water because the two provinces of Alsace and Lorraine in France which are German speaking belong to, and are in France. Texas and whole parts of western United States of America are Spanish speaking which by that logic, ought to be in Mexico. Or why can’t the Oduduwans also lay claim to and include parts of the Yoruba speaking areas of Benin Republic?

Then the brass tacks. How will the component parts of the Oduduwa republic live with one another politically? How will the Oyo component square up against the Egbas and Ijebus? The Remos and Yewas against both? Or the Ekitis and the Ondos? Ifes and Modakekes? And the big one; Ibadans and the Ijeshas?

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The agitation for Biafra republic in the south east also faces similar reality checks. The first of such is to convince the contiguous non-Igbo ethnic groups to willingly join in the Biafra republic. This will not only provide much needed access to the sea but a share of the oil riches of the area. And the Igbos of Biafra will also have to cope with the fact of huge Igbo investment and settlement outside of the projected Biafra republic. Will Igbos abandon such investments and settlements and relocate and start afresh in the new Biafra?
Shorn of its mainly romantic appeal and promoted by a media for reasons of boosting circulation figures, the issue of secessionist agitation from Nigeria is really as a result of the lack of a clear pathway to genuine national development by our elite. Ironically it is the same elites who have squandered the opportunities to rise to the challenges of Nigerian nationhood that are turning round to seek the break-up of the country.

Secession will neither be the solution to Nigeria’s challenges, nor will it even succeed or be of any benefit to any part of the country that attempts it. Nigeria has come a long way and the best is ahead of us; it will be more beneficial and rewarding for us to work painstakingly together towards that goal than expend our energies in pursuits that will ultimately destroy us all.

Gadu can be reached via: [email protected], 08035355706 (sms only)



Views expressed by contributors are strictly personal and not of TheCable.
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