Herbert Ekwe-Ekwe
FEW NOW FAIL to observe the unassailable ascent
of the Biafra freedom movement. The convulsive desperation being exhibited by
the British chief representative to genocidist Nigeria presently in speech
after speech in this “country” of Britain’s denouncing Igbo/other African
peoples’ rights to self-determination speaks volumes of British
acknowledgement, however belated, 51
years later, that neither it nor its client co-genocidist state Nigeria can
stop the triumph of Biafra freedom. No one else can. The Igbo are gone! Gone! Free!
Some would probably argue that the chief
representative’s rantings, condemning African peoples’ inalienable rights to
freedom whilst on the ground in the “foreign land” of their posting as a “diplomat”,
is “not diplomatic”. This representative would retort, and correctly so, that
their position in Nigeria is far beyond that of the “conventional diplomat” but
that of a proconsul – from suzerain state Britain.
“Driving seats” of freedom
Two major unfolding events in Britain itself and
the perceived, related consequences that these could have on the politics of
the ongoing Igbo genocide waged by both Britain and Nigeria account for this proconsul’s
unrestrained utterances on African freedom and feeling of bitterness: (1) Scotland’s
(nation and state positioned at north region of Britain) quest for
restoration-of-independence from Britain after 310 years of union and (2) British departure from the
European Union after 44 years of union.
Both “unions”, it must be stressed, were consummated because of the voluntary
wish or disposition of each of the constituent members/parties. As I have shown
elsewhere (http://re-thinkingafrica.blogspot.co.uk/2012/01/rights-for-
scots-rights-for-igbo.html), Scotland is a very unlikely candidate to wish to leave the British Union given the exponential benefits that it has derived from the association for three centuries but the Scots insist that they want to exercise their inalienable right to freedom, a right recognised by the United Nations as a right for all peoples. Nicola Sturgeon, Scottish first minister couldn’t be clearer on this goal of the Scottish mission: “Our dream is for Scotland to become independent … To be in the driving seat of our own destiny, to shape our own future”. In her own 29 May 2017 letter to EU President Donald Tusk formally triggering British exit from the EU, British Prime Minister Theresa May unequivocally strikes the chord of freedom: “[we are leaving the EU] to restore our self-determination”.
scots-rights-for-igbo.html), Scotland is a very unlikely candidate to wish to leave the British Union given the exponential benefits that it has derived from the association for three centuries but the Scots insist that they want to exercise their inalienable right to freedom, a right recognised by the United Nations as a right for all peoples. Nicola Sturgeon, Scottish first minister couldn’t be clearer on this goal of the Scottish mission: “Our dream is for Scotland to become independent … To be in the driving seat of our own destiny, to shape our own future”. In her own 29 May 2017 letter to EU President Donald Tusk formally triggering British exit from the EU, British Prime Minister Theresa May unequivocally strikes the chord of freedom: “[we are leaving the EU] to restore our self-determination”.
Both Sturgeon and May declarations on freedom are at the core of the
historic Igbo freedom resolve made on 29 May 1966, 51 years ago, to exit from the British-created Nigeria
conquest-“federation” in response to the Anglo-Nigeria launch of the Igbo
genocide, the foundational genocide of post-(European conquest) Africa. Both
genocidist states’ collaborators murdered 3.1 million Igbo people, 25 per cent
of this nation’s population, during phases I-III of the genocide (29 May 1966-12
January 1970) and have subsequently murdered tens of thousands of additional Igbo
during phase-IV of the crime which continues to this day.
In the wake of Brexit and the Scots’ restoration-of-independence drive, such
high-profile and most unprecedented manifestations of freedom for the peoples
not seen recently within Britain, the British government has no confidence at
all that its clients in Nigeria can adequately articulate the seeming
complexity of explaining to African peoples in Nigeria why their “country” should be waging a 50-year-old genocide
against Igbo people, an African people,
for demanding to be free to be in the “driving seat of [their] destiny, to
shape [their] own future”, “to restore [their] self-determination”, just as the
Scots and the other constituent peoples in contemporary Britain so wish. That
task of explaining has been assigned to its chief representative in Nigeria and
the outcome is the staggering racist vituperation covered in the media in
Nigeria. Reading through the vitriol, it appears that the proconsul is not only
actively waging this phase of the Igbo genocide but is also confronting the
Igbo all over again in the enslaved estates of Virginia, the Carolinas and
elsewhere in southern United States and in Jamaica and Saint Domingue of the Caribbean
after not too many centuries since... The hostility to African freedom can indeed be devastating to the psyche of its assailant(s)…
British chief representatives in genocidist Nigeria as proconsul did not,
of course, emerge with the recent dramatic developments of Scottish freedom and
Brexit. Nigeria, it cannot be exaggerated, belongs
to Britain; Nigeria is Britain’s (for
a more expansive range of discourse on this theme, see Herbert Ekwe-
Ekwe, “Igbo genocide, Britain and the United States”, http://re-
thinkingafrica.blogspot.co.uk/2015/10/herbert-ekwe-ekwe-conquerors-concord-in.html). Right from the outset, beginning of the Igbo genocide in May 1966, the resident British chief representative, Francis Cumming-Bruce, was proconsul liaising unabashedly with Yakubu Gowon and other Nigerian military and civilian genocidist operatives who were on their premeditated goal raging and murdering any and all Igbo in their sights. During phase-III of the genocide (6 July 1967-12 January 1970), some ex-British conquest administrators/officials who had worked in Nigeria and were back home were often tagged as more “coherent spokespersons” who “rationalised” the genocide than the official Nigerian genocidist spokespersons especially Tony Enaharo, Alison Ayida, Murtala Mohammed, Obafemi Awolowo. The British Broadcasting Corporation, particularly its World Service channel, was nothing short of being the external radio station for the prosecuting Nigeria genocidist junta in Lagos. This service was much more robust in its “rationalisation” of the genocide (“one Nigeria”, “territorial integrity”, “inviolability of colonial-set frontiers”, “indissolubility of colonial-set borders”, “rebels”, “unacceptable precedence for rest of Africa”, “secessionist!”, “secessionist!”, “secessionist!”…) than the rambling, ramshackle Voice of Nigeria. We should note that neither the BBC nor any major broadcaster, news agency, webcaster and the like in the European World/West would dare use any or a variation of the epithets in the parenthesis above employed to demonise Igbo freedom in commentaries/discussion on the Scottish freedom movement or those of the English, Welsh or Irish peoples of the British Isles currently on course.
Ekwe, “Igbo genocide, Britain and the United States”, http://re-
thinkingafrica.blogspot.co.uk/2015/10/herbert-ekwe-ekwe-conquerors-concord-in.html). Right from the outset, beginning of the Igbo genocide in May 1966, the resident British chief representative, Francis Cumming-Bruce, was proconsul liaising unabashedly with Yakubu Gowon and other Nigerian military and civilian genocidist operatives who were on their premeditated goal raging and murdering any and all Igbo in their sights. During phase-III of the genocide (6 July 1967-12 January 1970), some ex-British conquest administrators/officials who had worked in Nigeria and were back home were often tagged as more “coherent spokespersons” who “rationalised” the genocide than the official Nigerian genocidist spokespersons especially Tony Enaharo, Alison Ayida, Murtala Mohammed, Obafemi Awolowo. The British Broadcasting Corporation, particularly its World Service channel, was nothing short of being the external radio station for the prosecuting Nigeria genocidist junta in Lagos. This service was much more robust in its “rationalisation” of the genocide (“one Nigeria”, “territorial integrity”, “inviolability of colonial-set frontiers”, “indissolubility of colonial-set borders”, “rebels”, “unacceptable precedence for rest of Africa”, “secessionist!”, “secessionist!”, “secessionist!”…) than the rambling, ramshackle Voice of Nigeria. We should note that neither the BBC nor any major broadcaster, news agency, webcaster and the like in the European World/West would dare use any or a variation of the epithets in the parenthesis above employed to demonise Igbo freedom in commentaries/discussion on the Scottish freedom movement or those of the English, Welsh or Irish peoples of the British Isles currently on course.
Biafra mission
Biafrans have an opportunity to
begin to build a new civilisation where human life, fundamentally, is sacrosanct.
This salient feature cannot be overstressed. Nigeria has been, for the Igbo, a
haematophagous quagmire throughout its history. Those
writing the scores of the Biafra freedom symphony are aware of this. The Biafran freedom
mission is therefore not to begin to construct a state that is merely post-genocide
or post post-conquest/post post-“colonial” state of Africa –
in other words, cancelling out here and there, in some mechanical venture, that
which was Nigeria, arguably “Berlin-state” Africa’s most
notorious state. Instead, Biafra is a realisation, a
profound reclamation of that which makes us all human and part of
humanity. Biafra is a beacon of the
tenacity of the spirit of human overcoming of the most desperate, unimaginable
brutish forces. Biafra is a haven of creativity, humanism, and
progress, in the wake of the gruesome Igbo genocide.
(Alice Coltrane Quartet, “Lord, help me to be” [personnel: Coltrane, piano; Pharoah Sanders, tenor saxophone; Jimmy Garrison, bass; Ben Riley, drums; recorded: Coltrane home studio, Dix Hills, New York, US, 29 January 1968])
Twitter@HerbertEkweEkwe
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