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Nigerians Are Better Together
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Nigerians Are Better Together
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Forty-six years ago this month, Nigeria's civil war came to an end with all the surrender of the secessionist Republic of Biafra. The two and a half years of fighting took some two million lives, but when the bitter struggle ended the triumphant [http://www.aparthotelbuenretiro.com.bo/index.php/component/k2/itemlist/user/180021 Nigerian] authorities proclaimed, "No Victor, No Vanquished." Nevertheless, the discontentment of the ethnic Igbo people of southeast Nigeria lingers on.<br><br><br><br>[http://www.hotbot.com/search/web?q=nigerian&keyvol=01a396b7cffb09c17d26 hotbot.com]In 1999, a group known as the Movement emerged, seeking through demonstrations and political agitation to re-establish an independent country. In recent years it has been overshadowed by another group, the Native People of Biafra, which likewise calls for autonomy, by violence if needed.<br><br>Nearly every day since Mr. Kanu's arrest, there have been demonstrations and calls for the government to free him. In managing his case, the government must tread carefully, ensuring that it will not transform him into a cause celebre.<br><br>A couple of weeks ago, [http://ladunliading7.hazblog.com/Primer-blog-b1/De-la-visiAn-a-la-acciAn-Segunda-Cumbre-sobre-el-Africa-de-AGCO-celebrada-en-BerlAn-b1-p2.htm Nigerian] papers reported the presence of a handwritten statement Mr. Kanu submitted to law enforcement agents shortly after his arrest, in which he apologized "unreservedly" for the "regrettable" and "uncomplimentary things" he had said about President Buhari and some other people. The authorities should think about capitalizing on this hint of remorse and making an offer of amnesty to Mr. Kanu in exchange for a pledge to be less-tumultuous in his strategy.<br><br>Directed by Nnamdi Kanu, a [https://kerrozvimrvesx.wordpress.com/?p=5 Nigerian] who was living until last October in Britain, it has exhibited greater sophistication than Massob. Its primary marketing tool is Radio Biafra, an online station that propagates the call for "liberation" and "self-emancipation" from the "zoo" called Nigeria. These actions have annoyed President Muhammadu Buhari, who has publicly backed Mr. Kanu's on-going trial for treason.<br><br>When the Biafran War broke out in 1967 in the wake of widespread communal violence, Lieut. Col. Odumegwu Ojukwu, a top Igbo officer, declared that "eastern Nigerians are no longer wanted as equal partners in the Federation of Nigeria." That feeling is still widely shared among the Igbo. But the frustrations of today's would-be Biafrans are no distinct in the Niger Delta, whose oil keeps Nigeria but gets them little in return, apart from oil spills and gas fires. Nor do they differ from the grievances of their fellow countrymen in the north, who continue to wallow in levels of illiteracy and poverty that make the south seem affluent in comparison.<br><br>The truth is that no part of Nigeria has a monopoly on [http://Www.Britannica.com/search?query=victimhood victimhood]. The impulse to protest suffering and also to seek to determine one's destiny is just not wrongheaded; the trouble lies in seeking change in an approach that incites violence and ethnic hatred. It might not be worse for Biafran separatists to drop their calls for independence and drive for constitutional change that will strengthen the federal system Nigeria purports to practice. Our current Constitution, such as the others that followed independence from Britain in 1960, is the product of military leaders whose schedule has rarely coincided with the public good. Though it starts with the needed words ("We the folks of the [http://www.china-plastic-supplier.com/index.php/blog/unn-graduates-13554-at-45th-convocation-ranks-first-in-nigeria.html Federal Republic of Nigeria] ... "), it had been crafted by a handpicked committee rather than made public until the military transferred power to the civilian government on May 29, 1999.<br><br>Igbo separatists would do better to follow the example of Scotland and push for a referendum to decide the future of the area. True, the central government will be unlikely to endorse such a call for fear that it may trigger an influx of referendum requests in this state of more than 250 ethnic groups. But were one my guess is that it might turn out overwhelmingly in favor of maintaining union with Nigeria.<br><br>There'll never be enough support in the southeast for independence from Nigeria, mainly because most of the folks there realize that there could be little to gain and much to lose. It is doubtful that the several minority in the delta agitators that the oil-rich delta states really are an all-natural section of Biafra. Biafra would have been a a tiny, landlocked nation, its enterprising individuals hobbled by a condition to acquire visas to do business in places where they've dealt and lived in for decades.<br><br>Also, an unaffiliated Biafra would remain riven over the tribal and religious lines which are being invoked to justify its leaving Nigeria. It is easy for the Igbo to regard themselves as a cultural and spiritual monolith provided that they stay in Nigeria. But all Nigerians should know that there's no end once we give in to the impulse to subdividing ourselves. Within an independent, irresistibly Christian Biafra, as they already occasionally do in local politics -- folks would start to identify themselves as Catholics and Anglicans and Methodists. In the run up to the elections of last year, for example, Anglican bishops warned the ruling party in the Igbo state of Enugu that they'd not accept a gubernatorial ticket composed completely of Catholic candidates. The party disregarded the warning.<br><br><br><br>[http://www.weatherzombie.com/ weatherzombie.com]The clamor to get a referendum would give an excellent opportunity for all those like me who consider (to take a phrase from British opponents of Scottish autonomy) that Nigeria would be "Better Together." True it is difficult to see this in a state where on-line comments normally degenerate into ethnic sniping, but in fact Nigeria's diversity could, with appropriate framing, be turned into a unifying motif.<br><br>That "Better Together" effort would demand much soul searching about our state's painful past. It would likewise call for acknowledging the criticisms of the countless Igbo voices that are exhausted of marginalization however don't support the notion of secession.<br><br>The easiest way for the authorities to permanently sideline people who call for violence that is political would be to push for the economical reforms that President Buhari has vowed to action. Tackling corruption and ensuring more equitable distribution of Nigeria's wealth will help all its individuals. Splintering the united states right into a hodgepodge of independent states will not.
Unified diff of changes made by edit (edit_diff)
@@ -1 +1 @@ - +Forty-six years ago this month, Nigeria's civil war came to an end with all the surrender of the secessionist Republic of Biafra. The two and a half years of fighting took some two million lives, but when the bitter struggle ended the triumphant [http://www.aparthotelbuenretiro.com.bo/index.php/component/k2/itemlist/user/180021 Nigerian] authorities proclaimed, "No Victor, No Vanquished." Nevertheless, the discontentment of the ethnic Igbo people of southeast Nigeria lingers on.<br><br><br><br>[http://www.hotbot.com/search/web?q=nigerian&keyvol=01a396b7cffb09c17d26 hotbot.com]In 1999, a group known as the Movement emerged, seeking through demonstrations and political agitation to re-establish an independent country. In recent years it has been overshadowed by another group, the Native People of Biafra, which likewise calls for autonomy, by violence if needed.<br><br>Nearly every day since Mr. Kanu's arrest, there have been demonstrations and calls for the government to free him. In managing his case, the government must tread carefully, ensuring that it will not transform him into a cause celebre.<br><br>A couple of weeks ago, [http://ladunliading7.hazblog.com/Primer-blog-b1/De-la-visiAn-a-la-acciAn-Segunda-Cumbre-sobre-el-Africa-de-AGCO-celebrada-en-BerlAn-b1-p2.htm Nigerian] papers reported the presence of a handwritten statement Mr. Kanu submitted to law enforcement agents shortly after his arrest, in which he apologized "unreservedly" for the "regrettable" and "uncomplimentary things" he had said about President Buhari and some other people. The authorities should think about capitalizing on this hint of remorse and making an offer of amnesty to Mr. Kanu in exchange for a pledge to be less-tumultuous in his strategy.<br><br>Directed by Nnamdi Kanu, a [https://kerrozvimrvesx.wordpress.com/?p=5 Nigerian] who was living until last October in Britain, it has exhibited greater sophistication than Massob. Its primary marketing tool is Radio Biafra, an online station that propagates the call for "liberation" and "self-emancipation" from the "zoo" called Nigeria. These actions have annoyed President Muhammadu Buhari, who has publicly backed Mr. Kanu's on-going trial for treason.<br><br>When the Biafran War broke out in 1967 in the wake of widespread communal violence, Lieut. Col. Odumegwu Ojukwu, a top Igbo officer, declared that "eastern Nigerians are no longer wanted as equal partners in the Federation of Nigeria." That feeling is still widely shared among the Igbo. But the frustrations of today's would-be Biafrans are no distinct in the Niger Delta, whose oil keeps Nigeria but gets them little in return, apart from oil spills and gas fires. Nor do they differ from the grievances of their fellow countrymen in the north, who continue to wallow in levels of illiteracy and poverty that make the south seem affluent in comparison.<br><br>The truth is that no part of Nigeria has a monopoly on [http://Www.Britannica.com/search?query=victimhood victimhood]. The impulse to protest suffering and also to seek to determine one's destiny is just not wrongheaded; the trouble lies in seeking change in an approach that incites violence and ethnic hatred. It might not be worse for Biafran separatists to drop their calls for independence and drive for constitutional change that will strengthen the federal system Nigeria purports to practice. Our current Constitution, such as the others that followed independence from Britain in 1960, is the product of military leaders whose schedule has rarely coincided with the public good. Though it starts with the needed words ("We the folks of the [http://www.china-plastic-supplier.com/index.php/blog/unn-graduates-13554-at-45th-convocation-ranks-first-in-nigeria.html Federal Republic of Nigeria] ... "), it had been crafted by a handpicked committee rather than made public until the military transferred power to the civilian government on May 29, 1999.<br><br>Igbo separatists would do better to follow the example of Scotland and push for a referendum to decide the future of the area. True, the central government will be unlikely to endorse such a call for fear that it may trigger an influx of referendum requests in this state of more than 250 ethnic groups. But were one my guess is that it might turn out overwhelmingly in favor of maintaining union with Nigeria.<br><br>There'll never be enough support in the southeast for independence from Nigeria, mainly because most of the folks there realize that there could be little to gain and much to lose. It is doubtful that the several minority in the delta agitators that the oil-rich delta states really are an all-natural section of Biafra. Biafra would have been a a tiny, landlocked nation, its enterprising individuals hobbled by a condition to acquire visas to do business in places where they've dealt and lived in for decades.<br><br>Also, an unaffiliated Biafra would remain riven over the tribal and religious lines which are being invoked to justify its leaving Nigeria. It is easy for the Igbo to regard themselves as a cultural and spiritual monolith provided that they stay in Nigeria. But all Nigerians should know that there's no end once we give in to the impulse to subdividing ourselves. Within an independent, irresistibly Christian Biafra, as they already occasionally do in local politics -- folks would start to identify themselves as Catholics and Anglicans and Methodists. In the run up to the elections of last year, for example, Anglican bishops warned the ruling party in the Igbo state of Enugu that they'd not accept a gubernatorial ticket composed completely of Catholic candidates. The party disregarded the warning.<br><br><br><br>[http://www.weatherzombie.com/ weatherzombie.com]The clamor to get a referendum would give an excellent opportunity for all those like me who consider (to take a phrase from British opponents of Scottish autonomy) that Nigeria would be "Better Together." True it is difficult to see this in a state where on-line comments normally degenerate into ethnic sniping, but in fact Nigeria's diversity could, with appropriate framing, be turned into a unifying motif.<br><br>That "Better Together" effort would demand much soul searching about our state's painful past. It would likewise call for acknowledging the criticisms of the countless Igbo voices that are exhausted of marginalization however don't support the notion of secession.<br><br>The easiest way for the authorities to permanently sideline people who call for violence that is political would be to push for the economical reforms that President Buhari has vowed to action. Tackling corruption and ensuring more equitable distribution of Nigeria's wealth will help all its individuals. Splintering the united states right into a hodgepodge of independent states will not.
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Forty-six years ago this month, Nigeria's civil war came to an end with all the surrender of the secessionist Republic of Biafra. The two and a half years of fighting took some two million lives, but when the bitter struggle ended the triumphant [http://www.aparthotelbuenretiro.com.bo/index.php/component/k2/itemlist/user/180021 Nigerian] authorities proclaimed, "No Victor, No Vanquished." Nevertheless, the discontentment of the ethnic Igbo people of southeast Nigeria lingers on.<br><br><br><br>[http://www.hotbot.com/search/web?q=nigerian&keyvol=01a396b7cffb09c17d26 hotbot.com]In 1999, a group known as the Movement emerged, seeking through demonstrations and political agitation to re-establish an independent country. In recent years it has been overshadowed by another group, the Native People of Biafra, which likewise calls for autonomy, by violence if needed.<br><br>Nearly every day since Mr. Kanu's arrest, there have been demonstrations and calls for the government to free him. In managing his case, the government must tread carefully, ensuring that it will not transform him into a cause celebre.<br><br>A couple of weeks ago, [http://ladunliading7.hazblog.com/Primer-blog-b1/De-la-visiAn-a-la-acciAn-Segunda-Cumbre-sobre-el-Africa-de-AGCO-celebrada-en-BerlAn-b1-p2.htm Nigerian] papers reported the presence of a handwritten statement Mr. Kanu submitted to law enforcement agents shortly after his arrest, in which he apologized "unreservedly" for the "regrettable" and "uncomplimentary things" he had said about President Buhari and some other people. The authorities should think about capitalizing on this hint of remorse and making an offer of amnesty to Mr. Kanu in exchange for a pledge to be less-tumultuous in his strategy.<br><br>Directed by Nnamdi Kanu, a [https://kerrozvimrvesx.wordpress.com/?p=5 Nigerian] who was living until last October in Britain, it has exhibited greater sophistication than Massob. Its primary marketing tool is Radio Biafra, an online station that propagates the call for "liberation" and "self-emancipation" from the "zoo" called Nigeria. These actions have annoyed President Muhammadu Buhari, who has publicly backed Mr. Kanu's on-going trial for treason.<br><br>When the Biafran War broke out in 1967 in the wake of widespread communal violence, Lieut. Col. Odumegwu Ojukwu, a top Igbo officer, declared that "eastern Nigerians are no longer wanted as equal partners in the Federation of Nigeria." That feeling is still widely shared among the Igbo. But the frustrations of today's would-be Biafrans are no distinct in the Niger Delta, whose oil keeps Nigeria but gets them little in return, apart from oil spills and gas fires. Nor do they differ from the grievances of their fellow countrymen in the north, who continue to wallow in levels of illiteracy and poverty that make the south seem affluent in comparison.<br><br>The truth is that no part of Nigeria has a monopoly on [http://Www.Britannica.com/search?query=victimhood victimhood]. The impulse to protest suffering and also to seek to determine one's destiny is just not wrongheaded; the trouble lies in seeking change in an approach that incites violence and ethnic hatred. It might not be worse for Biafran separatists to drop their calls for independence and drive for constitutional change that will strengthen the federal system Nigeria purports to practice. Our current Constitution, such as the others that followed independence from Britain in 1960, is the product of military leaders whose schedule has rarely coincided with the public good. Though it starts with the needed words ("We the folks of the [http://www.china-plastic-supplier.com/index.php/blog/unn-graduates-13554-at-45th-convocation-ranks-first-in-nigeria.html Federal Republic of Nigeria] ... "), it had been crafted by a handpicked committee rather than made public until the military transferred power to the civilian government on May 29, 1999.<br><br>Igbo separatists would do better to follow the example of Scotland and push for a referendum to decide the future of the area. True, the central government will be unlikely to endorse such a call for fear that it may trigger an influx of referendum requests in this state of more than 250 ethnic groups. But were one my guess is that it might turn out overwhelmingly in favor of maintaining union with Nigeria.<br><br>There'll never be enough support in the southeast for independence from Nigeria, mainly because most of the folks there realize that there could be little to gain and much to lose. It is doubtful that the several minority in the delta agitators that the oil-rich delta states really are an all-natural section of Biafra. Biafra would have been a a tiny, landlocked nation, its enterprising individuals hobbled by a condition to acquire visas to do business in places where they've dealt and lived in for decades.<br><br>Also, an unaffiliated Biafra would remain riven over the tribal and religious lines which are being invoked to justify its leaving Nigeria. It is easy for the Igbo to regard themselves as a cultural and spiritual monolith provided that they stay in Nigeria. But all Nigerians should know that there's no end once we give in to the impulse to subdividing ourselves. Within an independent, irresistibly Christian Biafra, as they already occasionally do in local politics -- folks would start to identify themselves as Catholics and Anglicans and Methodists. In the run up to the elections of last year, for example, Anglican bishops warned the ruling party in the Igbo state of Enugu that they'd not accept a gubernatorial ticket composed completely of Catholic candidates. The party disregarded the warning.<br><br><br><br>[http://www.weatherzombie.com/ weatherzombie.com]The clamor to get a referendum would give an excellent opportunity for all those like me who consider (to take a phrase from British opponents of Scottish autonomy) that Nigeria would be "Better Together." True it is difficult to see this in a state where on-line comments normally degenerate into ethnic sniping, but in fact Nigeria's diversity could, with appropriate framing, be turned into a unifying motif.<br><br>That "Better Together" effort would demand much soul searching about our state's painful past. It would likewise call for acknowledging the criticisms of the countless Igbo voices that are exhausted of marginalization however don't support the notion of secession.<br><br>The easiest way for the authorities to permanently sideline people who call for violence that is political would be to push for the economical reforms that President Buhari has vowed to action. Tackling corruption and ensuring more equitable distribution of Nigeria's wealth will help all its individuals. Splintering the united states right into a hodgepodge of independent states will not.
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Forty-six years ago this month, Nigeria's civil war came to an end with all the surrender of the secessionist Republic of Biafra. The two and a half years of fighting took some two million lives, but when the bitter struggle ended the triumphant Nigerian authorities proclaimed, "No Victor, No Vanquished." Nevertheless, the discontentment of the ethnic Igbo people of southeast Nigeria lingers on.hotbot.comIn 1999, a group known as the Movement emerged, seeking through demonstrations and political agitation to re-establish an independent country. In recent years it has been overshadowed by another group, the Native People of Biafra, which likewise calls for autonomy, by violence if needed.Nearly every day since Mr. Kanu's arrest, there have been demonstrations and calls for the government to free him. In managing his case, the government must tread carefully, ensuring that it will not transform him into a cause celebre.A couple of weeks ago, Nigerian papers reported the presence of a handwritten statement Mr. Kanu submitted to law enforcement agents shortly after his arrest, in which he apologized "unreservedly" for the "regrettable" and "uncomplimentary things" he had said about President Buhari and some other people. The authorities should think about capitalizing on this hint of remorse and making an offer of amnesty to Mr. Kanu in exchange for a pledge to be less-tumultuous in his strategy.Directed by Nnamdi Kanu, a Nigerian who was living until last October in Britain, it has exhibited greater sophistication than Massob. Its primary marketing tool is Radio Biafra, an online station that propagates the call for "liberation" and "self-emancipation" from the "zoo" called Nigeria. These actions have annoyed President Muhammadu Buhari, who has publicly backed Mr. Kanu's on-going trial for treason.When the Biafran War broke out in 1967 in the wake of widespread communal violence, Lieut. Col. Odumegwu Ojukwu, a top Igbo officer, declared that "eastern Nigerians are no longer wanted as equal partners in the Federation of Nigeria." That feeling is still widely shared among the Igbo. But the frustrations of today's would-be Biafrans are no distinct in the Niger Delta, whose oil keeps Nigeria but gets them little in return, apart from oil spills and gas fires. Nor do they differ from the grievances of their fellow countrymen in the north, who continue to wallow in levels of illiteracy and poverty that make the south seem affluent in comparison.The truth is that no part of Nigeria has a monopoly on victimhood. The impulse to protest suffering and also to seek to determine one's destiny is just not wrongheaded; the trouble lies in seeking change in an approach that incites violence and ethnic hatred. It might not be worse for Biafran separatists to drop their calls for independence and drive for constitutional change that will strengthen the federal system Nigeria purports to practice. Our current Constitution, such as the others that followed independence from Britain in 1960, is the product of military leaders whose schedule has rarely coincided with the public good. Though it starts with the needed words ("We the folks of the Federal Republic of Nigeria ... "), it had been crafted by a handpicked committee rather than made public until the military transferred power to the civilian government on May 29, 1999.Igbo separatists would do better to follow the example of Scotland and push for a referendum to decide the future of the area. True, the central government will be unlikely to endorse such a call for fear that it may trigger an influx of referendum requests in this state of more than 250 ethnic groups. But were one my guess is that it might turn out overwhelmingly in favor of maintaining union with Nigeria.There'll never be enough support in the southeast for independence from Nigeria, mainly because most of the folks there realize that there could be little to gain and much to lose. It is doubtful that the several minority in the delta agitators that the oil-rich delta states really are an all-natural section of Biafra. Biafra would have been a a tiny, landlocked nation, its enterprising individuals hobbled by a condition to acquire visas to do business in places where they've dealt and lived in for decades.Also, an unaffiliated Biafra would remain riven over the tribal and religious lines which are being invoked to justify its leaving Nigeria. It is easy for the Igbo to regard themselves as a cultural and spiritual monolith provided that they stay in Nigeria. But all Nigerians should know that there's no end once we give in to the impulse to subdividing ourselves. Within an independent, irresistibly Christian Biafra, as they already occasionally do in local politics -- folks would start to identify themselves as Catholics and Anglicans and Methodists. In the run up to the elections of last year, for example, Anglican bishops warned the ruling party in the Igbo state of Enugu that they'd not accept a gubernatorial ticket composed completely of Catholic candidates. The party disregarded the warning.weatherzombie.comThe clamor to get a referendum would give an excellent opportunity for all those like me who consider (to take a phrase from British opponents of Scottish autonomy) that Nigeria would be "Better Together." True it is difficult to see this in a state where on-line comments normally degenerate into ethnic sniping, but in fact Nigeria's diversity could, with appropriate framing, be turned into a unifying motif.That "Better Together" effort would demand much soul searching about our state's painful past. It would likewise call for acknowledging the criticisms of the countless Igbo voices that are exhausted of marginalization however don't support the notion of secession.The easiest way for the authorities to permanently sideline people who call for violence that is political would be to push for the economical reforms that President Buhari has vowed to action. Tackling corruption and ensuring more equitable distribution of Nigeria's wealth will help all its individuals. Splintering the united states right into a hodgepodge of independent states will not.
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<p>Forty-six years ago this month, Nigeria's civil war came to an end with all the surrender of the secessionist Republic of Biafra. The two and a half years of fighting took some two million lives, but when the bitter struggle ended the triumphant <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://www.aparthotelbuenretiro.com.bo/index.php/component/k2/itemlist/user/180021">Nigerian</a> authorities proclaimed, "No Victor, No Vanquished." Nevertheless, the discontentment of the ethnic Igbo people of southeast Nigeria lingers on.<br /><br /><br /><br /><a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://www.hotbot.com/search/web?q=nigerian&amp;keyvol=01a396b7cffb09c17d26">hotbot.com</a>In 1999, a group known as the Movement emerged, seeking through demonstrations and political agitation to re-establish an independent country. In recent years it has been overshadowed by another group, the Native People of Biafra, which likewise calls for autonomy, by violence if needed.<br /><br />Nearly every day since Mr. Kanu's arrest, there have been demonstrations and calls for the government to free him. In managing his case, the government must tread carefully, ensuring that it will not transform him into a cause celebre.<br /><br />A couple of weeks ago, <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://ladunliading7.hazblog.com/Primer-blog-b1/De-la-visiAn-a-la-acciAn-Segunda-Cumbre-sobre-el-Africa-de-AGCO-celebrada-en-BerlAn-b1-p2.htm">Nigerian</a> papers reported the presence of a handwritten statement Mr. Kanu submitted to law enforcement agents shortly after his arrest, in which he apologized "unreservedly" for the "regrettable" and "uncomplimentary things" he had said about President Buhari and some other people. The authorities should think about capitalizing on this hint of remorse and making an offer of amnesty to Mr. Kanu in exchange for a pledge to be less-tumultuous in his strategy.<br /><br />Directed by Nnamdi Kanu, a <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="https://kerrozvimrvesx.wordpress.com/?p=5">Nigerian</a> who was living until last October in Britain, it has exhibited greater sophistication than Massob. Its primary marketing tool is Radio Biafra, an online station that propagates the call for "liberation" and "self-emancipation" from the "zoo" called Nigeria. These actions have annoyed President Muhammadu Buhari, who has publicly backed Mr. Kanu's on-going trial for treason.<br /><br />When the Biafran War broke out in 1967 in the wake of widespread communal violence, Lieut. Col. Odumegwu Ojukwu, a top Igbo officer, declared that "eastern Nigerians are no longer wanted as equal partners in the Federation of Nigeria." That feeling is still widely shared among the Igbo. But the frustrations of today's would-be Biafrans are no distinct in the Niger Delta, whose oil keeps Nigeria but gets them little in return, apart from oil spills and gas fires. Nor do they differ from the grievances of their fellow countrymen in the north, who continue to wallow in levels of illiteracy and poverty that make the south seem affluent in comparison.<br /><br />The truth is that no part of Nigeria has a monopoly on <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://Www.Britannica.com/search?query=victimhood">victimhood</a>. The impulse to protest suffering and also to seek to determine one's destiny is just not wrongheaded; the trouble lies in seeking change in an approach that incites violence and ethnic hatred. It might not be worse for Biafran separatists to drop their calls for independence and drive for constitutional change that will strengthen the federal system Nigeria purports to practice. Our current Constitution, such as the others that followed independence from Britain in 1960, is the product of military leaders whose schedule has rarely coincided with the public good. Though it starts with the needed words ("We the folks of the <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://www.china-plastic-supplier.com/index.php/blog/unn-graduates-13554-at-45th-convocation-ranks-first-in-nigeria.html">Federal Republic of Nigeria</a> ... "), it had been crafted by a handpicked committee rather than made public until the military transferred power to the civilian government on May 29, 1999.<br /><br />Igbo separatists would do better to follow the example of Scotland and push for a referendum to decide the future of the area. True, the central government will be unlikely to endorse such a call for fear that it may trigger an influx of referendum requests in this state of more than 250 ethnic groups. But were one my guess is that it might turn out overwhelmingly in favor of maintaining union with Nigeria.<br /><br />There'll never be enough support in the southeast for independence from Nigeria, mainly because most of the folks there realize that there could be little to gain and much to lose. It is doubtful that the several minority in the delta agitators that the oil-rich delta states really are an all-natural section of Biafra. Biafra would have been a a tiny, landlocked nation, its enterprising individuals hobbled by a condition to acquire visas to do business in places where they've dealt and lived in for decades.<br /><br />Also, an unaffiliated Biafra would remain riven over the tribal and religious lines which are being invoked to justify its leaving Nigeria. It is easy for the Igbo to regard themselves as a cultural and spiritual monolith provided that they stay in Nigeria. But all Nigerians should know that there's no end once we give in to the impulse to subdividing ourselves. Within an independent, irresistibly Christian Biafra, as they already occasionally do in local politics -- folks would start to identify themselves as Catholics and Anglicans and Methodists. In the run up to the elections of last year, for example, Anglican bishops warned the ruling party in the Igbo state of Enugu that they'd not accept a gubernatorial ticket composed completely of Catholic candidates. The party disregarded the warning.<br /><br /><br /><br /><a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://www.weatherzombie.com/">weatherzombie.com</a>The clamor to get a referendum would give an excellent opportunity for all those like me who consider (to take a phrase from British opponents of Scottish autonomy) that Nigeria would be "Better Together." True it is difficult to see this in a state where on-line comments normally degenerate into ethnic sniping, but in fact Nigeria's diversity could, with appropriate framing, be turned into a unifying motif.<br /><br />That "Better Together" effort would demand much soul searching about our state's painful past. It would likewise call for acknowledging the criticisms of the countless Igbo voices that are exhausted of marginalization however don't support the notion of secession.<br /><br />The easiest way for the authorities to permanently sideline people who call for violence that is political would be to push for the economical reforms that President Buhari has vowed to action. Tackling corruption and ensuring more equitable distribution of Nigeria's wealth will help all its individuals. Splintering the united states right into a hodgepodge of independent states will not. </p> <!-- NewPP limit report Cached time: 20160304210038 Cache expiry: 604800 Dynamic content: false CPU time usage: 0.024 seconds Real time usage: 0.025 seconds Preprocessor visited node count: 1/1000000 Preprocessor generated node count: 4/1000000 Post‐expand include size: 0/2097152 bytes Template argument size: 0/2097152 bytes Highest expansion depth: 1/40 Expensive parser function count: 0/100 --> <!-- Transclusion expansion time report (%,ms,calls,template) 100.00% 0.000 1 - -total -->
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