Those that call me a tribalist and an igbo-hater are simply
misguided and ignorant. Perhaps they do not know the meaning of those words or
the true import of their meaning. Those that know me well like you can confirm
the fact that I am not a racist or a bigot and that I consider such sentiments
as being unworthy of a man of class, good breeding and culture. I am however a firm believer in the propagation of
truth and I, like you, appreciate the value and importance of history. Sadly
many of our igbo brothers and sisters do not believe in that. History for them
consists of only one thing-how other Nigerians have always marginalised them
and treated them badly.
If only they knew their own history, where they
are coming from, what they used to be and where they were 100 years ago and
what their forefathers did to the rest of Nigeria over the last 80 years they
would know why they have always had such a hard time in this country. Sadly
because they dont know any of these things they cannot learn from it. And if
they cannot learn from it they will continue to make the same mistakes. That is
why they can come to another mans land and territory and call it their own and
when we say ''no'' they tell us to shut up and call us tribalists.
I was not a tribalist when I wrote a tribute to
Ojukwu after he died or when I condemned the '60's pogroms that took place in
the north in which their people were slaughtered like flies. I was not a
tribalist when I wrote against Yarima and child marriage in the north. Yet now
I am a tribalist because I spoke the truth about our history and who we the
yoruba are. I was not a tribalist when I had a long-standing and intimate
relationship with Miss Bianca Onoh, an igbo lady, who later married Colonel
Emeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu the leader of Biafra and who is now our Ambassador in
Spain. I was not a tribalist when I had a long-standing and intimate
relationship with Miss Chioma Anasoh, another igbo lady, who I almost married.
I was not a tribalist when I had a long-standing and intimate relationship with
Miss Adaobi Uchegbu, another igbo lady, who was exceptionally close to me and
who is now a leading figure at the National Headquarters of the ruling PDP.
I was not an tribalist when I wrote essays
defending the rights of the igbo and every other Nigerian nationality to
exercise their right of self-determination and leave Nigeria if that is what
they wanted to do. I was not a tribalist when I consistently wrote that Nigeria
must have a Sovereign National Conference where the rights and obligations of
all its various nationalities will be clearly defined and agreed upon. I was
not a tribalist when I employed more igbo people as a Minister of the Federal
Republic than even my own yoruba. I was not a tribalist when I wrote an essay,
just two years ago, extolling the virtues of igbo women. I was not a tribalist
when I condemned the bombing of predominantly igbo and catholic churches and
the killing of the igbo and others by Boko Haram in the north over the last
three years.
I was not a tribalist when I risked my life by
consistently writing against Boko Haram even though I live in the north. I was
not a tribalist when I wrote against political sharia. I was not a tribalist
when I wrote in defence of the igbo when it came to the abandoned property
issue. I could go on and on.These people have very short memories and anyone
that does not agree with them all the time or that says one word against them
at any point in time is labelled a tribalist for life.
They called Chief Obafemi Awolowo a tribalist,
a genocidal maniac, a child-killer and an igbo-hater simply because the man
refused to join sides with them in the war yet they forgot that when Awolowo
ran for the Presidency his running mate was from the east and not from the
north. They called Chief Festus Okotie-Eboh, Chief S.L Akintola and Sir Ahmadu
Bello as igbo-haters and tribalists simply because they saw through the igbo
agenda at a very early stage and they killed them for it. They called General
Yakubu Gowon a genocidal maniac, a child-killer, an igbo-hater and a tribalist
simply because he stood up to Ojukwu and insisted on keeping Nigeria together
and even though he declared that there was ''no victor and no vanquished''
after the war.
They accused President Olusegun Obasanjo of
being a tribalist and an igbo-hater even though he appointed an igbo man as the
first GOC in the Nigerian Army since 1966 and even though he appointed more
igbos into key positions in his government than any President before him. They
accused President Shehu Shagari and the northerners of being tribalists and
igbo-haters even though he pardoned Ojukwu and allowed him to return back home
after the civil war. They have accused the Nigerian people of being tribalist
and igbo-haters simply because we have not had an igbo President since 1966
forgetting that Nigeria was magnamonious in victory and that she not only
gladly welcomed them back into the fold after the civil war but that she also
gave them the Vice Presidency only ten years later.
They have labelled the yoruba as tribalists and
igbo-haters simply because we have refused to accept their claims to our land
and territory and even though we were more charitable, hospitable, accomodating
and generous to them than any other nationality in Nigeria after the civil war.
We have been too kind and gentle with them. That is the problem. They see our
liberal and accomodating nature as stupidity and weakness. That is why they always
like to go around calling the yoruba cowards forgetting that the history of the
yoruba proves otherwise. It is now time to tell the truth. They despise the
yoruba and they only pretend to believe in one Nigeria as long as they can
always have their way and laud it over others. Worst of all they have no
restraining factors because money and the acquisition of wealth is their sole
objective and purpose in life.
Someone ought to tell them that this is not a
virtue but a vice. It is a cultural deficiency which is borne out of not having
any history. If they did they would be less aggressive, more restrained and far
more civil to others. If speaking these bitter home truths and yearning and
fighting for a better Nigeria makes me a tribalist then it is a toga that I
would be happy to wear. I will not sit by quietly and allow my people, the
yoruba people of south western Nigeria, to be rubbished, insulted and cheated
by anyone no matter how aggressive that anyone may believe he is. I make or
offer no apology for my views. My numerous assertions in my two essays titled
''Lagos, The Igbo and the Servants Of Truth'' and ''The Bitter Truth About The
Igbo'' respectively stand.
Meanwhile I have read all sorts of strange
submissions in various newspapers and blogs that have held themselves out as
rejoinders to my two articles titled "Lagos, The Igbo and the Servants Of
Truth" and "The Bitter Truth About The Igbo". Sadly other than
the usual abuse and irreverant thrash not one of those so-called ''rejoinders''
has been able to address ANY of the issues that I raised in either of the two
articles, answer any of the questions that I posed in them or successfully
challenge my presentation of historical facts.
The bellicose nature and vulgarity of these
so-called rejoinders goes to prove two things. Firstly that those that I have
descibed as being collectively unlettered, uncouth, uncultured, unrestrained
and crude in all their ways really are all those things and a lot more and
secondly that they cannot put up any reasonable or serious arguement to
discredit or refute the message so instead they are attempting to destroy the
messanger. Meanwhile the two essays have been published in various newspapers
in our country and outside and it will continue to be published by others long
into the forseeable future.
The message is clear and it is already out
there. It cannot be called back in. The horse has bolted from the stable and
the falcon has left the nest. No matter how hard those that are attempting to
intimidate us into silence may try it will not work and we will not be cowed.
The message is already out there and the genie is already out of the bottle.
Those that seek to continue to denigrate and belittle the yoruba and lay claim
to what is rightfully ours should desist from doing so. They should grant us
our peace and give us our due respect and they will get the same in return. If
they do not do so those things will elude them and eventually history will
repeat itself again in this country.
Meanwhile when anyone reads a rejoinder that
addresses the issues that I raised in my essays and that has some level of
scholarship and intellectual content they should please let me know and I may
well dignify it with a response. The shameless and emotional thrash and
disjointed verbiage that have been described as rejoinders so far are just not
up to scratch. They are bereft of any scholarship and intellectual content.
They also invoke pity in me for the the faceless plebians that wrote them and
those they claim to represent. When the igbo, or anyone else, find a real
writer that can cross swords with me and give me a good run for my money
someone should please let me know. I am itching for a real debate with a worthy
adversary on this issue.
Like the great Achilles I feel that I have no
match. Are there no Hector's out there? Sadly it appears that my accusers,
traducers, opposers and haters cannot find one. All they have is their hate,
their ignorance, their insults and their inbred crudity and vulgarity.