NEWS: Ohaneze Ndigbo, IPOB, MASSOB honors Biafrans sit-at-home order
John Nwodo, the leader of Ohaneze, the pan-Igbo socio-cultural
organisation has bared his mind on the proposed sit-at-home protest by
Biafra separatist groups: the Indigenous People of Biafra, IPOB, and the
Movement for the Actualisation of the Sovereign State of Biafra,
MASSOB.
The IPOB group plans a sit-at-home protest in the south-east and
south-south regions of the country on May 30 to coincide with the annual
‘Biafra Remembrance Day,’ as well as honour the memory of pro-Biafra
activists killed by security agencies over the years.
The group called for the closure of all markets within “Biafran
territory” on May 30, and a halt of all vehicular movements in the area
from 12 a.m. on May 29 till midnight of May 30.
“They have been very law-abiding. In fact, they say everybody should
stay at home.
They didn’t ask everybody to come and demonstrate on the road. They say
stay at home to prayerfully and sorrowfully mourn the dead,” Mr. Nwodo
said in an interview with PREMIUM TIMES’ Festus Owete and Ebuka Onyeji.
“People died on both sides…
About 1.5 million people on the Biafran side died. When I talk about
Biafrans I am not talking about the Igbos. Philip Effiong was from the
present Akwa Ibom.
He was deputy to Ojukwu. Kogbara from Rivers was administrator in
Biafra. Achuzia was GOC. So, Biafra was beyond the confines of what you
call Igbo land today? The feeling is still in all those places.”
Meanwhile, the Nigeria Police Force has warned IPOB and other separatist groups not to embark on protests on May 30.
In a statement issued by the police spokesperson, Jimoh Moshood, on
Friday, the police said it would not hesitate to deal decisively with
any attempt to cause disturbance or carry out any unlawful procession or
assembly.
The Enugu State Police Command, through its spokesperson, Ebere
Amaraizu, also warned it would resist any attempt by the separatist
groups to force people to stay indoors on May 30.
The IPOB and Nigeria security agencies have a history of violence
confrontations over the past few years.
At least 150 peaceful pro-Biafra protesters were killed between August
2015 and August 2016 as Nigerian security forces embarked on – what
Amnesty International described as – a chilling campaign of
extrajudicial executions and violence in the Southeast.
During last year’s Biafra Remembrance Day march, at least 60 people
were killed as hundreds of protesters clashed with security forces
across the Southeast region, according to Amnesty International.
In announcing this year’s protest, the IPOB had said it would resist any
attempt to deter it from going ahead with its plan.
“The saboteurs and agents cannot stop us from honouring our fallen
heroes because it is our inalienable right to remember and honour those
who died in the struggle for Biafra independence,” the group had said.
The Nigerian Civil War, better known as the Biafra war (July 6, 1967 –
January 15, 1970), was a war fought between the government of Nigeria
and the secessionist state of Biafra.
Immediate causes of the war in 1966 included a military coup, a
counter-coup, and persecution of Igbos living in Northern Nigeria.
In a related development, the 82 Division Nigerian Army on Monday denied
an allegation supposedly made by IPOB in a statement released on Monday
that “there was sporadic shootings by the Army in Aba and Umuahia axis”
and that soldiers opened fire on IPOB members in Aba during a
procession in honour of those who died during the Biafra civil war.
“The Division wishes to state there was no soldier at the venue or
vicinity where the procession took place. Also, there was no crisis or
breakdown of law and order in Aba, Umuahia and in the whole of South
Eastern part of Nigeria as to warrant/justify ‘use of firearms’ as
falsely and mischievously alleged by IPOB propagandists,” an army
spokesperson, Sagir Musa, a colonel, said.
“What is obvious, however, is an increase in the presence of security
agencies on routine patrols in different locations in the region,
particularly areas that are regarded as real or potential flash points.
The aim is to pro-actively checkmate possible security breaches in view
of sordid/divisive utterances and in some cases blatant actions by
secessionist agitators.”
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