• "NO VICTOR, NO VANQUISHED”? NO, SIR. JUST THE BLOOD OF THE INNOCENT
    A Truthful Dissection of Gen. Gowon’s Crocodile Tears

    ✍Ugochimereze Chinedu Asuzu

    "I always remember the Civil War. It was the most difficult period of my life. It was not my choice…” So says General Yakubu Gowon: decades after the fact, as if the burden of memory alone could exonerate a man from the burden of responsibility.

    But memory, stripped of remorse, becomes theatre. And this latest performance by the old General, wrapped in prayerful tones and wistful platitudes, is exactly that a theatre of moral evasion. What was presented as reflection was in fact deflection. A man who presided over the darkest chapter in Nigeria’s history now seeks to launder his conscience with the sponge of spirituality, mouthing prayers as if that were enough to bury three million truths beneath the soil of forgetfulness.

    No, sir. You did not pray. You played. You played politics with people’s lives. You played Russian roulette with the destiny of a region. You played central command while entire communities burned. You stood at the gates of peace and walked away. The blood did not flow because you had no choice, it flowed because you made a choice. And the choice was war.

    You stood beside Odumegwu Ojukwu at Aburi in Ghana. There, both of you spoke, agreed, shook hands and made a pact. You returned to Lagos to a hero’s welcome, but before the ink of trust could dry, you tore it apart. You listened to federal hawks, buried Aburi under the rubble of Decree No. 8, and turned your face from peace. You betrayed a solemn covenant for the sake of power. That betrayal, not the first shot fired, is where the war truly began.

    The records are stubborn. They do not bend to nostalgia. They remind us that before a single Biafran soldier took up arms, thousands of Igbos had been hacked down in the North. Pregnant women butchered. Children beheaded. Men dismembered in full daylight. Railway stations were turned into morgues. Churches, into chambers of death. Kaduna. Kano. Jos. The North descended into madness, and the East was served grief on a plate of silence.

    You, sir, presided over that silence. You were Commander-in-Chief, not a curious passerby. You issued words but withheld justice. You gave speeches, but not shelter. You watched a people bleed and called it unfortunate. And now, years later, you whisper: "It was never out of hatred." But hatred needs no introduction when its fruit is genocide.

    And then came your famous phrase, carved into Nigeria’s post-war psyche: “No victor, no vanquished.” It sounded noble. It rang loud. But it rang false. Because the war ended, yes, but justice never began. Biafrans were not vanquished by force alone, they were buried beneath the rubble of reconstruction. Their economy was stripped. Their currency devalued. Their children starved. Their land mined and their dignity mocked. What you called reintegration, we lived as retribution. What you labeled reconciliation, we endured as marginalisation. The victor danced in national attire. The vanquished crawled through national amnesia.

    Sir, you had the chance to become a Mandela long before South Africa birthed one. You had the moment. The world watched. The African continent stood still. But you chose empire over empathy. You chose command over compassion. You chose to keep Nigeria one by breaking a people in half. And now, the same mouth that sanctioned the guns says, "I prayed to God." Perhaps you did. But God is not mocked by crocodile tears. Not when the skulls of infants still haunt the red soil of Nsukka, Aba, Umuahia, and Onitsha.

    Prayer is not repentance. Repentance begins with truth. And the truth is that you, along with others, enabled a war that was avoidable. You squandered the peace we almost had at Aburi. You enabled pogroms with your silence. You denied justice its wings and handed the world a bullet instead. And when it was all done, you wrapped the pain in poetry and hoped the music would make us forget.

    But we remember. Not because we hate. But because we bleed.

    This is not a call to bitterness. It is a call to honesty. To name what happened. To look the children of Biafra in the eye and say: Yes, you were wronged. Yes, we failed you. Yes, the war was avoidable. And no, it should never have happened.

    Until then, sir, do not cloak yourself in prayer while justice lies unclothed. Do not speak of love when you could not uphold truth. Do not say “it was not my choice” when history has proven otherwise. And above all, do not try to rewrite what we lived.

    You may now carry the Bible in one hand. But the other hand still drips with memories. Your legacy may wear the robe of elder statesmanship. But it remains stained by silence, by betrayal, and by the bones of those who trusted your word at Aburi.

    So here, General Gowon, is what history truly says:
    You may cry now, but the tears do not wash the blood away.
    You may kneel today, but that does not undo the horror of yesterday.
    You may pray, but the ghosts still answer with questions.
    And until Nigeria confronts its past with courage, it will never know peace that lasts.

    We forgive. But we do not forget. We move on. But we do not move blind.

    Because truth, bitter as it may be - is still better than convenient lies.

    ✍Ugochimereze Chinedu Asuzu
    Social Cum Political Analysis|Tuesday, June 10, 2025
    "NO VICTOR, NO VANQUISHED”? NO, SIR. JUST THE BLOOD OF THE INNOCENT A Truthful Dissection of Gen. Gowon’s Crocodile Tears ✍Ugochimereze Chinedu Asuzu "I always remember the Civil War. It was the most difficult period of my life. It was not my choice…” So says General Yakubu Gowon: decades after the fact, as if the burden of memory alone could exonerate a man from the burden of responsibility. But memory, stripped of remorse, becomes theatre. And this latest performance by the old General, wrapped in prayerful tones and wistful platitudes, is exactly that a theatre of moral evasion. What was presented as reflection was in fact deflection. A man who presided over the darkest chapter in Nigeria’s history now seeks to launder his conscience with the sponge of spirituality, mouthing prayers as if that were enough to bury three million truths beneath the soil of forgetfulness. No, sir. You did not pray. You played. You played politics with people’s lives. You played Russian roulette with the destiny of a region. You played central command while entire communities burned. You stood at the gates of peace and walked away. The blood did not flow because you had no choice, it flowed because you made a choice. And the choice was war. You stood beside Odumegwu Ojukwu at Aburi in Ghana. There, both of you spoke, agreed, shook hands and made a pact. You returned to Lagos to a hero’s welcome, but before the ink of trust could dry, you tore it apart. You listened to federal hawks, buried Aburi under the rubble of Decree No. 8, and turned your face from peace. You betrayed a solemn covenant for the sake of power. That betrayal, not the first shot fired, is where the war truly began. The records are stubborn. They do not bend to nostalgia. They remind us that before a single Biafran soldier took up arms, thousands of Igbos had been hacked down in the North. Pregnant women butchered. Children beheaded. Men dismembered in full daylight. Railway stations were turned into morgues. Churches, into chambers of death. Kaduna. Kano. Jos. The North descended into madness, and the East was served grief on a plate of silence. You, sir, presided over that silence. You were Commander-in-Chief, not a curious passerby. You issued words but withheld justice. You gave speeches, but not shelter. You watched a people bleed and called it unfortunate. And now, years later, you whisper: "It was never out of hatred." But hatred needs no introduction when its fruit is genocide. And then came your famous phrase, carved into Nigeria’s post-war psyche: “No victor, no vanquished.” It sounded noble. It rang loud. But it rang false. Because the war ended, yes, but justice never began. Biafrans were not vanquished by force alone, they were buried beneath the rubble of reconstruction. Their economy was stripped. Their currency devalued. Their children starved. Their land mined and their dignity mocked. What you called reintegration, we lived as retribution. What you labeled reconciliation, we endured as marginalisation. The victor danced in national attire. The vanquished crawled through national amnesia. Sir, you had the chance to become a Mandela long before South Africa birthed one. You had the moment. The world watched. The African continent stood still. But you chose empire over empathy. You chose command over compassion. You chose to keep Nigeria one by breaking a people in half. And now, the same mouth that sanctioned the guns says, "I prayed to God." Perhaps you did. But God is not mocked by crocodile tears. Not when the skulls of infants still haunt the red soil of Nsukka, Aba, Umuahia, and Onitsha. Prayer is not repentance. Repentance begins with truth. And the truth is that you, along with others, enabled a war that was avoidable. You squandered the peace we almost had at Aburi. You enabled pogroms with your silence. You denied justice its wings and handed the world a bullet instead. And when it was all done, you wrapped the pain in poetry and hoped the music would make us forget. But we remember. Not because we hate. But because we bleed. This is not a call to bitterness. It is a call to honesty. To name what happened. To look the children of Biafra in the eye and say: Yes, you were wronged. Yes, we failed you. Yes, the war was avoidable. And no, it should never have happened. Until then, sir, do not cloak yourself in prayer while justice lies unclothed. Do not speak of love when you could not uphold truth. Do not say “it was not my choice” when history has proven otherwise. And above all, do not try to rewrite what we lived. You may now carry the Bible in one hand. But the other hand still drips with memories. Your legacy may wear the robe of elder statesmanship. But it remains stained by silence, by betrayal, and by the bones of those who trusted your word at Aburi. So here, General Gowon, is what history truly says: You may cry now, but the tears do not wash the blood away. You may kneel today, but that does not undo the horror of yesterday. You may pray, but the ghosts still answer with questions. And until Nigeria confronts its past with courage, it will never know peace that lasts. We forgive. But we do not forget. We move on. But we do not move blind. Because truth, bitter as it may be - is still better than convenient lies. ✍Ugochimereze Chinedu Asuzu Social Cum Political Analysis|Tuesday, June 10, 2025
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  • WAKE UP, CHURCH! BLOOD IS CRYING IN OUR LAND!

    Our land is soaked with blood.
    Families are wiped out.
    Children are slaughtered.
    Fathers are butchered.
    Communities are burnt.
    Souls are perishing.
    And yet, the Church sleeps.

    The cries from Southern Kaduna…
    The pain in Plateau, Benue, Zamfara, Borno…
    The silent genocide in Christian communities…

    Who will speak? Who will rise? Who will pray?

    The forces of darkness are not asleep.
    The herdsmen are not resting.
    The terrorists are not tired.
    But Christians? Divided. Distracted. Disconnected.

    This is not just news.
    This is WAR.

    If we cannot gather in crowds,
    Let us gather in fives.
    If we cannot march in protest,
    Let us march into our prayer closets.
    If we cannot speak in the streets,
    Let us cry on our knees.

    Let every family become a prayer altar.
    Let every Christian home become a fortress.
    Let every believer rise in the night watch.

    You may not hold a microphone, but you can hold the heavens.
    You may not carry a weapon, but you can carry a burden.
    You may not go to the battlefield, but you can fight on your knees.

    This is no longer the time for casual Christianity.
    This is the hour of spiritual warfare.
    Not against flesh and blood—but against powers that love bloodshed.

    “If my people, which are called by my name, shall humble themselves, and pray...” (2 Chronicles 7:14)

    God is watching. Heaven is listening.
    Let the Church rise—or we will be buried in silence.

    Wake up. Speak up. Kneel down. Fight back on your knees.

    Remain blessed Jesus loves you
    (Prophet & Apostolic Voice)
    WAKE UP, CHURCH! BLOOD IS CRYING IN OUR LAND! Our land is soaked with blood. Families are wiped out. Children are slaughtered. Fathers are butchered. Communities are burnt. Souls are perishing. And yet, the Church sleeps. 💔 The cries from Southern Kaduna… 💔 The pain in Plateau, Benue, Zamfara, Borno… 💔 The silent genocide in Christian communities… Who will speak? Who will rise? Who will pray? The forces of darkness are not asleep. The herdsmen are not resting. The terrorists are not tired. But Christians? Divided. Distracted. Disconnected. This is not just news. This is WAR. If we cannot gather in crowds, Let us gather in fives. If we cannot march in protest, Let us march into our prayer closets. If we cannot speak in the streets, Let us cry on our knees. 🙏 Let every family become a prayer altar. 🙏 Let every Christian home become a fortress. 🙏 Let every believer rise in the night watch. You may not hold a microphone, but you can hold the heavens. You may not carry a weapon, but you can carry a burden. You may not go to the battlefield, but you can fight on your knees. This is no longer the time for casual Christianity. This is the hour of spiritual warfare. Not against flesh and blood—but against powers that love bloodshed. “If my people, which are called by my name, shall humble themselves, and pray...” (2 Chronicles 7:14) God is watching. Heaven is listening. Let the Church rise—or we will be buried in silence. 🔥 Wake up. Speak up. Kneel down. Fight back on your knees. Remain blessed Jesus loves you (Prophet & Apostolic Voice)
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  • They wanted to hide the Benue State genocide as usual, but there was a Verydarkblackman always waiting to expose them.
    They wanted to hide the Benue State genocide as usual, but there was a Verydarkblackman always waiting to expose them.
    Yay
    Sad
    2
    0 Commentarios 2 Acciones 190 Views 0 Vista previa
  • Every Igbo man must spend a minute today to honour Fredrick Forsyth, who has just passed away at 86 years.

    He was a BBC journalist who resigned his job with the BBC because they wouldn't allow him to cover the genocide going on in Igboland during the Civil War. He resigned and relocated to Biafra in 1968 and became the one western link pushing out information about the genocide against Ndigbo.
    He had written several books on the Biafran story which includes Emeka, The Biafran story and others.
    His book inspired the popular movie "Tears of the Sun" by Bruce Willis".

    To our great friend in need, Sir. Fredrick Forsyth, we give you a 21 gun salute and wish you eternal rest.

    LAA NA UDO EZI ENYI NDI IGBO.

    Tribute from
    Obidinma Aku

    To the great friend of Ndigbo
    Every Igbo man must spend a minute today to honour Fredrick Forsyth, who has just passed away at 86 years. He was a BBC journalist who resigned his job with the BBC because they wouldn't allow him to cover the genocide going on in Igboland during the Civil War. He resigned and relocated to Biafra in 1968 and became the one western link pushing out information about the genocide against Ndigbo. He had written several books on the Biafran story which includes Emeka, The Biafran story and others. His book inspired the popular movie "Tears of the Sun" by Bruce Willis". To our great friend in need, Sir. Fredrick Forsyth, we give you a 21 gun 🔫 salute and wish you eternal rest. LAA NA UDO EZI ENYI NDI IGBO. Tribute from Obidinma Aku To the great friend of Ndigbo
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  • Nemesis of the genocide perpetuated against the Igbos under the watch of Yakubu Gowon is still haunting Nigeria.
    Let nobody look far for why it has been impossible for past leaderships of Nigeria to fix the country.
    People must learn the basic natural principles that guide and sustain the earth or they risk swimming against the tide of life to their chagrin.
    Mother nature doesn't allow any injustice to go unpunished, without being redressed, because one of the fundamental physical laws of nature upon which the universal purpose of God for the earth is achieved is the law of balance.
    Without balance on both sides, nothing can be achieved but a continuously oscillating condition that puts no one to rest in the manner that we are all experiencing it in Nigeria.
    Unlike the so-called mercantilist Nigerian 'men of God' will tell Nigerians to pray endlessly, only an admission of guilt and reparations to the Igbos by Nigeria will set Nigeria free. If nobody decides to listen to this, let them do or we can go on endlessly on the present path of perdition until, as Patriarch Moses would say to a stubborn Pharaoh who chose to perish in the sea than grant the Israelites freedom, 'let my people go!'
    Nemesis of the genocide perpetuated against the Igbos under the watch of Yakubu Gowon is still haunting Nigeria. Let nobody look far for why it has been impossible for past leaderships of Nigeria to fix the country. People must learn the basic natural principles that guide and sustain the earth or they risk swimming against the tide of life to their chagrin. Mother nature doesn't allow any injustice to go unpunished, without being redressed, because one of the fundamental physical laws of nature upon which the universal purpose of God for the earth is achieved is the law of balance. Without balance on both sides, nothing can be achieved but a continuously oscillating condition that puts no one to rest in the manner that we are all experiencing it in Nigeria. Unlike the so-called mercantilist Nigerian 'men of God' will tell Nigerians to pray endlessly, only an admission of guilt and reparations to the Igbos by Nigeria will set Nigeria free. If nobody decides to listen to this, let them do or we can go on endlessly on the present path of perdition until, as Patriarch Moses would say to a stubborn Pharaoh who chose to perish in the sea than grant the Israelites freedom, 'let my people go!'
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  • Khaleed Yazeedu wrote:

    "The Igbo don’t just survive, they create survival.

    Without oil blocs, without government backed monopolies, and without political favoritism, the Igbos have built billion dollar economies from markets like Alaba, Onitsha, Aba, Nnewi, Enugu and Ladipo.

    These are not figures from fantasy, they are facts!

    While others wait for federal allocations, the Igbo man wakes up with a plan, builds a path, and feeds a nation.

    But instead of gratitude, they receive suspicion.

    Instead of partnership, they face persecution.

    Despite pogroms, war, marginalization, and decades of systemic exclusion, they keep rising.

    If Nigeria were fair, the Igbo would be celebrated as a backbone, not treated like a burden.

    No group that rebuilt itself from genocide should ever again be told to go and kneel for relevance.

    The painful truth is this, Nigeria depends on crude oil.

    The Igbo depends on no one.

    And if ever the day comes when the Igbo decides to walk away, Nigeria must ask itself, what will be left?

    It’s not a threat. It’s a warning. A nation cannot afford to keep pushing away those who hold it's economic pulse in their hands".
    Khaleed Yazeedu wrote: "The Igbo don’t just survive, they create survival. Without oil blocs, without government backed monopolies, and without political favoritism, the Igbos have built billion dollar economies from markets like Alaba, Onitsha, Aba, Nnewi, Enugu and Ladipo. These are not figures from fantasy, they are facts! While others wait for federal allocations, the Igbo man wakes up with a plan, builds a path, and feeds a nation. But instead of gratitude, they receive suspicion. Instead of partnership, they face persecution. Despite pogroms, war, marginalization, and decades of systemic exclusion, they keep rising. If Nigeria were fair, the Igbo would be celebrated as a backbone, not treated like a burden. No group that rebuilt itself from genocide should ever again be told to go and kneel for relevance. The painful truth is this, Nigeria depends on crude oil. The Igbo depends on no one. And if ever the day comes when the Igbo decides to walk away, Nigeria must ask itself, what will be left? It’s not a threat. It’s a warning. A nation cannot afford to keep pushing away those who hold it's economic pulse in their hands".
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  • The man who killed 12 million Africans in DR Congo has a statue in the middle of Brussels.

    The people who built it are telling you that Julius Malema chanting Kill The Boer is "inciting genocide."

    Maybe they can trick you, but in this life, obroni cannot trick me.
    The man who killed 12 million Africans in DR Congo has a statue in the middle of Brussels. The people who built it are telling you that Julius Malema chanting Kill The Boer is "inciting genocide." Maybe they can trick you, but in this life, obroni cannot trick me.
    Like
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  • EFF SAYS NO TO STARLINK IN SOUTH AFRICA!

    At the WHITE HOUSE, Johann Rupert made it clear that he wants Starlink in South Africa.

    The EFF will oppose Starlink in parliament as it is owned by white-genocide peddler Elon Musk and poses a Security Threat to South Africa!
    EFF SAYS NO TO STARLINK IN SOUTH AFRICA! At the WHITE HOUSE, Johann Rupert made it clear that he wants Starlink in South Africa. The EFF will oppose Starlink in parliament as it is owned by white-genocide peddler Elon Musk and poses a Security Threat to South Africa!
    0 Commentarios 0 Acciones 132 Views 0 Vista previa
  • *SOME NIGERIAN NEWSPAPER HEADLINES+, 22/05/2025*

    No Zamfara lady on trial for converting to Christianity – Govt

    We have Boko Haram informants among politicians, soldiers – Zulum

    NCoS offers N5m reward for information on fleeing inmates in Osun

    JAMB announces mop-up examinations for absentee candidates

    Benue NASS APC Caucus endorses Tinubu for 2027

    Naira appreciates to N1,615/$ in parallel market

    Tottenham beat United to win first European title since 1984

    Fortnite returns to Apple store after five-year ban

    US singer Chris Brown freed on £5m bail in UK assault case

    Ex-Ukraine MP with pro-Russian ties assassinated in Madrid

    Trump ambushes South Africa president Ramaphosa with ‘genocide’ accusation

    UK inflation hits 15-month high as utility bills soar

    Germany warns Nigeria, neighbours against Russia alliance

    Petrol price war closes nearly 5,000 fuel stations


    -----------------------------
    *DID YOU KNOW?*

    * The Empire State Building is the most photographed building in the world. At 102 stories, it stands prominently among the New York City skyline with other skyscrapers and a distant view of the water.

    * Raphael Nadal holds the title for the most Grand Slams ever won on Clay. He won the French Open 14 times.
    -----------------------------

    Tinubu celebrates Nigerian-born new mayors in London

    Dangote’s $19bn Refinery investment could have yielded $120bn in tech – Shettima

    Nigeria among Africa’s top investment destinations – Speaker Abbas

    Senate seeks Military base in Adamawa amid Boko Haram attacks

    Senate moves to formalise casual jobs in informal sector

    Senate summons NAFDAC over unwholesome fruit ripening practices

    Reps move to curb bank profiteering, push for support to real sectors

    Reps to probe driver’s licence issuance irregularities

    Reps to investigate non-payment of presidential wage award to pensioners

    Senator calls for relocation of old buildings near Abuja airport

    Rep Dasuki Asks FG To Allocate Seized 753 Duplexes To Military

    Natasha accuses police of bias in handling petitions against Akpabio, Yahaya Bello

    Shadow Government: Court slates June 25 for hearing, orders service on Utomi

    Court warns Nnamdi Kanu’s lawyer against unprofessionalism

    Three internet fraudsters bag 30-month jail term in Rivers

    Internet fraudster jailed 24 months, forfeits N124m in Kwara

    Music teacher bags life jail for raping 9-year-old pupil in Lagos

    IG orders probe of slain Oyo WASSCE candidate

    N45,000 quarterly imprest inadequate for police operations, says Sheidu

    Minister, EFCC boss inspect 753-unit estate recovered from Emefiele

    I almost resigned after UTME error – Oloyede

    Oyetola rallies France for Nigeria’s IMO bid

    Keyamo, stakeholders set for aviation book launch

    FG urges oil firms to shore up production to meet OPEC quota

    FG bans night driving for fuel tankers

    Nigeria spends $2bn on external debt in four months

    Salary crisis: FG plans intervention funds for 109 foreign missions

    No more jobs for uncertified engineers in oil sector — FG

    CBN sets 12-month deadline for new AML standards

    2025 Hajj: NAHCON airlifts 32,549 pilgrims

    FRSC, Actors Guild to unveil first road safety film festival

    Ogun Customs rake in N15bn in Q1

    Immigration warns of maritime insecurity

    AFRIMA plans to empower 1.2 million youths

    7,000 jobs created through Ogoni clean-up — HYPREP

    Wike defends FCTA’s N1. 78 trillion 2025 statutory budget

    NCC hands over digital ICT park to varsity in Katsina

    Lawyers oppose compulsory voting bill

    BudgIT: NASS Inserted 11,122 Projects Worth N6.9trn In 2025 Budget

    Lagos transport policy best in Nigeria, says institute

    Groups submit MoU to National Assembly for Ibadan state

    I’m still on FG’s wanted list — Igboho

    ₦1bn constituency allocations: Onjeh challenges lawmakers to publish list

    Telcos battle 33 outages in May

    Fidelity Bank CEO invests over N760m in shares

    Taravest: Dangote, Elumelu pledge fresh investments in Taraba

    Luft Pay TV debuts in Lagos

    Dangote supports Benue women entrepreneurs with cash grants

    Tinubu’s meeting with Pope, insult to Christianity — Babachir Lawal

    Ajaero vows to take over LP secretariats, Abure kicks

    Defections: I won’t abandon PDP, says Makinde

    Kano gov approves N6.8bn for dam construction

    Gov Sani appoints two new Commissioners, revives Ministry of Information

    Cult-related violence: Edo loses over $1b worth of investments yearly – Okpebholo

    Lagos loses N19bn properties to fire incidents

    Lagos unveils drone surveillance to boost security

    Oyo unveils annual schools census report

    Protesting Edo youths barricade highway over insecurity, bad roads

    Five arrested after police dismantled illicit fertiliser production in Bauchi

    Man arrested for stealing neighbour’s car in Lagos

    Adamawa man nabbed for dressing like a woman

    Family seeks N30m to save Ogun graduate with failing kidneys

    Adamawa NSCDC officer promoted for returning pilgrim’s lost N850,000

    -----------------------------

    *TODAY IN HISTORY*

    * On this day in 1973, the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) was established in Nigeria order to foster peace and unity. Under the one-year scheme, graduates of higher institutions below the age of 30 are drafted to serve the motherland.

    * On this day in 1960, the most violent earthquake in recorded history hit Chile. The Great Chilean Earthquake rated 9.5 on the moment magnitude scale. According to estimates, between 2230 and 6000 people were killed.

    -----------------------------

    You must love in such a way that the person you love feels free. – Nhat Hanh

    Good morning


    *Compiled by Hon. Osuji George osujis@yahoo.com, +234-8122200446*
    *SOME NIGERIAN NEWSPAPER HEADLINES+, 22/05/2025* No Zamfara lady on trial for converting to Christianity – Govt We have Boko Haram informants among politicians, soldiers – Zulum NCoS offers N5m reward for information on fleeing inmates in Osun JAMB announces mop-up examinations for absentee candidates Benue NASS APC Caucus endorses Tinubu for 2027 Naira appreciates to N1,615/$ in parallel market Tottenham beat United to win first European title since 1984 Fortnite returns to Apple store after five-year ban US singer Chris Brown freed on £5m bail in UK assault case Ex-Ukraine MP with pro-Russian ties assassinated in Madrid Trump ambushes South Africa president Ramaphosa with ‘genocide’ accusation UK inflation hits 15-month high as utility bills soar Germany warns Nigeria, neighbours against Russia alliance Petrol price war closes nearly 5,000 fuel stations ----------------------------- *DID YOU KNOW?* * The Empire State Building is the most photographed building in the world. At 102 stories, it stands prominently among the New York City skyline with other skyscrapers and a distant view of the water. * Raphael Nadal holds the title for the most Grand Slams ever won on Clay. He won the French Open 14 times. ----------------------------- Tinubu celebrates Nigerian-born new mayors in London Dangote’s $19bn Refinery investment could have yielded $120bn in tech – Shettima Nigeria among Africa’s top investment destinations – Speaker Abbas Senate seeks Military base in Adamawa amid Boko Haram attacks Senate moves to formalise casual jobs in informal sector Senate summons NAFDAC over unwholesome fruit ripening practices Reps move to curb bank profiteering, push for support to real sectors Reps to probe driver’s licence issuance irregularities Reps to investigate non-payment of presidential wage award to pensioners Senator calls for relocation of old buildings near Abuja airport Rep Dasuki Asks FG To Allocate Seized 753 Duplexes To Military Natasha accuses police of bias in handling petitions against Akpabio, Yahaya Bello Shadow Government: Court slates June 25 for hearing, orders service on Utomi Court warns Nnamdi Kanu’s lawyer against unprofessionalism Three internet fraudsters bag 30-month jail term in Rivers Internet fraudster jailed 24 months, forfeits N124m in Kwara Music teacher bags life jail for raping 9-year-old pupil in Lagos IG orders probe of slain Oyo WASSCE candidate N45,000 quarterly imprest inadequate for police operations, says Sheidu Minister, EFCC boss inspect 753-unit estate recovered from Emefiele I almost resigned after UTME error – Oloyede Oyetola rallies France for Nigeria’s IMO bid Keyamo, stakeholders set for aviation book launch FG urges oil firms to shore up production to meet OPEC quota FG bans night driving for fuel tankers Nigeria spends $2bn on external debt in four months Salary crisis: FG plans intervention funds for 109 foreign missions No more jobs for uncertified engineers in oil sector — FG CBN sets 12-month deadline for new AML standards 2025 Hajj: NAHCON airlifts 32,549 pilgrims FRSC, Actors Guild to unveil first road safety film festival Ogun Customs rake in N15bn in Q1 Immigration warns of maritime insecurity AFRIMA plans to empower 1.2 million youths 7,000 jobs created through Ogoni clean-up — HYPREP Wike defends FCTA’s N1. 78 trillion 2025 statutory budget NCC hands over digital ICT park to varsity in Katsina Lawyers oppose compulsory voting bill BudgIT: NASS Inserted 11,122 Projects Worth N6.9trn In 2025 Budget Lagos transport policy best in Nigeria, says institute Groups submit MoU to National Assembly for Ibadan state I’m still on FG’s wanted list — Igboho ₦1bn constituency allocations: Onjeh challenges lawmakers to publish list Telcos battle 33 outages in May Fidelity Bank CEO invests over N760m in shares Taravest: Dangote, Elumelu pledge fresh investments in Taraba Luft Pay TV debuts in Lagos Dangote supports Benue women entrepreneurs with cash grants Tinubu’s meeting with Pope, insult to Christianity — Babachir Lawal Ajaero vows to take over LP secretariats, Abure kicks Defections: I won’t abandon PDP, says Makinde Kano gov approves N6.8bn for dam construction Gov Sani appoints two new Commissioners, revives Ministry of Information Cult-related violence: Edo loses over $1b worth of investments yearly – Okpebholo Lagos loses N19bn properties to fire incidents Lagos unveils drone surveillance to boost security Oyo unveils annual schools census report Protesting Edo youths barricade highway over insecurity, bad roads Five arrested after police dismantled illicit fertiliser production in Bauchi Man arrested for stealing neighbour’s car in Lagos Adamawa man nabbed for dressing like a woman Family seeks N30m to save Ogun graduate with failing kidneys Adamawa NSCDC officer promoted for returning pilgrim’s lost N850,000 ----------------------------- *TODAY IN HISTORY* * On this day in 1973, the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) was established in Nigeria order to foster peace and unity. Under the one-year scheme, graduates of higher institutions below the age of 30 are drafted to serve the motherland. * On this day in 1960, the most violent earthquake in recorded history hit Chile. The Great Chilean Earthquake rated 9.5 on the moment magnitude scale. According to estimates, between 2230 and 6000 people were killed. ----------------------------- You must love in such a way that the person you love feels free. – Nhat Hanh Good morning *Compiled by Hon. Osuji George osujis@yahoo.com, +234-8122200446*
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  • Elon Musk is fighting to Invest in a Country where there is a “White Genocide”?
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  • https://guardian.ng/news/save-yagbaland-from-systemic-genocide-kogi-group-begs-govt-others/
    https://guardian.ng/news/save-yagbaland-from-systemic-genocide-kogi-group-begs-govt-others/
    GUARDIAN.NG
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  • 50 years ago… Ogbemudia was Igbo and Igbanke, Igbo Akiri

    Boji-Boji Atamuna.

    “From time immemorial, the people that are called Igbanke today were known and called Igbo-Akiri. It was in 1967 when Ogbemudia became the military governor of the Midwest State that he changed the name of the town from Igbo-Akiri to Igbanke…It would have been unthinkable at that time to reveal that an Ibo man or an Ibo town produced the military governor of the Midwest State…. Ogbemudia, including the prominent Evangelist Rev. Isaac Idahosa are all Ibo and they hail originally from Igbo Akiri.”

    (See Blood On The Niger, Gomslam Books 2012 pages 33, 216)

    Captain Fred Anuku, the Commander of the Biafran Navy was the first Nigerian naval graduate from Dartmouth. While his fellow Ika-Ibo Brigadier Samuel Ogbemudia joined the Federal troops, Fred, who was married to a Caribbean, fled Lagos during the 1966 Igbo pogrom and was offered the command of the fledging young Navy by the Biafran high command.

    At the same time, Major Nzeogwu’s involvement in the January 15, 1966 Revolution brought suspicion and calamity to his own people of Asaba, Okpanam and environs. As we prepare to organise a programme for the Anioma and Asaba 50th Year Genocide Anniversary, we shall today mention some of the top actors, commanders from the western Ibo nation of both forces whose roles led to the genocide in Asaba, Isheagu, Ogwashi, Igbodo, Ubulu Kingdom, Ibusa and Ndi Oshimili. These prominent Commanders include Major Kaduna Nzeogwu, Col. Conrad Nwawo, Col. Joe Achuzia, and Captain Fred Anuku on the Biafran side. On the Nigerian side, we shall record the memorable activities of Brigadier Samuel Ogbemudia, General Godwin Alabi Isama, General Cyril Iweze and Commander O.Z. Chiazor, the first black man to be commissioned by the Queen in the Royal Canadian Navy.

    Significantly, at this time, charismatic Chukwuma Kaduna Nzeogwu had been released from the Calabar prison. He had disagreed with Ojukwu’s war aims and military strategy, and obviously discountenanced the declaration of Biafra. He advised that the East should resist for, at least, four months, cultivate foreign and local support and then prepare and get into the position with more arms and training to resist a total war. He opposed any frontal engagements against the superior-armed federal troops at that initial stage of the war. At the 1967 Abakiliki military exercise, Nzeogwu demonstrated his extraordinary military acumen and proved beyond doubt that he was the Rommel of the Nigerian Army. A commander’s dream, endowed with a peculiar knowledge of the sub-savannah battlefield terrain, he exuded a rare combat capability and commanded the battle simulation with such confidence and precision that he drew tears of adulation from the awed subalterns. He inspired most of the officers with his unmitigated improvisations. To most of the top brass of the Biafran Army, who were seeing the dawn of real combat action for the first time, this fighting leatherneck was a military institution all by himself, a study in combat readiness and tactics.

    After his release from Calabar, Nzeogwu managed to reach his boys still in the Nigerian Army in the Midwest and in the West. The plan to enter the Midwest was originally his and that was his own way of setting a stage for the cessation of hostilities, an end to the war, and the restoration of the ideals of the January 15 Revolution. To this end, he was disappointed by his friend, Major Olusegun Obasanjo whom he had not heard from and whom he learnt had gone back to Kaduna. On the other hand, he was confident in, and had some respect for Major Samuel Ogbemudia, his colleague at the Nigeria Military Training College (NMTC), Kaduna.

    Furthermore, Wole Soyinka revealed that the Westerners had agreed on the opposition against the North but also disagreed with Ojukwu on the declaration of Biafra, and for that matter, the declaration of Benin Republic. Declaration of Biafra, the Revolutionaries reasoned would isolate the Easterners and put the West and the Midwest in a bad position whereby sympathies from the West and the Midwest would end up being restrained. They would do better fighting as Nigerians. Whatever was the final consensus, Ogbemudia turned tail. He was next heard of leading the triumphant entry of the Federal Forces into Benin.

    Few days after the war, the Biafra Research and Production Bureau made two secret and instant contacts with the high command of the Nigerian Army. Willy Achukwu, the Onitsha-born multi-talented improvising scientist, led one team to the Commander of the 82 Division, Enugu. Before the meeting, a team of Biafran Scientists were directed to put down sketches of the scientific equipment, designs, take measurements of the weapons, guns. A special house with good illumination was erected to keep safely all the Biafran designs and prototypes. They also produced a new Ajuala flying Ogbunigwe to supplement the ones produced at Awo Idemili. Research at this time resumed on what I might term the first world “Smart Bomb” was redesigned as the much needed facilities and spare parts, lacking with the exigency of the war were becoming available after the war. (Pse., see Biafra, a Legacy Lost TELL Magazine Special Report No. 14 April 8, 2002. Page 37)

    While Willy Achukwu led one group to the Commander 82 Division Enugu, Professor Ezekwe and Professor Nwosu went to Benin and handed over their Biafran scientific designs to Governor S.O. Ogbemudia. Ogbemudia raced to Lagos and desperately tried everything to convince General Gowon to seize the opportunity and convert that Biafran scientific ingenuity and like the Americans absorbed the German-Jewish war scientific breakthrough; and transform Nigeria to a modern powerful black nation. Gowon shillyshallied and meanwhile the Willy Achukwu group were lucky to escape the gallows.

    General Bissala the Commander of the 82 Division before their tearful eyes, poured gasoline over the designs and materials, brought out a box of matches and set the huge collection of scientific fabric of Black civilisation on fire!

    Ogbemudia’s shock and depression on learning of the outcome of the meeting with the GOC and the burning of the Biafran war prototypes and designs was enough to transform him from Saul to Paul. For the third time, the Brigadier deflected and returned to his original base and more than any other post war governor was very prominent in the rehabilitation projects to return the war-weary Igbo to Jerusalem. He offered grants to poor students, donated buses to the University of Nigeria and rehabilitated the former Biafran Army officers, returning home to Bendel.

    All the same, he cannot run away from the serious war crime charges of changing the name of a whole community, the heritage of his people Igbo Akiri to Igbanke. To this day, the people of this community yearn to return to their kith and kin in the Ika province of Delta State.

    On his triumphant entry into Benin, in company with the Butcher of Asaba, General Muritala Mohammed, can he absolve himself and other officers and men of the Federal Second Division, of complicity in the wanton killing of Igbo in Benin that started in September 21, 1967 to the end of that war?

    KNOW YOUR HISTORY................................
    50 years ago… Ogbemudia was Igbo and Igbanke, Igbo Akiri Boji-Boji Atamuna. “From time immemorial, the people that are called Igbanke today were known and called Igbo-Akiri. It was in 1967 when Ogbemudia became the military governor of the Midwest State that he changed the name of the town from Igbo-Akiri to Igbanke…It would have been unthinkable at that time to reveal that an Ibo man or an Ibo town produced the military governor of the Midwest State…. Ogbemudia, including the prominent Evangelist Rev. Isaac Idahosa are all Ibo and they hail originally from Igbo Akiri.” (See Blood On The Niger, Gomslam Books 2012 pages 33, 216) Captain Fred Anuku, the Commander of the Biafran Navy was the first Nigerian naval graduate from Dartmouth. While his fellow Ika-Ibo Brigadier Samuel Ogbemudia joined the Federal troops, Fred, who was married to a Caribbean, fled Lagos during the 1966 Igbo pogrom and was offered the command of the fledging young Navy by the Biafran high command. At the same time, Major Nzeogwu’s involvement in the January 15, 1966 Revolution brought suspicion and calamity to his own people of Asaba, Okpanam and environs. As we prepare to organise a programme for the Anioma and Asaba 50th Year Genocide Anniversary, we shall today mention some of the top actors, commanders from the western Ibo nation of both forces whose roles led to the genocide in Asaba, Isheagu, Ogwashi, Igbodo, Ubulu Kingdom, Ibusa and Ndi Oshimili. These prominent Commanders include Major Kaduna Nzeogwu, Col. Conrad Nwawo, Col. Joe Achuzia, and Captain Fred Anuku on the Biafran side. On the Nigerian side, we shall record the memorable activities of Brigadier Samuel Ogbemudia, General Godwin Alabi Isama, General Cyril Iweze and Commander O.Z. Chiazor, the first black man to be commissioned by the Queen in the Royal Canadian Navy. Significantly, at this time, charismatic Chukwuma Kaduna Nzeogwu had been released from the Calabar prison. He had disagreed with Ojukwu’s war aims and military strategy, and obviously discountenanced the declaration of Biafra. He advised that the East should resist for, at least, four months, cultivate foreign and local support and then prepare and get into the position with more arms and training to resist a total war. He opposed any frontal engagements against the superior-armed federal troops at that initial stage of the war. At the 1967 Abakiliki military exercise, Nzeogwu demonstrated his extraordinary military acumen and proved beyond doubt that he was the Rommel of the Nigerian Army. A commander’s dream, endowed with a peculiar knowledge of the sub-savannah battlefield terrain, he exuded a rare combat capability and commanded the battle simulation with such confidence and precision that he drew tears of adulation from the awed subalterns. He inspired most of the officers with his unmitigated improvisations. To most of the top brass of the Biafran Army, who were seeing the dawn of real combat action for the first time, this fighting leatherneck was a military institution all by himself, a study in combat readiness and tactics. After his release from Calabar, Nzeogwu managed to reach his boys still in the Nigerian Army in the Midwest and in the West. The plan to enter the Midwest was originally his and that was his own way of setting a stage for the cessation of hostilities, an end to the war, and the restoration of the ideals of the January 15 Revolution. To this end, he was disappointed by his friend, Major Olusegun Obasanjo whom he had not heard from and whom he learnt had gone back to Kaduna. On the other hand, he was confident in, and had some respect for Major Samuel Ogbemudia, his colleague at the Nigeria Military Training College (NMTC), Kaduna. Furthermore, Wole Soyinka revealed that the Westerners had agreed on the opposition against the North but also disagreed with Ojukwu on the declaration of Biafra, and for that matter, the declaration of Benin Republic. Declaration of Biafra, the Revolutionaries reasoned would isolate the Easterners and put the West and the Midwest in a bad position whereby sympathies from the West and the Midwest would end up being restrained. They would do better fighting as Nigerians. Whatever was the final consensus, Ogbemudia turned tail. He was next heard of leading the triumphant entry of the Federal Forces into Benin. Few days after the war, the Biafra Research and Production Bureau made two secret and instant contacts with the high command of the Nigerian Army. Willy Achukwu, the Onitsha-born multi-talented improvising scientist, led one team to the Commander of the 82 Division, Enugu. Before the meeting, a team of Biafran Scientists were directed to put down sketches of the scientific equipment, designs, take measurements of the weapons, guns. A special house with good illumination was erected to keep safely all the Biafran designs and prototypes. They also produced a new Ajuala flying Ogbunigwe to supplement the ones produced at Awo Idemili. Research at this time resumed on what I might term the first world “Smart Bomb” was redesigned as the much needed facilities and spare parts, lacking with the exigency of the war were becoming available after the war. (Pse., see Biafra, a Legacy Lost TELL Magazine Special Report No. 14 April 8, 2002. Page 37) While Willy Achukwu led one group to the Commander 82 Division Enugu, Professor Ezekwe and Professor Nwosu went to Benin and handed over their Biafran scientific designs to Governor S.O. Ogbemudia. Ogbemudia raced to Lagos and desperately tried everything to convince General Gowon to seize the opportunity and convert that Biafran scientific ingenuity and like the Americans absorbed the German-Jewish war scientific breakthrough; and transform Nigeria to a modern powerful black nation. Gowon shillyshallied and meanwhile the Willy Achukwu group were lucky to escape the gallows. General Bissala the Commander of the 82 Division before their tearful eyes, poured gasoline over the designs and materials, brought out a box of matches and set the huge collection of scientific fabric of Black civilisation on fire! Ogbemudia’s shock and depression on learning of the outcome of the meeting with the GOC and the burning of the Biafran war prototypes and designs was enough to transform him from Saul to Paul. For the third time, the Brigadier deflected and returned to his original base and more than any other post war governor was very prominent in the rehabilitation projects to return the war-weary Igbo to Jerusalem. He offered grants to poor students, donated buses to the University of Nigeria and rehabilitated the former Biafran Army officers, returning home to Bendel. All the same, he cannot run away from the serious war crime charges of changing the name of a whole community, the heritage of his people Igbo Akiri to Igbanke. To this day, the people of this community yearn to return to their kith and kin in the Ika province of Delta State. On his triumphant entry into Benin, in company with the Butcher of Asaba, General Muritala Mohammed, can he absolve himself and other officers and men of the Federal Second Division, of complicity in the wanton killing of Igbo in Benin that started in September 21, 1967 to the end of that war? KNOW YOUR HISTORY................................
    0 Commentarios 0 Acciones 620 Views 0 Vista previa
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