Can somebody please
remind me, again, why Nnamdi Kanu is still sitting in jail? Of course, I know the various charges that
have been levelled against him. And I am
not one to pooh-pooh the charges or suggest that they lack merit. But the larger and deeper issue from which
arose the charges that he faces is the one that has prompted the reflections in
this piece.
Kanu’s ultimate crime is
that he dared call for the secession of a part of the country that styles
itself “Biafra” from the rest of Nigeria.
What I propose to address here is the idea that it is a crime, per se,
to call for the break-up of the entity called Nigeria. I plan to call into question this
orientation. I am firmly of the opinion
that, based on what we know right now, every day that Kanu spends in jail is an
injustice.
Let me be clear. I don’t know Kanu. From the profile of him that I have read, he
does not strike me as a genuine freedom fighter and a lot of his responses to
his current situation smacks too much of rank opportunism and borderline
cowardice. But, as every serious democrat
knows, it is precisely when we find people odious that our commitment to ideas
and the freedom to express them is tested and requires demonstration.
We fought a civil war
provoked by the declaration of secession by what then was the Eastern Region
that, as a result, became the Republic of Biafra. In the aftermath, the rest of the country
rose in defence of the political and territorial integrity of the Nigerian
state. Whatever one feels about the war,
it was a pivotal moment, a defining moment for Nigeria. Regardless of how the country originated,
like similar situations in history, the war became a watershed, a moment when
the very existence of the country was consecrated in blood. It was almost as if there were enough of us
Nigerians then convinced of the worth and necessity of the experiment that we
were willing to shed precious blood “to keep Nigeria one”.
As in similar situations
in history, the task for those of us who survived the war, victor or
vanquished, was to ensure that our blood was not shed in vain, that the untold
suffering of Biafran children was not for naught, and that the cost exacted by
our need to stay together would impel us to build a country that would by now
be on the path to realizing its billing as the greatest “black” nation on
earth!
No one denies that this
is a dream that remains deferred. Worse,
as a result of repeated misrule by the military and the collective
irresponsibility of our politicians and intellectuals, all the gains of the
civil war, the promise of solidifying the unity of the country and creating a
supranationality—the true outcome of the national question—of which all
Nigerians would be proud remains elusive.
What ought to have been a
glorious opportunity for a brand-new country was aborted and alienation from
the very idea of Nigeria became magnified.
The leaders of the secessionist bid, the Igbo nation, especially a
significant portion of its leadership, never reconciled with the idea of
Nigeria. At intervals since then, with
different degrees of severity, the demand for separation from Nigeria and the
inauguration of an Igbo-denominated Republic of Biafra has become a permanent
feature of the Nigerian political scape.
For a long time, the
Movement for the Actualisation of the Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB) was
the spearhead of this agitation. A
younger generation, impatient with what they see as the snail pace at which
MASSOB has been moving towards the actualisation of their dream of a sovereign
republic, organized under the aegis of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB)
under the leadership of Nnamdi Kanu. It
is the activism of this group that has resulted in the charges against and the
incarceration of Kanu.
What is of moment in this
discussion is that since Kanu’s shenanigans made national news the question of
Biafra has become topical again. As I
said above, just as it is the business of non-governing parties to plot the
ouster of an incumbent government at the next election, a multination-state
like Nigeria cannot preempt the constituting units from contemplating and
acting towards restructuring be that the break-up of particular states within
it—mistakenly dubbed “creation of states” in current parlance—or the excision
of specific units from it. The emergence
of new states should not be by fiat. The
say-so of the residents of the existing state and that of the proposed state
should be established through serious campaign for and against, with cases made
by the respective sides towards swaying public opinion in favour of their
preferences. We no longer live in a
dictatorship where some unrepresentative decision-makers dictate where and when
new states should emerge. This is the
fallacy of depending on so-called “National Conferences” or even amendments to
a constitution that never had any popular inputs in its origination.
In other words, any law
against secession is a futility where a section is desperate and\or alienated
enough to attempt secession. A people
who are willing to die by their thousands are not likely forever to be kept
away from their goal unless serious efforts are made to make separation less
appealing and belonging in the existing state more desirable.
South Sudan went through
two cycles of bloody civil wars before separation from Sudan was effected. Eritrea fought for an even longer period even
though theirs was not a secessionist enterprise. For seventy years, the Union of Soviet
Socialist Republics (USSR) pretended that “the national question”, as it was
then styled, had been put to bed. Then
the Berlin Wall came down, there was a failed military coup and, just like
that, the Soviet Union was no more. Not
long thereafter we discovered that Yugoslavia was no more than a house of
cards. And the small state of
Czechoslovakia showed us that size has nothing to do with complexity and
attending fissiparous tendencies where different nations, yes, nations, cohere
uneasily within a single state.
I have cited the
preceding examples to show that the Nigerian experience is neither unique nor
particularly intractable in the annals of the comparative experiences of other
multi-nation states in the world.
Centrifugal tendencies are inherent in their very being. The only difference in the Nigerian case is
our penchant for playing ostrich and believing, firmly ensconced in the sorcerer’s
cove that our country, nay, continent has become, that if we repeat enough the
non-negotiability of our unity or affirm interminably our unity, things will be
so. It is a pity that this is how and
what we have become.
The path of reason is to
acknowledge the fact that Nigeria, like the preponderant proportion of
countries in the world, is not, repeat, not a nation-state. It is a multi-nation state. It may ultimately become a nation after
several generations of living together and evolving common myths, usages,
language even, That Nigeria is not and
has never been a nation is not a flaw. It
is just brute fact. It shares this fate
with the United Kingdom, Switzerland, China, Russia, Belgium, Canada, India,
and others. This is not the place to
dilate on the theoretical foundations of the claim just stated.
This brings us to the
fact that Nigeria is an artificial country that was put together by
non-Nigerians. No one sought the consent
of the people that were literally gaveled into existence as “Nigerians” when
the state was originally constituted.
There is a sense in which one can argue that the original emergence of
Nigerians was the equivalent of kidnapping.
Yes, some may argue that,
at independence, we could have freed ourselves from the forced identity foisted
on us by our colonizers. And there,
definitely, were such tendencies both before and after independence. Furthermore, it could be argued that, as
indicated above, the civil war was another watershed for cementing our living
together in the context of one country.
Unfortunately, since this
contraption of a country was handed over to us, there has not been a time that
we have sat down as a people to determine what kind of country we would like to
be, what would be the terms of engagement for its federating peoples, what the
internal relations should be amongst its diverse nations and how its federating
units should be constituted and, when circumstances demand, reconstituted over
time.
The only time a
reconstitution was undertaken under a democratic dispensation was the
perfidious scheme that led to the creation of the Midwest Region in 1963, not
out of any principle, but to undermine a particular political party. All other restructuring efforts have been
done by diktat of diverse military rulers.
It seems as if the main
reasons for staying together have been fear of a break-up, the oil-money
induced opportunism of the elite in the post-war period, and the all-knowing
arrogance of military misrule.
Given what I just said,
there is a very simple solution to the question of Biafra and others across the
country. As we might say in
parliamentary parlance, it is way past time to call the question of Biafra.
As things stand, the only
issues to be resolved are the following:
(1) Formulate
rules for how the constituent nations that make up Nigeria are to federate
(2) Formulate
rules for establishing how state boundaries are to be set and redrawn when
there are agitations for reconstituting those boundaries
(3) Set
the conditions for what percentage of those who live in an existing state must
indicate a desire to form a separate state or be completely excised from
Nigeria, as a whole, before such a wish can be effected
(4) Only
with (3) can we establish the popularity of MASSOB or IPOB amongst Igbo people
and whether the boundaries of Biafra will extend over the old Eastern Region or
just states currently dominate by Igbo elements.
(5) Relief
must be provided for those who elect to stay with the existing unit. Similarly, just like the majority electing to
have its way, the minorities within their spatial boundaries may be granted
veto powers unless certain iron-clad guarantees be given for the continuing
viability of their cultural identity and practices within the new unit.
When (1) though (5) shall have been
satisfied and the requisite percentage of Igbo elect to leave, that choice
should be respected and amicable separation be enacted.
I am tired of hearing
about how Igbo or any other people want to leave Nigeria. Let us put the rules in place. Let those who wish to go, go in peace and let
those who remain on mutually agreed terms proceed with their collective lives,
too.
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