It's been decades since the
plight of the Igbo people of Biafra was highlighted during the Nigerian Civil
War. The movement to resurrect the Republic of Biafra is gaining momentum.
Sertan Sanderson reports.
It's been decades since the
plight of the Igbo people of Biafra was highlighted during the Nigerian Civil
War. The movement to resurrect the Republic of Biafra is gaining momentum.
Sertan Sanderson reports.
With a
court decision due in the case of Pro-Biafra leader Nnamdi Kanu in late
September, many Igbo people living in exile took to simultaneous protests
across Europe to draw attention to their cause. One of those protests was held
in Bonn, Germany, where roughly 100 protesters gathered, chanting slogans and
handing out glossy flyers.
It's not
just here in Germany. If you go to Belgium, Netherlands, Sweden, Norway,
Canada, Australia you will also see protests today. In Germany, we decided to
come to Bonn because of the United Nations here. But what we want is peace. We
don't want war again," one of the protestors, Solomon Uzochukwo, told DW.
Wanting
peace, remembering war
The local
police appeared to be impressed by the peaceful display, posing for pictures
alongside the demonstrators. Uzochukwo, who lives in Frankfurt, embraced the
police officers as if they were old friends.
"Ours
is a message of peace," he stressed.
Mike
Okoro, who travelled from the western German city of Dortmund to join the demo,
says he is hopeful for the future, but appears to remember the horrors of war
more vividly.
Joining
Biafra with Nigeria gave way to many problems. We are Christians, and they
don't like that. They have been killing our people since the 1960s. They still
kill our people. Like if you protest about the issue in Nigeria, they shoot
you," he told DW.
Amnesty
International and Human Rights Watch have both accused the Nigerian military of
using excessive force and carrying out extra-judicial killings - not only of
suspected Boko Haram insurgents, who get most of the news coverage, but also of
pro-Biafra protestors.
The
military has categorically denied the charges.
Resecession?
More than
three million civilians died in Biafra during the Nigerian Civil
War from 1967 to 1970
- the majority of whom, however, starved to death under the complete isolation
the Nigerian military imposed on the breakaway nation. Biafra eventually
surrendered and was reincorporated into Nigeria, but relations between the two
have never improved.
Many Igbo
people opted to leave Africa and to look for a better future in exile. In many
parts of the world, their plight and the ensuing UN humanitarian efforts seem
to only be remembered as footnotes in history. But the outcome of Nnamdi Kanu's
court case may change that, as the movement to
secede from Nigeria again grows
stronger.
Our leader
will be brought to court again on Monday. We want an unconditional release for
him, but the government refuses and continues to hold him even though they have
granted bail. The court did not find him guilty. He was only fighting for his
rights," Solomon Uzochukwo says. Kanu had broadcast pro-Biafra messages on
banned radio waves and was arrested by Nigeria's State Security Service (SSS)
after reportedly being abducted.
We will be
very happy if he is released, but there is still work ahead. Because we are not
Nigerians; we are Biafrans. There are more than 40 million of us worldwide.
Buhari's
dirty war on dissidents
Mike Okoro
seconds that view. "We need to separate from Nigeria. Nigeria is not
working," he says.
The court
have ordered (Kanu's) release but Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari said 'no'
because he is a former military major general. And he is still ruling Nigeria
in a military way. He tells the military to kill Biafran protestors. He does
not want peace with anyone."
With Boko
Haram still wreaking havoc in the northeast of Nigeria, and many rural areas on
the brink of starvation once more, Buhari has
tightened his grip on the nation, singling out dissident and
subversive elements with what some call an iron fist.
Solomon
Uzochukwo explains, however, that in his view, his homeland is being destroyed
under continued clashes:
We want to
go back home. It is time. Today, our children don't know their fatherland
anymore. We want to bring a stop to this distance before it is too late."
http://www.dw.com/en/global-protests-move-biafra-conflict-back-into-spotlight/a-19571051



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