Professor Chukwuemeka
Ike, the traditional ruler of Ndikelionwu in Orumba North local government area
of Anambra State is one of the top people in the academia sitting on the throne
of their communities. Ike, an old boy of the famous Government College, Umuahia
is also an accomplished writer and has over eight novels to his credit. He
mounted the throne of the ancient Kingdom of Ndikelionwu after retirement as
the Registrar of WAEC.
In
fact, he was the first Nigerian to hold that position. He is also a member of
Igbo Leaders of Thought, a think tank for moving Igbo nation forward. In this
interview with Saturday Vanguard, Professor Ike spoke on the need for Igbo
nation to reenact the spirit that made Biafra thick during the civil war, the
infamous Expo 77, among other issues.
At the recent meeting
of Igbo Elders Forum in Enugu, you spoke about
an attempt by the Buhari administration to Islamize Nigeria. What gave
you that impression?
Well,
I have not used those words myself, but I know from my writing, from my civil
war novel, which is a historical novel, that we were in trouble. I also wrote a
novel when Nigeria was 40 years old which I called ‘The Search’ which was aimed
to look at Nigeria since independence. It’s like a lost ship that went on a
voyage and after long nautical miles something went wrong and all the hopes
were in trouble. One of the things I said was that there are people who think
they are born to rule; that they come from part of the country that must rule
and if they are not ruling, nothing goes.
In
fact, in my novel ‘The search’, I talked about the military coups. It was like
some people would organize themselves and as soon as the group settles down,
the chairs are pulled away. There is no doubt that some people in this country
feel that they are born to rule Nigeria and that Nigeria must be ruled by them.
During the war, the slogan was ‘To keep Nigeria one is a task that must be
done!’ But the question is to keep Nigeria one for what purpose? So that is the
Islamization.
The
Hausa/Falani feel that they are the people meant to rule the country all the
time. This issue of herdsmen carrying AK47 is not unlikely that it is part of
the ambition to overrun Nigeria. So we the Igbo are concerned about this even
though Ndigbo are responsible for part of what is happening to them and that is
why some of them still talk about Biafra. I have given my own ideas of what I
would like to see.
If
we can get ourselves organized and see what we can do to improve ourselves, we
many not care so much about what is happening in the rest part of the country.
If we are satisfied with the way things are here in Anambra, we may not care
much about the bigger Nigeria. It may almost be irrelevant if we get
things properly organized here.
Is it not a problem of
leadership? Where is Igbo leadership? Can you name one person that can lead?
We are in Igbo Leaders
of Thought because a number of us come together to exchange views from time to
time. But the problem really is, can you get them to stay together and identify
their problems and deal with them? That is one problem we have. That is why I
said that if we could see ourselves as having a common problem and choose our
leadership properly, we can begin to make headway. Some people hold the view
that if Igbo and Yoruba can come together, the north will join us to build a
strong nation. But Igbo and Yoruba don’t come together. That is the problem the
Middle Belt is also having. At a time they wanted to team up with us, but
somehow it didn’t work out.
The Yorubas came
together at some stage under the late Chief Obafemi Awotowo, but it was not
easy for Igbos to do that during the time of Zik. Anyway let’s not digress
because I am not a politician. But my worry really is that it has not been easy
for us to stay together.
I was at Igalla when
the late Chief Christian Onoh came to talk about the creation of Wawa State and
some of the things he said about the rest of us were surprising. I sat on the
panel for the Anambra State University of Science and Technology at a time and
I knew what the experience was like. So that is why I say we should concentrate
on Anambra State and if we succeed, it will help to ginger others on the need
to be united. We share the same culture and tradition and I don’t see why we
cannot join hands to improve our fortunes. So I advocate that we should start
developing in smaller scales, our various states and when we see progress here
and there, it will be easier to come together. We should not be struggling to
kick each other out.
Is there no possibility of assembling Igbo
people together to work out ways of developing the area?
Well, I have not
thought about it, but I remember that I met Prof Nebo and General Ike Nwachukwu
over the issue. But really, I have decided to concentrate on Anambra State
because it will be easier for us to begin here in Anambra state than to involve
the entire states in Igbo land. And if we are likely to get a good leader in
Anambra State who has large ideas, a proper direction will begin to evolve.
What is the position of Biafra in all these?
My concern is not
Biafra, but Biafranism. We should try and re-enact those things that made us
great in Biafra. There was an article that appeared in News of the World Report
in the USA in 1968 titled, ‘Biafra Possibilities’. That was only one year after
the civil war started and they had seen what was emerging and they were
concerned about it. This Biafranism was what they destroyed after the war
because they did not want to see that anything good came out of Biafra. And
that is the kind of spirit I really want us to re-enact. If we can do it in
Anambra State, in Enugu State, in Abia State, Igboland will become great again.
If we do that, we will
have a stronger force collectively. Biafra taught us that we had brains. Not
that it brought something new, but it showed that we had all along, failed to
realize what we had. If we evolve the spirit of Biafra again, things will
change.
I always use petrol to
illustrate this. Before Biafra, Nigeria had been brainwashed by the Western
World that crude oil refining is capital intensive and technologically advanced
for the developing nations. They gave us the impression that it was beyond us,
and were buying off our crude oil. Then when Biafra lost Port Harcourt, and
lost the refinery, we were faced with a challenge. You couldn’t fight the war
without petrol. So Biafra scientists began to ask, this crude oil refining,
what is in it? Is it not boiling the crude oil to a certain temperature and
boil that to another higher temperature until petrol emerges? Before long, we
had our own refineries and government had to control refining. All that Biafra
needed at the end of the war was additives.
I had said it
somewhere that the people of Niger Delta have a message which no one wants to
listen to. They have made us to know that you don’t have to be a super human to
refine crude oil. So they are doing it with what they have and nobody is
listening to them. We are talking about spending trillions to produce refined
oil, but these chaps are telling us that they can do it and save the country so
much money. We have crude oil in Anambra, although I don’t know what they are
doing now.
But that is one area
we can show our capability. That crude oil is one area, but there are many
other areas we can excel. For instance, we can also excel in the manufacture of
hardware. I tell you a story of a Professor of Physics, an Igbo chap who is one
of the most efficient physicists of his time. We had run from Nsukka to Enugu
because of the war. I saw him with a bottle of beer and this is not a kind of
man you would associate with drinking beer.
I called him and said
man what is the matter? He said he had taught all sorts of courses, including
nuclear power, but he had never imagined himself being able to launch a rocket.
But that day, he launched a four-feet rocket. It was small but something great.
Of course Biafra later went into launching rockets and anti aircraft. And of
course you know Ogbunigwe was the known war head Biafra produced.
There
were many other things. The raffia palm tree is being set ablaze and nobody is
doing anything with it, but the war showed us that it was a very precious tree.
Parts of it were used for scientific purposes and this tree was virtually
everywhere. Our brain showed us a lot of possibilities of what we could do. But
as I said the civil war ended.
At the end of the war,
I talked with Ukpabi Asika who was the Administrator of East Central State. In
fact he made me chairman of the committee for the reopening of University of
Nigeria, Nuskka and I told him he must do something to encourage our people.
When I was appointed chairman of the committee to reopen University of Nigeria,
there was a Lt. Col. Who was asked to take us to Nuskka to tell the Army to
vacate the campus because the University was used as an Army Brigade.
In those days, we had
a borehole serving the University and it was destroyed during the war. They
brought Army Engineers from Lagos to repair it and after working on it for two
weeks, they proclaimed the borehole dead. We were using tanker to go several
miles away to bring water to serve the University, but with the spirit of
Biafra, I called Professor Gordian Ezekwe who was a member of my committee and
reminded him that he was head of the Research and Production in Biafra and that
he must do something to give the University water.
Within two weeks,
water flowed in the University. He knew that I couldn’t take no for an answer
and he took the challenge and found an answer to it. Unfortunately, that spirit
of Biafra is gone because, as I said, General Obasanjo ensured that people
should believe that nothing good came out of Biafra. So we couldn’t talk about
manufacturing military hardware. I believe that if we come together and reenact
that spirit of Biafra, we will be self sustaining that we won’t care about what
is happening in other parts of Nigeria.
That is why I say we
should develop the spirit of Biafransim if we must move forward. We need to
exploit what God had given to us to solve our problems. When we were young,
there were things we used to describe as “Fabrikwe” which were things manufactured
in Japan. They were of poor quality at that time, but that was how they
started. Where is Japan today? That is the kind of thing our people have to
emulate; that is being innovative and creative.
I am happy Governor
Willie Obiano has raised an Elder’s council. The first day he called us for a
meeting, I raised that issue, that it is necessary that our people should be
encouraged to start using our brains. I believe we can do it successfully by
bringing our people in the Diaspora. If we do it in all the Igbo -speaking
states and succeed, nobody will care whether the president is a Falani or Hausa
because we will be self sustaining. In fact, other Nigerian will then become
afraid to get into our way. Some of the people who served in Biafra are still
around and can be useful.
What do you think will be the relevance of
these people who are agitating for Biafra?
By doing that kind of
thing, you are creating enemies for yourself. People are attacking what they
should not be attacking. Biafra was defeated; even though I hear some people
say that the UN had agreed that the people can come together to decide what
they want to be. But I think that is a diversion for me from what I call the
spirit of Biafranism.
This spirit is much
more important than MASSOB, the IPOB and the new one that came up recently. If
their concern is who will become what, that is not my concern. My concern is to
get that spirit that made Biafra thick. Besides, if Biafra survives, there will
be more problems. What kind of government will the agitators even form? Will it
be modeled after the Ahiara Declaration?
There
were people like Chinua Achebe who were formulating ideas as we were fighting
Nigeria and deciding the kind of government that would be in place after the
war. But with the way things were going, some people dismissed it even before
the declaration came out. Such people believed that the situation was not ideal
for formulating such a policy in time of war.
However,
there were things that gingered the people’s spirit during the war, like the
war songs and the Radio Biafra propaganda championed by Okokon Ndem. In fact every field had a contribution to
make during the war, including musicians. Nobody or group was superior to the
other. What we need now is to encourage our people to select a leader that can
give them what they want. If we can do that, we can transform Igbo land and I
assure you, other people will want to come and join us to see what they can get
from us. That is why I say that I don’t want to be caught up with IPOB or MASSOB.
Come to even think of
it, who are the people in MASSOB? Do they even have any ideology? They tell
themselves lets’ go on and by so doing, they give publicity to themselves.
Maybe they are happy they are keeping the name Biafra alive after Nigeria abolished
the Bight of Biafra which was even there before Nigeria’s Independence. For
that hatred for Biafra, Nigeria decided to abolish the Bight of Biafra.
Who really can be described as a hero?
That somebody is a
Head of State does not make him a hero. In fact in one of my novels, I said
that if I have power, political parties should not exist for 30 years because
all they are doing is pursuit of power. They are not seriously interested in
ideology. If we ban political parties, we can talk about rotation. What
Nigerians should be doing is that when it is their turn, they should bring
somebody.
We don’t need to hold
national election, the result of it most of us know how it is arrived at and we
spend millions in addition. People should meet in their areas and select
somebody when it is their turn. Political parties as they exist here make no
meaning.
The
system we are running is so corrupt that somebody has virtually nothing, gets
elected or appointed into a public office and within four years, he builds
mansions in many places.
Nigeria is still recovering money looted by a former
Head of state and this was somebody who never even attended a university. The
question is, how did he make this money? It was not like somebody like
Okotiebo, who was very rich before he became a minister. I believe that with
time, we will begin to see people who possess the qualities of leaders who can
help our people to create wealth. That will go a long way to change the manner
of our people.
What kind of impact do you think the Igbo
leaders of thought will really make?
The Igbo Leaders of
Thought is made up of people from states in Igbo land and when we go there,
nobody pays us transport allowance. So we are not going there for what we will
get. So you can see that the impact is limited at the moment. Maybe over the
years, it may be possible to expand it by involving more people. At the moment,
we do not want to involve the governors because they are politicians. Maybe they
could function in advisory capacity when necessary. The kind of goals they have
may not fit into the activities of Leaders of Thought.
What is the difference between English Leaders
of thought and Generally Ndigbo?
Generally is almost an
Institution that involves the entire Igbo people. Generally speaks the minds of
Ndigbo, even though I do not know what the situation is now concerning its
Leadership.
Tell us your
experience when you were part of the administration at the University of
Nigeria?
Initially,
Nuskka had problems; serious problems. Many people were not happy that Zik
brought American education to Nigeria. It started with its own degrees when
others were awarding foreign degrees. There were jokes about Nsukka degrees
then. We had difficulties getting students and we had to organize secondary
school students to talk to them and encourage them to come to UNN.
We
published newsletters which we also sent to the schools from time to time. I
visited Government College Umuahia deliberately to talk to the students. I was
the college prefect during my time there and the idea was to assure them that I
would not deceive them if Nsukka was not good. Nsukka was very unpopular and
the University was offering courses the students had never heard about. We also
organized careers exhibition and brought in employers to address the students
in UNN.
There
was a white man at the Nigeria Tobacco Company who called me by the side and
said, if you were in my shoes, will you be employing these students? They
believed the degrees were useless. So I decided to employ Nduka Eya and B.I.C
Ijeoma, who were graduates of the university. When I went to WAEC as Registrar,
I wanted to take Nduka Eya but his wife did not like their moving to Ghana with
me. Eya was among the first set of graduates. But look at Nsukka today.
If Ohaneze Ndigbo is
effective, would there have been any need for Igbo Leaders of Thought?
Igbo
Leaders of Thought is more selective. Not everybody joins it. You join when you
are invited. Theoretically, they should be better equipped to do the job. They
don’t have the reach Ohaneze has, but quite frankly it is in a position to
encourage our people to pay more attention to their states.
You were the Registrar
of WAEC when there was this Expo 77. What happened?
Yes, there was a
leakage of the examination that year. There had been one before I came in, I
think in the 60s. A Ghanaian was the Registrar at the time. I was the first
Nigerian Registrar of WAEC. I gave a press conference that annoyed the chairman
of the committee set up by the federal government to look into the leakage. But
what gave me joy was that government set up the panel and no official of WAEC
was linked with the leakage. What happened was that a policeman from the
Special Branch who was detailed to guard the papers fell sick and went to a
herbalist.
The herbalist asked
him where he was working and he said WAEC and the herbalist shouted aah, you
are in money. You are guarding question papers. With that encouragement, the
man would go to the strong room, steal one question paper and went and sold. He
was eventually caught and what gave me joy was that no WAEC official was
involved. It showed that all my staff were people of high integrity.
The
other one happened at the Nigerian Minting and Printing Company in Lagos which,
though had very effective security, some of the workers there memorized WAEC
questions sent there for printing, then came out and wrote the questions. When
I was asked to give a guarantee that there won’t be further leakage, I said
they should invite the Commissioner of Police to guarantee that his men sent to
guard the question papers would no longer steal them.
But
we evolved a strategy that enabled us to minimize the effect of the leakage. So
we had adopted a measure whereby if any question paper leaked, we cancelled it
outright and set another one. From that experience, I keep saying that
corruption is our common way of life.
WAEC
had been disturbed by miracle centres.
Surprisingly some parents aide their children to cheat in examinations.
These days we hear the kind of things that did not happen during our days in
the university. We hear lecturers these days ask students to go and pay for
rooms in hotels and wait for them to come and meet them just to pass them in
the examination. It is really unimaginable.
Do you think it was
lack of confidence in WAEC after the EXPO 77 that made government to establish
NECO?
Prof Babs Fafunwa who
was with us at Nsukka embarked on a massive campaign against WAEC. Zik brought
him to Nsukka when he returned to Nigeria from USA. When I was Registrar of
WAEC, he was at Nsukka. He gave examples that there were many examination
boards in England and wanted Nigeria to break the monopoly of WAEC. I said he
should have told the whole story. It is true that there were many Examination
boards in England, but our system was different from theirs.
That was also how JAMB
came. They wanted a quota system and they felt that the only way to achieve it
was to set up another body. It was Prof. Bamiro who argued that Northern
students were unfairly treated. How can we discriminate in WAEC? The next thing
we heard was that government had set up JAMB without even waiting for an
interim report and Obasanjo announced that it was with immediate effect. They
later amended it when they discovered that it was impossible to implement it
immediately and it was shifted to one year later. That’s how these things
started. The impression they gave was that WAEC was favouring southern
students.
You left WAEC under
controversial circumstances. What actually happened?
This
thing happened a long time ago and I am surprised that you know it. Actually, I
gathered that when the WAEC leakage happened in 1977, government set up a
panel. All kinds of allegations were made, including the allegations that WAEC
was favouring some schools. Nobody in WAEC, not even the Registrar, knows what
any student would score until the results are collated.
The papers are marked
in batches and printed school by school. Nobody has the capacity to change
anything but the chairman of the panel believed that the result of his child’s
school was cancelled because he went to a poor school. The result was that Ike
must be punished.
There was also the
allegation that when I was appointed WAEC Registrar, that I did not report to
Lagos; that I went to Accra straight. They thought they would catch me but from
all the reports, they could not catch me. Anyway, I was travelling to Senegal
and they wanted me back in Lagos immediately. In fact, they wanted to send a
special plane for me to return immediately and I said there was no need for
that because I was already returning to Lagos.
At
the Airport, somebody gave me a photocopy of the decision they had already
taken and the next thing was that Obasanjo wanted me to name any other job I
wanted apart from Registrar of WAEC. I
was asked to report to the chairman of the Public Service Commission who
said man you are lucky, just name anything big and it will be yours. I told him
plainly that I did not want anybody to give me any job. Anyway, after so many
intrigues, I offered to retire voluntarily. Sometime later, Obasanjo invited me
to join Otta Farms, but I could not. Sometime later, I was invited to be among
15 Nigerians for a special assignment and I also declined.
Was it after your
retirement from WAEC that you went to teach in the University?
It was after my
retirement from WAEC that I went into teaching. I was the Registrar at the
University of Nigeria before going to WAEC. After my retirement, I was invited
by the University of Jos as a visiting Professor. Because of the level I had
attained, I could not be invited to come and become just a lecturer. I was
first invited by a University in the USA and in fact I was inclined to go, but
I chose Jos. Obasanjo has been mentioneIt was after my retirement from WAEC
that I went into teaching. I was the Registrar at the University of Nigeria
before going to WAEC. After my retirement, I was invited by the University of
Jos as a visiting Professor. Because of the level I had attained, I could not
be invited to come and become just a lecturer. I was first invited by a
University in the USA and in fact I was inclined to go, but I chose Jos.
Obasanjo has been mentioned in many places
during this interaction. How do you rate him as a leader? Can he be described
as a hero?
Obasanjo ruled this
country for 11years and he is in a different class if you want to compare him
with people like Sani Abacha and other people. Whenever it comes to the issue
of heroes, I have to do some more thinking. It should be left for Nigerians to
define who should be called heroes. Well, somebody can be fantastic and within
a few months of his leadership, you could see the direction he is going. That
somebody should be called a hero because he served as a head of state,
certainly I cannot accept it.
You wrote many books. What influenced your
writing?
I will start from
secondary school. I went to a good school which is Government College Umuahia
which encouraged us. We had such caliber of people, like Prof. Biobaku who was
my teacher. He got B.A from London and came to teach us. In fact he marked my
essay and gave me 27/30. He was somebody that encouraged me and I owe a lot to
him. After my graduation, I got in contact with him and he changed my career.
The kind of knowledge the teachers impacted on us made Umuahia to be noted for
creative writing.
It was so much work
that the students didn’t know much about social life. So a social night was
organized for us at the Women Training College (WTC) , Umuahia on a Saturday
night. Biobaku taught us how to comport ourselves. On the Monday morning when
we came to the class we were asked to write a poem on the outing and what one
of us wrote surprised us as he used beautiful language to capture all the
events of the night. That made me to develop interest in writing.
Chinua Achebe was my
senior at Umuahia and he too influenced my writing. In fact, I never thought of
writing novels until Chinua Achebe published his Things Fall Apart in
1958.Chinua Achebe and myself were close friends and we thought about writing
together. That was how it started. Later I saw I could use fiction to write. I
didn’t know I would be lucky with writing. I continued and, glory be to God, I
celebrated 50 years of writing in October last year. Umuahia produced a lot of
writers- myself, Chinua Achebe, Cyprain Ekwensi, Gabriel Okara, Ken Saro Wiwa
etc.
Which was your first novel?
Toads for Super
What is your attitude towards wealth?
In
an interview I granted two years ago, I said I would rather have 20 novels
against my name, than have 20m pounds in my account. I like money, but money
cannot be my target in life. Money is helpful, but for me, there are things
that are more enduring than money. In August this year, I got a call from the
Federal University in Yola that I would be honoured with a Doctorate Degree. I
don’t know anybody there and if it were something to be bought with money,
there is no way I could get it.
How long did it take you to build this house?
I was a young graduate
and my father surprised me one day. He bought some bags of cement and said I
should build a house. It was a challenge. I finished the house before my
wedding in December 1959. This office we are using now was my father’s bedroom.
In this community we don’t have a central palace for the traditional ruler and
so when you are made the traditional ruler, you use your house as the palace. I
started building the other house after I had retired from WAEC
Is the traditional institution hereditary in
Ndikelionwu?
Yes. We are different
from many communities. In a number of communities, they tell you that two or
three families that came first will be producing the Eze. Here, only the Ike
dynasty produces the Eze. There was a move by some people to make it rotational
but that has not gone beyond some people’s imagination.
What is your advice to Ndigbo?
We need to help
ourselves. We need to use our God-given brains much more than we are doing.
That is the only way to transform our society. This country is blessed and we
can make ourselves more progressive than we are today.

No comments:
Post a Comment