FILE PHOTO: CHUKWUEMEKA ODUMEGWU OJUKWU
Late Nigerian elder statesman and former President-General of the pan-Igbo
socio-cultural organization, Ohanaeze Ndigbo Chief Raphael Chukwu Uwechue, sensationally revealed, in
a book, how ego and quest for absolute control by Chief Chukwuemeka Odumegwu
Ojukwu ruined Biafra. Recall that the former career diplomat, who served Nigeria in countries like Pakistan, Cameroun, Mali and Liberia, died in March, 2014, at the age of 79.
He said, in the book, Reflections on the Nigerian Civil War
– Facing the Future, that Ojukwu adopted a maximum ruler posture, shunned
advice as well as believed in his won judgment, factor, which he said, caused
the failure of the breakaway of the Eastern Nigeria
He said: “By keeping Ojukwu constantly enveloped in an
atmosphere of superiority, it made him, as a matter of habit, distrustful and
disdainful of other people’s judgment, impatient with their opinions and
finally simply authoritarian.”
Uwechue had visited the corporate headquarters of The Sun
sometime ago and while fielding questions from a team of senior editors, he
spoke about pre-independence Nigeria, the politics after independence, civil
war and the country after the war. He had promised to send to The Sun copies of
his book: Reflections on the Nigerian Civil War – Facing the Future, a revised
and expanded edition of his previous book, Reflection on the Nigerian Civil War
– A Call for Realism. The book was reprinted in 2004. True to his promise, the
elder statesman sent copies of the book, which turned out to be expository.
LATE CHIEF RAPH UWECHUE |
Indeed, the 199-page book told the story of the first
military coup in the country, the second military coup, the crisis after the
second coup, the meetings to forestall a war, the secession of the eastern part
of the country and the efforts to end the war. The book also has two epilogues,
where the author analysed the fall of Biafra, in the topic: The Genesis of
Failure and also there is the examination of government structure, in the
topic: An Elastic Federal Union.
Reading Chief Uwechue’s book, we found The Genesis of
Failure very interesting and, therefore, decided to reproduce it. The chapter
talked about the things, in the author’s opinion, caused the failure of the
Biafra Republic. He pointedly laid the blamed on Chief Chukwuemeka
Odumegwu-Ojukwu, who led Biafra. He said that Ojukwu lacked tact, never took
advice, suffered what could pass for inferiority complex and was power drunk.
In the opening paragraph of that chapter, Uwechue said: “It is a sad but
instructive irony that Lt. Col Odumegwu Ojukwu, one of Africa’s one-time most
brilliant political promises, was the man that led his own people with such a
lack of ingenuity into what was clearly a foreseeable disaster.” He said that
the personality of Ojukwu robbed off negatively on Biafra, adding: “It can be
said for the Nigerian Civil War that the personality of Odumegwu Ojukwu more
than any other single factor determined much of the course and certainly the
character of the end of the Biafran adventure.”
The late elder statesman said, in the book, that Ojukwu was
ambitious and, therefore, paid attention only to the “politics of the war”
instead of the security of the people he led. He said that owing to Ojukwu’s
interest, two wars were fought with the territory of Biafra then: “The first
was for the survival of the Ibos as a race. The second was for the survival of
Ojukwu’s leadership.” He said that Ojukwu was more interested in the survival
of his leadership at that time, which, he said: “Proved fatal for the Ibos”
during the war.
The late Ohanaeze chieftain said that if Ojukwu were smart
enough to understand the politics of alliances in the country, Biafra could
have survived. According to him, there was an opportunity for Ojukwu to align
with the Western Region then, but he did not see the necessity for that. He
said that this opportunity came when the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo was
released from prison by General Yakubu Gowon and he declared: If “the Eastern
Region was pushed out of the federation, Western Nigeria would quit the
federation as well.” According to him, Ojukwu should have taken that
declaration as a cue and wooed the Western Region.
FILE PHOTO: OJUKWU INSPECTING A GUARD OF HONOUR OF BIAFRAN SOLDIERS |
Uwechue said that another opportunity also came the way of
Ojukwu to forge an East-West alliance when Awolowo visited Enugu, as Gowon’s
emissary. According to him, what Ojukwu needed was to bring Awolowo to his
side, but he did not utilize the opportunity and ended up describing the
meeting as “ill-conceived child.”
He had revealed: “When on 7th May 1967 the Yoruba leader (Awolowo)
came to Enugu at the head of a reconciliation committee, Ojukwu had a handsome
opportunity to play his card. He missed it. Dr. Michael Okpara, who still enjoyed
popular support in Eastern Nigeria and whose friendship with Chief Awolowo had
sustained the UPGA alliances, was not even invited to meet Chief Awolowo. After
a hurried reception, Chief Awolowo’s delegation left Eastern Nigeria.”
He said that Gowon, understanding the way alliances worked
in the country, had wooed Western Nigeria, first by releasing Awolowo from
prison and second, by not only offering him an appointment, but also making him
the highest civilian in the government as the vice president of the Federal
Executive Council. According to him, by this appointment, there was an
“unspoken understanding that Nigeria was his (Awolowo’s) as soon as the war was
over and the army withdrew.” He said that this cemented the relation between
the Northern Region and Western Region and, therefore, left the east in the
lurch.
Uwechue said that within Biafra, Ojukwu alienated talented
Igbo, using iron hand to establish his authority. Towards this end, he said
that Dr. Okpara, former premier of Eastern Nigeria, was jailed as well as
others. “These political figures were to remain out of favour and far from the
corridor of power, except for their occasional utility as window dressing, such
as posing for photographs with General Ojukwu or flanking him on ceremonial
occasions,” he wrote.
He said that the same thing happened in the army, as Ojukwu
suppressed officers and, therefore, had a “timid army tamed to unquestionable
obedience.”
The late diplomat said that Ojukwu had the opportunity of
using the diplomatic front to sell Biafra, but that instead of doing this he
shunned advice, especially on the need for compromise. He said that when the
war dragged, many eminent Igbo advised Ojukwu to asked for a confederal nation,
which would keep Biafra within Nigeria and also give it adequate local
autonomy, but this was not only rejected but also those who suggested it were
witch-hunted.
He said: “The climax came on 7th of September 1968, just
before the OAU summit meeting in Algiers. A number of anxious Igbos, including
Dr. Azikiwe, former president of Nigeria, Dr. Michael Okpara, former premier of
Eastern Nigeria (Biafra), Dr. K. O. Dike, former rector of Ibadan University
and myself made a formal recommendation in which we told General Ojukwu that as
Africa was sympathetic to the Ibo cause, but at the same time opposed to
secession, he should use the opportunity of the Algiers meeting to seek OAU
guarantee for a confederal arrangement, such as was agreed at Aburi (Ghana).
General Ojukwu not only rejected this advice outright but also asked some of us
to recant or resign. Dr. Azikiwe left Paris in disgust and went to London in
voluntary exile. I myself chose to resign.”
Uwechue said that Ojukwu saw himself as a supremo during
the war and only trusted his own judgment. In trying to explain why this could
have been so, he said: “To this special development of his ego and the feeling
of self-sufficiency was added the confidence acquired from an Oxford University
milieu and from the fact of his father’s great wealth. Back to Nigeria, Ojukwu
soon joined the army, where, as an officer, he got more accustomed to giving
orders and receiving prompt obedience than meeting opposition and arguments.”
He said that Ojukwu found himself always at the “giving end” rather than at the
“receiving end,” adding: “By keeping Ojukwu constantly enveloped in an
atmosphere of superiority, it made him, as a matter of habit, distrustful and
disdainful of other people’s judgment, impatient with their opinions and
finally simply authoritarian.”
He concluded that owing to Ojukwu’s
attitude, Biafra failed. He said that the failure was mainly a “political one,”
which, according to him, “was, in turn, the failure of the leadership, which
firstly, made a wrong tactical choice – outright secession – instead of
maneouvring appropriately for vital political alliances within Nigeria and
exploiting in that context the numerous weaknesses of its opponents.” He said
that by breaking out of the country, “the Biafran leadership abandoned the
Nigerian field to those who had then only recently wrenched federal control
from the Ironsi government, thus uniting various shades of political opinions
in the country behind the new federal authorities, as had never been the case
before in Nigeria’s political history, in defence of Nigerian unity.”
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