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Apr 26, 2020 67 tweets 14 min read Read on X
Last year I took my friend and partner, @tundeleye to my homestead.

In going to that area, we did not cross the Niger River (Oshimmiri in my native dialect) the way most people cross it these days. Rather, we went the old way. Image
We took a boat from Cable Point (Ikpele Nmili) in Asaba, and 12 minutes later, we were sharing a beer with some of my acquaintances at Onicha Marine.

You see, for those who know the history, Asaba and Onitsha, prior to the building of the bridge, were quite closeknit. Image
The third point in the dictionary definition of a mongrel is "any cross between different things, especially if inharmonious or indiscriminate."

This is the classic definition of the Igbo people, something I wrote about six years ago. bit.ly/32xOIHu
The Igbo people came from different parts of what is today's #Nigeria, and settled in the area that they now call home.

This, centuries worth of migration, mixing and consolidation, was anything but harmonious or planned.
However further research has shown me that some of what I wrote then was incomplete, but I will refrain from saying "wrong", because I am unfit to untie Elizabeth Isichei's shoelaces, and it was from her 1976 work, A History of the Igbo People, that I drew heavily for that piece.
As an aside, I think it's time for me to do my first social media appeal.

Is anyone willing to finance me to go and sit with her in #NewZealand once this pandemic is over?

She lives there now, and she is such a repository of Igbo history. @NewsomCA help???
Elizabeth Isichei was born in 1939 which means that at 81, the window for a comprehensive debrief of the stuff which didn't make any of her three books that focused on the Igbo people is closing…

@NewsomCA, again, HELP!!!
Let me go back to topic.

In the last few days there has been a lot of argument on Twitter about whether the Igbo speaking people of Delta State in #Nigeria are Igbo, or something called Anioma.
Some people from this area have pointed out that they have been victims of taunts by some Igbos from the East of the Niger, who have themselves said that Delta Igbos are not Igbo.

Both sides of this argument are right, but one tweet I saw was an outright lie.
There is no one from the East who will call a native Anioma person "Onye ofe mmanụ.

That slur is reserved for Yoruba people as the stereotype is that Yoruba can't cook, so drown their soups in oil and pepper to cover the lack of culinary skills.

My pot belly calls bullshit!
The words used for the various peoples of the former Bendel are: Ndị Ika to describe Delta Igbos; Ndị Idu to describe the Bini people; Ndị ohu (a slur) to describe Esans (and the history of this is actually linked to Benin); Ndị Usobo to describe those in the "proper Delta".
Now, the problem with most of #Nigeria, is that we don't know where we are coming from, so it's kinda hard to know we're going to.

Too many Igbo people both East and West of the Niger, do not know where they are coming from.
Referring back to the piece I highlighted earlier, I pointed out that, "The Anioma sub-group is divided into two, Enuani and Ukwuani. Enuani and Onitsha people migrated from Igala along with Ishan."

This is incomplete.
In the intervening years, I've had discussions with older men in Onitsha, Idumuje-Ogboko, Onicha Ugbo, Atani, Obosi, Issele Azagba and Ibusa, and built a more complete profile.
Yes, some Onitsha people indeed came from the Igala area, but most claim their ancestry from around Benin (possibly from what is now called Igbanke), who fled East sometime in the 16th Century to escape the wrath of Oba Esigie.
Eze Chima's crew founded a number of towns along the way - Ọnicha Ugbo, Ọnicha Ọlọna, Issele Uku, Issele Azagba, and then some crossed the great river and settled at Ọnicha Mmiri, today known as Ọnicha, or as British colonists 3 centuries later transcribed it, Onitsha.
Now, to cross to what became Onitsha, the ụmụ Eze Chima must have crossed the river at the point where the water is calmest.

The area was called Ikpele Nmili but was rechristened Cable Point by the British when they set up their communications soon after decimating Asaba.
These Ụmụ Eze Chima were helped to cross by the locals who had themselves settled there two generations earlier under the leadership of Nnebisi, who had himself left his hometown, Nteje in today's Anambra State.
Nteje itself has Igala origins, and I have an appointment with the Eje of Ankpa in today's Kogi state, to discuss this relationship (note the title of their traditional ruler - Eje, and then relate it to Nteje)…
According to Dennis Osadebey in the book, Building A Nation, Nnebisi was the son of an Nteje woman, Diaba, who had gotten pregnant for an Igala man, Ojobo.
Nnebisi grew up in Nteje thinking he was of the kindred, but one day, after a quarrel, he was told that his father was not from there, so he could not take part in land sharing.

He thus left Nteje with his followers, and followed a route which brought him to the great river.
If you look at a map of those areas, it is quite easy to trace the route taken by Nnebisi, which must hae taken him through Nsugbe, and then along the Anambra River (Ọma Mbala), and then to the point where the Anambra River joins the Niger River.
That precise point where the Anambra River joins the Niger River, is coincidentally, the precise point where you can take an eight minute boat ride and land at Cable Point in Asaba.
Nnebisi and his people crossed, landed at Ikpele Nmili and decided to plant their crops there for the year.

A year later, after a great harvest was (of course the area is rich in alluvial soils brought from upstream by the river), they decided to settle there.
Nnebisi called the place Ani Ahaba (We have settled in this land), and four hundred years later, some white chap hearing the name that the natives called their land, wrote Asaba in his map, and not Ahaba.
That man was Carlo Zappa, an Italian priest who was appointed Prefect of the Upper Niger by the Catholic Church.

Zappa spent a lot of time converting the natives in both Asaba and Onitsha, and all the way to Ojoto, East of the Niger, and Agbor, West of the Niger.
A look through Catholic records during the Ekumeku resistance will show that at the turn of the century, most of the Catholic priests in what is now the Diocese of Issele Uku in Delta State, came from the Onitsha area, as they were all under the same ecclesiastical province.
A look at the roll call of the dead from the Aba Women's affair of 1929, shows that the wife of the Sanitary headman in Opobo was from Asaba, which kind of tells you the direction in which people went before the split of Southern Nigeria into East and West in 1954.
Up until that point in 1954, many from the Igbo speaking areas just west of the Niger River, found it easier to cross the river to do their business.

And why not?
The distance between Asaba and Owerri is just 102km.

Asaba to Enugu is 125km, while Asaba to Umuahia is 142km.

All of these places are closer to Asaba than Warri, which in modern Nigerian geopolitics is in the same state as Asaba.

Warri is 176km from Asaba.
The Asaba man, when he arrives in either of Enugu, Owerri or Umuahia, speaks the same language as the people in those places, barring the normal dialectal differences that occur in languages that are spread over large geographical areas.
This same Asaba man, would arrive in Warri, and would be at a complete loss as to what the native in Warri is saying…

Referring back to Dennis Osadebe, any young Anioma person who wants to learn his history should find Osadebe's book, Building A Nation, and read it.
Osadebe understood where he was coming from, and was unequivocal about it.

Thus it was that he joined first the Asaba Union, then by sheer force of will helped to coalese it into the Western Ibo Union, and then by 1939, he was the General Secretary of the Ibo Union.
He joined OBN Eluwa on his trip around both Eastern and Western Igboland between 1947 and 1953, a trip which created the Igbo identity that we know today (until 1966) at least.
Osadebe was at the forefront of agitation to remove the Asaba Division from the Benin Province to which it had been joined in 1931 and either rejoin it to the Onitsha Province where it had been prior, or create a province of its own.
Of course that agitation fell flat in 1954 once the Southern Region was split into East and West, but being a pragmatic fellow, Osadebe teamed up with his Benin and Delta Division neighbours to campaign for the creation of the Midwest Region.
This campaign succeeded in 1963 with Osadebe becoming premier of the region.

Even at that, Osadebe maintained his close relations with his kin from across the river.

When war broke out four years later, more than any other, Osadebe's people, from Asaba, bore the biggest blow.
This was where things began to take a negative turn for the Midwestern Igbo identity.

In 1964, a brilliant and ambitious 30-year old from Asaba joined the public service. Phillip Asiodu, an Oxford graduate who spoke Yoruba as a first languge, rose very fast.
By mid-1966 as #Nigeria was melting down around everyone, Asiodu was already a Permanent Secretary in the federal civil service.

Unfortunately, he faced the same mistrust that every Midwest Igbo faced in Nigeria of the time: where did his loyalties lie?
He chose #Nigeria, and as tends to be the case with people who have to prove themselves, showed his loyalty to Nigeria only too well.
Asiodu was the one who adviced Gowon to renege from the Aburi Accord when he pointed out that Ojukwu had outmanouvered Gowon in that meeting in Ghana.

The moment Gowon reneged on that deal, war became inevitable.
The war had a personal effect on Asiodu as his brother Sidney, a well known prize winning athlete, was killed during the Asaba Massacre in 1967.

But Asiodu kept his head down, and remained firmly Nigerian, and non-Igbo.

That was the birth of the split in identity.
A people defeated in war have a tendency to bow their heads.

Those who can, reject being members of that defeated group.

So it is no surprise that those Igbos who could (borderlands) decided that they no longer wanted to be Igbo.
Midwest Igbos created a new identity to the extent that the town of Igbo Akiri changed its name to Igbanke.

Its most prominent son, Samuel Chiedu Osaigbovo Ogbemudia, who along with Alexander Madiebo narrowly escaped death in the July 1966 coup, dropped "Chiedu" from his name.
To be honest, I cannot hold people responsible for such behaviours. The city of Gdansk in #Poland was once called Danzig, and it was in #Germany
Going back to Dennis Osadebe, after the war, some prominent Igbos including Osadebe banded together to try and resurrect the Igbo Progressive Union which had been proscribed by Aguiyi-Ironsi in 1966.
So they formed the Igbo National Assembly whose stated goal was to unify Igbos under a common umbrella body.

In no time, the INA was banned by @NigeriaGov, but by 1976, shortly after the murder of Murtala Mohammed, they tried again.
This time, went the route of a socio-cultural organisation.

Thus Ohaneze Ndị Igbo was born, and one of the original signatories to the Ohaneze charter was Dennis Osadebe. Along with Ben Nwabueze, and a few others whose names I don't recall.
Osadebe knew that the place of the Midwestern Igbo in #Nigeria's geopolitics would always be with his kin from across the Niger, and he always acted accordingly.

Osadebe was the one who coined the term Anioma, as the entry region of the Midwestern Igbos into Ohaneze.
Some of these things are simple to check out, for example, the expression "Anioma" does not appear in any document predating 1975.

The funny thing is that by 1992, even Asiodu who was perhaps most directly responsible for the identity crisis facing his people, had come around.
In 1992, along with some notable people from Anioma, Asiodu wrote a letter to IBB asking him to take Anioma out of Delta state, excise Onitsha and Atani from Anambra state, and create an Anioma state which would have been a part of what is now the South-East geopolitical zone.
The signatories to that letter, dated 15/6/92 were as follows: Nnamdi Azikiwe, Owelle Onicha; Dennis Osadebe, Ojiba Ahaba; Phllip Asiodu, Izoma Ahaba; Anthony Modebe, Ogene Onicha; Ben Nwabueze (from Atani in Anambra); Chukwuma Ijomah (from Aboh in Delta); and Ukpabi Asika.
BIC Ijomah died just over a month ago, so of all the sages who signed that letter, only Phillip Asiodu is still with us, and for whatever reason, IBB did not act on the letter.

What is the lesson from Chief Asiodu's apparent turnaround?
Once your name is Emeka, #Nigeria will eventually happen to you.

This is what people like Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala understand.
This is what people like Austin Okocha understand.
This is what great men like Osadebe, Ijomah, Achuzia, and finally Asiodu, understood.
The truth is that based on our history, the Anioma man never saw the Niger River as a barrier. As a matter of fact, just read Chinua Achebe's Chike And The River, and you'll get a sense of how people used to cris-cross the river at that salient point before the bridge was built.
The remnants are still there today. Cable Point projects into the river, it is clearly an old market, and Onitsha Marine also projects into the river.

That is the original location of the famous Onitsha Market.
Has any one from Onitsha ever stopped to ask himself why the Basilica of Holy Trinity was built basically a few metres away from the river at Onitsha Marine?

Cross the river to Asaba and St. Joseph's Catholic Church is in an almost identical position.
Both churches were built about the same time, commissioned by the same man, Carlo Zappa.

How else do you explain that the dialect of Igbo spoken in Asaba, and that spoken in Onitsha, are the same language?
In the end, the Anioma man, because Biafra lost a war 50 years ago, may deny his identity all he wants, but it will not change the fact - in the Byzantine politics of #Nigeria, the day will come when you will be told who you are.

It's the one thing Nigeria never fails at.
Once your name is Emeka, or Chike, or Nnamdi, or Uju, or Chukwuma, or Obi, or Ogechukwu, or Ekwi, or Azuka, or Ike, or Nonso, or Ifeanyi, or indeed Cheta, the day will come, when Nigeria will tell you who you are. Don't be caught flat footed.
For the Igbos from the East, never forget some facts - the most effective Biafran diplomat during the war was Raphael Uwechue, Oguluzeme Ogwashi-Uku.

The majority of the weapons that were supplied to Biafra came from France, and it was his efforts.
Almost all of the CARITAS flights that saved starving Biafran children, had his fingerprints on them. Plus the fact that Emeka Ojukwu, Ikemba Nnewi got out of Biafra in the end and spent 12 years in exile in a French speaking country, was due to his diplomatic efforts.
Raphael Chukwu Uwechue was also President-General of Ohaneze Ndị Igbo for four years.

Ndị Anioma, that was your son.
Also, Igbos from the East, never forget that the most successful commander of Biafran forces during the war was Joseph Achuzia, Ikemba Ahaba.

From 4 October 1967 to 12 October 1967, he prevented Nigerian forces from successfully crossing the Niger River.
The Nigerians could only establish a bridgehead at Onitsha Marine before they were beaten back by Achuzia.

This defeat was one of the things that led to the massacre of his kinsmen in Asaba on 7 October 1967.
On 31 March 1968, Achuzia directed Jona Uchendu's company of about 700 men in what became Biafra's most spectacular success of the war, the Abagana Ambush.

In that event, 700 Biafran men defeated a Nigerian force of 6000 men.
Only 100 Nigerian soldiers, including Murtala Mohammed survived.

It was after that action that Murtala did not take part in the war again.

Achuzia who died two years ago, was also an Anioma son.

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More from @Chxta

Jan 6, 2023
There has been a lot of recrimination due to the musician, Brymo's misguided tweets. I won't join issues with him except to mention that as a Tinubu supporter, he is simply doing what I have said, so many times, would be done by Tinubu supporters, ethnicise the elections.
What I want to talk about, very briefly, before returning to @EdPaiceARI's excellent book is the tendency for Nigerians, in general, to keep behaving like our country's civil war did not end 52 years ago.
Igbo people in #Nigeria are generally treated like we are all fifth columnists who secretly support Biafra.

This ahistorical view completely ignores that even during the war, there were Igbo people, Ukpabi Asika and Ike Nwachukwu as examples, that fought for Nigeria.
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I had a discussion with someone yesterday that brings to my mind the nature, to some extent, of the damage that the current Japa wave is doing. This time, not to the body-corporate #Nigeria
I've discussed that in some form here, and I've done a thread on the effects on the middle class, who are the primary movers of this migration.

I recommend reading @tundeleye's 2017 piece about why people were leaving #Nigeria bit.ly/2WvirUH
The #LekkiMassacre of two years ago merely accelerated what was already a trend.

But not much is being said about the effect of this trend on the lower classes, the people who used to be house helps, nannies, stewards, drivers, cooks and maiguards.
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Nov 24, 2022
Words matter, especially when they come from someone with influence.

That is the theme of my latest column in @FinancialNG bit.ly/3VhvOAI, the impact of the words of @JoeBiden before he became POTUS.

Bear in mind, this was written before #America's mid-terms...
Faced with the implications of his words during his presidential campaign, the Biden administration rediscovered the concept of realpolitik and tried to make good with the Saudis by visiting #SaudiArabia in July and ending up with that infamous fist bump. Image
In November 2019, Joe Biden fingered MBS in the killing of @washingtonpost contributor Jamal Khashoggi and committed to making the Saudis pay.

He followed up upon assuming office by rejecting contact with MBS and stopping US assistance to Saudi efforts in its war in #Yemen.
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On #FreshlyPressed981 with @SopeMartins and @monsieurceee this morning, we'll be asking how the NNPC came to the conclusion that petrol will sell for ₦462/litre without the subsidy.

@Smooth981FM in 15 minutes...
The NNPC is just involved in unnecessary fear-mongering.

Our neighbours, who are poorer, pay a lot more than we do for petrol. What I see in all this is people committed to maintaining their cushy subsidy scam going on.
Consider the attached chart, published in February.

As of February, based on the exchange rate, we were paying 40 cents per litre of petrol. In #Benin it was 95 cents, in #Niger it was 97 cents, in #Chad it was 89 cents, and in #Cameroun, it was $1.09. Image
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Aug 17, 2022
“We have seen your type before, and they all fizzled out. Let’s see how long you will last.”

That's what someone told @DavidHundeyin as recounted in his @BusinessDayNg column today: bit.ly/3JZzB0N

That thing cut my soul because it is true...
For all the flak that the Nigerian media gets, people tend to forget one crucial fact: they are products of their environment, working within that same environment.

Only a very few people in this life have the fortitude of Job.
The overwhelming majority of humanity, including me these days, would make the required compromise to just keep things moving.

One problem we have in #Nigeria is that we never interrogate these things. We must ask, "why"?
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Aug 16, 2022
In the 1963 movie, Cleopatra, there was an interesting dialogue between Mark Anthony and Octavian, the man who would later become Augustus Caesar, the first emperor of Rome about the birth of Julius Caesar's son, Caesarion:
Mark Antony: "You were so shut at the mouth just now one would think your words were are precious to you as your gold."

Octavian: "Like my gold, I use them where they are worth most."

This is instructive...
Also instructive is that during his 19 years as chairman of the US Federal Reserve, Alan Greenspan did not give any interviews. Having taken over from the inflation-busting Paul Volcker, Greenspan knew that words from his position carried weight and so had to be used sparingly.
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