Chxta Profile picture
27 Dec, 14 tweets, 4 min read
I can't but help coming back to this thread. I owe Uncle Gbenro a bottle of cognac for it.

Let me build on it a little...

Prior to when Carlos Zappa renamed Ahaba to "Asaba", ndị Oshimịrị were quite an intertwined people who knew their kin.
As such, you could not "kpa alo" in Ahaba without a priest from Nri present.

This kinship is seen in the names. Onicha Mịrị, Onicha Ụgbo, Onicha Olona, as examples, the first being the great market town, the last two being on the west side of the great river, Ori mịrị...
Then Carlos Zappa came, and renamed Ahaba to Asaba, while TE Dennis renamed Onicha to Onitsha.

A hypothetical child, let's call him Chukwudebe Isichei, born exactly 120 years ago today in Asaba, knew himself as being Onye Oshimili, as did his cousin across the great river.
The year Isichei was born, a strange company, the Royal Niger Company, without his elders' consent or even knowledge, passed over "ownership" of his village to the British Crown, and the cartographers went to work.

Isichei became a "Southern Nigerian" from Onitsha Division.
Then on Isichei's 14th birthday, his Southern #Nigeria was "amalgamated" with a strange land called Northern Nigeria, and he was told that himself and those people whom he had not much in common with, except perhaps the colour of their skin, were now from the same country.
It didn't end there. When Isichei turned 39, his "Southern #Nigeria" was split into two by imperial fiat, and split along the lines of the Great River.

Suddenly, Isichei was told that he was from Benin Division in Western Region, and now had to take his leadership from Ibadan.
Agitations started almost immediately, but were put on hold because the Imperial power had a war to fight, and Isichei was shipped off to a strange land and called a "Burma Boy".

He returned at age 45 to a country in turmoil and seeking "independence". He joined the movement.
When Isichei turned 47, he was paid a visit by the great Bernard Eluwa, the charismatic secretary of the Igbo Progressive Union, who, speaking in a dialect similar to Isichei's, convinced Isichei that, "anyị bụ ndị Igbo bụ ofu."

Isichei agreed with him.
In Isichei's 60th year, "independence" came. Three years later, Isichei was told that he was no longer a westerner, but a Midwesterner.

In all this, OBN Eluwa's message rang, and his son, Chike, a doctor in Benin, told him that the Central Hospital was known as "Kedụ Hospital".
Then disaster struck.

In Isichei's 66th year, #Nigeria fell apart, and war followed the next year. Tragically, Chike was killed in the #AsabaMassacre.

The old man was spared because he couldn't make it to the "meeting" with federal troops.

He took his tragedy stoically.
After age 70, he noticed that many of the young men who survived were no longer disciples of either OBN Eluwa or Dennis Osadebe.

The canoes and pontoons had stopped moving from Cable Point, and instead, a new bridge took their place.

At age 76, Isichei became a "Bendelite".
This bewildering turn of events went on, as also at age 76, after a series of meetings, the great Dennis Osadebe coined the term, Anioma, good land, to describe the Igbo speaking peoples of Bendel.

Isichei felt it was good, but there was to be another twist in the tale...
Isichei died in 2000 at the ripe old age of 100. At age 91, by military fiat, he stopped being a Bendelite, and became a "Deltan".

In his 100 years on earth, he had had 10 different, often conflicting identities.

Now tell me, which would work, and which wouldn't in this soup?
Oh, and for the record, I could do a similar story and situate Chukwudebe Isichei in Nsube. At that point, we'll find out that until the year 1976, no one had heard the term "Anambra".

It's not even an Igbo word.

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More from @Chxta

3 Dec
By now it should be obvious that there is precious little willpower on the part of @NigeriaGov to do what has been asked of it and disband the obnoxious @PoliceNG unit called SARS.

They really can't #EndSARS - bit.ly/3lBUbqj
The best we are going to get is renaming SARS, shifting positions, and outright belligerence like the shame of policemen refusing to work because they felt hurt by the protests.

Then today's spectacle of the IG asking a court to stop all the panels into police brutality.
I think it's important to ask why the government seems so unable, and indeed unwilling, to stop police brutality.

I've given it a bit of thought, and for me, the answer comes down to money. #Nigeria is pretty skint.
Read 13 tweets
27 Nov
One of the most important men in history is Adam Smith. His magnum opus, "The Wealth of Nations", is the basis of the greatest accumulation of wealth in human history.
It was after Smith put his ideas into writing that the structured capitalist economy began to build, and led to a situation where countries have been able to bring people out of poverty in huge numbers.

Need evidence? Look.
Note that #England's GDP grew linearly right until the century following the publication of that seminal book.

As the man's ideas began to take root, it was boom, exponential growth, and they've hardly looked back ever since.
Read 21 tweets
24 Nov
I attended a dinner party last week, and when I introduced myself to one of the guests, he called me troublemaker, then offered me a job in a federal establishment.
I declined, and then he threw the following gem at me: “Guys like you are comfortable with staying on the sidelines to criticise. Knowing what you know, why don’t come and help? Come join us and change things from within.”
To be honest, I’ve had this argument with myself before, and very early on in this particular government, I came close to joining government but ended up not getting it because I gave a condition that they were unwilling to meet.
Read 22 tweets
18 Nov
#Nigeria’s problems are deeply structural, and not many things show this up as the official reaction to the #EndSARS protests and the #LekkiMassacre.

What both show is that Nigeria as currently structured exists only to protect those in power.
Consider this — during the height of the protests, @HQNigerianArmy's leadership pledged loyalty, not to #Nigeria or to its Constitution, but to the person of the President.

This shows that our security forces need a complete reorientation.
The manual under which our armed services are trained and operate has to be thrown away and a new one rewritten.

But that in itself brings up more questions, one of which is who, or what, do they pledge their loyalty to?
Read 9 tweets
16 Nov
In September @officialNESG and @cenbank had a public spat over #BOFIA, yet, the law was still signed telling me that feedback mechanisms have been starved to death by this govt.

Y'all should read @GuardianNigeria's story about the reaction to the Act: t.ly/4g74
The key phrase for me in the entire story is the point where someone told @GuardianNigeria that the banks would murmur in silence as nobody wants to be seen as confronting @cenbank.

For me, that is the crux of the matter.
The lily-livered behaviour of our bankers will hurt all of us.

Your bank declared a profit before tax of ₦74 billion, but can't resist an illegal government directive to block the accounts of a few activists?

Are you compromised or what because I don't understand.
Read 5 tweets
10 Nov
It's amusing to see a lot of pro-government misters trying to spread the disinformation that the #EndSARS protests of October 2020 were "hijacked" and turned into some sort of orgy of violence.
The facts, as recorded in this world of digital media where it is now difficult to hide, is that @NigeriaGov, unable to find "leaders" to either bribe, intimidate or otherwise coerce, cynically turned to thugs to disrupt (not hijack) the protests.
The govt's strategy succeeded to some extent, but the jury is still out, and it is increasingly looking like a case where they won a battle in order to lose a war.

This is where my column in today's @BusinessDayNg comes in: businessday.ng/columnist/arti…
Read 16 tweets

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