In the past few weeks, I've been on a nationwide tour. A lot of it by road. I have spoken with people in all of #Nigeria's geopolitical zones. Lots of people.
Let's just say that attitudes have hardened. Nigeria is in for a really rough ride in the coming months and years.
There will be not much added to the conversation if I talk about @MBuhari's absolute failure to manage #Nigeria's diversity.
It goes without saying that Buhari's blatant nepotism and disregard for the rule of law has created precedents that will come to bite us.
Buhari's successor is likely to do the same in terms of narrow appointments to the spoils of office, and in a country as unproductive as ours, the danger is at some point, someone will simply opt to remain in power, with the support of his "countrymen" to "avoid marginalisation".
But as I said, this thread isn't about Buhari.
This is about you who is reading, and me.
Two of our greatest failings as a people are our penchant for apportioning collective guilt, and our penchant for absolving those belonging to our tribe of all guilt.
This is the reason why when a group of shortsighted boys mutinied in January 1966, and people from the ethnic group of most of those boys got slaughtered in retaliation.
It is the reason why when at the start of November 1999 some boys in Bayelsa murdered a few policemen, @HQNigerianArmy went in and killed almost everyone in the village in which the murders occurred.
It is the reason why when a few guys armed with small arms held the country hostage, their entire region was demonised up to a son of the region who accidentally became president of #Nigeria.
This same laziness is the same reason why an entire ethnic group is being held up for the actions of some of their number.
This isn't to absolve Buhari for his role in worsening things and when you have statements from govt officials implying they are taking sides, no one should be surprised when people start to take the law into their hands.
Unfortunately, this gives demagogues an opportunity.
On the second part of what I talked about, our inability, or better still, refusal, to hold our "countrymen" to account, we saw a live example yesterday.
A story made the rounds on social media that @HQNigerianArmy launched an attack with helicopter gunships in Orlu, Imo State.
@nicholasibekwe published a tweet in which he said attempted to clarify the situation. Having made calls to people in the area, I can say that Nicholas is correct.
Two priests I spoke to were categorical that nothing of the sort was happening.
One of them informed me that a raid had happened on Sunday in response to some disturbances.
I think it behoves us, ndị Igbo to ask ourselves some tough questions.
What was the military responding to?
And why are we allowing, to be very blunt, riffraff to dictate the terms of ani Igbo's engagement with the rest of the country?
I'm keeping in line with my point of asking ourselves the hard questions about ourselves, why are we, Igbo people, so happy with the unreflective kind of behaviour that will ultimately take us to a sort of mass suicide?
So it won't be like I'm just complaining, let me try and, very briefly, diagnose the problem.
There are three kinds of Igbo people. There is the Igbo of the homestead, who lives in ani Igbo and doesn't go out. Has probably never been past Asaba in his life.
There is the "Lagos Igbo", who was either born and brought up in Nigeria but outside of Igboland, and has a cosmopolitan worldview.
For the purposes of this discussion, an Igbo person who was born in ani Igbo but has settled elsewhere in #Nigeria probably fits into this group.
Then there is the Diaspora Igbo. Many of the Diaspora Igbo, out of frustration of #Nigeria, dream of a utopia called Biafra.
Most of the funding by secessionist groups comes from the Igbo in the diaspora.
The "Lagos Igbo" is like most other Nigerians trying to survive and make his way in the world.
He goes home regularly, has built a house at home, and has tried to integrate into his area of residence.
Unfortunately, and this is not always the case, the Igbo of the homestead has not made it. He is the victim of a lot of bad policies by both the federal government and admittedly terrible state governments.
He is mostly poor, and not as successful as the "Lagos Igbo" and this has bred envy.
In discussions I had with people in the Orlu area not two weeks ago, it was very clear to me that a lot of their angst was with their own kin who they felt were not doing enough for them.
It is the reason why, and I have talked about it before, many of them turn to groups such as IPOB.
This is a problem not just among the Igbo, but in #Nigeria as a whole. The levels of poverty have turned people against one another, and a rudderless government has made it worse.
Our fathers said, "Ofu mkpisiaka luta mmanu oju aka." We cannot let the actions of a few disgruntled people bring ruin to all of us.
This is why it is important for those of us "Lagos Igbo" to invest back home and create jobs. The time to have started doing that is yesterday.
We can't afford to let our region become the centre of a scorched earth insurrection.
We don't have the land area for that, neither do we have the environment for sustained guerrilla warfare.
Those who have ears, let them hear.
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We'll do well to remember the lives that have been lost to various atrocities in this blood-stained country of ours... bit.ly/2N8cTdG
While there is no doubt to my mind that many officers in @HqNigerianArmy are heroes, think Sani Bello who saved the life of Gen. Ironsi’s ADC, Andrew Nwankwo, or Usman Jibrin, who flew many Igbo officers to safety during the pogroms of 1966...
or even Mohammed Shuwa, who ensured that Igbos were protected in the area under his command, the fact is that on the balance, @HqNigerianArmy has a murderous reputation, and as I once referred to them, are an equal opportunities brutaliser.
An acquaintance of mine was attacked around Orlu two days after Christmas. They were taken to a literal "kidnap factory", where the people involved kept bringing in more victims.
His assailants made him open his phone, went through all his banking apps and made him transfer all the money they could see to some accounts.
These guys weren't even bothering to hide the accounts, indicating a level of impunity that is worrying.
Eventually, after extracting all they could from his accounts (he spent a day in their custody), he was stripped to his boxers, his shoes taken, then he was given ₦500 "as transport" and released.
Part of my problem with #Nigeria's way of doing things (asides from the routine anyhowness) is the "unmerited favour" approach, even to governance.
Please read this story, and then let's talk about it. bit.ly/2X5nyHR
At best this is government-by-wishful thinking, at the middle, it is government-by-banter or government-by-miracles, and at worst, plain sabotage.
It is what is so annoying about the way we do things here.
How can you tell us that the first batch of vaccines will arrive in the country at the end of this month, tell us you aim to vaccinate 20% of the population, then in the same breath, tell us that your committee has not yet selected the vaccine most appropriate for the country?
Here is the thing about these 2015 conversations that many appear to have refused to move on from.
They should be a teachable moment. Sadly, aren't asking the right asks. Too many people from my neck of the woods (SE/SS) keep insisting on narratives that won't stand scrutiny.
I'll speak for the Igbo side, we are letting ourselves down in what should be a race to advance our agenda within #Nigeriabit.ly/3hzmXYl
Yes, it is undeniable that there was an element of ethnic chauvinism in the coalition that came together against GEJ, but to attribute his loss simply to that factor is to completely miss the lessons of 2015, and as a result, set yourself up for another failure.
Today is the last day of 2020, a year most will agree saw years' worth of events happen. I agree with that, but draw the line at saying it was "the worst year in the last 100".
I'm sure that people who lived in 1929, 1937, 1941 and 1966 will have a lot to say about that...
For me, like for many, 2020 started with a lot of optimism.
This quickly gave way to caution when shortly after my return from holiday, I fell quite ill.
This illness ended with me getting a new accessory, my spectacles.
No sooner was I back on my feet, than #covid19 caused global panic and lockdown became a thing.
What started out as a cute holiday with @LoladeSowoolu using me as a very willing culinary guinea-pig ended with her broadcasting a video of my now corpulent self attempting to dance.