The
Igbo Canadian Community Association (ICCA/Umunna) have described as
insensitive and callous the insinuations made by President Muhammadu
Buhari that the Nigeria Army showed a lot of restraints on Biafrans
during the civil war.
In
a statement issued from Toronto, Canada, the President of ICCA/Umunna,
Chief Ugochukwu Okoro, said Buhari making such comments at a time when
Igbos all over the world were observing a remembrance of their loved
ones who died during the war is unfortunate and does not reflect the
qualities of a democratic leader that should be liberal and inclusive.
President
Buhari had during his investiture as Grand Patron of the Nigerian Red
Cross Society (NRCS) at the presidential villa in Abuja, said that the
Nigeria Army were issued strict instructions by the then head of State,
Gen. Yakubu Gowon, that Biafrans were not enemies, but “brothers and
sisters of the rest of Nigerians.”
Okoro
said “It is appalling that President Buhari, being the
Commander-in-Chief and an active participant during the civil war meant
to exterminate people of Igbo origin across the country could make such
statements credited to him. We find his remarks misguided and calculated
to assault the emotions of Ndigbo in a manner designed to re-open the
wounds of pogrom, holocaust and attempted annihilation meted against the
Igbo people in the 30 months civil war waged on the people of the South
East region leading to the deaths of over three million Igbo sons,
daughters and children.”
“Choosing
to use such tragic event such as the civil war, which left three
million innocent and defenseless men, women and children dead, to
commend the activities of the Red Cross leave more to be desired from
the leader of a country. One would have thought that President Buhari
ought to have made reference to recent incidents that occurred under his
watch to encourage the Red Cross. In March
this year, 11 people including three aid workers were killed when
suspected Boko Haram militants attacked a barracks in Rann, Borno State
leading the United Nations (UN) to evacuate aid workers in the region.
It would have been honourable and compassionate if President Buhari
showed some humanity by using the event of his
investiture as a patron of the Red Cross to reach out to the families
of the aid workers hundreds of Nigerians that have lost their lives to attacks under his leadership,” Okoro said.
The ICCA/ Umunna demanded to know from the President Buhari what manner of restraint would leave three million persons dead.
“When
President Buhari said the Nigeria Army troops showed a lot of
restraints we beg to ask in what ways were these shown; was restraint
used in the pogrom carried out in the Northern region during the months
of February- July 1967 in which over 500,000 Igbos were continuously
being killed in the Araba riots? Was the indiscriminate bombing of
hospitals, schools and marketplaces with innocent men, women and
children targeted and killed part of the restraint? Was the massacre
that occurred in Asaba which left every living male shot to death also a
form of restraint by the Federal troops? Was the blockage of food and
relief materials from entering Biafra also regarded as the orders of
restraint Federal commanders were given? Even with the No Victor No
Vanquished Declaration by the Gowon government, was the Abandoned
Property Decree and Twenty pounds payment policies of the Federal
Government among the restraints President Buhari was referring to?”
The
ICCA/Umunna urged President Buhari to, rather than open fresh wounds of
what Ndigbo went through the war, restrain himself and his loathing for
Ndigbo by telling the world where the leader of the Indigenous People
of Biafra (IPOB), Mazi Nnamdi Kanu and his aged father are being kept;
Buhari should show some restraints towards Ndigbo by stopping the
deployment of soldiers to South East region in whatever disguise to kill
young Igbo youths indiscriminately.
“This
is a President that will blame the late Libyan leader, Col. Muammar
Gaddafi, for his inability to check the incessant killing of Nigerians
by the Fulani herdsmen of which he is a patron with no arrests made but
will order the Nigeria Army to kill Ndigbo and citizens of Nigeria as
witnessed in the so-called the Operation Python Dance in September last
year.”
Okoro
went on to say that in the spirit of unity among Ndigbo, ICCA/Umunna
will host a special event in remembrance of Igbo sons and daughters who
lost their lives during the war.
“On June 16,
the ICCA will host the 2018 Biafra Memorial Event where we will be
showing what Ndigbo went through and have been able to achieve despite
the setback of the war. This will also afford us an opportunity to
remember our loved and lost ones. And we will use the event to educate
President Buhari if that the ingenuity and brilliance of Ndigbo were
what sustained the civil was to last the length it did and that same
ingenuity will drive Ndigbo towards emancipation from the
marginalization and cruelty they Buhari administration has shown to the
people of the South-East.”
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About ICCA/Umunna
The
Igbo Canadian Community Association (ICCA/Umunna) is socio-cultural and
political organization committed to the rediscovering and
reestablishment of the rich Igbo cultural identity, enhancing and
strengthening the cords of unity and bonding among Igbo speaking people
in Nigeria and the diaspora, advocating and agitating in a peaceful
manner in all causes pertaining to Igbo people. Founded in 1970 at the
end of the civil war, the association has
firmly resolved that the Igbo Canadian Community Association, otherwise
known as ICCA (Umunna), a Non-Profit Ontario Corporation, will be the
umbrella body that will re-instill
a sense of identity and pride within the Igbo nation by promoting her
language, culture, history, traditions and philosophy of Igbo nation; create awareness of political and social condition of Igbo peoples in Nigeria and
diaspora and help proffer and articulate solutions to Igbo problems
with a view to reawakening the original and quintessential Igbo spirit
and psyche as well as pursue cultural and historical education our
people with the view to promoting the glorious heritage of the Igbo
nation and its people.
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