By Chidi Nkwopara, Kingsley Omonobi,
Wole Mosadomi, Omeiza Ajayi, Francis Igata, Ugochukwu Alaribe, Egufe Yafugborhi
& Chimaobi Nwaiwu
ABUJA—THE three-week-long pro-Biafra protests turned bloody, yesterday, as the Joint Military Task Force (JTF) killed nine of the protesters and injured 18 in Onitsha, the commercial city of Anambra State.
ABUJA—THE three-week-long pro-Biafra protests turned bloody, yesterday, as the Joint Military Task Force (JTF) killed nine of the protesters and injured 18 in Onitsha, the commercial city of Anambra State.
Pro-Biafra protesters mount road
blocks and bonfires at Onitsha Head Bridge in Anambra State, yesterday. Photos:
Vincent Ujumadu.
Irked by the stubborn disposition of
the pro- Biafra agitators, who blocked the Niger Bridge Head and refused to
give way to motorists, the JTF comprising Army, Navy, Police and Civil Defence
troops, yesterday afternoon, opened fire at protesting members of
Indigenous People of Biafra, IPOB, and Movement for the Actualisation of
the Sovereign State of Biafra, MASSOB, killing nine people and injuring 18.
Five people were killed at Niger Bridge Head while three were killed at
Obodoukwu Road. A suya (barbecue meat) seller said to have been hit by a
stray bullet died instantly. The protesters were having a peaceful procession
across South East states and had vowed to continue their blockage of the bridge
for three days until detained Director of Radio Biafra, Mr. Nnamdi Kanu is
released.
Miscreants, on hearing that some
people had been shot dead by the JTF, started another protest, marched to the
Central mosque near Onitsha Main Market and set it ablaze. A Hilux pick-up van
with Federal Government number plate was also burnt when the JTF held motorists
and commuters hostage at Upper Iweka with sporadic shootings that had never
been witnessed before in Onitsha.
Despite losing two men, we
didn’t attack protesters –
Police
The Anambra Police Command said,
yesterday, that despite losing two of its men during the pro-Biafra protests in
Onitsha, the command never retaliated.
The command’s Public Relations
Officer, PPRO, Mr. Ali Okechukwu, in an interview, faulted the allegation that
Police fired at the protesters, adding that one of the policemen, a sergeant,
was killed at Obodo Ukwu, while the other was killed at Eze Iweka road.
He said that following the problem
in Onitsha, police kept vigil to ensure that peace was maintained and totally
denied police involvement in the bloody riot that led to the death of about
nine people.
“We did not fire a shot at anybody
and even when our men were felled, we still did not retaliate,” he said.
It was gathered that what led to
yesterday’s violence was an attempt by the JTF to reopen the blocked roads at
the Bridge Head and at Upper Iweka road in the wee hours of Wednesday.
When the security operatives tried
to open the roads, it was learned, they met resistance from the
protesters, who grounded Onitsha on Tuesday and ensured that no vehicle entered
or left the commercial city.
How protests turned bloody
The protesting IPOB members had
blocked the Niger Bridge early Tuesday morning, thereby grounding vehicular
movements in and out of Onitsha. From Asaba, Delta State, many boarded
speed boats provided by the Marine Police to get in and out of Onitsha.
The protest was, however, aggravated
by shooting to death of five IPOB members who were observing their peaceful
procession at the Niger Bridge Head against the continued detention of their
leader, Mr. Nnamdi Kanu at about 1.30 am
Pro-Biafra protesters mount road
blocks and bonfires at Onitsha Head Bridge in Anambra State, yesterday. Photos:
Vincent Ujumadu.
All the markets in Onitsha were shut
around 12.30 pm, as thousands of traders in the markets and environs were seen
scampering for safety as sporadic gunshots continued in many parts of the city.
The JTF, who could not disperse the
protesters on Tuesday invaded the Niger Bridge at about 1.30 am, yesterday, and
opened fire on the IPOB members who refused to leave the Niger Bridge, the
gateway to the South East, killing six people including the suya seller
said to have been hit by a stray bullet.
The killing of the protesters
sparked off another protest by IPOB members who were joined by MASSOB members.
They made bonfires along Onitsha-Owerri Road and Onitsha-Enugu Express way,
forcing motorists coming in and out of Onitsha from Enugu, Asaba and Owerri to
be trapped.
A Vanguard reporter
who went to Oba for an assignment was trapped at Oba junction, where he had to
pay N3,000 from Oba Junction to Tarzan Junction, Onitsha, as over 2,000
vehicles coming into Onitsha were seen parked at the Oba Junction and refused
entrance into Onitsha.
Commercial motorcyclists banned on
the express roads by the state government made brisk business and had a field
day as it was the only means of coming into and out of Onitsha.
Military should not push us
into violence — IPOB
Speaking with newsmen, National
coordinator of IPOB, Mr. Chidiebere Onwudiwe, alleged that five of their
members were killed while 18 people sustained injuries, adding that he learned
that more people were killed in the sporadic shooting by the JTF at Upper
Iweka.
“The Joint Military Task Force could
not disperse the protesters on Tuesday, and they went to regroup and invaded
our members who were observing our three-day peaceful protest at the Niger
Bridge at about 1.30 am Wednesday morning. We warned that they should not push
us to be violent because we have people that can match them violence for violence,”
he said.
Vanguard gathered that Chief Rommy Ezeonwuka, the Ogirisi Igbo, a
respected Igbo leader, who has the loyalty of both MASSOB and IPOB youths was
attacked at about 1.35 am when he went to talk to the protesting youths at the
Niger Bridge Head, after some Igbo leaders had pleaded with him to speak with
the protesters.
Speaking in an interview at his
house in Oba, Chief Ezeonwuka said: “The dangerous game being played by the
Federal Government of Nigeria in the continued incarceration of Nnamdi Kanu
will end up being an expensive joke and dangerous mistake.
“I am calling on Igbo elite to speak
with one voice for immediate release of Nnamdi Kanu before the youths turn
their peaceful protest to violent protest. The protest started with free flow
of traffic, but today it has advanced to road block,” he said.
The Campaign for Democracy, CD,
South East branch, also condemned the killing of the protesters. Chairman of
CD, South East branch, Dede Uzor A Uzor, said: “IPOB has been peaceful in their
protest and there should not be any reason to open fire on them by security
agencies. We are also calling for the unconditional release of Nnamdi Kanu and
other IPOB and MASSOB members being incarcerated in various prisons and
detention centres in the country, as they have not broken any law for
protesting peacefully.”
IG reads riot act, begins
prosecution of protesters
However, the Inspector-General of
Police, IGP Solomon Arase, has disclosed that no fewer than 137 protesters have
been arrested and currently undergoing prosecution. The police boss spoke
yesterday, when he visited the Ministry of Interior.
According to him, the suspects are
all members of MASSOB and IPOB.
Arase, who also described Nigerians
as lawless, said in as much as government respects the right of citizens to
free expression, MASSOB and IPOB activists must stop threatening public peace
or face the full wrath of the law.
His words: “What I can assure you is
that we will not allow any group to disturb the peace of this country. We will
clamp down on them, we will deal with them, we will prosecute them. Already, we
have about 137 of them who are undergoing prosecution across the length and
breadth of the South East and we will continue to do that.
Onitsha-protest
“The latest manifestation of this
threat is the attempt to block the Onitsha end of Niger Bridge on December 1,
2015, an action that caused major hardship to innocent and law abiding
motorists and citizens. The act also occasioned serious dislocation of business
activities.”
Arase issued a stern warning to
MASSOB and IPOB activists to stop threatening public peace or face the full
weight of the law.
To maintain law and order, the IG in
a statement by Acting ACP Olabisi Kolawole, directed Assistant
Inspectors–General of Police Zone 5, (Benin); Zone 6, (Calabar) and Zone 9
(Umuahia) and all Commissioners of Police in the affected states in the South
East and neigbouring states “to henceforth maximally exercise their statutory
mandate in relation to prevention and disruption of any gathering that
threatens public order and national cohesion. Any person or group of persons so
arrested in furtherance to the enforcement of this order will be made to face
the full wrath of the law”.
The IGP advised parents and
guardians to call their children and wards to order as the patience of the
Force was being stretched to the limit, adding that “no individual or
group interest can override the interest of the nation and that democratic
values provide for exploration of rule of law to advance any concern, not the
resort to endless and misguided acts of brigandage, unless there is an ulterior
motive as the extant instance tends to dictate.”
Monarchs to the rescue
Disturbed by the growing protests,
representatives of Northern States Council of Traditional Rulers and their
South East counterparts met in Owerri, yesterday, to deliberate on the issue.
The visiting royal fathers from the
North were led by the Etsu Nupe, His Royal Highness, Alhaji Yahaya Abubakar.
Other traditional rulers that made
the trip included the Coordinating Committee Chairman of Northern States
Council of Traditional Rulers and the Emir of Gumi, Justice Lawal Aliyu Gumi;
the Emir of Lafia, Alhaji Mustapha Agwai, who is the Chairman of Nasarawa State
Council of Traditional Rulers; Emir of Fika, Alhaji Abali Mohammadu, Chairman
of Yobe State Council of Traditional Rulers, and Gbong Gwom Jos, Da Jacob Buba
Gyang, Chairman of Plateau State Council of Traditional Rulers.
The South-East Traditional Rulers
were led to the meeting by the Chairman of the Council, Eze Ebere Dick, who is
also the Chairman of the Abia State Council of Traditional Rulers; Obi of
Onitsha, Igwe Nnaemeka Alfred Achebe, Chairman of Anambra State Council of
Traditional Rulers; Eze Agunwa Ohiri, Chairman Imo State Council of Traditional
Rulers and Eze Dr. Agom Eze, Chairman, Ebonyi State Council of Traditional
Rulers.
Speaking when the group paid a
courtesy call on Governor Rochas Okorocha at the Government House, Owerri, the
Etsu Nupe and leader of the delegation, Alhaji Yahaya Abubakar, explained that
they were in the state to meet with the South East Traditional Council, at the
instance of His Eminence, Sultan of Sokoto, Alhaji Sa’ad Abubakar, who is
Chairman of the Northern Council of Traditional Rulers.
“We are principally in Imo to
discuss the issue of the current and escalating agitation by Pro-Biafra groups
in the South-East geo-political zone and to find the reasons for this renewed
agitations and how the situation can be arrested”, Alhaji Abubakar said.
He also disclosed that they are in
Imo to find out the truth about the rumour that there was crises in the
leadership of the South East Council of Traditional Rulers.
While saying that they would go back
home to relate their findings to their colleagues, the royal fathers also
remarked that protection of the nation’s unity was paramount.
Speaking also, Chairman of the South
East Traditional Council, Eze Ebere Dick, promised that they would work
together with the South East governors to amicably resolve the MASSOB and IPOB
issues.
Responding, Governor Okorocha
commended the royal fathers for the meeting, which he described as timely and
advised them too to “make such meetings regular in the interest of the nation.
There is need for traditional rulers across the nation to be meeting regularly,
to help in curbing religious and ethnic crises, mostly caused or sponsored by
politicians for political gains. It is also important that our traditional
rulers should resist the temptation of entering into the murky waters of
Nigerian politics.”
On the pro-Biafra protests and
agitations, Governor Okorocha informed that the South-East governors and
stakeholders in the region had set up a committee to look into the issue and
proffer quick solution.
The governor also appealed to the
Northern traditional rulers to, as a matter of urgency, address the issue
of the activities of Fulani herdsmen within the South-East because their
activities constitute great danger to lives and properties of the people of the
area.
Obiano sues for peace
Governor Willie Obiano of Anambra
State, last night, in a broadcast appealed to the protesters to maintain peace
and resist attempt by hoodlums to take advantage of the situation to
destabilize the state.
The governor’s address read: “My
beloved people of Anambra State, I wish to address you on the on-going protest
staged in Onitsha by the members of the Indigenous People of Biafra and MASSOB.
“The government of Anambra State has
been monitoring developments and is greatly concerned about the security of
lives and property of residents and visitors to the state. As your Governor and
Chief Security Officer of the state, I am compelled to act to avert any likely
breakdown of law and order. In all situations, the preservation of human life
comes first and I am determined to enforce that.
“Since the inception of my
administration, we have made the security of lives and property our priority
and we are not going to compromise on that. I, therefore, sincerely appeal to
members of the IPOB, MASSOB and other aggrieved groups and individuals to
maintain the peace and resist any attempt by hoodlums to take advantage of the
situation and destabilize any part of Anambra State.
“I am in constant touch with all the
security agencies in the state to ensure that what has otherwise been a
peaceful protest is not hijacked by trouble makers. All mischief makers are
hereby warned to keep off as we will not tolerate any breach of peace under any
guise or pretext. You are seriously warned! I therefore wish to assure Ndi
Anambra and all visitors to the state to go about their normal businesses
peacefully as the security agencies are on top of the situation to preserve law
and order.”
We didn’t set Onitsha Central Mosque
ablaze – IPOB, MASSOB
Meanwhile, the agitating groups have
disassociated themselves from acts of arson and violence that culminated in the
razing down of Onitsha Central Mosque and burning of some vehicles.
MASSOB Acting Leader, Uchenna Madu,
in a statement said: “The setting of Ontisha Central Mosque and vehicles ablaze
and making of bonfires, which depict violence are not done by the members of
IPOB or MASSOB under my leadership.
“This unwarranted acts of violence
are perfected by hoodlums sponsored by agents of the Federal Government to
create impression that non-violence and peaceful pro-Biafra groups have turned
violent in our agitation for Biafra. Our oppressors are no longer comfortable.
There is no evidence of terrorism in our protest. How can we resort to violence
now that we’re told that the presidency is about negotiating with leaders of
pro-Biafra group?
“With today’s killing of our members
and injuring many with bullet shots,we are no longer comfortable with the
presidency’s move for dialogue. Federal Government’s move for dialogue is
hypocritical and deceitful. Any Igbo group, organization and persons
negotiating, meeting or dialoguing with the presidency on our behalf without
our consent or mandate should stop now.
“MASSOB led by Uchenna Madu and IPOB
led by Nnamdi Kanu have never mandated any person to negotiate for us. Even in
this persecution, arrest, killings, clampdown, suppression against us by Nigeria
Government, we shall continue and intensify our non-violence agitation for
Biafra. For Nigeria to release their Armed Forces against non-violent,
defenceless Biafra agitators shows their wickedness and the devilish mind of
President Muhammad Buhari against our people.”
Don’t use force
Following the recent development,
Igbo living in Niger State have urged the Federal Government not to use force
on the agitators for Biafra but rather should dialogue with them in order not
to further compound the insecurity that has already enveloped many parts of the
country.
While suggeting dialogue as a means
of settling the crisis which is daily building up across the country, the Niger
State Chapter of Ohanaeze Ndigbo said it is not in any way in support of any
move that could lead to war in the country.




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