When
on Saturday, March 24, 2018, Gen T.Y. Danjuma sent out a shrill cry to
Nigerians using the exalted pedestal of the Taraba State University’s first
convocation ceremony as a medium to send out his message, one could see nothing
but desperation, frustration and hopelessness all over him as a result of the
incessant killings of Nigerians of diverse nationalities by the marauding
Fulani herdsmen terrorists.
Such emotions are
expected of a man whose kith and kin are directly in the line of fire.
*Gen Danjuma |
There is no doubt that
Danjuma’s call for Nigerians to rise and defend themselves in the face of the
immutable failure of security agencies to come to their rescue is germane, it
is however too late, too little and too feeble. This is in addition to the fact
that Danjuma has since lost his exalted place in the scheme of morality before
the ordinary Nigerian.
An unrepentant war-monger, Danjuma is not different to the criminal behavior of those he is attempting to castigate today. In fact, it is the tribal antics of narrow-minded people like the former minister of defence that brought us all to this unfortunate saga.
An unrepentant war-monger, Danjuma is not different to the criminal behavior of those he is attempting to castigate today. In fact, it is the tribal antics of narrow-minded people like the former minister of defence that brought us all to this unfortunate saga.
No one may like the
content of this piece, but I am not writing to be liked, have never written to
be liked and does not wish to write to be liked but to always be as truthful
and, if possible, brutally truthful and hurtful to those averse to truth! This
is all I owe my conscience and my God.
Just like the Fulani
herdsmen terrorists of today, Danjuma also led a gang of armed bandits in
uniform to Ibadan
to murder the then Head-of-State, Gen JTU Aguiyi Ironsi, execution style. He
then went further to actively participate in the near annihilation of the Igbo
during the civil war where three million Biafrans were randomly and
wantonly wasted, clearly against the rules of engagement.
The Asaba massacre is
one example of the mindless nature of people like Theophilus Danjuma.
On that morning of
October 7, 1967, the good people of Asaba had thronged out in their numbers to
show solidarity to the Nigerian troops who had earlier pushed the Biafran
soldiers further back from Ore to the Niger . The
solidarity by Asaba indgenes became necessary as a way of abating the continued
and unwarranted massacre of their people by the federal troops who accused them
of being “sympathizers of Biafra ”.
They thought that by
expressing such solidarity in an all-white attire signifying peace and
surrender would appease the federal troops. But that was their greatest
undoing!
It is recorded that
about 1,000 of them including some as young as 12 were murdered in cold blood
during the massacre. Federal troops separated the men from the women in the
solidarity march at the square and randomly opened fire on all of them:
innocent, defenceless, armless, harmless and helpless civilians.
The gory story of the
civil war has been told time and time again. Both sides have their faults, no
doubt, but the deployment of “extra-war” strategies to prosecute the war
against Biafra would remain the sour
point in the history of that war.
The most heart wrenching
of them all are the images of infants and children who were starved to death as
Danjuma and his cohorts deployed starvation as an instrumentality of war. In
that circumstance, innocent Igbo children who should have been spared the
consequences of the war having been too young to have contributed to the causes
were seen dying slowly and painfully on the streets, in the bushes and
everywhere. Some of them had their severely malnourished bodies feasted upon by
vultures even while still alive. Not even their mothers whose breasts had
shrunk back into their chests due to deprivation could provide milk to save the
infants from starvation.
Today, the reasons the
late Emeka Ojukwu declared secession has come back to haunt Danjuma who thought
he was doing humanity a great service by siding with the Fulani who, today,
have turned the sword against him and his people under the auspices of herdsmen
terrorists. What they could not see while standing on an Iroko tree, Ojukwu had
since seen even while sitting on ute uche ya (his mat of wisdom).
Today, the chicken has
come home to roost. While the southeast remains one of the most advanced and
peaceful regions in the country today, there is mayhem, fire and brimstone
visited upon Danjuma’s home by the same people he freely fell into infamy for
in the years of the war.
Let us even assume
without accepting that all those events happened as a result of war, it is more
sickening that Danjuma has since carried on like an unassailable veteran whose
evil deeds would automatically turn to good simply because he fought on the
side of federal troops.
It would be good at
this point to remind Danjuma that Igbo blood is thick. All those who
participated in the massacres and starvation of even children in the 1967 –
1970 imbroglio would pay for them, not because Ndigbo would wage another war
but because the God of justice hears the cry of the blood of the innocent and
would set our traducers one against another unless such participants humble
themselves, apologise and make genuine efforts at reconciliation, even if it is
on individual basis, with the Igbo nation and all those who constituted the
former Eastern Region.
The blood of those
malnourished, innocent and extremely weak children whose condition were the
result of a deliberate policy of starvation the Danjumas deployed during the
war, and who looked on helplessly while their bodies were picked by birds of
prey, rodents and reptiles, still speaks till tomorrow. No matter how far
Danjuma and his gang run, the unmitigated divine law of vengeance would catch
up with them.
In an interview
with The Guardian in February of 2008, Danjuma insolently referred to
Aguiyi Ironsi as a “useless”, “desk-clerk” Head-of-State. That was 40 years
after the war. As recently as April of 2015, during a private visit of former
president Goodluck Jonathan to his residence shortly after Jonathan lost the
election, Danjuma ridiculously said if Ojukwu had conceded defeat early during
the civil war, one year of bloodshed would have been avoided.
It is instructive to
note that at no time did any matter relating to Ojukwu or the Biafra
war came up during Jonathan’s visit to Danjuma. He was just showing how
obsessed he was and still is with the Igbo, spitting on our people at every
opportunity. Fifty years after the war, Danjuma would not let sleeping dogs
lie.
Instead of making
efforts at healing wounds, Danjuma has continued to open healed wounds with
misplaced pride. He does not need to look too far to know that Ndigbo have
since arisen from the ashes of that war to become one of the fastest developing
regions in Nigeria in spite of the deprivations suffered during and after the
war; deprivations that have continued till tomorrow.
So when one saw him on
TV the other day calling on Nigerians to defend themselves against armed
bandits who he said the military is colluding with and giving cover, one can
only laugh and remind him that what goes around comes around. It was exactly
how he colluded with men in uniform to commit the worst atrocities against
humanity. He should stop lamenting but start reflecting.
A more reasonable man,
instead of continuing to ridicule the Igbo at every given opportunity,
lamenting and making lame calls, would have visited the Obi of Onitsha, for
example, with the leader of Ohanaeze Ndigbo, Chief Nnia Nwodo, present, to say
“Your Majesty, we all made mistakes during the civil war. It should never have
happened but it did. All sides made mistakes but I am here in your palace in my
personal capacity to express my apologies for parts of my role during the war
which caused the Igbo great grief. I am here to appeal that we should all let
bygones be bygones, forgive one another, close ranks and live in peace. God has
given me the grace to live up to this moment and I want to make the best use of
it reconciling with all those who I might have offended in the cause of
carrying out my duties as a soldier of the federal republic. I acknowledge we
went too far in some cases. I want to meet my creator in peace whenever He
decides to call me, hence, my decision to do this”.
He has the opportunity
to do this especially now that the wife of late JTU Aguiyi Ironsi is still
alive and around.
But Danjuma would
rather live on like an eternal colossus lacking empathy except when the people
of Taraba State are under attack.
Ndigbo have had their
rights as major stakeholders in the scheme of things constantly denied and are
deliberately deprived; they are marginalized in all areas of the nation’s life
and have continued to suffer humiliation from a system deliberately skewed
against them as punishment from the civil war. However, they have endured all
and should be commended for their steadfastness and revival owing to God’s
grace and the people’s determination and hardwork.
Let me conclude this
piece by making it categorically clear that I am totally against the killings
by Fulani herdsmen terrorists particularly as it is happening in the north
right now. I have stated this position quite eloquently in both my writings and
speeches, and I still stand by them.
It is an act of gross
incompetence and wickedness for terrorists to be allowed to run roughshod over
our nation without any visible concrete action by government and security agents
to stem the tide. It is total failure on the part of government especially one
that came to power on the promise of ensuring the safety of Nigerians.
However, such clarion
calls as the one that came from Danjuma should not have come from someone like
him. His hands are too stained with blood of innocent children from the East to
be able to stir the people to self-defence as he attempted to do. Let him seek
peace and forgiveness from necessary quarters and he shall know peace!
*Jude Ndukwe is a
public affairs analyst (jrndukwe@yahoo.co.uk)
Hello Jude, I appreciate your comments about Danjuma.The history is quite interesting.I see him as a callous soldier except when it involves his own kins. But I give him credit because he cries out for his kins. We can not say that about Ohanaeze or Igbo Governors. They would rather collude with the soldiers and destroy the masses as was done to IPOB. They did not cry out about Python dance, or when the fulani herdsmen visited the igbo states. Why did you not castigate them?. It is sad for them, and us all.We need leaders that can cry out.
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