By Clement Udegbe
The new plan by
Governor Ambode of Lagos is to either force Igbos to go and start buying lands in
Badagry, Ikorodu, Epe and other areas in the hinter lands, build houses and
markets to develop those areas, or go back to the South East as Governor
Fashola told them to do after the deportation of Igbos in 2013. The risk in
this new plan is best captured by an Igbo proverb that says when a child starts
planning to eat plenty fresh vegetable, the vegetable also plans how to give
the child diarrhoea. No one, including the owners of Lagos ,
can say what Lagos will look like without Igbos, or what
Igbos will do if they have to be forced to relocate.
For example, Igbos
strangely prefer to go and buy lands, build and live in Asaba and its environs,
and commute to their markets stalls and shops in Onitsha, while neglecting all
that vast good land from Ogbaru, to Aguleri and their environs. Many Igbo buy
swamps from Port Harcourt , Elele, etc, in Rivers State and develop them, while neglecting the
solid land around Owerri and Aba .
They prefer to congregate again the same place where they lost abandoned
properties after the civil war. The Imo State Governor is not ashamed of the
craters that have rendered the Imo portion of the Portharcourt – Owerri Road impassable since he came to
power over five years ago. Similarly, his Anambra counterpart looks the other
way as his people suffer untold hardship traversing just between Awka and Enugu ,
a distance of less than 80
kilometres. The governors of Enugu and Ebonyi have also failed to do the
needful about the failed portions of their link roads.
Only God knows what
the people of Ebonyi go through daily to link up with other parts of Igbo land,
and Nigeria in general. Igbos participate and
invest in huge sea port development programmes in neighbouring states, while
neglecting the vast ocean front they have in Azumini area in Abia State. Indeed
it is baffling why Igbos have failed or refused to develop their own
zone with the same zeal they put in other zones. While no Igbo man has made it
to the list of the world richest, it is obvious that there are factors
militating against them as a people. And until they wake up and address these
factors, they will continue to run from pillar to post whenever their host
governments sneeze! This is why the new Ambode plan against Ndigbo in Lagos is a welcome development. Perhaps it
will make them to begin to think differently and to reconsider their ways in Nigeria .
It will help them to rediscover that Igbo spirit that existed in the days of
Zik of Africa, Dr. Michael Okpara, Dr. Akanu Ibiam and a host of other Igbo
patriots who worked assiduously with other patriots from the South West and the
South South to create the Nigeria that the Military and their political friends
have worked equally hard to undermine since 1966, barely six years after our
independence.
It will
perhaps make Igbos realise that no matter how long the crocodile remains in the
water, it can never become a mangrove tree. No matter how long they may live in
Yorubaland, Tivland or Hausaland, they will remain Igbo people. And until
something fundamentally revolutionary happens, Nigeria ,
as I see it, cannot do without ethnicity and religion. I pray that a new
movement that will not be polluted by these two cancers presently killing Nigeria will start someday. The Ambode plan is
not fair and kind, and Igbos must take it seriously to avoid the enslavement it
implies. The Holy Bible, which over 80 percent of Igbos believe in, declares
that affliction shall not arise a second time against the righteous. And given
the obvious religious agenda of the ruling APC, Igbos must find ways to
re-engineer their own society and reduce the Pull Him Down Syndrome among
themselves. The Lagos State government has not hidden its dislike
for Igbos.