By Onyorah
Chiduluemije
It is no
longer news that ever since President Muhammadu Buhari assumed the mantle of
leadership of Nigeria
on May 29, 2015, one of his key focuses so far has been the incessant,
premeditated and wanton killing of unarmed members of the Indigenous People of
Biafra (IPOB). More often, if the killing was not based on the falsehood that
the IPOB members were the first to attack members of the Nigerian armed forces
and as such had to be killed in return, it would be predicated on the spurious
grounds that the hapless and unsuspecting victims of Buhari’s totalitarian and
fascist government were obstructing the free flow of traffic and thus needed to
be dealt with(which for the military entailed killing them) in order to clear
the way for motorists and other road users.
Meanwhile, in all of
these killings of peaceful protesters, the Buhari-led government is yet to come
out with a single video record showing members of the Nigerian armed forces
being attacked by the pro-Biafra agitators. But thus far, the reverse has
always been the case in the aftermath of every peaceful protest duly organised
by pro-Biafra agitators in Nigeria ,
all in pursuit of their legitimate demand for a sovereign state of Biafra . And besides the fact that thousands of members of
this separatist group have been mowed down in their prime for merely thronging
the streets of Nigeria in demand for self-determination as adequately
guaranteed by international laws and practices, the Amnesty International (AI)
recently had to lend its strong voice in total condemnation of the Nigerian
government’s persistent and cruel clampdown and massacre of these unarmed and
peaceful protesters.
According to this
highly esteemed international body, no less than 150 unarmed civilians
belonging to the separatist group were brutally murdered in cold blood using
torture, live bullets and other lethal weapons. And further to its graphic
report titled, “Bullets Were Raining
Everywhere” the AI findings clearly showed that the assertion that the
peaceful protesters were the first to attack members of the Nigerian armed
forces was neither here nor there. Strangely, as if the killing was not
provoking enough, the same soldiers and other security killer forces had to
even go the extra mile of invading churches at Onitsha
and its environs in Anambra State ,
Nigeria .
As it stands now, the
Christian people of Eastern Nigeria – comprising the Igbo and folks of the
Niger Delta region – are obviously not at war with the Nigerian state, unlike
the case in the Northern part of Nigeria where the terrorist Boko
Haram sect is increasingly having a field day and upper hand in the raging war
in the region. Yet, the states within the South Eastern enclave are at the
moment more militarised than the region which breeds and harbours terrorists in
Nigeria .