When Gen. Ibrahim Babangida launched his book, he said he did not want to go to the grave without speaking the truth he knew.
Thursday, May 28, 2026
What happens when history finally confronts conscience
Wednesday, May 27, 2026
UNDERSTANDING THE CHAIN OF EVENTS THAT LED TO THE NIGERIAN CIVIL WAR
UNDERSTANDING THE CHAIN OF EVENTS THAT LED TO THE NIGERIAN CIVIL WAR
The Nigerian Civil War did not emerge suddenly or without historical context. It developed through a rapid chain of interconnected political, military, and humanitarian events between January 1966 and May 1967. Understanding that sequence is essential to understanding both the declaration of Biafra and the collapse of the Nigerian federation at the time.1. January 1966 — The First Coup
In January 1966, a coup was carried out by a group of young military officers, many of whom were of Igbo ancestry. The coup failed in its original objective of fully taking over the government, although it resulted in the killing of several senior political leaders and military officers, mostly from Northern and Western Nigeria.It is important, however, to state the facts carefully.
The coup was not exclusively Igbo in composition. At least one of the five majors involved was not Igbo, and one of the senior officers killed (Colonel Arthur Unegbe) was himself of Igbo ancestry. Major Kaduna Nzeogwu, often described as Igbo, was culturally and socially more connected to Northern Nigeria despite his ancestry.Following the collapse of the coup, General Johnson Aguiyi-Ironsi, then the most senior military officer and himself an Igbo, assumed control of the country under the justification of restoring order and preventing national collapse. He appointed military governors for the regions, including Colonel Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu as Military Governor of the Eastern Region.
2. July 1966 — The Counter-coup
In July 1966, a counter-coup occurred. It was widely seen as retaliation for the January coup and was fueled by anger over the disproportionate killing of Northern political and military leaders during the earlier uprising.The counter-coup led to the assassination of General Ironsi and the mass killing of many Igbo officers within the Nigerian military. For many Igbos, it created the perception that merely being Igbo had become a basis for suspicion, persecution, and death.
The killings inside the military deepened fear and ethnic distrust across the country.
3. September–October 1966 — The Pogroms
What followed was even more devastating.Between September and October 1966, thousands of Igbos living in Northern Nigeria were killed in widespread ethnic massacres and mob attacks. The violence triggered one of the largest internal displacements in Nigerian history, as frightened Easterners fled back to the Eastern Region.
Ojukwu now faced a massive humanitarian and refugee crisis.
At the same time, serious disagreements emerged between Ojukwu and the new Head of State, General Yakubu Gowon, over the structure and leadership of the country following Ironsi’s death.
4. January 1967 — The Aburi Accord
To prevent total national collapse, both sides agreed to peace talks in Aburi, Ghana, in January 1967.The purpose of the meeting was to negotiate a political settlement, restore trust, address regional fears, and guarantee the safety of Easterners. The result was the famous Aburi Accord: effectively a negotiated framework for preserving Nigeria through a loose and highly decentralized arrangement.
For many Easterners, Aburi represented the last realistic opportunity to avoid war.
5. March–May 1967 — Breakdown of the Accord
The crisis deepened when the terms of the Aburi Accord were not implemented as agreed by the parties.Instead, the Federal Military Government issued Decree No. 8, which the Eastern leadership believed substantially altered or weakened the agreement reached at Aburi. Shortly afterward, Gowon announced the creation of twelve states, further escalating tensions and undermining confidence between both sides.
By this stage, trust had almost completely collapsed.
6. May 30, 1967 — Declaration of Biafra:
On May 30, 1967, Ojukwu declared the independent Republic of Biafra, formally attempting to separate the Eastern Region from Nigeria.Looking at the sequence of events, it becomes difficult to isolate the declaration of Biafra from:
* the killings of July 1966,
* the pogroms of late 1966,
* the refugee crisis,
* and the breakdown of the Aburi Accord.
These events formed a connected chain of causation.
By January 1967, Ojukwu had already accepted Gowon as Head of State in Lagos while remaining Governor of the Eastern Region. This weakens the argument that the conflict was fundamentally about Ojukwu refusing to recognize Gowon’s authority.A stronger historical interpretation is that the collapse of the Aburi settlement became the decisive trigger for secession and war.
That said, the causes of the war are separate from the strategic conduct of the war itself.
Even those who believe the Eastern Region was pushed into secession may still conclude that Ojukwu made serious strategic and military errors in the planning and execution of the war. A conditional surrender in the early phase of the conflict may have produced a different historical outcome.But on the narrow question of what led directly to the outbreak of war, the failure of the Aburi Accord remains central to understanding the chain of events that followed.
Disclaimer:
ECULAW Group is Nigeria's foremost platform for legal commentary, constitutional analysis, and political history. Our publications are grounded in law, driven by evidence, and guided by one unwavering conviction: that accountability begins with an accurate record. The views expressed represent the independent editorial position of ECULAW Group and do not constitute legal advice.Those who died in the stampede on the plain of Arafat in Saudi Arabia in 2026
Those who died in the stampede on the plain of Arafat in Saudi Arabia in 2026.
Our African Muslims will like to hide it from people to see.
One would work so hard getting #10m, only to visit a shrine in the middle east to throw stones at Satan, but eventually lead to early grave.
Those mothers in the market only need #100,000 for business so as to escape hunger, those who are in the hospital, The sick people only need just #500,000 for medical attention, those people sleeping in the streets only need less than #200,000 to get a house.
Are indigenous people of Saudi Arabia dying during this Arafat? Answer is no. Give yourself brain, there is no need to go deep.
In all, poverty keeps ravaging the African continent despite the natural wealth.
Imagine the brainwashing for crying out loud. For how long?
30,000 Armed Fulani Militants Fueling Christian Genocide in Nigeria
30,000 Armed Fulani Militants Fueling Christian Genocide in Nigeria – Shocking US Report Reveals New Massacre Data.
The United States Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) has dropped a bombshell security assessment, exposing that approximately 30,000 heavily armed Fulani militants are operating across Nigeria and have become the single deadliest threat to the nation's stability. The report identifies the militant herders as the leading perpetrators of mass killings, abductions, and systematic displacement of Christian farming communities in the Middle Belt and, increasingly, the southern states. Data reveals that militant Fulani attacks accounted for roughly 60% of all documented violent incidents between December 2025 and April 2026, far surpassing the combined impact of Boko Haram and ISWAP. In the 127-day period covered, researchers documented 437 incidents leading to 1,720 deaths and 1,484 abductions—an average of four people killed every single day.
Tuesday, May 26, 2026
GOWON FIRED THE FIRST SHOT AT GAKEM IN EASTERN REGION
GOWON FIRED THE FIRST SHOT AT GAKEM IN EASTERN REGION TO BEGIN THE POLICE ACTION AND FOLLOWED BY THE CIVIL WAR
I am happy General Gowon is alive when I am making my assertions
I am happy General Gowon is alive when I am making my assertions
I challenge Gowon to show evidence of Federal Government repair, rehabilitation or replacement of any of the Hospitals , Markets , Schools , Buildings or Roads destroyed by the intentional bombing by the Nigeria Air Force and their Arab mercenaries after the Nigerian /Biafran war .
I challenge him to show any Federal Government project that his government established in the Eastern part of Nigeria after the war .
I challenge Gowon to show the palliative or financial support that his government gave to the the Easterners after the war .
I need prove of his government' s effort for the Eastern children to catch up with the educational system after missing out for over three years .
I challenge him to show how many Easterner who lost their jobs because of the war were reabsorbed after the war .
Take It from me , the war ended with Nigeria being the Victor and the Easterners the Vanquished . The (3 Rs )Reconciliation, Reconstruction and Rehabilitation policy of Gowon's government was by mouth not deed .
Hitler came to a cabinet meeting carrying a chicken
One day, Hitler came to a cabinet meeting carrying a chicken. He held the chicken’s head tightly under his arm. As he walked, he began plucking its feathers one by one. The chicken screamed in agony, struggling desperately to escape from Hitler’s grip. But Hitler did not let go, nor did he pay any attention to its cries - he just kept plucking.
A cabinet member said to him: “Don’t torture the poor creature like that. Let it go!”
But Hitler refused to listen to him.
Finally, after plucking all its feathers, he threw the chicken to the ground. Then he took some grains out of his pocket and began feeding the chicken. In that state, the chicken desperate for food, started looking towards Hitler’s hand again.
Hitler called it closer, offering the grains. After a while, the chicken came and sat near him, eating those few grains. The same chicken that had been struggling to escape from Hitler all this time now sat beside him again - for just a handful of grains.
Another cabinet member asked in astonishment: “What is the meaning of this?”
Hitler replied: “Voters are just like this. For four and a half years, we pluck their feathers. And then, in the last six months, we throw them a few grains. For those few grains, the voters forget all the injustices we committed over four and a half years - and they vote for us again.”
What a shame
®️'LEXIS
ME: how i wish every Nigerian can read and digest the above write up as we approach 2027
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