Harold Williams, the British PM that supported the Nigerian forces killing Biafrans. Biafra and Britain: The only acceptable APOLOGY |
A lot of calls are going on today for Britain and other countries such as Russia, Egypt and even the United States of America to finally own up to the roles they played in the Biafra Genocide of 1966 to 1970. People of conscience of this world are calling for these countries to formally tender official and unreserved apology for their criminal acts of commission or criminal negligence in that sordid and shameful part of our (the world's) collective past.
It was a time in the history of the world when the big peoples of the world came together in criminal connivance and senselessly murdered 3.1 million Igbo/Biafrans. It was a time when all the responsible powers of the world chose to do everything wrong either by being baselessly too angry against a weak part of the human race or inexcusably too unperturbed about the sufferings of others and would not inconvenience themselves to act in an appropriate response. It was a period in the world's collective time when all people of the world with conscience would wish never existed in the annals of our world history. The world was shamed by its own acts and inactions.
The period between 1966 and 1970 stands out as one
of the darkest time in our world's history. In that space of time the world got
divided into five clear groups. In the first group was the Victim: Biafra. Then
those that actively supported and directly murdered the Victim: Nigeria,
Britain, Russia, Egypt, Cameroun and others. Then there were those that did not
care about the fate of the Victim, they were indifferent: USA, United Nations,
African Union and others. And there were those who actively supported and
helped the Victim; Tanzania, Zambia, Haiti, Gabon, Ivory Coast, World Council
of Churches, Caritas, some individuals and others. And finally there were those
who were either too self-conscious to openly and completely identify with the
Victim, they were just undecided or only halfheartedly concerned about what
happened to the Victim: France, Israel, Ghana and others. Everyone in the world
then fell into one of these groups and it becomes necessary today as we review
that time of history that each group should honestly and soberly acknowledge
the role they played and say sorry and be remorseful or just say; thank God we
did the right thing.
Looking back at the images of that time in
history, the Victim; Biafra's children and their mothers became the worst
spectacle example of the human race. The image created became an eternal
scathing accusation and haunting specter on humanity's conscience. Humanity at
that point in time came to judgment and fell short completely, it failed
itself. Between 1966 and 1970, our collective humanity could not live up to
that thing that makes us humans. From 1966 to 1970 almost the entire humanity
displayed a level of callousness and insensitivity that reduced it to the level
of the beast. The world was given a chance to choose at a critical moment and
it made one of its worst choices ever. And between 1966 and 1970 much of the
human race chose to kill off a significant portion of itself. From 1966 to 1970
humanity committed in Biafra one of the worst human disasters of all time and
for no good reason continues to maintain the most unprecedented level of
remorseless stance about it. In these countries which played central roles in
perpetrating this crime the silence or forgetfulness has reached a deafening
pitch that one cannot help asking what hope has the world got if it could
forget or sweep such open and heinous atrocity under its carpet indefinitely.
Because of the special position that Great Britain
occupies in Nigeria's history, Britain was Nigeria's colonial rulers; when
Biafra Nigeria War happened between 1966 and 1970, the role that was expected
of Britain to play was that of the impartial arbiter. They should not have
taken sides. But they actually took sides. They took the side of Nigeria
against Biafra even when they saw clearly the unjustness and the arrogant
aggression of the Nigerian state. Britain knew clearly what they were getting
into. No one on the side of Britain can plead partial knowledge of the details
of the various aspects of the problem that was taking place. Neither would
Britain claim imperfect comprehension of the implications nor the various
ramifications of the far reaches of the effects of the decisions they took at
the time. So the British Government of Harold Wilson and by extension that of
today's Cameron accepted the burden of guilt of their decision before even
taking it. To them it was a matter of; we will go ahead and do what we got to do
and we can deal with the mess later on.
Although Britain had just officially left Nigeria
on independence in 1960 but as at the time Biafra's situation was developing,
only five, six years into independence, they were still very well entrenched in
almost all the daily running of the new country. So Britain understood
completely what was going on and was expected to have acted differently.
Unfortunately they did not. They made a mistake, a huge mistake; they helped,
as a very major partner, to kill 3.1 million Igbo/Biafrans. Some people are
asking; could it be that Britain did not expect such a huge mess of so many
deaths and destruction? That is very doubtful because, for the first time
humanity was confronted with television images of starving and skeletal
kwashiorkor children and their mothers. But as the horrifying images assaulted
the sensibilities of the decent part of humanity, the British government
insisted that the horrendous genocide must go on even at the price of total
annihilation of a race of human beings. For Britain then, extermination of
Igbo/Biafrans was okay.
Even when a bewildered world unanimously named
kwashiorkor sickness that was ravaging Biafra's children and their mothers
after the Prime Minister Harold Wilson as Harold Wilson Disease, the Biafra
Pogrom was expedient for Great Britain and must go on. Britain understood the
extreme humanitarian crisis they were about to create before getting into it.
Every decision and action of the British was deliberate and well calculated
ahead of time. With the fore knowledge of all the implications, Great Britain
went ahead and provided the logistics, men and equipment with which to murder
unarmed children, women and men of Biafra – 3.1 million of them. Think about it.
We have now established the fact that the British
Government, Russia, Egypt and others were aware of what would be the
repercussion of their actions ahead of the time of their actual involvement in
the Genocide in Biafra but they went ahead and did it anyway. Let us try to
look at it from the point of view of history. Can the hinder sight find
somewhere in the mix, which we have overlooked, that exonerates and justifies
these nations' actions in Biafra? Let the reader be the judge here. Be honest
about it. In your mind try to place yourself in the position of the Victim, if
in honesty the oppressors are justified then let it be. But if crime has been
committed then let the guilty pay.
Due to very many complexities involved in human
relationship, sometimes it is difficult to carry on actual contact with one
another without offences. So it can almost be argued that as long as humans
remain social animals they are bound to offend each other at one time or the
other. This of course is the main reason why most human social systems devise ways
to redress or deal with offences that must occur as we interact with each
other. In dealing with such things the redresses are devised to reflect the
gravity of the offence. This is proper because we can only expect that heinous
crime of premeditated murder should not attract the same punishment as stealing
a colleague's lunch out of the common fridge at work.
For the sake of the survival of our human race we
cannot afford to take the issue of crime and punishment lightly. Even
accidental crimes must not be overlooked and more so deliberate ones. When
inadvertent crimes are properly redressed in societies people tend to be less
negligent and more conscious of the impact of their actions on their neighbors.
In the overall, crime punishment works well for the good health of the human
society. The next question we would want to ask is who should be punished and
should there be different parameter with which to measure crime punishment in
accordance with who is involved? For example, should the rich and powerful
members of the human society never get punished for crimes or if they ever get
punished at all, should they receive less punishment for the same crime as the
poor and less privileged members?
Why this question is necessary here is because
today Britain, Russia (both are active and direct criminals in the matter under
discussion) and United States (a negligent criminal in the matter) are rich,
powerful and are all members of the Security Council of the United Nations. It
will almost be said that they will be judges in their own case. But we know
that this may not be so after all. In today's world everyone is anxious to
promote equity, justice and probity and that includes these three nations. It
becomes inconceivable therefore that they will compromise this opportunity to
prove to the rest of the world that they are an active part of a changed and
now forward-looking world. So we are very confident that these countries will
now do the right thing about the Biafra Genocide. The three nations are world leaders
and it is expected of them to lead by example; the example of humility and the
championing of fairness for all, even for the weak and poor ones like Biafra.
After forty something years the people and nation
of Biafra deserve a sincere and unreserved apology from the triune countries,
Egypt and others and we know they, all of them, shall do the right thing. But
since we know that the apology is coming, we are now bound to ask what kind of
apology should we expect or deserve from these countries? Is it merely a public
statement expressing regrets at what they did or did not do during the time to
Biafra and her people? Maybe if some conditions were different that would have
been adequate. But in this circumstance and for several reasons, such an apology
is grossly inadequate. So in addition to such public pronouncement, Biafra and
her people are saying that the acceptable and near adequate kind of apology
that is expected from these erring nations is the reinstatement of the Biafran
nation as an independent and sovereign state free from the Nigerian state. That
is what the 3.1 million people died for and that is the only apology that
Biafra's dead and the living ask from a repentant world.
- Osita Ebiem
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