Vietnam, Greece and the plight of
American Negroes are the three causes abroad that most inflame the British
left. In Scandinavia, West Germany and probably most of Western Europe, the
cause that most inflames the left is Biafra. Towards Biafra the British left is
largely indifferent or hostile. The Labour government and most Labour MPS
support the shipment of arms to Nigeria.
Few white faces are seen in pro-Biafran demos. The people who gave their blood for the Vietcong have given little to help the starving Biafrans, who get most of their food and medicine from the continent. Both Tribune and the New Statesman treat Biafra with ignorance and disdain. Most British communists take the Biafran side for the same good reason they took the Czechoslovakian side, but the party is too small and split to be very effective. The Marcusist or New Left has ignored West Africa in favour of more urgent campaigns such as the demolition of capitalism or the blockade on food into the London School of Economics. At a personal level I find that people refuse to discuss Biafra. This refusal is not based on ignorance or the remoteness of the events, for the same people who claim to be bored by Biafra, where more than a million have died, wax passionate over Anguilla, where one policeman was banged on the head. Biafra, one might have thought, was a natural leftwing cause. It is a small nation fighting for independence against an empire. It holds old-fashioned left-wing beliefs like freedom and justice. Its citizens were the victims of an appal- ling massacre. Lord Byron espoused the Greeks for just these reasons. Yet the left, either deliberately or by default, has taken the side of the British and Russian governments, the international oil consortium, the British cocoa and soap companies. The reason for this, as far as I can make out, is misconception about Nigeria.
Few white faces are seen in pro-Biafran demos. The people who gave their blood for the Vietcong have given little to help the starving Biafrans, who get most of their food and medicine from the continent. Both Tribune and the New Statesman treat Biafra with ignorance and disdain. Most British communists take the Biafran side for the same good reason they took the Czechoslovakian side, but the party is too small and split to be very effective. The Marcusist or New Left has ignored West Africa in favour of more urgent campaigns such as the demolition of capitalism or the blockade on food into the London School of Economics. At a personal level I find that people refuse to discuss Biafra. This refusal is not based on ignorance or the remoteness of the events, for the same people who claim to be bored by Biafra, where more than a million have died, wax passionate over Anguilla, where one policeman was banged on the head. Biafra, one might have thought, was a natural leftwing cause. It is a small nation fighting for independence against an empire. It holds old-fashioned left-wing beliefs like freedom and justice. Its citizens were the victims of an appal- ling massacre. Lord Byron espoused the Greeks for just these reasons. Yet the left, either deliberately or by default, has taken the side of the British and Russian governments, the international oil consortium, the British cocoa and soap companies. The reason for this, as far as I can make out, is misconception about Nigeria.
The British Left, above all, the
left-wing Commonwealth correspondents, believed in 1960 that independent
Nigeria would prove a model democracy for all Africa. It did not. Thanks
largely to the gross and unworkable federation imposed by the former colonial
power, Nigeria soon started to fall apart. By 1964, it was notorious, even by
West African standards, for graft, factionalism, incompetence and sloth. In
1966 there came the coups and the massacre of the Ibos, who later founded their
own eastern state of Biafra. The British Left, that had invested so much hope
in Nigeria, was horrified and bewildered. Cockeyed left-wingers, who had
refused to believe that Africans could be grafters and rogues, saw that
Africans were now preparing for war. If the Biafrans had been black and the
Nigerians had been white, the rights and wrongs would have been much clearer.
But how could the left take sides in a war between Africans? The British left
resolved this problem with typically silly arguments. The Portuguese supported Biafra; therefore the Biafrans must be fascist. The Ibos were notoriously
good businessmen and they believed in a free enterprise system. They were
Catholics and had hired a public relations company, although nobody seemed to
object to the Nigerian public relations companies. It was 'all about oil.'
The British Left washed its hands of Biafra and waited for its destruction by
the Nigerians. That was two years ago but Biafra has not disappeared. Even the
British left must now realise that the oil companies and other big business
interests were on the side of Nigeria and that Biafra's fight was inspired, not
by oil, but by the will to survive. People who had hoped for and predicted a
quick Biafran defeat felt upset, and a little guilty, when they saw pictures of
starving babies and read accounts of air raids on civilians. They should have
felt guilty, for this was largely a British war. British arms, finance and
encouragement rallied the half-hearted Nigerians and, inversely, depressed the
Biafrans.
Battered Biafra continues to ask for her freedom from the murderous Nigerian government |
The indifference or callousness of the
left is sometimes relieved by sheer fatuousness. A distinguished, even
notorious left-wing editor finished an argument on Biafra with a remark he
must have thought devastating: 'I suppose you realise that people like
Aubermf Waugh are on your side.' This would be risible, except that this
editor's journal is thought to have some influence on a government which,
backed by big business interests, is promoting a cruel and pointless war.
What divides left from right in their
attitude towards Africa? The left, in principle, believes that Africans can and
should run their own countries. The right, in principle, believes that Africans
are not yet capable of self-government and need the control or even the rule
of whites. This distinction, in practice, is not al- ways clear. The Macleod
type of Conservative has a real regard for the African while some of the
right-wingers think that Africans should be left alone to ruin themselves. On
the other hand, a good many left-wingers are unconsciously but unpleasantly
patronising to Africans.
The Labour government in the last four
years has taken four major decisions in Africa that have strengthened the
Europeans and weakened genuine African power. It has sold arms to South Africa:
It has appeased the Smith regime. It has supplied its client government in
Kenya with massive loans and a horde of white British advisers, while refusing
to take the Asian British citizens, whom Kenya has expelled. It has financed a
war to preserve Britain's invest- ment in Nigeria and to safeguard the jobs and
influence of the whites.
The single most striking fact about
Biafra is that this is a country run by Africans rather than by Europeans.
Biafra is a genuinely independent state while Nigeria is a client state of
Britain and Russia. The Lagos politicians have managed with skill to play the
Russians against the British, and pocketed nice bribes from both, but Nigeria,
once the hope for the continent, is now a degraded neo-colonial state.
Biafra and the Left: How British Leftist parties and others abandoned Biafrans to be slaughtered |
Support for Biafra does not entail any
hatred of Nigeria. Probably this is one of the reasons it has not caught on
with the left. It is easy and satisfying to hate the colonels in Greece, the
fascists in Spain or the Americans in Vietnam. But the Nigerian colonels' are
not much different in character from the Biafran colonels. Nigeria is a
repressive state but it certainly is not fascist. Far from hating the Yorubas,
I like them -almost as much as the Ibos-
The villains of the Biafra war are in London rather than Lagos. And this brings
me back to the central point. We, in Britain, on the left, may care about
Vietnam Qf Greece or Spain or Czechoslovakia —but there is little-or nothing
that we can do to alter the situations there. Many demonstrators, I think, do
not really want to change the situations there. Some of the protests against
the American intervention in Vietnam have served, perhaps even deliberately, to
strengthen popular feeling for the Americans. They are rituals, irrelevant to
the stated cause, just as Gul, Fawkes's night is irrelevant to the Papist
Peril. Before the war, when Britain was still a world power, protests and demonstrations
here could influence the course of events in almost any country in the world.
Our influence, with our empire, has shrunk. English-speaking Africa is now
almost the only part of the world where Britain still has the power to change
eirefits. The present government, backed by the British left, has used this power
to promote war and to further white supremacy.
Richard West is a left-wing journalist who has
recently returned from Biafra.
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Published as Biafra and the left, on 15 May, 1969 by the Spectator
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