The Civil War Projects

The Civil War Projects Curating the stories of all those who have firsthand experiences of the Nigerian-Biafran Civil War.

The Nigerian-Biafran Civil War happened from July 6, 1967 – January 15, 1970 and as much as there have been various books written about it, there are still a lot more stories to be told. This project aims to curate and archive the stories of all those that have firsthand experiences of what happened then for posterity.

30/05/2017

The Biafran Genocide by Obinna Udenwe

"The Nigerian-Biafran war ended in 1970. After the war, the Nigerian army while retreating passed through my community (Edda) -- and to their surprise, the war hadn't really affected the community: homes were still intact, men were alive and walking about etc., so they got angry. They informed our people that as the war was over and Nigeria had won, it was a requirement that every community they passed through gather at one arena to say farewell to them and raise their hands in surrender and solidarity.
They ordered that every grown man must be present at the designated arena.

Our people, a conquered people, devastated and weak had no option for soldiers had warned that if any grown man was found wandering about or at his home, he was dead. That day, all grown men from Edda community gathered at this place - a large expanse of land at Okaria-echi Edda village. The Nigerian soldiers asked these men numbering hundreds to raise their hands in the air and shout 'One Nigeria'. They all did. Then the Nigerian soldiers opened fire and killed the men - almost all of them. Only a few were able to escape. Nkwegu Nkwuda from my own village survived but a bullet slashed through his mouth and the scar is a testament to the ordeal they passed through on that day. He told me that blood from those close by covered him, he ceased his breath and they thought he was dead. The immediate elder brother to Nnanna Oketa 's father (my uncle) lost his life on that day. The soldiers walked about, killing those still breathing. Until recently, the site of this killings remained a haunted ground -- any family that moved to live on the land saw ghosts wandering about and would move out in a matter of weeks. The site is now the location of my parish - Sacred Heart Catholic Church, Okaria-echi Edda.

So when people argue that what happened between 1967 - 1970 wasn't a genocide, I shake my head. Mostly, folks that have this opinion never studied anything about the war and hasn't read a single book on the war. Between May 29, 1966 to October 1966, the anti-Igbo pogrom happened in Lagos and in northern Nigeria -- over 5,000 Igbos were massacred in their sleep, shops, airports, bus parks and on the streets. When the war was fought between 1967 - 1970 over 100, 000 Igbo soldiers were killed, and over 2 million civilians including women and children killed by bullets and from starvation. It's estimated that over 4.5 million people were displaced.

So today, we Igbos commemorate the declaration of Biafra and we remember all our brothers and sisters who lost their lives during the genocide and many others who have lost their lives from then till now. I am a Nigerian, I don't support secession but it's an insult to say that Igbos are stupid or foolish for asking for independence or for demanding that the memory of their brothers and sisters be honoured -- to argue this is to deny our humanity and sense of honour.

So today, all over the Igbo states, helicopters are flying about and police/soldiers patroll the streets on a show of force. Past experiences haven't thought our security agencies the need to ignore IPOB or MASSOB members on a day like this. When they gather to have their protest and you tear-gas or arrest or shoot at them, you make them feel relevant, they fight back and it escalates to riots and killings. If they are ignored and allowed to express themselves in a peaceful protest and movement, after a few hours they would retire to their homes, exhausted and tired.

So as we mark the remembrance of our fallen brothers and sisters, I hope the Igbos all over the world endeavour to learn about our history, teach their children and wards, and that the Nigerian government learn to be tolerant and mature. I hope that other Nigerians learn to respect the right of the Igbos to grieve and mourn without adding salt to our injury."

Today marks 50 years when the Republic of Biafra was formed. Read Vivian Ogbonna's anthology of stories curated from Bia...
30/05/2017

Today marks 50 years when the Republic of Biafra was formed.

Read Vivian Ogbonna's anthology of stories curated from Biafran survivors which writer Okey Ndibe calls "A database of memories, testimonies, experiences and anecdotes about the war."

"...a data base of memories, testimonies, experiences and anecdotes."

On this day 50 years ago, Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu, the South Eastern Region's military governor, announced the Repub...
30/05/2017

On this day 50 years ago, Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu, the South Eastern Region's military governor, announced the Republic of Biafra, citing the Easterners killed in the post-coup violence of 1966.

Revisiting the 1967 Asaba MassacreAs seen in Vanguard Newspaper: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/10/revisiting-1967-asab...
05/04/2017

Revisiting the 1967 Asaba Massacre

As seen in Vanguard Newspaper: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/10/revisiting-1967-asaba-massacre/

“I looked around and I saw machine guns all around us. Some of them were also carrying automatic rifles. One of them shouted an order, and they started shooting.”
With these chilling words, Ify Uraih describes how the massacre of hundreds of innocent civilians began in Asaba more than 40 years ago. Here we document how this terrible event unfolded, why it is important, and why the people of Asaba now demand recognition.
It started on October 4, 1967, when Nigerian federal troops entered Asaba, the Niger River town that was then part of Nigeria’s Midwest Region. The war over the secession of the predominantly-Igbo Eastern Region, renamed Biafra, had broken out in July; in August, the Biafran army had advanced across the Niger Bridge and progressed through the Midwest, headed for Lagos.
Federal troops counter-attacked, pushing the Biafrans back across the Niger at Asaba. The Biafrans blew up the Onitsha end of the bridge, leaving the Federal Second Division, commanded by Col. Murtala Muhammed, on the Asaba side. Asaba, although ethnically related to the Eastern Igbo, remained part of Nigeria, and supported the government’s ideal of a multi-ethnic “One Nigeria.”
As Wole Soyinka wrote in 1972, the Midwestern Igbo, caught between their desire to remain part of the federation and their identity with Eastern cousins, became “the most vulnerable Nigerians.”
Asaba had a long tradition of high education, producing a disproportionate number of professionals and high-ranking civil servants, who had contributed to a sense of allegiance to a united Nigeria, and trust that Federal troops would behave appropriately.
Head of State, Gen. Yakubu Gowon, had issued a military Code of Conduct, so when troops arrived, the townsfolk were unprepared for what followed.
At Ogbeosowe mass ground Soldiers occupied the town, and began killing civilians (mainly boys and young men) accused of Biafran collaboration. Dozens, perhaps hundreds, were killed in the next three days, some apparently randomly, while others appeared to be targeted.
Stanley Okafor, then a university student, described how he and several relatives were summoned by troops:
“we got to the police station and there was a huge crowd. And then they would come around and they would say do you know Mr. X, Mr. B, and do you know his house? They had names they wanted to kill. And once in a while they’d pick someone from the crowd, go to the back and you hear gunshots. And the crowd would wail.”
Patience Chukwura, a young mother expecting her fourth child, saw her husband Eddie gunned down near the police station, along with his brother, Christian:
“That made me hysterical. I held onto the soldier and said; ‘Why did you kill my husband?’ The man, with the butt of the gun, hit me on the chest and said; ‘woman, if you’re not careful, you’ll get killed as well.’ We feared they were going to wipe out everybody in Asaba, especially male children.”
Troops invaded homes, demanding money, executing men and boys, and abducting women, often before setting the houses ablaze. The streets were littered with corpses.
Patrick Okonkwo recalled that his compound was crowded with extended family members, when soldiers entered and shot his two brothers, a cousin, and two other relatives. His father buried them in shallow graves in the compound.
On October 7, in hopes of avoiding more violence, Asaba leaders summoned everyone to gather to show support to the troops by making a pledge to One Nigeria. Hundreds of men, women, and children assembled, dancing and singing. According to survivors, as the parade reached a major junction, troops removed women and young children, and directed men and boys into an open area.
As the crowd began to realize what might be happening, panic grew, as Peter Okonjo explained:
“Women who came with their sons were removing their skirts and blouses to disguise them. And I looked at the whole place, there is nowhere to escape.”
Ify Uraih was 13 years old, and had joined the parade with his brothers and father. He described how the officer in charge, identified by several witnesses as Ibrahim Taiwo, gave the order to open fire, and the massacre began:
“Some people broke loose and tried to run away. They shot my brother in the back. The rest of us just fell down on top of each other. And they continued shooting, and shooting, and shooting. I don’t know how long it took; after some time there was silence.”
Hundreds died; survivors report climbing from among heaps of bodies when the soldiers finally left hours later. Ify Uraih survived, but his father, Robert, and brothers Emma and Paul were dead. His brother Medua was shot multiple times, but survived. Between 500 and 800 were murdered, in addition to many from previous days, and many people fled the town.
Although there is no firm death count, our research suggests that more than 1,000 died at the hands of the troops during October. Most were buried in mass graves, without observing requisite practices, and the town was destroyed, with most of the houses looted and burned. The long-term impacts of these tragic events were profound; many extended families lost multiple breadwinners, and the town’s leadership was decimated. Survivor accounts and reports by relief agencies show that Asaba remained in dire straits until the war’s end, most inhabitants having fled or subsisting in refugee camps.
Soldiers assaulted and abducted women and girls with impunity. The destruction was so complete that Asaba disappeared from the official roll of Nigerian towns in 1969. The atrocities at Asaba remained virtually absent from the published record, and have largely remained unacknowledged. A major reason was lack of media coverage at the time.
Of course Biafra became world-famous, but its public, international narrative developed after the retreat of the Biafrans across the Niger, after which the federal government imposed a blockade, effectively starving the East into submission, and searing the images of emaciated children into the international memory of the War.
This contrasts with the lack of attention in 1967, when the Midwest people suffered most. The Federal government suppressed accounts of military action against civilians in the Midwest, and the international media were carefully managed.
The 1967 massacres received almost no press coverage at the time. In later historical accounts, the Asaba events, if mentioned at all, are usually dismissed as aberrant or unproven.
In 2001, some Asaba survivors testified to the Nigerian Human Rights Violations Investigation Commission (HRVIC, or Oputa Panel), commissioned by President Olusegun Obasanjo, and charged to consider the history of human rights abuses from 1966 to May 1999, of which civil war events were part.
The Asaba accounts were included in the Ohaneze Petition, presented by Barrister Chuck Nduka-Eze, and drawing on earlier research by Emma Okocha, as well as testimonies recorded in 1969.
The HRVIC’s report was never officially released, although it is now available on the internet. Obasanjo declined to offer formal apologies, although in a landmark moment, Gowon publicly apologized to the people of Asaba in 2002, opening the door to further efforts at truth and reconciliation.
After the Oputa Panel, Asaba leaders formed a committee to develop a memorial process, seeking an academic partnership to research the history of the event objectively.
We responded, and with the support of our university’s Holocaust and Genocide Studies Center, have been researching the events of 1967 and beyond. Our work is based on an array of sources, including archival collections on both sides of the Atlantic, as well as videotaped interviews with almost 80 people. Most are direct witnesses and survivors, while others testified about the long-term impacts on Asaba.
They were interviewed in several locations – Asaba, Lagos, Ibadan, Benin City, and the United States, and their stories produce a compelling, detailed, and consistent account of the atrocities that befell their town.
Our research has produced several interrelated conclusions. First, it shows that the killings in Asaba were unprovoked, and stemmed directly from a chain of events that started before the war, continuing through the Biafran offensive across the Niger, which stirred up simmering ethnic hatred that had previously resulted in violence toward Igbos.
This fueled the undisciplined actions of the counter-attacking federal troops against Nigerian civilians.
Second, although the Federal authorities worked hard to suppress the news, people fleeing Asaba spread the word, and the killings of large numbers of people of Igbo ethnicity bolstered Biafran claims that the war was one of genocide. This helped steel the Biafrans’ resolve to continue the eventually hopeless war, and so represents a pivotal moment that directly contributed to the progress of the conflict.
More broadly, the Asaba killings raise issues that go beyond the tragedy of one community. The war has left a bitter legacy; many today argue that the violence and ethnic hatred endemic in contemporary Nigeria are partly attributable to an institutionalised unwillingness to come to terms with it. Thus the Asaba events are instructive because they provide a vivid case study of the unresolved consequences of ethnic tension and state violence which have created barriers to reconciliation.
Today, our work suggests it is time to “recalibrate” the nation’s collective memory, putting Asaba’s fate in its rightful place as a key event in the Civil War. Martina Osaji, who dragged the body of her father Leo Isichei from among the dead, speaks for many in Asaba:
“There is nothing you can do to replace my father — no amount of compensation. I would rather have my father and my other relations. But I want the world to know this happened; that’s the only way we can remember them. God knows why I had to survive—for me to have a story to tell. And that is why I’m telling you now.”
Thus the people of Asaba rightfully demand an acknowledgment of the sacrifices they made while expressing support for Nigerian unity. And they also wish to use their experience as a way to open dialog and invite reconciliation – so important in this Nigerian Centenary Year.
Our research shows that wartime atrocities are complicated. For instance, several survivors recalled that amid the brutality, individual Federal officers and soldiers stepped in to prevent violence and protect civilians. Some, notably a Captain named Matthias, are remembered in Asaba for their actions, as they rose above the horror being inflicted – warning people to escape, shielding civilians, or even spiriting whole families out of town. Such stories show that good may transcend ethnic hostilities, and can offer opportunities for moral reflection.
It is important to acknowledge the horrors of history; accounts of “upstander” soldiers help us understand our common humanity, making repetition of evil less likely. We are documenting all our research on our project website: www.asabamemorial.org
where readers may find a short video based on our interviews, our longer academic articles, and information about the ongoing research. We invite readers to peruse our work, consider how much Asaba is owed, and reflect on ways to avoid such horrors in the future."

Hundreds died; survivors report climbing from among heaps of bodies when the soldiers finally left hours later

"George Washington University's “Remembering Biafra” conference will bring together scholars, activists, and humanitaria...
16/02/2017

"George Washington University's “Remembering Biafra” conference will bring together scholars, activists, and humanitarians to examine the global impact of the Nigeria-Biafra War of 1967-70. Speakers will analyze the war in terms of its impact on US-Africa relations, its influence on the modern politics of humanitarianism, and the legacies of decolonization. With the 50th anniversary of the start of the war in June 2017, the conference will explore why this major African crisis has been so long forgotten, and what lessons might be learned from remembering Biafra today."

Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie is the keynote speaker. There are also other conference speakers of Nigerian origin. You should attend if you can.

George Washington University‘s “Remembering Biafra” conference will bring together scholars, activists, and humanitarians to examine the global impact of the Nigeria-Biafra War of 1967-70. Speakers will analyze the war in terms of its impact on US-Africa relations, its influence on the modern politi...

This Day in History - The Aburi AccordThe Aburi Accord was reached in 1967 at a meeting attended by delegates of both th...
04/01/2017

This Day in History - The Aburi Accord

The Aburi Accord was reached in 1967 at a meeting attended by delegates of both the Federal Government of Nigeria (The supreme Military Council), led by Lt.-Col. Yakubu Gowon and the Eastern delegates, led by the Eastern Region's leader Colonel Ojukwu. It was held between 4 and 5 January 1967. Its purpose was to carve out a way to prevent a war outbreak.

Aburi, Ghana was specifically chosen as the venue of the meeting because the Eastern delegates and their leader, Colonel Ojukwu’s safety could not be guaranteed anywhere within the Western and Northern part of Nigeria.

As history show, the failed implementation of the famous accord by leaders of the contending federal and secessionist forces led to the civil war in Nigeria 50 years ago.

Read the Minutes of the Meeting:

https://www.dawodu.com/aburi2.htm
http://www.biafraland.com/aburi_minutes.htm

The concept of humanitarian intervention originates at a specific time and place, as is explained Brian McNeil.Brian McN...
05/10/2016

The concept of humanitarian intervention originates at a specific time and place, as is explained Brian McNeil.

Brian McNeil specializes in history of United States foreign relations, and is currently revising his book manuscript titled, Frontiers of Need: the Nigerian Civil War and the Origins of American Humanitarian Intervention, which is the subject of this podcast via 15 Minute History for The University of Texas at Austin.

- Episode 87: Nigeria’s Civil War & The Origins of American Humanitarian Interventions

http://15minutehistory.org/2016/09/27/episode-87-nigerias-civil-war-the-origins-of-american-humanitarian-interventions/

Episode 87: Nigeria’s Civil War & The Origins of American Humanitarian Interventions Posted on September 27, 2016 by Christopher Rose Host: Samantha Rose Rubino, UT School of Law Guest: Brian McNeil, Fellow, Institute for Historical Studies, UT-Austin Humanitarian intervention has become such an acc...

In tipping our hats to heroes, compatriots past, present and future and in remembering and revisiting history, here are ...
03/10/2016

In tipping our hats to heroes, compatriots past, present and future and in remembering and revisiting history, here are pictures of the region from early colonial times, pre-independence and post-independence.
- An independent country: Nigeria through the years in photos

http://thatigbogirl.com/2016/10/03/nigeria-independence-photos/

In tipping our hats to heroes, compatriots past, present and future and in remembering and revisiting history, here are pictures of the region from early colonial times, pre-independence and post-independence

   . We've got ways to go, but we'll get there as long as we put in the work.
01/10/2016

. We've got ways to go, but we'll get there as long as we put in the work.

Nigerian essayist, novelist and political columnist, Okey Ndibe; and author of the critically acclaimed novels Arrow of ...
30/05/2016

Nigerian essayist, novelist and political columnist, Okey Ndibe; and author of the critically acclaimed novels Arrow of Rain and Foreign Gods, Inc. reminisces on his experience of the Nigerian-Biafran civil war.

What Nigerian writer, Okey Ndibe, sees when he recalls the Biafran War.

On this day 49 years ago, Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu, the South Eastern Region's military governor, announced the Repub...
30/05/2016

On this day 49 years ago, Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu, the South Eastern Region's military governor, announced the Republic of Biafra, citing the Easterners killed in the post-coup violence.

The secessionist state enjoyed its independence for a very short time (a month and three days), before the civil war began on July 6, 1967 to counter the withdrawal of Biafra from Nigeria. It will go on to be the bloodiest war in the history of Nigeria.

After two-and-a-half years of war, over three to six million Biafran civilians died in fighting and from starvation occasioned by the total blockade of the region.

Have you ever wondered why History hasn't been taught in primary and secondary schools? Why most of those born after the...
11/05/2016

Have you ever wondered why History hasn't been taught in primary and secondary schools? Why most of those born after the civil war are unaware of it, unless they deliberately choose to do research on their own? You are not alone.

This generation is asking questions. The civil war is an important part of our history and shouldn't be ignored.

Karen Attiah writes about her mum's experience.

"While I was growing up, my mother, Grace, rarely talked about her childhood in Nigeria. It’s only in the past few years that I have come to know how she feels about her birth country. She was born in Enugu, a city in the southeastern state of Anambra, to my Yoruba grandmother, Francisca, and my Ghanian grandfather, Fred, who worked in the British civil service. At age 14, my mother fled with her family to Ghana to escape the violence of Nigeria’s brutal Biafra civil conflict, which killed 1 million Nigerians in the late 1960s.

She recalled food and water shortages. Classmates killed in bomb raids. The loyal dog they had to leave behind as the circle of violence tightened around Enugu. How for almost two years they bounced from town to town, living in abandoned homes. Finally, in 1968, my grandfather got the family out on a Red Cross evacuation flight to Accra, Ghana, where my grandmother and relatives still live.

“Everything was taken from us. We had to run and only take what we could carry. We had to run to forest areas to hide from shellings. . . . Some people had no food, eating lizards in the bushes!” Later she told me that she sobbed uncontrollably the evening after we talked."

A homeland torn apart by a civil war in the 1960s is being ravaged today by Boko Haram.

Interview 5:Today we had a chat with Evangelist Young Ogwuegbu who was a soldier during the war, on the Biafran side. He...
08/05/2016

Interview 5:

Today we had a chat with Evangelist Young Ogwuegbu who was a soldier during the war, on the Biafran side.

He shared his numerous near-death experiences and how it made him a strong Christian and influenced the man he is today.

Pa Ogwuegbu had left his home back East at the age of 17 to seek a better life in Lagos, but had to return back shortly before the beginning of the war. He lost everything, including his life savings of 10 pounds that he'd put away at the Post Office back in Lagos.

At the end of the war, he once again moved back to Lagos to start his life over.

Pa talked about something of vital importance, which has almost never been talked about ever since the war ended. It is about the Biafran women. Young girls and teenagers were taken away by the Nigerian soldiers. Some lucky ones returned, but were forever marred by their experience. The unlucky ones never retuned. His sister, Ijeoma, was one of the unlucky ones. To this day, according to Pa, Ijeoma has never been found. This is just like Kainene in Chimamanda Adichie's Half of a Yellow Sun.

He says he doesn't talk much about his experience because he has chosen to move on from it. All the education he had after the war was through personal effort, attending night or correspondence school. he was able to train his junior brother, among other with the money he made. Today, his brother is a medical doctor.

Shot by Leke Togun and Ogeche Agba for TCWP.

Interview 4:We had an extensive interview with Professor Akachi Ezeigbo about her experience as a teenager during the wa...
08/05/2016

Interview 4:

We had an extensive interview with Professor Akachi Ezeigbo about her experience as a teenager during the war. And it was really enlightening.

She was trained to serve in the Biafran army. Professor Ezeigbo lost a brother, cousins and friends in the war.

Prof Ezeigbo said that some of those that survived the war didn't survive the peace, as they died on their way home.

The war thought her one important lesson, which is hard work indeed pays off. She returned to school and studied to attend get a university education. Through the benevolence of a good samaritan who paid for a her examination forms, she was able to sit for the exams and pass with flying colours. With her result, she was able to get a scholarship to study at the University of Lagos, where she went on to teach for 30 years.

Watch this space, we will share short clips from the interview soon.

Shots by Leke Togun and Ogeche Agba for TCWP.

The Civil War Projects aims, among other things, to curate and share the stories of those who have firsthand experience ...
08/05/2016

The Civil War Projects aims, among other things, to curate and share the stories of those who have firsthand experience of the Nigerian-Biafran Civil War.

Want to share your story? Know someone we should interview? Send us an email here: [email protected]

Find us on:
Twitter: twitter.com/tcwprojects
Instagram: instagram.com/tcwprojects
Soundcloud: soundcloud.com/thecivilwarprojects
Website: thecivilwarprojects.org
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC3GQ7qEBjzajLv7bL4EgCFw

Photo via Getty Images.

Address

Lagos

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when The Civil War Projects posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Business

Send a message to The Civil War Projects:

Share