Opinion
The Asaba Massacre; We Remember!
By Charles Ogbu
The picture below was taken three years today (2017), in Grand Hotel, Asaba,
venue of the Commemoration of the Asaba Massacre.
As I sat listening to a number of survivors narrate their experience, I was left wondering if those men and women were narrating scenes from some horror movie they just watched. But as it happens, I wondered wrong, for they were actually narrating event that happened few steps away from where we were all seated.
For the people of this town, October 7th remains a day they will forever rue, for that was the day the Nigerian state executed one of the worst form of savagery against them.
In the early days of the Biafran war in 1967, it happened that Nigerian troops had entered the town of Asaba in pursuit of the Biafran soldiers who had retreated into the core East. On getting into Asaba on the 4th of October, 1967, the Nigerian troops led by Col. Murtala Muhammad with Col.Ibrahim Taiwo as his deputy, wasted no time embarking on indiscriminate killing of men and boys in the town on suspicion of being sympathetic to the Biafran soldiers.
After two days of such killings, the leaders of the town had gathered all their people, both young and old, to the village square to officially welcome the federal troops and pledge their allegiance to #OneNigeria. Dressed in the customary white cloth (akwa ocha) signifying peace, they all marched before the Nigerian troops, singing #OneNigeria.
But for col. Murtala Muhammad and Ibrahim Taiwo, nothing short of total annihilation of all boys and men in the town would suffice. Those two military men would gather all the boys and men to one side before ordering their soldiers to shoot them all at a very close range. At the end, not less than 1500 people lay dead, according to survivors of the massacre which include rt Reverend Emmanuel Chukwuma, the Anglican archbishop of Enugu who spoke at the anniversary.
Murtala Muhammed and his men would later remain in the town where they raped many women and girls and forcefully married some.
Now this is not even the biggest tragedy of this. The biggest tragedy here is that the Nigerian state would later reward, not punish, those two conscience-less war criminals.
While Taiwo Ibrahim would later become the military governor of Kwara state, Murtala Muhammad did not only become head of the Nigerian state, a foremost international airport, Lagos airport, still bears his name till date. His face dones the twenty naira note. Asaba people use this airport the same way they have no choice but to look at his murderous face each time they spend the twenty naira note.
As for Yakubu Gowon, the Commander-In-Chief under whose watch this unconscionable act took place, he is busy gallivanting from one church to another with some prayer group known as The Nigeria Prays.
53 years after this clear case of barbarism committed by a body that calls itself a Nation, there’s been no restitution of any kind, no explanations, not even a recognition not to talk of attempt at reconciliation.
If Nigerian soldiers could do this to civilians in Asaba even after pledging allegiance to #OneNigeria, is it not safe, logical and reasonable to assume that civilians in the core East must have been gifted with a fate more cruel than that during the Biafran war?
How can anyone feel proud to be associated with a country that does not just murder her own unarmed citizens but equally celebrate the murderers??
How can I love a country that is deaf, dumb and blind to the sanctity of the lives of the same citizens she exists mainly to protect??
How does one show patriotism to a country that has no conscience, no sense of morality, no nothing! Just kill everything and everyone WITH IMPUNITY!
A country where some people can commit all sort of unimaginable crime and their names and religion would be all that would be required to ensure they are rewarded instead of being punished.
A country where criminals and terrorists are celebrated and honored with monuments for butchering innocent people.
For this thing masquerading as a Nation, the night beckons with a knife. Whether she will bend to escape this knife or be cut to pieces remains to be seen.
But for the victims of the ASABA MASSACRE and the numerous victims of the moral tragedy that was the Biafran war, WE REMEMBER!