Igwe Alex Nwokedi, Press Secretary to the Head of State in the military
regime of Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, is the sitting Uthokoneze and
paramount ruler of Achalla Kingdom, Anambra State. The 79-year-old
former Chairman, Anambra State Council of Traditional Rulers and
erstwhile Chairman, Eastern Nigerian Traditional Rulers Forum, spoke to
Vanguard on the calls for Biafra and threat of secession by Afenifere
among other things
What is your perspective on the brewing agitation for Biafra in your part of the country?
General Yakubu Gowon, in one of his published
interviews, spoke well when he said he was surprised that people could
be talking about Biafra over 40 years after the matter had been
resolved. Owelle Rochas Okorocha, a respected governor of the people,
of course, has also spoken like a patriotic Nigeria when he counselled
that Igbo should stop hating other Nigerians. That comment credited to
him gives a good perspective on the Igbo people of this country. Igbo
people are loving people but we should talk about what unites us than
talking about what divides us.
I have read a lot about the so-called agitation for Biafra and I even
read something about people who said they wanted to secede from Nigeria
and become Oduduwa country. Biafra and Afenifere are no threat to the
unity of Nigeria.
So, as far as I am concerned, we should talk more about what unites us than what divides us.
I am more concerned about the need to develop all the regions of
Nigeria. I am concerned about the need for government both at federal
and state levels to collaborate and bring physical development to all
parts of the country. It is sad, for instance, that Enugu-Awka-Onitsha
Road is not motorable.
As a matter of fact, when I was coming to Lagos, I drove through the old
road to link the airport and that road, so narrow with narrow bridge,
is very dangerous. I have read so much about how contractors handling
that road complained that they have been owed for over three years, a
situation they said had led to the retrenchment of many of their
workers including the expatriates and that they were now considering
folding up.
I appeal to the Federal Government to look into the issue and come to
the aid of the people of that area by paying the money owed the
construction company so that they can fix the road in good time. The
road facilitates the movement of goods into and out of the South-East to
other parts of Nigeria and, if properly fixed, falling and breaking
down of vehicles plying the road will stop and, also, it will boost the
economy of the nation from that axis.
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