You have been very vocal lately in dismissing and trashing the then
federal military government’s post-civil war efforts at the 3 Rs:
Reconstruction, Reconciliation and Rehabilitation. What don’t you agree
with?
AKPABIO: As a young man, you definitely will not
understand me. But I was a victim of the Civil War. I was one of those
who suffered the pains of the war. I was born sometime in 1962; the
civil war came really into our area in 1967. So, I was probably five or
six years old during the war; and if I had been around nine years, I
would probably have been conscripted.
I saw parents throw their children into pit toilets because they did not
want their positions to be made known to the enemy. I saw devastation; I
saw kwashiorkor; I saw hunger; I saw thousands of people and bodies
littered everywhere and smelling while vultures had a field day every
day. I saw houses destroyed; I saw families scattered such that till the
end of the world, they can never gather themselves together again.
There were children who were shipped away to Gabon, and they can never
come back to Nigeria again because they were small. How would
two-year-olds and three-year-olds ever know where they came from? They
are now proud Gabonese and I don’t think Nigerians are even asking
questions.
So, during the Silverbird Man of the Year Award, there were pictures
that were shown of the Civil War. Somebody, sitting by me, who is from
the West, was asking if those things were acted: the Kwashiorkor-ridden
children with their swollen tummies, ugly shapes and bony structures
because of hunger and starvation.
The then Head of State, General Yakubu Gowon attempted to explain that
he tried everything to avoid the scenes that were being shown on the
screen, that he did not want the war. The other person who could have
answered him, unfortunately, that is Emeka Ojukwu, is dead. He said he
tried everything to stop the war from breaking out but it’s only Ojukwu
who could have answered whether he equally did his part in avoiding the
war.
But something struck me: it was said that Gowon should be commended for
initiating the three Rs: reconciliation, rehabilitation and
reconstruction. And I asked a very simple question, that I came with a
written text but I wasn’t going to read it. I thanked Silverbird for the
award; and I said I did not want to criticise my leaders because I am
also now a leader. But I asked to be allowed to ask a question: how come
reconstruction started in the West when the war was actually fought in
the East? They started the Third Mainland Bridge, the National Theatre,
the international airport, and so on, in the West, while the war was
fought in the eastern region. And if we really wanted to ensure total
reconciliation, how come every account holder in the eastern region was
given only £20? It did not matter whether your father had £10,000,000 or
£50,000,000 before the war; you were given just £20. It was a take it
or leave it situation. If your family survived and there was an account
holder alive, he/she went to the bank, and collected just £20.
Could £20 pounds solve the Kwashiorkor that we were seeing? Could it
reconstruct the houses that were burnt? Could it produce food? A lot of
other things happened that I did not mention on that occasion. Don’t
forget that it was shortly after the war in 1971 that the policy of
indigenisation started, where most of the foreign industries and
companies were sold to Nigerians, and the war-ravaged eastern regions,
which include the entire South-South and the rest of them, could not
buy, because no one who did not have money to even feed or clothe
himself would have had money to buy any industry. So, I was just
wondering, as a young man, if that was true reconciliation, because one
would have thought that the government would have gone to any extent to
give them more money so that they could truly rehabilitate themselves.
They needed money from reconstruction, and I would have thought that
reconstruction would have also started from the East. I just asked
because we were lucky to have the personal dramatis of the war right in
still alive : General T. Y. Danjuma, General Yakubu Gowon, General
Obasanjo, General Buhari and others. It is very rare to see these former
heads of state in just one place, so I had to ask.
I said also that it is important, even for the current-day leaders, that
we continue to take actions that will unite Nigeria. And we should
purge ourselves of actions that tend to cause pains to Nigerians. For
me, I believe that because of certain policies of the federal government
after the war, the war did not cease in the eastern region until about
30 years after the war.
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