Kalu said rather than being accorded the status other major ethnic
groups within the Nigerian project had, the Igbos had been consigned to
the background in the scheme of things in Nigeria.
Kalu, who spoke last Thursday at the British House of Commons in the
United Kingdom, said the statistics, which formed the very basis of the
existence of the country, had glaring evidences that the Igbos, who
occupied the South-East part of the country, were not as highly valued
as the Hausa and Yoruba ethnic stocks.
He said the statistics, ranging from the distribution of the
country’s commonwealth to the opportunities to govern at the federal
level and the number of states, local government areas and senatorial
districts in each of the geopolitical regions of the country pointed to
the value placed on the Igbos by the Nigerian state.
He said: “The Igbo in Nigeria have become the receptacle of anger,
hatred, envy and frustration oozing out of their fellow compatriots. But
this is on the level of the transaction between private citizens.
“How about the place of the Igbo in respect of the manner in which
public affairs are conducted by the Nigerian Federal Government and its
agencies? The simple answer is that the rain has continued to beat the
Igbo.”
To back up his argument, Kalu told the gathering, which included
Nigerians in the Diaspora, especially those based in the United Kingdom,
that while the South-East had just five states, other geopolitical
regions had between six and seven states. Specifically, he said the
North-West had seven states while others had six. In terms of local
governments, the South-East also had the least 95.
The North-West had 186 local government areas, North-East 112,
North-Central 115, South-West 138 and South-South 123. For the federal
constituencies, which formed the basis for election into the House of
Representatives, the South-East had 43 while the North-West had 92, the
North-East 48, North-Central 49, South-West 71 and South-South 55. For
senatorial districts, the North-West tops with 21, the North-Central,
North-East, South-South and South-West all had 18 and the South-East
with the least, 15.
Kalu said: “The above table does not represent an opinion or a
hypothesis. It represents the blatant reality of the third rate status
forced upon the Igbo in the political space in Nigeria.
“We, the Igbo, have striven but thus far failed to persuade the
Nigerian establishment about the hurt and humiliation and deprivation
that come with the idea that we, as a people, are legally condemned to
third rate status in our own country, as amply demonstrated by the above
table.
“The implications of this calculated fraud against my people are so
massive and go entirely untold: unequal allocation of resources, unequal
voice in the Federal Executive Council, unequal representation in the
National Assembly (the gravest of all), unequal participation in the
administration of justice in the federation, unequal participation in
the federal civil service and adjunct bodies, unequal representation in
the armed forces and paramilitary organisations, unequal representation
in the diplomatic corps ensuring incapacity in showcasing the Igbo
culture as part of a pan Nigerian culture in our foreign missions and
embassies, fewer primary, secondary and higher education opportunities
for our children, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.”
Kalu went further to state that these disparities had been taken
further to the ruler ship of the country. He said while those from the
North-Central had ruled for 17 years, 11 months and 20 days as at the
time of the address to the House of Commons, the North-West had occupied
the country’s presidency for 13 years, 11 months and 10 days; the
South-West for 11 years, 10 months and eight days; the North-East for
five years, three months and 15 days; and the South-South for five years
and 23 days.
But for the South-East, leading the country had only been for six
months and 13 days. Kalu added: “The structural disparities are
constitutionally entrenched (please see the constitution of the Federal
Republic of Nigeria, 1999), thus their grave implications for Ndigbo are
beyond the primary questions of inequity and marginalization.
“The histories of nations are replete with evidence of existential
threat to any group whose marginalization is made a subject matter of
constitutional enshrinement.
“With unequal voice in the Federal Executive Council, in the National
Assembly, on the federal judicial benches and a vast array of other
fora in which the Igbo suffer sub-parity representation, the strength of
the advocacy of our problems and priorities is thus diminished. Little
wonder, then, that the South-East zone, the area inhabited by the Igbo,
still manifests the physical characteristics of a conquered and occupied
land, 43 years after the civil war.
“Quite apart from the psychological assault it represents for Igbo
people, the practical issues of unequal representation and unequal
allocation of resources are calculated to retard the development of our
region and our people.
“The massive difference, which the resources and human empowerment
that we are denied might have made in our society, is something that
calls not just for a sober reflection but a gritty resolve to bring
about their speedy resolution.
“The Igbo tenacity, drive and relentless optimism to pursue life’s
enduring dreams of family, faith and success and to overcome life’s
challenges will see them through. But the world must listen to them
whenever they cry out. For they have long suffered and endured in
silence, as the rain continues to beat them.”
Kalu said this was the major reason for the formation of Njiko Igbo, a
group with the mandate to push for the election of a president of Igbo
extraction for Nigeria in 2015.
He said: “The presidency of the Nigerian nation has not eluded the
Igbo by accident or by an act of divinity but by human design; and it is
through human pressure that we can attain it. Njiko Igbo is the
catalyst and conduit for our collective action. We trust that you
recognise, as we do, that power concedes nothing without a demand….
“Njiko Igbo is an organisation dedicated to the struggle for the
ascent of a citizen of Igbo extraction to the presidency of the Federal
Republic of Nigeria in 2015.
“We are fully committed to the security and peace of our nation, and
to the comradeship of a common justice and equality for all Nigerians.
“We are neither supportive of nor opposed to any political party or the aspirations of any individual politician.”
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