We saw this coming! Igbo leaders have started responding to TY Danjuma’s criticism of Ojukwu

by Azubuike Azikiwe

No matter how flawed he was or even if they don’t agree with his decisions, Igbos don’t joke around with the legacy of Dim Chukwuemeka Ojukwu… they simply don’t.

A couple of days ago, while playing host to President Goodluck Jonathan, former Chief of Army Staff, General TY Danjuma (retd.) committed a huge blunder, by chastising Ojukwu, the late Igbo leader and Biafran warlord.

Danjuma goofed by saying that if Ojukwu had conceded defeat after Enugu fell to the Nigerian army like Jonathan conceded defeat to Muhammadu Buhari, the civil war could have been averted.

At a time when the Igbos were still upset over the threatening comments of the Oba of Lagos, it was a no-brainer that a backlash would precede Danjuma’s comments.

And now they have started trickling in- from different Igbo leaders:

The first four persons to react to Danjuma’s utterances are; former Secretary-General of Ohaneze Ndigbo and officer in the Biafran Army, Col Joe Achuzia; Second Republic Politician, Chief Guy Ikokwu; botched Third Republic Governor of Anambra State, Dr Chukwuemeka Ezeife and former Deputy National President of the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ), Chief Abia Onyike.

Ezeife’s response was rather brief. He said: “I know Danjuma is not very well. So I am not surprised.”

Ikokwu on his part, claimed that Danjuma killed Nigeria’s first military Head of State, General Ajuiyi Ironsi (an Igbo), stating that he will get a full response after the elections because by talking about Ojukwu, he is talking about the South-East and South-South geo-political zones, which constituted most of the former Eastern Region and later the defunct Biafra.
He said: “I don’t think we should take issues with Danjuma until after the elections. Jonathan went to him and not him to Jonathan. We shall respond to him.”

Meanwhile, Col Joe Achuzia said: “I am happy that my friend Danjuma owned up that there was bloodshed and pogrom against the people of Biafra. I don’t understand what he meant by Ojukwu conceding defeat. If the Federal Government had implemented the Aburi Accord, the bloodshed would have been avoided.”

“Ojukwu believed in Aburi as the road map for peace at the time of the crisis but the Federal Government reneged on the agreement reached in Ghana. One does not concede defeat half way into a battle. Doing that would have amounted to cowardice. I don’t know where Danjuma got the idea of Ojukwu not accepting defeat from. He has little knowledge of the intricacies of the war. He didn’t even know the terrain of the Enugu that he talked about.”

“If the necessities of capitulating were there, why did the war last for three years? I fought the war for three years and I know that the necessities were not there. Sometimes people talk for talking sake. The President’s visit to him was a private one and he should not have used that opportunity to insult all that Ojukwu stood for. To say publicly that the President was defeated was even a mockery of the President.”

“It does not portray the President in good light. Of course what he said was an insult on Ojukwu. His reference to the fall of Enugu is laughable because the war was just starting then. Which military officer will surrender in that kind of situation even before firing a bullet? When some people make wrong comments on the civil war, I wonder what often inform their judgement. Ojukwu was a General and was right on all the decisions he took in the interest of the Igbo.”

Onyike shared the others’ sentiments, saying: “In the first place, it was Danjuma that backed the spilling of the blood of the Igbo, with the killing of Aguiyi Ironsi in Ibadan in 1967 and we want to say that Danjuma belongs to the group of Army Officers who led the gruesome genocide and massacre of over three million Igbo during the Nigerian civil war.”

“We want to say that the problem with General T. Y. Danjuma is mainly psychological because at a time when some of them felt that they had become great statesmen and patriots for presiding over the attempted extermination of the Igbo, unfortunately for them, the Igbo people survived and have come to assert themselves and their identity in the Nigerian federation.”

“Secondly, a twist emerged in the Nigerian scene where people like Danjuma and the minority group where he comes from in the Northern have been subjected to the same gruesome murders by militant elements of the same northern oligarchy which they serve, and to that extent Danjuma cannot go to his village.”

“So, let him go and resolve that problem first because when Ojukwu was making them understand the nature of the Nigerian federation and the dangers inherent in the politics that was emerging, Danjuma preferred to be a surrogate. So let him stop using the Igbo to hide his inadequacies.”

Comments (2)

  1. I can now see that Danjuma is truly sick in the head. That he is still alive and not knowing what to do with his ill-gotten blood money does not make him more patriotic a Nigerian than the peoples General, Ojukwu even in death, afterall the shedding of Igbo blood did not start with the war but with the slaughtering of millions of Igbos, including my dear father, all over the North, between june and sept 1966, with surrogates like Danjuma not bating an eye lid. Danjuma should also realise that the Igbos have not forgotten the heinous role he played in the killing of Major Gen Aguiyi Ironsi. Perhaps the blood of the Igbos he sucked is beginning to have a toll on him and his generation yet to come, Igbos, it is time for us to stand up to the likes of Danjuma in the present day Nigeria before they start organizing another pogrom to exterminate the Igbo race. Chukwuemeka Odimegwu Ojukwu, the Peoples General, remains our Hero and even in death is worth more than one thousand Danjumas.

  2. TY Danjuma is a fool.

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