Agony Of Igbos In Benue
OF IGBOS IN BENUEculled from the Nigerian Sun newspapers of April 12,
2014By Chris Oji.They are torn between two worlds. Being of the
Igbostock, their soul is in the Southeast, but their bodies and homes
are in Benue State, in the Northcentral. That is not all. In Benue,
where they are quartered, more for political considerations than for
cultural reaons, they lament their lack: no roads, no water, hardly any
sign of modern life.They are Igbos of the Ezza, Izzi and Effium stock.
Their kith and kin are in other parts of the Southeast, particularly
Ebonyi State. They claim they are not fewer than one million scattered
in four local governments of Benue State. And for close to 50 years
since they were excised from their kinsmen, they have been living
primitive lives.Their pathetic plight is that the authorities in Benue,
from the state to the local governments, have not seen them as part of
the state ostensibly because they speak Igbo. On the other hand, the
Ebonyi Stategovernment where they should have rightly belonged is
helpless as they are not under its area of administration and
authority.The people allege that since their inclusion into Benue State
they have not felt any government presence. None of their people were
considered for employment in any of the two tiers of government. Indeed,
in their lamentation, they are not in the scheme of things as far as
government business is concerned in Benue.“We have been on our own. No
roads, no water, no electricity, no employment. We just wander about to
help ourselves in our own way,” an octogenarian, Pa Nwankwo Aloh said,
clutching a bucket in search of water.Benue State Governor Gabriel
Suswam is said to have acknowledged their existence and concerns, even
promising to address them, but that was during his first term in
office.Also, Mr Ogbu Igelega, spokesman of Ado Local Government Area,
one of the councils where the Igbos are found in Benue, told our
reporter on the telephone that one of the obstacles to the development
of the Igbo-speaking areas of the stateis their difficult terrain.
Igelega said this makes access difficult, adding that the few places
which donot present such challenges get government attention.The
spokesman cited the example of Etenyi which has 90 per cent Igbo
population, saying the community “is being electrified at the cost of
N17m”. He also said the Igbos occupy “important offices” in the council,
adding that the assistant head of Revenue Development is Igbo, while
the Senior Special Assistant on Inter-ethnic Relations isalso Igbo.The
reporter met with the president, Benue Igbo Development Union, Nweke
Cedrick Ifeanyi who narrated their ordeal. He said all they want is for
theBenue State government to accept them since fate has lumped them
together. He is of the view that if they can be given a sense of
belonging, they would all wholeheartedly join in the effort to develop
the state.Ifeanyi does not expressly condemn their inclusion in Benue
State, be he said if the other ethnic groups do not want them in Benue,
the Federal Governmentshould set up a machinery immediately to return
them to their kith and kin in the Southeast, particularly Ebonyi
State.He sent a save-or-soul message to the Senate president, David Mark
and Governor Suswam to come and save them from “this ignoble plight”,
adding: “We are neither here nor there.”In Nweke’s words: “The Igbos in
Benue State particularly those in Ado, Oju, Obi and Okpoku LGAsof the
state were in existence before the advent of Christian religion in
Nigeria.The Igbo found in Benue are: Umuezeokoha, Umuezeoka, Oriuzor,
Umuoghara, Amaekka and Amaezekwe all in Ezza communities, Izzi, Ezzamgbo
and Effium, these are the people who would have been in present-day
Ebonyi State but due for the fact that the Nigerian government then
carved us into Benue in order to use our population to suppress our
Eastern population. Apart from the Ezza-speaking clan, particularly the
people of Umuezeokoha that has over 300 villages, if you are to
calculate the number of Igbo-speaking villages, you find out that we are
more than 600 villages because three of the biggest markets in our area
areall in the Igbo-speaking part.The markets are as follows: Inikiri
Ichari, Iddah, Iduokpe.”But in all these places, we have been facing a
lot of deprivation of our fundamental human rights to the extent that we
do not have any project attracted by the government, be it local, state
or federal. In fact we have become the rejected part of the country
because local government identification letters are not given to us any
longer.“Before now we used to witness governmental attention in
everything during and after colonial administration but since after the
civil war we were dumped by the successive governments just because of
our language difference.“We do not have any drinking water, our source
of water here is a dam which Fulani herdsmen do carry their cow to drink
at the same place with us because the water is not covered.“In the
process of stopping them from coming to thewater with their cow, it
later resulted in the loss of five lives.“We have no representative in
local, state and federal levels. Mosquito nets that were given free of
charge to roll back malaria have been sold to our people at the sum of
N6,000 each. We have become slaves to our brothers because of language
difference. No hospital, let alone health centre, we are seeing hell
here in Benue State because of our language. I do not know whether it is
a curse for someone to have fallen under a particular tribe like Ezza,
Izzi, Ezzamgbo and Effium.“Our women are dying every day during labour.
Alsoour children are dying for lack of polio immunisationprogramme and
other medical treatment needed to be given to a child at a tender
age.“Our roads are not passable. We have contributed so much not only to
the development of Benue Statebut Nigeria at large. At least a place
with over one million people in population has no primary school. We are
therefore as a matter of urgency calling on federal government, our
Southeastern brothers and any other corporate bodies to rush to our aid
before water will come to our neck.It is obvious that if we are speaking
the same language with them we wouldn’t have found ourselves in this
forbidden and undeserved situation like this one we are now.An area with
over 50 polling units, but we are benefiting nothing even on every of
our market days they do come and sell their ticket (tax). We have been
regarded as slaves in the country of our birth and our fore-fathers, we
are also calling on our able president of the senate David mark to come
to our help because after God we also contributed in making him what he
is today and even Gabriel Suswan.We can never regret why we are Igbos or
deny being Igbo people before we are recognized in the country of our
fore-fath
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