What we want to achieve with Radio Biafra.
In the last two weeks, Radio Biafra, London, started
broadcasting in Nigeria as a mobile station, on FM frequency 88.2. It’s being
received in Enugu, Onitsha, Port Harcourt, Nnewi and Owerri.
According to the director, Radio Biafra, Mr. Nnamdi Kanu,
who visited Nigeria from his London, United Kingdom base, the broadcast in
Nigeria, on FM frequency, other than the initial short wave frequency from
London, is aimed at giving Igbo and other Nigerians the opportunity to receive
the message from the station without much difficulties.
In the interview, Kanu revealed the role of Radio Biafra and
why its broadcast was brought home. He talked about the struggle for Biafra,
the activities of the Movement for the Actualisation of the Sovereign State of
Biafra and other pro-Biafran groups, the funding for Radio Biafra and the
crisis in the All Progressives Grand alliance (APGA).
Excerpts:
We discovered that Radio Biafra is now broadcasting in the
East other than London. What informed this?
At this point in the country’s history, we believe that it’s
appropriate to bring home Radio Biafra. The last time the radio broadcast in
the East was about 43 years ago, during the war. We have been broadcasting from
London, on short wave frequency. By coming home now, we want more people to
tune to the station. Now we are on the FM frequency and covering a segment of
the Eastern Nigeria. It is not enough to propagate round the country, but we
are working on that. Sometime in September or October, we will bring in
sufficient power, in terms of transmission, to allow us access to all areas
within Nigeria.
What were the challenges you encountered in bring Radio
Biafra home, so to say?
The people that gave us some problems are obviously agents
of the Nigerian government. However, we were sufficiently protected because we
are not doing anything illegal. It is free speech situation. We are basically
speaking our minds. That is what is happening, which incidentally, a lot of
people, in and around the country, bought into. It’s not a question of us
saying something that is new. We are discussing something that every other part
of the country would like to be a part of.
How long have you been running the radio station in Nigeria?
We started running Radio Biafra in Nigeria for the past two
weeks, to be precise.
How has the reception been?
It’s been very good, but initially, the estimate we had was
for a 25-mile radius range going by the power of the transmitter and antenna
that we have, but what we are recording is 18 miles. What we then need to do is
to take it back to our people and then make some improvements to it. We have a
bigger transmitter coming in around September or October. We should provide
coverage nationally with that. Wherever you are in Nigeria, you should get
Radio Biafra on FM and AM from October this year.
For now, what is the duration of the broadcast?
It is normally two and three hours. The broadcast from Aba,
because of the location and incessant rain, kept falling. It was curtailed to
an hour and 49 minutes, but we are hoping, as time goes on, to bring Radio
Biafra to people on a daily basis.
Could you tell us how you started Radio Biafra in London?
We started Radio Biafra in 2009 with the help of the then
MASSOB members. They contributed to set up Radio Biafra. When we discovered
that the leadership of MASSOB was doing something entirely different from what
the people actually wanted, we went on air to tell the people what we
discovered and the funding from MASSOB for Radio Biafra was stopped at that
point in time. It was moribund for about two years. We then revived Radio
Biafra ourselves a year ago. It came back online again on April 13 last year,
following the killing of our people, Igbo, in the North. We decided to revive
the radio station to bring hope, enlightenment and knowledge to our people.
How many of you are involved?
Eight people revived Radio Biafra ostensibly. Within the two
years that Radio Biafra was off air, we were working Monday to Friday, 9-5
everyday, and saving money to start the station again. We neglected our
families. We abandoned our commitments to our families, both in London and here
in Nigeria. The eight of us include
myself, Uche Mefor, Dr. Chukwuma Egemba, Barrister Adolf Emeka Esiri, Barr.
Emman Mezu, Amarachi Okpara and Chukwunebuneze Ikpa. These were the people that
got together and decided to form Radio Biafra again and we succeeded.
How have you been funding and sustaining it?
We work in London and earn a living. After our official
duties, we face Radio Biafra. We know that the media job is a full-time one,
but we can’t afford to run Radio Biafra full time because of funding. We are
the ones funding and we have to work to get money. Nobody has helped us in
funding. Anywhere we go for funding, they always remind us where the previous
support they rendered other groups agitating for Biafra went. They always use
MASSOB and what Uwazuruike is doing as example and as reasons they won’t fund
us. For us, instead of relying on people, who are not even ready to fund the
project, we are doing it alone. And God has been helping us. We have spent a
lot to sustain the broadcast.
We are not deterred. We hope that in future, people will see
the impact of what we are doing as well as our sincerity of purpose and help
financially. One individual, Chukwudi Oforma, who is based in Australia, is
funding the FM experiment. That tells you that people are now beginning to come
out to put some financial muscle behind what we are doing.
How is the reception in London?
When Radio Biafra came back on air, there were jubilations,
not only in Nigeria but also in all over the world. People recognise what Radio
Biafra represents. At Radio Biafra, we cannot afford to lie. It is not a
propaganda machine. We tell you things the way they are. If we are failing, we
will tell the people we are failing and why we are failing. At Radio Biafra, we
took an oath and we swore never to misrepresent the truth. Any day we lie or
represent what is not factual, that day, we will shut down and we will not
proceed. That is why we have been able to accomplish more than when we received
sponsorship from members of MASSOB, who wanted to use it for their selfish end.
Having severed relationship with them, events have shown that it was the best
thing we have done. You can see what the group has become.
What is wrong with MASSOB?
The movement has been flawed because people have started to
follow the path of money. They have forgotten what Biafra realisation is all
about. Mind you, we are not actualising but realising Biafra, because Biafra
already existed.
You cannot actualise what is already in existence. The
movement derailed because of the cult hero worship. When you are in a freedom
fighting movement, the leadership of that movement is not very important.
What is important is the ideology that underpins the entire
movement. When you then embody and encapsulate the entire thinking of a
movement in one person, that person becomes a target, either for compromise or
for assassination. That is what happens and that is what happened in this case.
As you can see, they have now abandoned the struggle for Biafra.
They are talking about chieftaincy titles. They are talking
about working with PDP. They are talking about sowing uniform and becoming
peace ambassadors and the rest of it. That was not the original concept of the
struggle. Biafra is puritanical, in the sense that it doesn’t like
contamination with any other thing and that is why we are suffering today. And
because we took our eyes away from what was important, which was the freedom
for our people, we started to look at material things, like cars, buildings,
accolades and wealth. That was how we derailed.
What then is the ideology of Biafra?
The ideology of Biafra is the freedom, the emancipation of
all the Biafran people, which means that all the people bound genetically, culturally
and by the same value system. In other words, I am talking about those who
understand the history of the Biafran
people. I am talking about the Idoma people, the Igbo people, the Efik, Ibibio,
Anang, Ijaw, Itsekiri, the Urhobo and the Anioma people. All these are Biafran
families. If you go to a village or town, for instance, Oturpko, they have four
market days – Eke, Orie, Afor and Nkwo. And when people say that these people
are not Igbo people or that they are not related to Igbo people, it becomes a
thing of wonder. How is it possible that people that have Eke, Orie, Afor and
Nkwo as their market days are not related to Igbo people?
When you go to Akwa Ibom or Cross River State, what they
call God is Obasi. That is what we call God, where we come from. The highest
fraternity in Igboland, where I come from in Abia State is Okonko. Okonko was
directly derived from the Ibibio and the Efik cultures. The same thing with
Ekpe. When we want to dance Ekpe in my place, we go to Ibibio land to buy the
kits for the Ekpe, which is a masquerade dance. So, we are all related. We are
the same people genetically, in terms of our complexion, in terms of our
attitude. I give all your readers a challenge. I want you to go to any market
in Warri, for instance. Stand back and take a picture of that market, then, go
to any Igbo town or village, take a picture of the market and tell me if you
can tell the difference. There is no difference.
The dressing is the same. Everything we do is the same. The
people we call Bonny today are people from Nkwerre. We are all the same people.
But due to the difficulties, the hardship, the pain that we have been subjected
to, they think it is now fashionable to jettison where you come from and try to
be something that you are not, which is why we are suffering till today.
Does Radio Biafra have any link with the campaign for Biafra
republic?
Yes, we do. Radio Biafra is the most listened to indigenous
broadcast out of sub-Saharan Africa. We have every evening nothing less than
two million people tuned in all around the world. We have on average of nothing
less than 100,000 people visit Radio Biafra website; so the message we
propagate is getting through or else people will not be coming.
Our message is resonating with the people and we are working
with a lot of groups, ostensibly Bilie Human Rights Initiatives, Biafra
Liberation Council. We are also working with other groups across the Niger
Delta areas to make sure we bring about Biafra, of justice and equality, not
Biafra of domination because a lot of people are afraid that if we have Biafra,
there is going to be domination by the Igbo people and our question to them is
very simple: before Nigeria, before the white man came, did the Igbo conquer
anybody? The answer is no. We are larger than the Ibibio, Efik, Ijaw. Did we go
to the Ijaw and say you must speak Igbo language or else we kill you? Or you
must adopt our culture or else we kill you?
The ironic thing is that we ended up absorbing these other
cultures to the Igbo way of life. That goes to show how versatile we are. We
are not a domineering people. The fact that if you open up your shop to trade
and you are blessed and become wealthy means that you are domineering? That is
a slightly false perception of what dominance is. It is not dominance. It is
people actually doing well. And you will know even in Igboland today, there is
a traditional ruler that has converted to Islam – Eze Dumuna of Mbaitoli. He is
now Musa Dimuna, a traditional titled ruler in Igboland! He has not been killed.
He will not be killed. He’s not being chased out or bombed because we believe
in tolerance.
What’s your take about groups agitating for Biafra?
We welcome every group agitating for Biafra as long as you
are doing it in truth and honesty. If you look at the programme of some
elements of movement within Biafra land, you would know that they have derailed
from that cardinal principal. They are not pursuing Biafra in truth and honesty
anymore. What they are doing does not represent freedom fighting anymore. That
is why we say to people, there are groups you can join. You can join Bilie
Human Rights Initiative, which took Nigeria to court, which a lot of people
don’t know about.
A court in Nigeria recognised the word ‘Biafra’ for the very
first time without throwing everybody in jail. The case is coming up on April
30 and we are asking everybody to be in court in Owerri to witness this
landmark occasion. It’s been going on since last year. A lot of people don’t
know this.
Again, we are saying join Bilie Human Rights Initiatives,
listen to Radio Biafra broadcasting, both from London and Biafra land; you can
also join Biafra Liberation Council. It is a legitimate group. You can join
Lower Niger Congress. These are groups that are legitimate. Any other group you
join is involved in criminality and in violence, detrimental to what we are
pursuing. There are people with MASSOB, for instance, who are going about
arresting people and handing over to Nigerian police. People agitating for
Biafra are being arrested and being handed over to the Nigerian police and
these are people claiming to be fighting for the struggle. You have to be
consistent. There is no relationship between fighting for the freedom of your
people and accumulation of wealth. That is what we are against.
Is it right to assume that
your relationship with MASSSOB is sour?
Our relationship with genuine people within MASSOB pursuing
Biafra in truth and honesty is sound. What we abhor is the leadership of MASSOB
because the leadership of MASSOB is corrupt. Intrinsically corrupt. They were
campaigning for PDP during the last elections; everybody knows that. They are
running all over the place looking for chieftaincy titles. We asked them: have
you seen anywhere in the history of modern freedom fighters where you jettison
freedom fighting and start looking for chieftaincy titles? You abandon freedom
fighting to start pricing the cost of cement and sand to go and build a house.
The right thing to do is to wait until you get what you are
looking for. At that point, the people will honour you.
Nelson Mandela doesn’t live in a mansion. Mahatma Ghandi
never lived in a mansion. Martin Luther King Junior never lived in a mansion.
Che Guevara never lived in a mansion. What are you doing with landed property?
What are you doing with wealth if you are a freedom fighter? We work ourselves
to put our money in Biafra. We don’t expect anything from Biafra. We don’t have
anything to with money. That is the cardinal rule in Radio Biafra. You can
never be rich. You don’t need money for anything at all as long as you can feed
and clothe and transport yourself; that is enough. The glory of your people
being free is your gain. Nothing more, nothing less. If you are lucky the
people might give you a three-bedroom bungalow to live when you retire, but we
have role models in the like of Mandela, among others, who never amassed any
personal wealth. These are genuine freedom fighters and this is what Radio
Biafra is modelled on.
You may have been following the political imbroglio between
Victor Umeh and Gov. Peter Obi. What is your take?
It is nemesis. It was Chekwas Okorie that single-handed
formed APGA and handed it to the Igbo people through the leadership of His
Excellency, the late Dim Chukwuemeke Odumegwu-Ojukwu. I have been at the centre
of many things happening. As I would say to Chekwas and the rest of them, there
is, so to speak, no prominent Igbo person I have not served in one capacity or
the other. We were in a room at Millennium Hotel, in Kensington, London, which,
incidentally, I paid for. The deposit of that I still have the receipt. I paid
for the suit where Ojukwu stayed at the hotel. Ojukwu was there, so also were
Chekwas Okorie, Victor Umeh, Ukwa Akwu, Tim Menakaya, Gov. Peter Obi. And I
told Peter Obi to his face that the problem we have today in Igboland is the
Anambra people and I said it jokingly. Of course, he said if that is the
problem, that is also the solution. There and then, Ojukwu said, in front of
everybody, that if he were to die today that he had a successor beside him. He
said it was Chekwas Okorie.
Umeh was there. Andy Emenife was there. I was there. Ifeanyi
Iregbu was there. Dr. Chukwuma Egemba was there. Chinedu Nwosu was there. They
witnessed what I am telling you right now. Who has ever organised Ojukwu to
appear before BBC’s Hard Talk? We did it. Nobody has done that for him before.
We in London did it. The fact that we don’t shout and come to newspaper all the
time doesn’t mean we don’t know what we are doing.
Chekwas Okorie should be given the honour that is due to
him. Victor Umeh, as much as I like and respect him, the way he emerged as the
APGA chairman wasn’t proper. When this whole thing started happening, we wrote
to them to reconcile. We suggested that Chekwas be brought back and made
chairman of the board of trustees of APGA, while Victor Umeh can remain as the
chairman, but they said no. Look at
where Victor Umeh is today? Everybody has lost and we are seeing the collapse
of APGA. We now have UPP, floated by Chekwas Okorie. We are now starting afresh
again. Every time we run a race as a people, we start all over again. And do
you know why it so? It is because we hold our meetings outside. If we hold
these meetings in Igboland and you do something bad, you will die. That was how
our land was structured before they brought in these new age churches to ruin
everything. In the olden days, if you agree and share kolanut, if you go against
it, you will die. We have all wronged Chekwas Okorie, one way or the other. We
need to seriously apologise to him. What happened to APGA shouldn’t have
happened.
2015 is around the corner. Should Jonathan run?
Nigeria can do anything it likes, I am interested in Biafra
alone; but one thing is for sure; some us live abroad. I live in London, but
the truth is the truth everywhere. Jonathan should not run for the third time
because one thing I find difficult in a country that claimed they have learned people
is that most Nigerians are not educated
enough to understand that a presidential system of government is a joint ticket
concept. If I am running as your vice president, I am running on the same
ticket as you because if something happens to you, I take over. You cannot be
sworn in three times into an office; it is impossible. If you claim you are
somebody’s vice presidential candidate, you have accepted that should anything
happen to that person, you will assume power to finish serving for that person on
your joint ticket because it is two of you that people voted for.
They said Jonathan and Sambo. It was Yar’Adua and Jonathan.
Two people running together on a ticket. What the judges did, in pronouncing
the idea that Jonathan could run again
is called following the letter of the law, but not the spirit of the law
because the spirit and the letter of the law must merge for a law to be sound,
for a ruling or a judgment to be seen to be just. Jonathan cannot run again.
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