DR. FRANCIS AKANU IBIAM
TO HER MAJESTY QUEEN ELIZABETH II
I am deeply and humbly constrained to present you with this
letter. For many years, indeed throughout my mature life, I had been a proud
but disinterested admirer of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland
and her peoples. The history of Your Majesty’s country is replete with heroism,
discoveries which were near miracles, and institutions of higher learning of
the most outstanding character and achievement. Britain, though insular and
small in size and capacity, had centuries ago proved conclusively, to the world
that for any community and nation to reach the acme of greatness and respectability,
it is not quantity that counts but quality and the type of people who make up
the nation.
British Christians had the privilege and honour of
evangelizing not only a good part of Africa, my own continent, but also a
greater part of the rest of the world. Her missionaries, men and women, left
home and kindred and comfortable life, to spread Christianity far and wide in
areas of the world where, for want of a better description, life was anything
but civilized in the Western sense of the word, civilization. They endured lack
of scientifically purified water, electric or gas light. They trekked long
miles of single-file roads, endured our moist heat and drenching rains, the
nuisance of mosquitoes, and sand flies and other indigenous African insects. In
the earlier days of missionary venture, they imported tons of tinned foodstuffs
and cared nothing for their lives so long as they could preach the Gospel and
its Good News, heal the sick, and bring education and enlightenment to the
people. The result of this effective humanitarian service, supported
financially, morally, and prayerfully by the Churches way back in their
homeland, has born exceedingly abundant fruit, and for us in Biafra (formerly
Eastern Nigeria), their work has, by grace of God, made our homeland as much a
Christian country as any other reputed countries of the world.
Despite annoying treatment meted to me and my fellow African
students now and again in certain quarters, I was highly impressed with the
religious life of the people of Britain, particularly in Scotland, where I
lived and studied in the University of St. Andrews for seven years in one of
the coldest parts of the United Kingdom. Altogether, I resided in Britain for
ten long years. And having seen their homeland and lived in this Christian
atmosphere in which they grew up, the self-denial and self-sacrifice of
Christian Missionary came home to me very forcibly, I drew much inspiration
from their splendid example, and my understanding and realization of the full
meaning and significance of the Christian life dawned on me with great sense of
joy and thankfulness.
After taking my medical degrees, therefore, I offered my
services to the Foreign Mission Committee (now the Overseas Council) of the
Church of Scotland, Edinburgh. I joined the Church of Scotland Medical Service,
Calabar Mission, Nigeria, and served the mission and its offspring, the
Presbyterian Church of Nigeria, from February 1, 1936 to January 31, 1967. With
the consent and approval of the Overseas Council, I was on leave of absence
without pay during the last five years, December 1960, to January 1965, of my
missionary service, while I was Governor of Eastern Nigeria. As the only
Nigerian among a group of some seventy European Missionaries for twenty five
years, the going was in the main, stiff and at various times, I felt most
frustrated and unhappy. For although Missionaries inspired me without knowing
it themselves, I regret to say that, by and large, they did not encourage me.
Such a situation did not bother me, however, because I was inwardly happy to
serve my people in this unique capacity, and I was not going to quit, come
weal, come woe, until, like other missionaries, I had served my turn for thirty
years or reached the age of sixty years. If European missionaries, I argued
within me, could leave their well-ordered homeland and ease of life, more or
less, and where they could make a name for themselves academically or
otherwise, and came to my homeland where amenities of life in the European
background were hardly existent, I did not see any reason why I, an African,
could not follow in their footsteps and serve my own people in my own country
under conditions which called for naked hardship and demanded much self denial
and self sacrifice.
In 1949 New Year Honours Awards, Your Majesty’s revered and
late father, His Majesty King George the sixth, graciously conferred on me the
honour to be an Officer of the Civil Division of the Most Excellent Order of
the British Empire (O.B.E) for services to the Church and State. Again, in the
New Year Honours, 1951, he conferred on me the dignity to be a Knight Commander
of the Civil Division of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (K.B.E)
for selfless service to the Church and my country. I happened to be in London
at this time as a special guest of the British Council, and when I was invited
by a Buckingham Palace Official to present myself before His Majesty to receive
the insignia and accolate of Knighthood, I begged permission to have them
conferred on me on my return home to Nigeria. I did receive the insignia and
certificate at the hands of His Excellency the then Governor of Nigeria, Sir
John Macpherson, but I had the unique distinction and singular privilege of
receiving the accolade from Your Majesty’s august person during your Majesty’s
Royal and memorable visit to Nigeria in February, 1956. On the attainment and
independence of Nigeria and sovereignty by Nigeria on October 1, 1960, Your
Majesty was graciously pleased to appoint me as Governor of Eastern Nigeria
within the Federal Republic of Nigeria on the recommendation of the Honourable
Premier of Eastern Nigeria with the assent of his Excellency the President of
the Federal Republic of Nigeria. In August 1962, Your Majesty conferred on me
the dignity of being a Knight Commander of the Civil Division of the Most
Distinguished Order of St. Michael and St. George (K.C.M.G.).
For these great honours and special recognitions, I am
humbly grateful to Your Majesty and Your Majesty's Britannic Government. They
are a happy reflection of the importance of Africa and her people before God
and man. Howbeit, I must renounce all of them at this time. I do so to register
the strongest protest at my command against Your Majesty's Government of United
Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland for supplying military equipment and arms
to Nigeria which has waged a senseless and futile war of aggression against my
country, the Republic of Biafra. My objection and protest are directed solely
and entirely to the British Government because I believe that the staunch
British friends of Africa, particularly the CHURCH, and informed British public
opinion will deplore this unkindly act of the British Government to the
Republic of Biafra. With the highest sense of responsibility, therefore, and
bearing clearly in my own mind the moral issues which are at stake, and my own
stand thereat, I return the insignia and paraphernalia of my title to Your
Majesty’s Britannic Government through the British Deputy High Commissioner who
is resident here in Enugu - the capital city of the Republic of Biafra.
During the months of May, July, August, and September, 1966,
Northern Nigerian soldiers and civilians planned and committed the most
atrocious crimes against Eastern Nigerians—now citizens of the Republic of
Biafra. Sadistically, brutally and in cold blood, they murdered and slaughtered
thousands of my brothers and sisters who were then living in Northern Nigeria
and other parts of the former and defunct Federal Republic of Nigeria. They
killed innocent children, helpless women, and defenseless men without any
reason or rhyme. They entered churches and...
[4:01:18 AM] Andy Peter Andy: During the months of May,
July, August, and September, 1966, Northern Nigerian soldiers and civilians
planned and committed the most atrocious crimes against Eastern Nigerians—now
citizens of the Republic of Biafra. Sadistically, brutally and in cold blood,
they murdered and slaughtered thousands of my brothers and sisters who were
then living in Northern Nigeria and other parts of the former and defunct
Federal Republic of Nigeria. They killed innocent children, helpless women, and
defenseless men without any reason or rhyme. They entered churches and
hospitals and slaughtered them in cold blood. And most unbelievably yet only
too true, they massacred women in actual LABOUR and their unborn children. They
plundered, looted, assaulted and raped women and burnt down the homes of
Easterners and left them penniless.
The most painful and unsoldierly act of all was that these
Northern Nigerian soldiers killed their superior officers, including and
especially His Excellency the Military Governor of Western Nigeria, Lt. Col.
Francis Adekunle Fajuyi, and his guest and comrade, His Excellency, the Head of
Supreme Military Council and Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces of the
former Federal Republic of Nigeria, Major-General J.T.U. Aguiyi-Ironsi, both of
them of blessed memory. On July 29, 1966, they were kidnapped by Northern
Nigerian soldiers and ruthlessly killed after torturing them. It must be stated
here that the late Major-General J.T.U. Aguiyi-Ironsi, an Eastern Nigerian at
that time, went all out to build up ONE UNITED AND STRONG NIGERIA through a
unitary Government Administration, but paradoxically and ironically, he met a
cruel and untimely death for that very reason. It is very strange, therefore,
that Nigeria should be futilely waging a war of aggression against Biafra in
her impossible bid to force Biafra back into this very same union—One Nigeria
from which she had been so purposely and systematically forced out. Be that as
it may, all kith and kin fled Northern Nigeria, Western Nigeria, and Lagos and
returned to their homeland of Eastern Nigeria, the only place they knew they
could have protection. In the process, Eastern Nigeria was left to look after
and cater for at least two million refugees, and she has done and is doing so
with commendable achievement. Eastern Nigeria did not retaliate in any way, for
we do not kill strangers within our gates, and being humble and sensitive
Christians, we refused to commit murder, contrary to the commandment of God, particularly
as we believe that two wrongs can never make a right. Northern Nigerians in
Eastern Nigeria were therefore collected together and escorted safely by train
across the border to their own section of Nigeria.
In the succeeding months, the Hausa/Fulani controlled Lagos
Government of Nigeria purposely, directly, and inexorably forced Eastern
Nigeria out of the Federation, and our Military Governor with advice and
consent of out Consultative Assembly had no other choice but to declare Eastern
Nigeria a free, independent and sovereign state to be known as the Republic of
Biafra. This happy and historical occasion took place on May 30. On July 6th,
Nigeria attacked Biafra in her mad wish to force Biafra to return to the
Nigeria federation. Having killed 30,000 of us in their land and seized our
property worth millions of pound sterling, they have now come to kill more of
us in our own homes and make the rest of us slaves to the Hausa/Fulani
Feudalists and Moslems.
The people of Biafra are, therefore, fighting a war of
LIBERATION AND SURVIVAL. We adamantly refuse to be colonized by the
Hausa/Fulanis of Northern Nigeria or any other people in the world. Moreover it
is an ardent desire of the Hausa/Fulani and Moslem Northern Nigeria to
subjugate Biafra and kill Christianity in our country.
Your Majesty, the British officials in Nigeria are fully
aware of all these. They know that we are injured and deeply grieved people and
had been cruelly treated by our erstwhile fellow citizens of Federal Republic
of Nigeria. The British officials not only knew the crux of the matter, but
they also encouraged Northern Nigeria to carry out and execute their nefarious
plan against us. They are angry with Biafra because Biafra categorically
refused to remain as part of the Nigeria federation and political unit only to
be trampled upon, discriminated against and hated, ruthlessly exploited and
denied her rights and privileges, and slaughtered whenever it suited the whims
and caprices of the favoured people of Northern Nigeria. To add insult to
injury, Your Majesty’s Britannic Government, instead of being neutral in our
quarrels or finding ways and means to mediate and bring peace to the two
countries, has now taken it upon herself to supply military aid to Nigeria to
help them defeat and subjugate Biafra.
It is simply staggering for a Christian country like Britain
to help a Moslem country militarily to crush another Christian country like
Biafra. This is just too much for me, Your Gracious Majesty, this act of
unfriendliness and treachery by the British Government towards the people of
Republic of Biafra who, as Eastern Nigerians, had so much regard for Britain
and British people.
In the circumstance, Your Majesty, I no longer wish to wear
the garb of the British Knighthood. British fairplay, British justice, and the
Englishman’s word of honour which Biafra loved so much and cherished have
become meaningless to Biafrans in general and to me in particular. Christian
Britain has shamelessly let down Christian Biafra.
I love the Republic of Biafra very dearly and pray that, by
grace of God, she may remain and continue to grow and live and always act like
a truly Christian country for all times.
I am, Your Majesty
Yours Most Respectfully
No comments:
Post a Comment