Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu: Biafrans Leader
In 1952,
Odumegwu Ojukwu was admitted to Oxford University. He majored in history,
graduating in 1955 with honors. As an undergraduate, Odumegwu Ojukwu continued
to pursue his love of athletics while developing outside interests in drama and
journalism. He served as a leader in the Oxford branch of the West African
Students Union during this time. In addition, he was known for his flashy
sports cars, which he frequently drove at high speeds between Oxford and
London. It was at Oxford that he met a female law student named Njideka; she
eventually became his wife.
With a degree from Oxford University and a
wealthy father, Odumegwu Ojukwu was guaranteed access to the highest levels of
British colonial Nigeria. Rather than relying on his father, however, he chose
to enter the workforce. Odumegwu Ojukwu was hired by the Nigerian civil service
and became the assistant district officer in the town of Udi, overseeing
community development in rural areas. He later served in the same position in
the towns of Aba and Umuahia. As a community development leader, he gained a
reputation for his quick understanding of complex issues and was respected for
his fair recommendations.
In 1957, again in an attempt to distance himself
from his privileged upbringing, he joined the army. His father was so against
this decision that he did not speak to his son for the next two and a half
years. Meanwhile, the younger Odumegwu Ojukwu completed officer training in
England at the Officer Cadet School at Eaton Hall and was commissioned a second
lieutenant. After attending the Infantry School in Warminister, England, the
Small Arms School in Hythe, England, and the Royal West African Frontier Force
Training School in Teshie, Ghana, he returned to Nigeria in 1958 and was
assigned to the Fifth Battalion in Kaduna.
Once Nigeria had gained independence from
Britain in 1960, Odumegwu Ojukwu was quickly promoted; he held the rank of
major by 1961. As one of his assignments, he served with the Nigerian First
Brigade in the Congo as part of a United Nations peace-keeping program. Later,
he attended the Joint Services Staff College in the United Kingdom as the first
Nigerian officer ever to do so. In 1963, Odumegwu Ojukwu, as a lieutenant
colonel, became the first Nigerian quartermaster-general in the Nigerian Army.
His first independent command came in 1965; he was assigned as commanding
officer to the Fifth Battalion of the Nigerian Army in Kano.
The early years of Nigerian independence were difficult for the country. Political turmoil, riots, and ethnic rivalries resulted in a civil war in the latter half of the 1960s. Members of the largest ethnic group, the Ibos, were murdered in great numbers during the chaos, and more than a million (some sources say over four million) survivors fled back to their homeland in eastern Nigeria. Odumegwu Ojukwu, the military governor of the region, assumed control in the mid-1960s in an attempt to strengthen the bargaining power of the Ibos. He first argued against secession from Nigeria by the Ibos and, instead, urged easterners to accept a loosening of ties with the rest of Nigeria. A 1968 article in Time magazine stated, "Odumegwu Ojukwu was a calm and reasoned voice pleading for a united Nigeria long after other powerful Ibos had angrily given up hope of preserving the union." Critics felt that because most of Odumegwu Ojukwu's inheritance from his father was in Lagos, he had a personal stake in keeping Nigeria together.
Odumegwu
Ojukwu changed his stance, however, and sided with the separatists on the issue
of safety for the Ibos. At one point, he and Nigerian army chief of staff
Yakubu Gowon, also in control of the central Nigerian government, appeared to
be nearing a compromise that would have allowed the Ibos a measure of autonomy
while staying within the Nigerian federation. But Gowon was unwilling to let
the eastern region maintain a separate army, and Odumegwu Ojukwu was unsure of
the ability of the Nigerian central government to protect the Ibos. Odumegwu
Ojukwu reluctantly demanded independence for the easterners. He formally
proclaimed the independent Republic of Biafra on May 30, 1967, during a
reception in the regional capital of Enugu. At the time, he also hinted that
the Nigerian central government had played a role in the genocide of the Ibo
people. He then built up his army and expelled northerners from Biafra, telling
them that, because of the flood of Ibo refugees, non-easterners should leave
for their own safety.
At the
onset of conflict in 1967, Odumegwu Ojukwu received little sympathy or support
from the international community. Nigeria, however, was backed by Britain, the
Soviet Union, and most of Western Europe. The Nigerian central government first
established a naval blockade along the Biafran coast then sent troops, composed
mostly of Muslims from the northern part of the country, to the east where they
were met by Odumegwu Ojukwu's rebel forces. Initially, the Biafrans took
control of strategic points in the midwestern region of Nigeria and the
oil-rich Niger River delta. The central government retaliated by sending in
more armed forces, which escalated the conflict into a full-blown civil war.
Odumegwu Ojukwu directed the overall strategy for Biafra in the war, but he
left most of the tactical decisions to his brigade commanders and often sought
advice from Ibo elders. He downplayed his role in the civil war, although the
Nigerians frequently called the conflict "Ojukwu's war" and depicted
the military leader as a power-mad Hitler who was shattering the unity of the
new Nigeria. Odumegwu Ojukwu told New York Times Magazine reporter Lloyd
Garrison, "Independence is not one man getting up and declaring it.
Freedom without substance is meaningless."
By the end of 1967, Nigerian forces had regained
control of the midwest and had cut off Biafran access to the sea. Although they
had encircled the Biafrans, they were unable to penetrate the Ibo heartland.
The Biafrans, however, were crowded into mangrove swamps and hardwood forests,
unable to provide themselves with the materials of daily existence. Meanwhile,
Soviet-built warplanes, many flown by hired Egyptians and British pilots, cut
supply lines and inflicted heavy casualties during raids on Biafran urban
centers.
Consequently, Biafrans were starving to death at
a rate conservatively estimated to be approximately 1, 000 people a day,
according to Time. Other sources estimate that as many as 8, 000 people a day
died of starvation in the region during this time. Despite the hardship, the
Ibo people continued to support the war effort. Odumegwu Ojukwu thus began
waging a public-relations campaign to receive badly needed supplies from the
rest of the world. He sent out press releases and photos showing starving
Biafrans. He persuaded several countries, including Czechoslovakia, The
Netherlands, and Belgium, to cut off weapons supplies to Nigeria. Odumegwu
Ojukwu hoped for airlifts, which he considered a symbol of the world helping a
besieged people. But by October of 1969, realizing that he would receive little
foreign support, he appealed for United Nations mediation to obtain terms for a
cease fire and to begin peace negotiations. The Nigerian central government,
however, was not inclined to accept anything less than surrender and seemed to
consider starvation a weapon of war that would preclude its having to send
soldiers into battle. At about this time, Odumegwu Ojukwu told Time
correspondent James Wilde, "What you are seeing now is the end of a long,
long journey. It began in the far north of Nigeria and moved steadily southward
as we were driven out of place after place. Now this path has become the road
to the slaughterhouse here in the Ibo heartland." By the end of the year,
120, 000 Nigerian troops had divided Biafra in half.
After the civil war, under Gowon's supervision,
the Nigerian central government took steps to ensure that the Ibos would be
treated as fellow citizens rather than defeated enemies. Programs were
developed to reintegrate the Ibos into a united Nigeria. Many Biafran military
officers rejoined the central government as part of a general amnesty. Odumegwu
Ojukwu, however, opted for voluntary exile and went to the Ivory Coast on the
invitation of that nearby African nation's president. He justified his actions
at the time by declaring, as quoted in Newsweek, "Whilst I live, Biafra
lives." Odumegwu Ojukwu was invited back to Nigeria by Shehu Shagari of
the Nigerian government in 1982. Since then, the former Biafran leader has
become active in the National Party of Nigeria. Although he was unsuccessful in
a bid to be elected to the national senate, his advice is often sought by
factions of the Nigerian and greater African community. He has encouraged the
military to support Nigeria's slow transition toward democracy. In 1993, he
publicly supported Nigeria's Republican Party because he thought it would be
the best guarantor of eastern interests in national politics.

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