Former Military Head of State, General
Yakubu Gowon (rtd) has disclosed how lies by late warlord, Odumegu
Ojukwu after the Aburi accord led to Biafra civil war, between 1967 and
1970.
Gowon made the claim while giving insight into what
happened at the Aburi Conference, in Ghana, convened to resolve
Nigeria’s political logjam.
He said the Federal Government
went to Aburi unprepared, following a disagreement which broke out
between the Supreme Military Council (SMC) and the Eastern region, led
by Ojukwu.
Speaking on AIT’s programme “People, Politics and
Power,” on Tuesday, Gowon said the decision to go to Aburi was borne out
of the desire to win back the trust and confidence of Nigerians.
He maintained that secession was never part of the resolutions they agreed on.
Gowon
said, “We agreed to put our heads together, to regain the trust and
confidence of Nigerians. We went to Aburi, to agree to deal with the
situation of our country, by ourselves.
“We did not go with
any prepared position on the federal side, but, Ojukwu came with a paper
he prepared. His prepared position was on a pink paper. Usually, pink
paper at the Staff College is directing staff solution to the problem.”
Gowon
said most of the positions presented by Ojukwu at the conference were
accepted and upon their return to Nigeria, he was determined to keep the
country united by assuaging the South East but Ojukwu felt otherwise.
He
said Ojukwu’s refusal may have been as a result of killings of Igbos in
the North, a situation that made him (Ojukwu) insist on Nigeria’s
breakup.
Gowon disclosed that part of the agreement reached in
Aburi was that upon return to Nigeria, he would be the first to make any
statement concerning the resolutions before any governor makes any
statement.
He said, “But, by the time I returned, I was ill; I
had fever. I could not make any statement. But, Ojukwu went to the
radio, to make a statement and said the things we never agreed on.
“David
Ejoor was the one who called me one early morning to ask if I had heard
what Ojukwu said, and I said no. He then reeled out all that Ojukwu had
said and I asked David, in all honesty, if that was what we agreed. He
said no.
“To keep the country together was not a task that I
could do alone. I needed the cooperation and understanding of every
Nigerian. And, in order to ensure we kept the country together, I
reckoned that we needed to have discussions among ourselves. We had a
civil servant who was exceptionally experienced and good.
“We
went there (Aburi) to restore the trust of our country. If we were
working together, anyone with conscience will assuage the feelings (of
the South-easterners). But, Ojukwu thought otherwise. He had in mind all
along, based on what happened to his people in the North, that
secession was the only way out. But, we were thinking of the whole
country, because all parts of the country were involved. The military
was not involved in the killings of South-easterners in the North.”
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