Igbo Heritage Of History

Igbo Heritage Of History Here, we talk about developments, history and dynamics of the Igbo nation and her people
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ARE YOU A REALTOR IN ABA OR NIGERIA, THIS IS FOR YOU. SMS ONLY 8149014508
22/06/2024

ARE YOU A REALTOR IN ABA OR NIGERIA, THIS IS FOR YOU. SMS ONLY 8149014508

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21/06/2024

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Do you remember the late legendary actor, Ashley Nwosu, who left us too soon? I'm sure you do, and I'm sure you also rem...
12/05/2024

Do you remember the late legendary actor, Ashley Nwosu, who left us too soon? I'm sure you do, and I'm sure you also remember the wonderful roles he played in most home video movies of VCD and cassette back then. Oh, God bless his soul.

As I went through some old photos, I came across a picture of his daughter, Sharon. I was told she now resides in the US with her family. I couldn't help but notice how much she resembles her father. The resemblance is uncanny! It's as if Ashley Nwosu lives on through her.

I'm happy to hear that Sandra is beautifully married to her heartthrob and living her best life. It's an indication to the enduring legacy of her father, who brought so much joy and entertainment to our lives through his work.

Take a moment to remember Ashley Nwosu and the impact he had on our lives. May his memory continue to inspire and bless us all.


Highlight

(1949) NNAMDI AZIKIWE, “ADDRESS TO THE IBO (IGBO) PEOPLE”This address was delivered at the Ibo (Igbo) State Assembly hel...
12/05/2024

(1949) NNAMDI AZIKIWE, “ADDRESS TO THE IBO (IGBO) PEOPLE”
This address was delivered at the Ibo (Igbo) State Assembly held at Aba, Nigeria, on June 25, 1949. In this address, Nnamdi mentioned the bad press, discrimination and marginalization of Igbos under the British government and called for Igbos to fight for their self-determination but under Nigeria and Cameroon, which will later lead up to the United States of Africa.

Harbingers of a new day for the Ibo nation, having selected me to preside over the deliberations of this assembly of the Ibo nation, I am conscious of the fact that you have not done so because of any extraordinary attributes in me. I realise that I am not the oldest among you, nor the wisest, nor the wealthiest, nor the most experienced, nor the most learned. I am therefore grateful to you for elevating me to this high pedestal.
The Ibo people have reached a cross-road and it is for us to decide which is the right course to follow. We are confronted with routes leading to diverse goals, but as I see it, there is only one road that I can safely recommend for us to tread, and it is the road to self-determination for the Ibo within the framework of a federated commonwealth of Nigeria and the Cameroons, leading to a United States of Africa. Other roads, in my opinion, are calculated to lead us astray from the path of national self-realization.
It would appear that God has specially created the Ibo people to suffer persecution and be victimised because of their resolute will to live. Since suffering is the label of our tribe, we can afford to be sacrificed for the ultimate redemption of the children of Africa. Is it not fortunate that the Ibo are among the few remnants of indigenous African nations who are still not spoliated by the artificial niceties of Western materialism? Is it not historically significant that throughout the glorious history of Africa, the Ibo is one of the select few to have escaped the humiliation of a conqueror’s sword or to be a victim of a Carthaginian treaty? Search through the records of African history and you will fail to find an occasion when, in any pitched battle, any African nation has either marched across Ibo territory or subjected the Ibo nation to a humiliating conquest. Instead, there is record to show that the martial prowess of the Ibo, at all stages of human history, has rivaled them not only to survive persecution, but also to adapt themselves to the role thus thrust upon them by history, of preserving all that is best and most noble in African culture and tradition. Placed in this high estate, the Ibo cannot shirk the responsibility conferred on it by its manifest destiny. Having undergone a course of suffering the Ibo must therefore enter into its heritage by asserting its birthright, without apologies.
Follow me in a kaleidoscopic study of the Ibo. Four million strong in man-power! Our agricultural resources include economic and food crops which are the basis of modern civilisation, not to mention fruits and vegetables which flourish in the tropics! Our mineral resources include coal, lignite, lead, antimony, iron, diatomite, clay, oil, tin! Our forest products include timber of economic value, including iroko and mahogany! Our fauna and flora are marvels of the world! Our land is blessed by waterways of world renown, including the River Niger, Imo River, Cross River! Our ports are among the best known in the continent of Africa. Yet in spite of these natural advantages, which illustrate without doubt the potential wealth of the Ibo, we are among the least developed in Nigeria, economically, and we are so ostracised socially, that we have become extraneous in the political institutions of Nigeria.
I have not come here today in order to catalogue the disabilities which the Ibo suffer, in spite of our potential wealth, in spite of our teeming man-power, in spite of our vitality as an indigenous African people; suffice it to say that it would enable you to appreciate the manifest destiny of the Ibo if I enumerated some of the acts of discrimination against us as a people. Socially, the British Press has not been sparing in describing us as ‘the most hated in Nigeria’. In this unholy crusade, the Daily Mirror, The Times, The Economist, News Review and the Daily Mail have been in the forefront. In the Nigerian Press, you are living witnesses of what has happened in the last eighteen months, when Lagos, Zaria and Calabar sections of the Nigerian Press were virtually encouraged to provoke us to tendentious propaganda. It is needless for me to tell you that today, both in England and in West Africa, the expression ‘Ibo’ has become a word of opprobrium.
Politically, you have seen with your own eyes how four million people were disenfranchized by the British, for decades, because of our alleged backwardness. We have never been represented on the Executive Council, and not one Ibo town has had the franchise, despite the fact that our native political institutions are essentially democratic—in fact, more democratic than any other nation in Africa, in spite of our extreme individualism.
Economically, we have laboured under onerous taxation measures, without receiving sufficient social amenities to justify them. We have been taxed without representation, and our contributions in taxes have been used to develop other areas, Out of proportion to the incidence of taxation in those areas. It would seem that we are becoming a victim of economic annihilation through a gradual but studied process. What are my reasons for cataloguing these disabilities and interpreting them as calculated to emasculate us, and so render us impotent to assert our right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness?
I shall now state the facts which should be well known to any honest student of Nigerian history. On the social plane, it will be found that outside of Government College at Umauhia, there is no other secondary school run by the British Government in Nigeria in Ibo-land. There is not one secondary school for girls run by the British Government in our part of the country. In the Northern and Western Provinces, the contrary is the case. If a survey of the hospital facilities in Ibo-land were made, embarrassing results might show some sort of discrimination. Outside of Port Harcourt, fire protection is not provided in any Ibo town. And yet we have been under the protection of Great Britain for many decades!
On the economic plane, I cannot sufficiently impress you because you are too familiar with the victimization which is our fate. Look at our roads; how many of them are tarred, compared, for example, with the roads in other parts of the country? Those of you who have travelled to this assembly by road are witnesses of the corrugated and utterly unworthy state of the roads which traverse Ibo-land, in spite of the fact that four million Ibo people pay taxes in order, among others, to have good roads. With roads must be considered the system of communications, water and electricity supplies. How many of our towns, for example, have complete postal, telegraph, telephone and wireless services, compared to towns in other areas of Nigeria? How many have pipe-borne water supplies? How many have electricity undertakings? Does not the Ibo tax-payer fulfill his civic duty? Why, then, must he be a victim of studied official victimization?
Today, these disabilities have been intensified. There is a movement to disregard traditional organization in the Ibo nation by the introduction of a specious system of a form of local government. The placing of the Ibo nation in an artificial regionalization scheme has left an unfair impression of attempted domination by minorities of the Ibo people. In the House of Assembly and the Legislative Council the electoral college system has aided in the complete disenfranchisement of the Ibo. As a climax, spurious leadership is being foisted upon us—a mis-leadership which receives official recognition, thus stultifying the legitimate aspirations of the Ibo. This leadership shows a palpable disloyalty to the Ibo and loyalty to an alien protecting power.
The only worthwhile stand we can make as a nation is to assert our right to self-determination, as a unit of a prospective Federal Commonwealth of Nigeria and the Cameroons, where our rights will be respected and safeguarded. Roughly speaking, there are twenty main dialectal regions in the Ibo nation, which can be conveniently departmentalized as Provinces of an Ibo State, to wit: Mbamili in the northwest, Aniocha in the west, Anidinma and Ukwuani in the southeast, Nsukka and Udi in the north, Awgu, Awka and Onitsha in the centre, Ogbaru in the south, Abakaliki and Afikpo in the northwest, Okigwi, Orlu, Owerri and Mbaise in the east, Ngwa, Bende, Abiriba Ohafia and Etche in the southwest. These Provinces can have their territorial boundaries delimited, they can select their capitals, and then can conveniently develop their resources both for their common benefit and for those of the other nationalities who make up this great country called Nigeria and the Cameroons.
The keynote in this address is self-determination for the Ibo. Let us establish an Ibo State, based on linguistic and ethnic factors, enabling us to take our place side by side with the other linguistic and ethnic groups which make up Nigeria and the Cameroons. With the Hausa, Fulani, Kanuri, Yoruba, Ibibio (Iboku), Angus (Bi-Rom), Tiv, Ijaw, Edo, Urhobo, ltsekiri, Nupe, Igalla, Ogaja, Gwari, Duala, Bali and other nationalities asserting their right to self-determination each as separate as the fingers, but united with others as a part of the same hand, we can reclaim Nigeria and the Cameroons from this degradation which it has pleased the forces of European imperialism to impose upon us. Therefore, our meeting today is of momentous importance in the history of the Ibo, in that opportunity has been presented to us to heed the call of a despoiled race, to answer the summons to redeem a ravished continent, to rally forces to the defence of a humiliated country, and to arouse national consciousness in a demoralized but dynamic nation.
SOURCE
Nnamdi Azikiwe (1961). Zik: A Selection from the Speeches of Nnamdi Azikiwe, Governor-General of the Federation of Nigeria formerly President of the Nigerian Senate formerly Premier of the Eastern Region of Nigeria. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Can you tell us the part of the quote you find interesting, shocking, or insightful?
Do you think Nnamdi Azikiwe was right?
Let us know your thoughts.

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29/09/2023

Today SE Govs, all of them gathered in Owerri to talk about same. Can they build the super highways, regional rail lines, mega factories, etc. Time will tell.

Let's give them all support

WCMCaptain Chinyere Kalu: Nigeria's First Female PilotIn 1981, Captain Chinyere Kalu a native of Akwete, Ukwa East LGA i...
25/09/2023

WCM
Captain Chinyere Kalu: Nigeria's First Female Pilot

In 1981, Captain Chinyere Kalu a native of Akwete, Ukwa East LGA in Abia State, Eastern Nigeria, embarked on a historic journey, becoming Nigeria's first female pilot. In a male-dominated industry, her ascent to the cockpit was a testament to her determination and passion for aviation. She faced societal expectations and gender biases but soared above them.

Captain Kalu's achievement was not just a personal milestone; it was a blazing trail for future generations. She inspired countless young girls across Nigeria to dream beyond the limits set by society.

Her legacy is a reminder that with unwavering determination, barriers can be broken, and dreams can take flight. Captain Chinyere Kalu's story is etched in the annals of Nigerian aviation history, a beacon of hope for those who dare to defy gravity. It shows that the sky is not the limit; it's just the beginning of an incredible journey.

23/09/2023
PALM OIL PRODUCTON IN ANCIENT IGBO CULTURE1. Harvesting of Palm fruit by the men - The practice of only men harvesting p...
22/09/2023

PALM OIL PRODUCTON IN ANCIENT IGBO CULTURE
1. Harvesting of Palm fruit by the men - The practice of only men harvesting palm fruit in Igbo land can be attributed to cultural and traditional norms that have been passed down through generations

2. Threshing of palm fruits - Threshing is the process of separating the palm fruit from the bunch and preparing it for further processing; the harvested bunches are split open manually using a machete or similar tool.

3. Cooking of the palm fruit - The ripe, fatty kernels are boiled overnight in a big pot. This loosens the fibre around the central nut in the kernel. The hot kernels are poured into a hollowed out log or a shallow clay well usually molded around the corner of the house with shade.

4. Palm fruit crushing – The women walks up and down its length exerting force and adding water at intervals. As they add more water, the husk begins to fall away from the nut, releasing the fatty yellow juice.

5. Collection of fat floating – After thorough crushing, a good amount of water is added into the mixture causing the extracted juice to float on the surface of the trough with the fibre which is pressed to release the juice. The juice is further collected in a pot with the use of a locally made sieve

6. Collection of palm kernel seeds – Palm kernel seeds are collected afterwards. They are either cracked and eaten or roasted, and their oil extracted to create a tonic oil that is believed to prevent colds and flu and applied on children's bodies in traditional practices. This Tonic oil is called “Enu aki”

7. Cooking of the Fat Floating – Typically, the process involves boiling the mixture until the water evaporates, leaving behind the palm oil. This can take several hours, often requiring continuous monitoring and stirring to ensure that the water content evaporates completely

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04/06/2023

Setting The Pace In 042
Setting The Pace In South East
Application Closes On July 5 2023
SMS Only To 0814 901 4508

04/06/2023

Dear All
Starting from now, we shall be buying Igbo Historical articles from you. This will include stories, images and all that could be recorded as Igbo Heritage. If interested, inbox me or SMS to
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07/04/2023

THE MAN DIED

"I've never heard anyone threaten the judiciary on TV the way Datti did." (Prof. Wole Soyinka)

With all due respect, in the above quote, Soyinka is being clever by half. But I'll give him credit for creative sophistry. Notice Soyinka said "on TV". What that means is that Wole Soyinka has heard people threaten the judiciary - just not on TV. Also notice that Soyinka said he had never "heard". What it means is that Soyinka may have seen or read many people threaten the judiciary - just not heard and not on TV.

Seriously, will Wole Soyinka swear by Sango that he has not said or written worse things about the corrupt Nigerian judiciary? He will not, because the man will die. Truth be told, Wole Soyinka has said and written worse. But even worse troubling is that the 88-year old literary icon is fast losing his once-brimming intellectual spark. The old Soyinka would have risen to a higher intellectual stratosphere to contend that the real threat on Nigerian judiciary in the 21st century is INEC's signature "go to court" dismissal of every allegation of its daylight rigging of elections.

A notorious village scoundrel who steals people's fowls, rapes village women, but who flees the raging mob, gets home, and hides behind his aging father, exposes his father to the fire and fury of the village mob. When the mob arrives, not only will they break the urchin's neck, they will also brutalize his father and burn down the family house. That is the real threat. The old Soyinka would have parablized that story to highlight INEC's brigandage and the court's complicity. INEC is the scoundrel, the judiciary is the scoundrel's aging father. The old Soyinka, the master in storyfication, would have seen the gray lines. But, alas, the old Soyinka is dead. The man died.

If the old Soyinka still lived, he would have delineated the fine and clear moral and practical lines between a threat on judiciary and an attack on democracy. But the old Soyinka is dead. The man died. The new Soyinka does not care about the insidiousness of the ethnic attacks and killings of ndị Igbo in Lagos on March 18 just to keep them from exercising their God-given and constitutional right to vote candidates of their choice. The old Soyinka would have seen that, but the old Soyinka is dead. The man died. Weep, Nigeria; we have lost a once brilliant mind.

The man died!

Vitus Ozoke
04.07.23

07/04/2023

Nigeria’s Hollow Democracy
Why is America congratulating the winner of this disastrous election?

By Chimamanda Adichie

In black and white, President-elect Bola Tinubu. In red, the Labour candidate Peter Obi. (Illustration by The Atlantic. Sources: Adekunle Ajayi / Getty; Temilade Adelaja / Reuters.)
APRIL 6, 2023, 8:51 AM ET

Dear president biden,

Something remarkable happened on the morning of February 25, the day of the Nigerian presidential election. Many Nigerians went out to vote holding in their hearts a new sense of trust. Cautious trust, but still trust. Since the end of military rule in 1999, Nigerians have had little confidence in elections. To vote in a presidential election was to brace yourself for the inevitable aftermath: fraud.

Elections would be rigged because elections were always rigged; the question was how badly. Sometimes voting felt like an inconsequential gesture as predetermined “winners” were announced.

A law passed last year, the 2022 Electoral Act, changed everything. It gave legal backing to the electronic accreditation of voters and the electronic transmission of results, in a process determined by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC). The chair of the commission, Professor Mahmood Yakubu, assured Nigerians that votes would be counted in the presence of voters and recorded in a result sheet, and that a photo of the signed sheet would immediately be uploaded to a secure server. When rumors circulated about the commission not keeping its word, Yakubu firmly rebutted them. In a speech at Chatham House in London (a favorite influence-burnishing haunt of Nigerian politicians), he reiterated that the public would be able to view “polling-unit results as soon as they are finalized on election day.”

Nigerians applauded him. If results were uploaded right after voting was concluded, then the ruling party, the All Progressives Congress (APC), which has been in power since 2015, would have no opportunity for manipulation. Technology would redeem Nigerian democracy. Results would no longer feature more votes than voters. Nigerians would no longer have their leaders chosen for them. Elections would, finally, capture the true voice of the people. And so trust and hope were born.

The Professional Triumph of the Firstborns
JOE PINSKER
By the evening of February 25, 2023, that trust had dissipated. Election workers had arrived hours late, or without basic election materials. There were reports of violence, of a shooting at a polling unit, and of political operatives stealing or destroying ballot boxes. Some law-enforcement officers seemed to have colluded in voter intimidation; in Lagos, a policeman stood idly by as an APC spokesperson threatened members of a particular ethnic group who he believed would vote for the opposition.

Most egregious of all, the electoral commission reneged on its assurance to Nigerians. The presidential results were not uploaded in real time. Voters, understandably suspicious, reacted; videos from polling stations show voters shouting that results be uploaded right away. Many took cellphone photos of the result sheets. Curiously, many polling units were able to upload the results of the House and Senate elections, but not the presidential election. A relative who voted in Lagos told me, “We refused to leave the polling unit until the INEC staff uploaded the presidential result. The poor guy kept trying and kept getting an ‘error’ message. There was no network problem. I had internet on my phone. My bank app was working. The Senate and House results were easily uploaded. So why couldn’t the presidential results be uploaded on the same system?” Some electoral workers in polling units claimed that they could not upload results because they didn’t have a password, an excuse that voters understood to be subterfuge. By the end of the day, it had become obvious that something was terribly amiss.

No one was surprised when, by the morning of the 26th, social media became flooded with evidence of irregularities. Result sheets were now slowly being uploaded on the INEC portal, and could be viewed by the public. Voters compared their cellphone photos with the uploaded photos and saw alterations: numbers crossed out and rewritten; some originally written in black ink had been rewritten in blue, some blunderingly whited-out with Tipp-Ex. The election had been not only rigged, but done in such a shoddy, shabby manner that it insulted the intelligence of Nigerians.

Nigerian democracy had long been a two-party structure—power alternating between the APC and the Peoples Democratic Party—until this year, when the Labour Party, led by Peter Obi, became a third force. Obi was different; he seemed honest and accessible, and his vision of anti-corruption and self-sufficiency gave rise to a movement of supporters who called themselves “Obi-dients.” Unusually large, enthusiastic crowds turned up for his rallies. The APC considered him an upstart who could not win, because his small party lacked traditional structures. It is ironic that many images of altered result sheets showed votes overwhelmingly being transferred from the Labour Party to the APC.

As vote counting began at INEC, representatives of different political parties—except for the APC—protested. The results being counted, they said, did not reflect what they had documented at the polling units. There were too many discrepancies.

“There is no point progressing in error, Mr. Chairman. We are racing to nowhere,” one party spokesperson said to Yakubu. “Let us get it right before we proceed with the collation.” But the INEC chair, opaque-faced and lordly, refused. The counting continued swiftly until, at 4:10 a.m. on March 1, the ruling party’s candidate, Bola Tinubu, was announced as president-elect.

A subterranean silence reigned across the country. Few people celebrated. Many Nigerians were in shock. “Why,” my young cousin asked me, “did INEC not do what it said it would do?”

It seemed truly perplexing that, in the context of a closely contested election in a low-trust society, the electoral commission would ignore so many glaring red flags in its rush to announce a winner. (It had the power to pause vote counting, to investigate irregularities—as it would do in the governorship elections two weeks later.)

Rage is brewing, especially among young people. The discontent, the despair, the tension in the air have not been this palpable in years.

How surprising then to see the U.S. State Department congratulate Tinubu on March 1. “We understand that many Nigerians and some of the parties have expressed frustration about the manner in which the process was conducted and the shortcomings of technical elements that were used for the first time in a presidential election cycle,” the spokesperson said. And yet the process was described as a “competitive election” that “represents a new period for Nigerian politics and democracy.”

American intelligence surely cannot be so inept. A little homework and they would know what is manifestly obvious to me and so many others: The process was imperiled not by technical shortcomings but by deliberate manipulation.

An editorial in The Washington Post echoed the State Department in intent if not in affect. In an oddly infantilizing tone, as though intended to mollify the simpleminded, we are told that “officials have asserted that technical glitches, not sabotage, were the issue,” that “much good” came from the Nigerian elections, which are worth celebrating because, among other things, “no one has blocked highways, as happened in Brazil after Jair Bolsonaro lost his reelection bid.” We are also told that “it is encouraging, first, that the losing candidates are pursuing their claims through the courts,” though any casual observer of Nigerian politics would know that courts are the usual recourse after any election.

The editorial has the imaginative poverty so characteristic of international coverage of African issues—no reading of the country’s mood, no nuance or texture. But its intellectual laziness, unusual in such a rigorous newspaper, is astonishing. Since when does a respected paper unequivocally ascribe to benign malfunction something that may very well be malignant—just because government officials say so? There is a kind of cordial condescension in both the State Department’s and The Washington Post’s responses to the election. That the bar for what is acceptable has been so lowered can only be read as contempt.

I hope, President Biden, that you do not personally share this cordial condescension. You have spoken of the importance of a “global community for democracy,” and the need to stand up for “justice and the rule of law.” A global community for democracy cannot thrive in the face of apathy from its most powerful member. Why would the United States, which prioritizes the rule of law, endorse a president-elect who has emerged from an unlawful process?

Compromised is a ubiquitous word in Nigeria’s political landscape—it is used to mean “bribed” but also “corrupted,” more generally. “They have been compromised,” Nigerians will say, to explain so much that is wrong, from infrastructure failures to unpaid pensions. Many believe that the INEC chair has been “compromised,” but there is no evidence of the astronomical U.S.-dollar amounts he is rumored to have received from the president-elect. The extremely wealthy Tinubu is himself known to be an enthusiastic participant in the art of “compromising”; some Nigerians call him a “drug baron” because, in 1993, he forfeited to the United States government $460,000 of his income that a Chicago court determined to be proceeds from he**in trafficking. Tinubu has strongly denied all charges of corruption.

I hope it will not surprise you, President Biden, if I argue that the American response to the Nigerian election also bears the faint taint of that word, compromised, because it is so removed from the actual situation in Nigeria as to be disingenuous. Has the United States once again decided that what matters in Africa is not democracy but stability? (Perhaps you could tell British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, who quickly congratulated Tinubu, that an illegitimate government in a country full of frustrated young people does not portend stability.) Or is it about that ever-effulgent nemesis China, as so much of U.S. foreign policy now invariably seems to be? The battle for influence in Africa will not be won by supporting the same undemocratic processes for which China is criticized.

This Nigerian election was supposed to be different, and the U.S. response cannot—must not—be business as usual. The Nigerian youth, long politically quiescent, have awoken. About 70 percent of Nigerians are under 30 and many voted for the first time in this election. Nigerian politicians exhibit a stupefying ability to tell barefaced lies, so to participate in political life has long required a suspension of conscience. But young people have had enough. They want transparency and truth; they want basic necessities, minimal corruption, competent political leaders, and an environment that can foster their generation’s potential.

This election is also about the continent. Nigeria is a symbolic crucible of Africa’s future, and a transparent election will rouse millions of other young Africans who are watching, and who long, too, for the substance and not the hollow form of democracy. If people have confidence in the democratic process, it engenders hope, and nothing is more essential to the human spirit than hope.

Today, election results are still being uploaded on the INEC server. Bizarrely, many contradict the results announced by INEC. The opposition parties are challenging the election in court. But there is reason to worry about whether they will get a fair ruling. INEC has not fully complied with court orders to release election materials. The credibility of the Nigerian Supreme Court has been strained by its recent judgments in political cases, or so-called judicial coronations, such as one in which the court declared the winner of the election for governor of Imo State a candidate who had come in fourth place.

Lawlessness has consequences. Every day Nigerians are coming out into the streets to protest the election. APC, uneasy about its soiled “victory,” is sounding shrill and desperate, as though still in campaign mode. It has accused the opposition party of treason, an unintelligent smear easily disproved but disquieting nonetheless, because false accusations are often used to justify malicious state actions.

I supported Peter Obi, the Labour Party candidate, and hoped he would win, as polls predicted, but I was prepared to accept any result, because we had been assured that technology would guard the sanctity of votes. The smoldering disillusionment felt by many Nigerians is not so much because their candidate did not win as because the election they had dared to trust was, in the end, so unacceptably and unforgivably flawed.

Congratulating its outcome, President Biden, tarnishes America’s self-proclaimed commitment to democracy. Please do not give the sheen of legitimacy to an illegitimate process. The United States should be what it says it is.

Sincerely,

Chimamanda Adichie

Chimamanda Adichie is the author of Americanah and, most recently, Notes on Grief.

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Igbo Heritage of History is a place for gathering of Igbo Histories of People, Wars, Warriors, Myths, Artifacts, Inventions and Traditions/Cultures. You are expected to send to us any information you have. Pictures will help alot! Information of Persons and Places of fame and Honor is highly welcome. You are Here Now. Do Something!

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