FANI-KAYODE SAYS INNOSON AFFAIR REFLECTS THE IGBO AS THE ORPHANS OF THE CORPORATE WORLD

FANI-KAYODE SAYS INNOSON AFFAIR REFLECTS THE IGBO AS THE ORPHANS OF THE CORPORATE WORLD

Fiery and outspoken former Aviation Minister, Femi Fani-Kayode has described the treatment meted out to Innocent Chukwuma, the Founder of Innoson Motors who was openly disgraced and arrested by the EFCC on the orders of Guaranty Trust Bank (GTB) as a reflection of how the Buhari government treats the Igbo nation. He criticized the government for keeping silence and allowing a successful entrepreneur to be disgraced by an agency of the government over a matter that could have been resolved by the Innoson boss and his bank amicably without third party interference.

He wrote:

Such was his shock and anger at the turn of events that the real estate magnate

and owner of the resplendent, opulent and stunningly beautiful ‘Amen Estate’ on

the outskirts of Lekki in Lagos, Babatunde O. Gbadamosi, wrote the following:

“I have studied the case. I am going to withdraw ALL my funds from Guaranty

Trust Bank tomorrow morning”.

The basis of his angst and consternation was the plight of the propietor of

Innoson Motors at the hands of Guaranty Trust Bank, the EFCC and the Buhari

administration.

Babatunde’s disgust and repugnance at the way in which the bank and the EFCC

behaved accurately reflects the mood and sentiment of millions of Nigerians on

this matter.

Yet in my view the matter goes much further and deeper than just GTB and the

EFCC.

They are simply willing puppets, tiny minions and minor players in a much bigger

game and a much wider picture.

Permit me to cross the “t”s, dot the “i”s, consider the background and look at

the facts.

In the last one year alone no less than three prominent Igbo businessmen have

been arrested, humiliated and detained by the Buhari administration.

All three are major employers of labour who fared extreemly well under the

administration of President Goodluck Jonathan and whose companies have become

household names.

The first is Cletus Ibeto of Ibeto Cement, a humble, charming, hard-working,

low-profile and exceptionally profound and insightful man who I met when I was

in detention last year.

The second is the ebullient, young and vocal Ifeanyi Uba of Capital Oil and Gas,

who later joined politics and who was indeed a member of President Goodluck

Jonathan’s campaign organisation in 2015 where we worked closely together.

The third is Innocent Chukwuma, the owner of Innoson Motors whose company is the

only one in Nigeria that produces cars, who I am told is an absolute gentleman

and whom I have never met.

These three men are amongst the five biggest and most prominent Igbo businessmen

in the country today. The remaining two are Arthur Eze of Atlas Oronto Petroleum

International and Emeka Offor of Chrome Oil both of whom have done very well but

that have also had their own fair share of persecution and travails over the

years.

I made a point of doing the research in the cases of Chukwuma, Ibeto and Uba and

why they were having issues with the EFCC and the SSS respectively and I came to

the conclusion that not only had they done nothing wrong but they were being

targetted simply because they were perceived as being “Jonathan men”, because

they were deemed as being sympathetic to the PDP, because they were Igbo and

finally simply out of envy from ruthless competitors.

Given that it came as no surprise to me when, just yesterday morning, I was

informed that Chukwuma’s home was raided and tear-gassed by the EFCC and he was

arrested and detained in what can only be described as brutal and questionable

circumstances.

I was reliably informed that officers of the EFCC and the Nigerian Police not

only injured many in his home but that they also slapped his wife.

Never mind that he was later reportedly offered bail after what can only be

described as a gruelling and harrowing period of torment and trauma: the fact is

that his home should never have been raided and he should never have been

arrested, detained and subjected to this brutal affront and indecorous

indignity in the first place.

Such was my concern for him and the way in which the security forces had behaved

at his home that I was constrained to post the following on both my twitter

handle and Facebook page on that same day. I asked,

“Why should anybody be surprised about the arrest of the owner of Innoson

Motors? They did the same to Cletus Ibeto about a year ago.These people come

from the “wrong” part of the country and they are providing a service and

employment for Nigerians. They must be punished for it!”.

I went further by offering some gentle and wise counsel to an old and dear

friend by also posting the following:

“I have known the MD of GTB, Segun Agbaje and his two older brothers, Femi and

Jimi, for close to 40 years and I have immense respect and deep affection for

them. I urge him not to expose himself to the shark infested waters of politics

by allowing himself to be used by these barbarians to destroy Innoson. If he

does he will regret it”.

Yet it does not stop there. The matter goes much deeper and further than just

the travails of Innocent Chukwuma of Innoson Motors or indeed those of Cletus

Ibeto and Ifeanyi Uba.

It goes to the very heart and foundation of the fundamental problem of what

Nigeria has been turned into by those who believe that they own her.

It touches on the nationality question, the quest and struggle for equal rights

and opportunities for the various ethnic nationalities that make up Nigeria and

the unofficial and unannounced policy of the Buhari administration to treat

southerners as slaves and to discredit, crush and malign any Igbo person who

aspires to excellence and greatness and who is a source of pride and inspiration

to their people.

To those that doubt this grave assertion I have one question to ask: can they,

under ANY circumstances, imagine or envisage Aliko Dangote of the Dangote Group

or Abdul Samad Rabiu of the BUA Group , both of whom are highly successful,

extremely wealthy and very well-known northern Muslim Hausa-Fulani businessmen,

being treated in this way by ANY Nigerian government let alone one like Buhari’s

that was established by the Fulani and solely for the interests of the Fulani?

The answer to the question is a resounding “no”.

Yet for the southern businessman and particularly for the Igbo one the rules are

very different and the treatment that they get from the government and its

security agencies are a world apart.

As a matter of fact they are unfairly deemed and insidiously labelled as the

“fatherless ones” and the “orphans of the corporate world” simply because they

are on their own and they have no favour or protection from government.

It is clear that any Igbo man that has the temerity and the fortitude to shine

and to rise up by dint of conviction, vision, passion and hard work must be

humiliated, demonised and denigrated.

The story and the theme appears to be a never-ending one and it touches on all

spheres of human endeavour in Nigeria. The policy, principle and practice is the

same: as long as you are Igbo you are in trouble and in order to survive you

must sing the praises of the Buhari administration, bow and grovel to the

Fulani, accept your servitude and slavery with stoic ignomy and “bend the knee”.

In the field of the struggle for self-determination and the quest for the

establishment of the independent and sovereign state of Biafra the powers that

be did it to the great Nnamdi Kanu, to his IPOB and to MASSOB.

In the field of business they have done it to the Chukwumas, the Ubas and the

Ibetos of this world.

In the field of partisan politics they have done it to countless Igbo elders and

leaders who have refused to bow to the Fulani hegemony that the Buhari

administration represents.

In the field of the Armed Forces, the Nigerian Police Force and the various

security and intelligence agencies they have done it as countless Igbo career

officers have either been denied promotion and operational command or they have

been prematurely retired.

Yet all this pales before the fact that thousands of young Igbo men and women

have been secretly slaughtered, have been subjected to mass murder and genocide

and have been buried in mass graves by agents of the Buhari government and

security forces over the last two years and six months.

I have written about this over and over again simply because I believe that an

attack on the Igbo is an attack on the whole of the south and is indeed an

attack on humanity and all right-thinking people.

It is also an attack on the Christian faith of which I am a member because

virtually every single one of the 50 million Igbos in Nigeria are Christians

whilst those that are waging this unofficial and undeclared war against them are

predominantly Muslims.

That is why the meeting between the Igbo and the Yoruba leaders slated for

Jaunuary 11th in Enugu, under the auspices of Nzuko Umunna and which will be

attended by the Obi of Onitsha, the Ooni of Ife, Afenifere, Ohanaeze and all the

key Igbo and Yoruba leaders, intelligensia and politicians from all sides of the

political divide is so crucial.

The Igbo and the Yoruba must set aside our dfferences, look at these matters,

speak the bitter truth, come together and agree on how to move forward and

protect our collective interest.

Whichever way it goes and whatever happens the matter shall come to an expected

end because the God of Heaven will not sit by idly and allow this injustice and

wickedness to go on for much longer.

I say this because the blood of the innocent cries to Him in heaven for

vengeance and sooner or later He will hear their cry and both deliverance and

judgement shall come.

In the meantime when I heard about the injustice that Innoson and his family had

been subjected to I wrote the following words which came to my spirit and which

burn in my soul right up until this very moment.

It is a heart-felt and powerful lamentation and it reflects the way virtually

every right-thinking and sensitive southerner feels and thinks today about what

is happening in Nigeria even though they may be too scared to voice it.

“O Igbo what have you done to the sons of Futa Jalon? Why do the heathans rant

and rage? Why do the cow-loving aliens and foreign invaders seek to subjugate

you and wipe you off the face of the earth?

In silent whispers they claim that they have cursed you, that you are not fit to

rule or lead and that they hate you with a perfect hatred. Yet in 1966 you saw

all this coming.

You warned us about what would happen and you tried to do something about it.

Sadly we would not listen and we laughed you to scorn. You saw what we never

saw. You knew what we never knew.

You suffered what we never suffered and you shed the tears that we never shed.

51 years later nothing has changed. They still kill you and rape your women.

Only now they have widened the circle and it is no longer just you.

They have enslaved the rest of us as well. They kill us too and rape our women.

Those of us from the South West, South South and the Middle Belt that joined

forces with them to kill you and starve your children to death have now been

turned into their slaves and serfs.

They kill us too and rape our women as well. They also take our land, shame our

children and hate and denigrate our faith.

Yet we look on sheepishly and helplessly all in the name of keeping the peace

and political correctness: we accept our pitiable plight and we suffer in

silence.

The Bible asks, “what can flesh do to me?”, yet we ignore this divine injunction

and holy scripture and bow our heads in trepidation and shame.

Our men have become women and we mask our accursed fear of death, destruction

and incarceration and our inexplicable awe of our collective oppressors with a

shameful and cowardly smile.

We readily accept every shame, every insult, every indignity and every act of

savagery, brutality, barbarity and callousness that they inflict on us all for

the sake of an illusionary, ephemeral, undefined and far-fetched concept known

as “one Nigeria” which bears false and delusionary pretentions and claims of

nationality and nationhood.

We even thank our collective oppressors and captors and we rejoice with them

when they denigrate our faith and when they slaughter our children and our

beloved in the fields and in the streets.

O Southern Nigeria: who has bewitched you? Cowardice is thy name.”

May God deliver us!