Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-25wd4 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-26T18:47:21.922Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Modernisation and Political Disintegration: Nigeria and the Ibos

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 November 2008

Extract

On 30 May 1967, Lt.-Col. C. Odumegwu Ojukwu, Military Governor of Nigeria's Eastern Region, announced the secession of Eastern Nigeria from the Federation and the creation of the sovereign and independent state called the Republic of Biafra. The birth of Biafra was the product of a long and bitter blood feud between the conservative, Muslim, Hausa-Fulani people of the North and the progressive, Christian Ibos of the East. The roots of the hostility are deep, but the immediate impetus for the break-up began with the military coup d' état of I 5 January 1966, in which the civilian régime of Prime Minister Tafawa Balewa was overthrown and several leaders assassinated.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1967

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Page 163 note 1 ‘Lt.-Col. Ojukwu Addresses Information Officials’, News from Nigeria (Federal Ministry of Information, Lagos), 19 02 1966.Google Scholar

Page 163 note 2 Dawn of a New Era (National Ministry of Information, Lagos, 1966), p. 15.Google Scholar

Page 165 note 1 Broadcasts on ‘Radio Nigeria’, 30 May 1967.

Page 166 note 1 O'Brien, Conor Cruise, To Kalanga and Back (London, 1965), pp. 248–9.Google Scholar

Page 168 note 1 Most theories of modernisation in the emerging areas are derivations of the Weberian model, of which the contemporary proponents are, inter alia, T. Parsons, F. X. Sutton, E. Shils, F. W. Riggs, D. Apter, M. J. Levy, M. F. Millikan, and D. L. M. Blackmer. For a succinct criticism of these theorists see Whitaker, C. S. Jr, ‘A Disrhythmic Process of Political Change,’ in World Politics (Princeton), xix, 2, 02 1967, pp. 190217.Google Scholar

Page 169 note 1 The major sources consulted for Ibo traditional culture were: Buchanan, K. M. and Pugh, J. C., Land and People in Nigeria (London, 1962),Google ScholarGreen, M. M., Ibo Village Affairs (London, 1947),Google ScholarForde, Daryll and Jones, G. I., The Ibo and Ibibio-Speaking Peoples of South Eastern Nigeria (London, 1950),Google ScholarOttenberg, Phoebe, ‘The Afikpo Ibo of Eastern Nigeria,’ in Gibbs, James L. Jr (ed.), Peoples of Africa (New York, 1965), pp. 140,Google Scholar and Ottenberg, Simon, ‘Ibo Receptivity to Change,’ in Bascom, William R. and Herskovits, Melville J. (eds.), Continuity and Change in African Cultures (Chicago and London, 1959), pp. 130–43.Google Scholar

Page 169 note 2 Hailey, Lord, Native Administration in the British African Territories (London, 1951), p. 155.Google Scholar

Page 170 note 1 Ottenberg, op. cit. p. 137.

Page 170 note 2 Population Census of Nigeria (Government Statistician, Lagos), 1921, 1931, and 1952.Google Scholar

Page 170 note 3 Coleman, J. S., Nigeria: background to nationalism (Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1958), p. 76.Google Scholar

Page 171 note 1 Population Census of the Western Region of Nigeria, 1952 (Government Statistician, Lagos, 19531954).Google Scholar

Page 171 note 2 Report on the Kano Disturbances, 16th, 17th, 18th, and 19th May 1953 (Kaduna, 1953), pp. 3940.Google Scholar

Page 171 note 3 Coleman, op. cit. p. 333.

Page 172 note 1 Annual Abstract of Statistics (Federal Office of Statistics, Lagos, 1965), Table 2.4, p. 14.Google Scholar

Page 172 note 2 At the elementary level, the number of teachers in the East in 1963 was 8,099 as compared with the West's 3,740 and the North's 2,881. At the secondary level, the West's secondary modern school system gave it the lead, with 6,525 teachers as compared to the East's 2,070 and the North's 480.

Page 172 note 3 Nigeria Year Book, 1965 (Lagos, 1965), p. 259.Google Scholar

Page 172 note 4 Annual Abstract of Statistics (1965), Table 5.5, p. 42,Google Scholar and p. 49.

Page 172 note 5 Ibid. pp. 139–140.

Page 172 note 6 The Nigerian Situation:facts and background (Zaria, 1966), p. 25.Google Scholar

Page 172 note 7 Ibid. p. 559.

Page 173 note 1 See Coleman, op cit., and Skiar, Richard, Nigerian Political Parties (Princeton, 1963)Google Scholar for details of the political history of the Ibos. Also see Mackintosh, John P. et al. , Nigerian Government and Politics (London, 1966).Google Scholar

Page 174 note 1 West African Pilot (Lagos), 6 07 1949, as quoted by Coleman, op. cit. p. 347.Google Scholar

Page 174 note 2 Statistics on voting behaviour were derived from Sklar, Richard L. and Whitaker, C. S. Jr, ‘Nigeria,’ in Coleman, James S. and Rosberg, Carl G. (eds.), Political Parties and National Integration in Tropical Africa (Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1964), pp. 652–4.Google Scholar Also see Sklar, and Whitaker, , ‘The Federal Republic of Nigeria,’ in Carter, Gwendolen M. (ed.), National Unity and Regionalism in Eight African States (Ithaca, 1966), pp. 53–6.Google Scholar

Page 174 note 3 Figures for the 1964 Federal Election indicate that 92 per cent of the seats being contested in the East went to the N.C.N.C., but due to the irregularities of that election the results of this and the subsequent regional election in the West cannot be used as valid indices of the popularity of the party at the polls.

Page 174 note 4 Sklar, and Whitaker, , ‘Nigeria’, p. 612.Google Scholar Leaders included members of the executive committees of the political parties, federal officers, regional representatives, and ministers in federal and regional posts, as selected by the author. It should be noted that ethnic groups indigenous to the North did not include the Yorubas in the calculations. For more details, see Sklar, op. cit.

Page 175 note 1 Ibid. p. 614.

Page 176 note 1 Daily Express (Lagos), 30 07 1964,Google Scholar as quoted in Mackintosh, et al., op. cit. p. 564.

Page 176 note 2 A review of this election may be found in Harris, Richard L., ‘Nigeria's Federal Election: democracy in crisis,’ in Africa Report (Washington), 03 1965.Google Scholar

Page 177 note 1 Nnamdi Azikiwe, ‘May Allah Save Our Republic’, an appeal to the leaders of the nation broadcast over the network of the N.T.S. on 10 December 1964.

Page 177 note 2 Daily Express, 22 December 1964.

Page 177 note 3 ‘Sir Abubakar Assures Overseas Investors of Stability’, News from Nigeria, 20 February 1965.

Page 177 note 4 Nigeria 1966 (Federal Ministry of Information, Lagos, 1967), p. 5.Google Scholar

Page 179 note 1 Coleman, op. cit. p. 426.