Senator
Adeseye Ogunlewe, a former Nigerian minister for Works and Housing,
expresses his vision on the issue of Igbos deportation:
Lagos
State belongs as much to the ethnic Igbo as to the Yoruba, Ijaw, Hausa,
Fulani, Efik, Idoma, Urhobo, Itshekiri, Edo, and so on who live in it,
pay tax, identify with it, and settle in it. That compact was made the
moment Nigeria became a single nation, and a successor power to the old
principalities who were subdued and who ceded their sovereignty for the
new commonwealth of Nigeria.
It
was pragmatic. The Igbo had the skill and the industry, and Lagos was
the seat of the Federal Government of Nigeria and its major port. The
Igbo have lived in Lagos since the 15th century when the Aro and other
Igbo first settled in good number in a place we now call “Oyingbo” in
the era of Benin and the Portuguese trade.
The
arrival of Dr. Namdi Azikiwe to Lagos in 1937 from Accra after his
studies in the United States, stimulated the political and cultural
environment of Lagos as no other has before or after him. Zik literally
resurrected the wizard of Kirsten hall from political death. Zik
represented Lagos in the western house. The NCNC was the power in Lagos,
and not the Action Group. The Igbo were prominent in the governance of
Lagos in the Lagos City Hall.
The
institutional development of Lagos – the railways, the ports and ship
yards; the education and research facilities; the Banking and
Commodities Exchange, the development of towns like Yaba, Surulere,
Ebutta-Metta, Festac Town, Victoria Island, and now increasing the
Ajah-Lekki axis, and of course, the ghettoes along the Orile-Badagry
axis, have profound Igbo imprimatur.
The
circulation of the image of Lagos is to date best reflected in the
cosmopolitan Igbo imagination of one of the greatest African writers of
the 20th century, Cyprian Ekwensi, a thorough Lagosian if there was any.
Igbo have built industries in Lagos and have been drivers of commerce
and exchange.
Interestingly,
I was born at plot number 8, Okoya Street, Idumagbo-Lagos, while the
Ojukwu families were residing at number one to three on the same street.
I grew up to know the father of Odumegwu Ojukwu. Chimbizie and Azuka
grew up with us on the same street. Even the Chibeze small parking space
at the end of Okoya Street is called Ojukwu.
I
later attended St. Patrick Primary School, Idumagbo, where I had very
amiable classmates of Igbo origin in the persons of Azubike Ezenwa and
Damian, Ihekuna, both now professors and doctors of today. They were
brilliant, resourceful and friendly.
When
we were playing bamboo and Tene Felele at Orikoriko at Onola playing
ground, the Igbo participated actively. In the area of sports, school
football and athletes, Igbo were dominant at Kings College, St. Gregory
school, St. Finbars, Akoka, Igbobi College and Ahmadiyya College, Agege.
Such boys, Njokwu, George Amu, Stephen Keshi, Henry Nwosu, Patrick
Noquapor, Peter Anieke and Sammy Opone were dominant on the field of
football, while Asiodu, Empire Kanu were prominent on the field of
athletics.
Anytime
we went to watch football match at Onikan stadium, my darling team,
Stationery Stores and our adversary team I hated most was the E. C. N,
where the centre forward, Paul Hamilton, the National Team, Fabian the
captain who bit the dust. Our greatest captain was Duru, Oduah
Onyenrekwa, Onyeador Onyeali and Opel, the greatest outside right
Nigeria ever had, Cyril Azuluka. So, during my early life at primary
school, the Igbo were always there and delightful to watch, both in
athletes and on the football field.
When
I listened to radio at that time, both the commentary and drama series,
the Igbo were there for you. The likes of Chris Ndaguba, Ernest
Okwonkwo, Ralph Okpara ‘Alawo Sekiseki the traveller’. The episode will
end with – The script was written by Ralph Okpara and edited by Yemi
Lijadu.
Anytime
I visited where I was born today in Idumagbo at Lagos Island, the
entire place is covered by Igbo traders in their thousands. They were
never troublesome but decent and accommodating. They have virtually
taken over all properties of the indigenes. They succeeded in developing
all our properties, married to most of our children even from the royal
families. There is no single house you will visit without an Igbo man
selling wares there.
So,
who is saying something else? Only the strangers in our midst will not
notice participation of economic development in our state by the Igbos.
Most houses and shops in Lagos Island have been purchased, developed and
occupied by the Igbos. The value of their investments in Lagos Island
alone is in trillions of naira.
Instead
of deporting the Igbos, whose contributions to the development of Lagos
state are immensurable, you must keep on praising and encouraging them
to keep on developing Lagos State. READ MORE: http://news.naij.com/44704.html
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