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Sunday 13 July 2014

Emmanuel Ifeajuna: Commonwealth Games gold to facing a firing squad

The Nigerian high jumper was the first black African to win a gold medal but his remarkable story had a tragic end. He was tied to a stake and executed for treason. Read the story below written by former Sports Editor of the Observer, Brian Oliver...
The first time Emmanuel Ifeajuna appeared before a crowd of thousands he did something no black African had ever done. He won a gold medal at an international sporting event. “Nigeria Creates World Sensation,” ran the headline in the West African Pilot after Ifeajuna’s record-breaking victory in the high jump at the 1954 Empire and Commonwealth Games in Vancouver. He was the pride not just of Nigeria but of a whole continent. An editorial asked: “Who among our people did not weep for sheer joy when Nigeria came uppermost, beating all whites and blacks together?” Continue
In the words of a former schoolmate, Ifeajuna had leaped “to the very pinnacle of Nigerian sporting achievement”. His nine track and field team-mates won another six silver and bronze medals, prompting a special correspondent to write “Rejoice with me, oh ye sports lovers of Nigeria, for the remarkable achievements of our boys”.

Ifeajuna, feted wherever he went, would soon see his picture on the front of school exercise books. He was a great national hero who would remain Nigeria’s only gold medallist, in Commonwealth or Olympic sport, until 1966.

The next time Ifeajuna appeared before a crowd of thousands he was bare-chested and tied to a stake, facing execution before a seething mob. He had co-led a military coup in January 1966 in which, according to an official but disputed police report, he shot and killed Nigeria’s first prime minister. The coup failed but Ifeajuna escaped to safety in Ghana, dressed as a woman and was driven to freedom by a famous poet. Twenty months later, he was back, fighting for the persecuted Igbo people of eastern Nigeria in a brutal civil war that broke out as a consequence of the coup.

Ifeajuna and three fellow officers were accused by their own leader, General Emeka Ojukwu, of plotting against him and the breakaway Republic of Biafra. They denied charges of treason: they were trying to save lives and their country, they said, by negotiating an early ceasefire with the federal government and reuniting Nigeria. They failed, they died and, in the next two and a half years, so did more than a million Igbos.

The day of the execution was 25 September, 1967, and the time 1.30pm. There was a very short gap between trial and execution, not least because federal troops were closing in on Enugu, the Biafran capital, giving rise to fears that the “guilty four” might be rescued.

As the execution approached, the four men – Ifeajuna, Victor Banjo, Phillip Alale and Sam Agbam – were tied to stakes. Ifeajuna, with his head on his chest as though he was already dead, kept mumbling that his death would not stop what he had feared most, that federal troops would enter Enugu, and the only way to stop this was for those about to kill him to ask for a ceasefire.

A body of soldiers drew up with their automatic rifles at the ready. On the order of their officer, they levelled their guns at the bared chests of the four men. As a hysterical mass behind the firing squad shouted: “Shoot them! Shoot them!” a grim-looking officer gave the command: “Fire!” The deafening volley was followed by lolling heads. Ifeajuna slumped. Nigeria’s great sporting hero died a villain’s death. But he had been right. By 4pm two and a half hours after the executions, the gunners of the federal troops had started to hit their targets in Enugu with great accuracy. The Biafrans began to flee and the city fell a few days later.

Of all the many hundreds of gold medallists at the Empire and Commonwealth Games since 1930 none left such a mark on history, led such a remarkable life or suffered such a shocking death as Ifeajuna.

His co-plotter in the 1966 coup, Chukwuma Nzeogwu, was buried with full military honours and had a statue erected in his memory in his home town. But for Ifeajuna, the hateful verdict of that seething mob carried weight down the years. His name was reviled, his sporting glory all but written out of Nigeria’s history. His name is absent from the website of the Athletics Federation of Nigeria, appearing neither in the history of the Federation nor in any other section.

There is no easy road to redemption for the gold medallist who inadvertently started a war and was shot for trying to stop it.

Nigeria’s first foray into overseas sport was in 1948, when they sent athletes to London to compete in the Amateur Athletic Association Championships, and to watch the Olympic Games before a planned first entry in the next Olympiad. In 1950 there was cause to celebrate when the high jumper, Josiah Majekodunmi, won a silver medal at the Auckland Commonwealth Games. He also fared best of Nigeria’s Olympic pathfinders, the nine-man team who competed at Helsinki in 1952. Majekodunmi was ninth, with two of his team-mates also in the top 20. Nigerians clearly excelled at the high jump.
With three men having competed in that 1952 Olympic final, the Nigeria selectors had plenty of names to consider for the Commonwealth Games high jump in Vancouver two years later. Ifeajuna, aged 20, was not a contender until he surprised everybody at the national championships in late April, less than two months before the team were due to depart. His jump of 6ft 5.5in, the best of the season, took him straight in alongside Nafiu Osagie, one of the 1952 Olympians, and he was selected.

The high jump was on day one of competition in Vancouver and Ifeajuna wore only one shoe, on his left foot. One correspondent wrote: “The Nigerian made his cat-like approach from the left-hand side. In his take-off stride his leading leg was flexed to an angle quite beyond anything ever seen but he retrieved position with a fantastic spring and soared upwards as if plucked by some external agency.”
Ifeajuna brushed the bar at 6ft 7in but it stayed on; he then cleared 6ft 8in to set a Games and British Empire record, and to become the first man ever to jump 13.5in more than his own height. This first gold for black Africa was a world-class performance. His 6ft 8in – just over 2.03m – would have been good enough for a silver medal at the Helsinki Olympics two years earlier.

The team arrived back home on 8 September. That afternoon they were driven on an open-backed lorry through the streets of Lagos, with the police band on board, to a civic reception at the racecourse. The flags and bunting were out in abundance, as were the crowds in the middle and, for those who could afford tickets, the grandstand. There was a celebration dance at 9pm. Ifeajuna told reporters he had been so tired, having spent nearly four hours in competition, that: “At the time I attempted the record jump I did not think I had enough strength to achieve the success which was mine. I was very happy when I went over the bar on my second attempt.”

After a couple of weeks at home Ifeajuna was off to university on the other side of the country at Ibadan. His sporting career was already over, apart from rare appearances in inter-varsity matches. He met his future wife, Rose, in 1955. They married in 1959 and had two sons. After graduating in zoology he taught for a while before joining the army in 1960 and was trained in England, at Aldershot. Ifeajuna had first shown an interest in the military in 1956 when, during a summer holiday in Abeokuta, he had visited the local barracks with a friend who later became one of the most important figures in the Commonwealth.

Chief Emeka Anyaoku joined the Commonwealth Secretariat in 1966, the year of Ifeajuna’s coup attempt. While his good friend escaped, returned, fought in the war and died in front of the firing squad, Anyaoku moved to London, where he rose to the highest office in the Commonwealth, secretary-general, in 1990. For four years at university he lived in a room next door to Ifeajuna, who became a close friend.

Why did the record-breaking champion stop competing? “From October, 1954, when he enrolled at Ibadan, he never trained,” said Anyaoku, nearly 60 years later. “He never had a coach – only his games master at grammar school – and there were no facilities at the university. He simply stopped. He seemed content with celebrating his gold medal. I don’t think the Olympics ever tempted him. I used to tease him that he was the most natural hero in sport. He did no special training. He was so gifted, he just did it all himself. Jumping barefoot, or with one shoe, was not unusual where we came from.”

Another hugely influential voice from Nigerian history pointed out that Ifeajuna, in his days as a student, had “a fairly good record of rebellion”. Olusegun Obasanjo served as head of a military regime and as an elected president. He recalled Ifeajuna’s role in a protest that led to the closure of his grammar school in Onitsha for a term in 1951, when he was 16. Three years after winning gold, while at university, Ifeajuna made a rousing speech before leading several hundred students in protest against poor food and conditions.

The former president also held a manuscript written by Ifeajuna in the aftermath of the coup but never published. It stated: “It was unity we wanted, not rebellion. We had watched our leaders rape our country. The country was so diseased that bold reforms were badly needed to settle social, moral, economic and political questions. We fully realised that to be caught planning, let alone acting, on our lines, was high treason. And the penalty for high treason is death.”

In 1964 the Lagos boxer Omo Oloja won a light-middleweight bronze in Tokyo, thereby becoming Nigeria’s first Olympic medallist. It was a rare moment of celebration in a grim year that featured a general strike and a rigged election. Another election the following year was, said the BBC and Reuters correspondent Frederick Forsyth, seriously rigged – “electoral officers disappeared, ballot papers vanished from police custody, candidates were detained, polling agents were murdered”. Two opposing sides both claimed victory, leading to a complete breakdown of law and order. “Rioting, murder, looting, arson and mayhem were rife,” said Forsyth. The prime minister, Tafawa Balewa, refused to declare a state of emergency. There was corruption in the army, too, with favouritism for northern recruits. A group of officers began to talk about a coup after they were told by their brigadier that they would be required to pledge allegiance to the prime minister, from the north, rather than the country’s first president, an Igbo. Ifeajuna’s group feared a jihad against the mainly Christian south, led by the north’s Muslim figurehead, the Sardauna of Sokoto.

The coup, codenamed Leopard, was planned in secret meetings. Major Ifeajuna led a small group in Lagos, whose main targets were the prime minister, the army’s commander-in-chief, and a brigadier, who was Ifeajuna’s first victim. According to the official police report, part of which has never been made public, Ifeajuna and a few of his men broke into the prime minister’s home, kicked down his bedroom door and led out Balewa in his white robe. They allowed him to say his prayers and drove him away in Ifeajuna’s car. On the road to Abeokuta they stopped, Ifeajuna ordered the prime minister out of the car, shot him, and left his body in the bush. Others say the Prime Minister was not shot, nor was the intention ever to kill him: Balewa died of an asthma attack or a heart attack brought on by fear. There has never been conclusive evidence either way.

Ifeajuna drove on to Enugu, where it became apparent that the coup had failed, mainly because one of the key officers in Ifeajuna’s Lagos operation had “turned traitor” and had failed to arrive as planned with armoured cars. Major-General Ironsi, the main military target, was still at large and he soon took control of the military government. Ifeajuna was now a wanted man. He hid in a chemist’s shop, disguised himself as a woman, and was driven over the border by his friend Christopher Okigbo, a poet of great renown. Then he travelled on to Ghana, where he was welcomed.

Ifeajuna eventually agreed to return to Lagos, where he was held pending trial. Ojukwu, by now a senior officer, ensured his safety by having him transferred, in April, to a jail in the east. Igbos who lived in the north of the country were attacked. In weeks of violent bloodshed tens of thousands died. As the death toll increased, the outcome was civil war. In May, 1967, Ojukwu, military governor of the south-east of Nigeria, declared that the region had now become the Republic of Biafra. By the time the fighting ended in early 1970, the number of deaths would be in the millions.

Arguably, if either of Ifeajuna’s plots had been a success, those lives would not have been lost. The verdicts on his role in Nigerian history are many and varied: his detractors have held sway. Chief among them was Bernard Odogwu, Biafra’s head of intelligence, who branded Ifeajuna a traitor and blamed him for “failure and atrocities” in the 1966 coup. Adewale Ademoyega, one of the 1966 plotters, held a different view of Ifeajuna. “He was a rather complicated character ... intensely political and revolutionary ... very influential among those close to him ... generous and willing to sacrifice anything for the revolution.”

The last time Anyaoku saw Ifeajuna was in 1963, in Lagos, before Anyaoku’s departure for a diplomatic role in New York. He later moved to London and was there in 1967. “I was devastated when I heard the news of the execution,” he said. As for Ifeajuna being all but written out of Nigeria’s sporting history, he noted that: “The history of the civil war still evokes a two-sided argument. He is a hero to many people, though they would more readily talk about his gold medal than his involvement in the war. There are people who think he was unjustifiably executed and others who believe the opposite.”

One commentator suggested recently that the new national stadium in Abuja, the Nigerian capital, should be named after Ifeajuna. It will surely never happen.

The writer Brian Oliver is a former sports editor of the Observer. This is an edited extract from his book, The Commonwealth Games: Extraordinary Stories Behind The Medals

Culled from Guardian

174 comments:

  1. What a sad story.

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    1. Nigeria Nigeria Nigeria, it is finished

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    2. Awww I used dt OLYMPIC exercise book wit a man doing d high jump
      RIP

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  2. Eyaa...

    Lesson: if the going is good for you, you still need God. Stories can change. May we all end well

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    1. The great Chinua Achebe mentioned him in his book 'There was a Country". Pre Biafra-History needs to be taught in our schools.

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  3. WAO!!!!! He shouldn't have been killed like that! R.I.P to him.

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    1. It is usually not how you start but rather how you finish that matters. Today's youth take note.!

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  4. Month sealed. Pretex4luv@yahoo.com

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  5. Nd finally I finished reading the long story. . Dunno wat to say. . Ifeajuna was a great man

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  6. A history lesson from you today, Linda. Who will commission the movie on his life? Half of a Yellow Sun 2.

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    1. True that! Real history lesson. Lol @ the last part of your comment!

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    2. Indeed! Half of a Yellow Sun 2 in the offing.

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    3. It's all in blood of the innocent man he killed!

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  7. Yea a great write up...I remember using that 2A olympic exercise book...eya may his soul rest in peace.
    ....Her Excellency....

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    1. OH linda am in Awe upon reading dis History abt dis great man,I also remeba using 2A olympic exercise bk it was my fave cuz 2B was 4 math,I neva knew wu d boy was on d blue cova book nuffin abt him in our history I ad 2 read dis story out loud 4 my old man and woman and dey knew him. Sad he dead 4 treason he took a "life" dats wat planning a coup means he and his political friends did,doe wat he feared happened it was a war btw Nigeria and Biafra he stood 4 Biafra and died 4 Biafra dats Y he died tied 2 a stake cuz wen he wanted 2 mk peace it was already 2late. No 1da day banned d Olympic exercise bks dunno if am wrong buh avnt seen eni in dis recent days no 1day "Half of a yellow Sun" is yet 2 be approved by d "NVACB" wateva dey call it cuz dey re linked 2 Biafra.

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    2. @ nancy drew neva knew u can't express urself in english oh! Still shocked! Waaaat?????????? Babe biko ozugo nke isuru asu. Ur abbreviations na die too! Choi!!!!

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  8. Interesting read! Linda, I wonder how dis your new social media will be able to read and conprehend this!

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  9. www.meddirectng.com13 July 2014 at 14:17

    Too long , i will continue tomorrow

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  10. At a story! Continue †̥̥Æ ̴̴̴͡ sleep in Perfect Peace!

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  11. nice history.. patoswife@gmail.com

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  12. touching story, in life we sacrifice alot but only God can repay us.

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  13. I am Nigerian and lived in Philadelphia i just finishing reading this article with a friend of my who is hollywood he just told me that this story is perfect to make a movie out of it.

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    1. Good to tell him to research further because a school of thought holds that Ifeajuna was a traitor whose treachery scuttled the Kaduna-Nzeogwu led cleansing of Nigeria (the execution of its allegedly corrupt elites). An account of history holds that while Nzeogwu and his part of the team successfully executed the Northern elites, Ifeajuna who was supposed to execute the Igbo elites rather went to tip them off to go into hiding. The fallout of this is that to the northerners and southerners, it then appeared as though the Igbos in this revolutionary team of Majors had planned to execute the Northern and Southern leaders so theirs could clinch Federal power. The subsequent reciprocal killings of the Igbos in the North and harrassments in the Midwest and southwould result in the civil war. Idnteresting story. He can begin his research with the book: Why We Struck by Adegboyega. Kaduna Nzeogwu by Olusegun Obasanjo and Because I was Involved, by Chukwuemeka Ojukwu.

      A VERY popular song about Ifeajuna goes like this (Igbo translation): -

      Oh! My! My brother and I were sent on a message!
      Greed for money, made Ifeajuna betray us! Oh! My!

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    2. I hope I read Hollywood not Nollywood. We don't want part 1-5 and long pauses between shots!

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  14. Lol linda u are fast o, I just finish reading this article on www
    Guardian. Com, and I said to myself this is an intreasting article and quiet touching, to me I think he deserves to be remembered as a national hero, and I was surprise to come to ur blog and I saw it here, keep up the good work #Nija born America based

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  15. The number of comments on this piece attest to how lost a generation we are... in the end.., different versions of events will continue to be brought forward.. all we can do is dare to dream.

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  16. Wow! He was such a fearless man.

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  17. May his soul continue to rest in peace

    ~BONARIO~says so via NOKIA LUMIA

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  18. Wow! All I can say is wow! Deep from the annals of history.We can only but believe what we are told but which is to be believed?? Glory to dust.

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  19. Well Linda the versions of stories I have heard and read all pointed that he betrayed the Biafran Forces. Wasn't there but they said he did it for money.

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  20. hmmm... the many untold chronicles of a heartache called Nigeria. If only we sacrificed our greed and primordial sentiments at the alter of conscience and love, so many things will become unnecessary and our growth and prosperity as nation will be sure, to say the least.

    I digested this piece with awe. Sadly a majority of today's youth will deem this too long to read.

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    1. my brother how I wish. May God help us and deliver us from greed and tribalism.

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    2. Suprisingly, not all. I read the whole article and was speechless...which way, Nigeria?

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  21. Hmm......What a history!
    Now, who's the HERO between Ojukwu and Ifeajuna?
    I think we should give Biafra another shot....*just an opinion hey.

    *My R1.50c comment*

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    1. You fool!! Didn't you read the part dat said he was trying to end the war. *Some pple tho*

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    2. Anonbeast! Ange cape is someone's wife n mother and even though she's not, why call her fool? Gosh I hate y'all stupid fools hiding under anonymous. Cum out wit ur face or name let's see u and know u aint scared of anybody! Eleke nti oba!

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  22. Too bad #bright bravo#

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  23. Read this earlier today. Great read. I had never heard of him b4. The Naija educational system needs to get over not really teaching abt the Biafran war

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  24. Thank u so very much Linda for this piece. Can't believe there was this story about a Nigerian who took part in the coup that started the civil war. Hmm, trust me am going further to read more about the other side of the story b4 I can't pass a conclusive judgement, cos this one is not balanced. By the way for Ikemba to have seen that this man was executed,there must be more to it than the ordinary eye can see.
    However,my findings will be conveyed to all when am done researching. Anyway, u can join me as we google it out.
    God bless Nigeria.

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    1. Wasn't there but heard Ifeajuna betrayed d Biafrans! U pple should go and meet ur parents to tell u more or visit ur goggle.

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    2. And u think u would find it on google...

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  25. Hmmm i would love to read more about d civil war






    NEVER TRUST ANYTHING THAT BLEEDS FOR FIVE DAYS AND WONT DIE #WORD

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  26. Nigeria is so rich with history, so many stories to tell and I wonder how Nollywood is stuck with making movies about Blackberry babes and Aristos? There many people who should be commemorated in motion pictures, their stories told on the silver screen so that generations to come will remember them, but NO, nollywood wants to make stories of Aki and Paw Paw messing about and Nkem Owoh yarning dust! Isn't it time Nigerians watched a Biafran story or are we going to forever let our government force to continue to think it never happened?

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    1. Well, it will interest you to know that Nollywood cannot make movies on Biafra without grief right now BECAUSE there remains a deliberate and unspoken policy of the Federal government to keep every story related to Biafra away from Nigerian consciousness. It is shameful because look at what it has done - robbed students about learning of this focal part of Nigeria's history. Perhaps if these histories were taught, allowed to be made movies of, tribalism may well have been a thing of the past. Hopefully one day, your dreams and mine about these sort of films will be answered.

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  27. Wow. I wonder what this country would have been like if such strong characters had survived. unsung hero.

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  28. Not a small 'something. Enlightening .

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  29. Good information

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  30. Dis story is 2mch.ekwuruibea@gmail.com

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  31. Continue to Rest in Peace Granduncle

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  32. a.k.a EDWIN CHINEDU AZUBUKO said...
    .
    Too long abeg.....
    .
    .
    ***CURRENTLY IN JUPITER***

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    1. Anoufia....classical example of one of them youth's that don't wanna use their brains properly...and to make thieves,you're igbo

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    2. Im yoruba, if I were you Edwin, I would not have typed anything much less a useless comment as yours. Get your lazy ass off the bed, take a book and write an essay about this unsung hero and how his legacy can impact your future and submit it to Linda for us all to read. No matter how long it is, it is a story worth reading. Someone fighting and dying for something they strongly believe in, that's a life worth praising.

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    3. People like you are the problem with Nigeria today. Learn about your history son.

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  33. Too long to finish,read the first few,nice article though and very heart melting.

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  34. Wow! Interesting and Educative.

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  35. And the killing of Igbos has not even stopped. God please forgive us Igbos and deliver us from Nigeria in Jesus name amen.

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    1. What are you saying? You are your problem.

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    2. Oh shut up idiot. Who was killed in your family that you're saying it hasn't stopped! Idiot, and I'm Igbo before you try claiming mgbati mgbati

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    3. God has answered your prayers. Feel free to leave the union anytime. Nigeria will be better off without the Igbo.

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  36. woooffff!!!!! officially d longest article i ever had to read!!!!! really dunno what to say..only that I love history....and i think this guy was mentioned in Achebe's There Was a Country.....alas!! he was an unlucky revolutionist after all..

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  37. woooffff!!!!! officially d longest article i ever had to read!!!!! really dunno what to say..only that I love history....and i think this guy was mentioned in Achebe's There Was a Country.....alas!! he was an unlucky revolutionist after all..

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  38. Why dig up old wounds, Emma is a traitor. The mess the East is into today he contributed a great deal.

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    1. Tell us more, and please let it be based on facts. It would be nice to hear the other side of the story be it good or bad.

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  39. Nice piece. Linda thanks for posting this.

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  40. I know say this is from Yoruba people or from the family , this man betrayed the Biafrans .. even if he like let him won all the medal he is not a good man .. he is our uwazurike now and the same thing will happen to uwazurike if he do not take his time

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    1. What did he do? I love history, what is the full story?

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    2. Choi! Ihe ina asugodu na oyibo bu finish 'em all..... Idi egwu!

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  41. Intriguing....I still remember the picture of this man on my olympic notebook back then :')

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  42. Linda I want to thank you for posting this I never knew most of the information here.

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  43. Linda who go read all this....


    XDON D DON

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    1. Apparently not you, dumbo. Im flabbergasted by these, "its too long," " my eyes hurt from reading this" comments. If its too long, why bother trying to comment? Let those of us that read and thoroughly enjoyed the article comment on what we liked, disliked, agree or disagree with; why come on here and water down the intelligence of those in an educative and informative conversation. Listen kid, if you're going to act like a kid, go sit at the kiddies tables until your small brain can join the adults in a civilized conversation about an interesting read. Do you understand me?

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    2. Lazy brain. You need a school!

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  44. pls Lindodo let me go and eat so dat i will have strenght to read dis ur history onyekababyface@gmail.com

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  45. www.meddirectng.com13 July 2014 at 16:14

    Linda, i can see u deliberately witheld my comment. There is Godooooo!

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  46. www.meddirectng.com13 July 2014 at 16:14

    Linda, i can see u deliberately witheld my comment. There is Godooooo!

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  47. IGBOs are funny. You plan a coup in a rather peaceful country. The north retaliates on you then you insist you wanna breakout and form your own country. Luckily for you, everybody insists you're not going anywhere.

    Yet till this day, you declare yourselves as the heroes for trying something so stupid and also as the victims for failing in your stupid campaign.

    You all should just try not to be too greedy and let your actions not be guided by tribe but as a nation.

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  48. @ a point I felt lyk I wz d 1 in d story...HERO

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  49. So so sad. May our lives end well...

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  50. Na wa! Nigeria! We hail thee! Things have happened! Things are happening!! Things will continue to happen! It is well. Wow! Wonderful History, How many pple take history in schls now? Even University History student knw nottin abt history! It is well.

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  51. Such a long story here, tnk God av read a lot of stories abt the dude, he was a great soldier I heard tho he lost his bravity when it was most needed bt is all bye gone sha

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  52. Amazing story. One that needs to be included in our History curriculum. People who do not learn from their past tend to repeat it.

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  53. This story has to be written by a white man in a foreign land in a foreign newspaper... what a sad irony in Nigeria's journalism history ...

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  54. Sad. After reading this article, I like this guy Ifeajuna already. May your soul continue to rest in peace

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  55. hmmm...nkemdirimeverista111@gmail.com

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  56. Wow so long so sad. Oyindamolaharvey@yahoo.com

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  57. Nice piece...well done Linda

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  58. Abeg who don read am finish ?....

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  59. Linda I read your blog without leaving comments. But on this I can't help but write. This is our history. I hope young nigerians will read this and get the message behind it. We should stop looking at our differences and rather look at what unites us, cause only so will we become a great nation of which its citizens are proud of. Only when we know and understand our past will we rightfully shape our future.
    Greetings from Obinna. Germany

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  60. All of u saying its too long to read, if it was a romance novel or novel about sex u all will read it all in a day #Nija born America based#

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  61. I have to eat a plate of eba ibo before I can finish this story*open mouth*too long but nice anyway#GiftedDiva#

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  62. NIGERIA IS GREAT. GOD BLESS NIGERIA.

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  63. @hilary obiorah, i swear u always know wat i want to say,but do not have the strength to type,spot on man..patoswife@gmail.com

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  64. Am inspired very educative very brave young man all this happen in his early 20s how many young men and women are ready to make such Sacrifice today?

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  65. Miss Understood13 July 2014 at 18:16

    Nice piece of history.. All these nude pic/hot body/bikini pic seeking LIBers will not comment now oooo. Awon degraded internet trolls.

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  66. Nigerians we lack reading culture am supprise that people would complain at this wonderful history that is too long to read history about our country I knw that many here like me is reading for the first time in their lives is worth reading over $ over again is amazing

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  67. That was where Ojukwu made the greatest mistake during the civil war. He executed the best brain in Ibo land and that led to his down fall. This guys saw what was coming and were termed saboteurs. How can u continue witha war when the people u re fighting their course are dying in millions. Nigeria will rise again we only have to change our ways and call up to God not American,Britain...

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  68. That was where Ojukwu made the greatest mistake during the civil war. He executed the best brain in Ibo land and that led to his down fall. This guys saw what was coming and were termed saboteurs. How can u continue witha war when the people u re fighting their course are dying in millions. Nigeria will rise again we only have to change our ways and call up to God not American,Britain...

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  69. Long story will contiue next week. BAD SAINT

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  70. Nice one linda with this I can believe on one Nigerian but please the marginalisation have to stop. The Igbos have learned from their mistake if not Biafrans we succeed. God blessed Nigerian and give us a true leader. Amen!

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  71. Linda abeg we need this kind of history lesson from time to time. Ifeajuna your name lives on.

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  72. Tragic history

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  73. Those 2 sons were my school mates in secondary school, very brilliant children. The first was a high jumper. The second is a professor now. The issues of 1966 are still with us!

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  74. this great man's life is a story untold and should be projected in a nollywood movie. if it werent for this write up, i would never have heard about emmanuel ifeajuna. wow... i am mind blown

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  75. Ifeaajuna was not a Traitor, His Intentions were Simply Misinterpreted & Misunderstood

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  76. Legend...

    *d cheerful 1*

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  77. Hw amazin dat dis generation wil hav tym & energy to drop comments but not to read a very educative and inspirin article

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  78. This is quite revealing. So sad. Guys, follow my channel on BBM for more historical facts. Today In History: C00494B91.

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  79. Don't discount his memory by saying 'great Igbo son' . The man was a great nigerian. RIP

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  80. Linda u got de story wrong! Ifeajuna is de reason biafra didn't happen! He betrayed de ibo's

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  81. Many people did not read this story well. Imagine some sayin sad! And Bonario sayin may his soul continue to rest in peace!! We know his soul is resting in peace,

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    1. Lmao! Wat does bonario know? Its just linda hyping d flat ass fool! Always coming here to diss goodluck and say little he saw on news papers. Yea dats wat he does. His cousin is on dis blog and ma friend on facebook n follows me on twiter. Told me how he manages to do all dis gra gra here. So eva dear chill! He's just an empty vessel. A nerd!

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  82. Linda,dis ur blog too much o! Some grand papas and mamas are here. imagine some people on ur blog said they were in primary sch and saw his face on olympia notebook.this would ve been in d 50's

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    1. No eva its 70s n 80s which I heard d almighty bonario is 78! I used it too....... I fall in 80s mind y'all fools who'll cum right under ma comments thinking de r talking to a child!

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    2. It wasn't exactly in the 50's, I used the olympian note book in primary school dat was like 1995 and am only 25years old

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  83. Dear linda
    Articles like this will make your blog renowned, more of this and less of kardashians, bikinis, onyx, half naked people and all those things that dull the brain!!!
    I take pride in Nigeria's history...

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  84. I'm so impressed day linda posted dis. At least pple we know we were actually studying back den in school. HISTORIANS ROCK!. Great diplomats, can we now bestow upon Linda Ambassador plenipotentiary?

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  85. In fact to cut d hole story short, linda did u do MILITARY IN POLITICS ? Cos dis is a course in history.

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    1. What are u on about? She only copied and pasted the article here, she didn't write it.

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  86. A very enlightening piece. Would definitely dig up on it. I remember using that olympic book though.

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  87. Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur He Sold Biafrans to nigeria,

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  88. Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur He all rot in HELLLLLLLL

    Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur He all rot in HELLLLLLLLSabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur He all rot in HELLLLLLLLSabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur He all rot in HELLLLLLLLSabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur He all rot in HELLLLLLLLSabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur He all rot in HELLLLLLLLSabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur He all rot in HELLLLLLLLSabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur Sabooooooooooooo Saboteur He all rot in HELLLLLLLL

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  89. Nice write up, read about this guy before he was a traitor for real n deserved what he go. Gdnit

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  90. This is your very best piece for now Linda. I love it!

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  91. @Boniface. The version(s) u heard was/were very wrong. Biafra was ill prepared for that war n when it was obvious d new republic was going to be overran by federal forces someone had to be d fall guy and Ifeajuna and his other colleagues were branded saboteurs. He was a patrotic and detribalized Nigerian who placed issues of his country and that of his igbo roots paramount on his heart

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  92. @Boniface. The version(s) u heard was/were very wrong. Biafra was ill prepared for that war n when it was obvious d new republic was going to be overran by federal forces someone had to be d fall guy and Ifeajuna and his other colleagues were branded saboteurs. He was a patrotic and detribalized Nigerian who placed issues of his country and that of his igbo roots paramount on his heart

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  93. @Boniface. The version(s) u heard was/were very wrong. Biafra was ill prepared for that war n when it was obvious d new republic was going to be overran by federal forces someone had to be d fall guy and Ifeajuna and his other colleagues were branded saboteurs. He was a patrotic and detribalized Nigerian who placed issues of his country and that of his igbo roots paramount on his heart

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  94. I've always known Ojukwu was in a way bad...from what I just read, I think the two should have switched fates.

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  95. In the world over, we the youths just no longer have the fighting spirits our fore fathers held and the passion for progressive actions. We have been over-pampered by our parents who do not want a single bruise to the knees of their offsprings. We oursleves cannot put down our phones and other technology gadgets we have and pick up a book that will teach us our histories and maybe sway us to stand for something worthwhile. I myself am guilty of what I sit and write behind the comfort of my phone.

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  96. asueiza Warmann14 July 2014 at 01:48

    History never looks this good. Very informative. We should invest more in our history. It helps to make unbiased judgements during debates.

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  97. In the world over, we the youths just no longer have the fighting spirits our fore fathers held and the passion for progressive actions. We have been over-pampered by our parents who do not want a single bruise to the knees of their offsprings. We oursleves cannot put down our phones and other technology gadgets we have and pick up a book that will teach us our histories and maybe sway us to stand for something worthwhile. I myself am guilty of what I sit and write behind the comfort of my phone.

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  98. Apparently You can't fight for a people that will turn against you. Nigerians are always two sided and by the way, there is always a repitition in History. Ifejuna was misunderstood

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  99. What a long story a sad 1 to, Nigeria Nigeria ur history is 1 of many colours, atyms I just wish things had gone differently then to ensure progress and stability nau, not what d reality is today.

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  100. OMG!..What an article!..What an article!!..@Bonario...Please go through this article again....and make a proper comment,....many of us look out for your comment and its obvious you didn't read through this time....Meanwhile...the real truth behind this issue might never be known...My heart goes out to his family....I hope his wife and children got to know the real truth behind his actions and his brutal demise...Long Live Nigeria!

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  101. Lindodo, pls make articles like these a sunday special! I loved it. I have a degree in history and all I knew of this man was a few mentions here and there in the history books of Nigeria. Good read!

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  102. Am so impressed with dis write up, bt also sad it was written by a foreigner, 9ga own up!! We need to knw more about our history (more documentary should be out der abt our country, it wld only make us stronger n more united to learn frm our mistakes and founding fathers).......

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  103. Cold blooded power grabbing murderers meant to protect the nation plunged Nigeria into what is has become today. These guys started the coup trend.. Dont know why they are being hailed as heroes tho. They gave incentives to the likes of dimka and all other successive coup plotters... Imagine, kidnapping your PM, driving him all the way to Abeokuta express way and shooting him in the head.. These guys were monsters men..

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  104. very interesting article.
    1. why doesnt the Nigerian secondary school curriculum contain information like this, maybe cos we are trying to act like the Biafran war never happened and thats probably the reason why half of a yellow sun hasnt been given the necessary approvals in naija
    this is a great script for a movie. at least if all nollywood does for us is do a bit of research and organise plays and direct movies with such valuable content....they would have given Nigeria their best. Thank you Linda...please more of this. as for me...am so intrigued, amma go ask google some related questions and find out more.

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  105. What I'll never understand is why Ojukwu got a national recognition for his burial. He was a man who led a coup, which was in every way an act of treason. Furthermore, he fled the war and left his second-in-command to surrender. I don't think the Ibos should even see him as a hero because a true hero would have either fought to the end or surrendered in the best interest of his people. Millions of Ibo lives were lost but he was desperate to preserve his. Cowardice I call it.

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  106. @mr Fanstatic u re right, d coup was proposed by Nzeogwu an Igbo man to eliminate all d corrupt politicians in Nigeria which was a good motive, d Northerners & westerners carried out theirs perfectly, but Ifeajuna & his crew eliminated the rest but spared Aguyi Ironsi wich d Northerners where furious abt & they tag them saboteur. Their failure to carry out d coup successfully led to d 2nd coup wich was masterminded by Gowon & d North leaders. D grudge dey held against Ifeajuna & his allies, dt d Igbos masterminded a coup dt made dem killed their leaders & spare her own, wich also led to d arbitral killing of d innocent Igbos in North, d massive killing of the Igbos wich Nigeria could not controled/stopped bcos d head of state den was Gowon a Northerner, who seems to be please with d killing. Dis made late Nkemba1 Odumegwu Ojukwu & the Igbo leaders clamor for Independent wich birth Biafra Republic. That was exactly wat Ifeajuna saw (war) dt made him tried to convince d Igbo leaders to ceasefire in order to prevent War & further bloodshed, He was tag Saboteur by his pple again, they felt he tried to stop Dem from there total Liberation/Freedom from Nigeria, the Igbos als felt dt he brought d whole calamity upon Dem for his failed coup, he never knew it was too late, way too late cos d Igbos had already made up there mind COs dey felt they are driving to there freedom as a Country....Am a Yoruba man i read abt their history, i was in tears when i read abt d aftermath of d war, i salute d courage of d Biafrans for fighting a three years war with the world als RIP to those who lost there Lives during d WAR.

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  107. May God bless all our unsung heros. I love the story. May his soul rest in peace.

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  108. He was truly a saboteur. But may his soul rest in peace!!!

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  109. This story made my day already.Today in history Ifeajuna sticks to my brain.Hmmmm...Ifeajuna I love u on d 2A exercise bcos u were once celebrated but u betrayed ur dear country by tipping off Igbo elites into hiding(Eze-Kaduna cleasing agreement)notherners n southerners were killed already.that singular cleasing might v made NIGERIA a better place by now.thou I love ur fearless spirit n brave mind by telling ur brothers on a ceasefire note even untill death but Ojukwu shouldn't v killed him ,he should v seen it has one of d short comings of a leader n let him b.Nig forgave Ojukwu bcos we all saw it as his short comings.against all odds I love Ifeajuna unionism days in school.Pls linda where can we locate his children ,he deserves to b celebrated like Ojukwu.We must call out a debate y he must b celeb...

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  110. This is really a piece of our history that need to be brought to light. It is an inspiring story even though it ended in tragedy... He is a sort of hero... the type our world needs now. Young men and women who are ready to lead and die for a cause. We should not die for useless things. Truly inspiring... one that would make a big block buster movie better than 12years a slave.

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  111. Going thru all d comments above,its seems only 2% are just reading about d story for d 1st time,Nigerians needs to improve on their reading culture.

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    1. I tell you.....poor reading culture......

      I first came across the character ifejuana in the book by "Why we struck"........ ifejuana had a compelling personality.

      What strikes me the most is the loss of potential..ifejuana was a very intelligent man and outstanding amongst his peers ...if he had lived till today, who knows what he might have become.....?????

      Maybe a governor, or a senate president???Afterall Anyaoku and obasanjo were hes contemporaries, those ones are alive today and celebrated................A great man whose destiny was cut short.

      Although there is this saying "He who lives by the sword dies by the sword"......he did kill Abubakar tafawa balewa dint he??? ..



      On 2 the Next!

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  112. once upon a time....
    learnt a lot from this story, nevertheless, Biafra had a cause which never saw the light of the day. What we are facing now is similar to what happened in the past. tribalism, Political crisis and religious conflict...

    #PICCANTO#
    lausmithuj@gmail.com

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  113. This is the first time i am hearing his name in all the civil war stories i have heard/read. why isn't his name common as in the likes of Ojukwu and Chukwuemeka Nzeogu who played major roles in the civil war? There are always two sides to every story,maybe Ojukwu had evidence to convict him as a traitor. What a sad end, May his soul continue to rest in peace.

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  114. Really,if you are not informed,you are automatically deformed,this is the first time i have read about this Great Hero Ifeajuna. Wow! it was worth reading,thanks Lili for posting just educative write-up.And R.I.P great one,it's a pity you were born in a corrupt and rotten country like ours,a country that destroys and kills bright and innocent spirits and exhorts criminals. This country has shed a lot of blood.May God help us all in this Naija,Amen!!!

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  115. So sad but inspering
    Cooldavoe@yahoo.com

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  116. Linda pls we want more history about Nigeria and civil war on your blog especially life experiences because this our generation dont understand what it is to be born during war time or the experiences. i dont think it will trigger violence but will always remind us about consequences of war. My mother will always tell me "may we never experience war" because she experienced Biafran war.I pray today and everyday of my life that i and my unborn children shall not experience war.

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  117. Emmanuel Ifeajuna was greater than those that killed him.Q.E.D.

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  118. When love of materialism gets the better of one,every good advice becomes sabotage. It takes good sence of judgement to read in between the line. Case of given a dog bad name to hang it, POOR EMMA. RIP.Love you loads.

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  119. linda, tnx for this story. we need more of this .
    smooth

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  120. Damn! adim speechless... really sad piece

    TEAM LINDAGATTI

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  121. It's a super story

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Disclaimer: Opinions expressed in comments are those of the comment writers alone and does not reflect or represent the views of Linda Ikeji.

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