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A former Head of State,
Gen. Yakubu Gowon (retd.) has said the resurgence of a group claiming to be
Pro-Biafra will not in any way pose a threat to the sovereignty of the country.
He added
that Nigerians had put the memories of the 1967 civil war behind them, saying
the recent activities of the group did not pose a threat to the country as they
were only seeking to reintroduce what had long been forgotten.
Thousands
of members and supporters of the Movement for the Actualization of the
Sovereign State of Biafra had on Tuesday embarked on a protest in Port
Harcourt, the Rivers State capital, demanding to break away from Nigeria. And
in a swift reaction, governors in the South East and other leaders in the zone
had dissociated themselves from the protests, saying they were not in support
of the group.
The Punch report continues:
Speaking
with Channels TV on Friday during his visit to Nassarawa State, Gowon said he
was sure that majority of the Igbo were not part of the group and its
agitations. He explained that it was in the interest of peace and to avoid hard
feelings that the phrase, “No victor, no vanquished” was adopted after the war.
He
said, “There is no threat. If there’s any problem like that, just as Boko
Haram, Nigeria should deal with it in a mature way. I even wish I could meet
some of those young people as a soldier too. What I saw was what the late
Ojukwu saw too. So, it’s not a question of hatred against any tribe but it is
about seeking the unity of Nigeria.
“I
hope and pray to God that it is only those few that are there and the majority
of the Igbo are not with them in that group. Yes, it is a democracy and they
can say their views, but let them remember that, with Biafra, it is finished.
“What I saw was true and
that’s what my old colleague, Ojukwu saw. It is not because of hatred and that
is the reason at the end of the war, in order to make sure there was no hard
feelings, that’s why we used the expression: ‘No Victor, no vanquished.”
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