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Slowdown as Biafra separatists call strike

Country Map - Nigeria (Onitsha-Nnewi) IRIN
Onitsha, in south east Nigeria
Shops, schools and banks were shut in many parts of southeast Nigeria on Monday, the first day of a two-day strike called by a separatist group refusing to abandon its long fight for an independent state. The Movement for the Actualisation of the Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB) called the stay-at-home protest to back a demand for independence for the region’s ethnic Igbos. The group is also protesting the continued detention of its leader, Ralph Uwazurike, currently facing trial for treason. One MASSOB activist said the strike was but a “warning” of things to come if their leader is not released. The protest is timed to coincide with Uwazurike’s trial, due to resume in the capital, Abuja, on Tuesday after official treason charges in early November. Prosecutors said Uwazurike and six other accused belonged to a militant group intent on waging war against the Nigerian state. On Monday in the sprawling trading town of Onitsha - a separatist stronghold - troops and police used tear gas and fired in the air to disperse crowds of MASSOB supporters who poured onto the streets in support of the movement. In other key cities in the region inhabited mainly by Igbos - the cities of Enugu, Aba, Owerri and Abakaliki - businesses and schools shut down and many workers could not reach their offices as transporters stayed home, paralysing the areas. “This is only a warning signal and evidence of things to come if our leader is not released,” Nnamdi Ohiagu, MASSOB’s director of organisation, told IRIN. “Biafrans reject this forced marriage called Nigeria, and no amount of intimidation or harassment will make us drop our demand for a sovereign Biafra,” he added. Igbos - one of Nigeria's three main ethnic groups - number about 30 million among the country's some 126 million people. The Hausa/Fulani are dominant in the north, the Yoruba in the southwest. Not all who heeded the MASSOB call to stay at home are supporters of the cause, Onitsha resident and businessman, Okwudili Otti, said. “Many people stayed at home because they feared there would be violence as happened in previous clashes between MASSOB and the police, not necessarily because they support them,” Otti told IRIN. For others the strike was less a show of support for MASSOB than a demonstration of dissatisfaction with the Nigerian government. Ernest Maduka, a welder in the city of Aba, said he complied and stayed away from his work more because he was unhappy with President Olusegun Obasanjo’s government than as a supporter of MASSOB. “Obasanjo’s government is not performing. All the money Nigeria earns from oil is cornered by people in government while the masses suffer,” Maduka said, saying general disaffection with government was the main reason for the high level of compliance with the protest. MASSOB wants to recreate the short-lived Republic of Biafra over which a bloody civil war was fought in Nigeria from 1967 to 1970, during which over one million people died, largely of starvation. Separatist leader Uwazurike’s claims that successive governments have oppressed Nigeria’s Igbos have struck a chord among thousands of jobless Igbo youths who were born after the war but who have joined MASSOB's ranks. Human rights groups charge that dozens of pro-Biafran activists have been killed over the last six years for campaigning on behalf of their cause, with hundreds in detention after being arrested at marches and rallies organised by MASSOB.

This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

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