“It
has crippled the whole of Mondays,” said Nduka of the protest. Many
residents who have dared to go out on Mondays have been attacked and
dozens have been killed, as reported over the months by the local media
though authorities have not provided estimates. The lockdown is
“affecting everything,” Nduka says.
The
separatist group’s campaign reminds many of the short-lived Republic of
Biafra which fought and lost a civil war from 1967 to 1970 to become
independent from Nigeria. An estimated 1 million people died in the war,
many of starvation.
More
than 50 years later, the new separatist group says the Igbo people,
Nigeria’s second-largest ethnic group from the southeast, are still
being marginalized and persecuted.
The
Igbo, with about 30 million people of Nigeria’s total population of 206
million, are concentrated in five of the country’s 36 states, including
Abia, Anambra, Ebonyi, Enugu and Imo states.
“What
we have decided is any day our leader will appear in court, our people
will sit at home in solidarity; to show that they like what the man is
doing for them,” said Emma Powerful, a spokesman for the Indigenous
People of Biafra.
About
70% of the region’s people stay home on Mondays and when Kanu appears
in court, which Ebonyi state governor Dave Umahi said is a result of
“fear” that is increasing poverty.
In
Orizo town in Ebonyi state, Success Nworie, 19, says no one in her
family goes out on Mondays, and “it is causing hunger,” because they
mostly live hand to mouth, from one day to the next.
Many government offices in the region are effectively closed on Mondays, despite efforts to keep them open.
The
reason is more “a psychological issue” than of support for the Biafran
separatist movement and its leader Kanu, said Steve Oruruo, a spokesman
for the Enugu state governor.
In
addition to the frequent lockdowns, Nigeria’s southeast is also
confronted by growing violence in which gunmen often target security
facilities, like police stations, jails and military camps.
Although
the pro-Biafra group insists its secessionist campaign is peaceful and
distances itself from some of the sit-at-home directives, police blame
it for several acts of violence including an April 2021 jailbreak in Imo
state in which nearly 2,000 inmates were freed.
Nigeria’s
southeast, once among the safest in the country, is now battling
violence and deepening poverty as the lockdown hits “the entire economy
of the people of southeast (and) the day-to-day activities,” said Alex
Ogbonnia, a spokesman for Ohanaeze Ndigbo, a cultural group representing
the Igbo people.
With even police officers being targeted by the violence, ordinary residents are afraid to go out on Mondays, he said.
After
some police stations and the residence of the Ohanaeze Ndigbo president
were attacked recently, Nigerian leader President Muhammadu Buhari said
“the law and order situation in the entire southeast is being
reviewed,” but such statements in the past have not succeeded in
restoring stability.
There’s
little confidence that order can be reestablished in the southeast by
Nigeria’s security forces, which are already overstretched by the
10-year-old revolt by the Boko Haram Islamic extremist rebels in the
country’s northeast and rapidly growing communal violence in the
northwest.
With another Monday lockdown around the corner, residents fear a continuation of the cycle of violence.“It
is very clear that the police are not enough to meet the security needs
of the people,” said Ogbonnia of the Igbo cultural group.
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