I learn of the Bifarian War recently and it's crazy to see how publicly involved the world was yet it quickly left public memory.
@KennyNGA Жыл бұрын
true but probably got overshadowed by the severel military dictatorship like the one of muhammadu buhari who is president since 8 years
@alvin4100 Жыл бұрын
It's as they say. "History is written by the Victors"
@SEAZNDragon Жыл бұрын
@@KennyNGA I hate the phase “why didn’t I learn this in school” as that shows me either you didn’t pay attention in class or didn’t have the curiosity to go to the library. However I can say Africa is fairly over looked in US public schools. And the tangle web of factions probably doesn’t t help.
@scottkrater2131 Жыл бұрын
@@SEAZNDragon Nothing personal, but the US had plenty of it's own history going on in the 50's and 60's, the Korean war, civil rights, the expanding war in Vietnam,the Cold War. Seems like those affected more Americans than post colonial Africa.
@SEAZNDragon Жыл бұрын
@@scottkrater2131 oh I agree. I’m usually accepting of the fact most schools at best an overview of a historical event but I can’t remember going over anything about Africa at all in secondary school.
@williamthebonquerer9181 Жыл бұрын
My fav cursed coalition in Africa was France, Charles Taylor and Gaddafi who conspired to overthrow Thomas Sankara
@aregularperson7573 Жыл бұрын
Just thinking about it just makes my head spin
@vexintersect1312 Жыл бұрын
rest in power to a real one, the rare hidden jem of ML leaders that didn't commit mass human rights violations or cultivate a divine personality cult.
@williamthebonquerer9181 Жыл бұрын
@@vexintersect1312 he didn't rule long enough to make an accurate judgement of his character imo.
@noeenricodomanais2517 Жыл бұрын
Gaddafi conspired to overthrow Sankara?
@holyfordus Жыл бұрын
@@williamthebonquerer9181 Thats arguably why he’s so loved. Unlike his peers, he didn’t live long enough to screw up his legacy
@ekusondebango3568 Жыл бұрын
As a person who saw the events leading up to the coup on 15 January, 1966 and then the civil war in which I participated, your reporting is very good. I want to make a few observations though: 1) The officers who were arrested for participating in that coup were arrested and jailed. Not a single one of them was promoted to a higher rank though. The promotion exercise in the army in particular benefited Northern soldiers as a way of appeasing them for losing some senior officers in that coup. 2) Your video is the very first to point out that Israel actually sold weapons to the Nigerian government in the beginning but stopped after a world outcry over the slaughter of civilians. Israel sold upwards of half a million dollars worth of weapons in a very short period of time before desisting from doing so. 3) Your video made mention of Frederick Forsyth as a BBC reporter. He worked in Biafra as a British military intelligence officer with BBC credentials for cover. He even admitted that much not too long ago. 4) The role of the British government in the war had a lot to do with British oil interests in light of the Arab -Israel conflict of 1967. You pointed this out precisely and I commend you for doing so. 5) You also mentioned that when the Northern People's Congress(NPC) won the most seats in parliament in the 1959 election that set the stage for independence, the leader of that party, Ibrahim Ahmadu Bello was expected to become Prime Minister but he turned it down. Instead he nominated Abubakar Tafawa Balewa for the position. The reason is that Bello did not want to be surrounded by "infidels" at the federal capital in Lagos should he accept that position. Bello remained the most powerful politician though and he always referred to the PM Balewa as "our boy in Lagos". I commend you for the effort you put into the video though.
@Anedoje Жыл бұрын
More like Bello had zero interest in the rest of Nigeria his policies were strictly North first
@mohammedbalaabdullahi8963 Жыл бұрын
Yes, North fist!
@ekusondebango3568 Жыл бұрын
@@mohammedbalaabdullahi8963 And his North "fist' policy led to backwardness in the North abi.
@Osamuyiii Жыл бұрын
This is an amazing addendum to the video. However, I believe the primary reason Ahmadu Bello declined the Prime Ministership was because of his North-first agenda. He was far more invested in the political and social autonomy and advancement of the North alone than in the entire Nigerian project.
@liquidkarim Жыл бұрын
It was no secret that Ahmadu Bello's ultimate goal was to become Sultan of Sokoto and he could not do that while being Prime Minister. Your statement on him not wanting to be around 'infidels' is false as I cannot find proof on it online anywhere. Unless you have a source.
@LAHFaust Жыл бұрын
A very well thought-out and researched video essay about a conflict which is relatively well-known but barely dove into. Subscribed.
@ifexki Жыл бұрын
It's funny how the westerns know more about the history of Nigeria than 99% of Nigerian do. I am Igbo from Enugu state and I haven't left Enugu all my life but this is one of the most informative video or expose I've learnt on the Nigeria civil war
@mohammedmusa481 Жыл бұрын
If you’re uninformed just say that. This is a good video, but shallow and sometimes wrong. “Fafawa Balewa” instead of Tafawa, NCNC is national council of Nigeria and the cameroons, not “nigerian citizens” as the video says just to name a few of the errors. The real problem is Nigerians like you waiting for random westerners to tell your stories and ignoring local sources of our history, which are plentiful.
@ifexki Жыл бұрын
@@mohammedmusa481 who said I am uninformed? When Nigeria only pedals a shallow surface narrative. Tell me you knew of that back story he gave before diving into the Igbo massacre by the Hausa/ Falani, Yoruba coalition? There are lots we Nigerian don't know about what led up to the war and what happened after the war and if we don't know that and don't learn from the mistakes of our fathers, we'll end up repeating them. You can't troubleshoot a faulty system if you don't keep records of how they got faulty in the past. Neither can you predict weather if you don't know of its past climate.
@mohammedmusa481 Жыл бұрын
@@ifexki Ofcourse I was aware of the back story! That’s why I said if you were uninformed you should just say that and not speak for 99% of Nigerians. No one is arguing about the importance of learning from the past, my complaint is your faulty assumption that Nigerians don’t know about their own. Imagine you, someone who grew up in the former capital of Biafra not knowing your own history? It’s sickening. Imagine believing your people’s fight for self determination was merely a proxy war for western powers? Everything is not about westerners. Anyways I blame the government for removing history from the high school curriculum.
@ifexki Жыл бұрын
@@mohammedmusa481 Sicken yourself too. Please get behind me mumu. What do you? Besides how do I know your claims are real and because you probably watched some few biased documentaries makes you think you know anything? Don't reply my post biko, get away. I made my claim not because I'm not very read read on the topic but because 90% of the real documented events and round table talks are locked up in western archives. Same applies to Majority of African histories. So please shut up and get lost mtcheew. Nwoke bok haram.
@mohammedmusa481 Жыл бұрын
@@ifexki your dirty tribalism is showing and I’m not Hausa so your Boko Haram insult no enter. Efulefu
@hkauffman604 Жыл бұрын
today i learned something new about the civil war. little change though: its pronounced "Lay-gos" not "Lah-gos", nigerians pronounce it as the former. (i am a nigerian, just for disclaimer)
@stimihendrix3404 Жыл бұрын
not just that, its eeg-bo not egg-bo, your-uh-buh not your-rue-buh, house-uh not hass-ah
@futumukafulangenge9863 Жыл бұрын
Tometo, tomato, does it matter.? Accents.
@theonlychickensama8353 Жыл бұрын
@@futumukafulangenge9863 perhaps, but could be helpful for next time as it makes him sound extra competent on the topic . Not that he isn't competent right now of course
@BasedEngineer Жыл бұрын
@futumukafulangenge9863 The way he pronounces "Lagos" is the original Portuguese pronunciation. The way he pronounced "Yoruba" and "Hausa" is just a matter of accent. However, his pronunciation of "Igbo" was flat out incorrect.
@stimihendrix3404 Жыл бұрын
@@futumukafulangenge9863 thats not an accent idiot, its the improper pronunciation.
@tomassankara5067 Жыл бұрын
All in all, this was a well researched video. The part I found most interesting was the back and forth on Lagos as FCT. No wonder it finally got relocated to Abuja.
@beepboop204 Жыл бұрын
i worked with a dude who survived this and immigrated to Canada. dude had been through some stuff.
@Mcmotherfuckingrory Жыл бұрын
*emigrated to, just so you know.
@beepboop204 Жыл бұрын
@@Mcmotherfuckingrory well, NO, just so YOU KNOW im·mi·grate /ˈiməˌɡrāt/ Learn to pronounce verbNorth American past tense: immigrated; past participle: immigrated he immigrated to Canada.
@beepboop204 Жыл бұрын
@@Mcmotherfuckingrory i guess you are confused about "emigration FROM" compared to "immigration TO" a country. i know English is a very hard language to master, but im an educated native speaker with an overly large vocabulary, so if you gonna try to "JuSt So YoU kNoW" you better know what you are doing. hopefully others can learn from your ignorance and confusion over the words "emigrated" and "immigrated"
@ekusondebango3568 Жыл бұрын
@@beepboop204 I thought it was just me . I was struggling to understand that psychobabble rant myself. Thanks for the clarification. I think that I will be able to sleep very well tonight. Good dreams!
@xboneava Жыл бұрын
The way Nigeria was split is it’s greatest problem right now. The north makes up majority of Nigeria, and the Igbos and Yoruba are so small. There can never be a thing as one Nigeria that’s why there’s constant tussle for power of presidency.
@windsurfer8824 Жыл бұрын
You don't know anything, Yoruba land is large and extends to parts of Benin and Togo. And the Yoruba people in Nigeria alone are about 50 million in number, the entire Northern Nigeria is about 100 million, but that's not only the Hausa, but other group like the Kanuri, Fulani and others. It's Igbo land that's small,and even Biafra is a land grabber war because their land is Small
@joshuaekpe6211 Жыл бұрын
@@windsurfer8824 He knows what he's saying and he's right, even tho Yoruba and Igbo are the 2nd n 3rd major ethnic group which basically embodies the Southern region, they'll still need to make an alliance with north, we are all at the mercy of the north. and how was Biafra a land grab war?
@tyronelorenzovalentio3414 Жыл бұрын
@@windsurfer8824 what are u talking about the Igbo land is 45 millions in Nigeria alone
@Benzene-y1l Жыл бұрын
@@windsurfer8824 You don't know anything....you think biafra is only Lagos State right?😆🤣
@ifeoluwaoni7999 Жыл бұрын
That's not entirely true, Southern Nigeria is not at the mercy of the North, neither is North's populated as our past fraudulent census made us believe. The South, I mean the Igbos, Yorubas, and Niger Delta, have never gone in one direction politically before since Nigerian independence, despite sharing predominantly Christian faith. Greed and internal fighting, and rivalry hasn't made the South united, the day South decides to work together and form ally with the Christian middle belt state, power will be taken completely out of the hands of Northern Muslims.
@F.udemin Жыл бұрын
Thank you for covering respectfully. I lost so much family in this war.
@jamescurrier6454 Жыл бұрын
Love your channel, i hope the best for you keep up the great work
@holyrosery5601 Жыл бұрын
My husband is Biafara veteran. I was 8 years old during Biafara and Nigeria war. Biafara must go their own way. I am igbo and we are still suffering.
@michaelking4760 Жыл бұрын
We are still suffering 😭
@flobekoe Жыл бұрын
@@michaelking4760Biafra Kwenu
@ikechukwuemmanuelezema4295 Жыл бұрын
U dey suffer how?
@ikechukwuemmanuelezema4295 Жыл бұрын
@@michaelking4760 u and who dey suffer?u no dey chop for ur house?anybody hold chain for ur hand?mk una dey well!!ah be igbo but ah no support wetin u talk here!!me no dey suffer!!
@albanchigozirim5144 Жыл бұрын
U Are just lazy that's all. Nigeria has everything to help u succeed. Stop Ur tears
@75echo Жыл бұрын
The fact that General Gowon was a traitor and switched sides to join the Hausa/fulani north is often ignored. Thank you for pointing out many inportant things in this historical presentation. By the way, currently Gen. Gowons own people in the middle belt are currently experiencing the same discrimination and persecution from the muslim north like the Igbos experienced in the pre-war period.
@chukemmang Жыл бұрын
Just like the issues that caused war 1 weren't resolved, which led to a world war 2 and is still brewing a world war 3. The issues that caused the civil war between Biafra and Nigeria, still remains unresolved and might lead to another civil war.
@kenedixon5720 Жыл бұрын
Very interesting and intriguing. Thank you so much
@ebukahjoseph8016 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for doing this justice. As an Igbo myself, I cried watching this.
@vincesega6885 Жыл бұрын
I fair decision given the fact that 50% of the oil wealth in the east was going to the other regions anyway.
@Sceptonic Жыл бұрын
@masudsaleh5155ah yes, one or a few people who happen to be Igbo justifies the atrocities the Nigerian armed forces commited
@okene8 ай бұрын
@@vincesega6885most of the oil isn't on Igbo land. The coastal regions are all niger-delta and being from there myself, I can tell you that they are the first people to chest beat and denounce any perceived igbo-ness you claim they have. The situation is much more complex, even in Biafra many people were against it and against Igbo domination. Like the video said, Biafran officers were killed by Biafrans primarily
@zaippiaz Жыл бұрын
Thank you for your breakdown
@awelechukwuemeka1382 Жыл бұрын
This is an European take on the civil war it had nothing to do with your cold war it had its own circumstances infact Communist China Russia and Britian were on the Nigerian side while France was the only country aiding Biafra and both Biafra and Nigeria were not fighting for capitalism or communism the Biafrans were fighting against ethnic cleansing and both leaders of Biafra and Nigeria had an economic incentive also oil pls get your facts right had nothing to do with your cold war.
@ikengaspirit3063 Жыл бұрын
I think China declared on the Biafran side due to the Sino-Soviet split but everything else is accurate.
@enachioken Жыл бұрын
Ummm, I don't understand your take nwanne. You described exactly what the video said.
@AndreMazi-du3ck7 ай бұрын
@@ikengaspirit3063Then why was running out of bullets and no tanks or real war planes
@ikengaspirit30637 ай бұрын
@@AndreMazi-du3ck because China and most other factions that declared for Biafra, provided NO material support for Biafra.
@skeletonkeysproductionskp Жыл бұрын
Great video, I covered this in my own video: "What if Biafra Was Independent?", where I explore this history, but then go on to suggest how African history and geopolitics would have been completely transformed! Leave a comment to share your thoughts!
@BlvckMidas Жыл бұрын
Mannnn, as a young Nigerian with many elders that still claim Biafra; Nigerian would be 100000x better if Biafra became independent
@manniking233 Жыл бұрын
Drop the link to the video, please.
@mr.pavone9719 Жыл бұрын
This video has put the mish-mash of source material for the game FarCry 2 into a much better perspective. While the game takes place in an unnamed African country it is certainly based in real events like this.
@enachioken Жыл бұрын
Thanks for this video. I've subscribed.
@nyasputin Жыл бұрын
Nigerian here! Great video! My only issue is the pronounciation of Lagos. Its meant to be pronounced kind of like lay - gos.
@nyasputin Жыл бұрын
Also some of the other names like Hausa and Igbo
@andycockrum1212 Жыл бұрын
I’m glad a Nigerian says it’s good info, cause I was worried when he kept pronouncing “Igbo” incorrectly
@nyasputin Жыл бұрын
@@andycockrum1212 same haha
@extragoogleaccount6061 Жыл бұрын
Hey there, can I ask you a question? In modern Nigeria, do the majority of people identify as "Nigerians" first, or by tribal association first? I guess basically, have the divisions healed any in the time since the war, or is it still culturally "fresh" and many do not feel there is a united "Nigerian" identity? Thanks!
@nyasputin Жыл бұрын
@@extragoogleaccount6061 I think it really depends on the person I think
@justinfrank7600 Жыл бұрын
Very interesting and very educational.. as an IGBO Nigerian and African❤
@NateBrantley Жыл бұрын
I love your channel, thank you 🙏
@Uloaku-Banks Жыл бұрын
I’m a Biafran and IPOB member. We are still fighting to restore our beloved nation Biafra. The Lugardian contraption Nigeria must collapse one day. 😅
@agberodongetinternet8651 Жыл бұрын
mark my words, you will all die like your fathers before you
@aSSGoblin1488 Жыл бұрын
who xares if a bunch of nigerians kill each other
@kenechukwnemoneharrison2461 Жыл бұрын
Let this channel talk more of modern day Biafrans struggle nd the true story of what the state is still doing today
@adebayosanmi1780 Жыл бұрын
You guys go still die like your heroes if you people refuse to have sense
@majeedmamah7457 Жыл бұрын
Nigerians are stronger as one people. Let's not create more division.
@dzemuus Жыл бұрын
I don’t understand why people keep calling it ‘The Biafra War’. It was a genocide. The Nigeria military carried out a genocide on the Biafran, the Igbo tribe. Stop misleading people.
@adb_500 Жыл бұрын
What happened in 1966
@MrBallofa Жыл бұрын
Great Video, Everything was well organized and easy to follow
@jonahs4819 Жыл бұрын
Imagine if you and 10 other random guys in your hometown were falsely arrested by a corrupt group of police, and you guys were all forced into a jail cell together. After a while you guys end up forming a gang to stay safe, and you grow a relationship based on your shared hatred for the police that put you in jail. Then suddenly one day, a judge decides that you’re all free to go, the charges have been dropped. As you walk out the door of the prison, you try to say goodbye to the 10 other guys you were stuck in there with, because you can’t wait to go back home to your own family. But instead of letting you go, the other 10 guys grab you and force you to stay with them. Even on the outside of the prison walls, they still see themselves as they did in prison. “We’re a gang now, you can’t leave us”. For real, I feel like the final stage of post-colonialism is the decolonization of the European-imposed borders. And we haven’t TRULY gotten to that stage yet, but it is inevitable.
@UnbekannterSoldat74 Жыл бұрын
this is so true.
@morten3465 Жыл бұрын
I just watched a DAVOS panel where an african journalist flat out said: "I wish for Africa to be one country" and an (African) finance minister flat out told him "that's not gonna happen" (which I agree with). It's wild to me that so many people talk about Africa as one thing, while ignoring that it's a lot like a huge version of Europe under the Renaissance: progress from bad centuries, sure, but factions, faith, nationalism and quite a lot of violence keep it from being anything like ONE country.
@UnbekannterSoldat74 Жыл бұрын
@@morten3465 But I really wish for countries in Africa to find peace through long term, sustainable cooperation. History cannot be forgotten, but it can be reconciliated.
@thegroundwaterresearcher Жыл бұрын
Deep insights
@thegroundwaterresearcher Жыл бұрын
I love your thought pattern. Nigeria, like most post colonial territories are artificial creations of imperialism.
@PaulSyp Жыл бұрын
you should look into the Madagascar Civil war in recent years. The Mayor of the Capital city, a DJ, overthrew the President of the country. Its a very interesting and very recent history
@TheTruth-qq9tu6 ай бұрын
one of the best documentary i watch on youtube
@t0n0k0 Жыл бұрын
Great content I didn't know about this on Biafra nation. The history and involvement of UK, France, Russia, Israel, Egypt, Egypt,US, Tanzania, Ivorian Coast, Ghana. 😳
@nabster9253 Жыл бұрын
really wish biafra was independent. A democratic capitalist nation in africa. Free Biafra, Free Igbos
@ikengaspirit3063 Жыл бұрын
0:40 Exaggerated bullshit. Like Jesus, its like a stupid assumption that the economies of most African states in every major subregion was organized around slave trade. This is something very easy to debunk. Imerina, Lunda, Ashanti, Aro etc did not have economies organized around the slave trade or in the case of the latter, had a diversified economy that easily moved away from slavery once it ended. Dahomey. Some coastal city states and some Northern Nigerian Emirates economies collapsing doesn't even come close to representing the economies of other regions. 2:10 More accurately, basically no one but the Zikists that represented the South/South East/East were for a united state. Before independence, premieres of that region had already threatened independence before. But the Zikists were influenced by Black nationalism to call for a united Nigeria and were the representatives of the Biafran region in federal level elections. 2:55 Culture wouldn't be the most accurate way to represent it. They didn't want to dilute their ethnic noR its identity to non-indigens and lose part of their ethnic homeland to non-indigens. Nobody was really gonna lose their ethnic identity, the very fact that it was to be a neutral territory city shows how the issue was about land. 12:39 No, they weren't never punished.They were to be punished through the legal system and not some Kangaroo court and surprise, surprise, court cases take a while, especially if those court cases are occuring in a decapitated government. Also, the coup plotter a certain Kaduna grew up in the north and his tribe was from South-West state not from the Biafra region, yes, Igbo tribes extend further than the Biafra region. 14:30 Also, what is "Halusi"? Is it like ur shortening of Hausa-Fulani? some ethnic way of saying Hausa you found?. Juts ur pronunciation of Hausa?. 14:39 targetted against Igbos in general not just Igbo soldiers and by Igbos most northerners understood it as someone from the Biafra region or just a southerner in general. Meaning, millions from other ethnic groups like Ijaw were also affected. 17:50 No, prevent a precedence of smaller states breaking away from them. Like you literally just narrated how Biafran independence was completely an internal affair so which precidence of foreign powers breaking Nigeria apart was created by an ethnic trying to escape genocide with independence?. It is like this strong urge to explain away wars elsewhere as just American surrogate affairs, is the only way I can explain that false statement. 18:02 There is an assumption here, a soft one that the UK and USSR military support of Nigeria is comparable to French, Portuguese and Israeli military support. No, it isn't for one, Israel supported Biafra militarily only at the end of the war and before that supplied to Nigeria(talk about playing both sides), Portuguese support is so minor that it is rarely mentioned and French support is the only significant one was still dwarved monetarily by Joint Church Aid humanitarian assistance, on the other hand the Brits supplied 75% to 90% of Nigerian arms and rearmed them. That is a huge amount of support while Biafra had to resort to swiftly assembled local industry to supply itself. 30:29 Only kinda. The Igbo region has risen to become more economically dominant than any Northern region tho outpaced by much of the southern regions. However, on a larger more global scale they are poor and economic attacks on the Igbo continue. So they're arguably middle income for Nigeria while their northern oppressors are on average poor tho on the flip side the mega rich are almost entirely Northern, which the communists Nigerian and International support because they both support the continued ethnic suppression of Igbos to keep Nigeria united. And yes, they are politically under represented and intentionally stunted on that front as well.
@chrisstevenson-kuylaars7684 Жыл бұрын
This shows that no one cares about anybody else, only their own interests. The end. Same as today
@mukhtarjibril4473 Жыл бұрын
I had friends of Biafra who told me the Biafra that they want independence from Nigeria 🇳🇬. I think every community must have choice to chose their destiny but let we build single Africa, Africa who has one flag one money strong Africa. I’m from Somalia 🇸🇴 even my country was divided in 5 region 2 independent countries Djibouti 🇩🇯 and Somalia 🇸🇴 and two regions one in Ethiopia 🇪🇹 one in Kenya 🇰🇪 the 5th one is Somaliland who United with Somalia in 1960. After Berlin conference in 1884 European colonizers divided Africa in their own interests regardless of their identities after our independence from Italy 🇮🇹 and Uk 🇬🇧 we fought with Kenya 1964 Ethiopia 🇪🇹 in same year then 1977 with Ethiopia again i think for fighting we loose our people let we open our borders to all Africans I’m sure if every single country except his neighbors allowing entrance with out visa free trade market we’ll move a prosperity.
@amberlight5830 Жыл бұрын
Wealth creation and equal distribution is the issue which create injustice which results conflicts. Juts by doing that withoit addressing root cause of it won't be helpful. Rather it will put rich country burden to give to less wepwhr making nations. And that way they won't like to remain in any such union. Secondly, most African nations countries heads are and presidential for life how they will leave their authority on that selective land which I a one reason for harming those countries. The last colonising power may left africa, but they're still controlling it largely by their puppets rulers. How they will allow anything which will strenghen African and dent in their still loot and plunder of African countries.
@ebubedike6457 Жыл бұрын
African can not be one without recognition of autonomous ethnic groups.. This group will then join forces together
@muyiwa508 Жыл бұрын
Well-told. A lot of Nigerians dont even have the full context. Good job!
@Infinitefire-w36 ай бұрын
Fun fact, there's nothing like hausa fulani, they're different groups, but before colonisation the fulani conquered the northern regions via a jihad to form the sokoto caliphate the caliphate invaded many southern regions then failing many times against the somewhat lesser civilised southern tribes, yes at the time the northerners were more civilised along with the South West. The south east and south south were what you would call savages some of them not all I say this being a mix of both south southern and south eastern tribes. But the British came anglicised and Christianised the south, these areas are now much more developed than the North. We don't mix we have to split and that is why I support a return to the regional system of government at least. Were too different to live in a unitary system.
@kaloyanradkov8962 Жыл бұрын
What is the difference between a marketplace and military barracks? I don't know i just fly the bomber...
@thomas-sinkala Жыл бұрын
Said the Egyptian pilots, lol. During the war, the Egyptians were the ones targeting Churches, schools and markets. The goals was to inflict as much civilian casualties as possible.
@AndreMazi-du3ck7 ай бұрын
Excuses they were told to bomb Igbo civilians Look at Arab Palestinians crying now Israel is dealing with them
@MrWaterlionmonkey Жыл бұрын
My mum's from Nigeria and I don't know much about its history, so thanks. But I heard one small error immediately. My mum and her people are Hausa and she's talked about the Fulani, and your pronunciation is off. It's pronounced 'how-sah' and 'foo-lan-ee'. Also Yoruba is pronounced more like 'Yer-a-bah' and Igbo is pronounced more like 'eee-bow'
@isthatso1961 Жыл бұрын
You're wrong. You already admit to not knowing much about 9ja, so no need for corrections mate. Yo ro ba, eee-gbo
@MrWaterlionmonkey Жыл бұрын
@@isthatso1961 No, you're wrong. I don't know much about the history, but I know what my mum calls her people.
@anjola173 Жыл бұрын
As a Yoruba, it's pronounced Yo-ru-bah
@isthatso1961 Жыл бұрын
@@MrWaterlionmonkey lol, you never been to Nigeria and you arguing with a Nigerian about Nigerian pronunciation? interesting 😂
@MrWaterlionmonkey Жыл бұрын
@@isthatso1961 Shows what you know. I've been to Nigeria many many times
@tinycockjock1967 Жыл бұрын
God damn what a complicated war!
@Anedoje Жыл бұрын
It’s honestly a lot more complicated than what he said in the vid, extremly more complicated for one the 3 groups are the largest groups but Nigeria has 500+ other groups who were caught in between, Gowan was a Christian and a Northern minority at a time when religion and ethnicity mattered less. The North had actually attempted secession with the coup that brought him etc.. the whole situation is extremely more complicated than this vid makes it out to be
@SanMon-bc1lc Жыл бұрын
@Anedoje 'Alots more complicated' as you said. I need to storyline about Jewish connection to isreal and the cultural activities between isreal n Biafra republic to be more comprehensive.. #freebiafranow..💫🙏
@DonVigaDeFierro7 ай бұрын
The US and the USSR on one side. "Huh?" West Germany on the other. "The hell?"
@christianweibrecht6555 Жыл бұрын
So many times British imperialists favored their Muslim subjects over christians
@ikengaspirit3063 Жыл бұрын
How is it surprising?. The Brits and Soviets have always favoured Muslims during their periods of Empire. The soviets persecuted the Orthodox Church in specifics and Christians in General far more than they did Muslims and the Brits always allied with states like Morocco and the Ottomans when they were involved in wars related to them and they officers of Nigeria literally considered the Hausa Kingdoms and Fulani Empire analogous to Anglo-Saxons of the middle ages and as such empowered the spread of Hausa-Fulani islamic courts, installed them as monarchs over ethnicities converting to Christianity and hoped that in time they'll adopt Anglo culture(but not religion). This has always been the operating characteristics of these Empires.
@ray_light44 Жыл бұрын
Well this isn’t about religion tho considering the fact that the leader of nigeria during the civil war itself was Yakubu Gowon who was a Christian
@ikengaspirit3063 Жыл бұрын
@@ray_light44 While it was more complex than religion, as the docu shows, Yakubu was more of the preferred figure head of the Northern Muslim Soldiers, which is wh they refused a higher ranking non-Igbo military officer to take power. And again, In Nigeria and much of their colonies, the Brits had always favoured the Muslim ethnicities, especially in regards to military affairs.
@makeytgreatagain6256 Жыл бұрын
@@ikengaspirit3063 this was because the Hausa were easier to control that’s it. Muslims are generally more collectivistic and easier to control if you rule the leader
@Rick_Riff Жыл бұрын
Is there a shelf life for blaming colonialism? I know there are institutions that continue with monetary "post colonialism" but at some point they must take control if their own sovereignty. It seems like, with very few exceptions, shit really hit the fan after decolonization. Maybe they should reconfigure the borders?
@pippajayson91527 ай бұрын
Thanks for this brief history of Biafra-Nigeria civil war. In my opinion Lt. Yakubu Gowan was the main cause of the civil war in Nigera. He attended the Aburi Accord in Ghana with Lt Odumegwu Ojukwu, signed the agreement which was named ABURI ACCORD, only to return to Nigeria and ditched the Aburi Accord Agreement that he had just signed. He, Yakubu Gowan retracted from the Agreement which he had sighed in Ghana. Where is that done in law? That was a breach of contract or a breach of that Aburi Accord Agreement. Nigeria lost a lot if her citizens on both sides of the war. The effects of that war are still hunting Nigeria till this day. The world's greatest Coloniser is the serpent that causes problems across the world even till today. I think the world will be a better place if this great serpent will have a change of heart to create peace and promote peace across the world.
@ekusondebango3568 Жыл бұрын
The video makes mention of how the 1964 election( federal election that is) led to ethnic tension. This was due to the massive rigging perpetrated by the ruling party. There was even more tension in after the October 1965 Western region election which was massively rigged by Akintola's Nigerian National Democratic Party(NNDP) which went into alliance with Ahmadu Bello's North People's Congress( the alliance of these parties was known as the Nigerian National Alliance or NNA for short). It was this alliance that contested the election against another alliance known as the United Progressive Grand Alliance or UPGA. UPGA was made up of Chief Awolowo's Action Group(AG) and a faction of the National Council of Nigerian Citizens( NCNC). The elections were so badly rigged that the political impasse prevented either alliance to agree to seat a new government. Some openly called on the military( army maybe) to take over. The problem was that the General Officer Commanding the Army at this time was a Briton( Major General Sir Christopher Welby-Everard), while the newly formed Airforce was practically headed by a German officer (Colonel W. Timming). Election rigging which was started by the British in the pre-independence election of 1959 is upon us again. The charade of the recent event under the APC government is clearly worse than the situation in 1964/65. It was this event that actually led to the coup in 1966 9 some other events also contributed to the coup such as the manipulation of the 1963 census figures and some violent actions directed at some people in the Middle Belt or Tiv Province and the Western region). Just closely as events unfold in the current dispensation. I do not want to say any more but I suggest that you follow these events closely before some hacks try to rewrite history to suit the purpose. INEC simply violated its own rules and the event in the Lagos state gubernatorial election were marauding APC gangs armed with dangerous weapons and protected by the army and the police stopped people from certain areas to go to their polling station simply smells like 1964 all over.
@johnchioma5302 Жыл бұрын
I was waiting to hear the Asaba massacre. Kudo to you for this informative article. 😮😮
@dogetaxes8893 Жыл бұрын
It’s crazy to me that African borders are still intact, most of them were drawn by Europeans and often don’t make sense ethnically or geographically. Africa is an interesting project and I’m not sure how it’ll play out for the next century.
@Ebi.Adonkie Жыл бұрын
Thanks for covering my country 🇳🇬
@oluchieliezer1129 Жыл бұрын
One thing I know The biafra people must have their freedom
@Churrb Жыл бұрын
NEW AFRICA VIDEO JUST DROPPED
@dgk693 Жыл бұрын
A lot of things were wrong in this video but thank you for the effort
@completelyunderstood Жыл бұрын
Like what? I'm asking to learn not to doubt
@dgk693 Жыл бұрын
@@completelyunderstood Such as "the Igbo wanted a centralised government". That is untrue. The Igbo people wanted a very decentralised government but certain Igbo leaders felt it was in their best interests to have a centralised government. Igbo leaders were a lot more isolated from the general population of Igbo people in comparison to Yoruba, Hausa and Fulani people. Next the grouping of the Hausa and the Fulani as one ethnicity (+the EXTREMELY bad pronounciatiom when the actual way is VERY easy). That is what people who haven't studied the Hausa and the Fulani would do. It is important to refer to them separately to get a good perspective here. Else you'd confuse yourself and the viewer. Next the idea that the MidWest region primary reason for splitting from the West was oil. In reality, apart from Itsekiri land maybe, the MidWest had no reason for being with the West. I mean ancestral IGBO land was in the MidWest. Whilst there was no Yoruba groups in the East. I can keep going
@completelyunderstood Жыл бұрын
@@dgk693 yeah I noticed the hausa fulani thing haha, the rest was interesting though, thanks for answering
@thomas-sinkala Жыл бұрын
@@dgk693 True, the biggest difference is that the Igbos tends to "know no king". Which is a blessing and a curse.
@ray_light44 Жыл бұрын
@@dgk693 actually grouping Hausa and Fulani especially during that time is a rather good idea Considering the fact that all the leaders ruling the Hausa’s in actuality were Fulani
@williaminnes6635 Жыл бұрын
I knew a dude who had an ex girlfriend who had a late father who had some older buddies due to being a bush pilot who also knew how to fly planes who had stories of having run guns to the Biafrans.
@thomas-sinkala Жыл бұрын
The chain is too long. Would have loved to hear his story.
@KennyNGA Жыл бұрын
i knew a dude he had an girlfriend who happens to be the cousin of another girl who is related to this one guy who once met brad pitt
@tola1526 Жыл бұрын
Some minor corrections: Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, not Fafawa NCNC = National Council of Nigeria and the Cameroons (some parts of Southern Cameroon were originally part of Nigeria back then) Otherwise, great video
@anthonyoruovo6733 Жыл бұрын
Also _Hausa_ not *Halusa*
@kwamedabla9726 Жыл бұрын
Woow the intro is my favourite video from College's Humor
@FBAsolutions7532 Жыл бұрын
I'm going to nigeria next week ✊🏾
@DigitalWaqf Жыл бұрын
Seriously, be for real. You named 4 different acronym political parties without explaining any of them or what ethnic group they associate with at 11:40. Even a Nigerian who lived through that time wouldn’t understand it, do better please.
@Ethyn_Jackson Жыл бұрын
Nothing about this felt like a cold war proxy war. It felt like one of those normal wars, if there ever was one. There's this weird sense that they're in control, and you hope at any moment they works things out. Did the bad guys win?
@ikengaspirit3063 Жыл бұрын
Depends on who you consider the closest to the bad guys. Nigerian and International communists and marxists to this day consider Nigeria to be gooder guy that won. But you're correct it isn't a proxy war. Western powers didn't start it and the most invested power in the war were the Brits (that provided between 75 to 90 percent of the weapons used by Nigeria) w
@stephenmichalski2643 Жыл бұрын
Does one really have to ask such a question? Let's ask another.....do you think people have the right of self determinization? .....how about another.......do you think that starving people is a good thing?......pretty obvious to me......yes.....the bad guys won.
@Jcaeser187 Жыл бұрын
The communists won, humanity, Christendom and decency lost
@MotaLass-vo6jn6 ай бұрын
@@stephenmichalski2643two fighting and you expect one to feed the other to have strength and fight them …please explain
@SundayChigozie-kw6ds6 ай бұрын
@@MotaLass-vo6jnthen don't cry for Palestine 😂😂 what goes around comes around very soon it's will reach your turn
@paul6618 Жыл бұрын
I'm Nigerian and this wasn't a proxy cold war. The war happened as a after a coup, Yakubu Gowon became head of state and it made General Ojukwu angry, he felt Gowon was a junior and as such wouldn't take orders from him; this coupled with the tension/hatred the North (Hausa - Fulani, Gowon's tribe) had for the East (Igbo, Ojukwu's tribe) all spiralled into a secession bid led on the basis that the Igbo was being marginalised. The Igbo part of Nigeria had all the oil and as such the other part of Nigeria wouldn't let them go. There was no outside factor determining who and why anyone wanted to secede. The outside factors came in when the war started and it wasn't like the Biafrans were supported by the Russians. Most world power countries played both sides incase anyone won.
@Anedoje Жыл бұрын
You are Nigerian but did not know that Gowoan is Angas not Hausa or Fulani The igbos also did not have the oil they were just the majority in the eastern region most of the oil was in the lands of us minorities who they did not think a second tha ought about when they wanted to massacre us
@paul6618 Жыл бұрын
@@Anedoje I know who and where everyone is from, I also do know the Igbos don't have the oil but at that time the south south was classified under the eastern region. I oversimplified it because I don't have the time to start writing a history lesson but my main point of everything is that the Nigerian civil war wasn't and never was a result of the cold war between the US and Russia. It was largely as a result of tribalism and when the war started, big nations happened to get involved and they always played both sides regardless of whatever you read on Wikipedia. That is my main point. Not everything you see on KZbin done by foreigners is well researched. You live in your country, make some research.
@thespiritualartofwar9 ай бұрын
Its a custom for a non-Igbo Nigerian to inherit lies. Gowon was a lower rank than Ojukwu. There were at least 3 men higher ranked than him when Aguiyi-Ironsi was assassinated. Can you name 3 men that were higher rank than Gowon when he took position as head of state? After you find out the names...ask why they were skipped and he chosen. Don't you understand military rank, you are not supposed to take orders from an inferior in rank. A younger brother is not over his older brother in the family. Oil wells are in Igboland. Look at any map of Igboland many were drawn by the British after the amalgamation of 1914. You will notice that eastern side of the Niger Delta is Igbo dominated. Do you know how to look at a map? Go and look at the oil wells...all are not in Ogoni and Ijaw land. Today, they are most impoverished group in the southern region in your beloved "One Nigeria". Lies is a poisonous fruit of a Satanic mind. This is why Nigeria as entity will fail in front of the world soon.
@AndreMazi-du3ck7 ай бұрын
@@paul6618Your right, Yoruba West, Hausa North, Igbo East Also Igbos have plenty crude oil and natural gas, No surprise Igbo borders South South tribes
@GamingwithGhostx3 ай бұрын
@@Anedoje.. nobody massacred y'all .. Igbos have Oil... Abia and Anambra gat oil... The state with the biggest gas reserve is Imo state ... State with the highest coal reserve is Enugu state ... Stop saying rubbish
@mayaawele5797 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for your efforts in this regards, however the omission of the southern Nigeria, the Niger delta to be precise has not always been a welcome development for the people of that region. The original plans before Nigeria independence was to establish a four regional government taking into consideration the four cardinal points of the space called Nigeria. Those who represented the various region were Almadu Bello Tafawa Belewa for the northern region , Nnamdi Azikiwe and Michael Okpara for the eastern region, Harold Dapa Biriye and Okoi Arikpo for the southern region and Obafemi Awolowo and Akintola represented the western region. We the Niger delta people are of the opinion that the conspiracy which denied the people the right to start an indigenous government along side other region should not continue as it constantly remind us of injustice.
@emmanueluzoigwe6385 Жыл бұрын
Biafra is the last hope of African renaissance
@akachiikenga617 Жыл бұрын
Agreed
@ekusondebango3568 Жыл бұрын
"The Biafran Research And Production demonstrated the capacity to produce petroleum and fuel oil on a large scale in numerous and widely distributed locations, and without the assistance and supervision of expatriate technicians(aka Europeans)". Source of the above quote: Thomas J. Biersteker, Distortion or Development? Contending Perspectives on the Multinational Corporation, MIT Press, 1978.
@dudeudontknow341 Жыл бұрын
Sitting here I’m just thinking….I might play some tropico rn
@igbotimehopper64yearsago46 Жыл бұрын
The Biafran sun will rise again
@adewoleadebayo5483 Жыл бұрын
Never!
@igbotimehopper64yearsago46 Жыл бұрын
@@adewoleadebayo5483 why not?
@adewoleadebayo5483 Жыл бұрын
@@igbotimehopper64yearsago46 This generation has better visions for a great Nigeria working towards universally accepted values and making progress for all citizens. We are no longer strangers to one another.
@igbotimehopper64yearsago46 Жыл бұрын
@@adewoleadebayo5483 is that why igbos are getting harassed in Lagos for voting? Or why fulanis are killing farmers in Yorubaland and the middle belt?
@mhizummy2091 Жыл бұрын
@@adewoleadebayo5483 keep dreaming so high no Nigeria flag in Biafra land right now if you don’t know fool
@willneverstop Жыл бұрын
Great video
@chigoziemichael8865 Жыл бұрын
I always ask those who kept on insisting of one Nigeria, 'how market? '. God no go fail to give everyone their reward in full. Igbos should learn to mind their business. We have bled enough for Nigeria... No matter the who is blamed!Britain have blood on their hands with their conspirators. It has always been about oil and resources.
@Football__Junkie Жыл бұрын
Every time you mention a coup I immediately think “I wonder who had their hand in that cookie jar? CIA? MI6? Mossad? KGB?”
@carboncopy4183 Жыл бұрын
How bout all of the above?
@dsnodgrass4843 Жыл бұрын
More like Shell, Elf, BP, or Standard Oil.
@sjappiyah4071 Жыл бұрын
Excellent breakdown, this is what sucks about the decolonization process, they just stuck a bunch of rival tribes together and expected it to work our perfectly lol. Europe at least at 2,000 of uninterrupted history (brief exception the moors and ottomans) for Europeans to battle amongst themselves to come to the modern borders they have.
@gosroth5465 Жыл бұрын
You are forgetting the main invader of Europe, who colonized, looted, raped, pillaged, enslaved and demanded tribute for hundreds of years: the mongols. Yes, this largely only affected eastern parts of Europe, but it left a legacy of violence and oppression to this day. They Kevian Rus and Muscowy where both colonized by mongols - today, their modern sucessor states battle for the borders.
@sjappiyah4071 Жыл бұрын
@@gosroth5465 Good point, I completely forgot the mongols
@drybokes7055 Жыл бұрын
The Moors occupied Spain for 800 years. Hardly brief.
@sjappiyah4071 Жыл бұрын
@Swarmpope Those tribes prior to colonization had their own separate territorial domains , language, histories and cultures. What I meant is that the European powers decided to put all these separate tribes with their separate territorial entities into ONE territory/nation. So no I wasn’t saying Europeans where shuffling the position of tribes around but rather they were shuffling the territorial domains. This is what continues ethnic strides and tensions in Africa today as you have competing tribes vying for power and influence on the same land.
@malkomalkavian Жыл бұрын
Did tribes not have conflict before being placed in nations? Do nations actually increase conflict between constituent tribes, or do they decrease conflict? Are European tribes that are artificially placed into nations along side their rivals more or less likely to engage them in armed conflict? The nation is the model of organisation which defeated the tribe. The defeat was not total, and was nowhere achieved without struggle.
@colin3424 Жыл бұрын
Was that a voice over by LittlePlatoon at the 7:00 mark?
@Farhan917 Жыл бұрын
🇫🇷 still have 50 % of 14 countries foreign exchange reserves from the continent to do has they want to while those nations are paying fees to hold those funds in their bank 😰
@johnmcdonald9295 Жыл бұрын
Respect to the French,helping out their African friends
@An_Ian Жыл бұрын
Love the CH reference at the start
@BrightOwusu-o2t Жыл бұрын
Because of war, my father tells us that fight is the meaning of freedom, freedom must come in Nigeria and baifars today, freedom in the world united African, we want to see the meaning of freedom in Africans today help us with good power..
@vipulajayasinghe Жыл бұрын
Reading the war history of Nigeria, the Economist went record that the both leaders of the civil war were more or less humanitarian towards each other taking into consideration the general outlook in Africa where people kill each other due to tribal nexus ! Gen. Okjukwu the Biafran leader was an Oxford alumni and General Gowon at the end of the Biafran war forbade violence against the vanquished opponents. All in all, both of them were not despots but civilized and educated people as shown by their behavior towards each other !
@christianbagnall9138 Жыл бұрын
Sorry but being half Nigerian, I must try and correct the pronunciation of the three main tribes. IGBO pronounced IBO silent G. YORUBA YO as in YO man, how you doing . RU ROW. as in ROW a boat. BA BA as in the word BAd. HAUSA HA Pronounced A. U Pronounced WU SA Prouounced SA as in SAt. It just kills me, the pronunciation is quite off but funny.
@habibpaints9719 Жыл бұрын
Igbo is igbo nothing like ibo I'm.an igbo born in igbo grew up and live in igboland he is correct Who tha fuq teaches yall this shit over there Half baked people pronouncing things wrongly
@christianbagnall9138 Жыл бұрын
@@habibpaints9719 so the G is pronounced in the word Igbo. I think you have drank too much palm wine. Igbo has a silent G when pronounced. Maybe you still haven't graduated from primary school
@habibpaints9719 Жыл бұрын
@@christianbagnall9138 bro you don't teach me my language, like seriously, I'm an igbo I live in enugu for fucking 30 decades and a dude who lived in a white mans land is teaching me pronunciation....lol dude you know nothing about my culture , ibo was a word spoken by people or slave masters or even slaves in America like you who can't pronounce the "gb" sound In igbo alphabet its A B CH D F G "GB" and so on to Z.... Hahaha nigga were are you from Haiti I guess
@christianbagnall9138 Жыл бұрын
@@habibpaints9719 we are not using the igbo alphabet here. Secondly my name is Uche. My mother surname is Njoku. She is from Imo state owerri. Using English phonetics to pronounce IGBO we don't sound the G in IGBO.
@habibpaints9719 Жыл бұрын
@@christianbagnall9138 bro who ever thought you that is wrong , if it's your family then its wrong, you're not born in homeland to know these, "b" is a sound "gb" is a sound ain't nothing silent B is pronounced bii as bi(a) which means come GB is pronounced gbii i(gb)u, to kill , i(gb)a mmiri - to fetch water ...now ask any igbo person around I mean the ones who grew in homeland not those sandwiched igbos ..over there Gb
@conradsunkiojack2538 Жыл бұрын
Nah! There was NOTHING cold about the Biafra vs Nigeria war. It was a brutal, hot, fast paced, devastating, blistering war almost three years in a blink of an eye. General Odumegwu Ojukwu, the Biafran leader and his fearless iron willed patriots, had more endurance to fight despite meagre resources.
@wiseguy2636 Жыл бұрын
My father fought in that war. He doesn’t talk about it at all. God bless the Igbo.
@ekusondebango3568 Жыл бұрын
I don't talk about it either except to correct certain misconceptions.
@jmagowan12 Жыл бұрын
Colonialism never really ended, it just evolved into neo-colonialism.
@tatertot8701 Жыл бұрын
What was that song at the beginning
@CasualHistorian Жыл бұрын
"America Sucks Less", College Humor
@MrElchav Жыл бұрын
Damn! I subscribed straight up! KZbin recommended this channel. My father was twice a POW captured by the Nigerian army. Twice he escaped. My mother barely escaped the pogroms against the Igbos and fled to the east. I hate the entity called Nigeria till this day!
@Benzene-y1l Жыл бұрын
@Masud Saleh Let's go our separate ways 🤔
@linesided Жыл бұрын
After reading so much about the sad tales of all African countries after the end of colonialism I have a question. What would have happened in N America had all the native tribes been handed the keys to the kingdom. Because, you know, I see nothing more than tribalism ruining these great nations. And I have to wonder how well the American tribes would have gotten along if they had the same responsibilities. I don't see how you can skip 100's of years of natural evolution and go from a tribe to a country without progressing through every larger kingdoms, which is exactly what happened in N Europe, Asia, and even India to an extent. It's the same problem facing the middle east, where their tribes were pulled out of a local world and forced to think internationally. It wasn't their choice or doing. It was forced on them, the same way it was forced upon African leaders. Now I make no excuses for corruption, but the big picture ain't looking too great here...
@floydlooney6837 Жыл бұрын
Federating makes more sense than centralized governments, leaving each other alone should be a top policy.
@okene8 ай бұрын
We are unequally endowed. A federation would allow some regions to greatly surpass others(more than they already do)
@DragonwolfoftheSands Жыл бұрын
How did you get "Hasau/Hausi/Halusi" from Hausa? Not criticism I'm just confused
@BasedEngineer Жыл бұрын
I think is was an amalgamation of Hausa + Fulani
@DragonwolfoftheSands Жыл бұрын
@@BasedEngineer that kinda makes sense but also makes zero sense like imagine somebody saying Fringlish while talking about the Crimean War Hard to take him serious
@Astorath_the_Grim Жыл бұрын
Someone should tell them diversity is their strength.
@rice84687 ай бұрын
Song in the background is 🔥🔥
@thebestcentaur Жыл бұрын
"a mixture of feudalism and Sharia law" Dear God. This sounds horrifying today
@JoseFlores-xc7wu Жыл бұрын
What happen around 21:14 that had to repeat the sentence
@Nothingseen Жыл бұрын
I guess the situation in Nigeria really WAS pretty complex.
@michaeldavid2553 Жыл бұрын
Some asinine comments here that Charles Taylor, Gaddafi and France plotted to overthrow Sankara, based on what they "read" on Wiki. Read again: 1) Taylor was accused of having plotted Sankara's assassination; accused, not proven guilty; 2) Gaddafi was a supporter of Sankara; 3) France was an opponent to Sankara. So, NO, there was no conspiration between France, Taylor and Gaddafi to overthrow Sankara. And, by the way, Wiki is not Scripture.
@OSTChuo10 күн бұрын
Other than name pronounciation, this is one of the most fair look into the civil war.
@Prototheria Жыл бұрын
A lot of Nigerians commenting here, so I'm hoping one of you can explain something to me. Starting at 1:55 we see a girl at the bottom off the screen looking directly at the camera or at someone just behind it. Then at the very end of that clip, she flashes money. Is there any significance to that, or is that just some random thing she's doing? It strikes me as noteworthy, hence why I asked.
@ikengaspirit3063 Жыл бұрын
I don't know if it means anything either. Just seems like a "look mum, i'm on TV" moment.
@khalidalali186 Жыл бұрын
Dude, Dubai probably has more alcohol than the entire state of Nevada.
@zeik04 Жыл бұрын
Thats Haram
@norml.hugh-mann Жыл бұрын
That's where Roland the Thompson Gunner met his destiny and became Roland the Headless Thompson Gunner
@Onijiji Жыл бұрын
The Igbo icons kind of resembles Eddie Murphy. lol
@R.Specktre Жыл бұрын
Big difference between how Israel regards African now as compared to then. Bibi brought the shame.
@ikengaspirit3063 Жыл бұрын
who's Bibi?.
@Oseiwe Жыл бұрын
You made a good attempt in your analysis and I gained new knowledge on the international side of the conflict. But in general your analysis was a little skewed towards the Igbo position. This was largely a conflict brought about because people way too young, immature and ambitious gained power way beyond their pay grade. Factor in the African disease of ethnic jingoism and you get a toxic mix just waiting to be ignited, and that ignition came on Jan 15 1966. Even here in 2023 the most important factor in political consideration and preferences is still ethnic. You can't imagine how it was so far in the past. Yes, as someone who has slept over this issue for decades, with no ethnic bias in my bone, I can say conclusively that the Igbo elite we're privy to the coup and there was no reason for the army chief to take over running the country after supposedly quelling the mutiny we're it not for the fact that a serious can of worms would be opened had constitutional order been restored. Too many details not worth going into but I am happy a considerable amount of literature exists about events of those days, including original documents, not recollections. At least Rwanda has broken the African record for the most unnecessary destruction of human life previously held by this our conflict
@thomas-sinkala Жыл бұрын
Question, how can you say conclusively that the Igbo elite were privy to the coup? Also, considering another Igbo quelled the Coup, does that imply an Igbo conspiracy to both the coup and counter coup? If yes, how do you piece the 2 together? The officers were opportunists, nothing more. Sad their actions plunged the country into nightmare that has lived with us all to this day. But the alleged Igbo conspiracy, masquerading as objective take on the subject, is nothing more than an attempt to justify the pogroms, and atrocities committed by other Nigerians and the Nigerian state against the Igbos.
@emmanueluzoigwe6385 Жыл бұрын
Biafra is a just cause and will certainly resurrect
@kayzeaza Жыл бұрын
This comment is clearly anti Igbo. Don’t try and cover up genocide you Islamic POS
@thomas-sinkala Жыл бұрын
@@kayzeaza no point in making it a religious conflict. Plus, if you insult people for voicing their opinion, it’d be hard to learn what they have to say and how they drew the conclusions they made. These things are not entirely black and white, good vs bad. There's always a gray area worth exploring.
@jodhod1498 Жыл бұрын
Yes, even taking only his video into account, his rebuttal of the "conspiracy theory" was very loose and thrown together, and like, not even a rebuttal at all,just some sort of minor character defense. "Oh he's so nice, he wouldn't possibly do that". As if PR stunts are some sort of alien concept. I guess it kind of makes sense from a European perspective to reject the idea of any "ethnic group perceived as controlling the nation that gets targeted for genocide" out of hand as a conspiracy theory, as that was how the Jews in Europe were perceived before the Holocaust.
@badbanner753 Жыл бұрын
Yo that Nixon impersonation is on point.
@theamazing2435 Жыл бұрын
Do a vedio on the crestaro war
@CyFed_Republic_of_Kaltovar Жыл бұрын
They literally had a company called the UAC? Doomguy has entered the chat.
@mhizummy2091 Жыл бұрын
I am proud Biafra l can’t imagine myself answering a name of a country white man created for me called Nigeria (zoo) because l know myself a black man can’t go to western world a create a country we are tribal by nature in African and Biafra has been existing before Nigeria we need freedom ❤😭
@albanchigozirim5144 Жыл бұрын
U need freedom from Ur foolishness that a name will cause u to destroy a country where by now we could have been like Saudi Arabia in wealth
@Nooroodin84 Жыл бұрын
Error: you kept calling Ahmadu Bello the prime minister…he was not. Abubakar Tafawa Balewa was the prime minister. Bello was the north region premier.
@Mr.InbetweenFX Жыл бұрын
I love how you didn't post any credit to the music video at the intro. I would like to know the artist and track title please.