Emma Okocha
is the author of the book “Blood on the Niger.” He is also a Human Rights
crusader and conflict studies expert. He was recently honoured by the Asaba
community for his pioneering work on Asaba massacre and for accurately telling
the story of the genocide. In this chat with OSA AMADI, the author recounts
blood-chilling events of the Asaba massacre which forms the thesis of his book,
“Blood on the Niger.” You received an award at the 50th anniversary of the
Asaba massacre. What earned you the award?
It was for
my pioneering work on the Asaba massacre which opened the way for other writers
to join in exposing the genocide. For the community to acknowledge my dangerous
sea sail without any compass and extend the same honour to some of my weary
colleagues was to me, the climax of that event. It is like a balm to my broken
back.
My family
may in due course return to me. Presently, I have no relations because they
believed I had wasted my career and endangered my life for this struggle. The
chairman of the organising committee, Ogbueshi Alban Okonkwo, should also be
congratulated for pushing for me and those honoured colleagues despite our
principled differences and colliding definitions of the Asaba genocide
narrative. What are those differences? The chairman argues that for the
community to resurge and experience rebirth, the people should forgive the
butchers.
We on the other side, reject that stand because there is no place for
forgiveness in the genocide register. It is not a matter of choice. Come to
think of it, one murderer is never forgiven whenever our legal system declares
a suspect a murderer. Can you now imagine a situation where over five thousand
people fell on the day the Second Division landed in town….? I forgive some
ill-informed members of the committee who postulate that 700 youths were
killed. The correct figure is far from this conservative estimate awarded to
Ogbeosowa. The killings at Ogbeke Square were more than 500. The killings at
present day NECAB/St.
Joseph’s Catholic Church were more than 800. At AGGS and
SPC Asaba, you could count over 1,000 dead. This was confirmed by the Nigerian
Chaplain of the Nigerian Army, Rev. Pedro Martins and the late Father Ossia
from Obamkpa. The killing that happened opposite the present Police
Headquarters recorded more than 500 shot victims.
That is why that piece of
property is uninhabitable till this day. Every 4am, eerie, terrible voices
disturb the peace of the night because the thousands buried there were victims
of the same genocide. Before Ogbeosowa, the killings at SPC, opposite the
Police Headquarters, etc., the whole town was a bloody mess with corpses of the
murdered lying on every street, meat for dogs and pigs. Those numbers are
uncountable. There were those who were not Asaba people, who didn’t participate
in the procession from the villages to Ogbeke and finally to the slaughter
ground of Ogbeosowa. Those victims were uncountable.
These Nigerians were
mainly from Ndokwa, Aboh and Ukwuani areas and have been here since the turn of
the last century, trading in fish and slaughtered near the Brigade areas down
the river. Of course, in the Cable Point area, there were massive killings and
burning of houses. Many died when their houses and properties were burnt to
ashes. It was at Cable Point that my father and two of my brothers were shot
into the River Niger after the soldiers identified his name in the Master list
from Benin City. The greatest number of death was registered when soldiers were
killing and dumping bodies into the river.
When the Biafrans collapsed the
bridge, hundreds of fleeing Asaba refugees were buried down the river together
with the fallen debris of the bridge. So, we feel insulted when some of my own
brothers are pleading for the perpetrators and spilling out numbers that don’t
match the scope of the calamity that was the plight of our people on October 7,
1967. Indeed, many Asaba families as a result of that war have ceased to exist.
Families like the Ezeadiefe, Wemeambu, Ojogwo and the Chukwuras, who suffered
over six dead in one day….may never forgive anybody that is singing the
forgiveness anthem. Many people who survived the bullets did not make the gory
aftermath.
The trauma of losing bread winners, life partners, beloved little
children and the anguish of staring every day at the burnt debris of your home,
etc., these are the unrecorded trauma that killed most of the victims even
after the war had ended. What is the major thesis of your book, Blood on the
Niger? In his foreword to the book, Chief P.C. Asiodu, who was a member of
General Gowon’s war Cabinet stressed that our account of the tragic event at
Asaba, Ibusa, Ogwashi-Ukwu, Isheagu is succinct, and that the narrative is
based on a long painstaking research. He had in his own introductory lines
concurred the thesis of our study, when he explained that “at Asaba and
environs from October 2 to October 7, 1967, horrible massacres were committed
by the Federal troops, hundreds of men were slaughtered as a result of cold,
deliberate planning. Men of all ages, teenagers and septuagenarians were shot
in cold blood.” I am fulfilled that we were able to document the names of these
victims, the villages, the communities and for every year, a new edition comes
out with fresh names that were not included in the last edition. Why do people
keep talking about peace without mentioning the word ‘Justice’? Asaba will
never be stampeded into supporting any new narrative that diminishes the
calamity that was the genocide of October 7, 1967. Before the arrival of the
two Human Rights Crusaders, Nobel Laureate, Wole Soyinka and Archbishop Kukah,
Barrister Nduka Eze and I were in the minority opposing the frightening new
narrative being imposed on our people. The two giants won the debate back to
us. Finally, the Asagba of Asaba, Prof. Chike Edozien, ended the debate when he
decreed that Asaba would seek and stand for Justice. We hear you are working on
another book that has to do with Nzeogwu, the leader of the 1966 coup. Could
you tell us about it? The Nzeogwu thunderbolt is ready, but as you know, Emma
Okocha is a poor reporter and a very poor writer. Unlike our foreign
collaborators who have lots of grants, we have nobody to sponsor the type of
earthquake chronicle that our mission has brought to our path. Major Chukwuma
Nzeogwu was the first and the last Nigerian Revolutionary.
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