Alhaji
Mujahid Asari Dokubo, Leader of the Niger Delta People's Volunteer
Front, NDPVF, has made another shocking revelation after he said that
Biafra is not originally from Igbo.
Leader of the Niger Delta People’s Volunteer Front, NDPVF, Alhaji Mujahid Asari Dokubo
Leader of the Niger Delta People’s Volunteer Front, NDPVF, Alhaji
Mujahid Asari Dokubo has revealed that the popular name, 'Biafra'
adopted by Chief Chukwuemeka Ojukwu is an Ijaw phrase and not Igbo.
According to him, the name was suggested by an Ijaw man at a
meeting convened by the late leader of the defunct Republic of Biafra,
Chief Chukwuemeka Ojukwu after the 1966/1967 pogrom. Dokubo even quoted
that the late Niger Delta activist, Maj. Isaac Adaka Boro affirmed that
Ijaw is Biafra in chapter six of his autobiography entitled: Twelve Day
Revolution.
Dokubo further said that the ties between Igbo and Ijaw ethnic
groups are inseparable, adding that it was another Ijaw Cardinal Rex Jim
Lawson, who first played the Biafran national anthem during the
proclamation of independence on May 30, 1967.
His words: “Ignorance can be a terrible disease but it is
curable if the sufferer is ready to humble himself to learn and accept
the cure for his sickness. Biafra is a Kalabari Ijaw phrase Bia fulo
meaning not properly cooked. The Kalabari of Kula named the estuary of
Santa Barbara Bia fulo because of the turbulence of the sea at the
estuary. The Portuguese like they did to many other names, words and
phrases which they could not pronounce properly named the area Biafra.
Later the coastline from the estuary of River Nun to the coast of Gabon
was named the Bight of Biafra.
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