Obasanjo, over comments alleged to be anti-
Biafra
- The pro-Biafra group says Obasanjo cannot
ask it to jettison its secessionist ideologies
- IPOB says plots by Obj and his cohorts to
silence their movement, will not work
The Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) has faulted
former President Olusegun Obasanjo's call, urging the
group to jettison its secessionist struggle.
Obasanjo has in a recent statement urged pro-Biafra agitators to bury their agitation and fight for the
‘national cake’.
In a press statement signed by its media and publicity
secretary, Mr Emma Powerful, IPOB said it was not
interested in the so called ‘national cake’.
The group said it wondered why elders in the mold of
Obasanjo could not tell the truth about the injustices
faced by Igbos in Nigeria.

Obasanjo asked pro-Biafra agitators to shun their
agitation and fight for the national cake
According to This Day, the group stressed that it was
a shame to hear such statements proceed from the
mouth of leaders like Obasanjo.
Adding that Obasanjo would have been in a position
to tell Nigerians the simple truth about the resolve of IPOB and it’s leader, Mazi Nnamdi Kanu, to restore
Biafra.
The group noted that no ploy by Obasanjo and his
"cohorts" will stop them from their mission.
Stressing that the Biafra awareness keeps gaining
audience by the day, making their resolve stronger.
In a similar vein, former minister of aviation, Femi
Fani-Kayode, has faulted statement credited to ex-
president, Olusegun Obasanjo, that the way to stop
the Biafran agitation is to offer the Igbo cake.
Obasanjo had on Thursday, May 25, in Abuja at a
Colloquim on 50 years of Biafra organised by the
Yar’Adua Foundation appealed to those agitating
for a Biafra state to shelve such request.
“There is enough cake for each of us.
“And, if what you are asking for is more of the cake,
then ask in a way that is pleasant, not in a way that
can make others feel that you are not entitled to
what you are asking for,” Obasanjo said.
In reaction however, Fani-Kayode in a tweet
described Obasanjo’s comments as insulting to the
Igbo.
The former minister warned that Obasanjo’s
statement is reminiscent of the words of Queen Marie
Antoinette of France before the revolution.
Meanwhile, the seat-at-home order for May 30 by the
Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) is gaining
momentum as Maxi Okwu, a top Igbo elder, says he
would take part in it.
Okwu, a former national chairman of the All
Progressive Grand Alliance (APGA), also thanked
Acting President Yemi Osinbajo for speaking out the
truth at a recent celebration in Abuja to mark the
50th anniversary of the Biafran war.
The Igbo elder further condemned the way former
President Olusegun Obasanjo spoke at the event
stressing that the retired military general is one of the major problems plaguing Nigeria.

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