The
Blame Game Has Begun: How
Nation is Trying to Make Igbos the Fall Guy for Americas “CPC”
Designation of Nigeria
The
headlines are back and the scapegoat is familiar. Suddenly, Trump has
re-designated Nigeria as a Country of Particular Concern, airstrikes
have landed in Sokoto, Washington has reactivated its interest in our
security architecture, and like clockwork a section of the
commentariat has begun whispering the same tired accusation: it is
the Igbo. It is Biafra. They lobbied America against the
system.
This
is the great Nigerian art of blame shifting. When the world finally
asks why bodies are piling up in Benue, why Catholic priests are
being abducted in Kaduna, why churches are being burned in Plateau,
and why entire Christian communities are being displaced by men on
motorcycles in Sokoto and Zamfara, the political reflex is not to ask
how we got here. The reflex is to find a convenient internal enemy
and dump everything on them. Historical laziness masquerading as
analysis.
Let
us be clear. If there was a Biafra lobby shining torches in
Washington, it has not been active in years. The lobby that has been
shaping Western discourse recently is not Eastern. It is Middle Belt
Catholic and Northern Christian. It is the burnt churches of Southern
Kaduna, the mass graves of Benue, the terrorised villages of Plateau,
and the community displacement in Sokoto. The documentary evidence
sits in the open. The testimonies from bishops, priests,
missionaries, NGOs, and civil society have been in congressional
hearings, UN reports, and Western think tank memos for more than a
decade.
The
US did not drop bombs in Ihiagwa, Enugu, Abiriba or Nkwerre. The
drones struck ISIS linked camps in Sokoto. The casualty map that
triggered a decade of Western pressure runs from Borno to Yobe to
Southern Kaduna to Benue to Plateau to Niger to Zamfara to Katsina.
No serious analyst puts Onitsha or Aba or Owerri at the center of the
American religious freedom file. The geography alone exposes the
fraud in the narrative being pushed by those who are eternally
committed to blaming the same tribe for everything wrong with
Nigeria.
So
why the sudden resurrection of the Biafra card. It is very simple.
Once America turns the light on Nigeria, the Nigerian political class
hates to look in the mirror. So they turn the mirror outward and say
someone tattled. Instead of asking why the world keeps reporting our
massacres, we ask who reported the massacres. Instead of asking why
priests are being killed, we ask who complained about it. Instead of
asking why terrorists are flourishing, we ask who carried the story
to Washington.
This
is how nations collapse. Accountability becomes ethnic treason. Truth
becomes sabotage. And those who warn become the enemy of the state
while those who kill become invisible.
There
is also a strategic angle that people are pretending not to
understand. Trump did not re-designate Nigeria and deploy drones
because of some diaspora Facebook activist shouting Biafra in Boston.
Washington has geopolitical interests in Nigeria. Nigeria is the
demographic anchor of West Africa, the energy hinge of the Gulf of
Guinea, the mineral door to the future, and the battlefield where
America, Russia and China are quietly contesting influence as the
Sahel burns. It is a chessboard for counter terrorism, maritime
security, shipping routes and strategic minerals. The Christian
persecution narrative is the moral wrapper around a much bigger
geopolitical reality.
Nobody
in Washington will waste Reaper missiles on behalf of a pressure
group that no longer commands serious bandwidth. America moves only
for interests. The Christian narrative activates domestic Evangelical
and Catholic passions at home. The terrorism narrative satisfies
Pentagon doctrine. The CPC designation builds leverage over Abuja.
The drones satisfy the strategic community. Only Nigerians would
believe that a superpower just moved because a few Igbos whispered
into some corridor in DC.
Let
us also be frank. This attempt to place the burden of global pressure
on the Igbo is not about Biafra. It is about maintaining the Nigerian
habit of turning Igbos into the national sponge that absorbs all
failures. When the economy collapses, blame the traders. When
political equity is demanded, blame the agitators. When the world
complains, blame the lobbyists. When terrorists burn churches and
foreign governments respond, blame Biafra. Soon, they will blame the
Igbo for climate change.
The
people pushing this line know the truth. They have seen the casualty
charts from Benue. They have seen the videos from Plateau. They have
read the communiques from the Catholic Bishops Conference. They have
seen the displacement data in Southern Kaduna. They have read the UN
Human Rights reports. They have seen the testimonies of missionaries
who fled the North West. They know who the victims are. They know
that the Eastern region was not the epicenter of the crisis that
pulled America back into our orbit.
So
here is the uncomfortable truth that Nigerians must face. The CPC
designation did not disgrace Nigeria because of any tribe. It
disgraced Nigeria because Nigeria is failing to protect its citizens.
It disgraced Nigeria because terrorists and bandits operate with
impunity. It disgraced Nigeria because religious cleansing has gone
unpunished. It disgraced Nigeria because the world finally ran out of
excuses for us.
Until
Nigeria confronts the root of its security failure, it will look for
new enemies at home to blame for every external embarrassment. Today
it is Igbos. Tomorrow it will be Middle Belters. The day after it
will be Southern Catholics. The cycle will continue because the
alternative is to ask hard questions about leadership, governance,
impunity and state capture.
We
can try to rewrite the narrative and pin this on a non existent
lobby. But drones have no tribal bias. Reaper missiles do not check
ethnic census before they strike. International law does not scan
Nigeria for domestic scapegoats. America did not bomb Sokoto because
of a rumor in Abuja or a whisper in Houston. America bombed Sokoto
because the Sahel is collapsing, ISIS is expanding, churches are
burning, priests are being abducted, villages are being displaced,
and Nigeria is still debating what to call bandits.
The
sooner we accept this, the sooner we stop scapegoating and start
governing.
By
Hon. Chima Nnadi-Oforgu
Duruebube
Uzii na
Abosi
www.oblongmedia.net