U.S EQUIPMENT, EXPERTS ARRIVE AT KENYA EBOLA FACILITY DESPITE COURT ORDER, PROTESTS. (PHOTO).

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 U.S equipment, experts arrive at Kenya Ebola facility despite court order, protests Around 20 flights carrying medical equipment and specialist staff have landed at a base in Kenya where the U.S. ​government is continuing to build an Ebola quarantine facility despite protests and Kenyan court orders blocking it, according to flight data and officials. At least two ‌people have been killed in protests in the central Kenyan town of Nanyuki, home to the Kenyan air force base where the U.S. military is building a 50-bed unit for Americans who might be exposed to the virus, which has infected hundreds in Democratic Republic of Congo and Uganda. A Kenyan court first ordered work on the Ebola facility to be suspended on May ​28, yet U.S. military flights into Nanyuki continued in the days that followed, according to data from flight-tracking service Flightradar24. The planes have brought in technical ​equipment as well as dozens of physicians, engineers, lab experts and construction work...

GOWON ACCUSES OJUKWU OF SABOTAGING PEACE EFFORTS BEFORE NIGERIAN CIVIL WAR. (PHOTO).


 Former Nigerian Head of State Yakubu Gowon has reopened contentious debates over the causes of the 1967–1970 Nigerian Civil War, claiming in his new autobiography that the late Biafran leader, Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu, deliberately frustrated repeated attempts to prevent the conflict.


In *My Life of Service and Allegiance*, Gowon offers a detailed personal account of the political mistrust, constitutional crises, and failed negotiations that plunged the country into war following the 1966 military coups and subsequent ethnic violence.


“Ojukwu deliberately and effectively thwarted every effort we made to amicably resolve our national issues,” Gowon wrote.


The former military leader recounted how the federal government pursued political settlements amid widespread outrage in the Eastern Region over the killings of Igbos in parts of Northern Nigeria, which fueled separatist sentiments. He said the federal side approached the landmark January 1967 Aburi meeting in Ghana with genuine hopes of reconciliation.


“We went to Aburi with open minds and with the sincere hope of finding a basis for national reconciliation,” Gowon stated. The talks, mediated by then-Ghanaian leader Lt.-Gen. Joseph Arthur Ankrah, brought together Nigeria’s senior military officers at a time of deep ethnic and institutional strain.


However, according to Gowon, the accord collapsed when the two sides returned with sharply divergent interpretations of the agreements reached. He argued that Ojukwu’s version of the Aburi Accord would have dangerously weakened federal authority and threatened the survival of Nigeria as a united nation.


“What was presented by Ojukwu as the Aburi Accord was, in reality, his own interpretation of our discussions,” Gowon wrote.


Despite the impasse, Gowon maintained that the federal military government continued efforts to avoid war. “At every stage, we tried to preserve Nigeria without resorting to war,” he emphasised.


The autobiography revisits long-standing controversies surrounding the Aburi Accord, rejecting accusations that the federal government negotiated in bad faith. Gowon described the period as one dominated by fear, suspicion, and eroding trust among leaders.


“Ojukwu’s actions made peaceful settlement increasingly difficult,” he wrote, adding that communication between both sides deteriorated rapidly in the lead-up to Biafra’s declaration of independence on May 30, 1967. “We were confronted with a situation in which compromise was becoming almost impossible.”


Gowon also defended the federal decision to create 12 states shortly before the declaration, saying it was intended to address the concerns of minority ethnic groups in the old Eastern Region who feared domination. “The creation of states was intended to give all groups a sense of belonging within Nigeria,” he explained.


He insisted that the federal government did not seek military confrontation. “Ojukwu’s declaration of Biafra left the federal government with no choice,” Gowon wrote.


Reflecting on the war’s end in January 1970, the former leader defended the “No Victor, No Vanquished” policy, which aimed at reconciliation and reintegration. “We fought to keep Nigeria one, not to destroy a people,” he stated. He acknowledged the deep trauma caused by the massacres of 1966, saying he understood Eastern fears but could not accept the breakup of the country.


Gowon’s memoir presents a perspective that places primary responsibility for the collapse of peace efforts on Ojukwu, contrasting with the late Biafran leader’s own narrative that Biafra was born out of necessity due to the Nigerian state’s failure to protect its citizens.


“We exhausted every peaceful avenue available to us. But Nigeria had to survive,” Gowon concluded.

Comments

  1. I believe this man is paid to lie against the dead. What is his gain in reopening the wounds he inflicted on the Igbos just to add pepper to it. Let him continue to enjoy the unity of Nigeria where the blood of his own people flows like river without end.

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