| State |
Entry |
Exit |
Combat Forces |
Population |
Losses |
| Biafra |
1967 |
1970 |
100000 |
10000000 |
100000 |
| Nigeria |
1967 |
1970 |
94000 |
82000000 |
25000 |
*****
Biafra...secessionist western African state that unilaterally declared its independence from Nigeria in May 1967. It constituted the former Eastern Region of Nigeria and was inhabited principally by Igbo (Ibo) people. Biafra ceased to exist as an independent state in January 1970.
In the mid-1960s economic and political instability and ethnic friction characterized Nigerian public life. In the mostly Hausa north, resentment against the more prosperous, educated Igbo minority erupted into violence. In September 1966, some 10,000 to 30,000 Igbo people were massacred in the Northern Region, and perhaps 1,000,000 fled as refugees to the
Igbo-dominated east. Non-Igbos were then expelled from the Eastern Region.
Attempts by representatives of all regions to come to an agreement were unsuccessful. On May 30, 1967, the head of the Eastern Region, Lieutenant Colonel (later General) Odumegwu
Ojukwu, with the authorization of a consultative assembly, declared the region a sovereign and independent republic under the name of
Biafra. General Yakubu Gowon, the leader of the federal government, refused to recognize Biafra's secession. In the hostilities that broke out the following July, Biafran troops were at first successful, but soon the numerically superior federal forces began to press Biafra's boundaries inward from the south, west, and north. Biafra shrank to one-tenth its original area in the course of the war. By 1968 it had lost its seaports and become landlocked; supplies could be brought in only by air. Starvation and disease followed; estimates of mortality range from 500,000 to several million.
The Organization of African Unity, the papacy, and others tried to reconcile the combatants. Most countries continued to recognize Gowon's regime as the government of all Nigeria, and the United Kingdom and the Soviet Union supplied it with arms. On the other hand, international sympathy for the plight of starving Biafran children brought airlifts of food and medicine from many countries. Côte d'Ivoire, Gabon, Tanzania, and Zambia recognized Biafra as an independent state, and France sent Biafra weapons.
*****
In January 1967, the military leaders and senior police officials met at
Aburi, Ghana, at the invitation of the Ghanaian military government. By now the
Eastern Region was threatening secession. In a last-minute effort to hold
Nigeria together, the military reached an accord that provided for a loose
confederation of regions. The federal civil service vigorously opposed the Aburi
Agreement, however. Awolowo, regrouping his supporters, demanded the removal of
all northern troops garrisoned in the Western Region and warned that if the
Eastern Region left the federation, the Western Region would follow. The FMG
agreed to the troop withdrawal.
In May Gowon issued a decree implementing the Aburi Agreement. Even the
Northern Region leaders, who had been the first to threaten secession, now
favored the formation of a multistate federation. Meanwhile, the military
governor of the Midwestern Region announced that his region must be considered
neutral in the event of civil war.
The Ojukwu government rejected the plan for reconciliation and made known its
intention to retain all revenues collected in the Eastern Region in reparation
for the cost of resettling Igbo refugees. The eastern leaders had reached the
point of ruptive in their relations with Lagos and the rest of Nigeria. Despite
offers made by the FMG that met many of Ojukwu's demands, the Eastern Region
Consultative Assembly voted May 26 to secede from Nigeria. In Lagos Gowon
proclaimed a state of emergency and unveiled plans for abolition of the regions
and for redivision of the country into twelve states. This provision broke up
the Northern Region, undermining the possibility of continued northern
domination and offering a major concession to the Eastern Region. It was also a
strategic move, which won over eastern minorities and deprived the rebellious
Igbo heartland of its control over the oil fields and access to the sea. Gowon
also appointed prominent civilians, including Awolowo, as commissioners in the
federal and new state governments, thus broadening his political support.
On May 30, Ojukwu answered the federal decree with the proclamation of the
independent Republic of Biafra, named after the Bight of Biafra. He cited as the
principal cause for this action the Nigerian government's inability to protect
the lives of easterners and suggested its culpability in genocide, depicting
secession as a measure taken reluctantly after all efforts to safeguard the Igbo
people in other regions had failed.
Initially the FMG launched "police measures" to restore the
authority of Lagos in the Eastern Region. Army units attempted to advance into
secessionist territory in July, but rebel troops easily stopped them. The
Biafrans retaliated with a surprise thrust into the Midwestern Region, where
they seized strategic points. However, effective control of the delta region
remained under federal control despite several rebel attempts to take the non-Igbo
area. The federal government began to mobilize large numbers of recruits to
supplement its 10,000-member army.
By the end of 1967, federal forces had regained the Midwestern Region and
secured the delta region, which was reorganized as the Rivers State and
Southeastern State, cutting off Biafra from direct access to the sea. But a
proposed invasion of the rebel-held territory, now confined to the Igbo
heartland, stalled along the stiffened Biafran defense perimeter.
A stalemate developed as federal attacks on key towns broke down in the face
of stubborn Biafran resistance. Ill-armed and trained under fire, rebel troops
nonetheless had the benefit of superior leadership and superb morale. Although
vastly outnumbered and outgunned, the Biafrans probed weak points in the federal
lines, making lightning tactical gains, cutting off and encircling advancing
columns, and launching commando raids behind federal lines. Biafran strikes
across the Niger managed to pin down large concentrations of federal troops on
the west bank.
In September 1968, Owerri was captured by federal troops advancing from the
south, and early in 1969 the federal army, expanded to nearly 250,000 men,
opened three fronts in what Gowon touted as the "final offensive."
Although federal forces flanked the rebels by crossing the Niger at Onitsha,
they failed to break through. The Biafrans subsequently retook Owerri in fierce
fighting and threatened to push on to Port Harcourt until thwarted by a renewed
federal offensive in the south. That offensive tightened the noose around the
rebel enclave without choking it into submission.
Biafran propaganda, which stressed the threat of genocide to the Igbo people,
was extremely effective abroad in winning sympathy for the secessionist
movement. Food and medical supplies were scarce in Biafra. Humanitarian aid, as
well as arms and munitions, reached the embattled region from international
relief organizations and from private and religious groups in the United States
and Western Europe by way of nighttime airlifts over the war zone. The bulk of
Biafra's military supplies was purchased on the international arms market with
unofficial assistance provided by France through former West African colonies.
In one of the most dramatic episodes of the civil war, Carl Gustav von Rosen, a
Swedish count who at one time commanded the Ethiopian air force, and several
other Swedish pilots flew five jet trainers modified for combat in successful
strikes against Nigerian military installations.
Biafra's independence was recognized by Tanzania, Zambia, Gabon, and the
Ivory Coast, but it was compromised in the eyes of most African states by the
approval of South Africa, Southern Rhodesia, and Portugal. Britain extended
diplomatic support and limited military assistance to the federal government.
The Soviet Union became an important source of military equipment for Nigeria.
Modern Soviet-built warplanes, flown by Egyptian and British pilots, interdicted
supply flights and inflicted heavy casualties during raids on Biafran urban
centers. In line with its policy of noninvolvement, the United States prohibited
the sale of military goods to either side while continuing to recognize the FMG.
In October 1969, Ojukwu appealed for United Nations (UN) mediation for a
cease-fire as a prelude to peace negotiations. But the federal government
insisted on Biafra's surrender, and Gowon observed that "rebel leaders had
made it clear that this is a fight to the finish and that no concession will
ever satisfy them." In December federal forces opened a four-pronged
offensive, involving 120,000 troops, that sliced Biafra in half. When Owerri
fell on January 6, 1970, Biafran resistance collapsed. Ojukwu fled to the Ivory
Coast, leaving his chief of staff, Philip Effiong, behind as "officer
administering the government." Effiong called for an immediate,
unconditional cease-fire January 12 and submitted to the authority of the
federal government at ceremonies in Lagos.
Estimates in the former Eastern Region of the number of dead from
hostilities, disease, and starvation during the thirty-month civil war are
estimated at between 1 million and 3 million. The end of the fighting found more
than 3 million Igbo refugees crowded into a 2,500-square-kilometer enclave.
Prospects for the survival of many of them and for the future of the region were
dim. There were severe shortages of food, medicine, clothing, and housing. The
economy of the region was shattered. Cities were in ruins; schools, hospitals,
utilities, and transportation facilities were destroyed or inoperative. Overseas
groups instituted a major relief effort, but the FMG insisted on directing all
assistance and recovery operations and barred some agencies that had supplied
aid to Biafra.
Because charges of genocide had fueled international sympathy for
Biafra, the
FMG allowed a team of international experts to observe the surrender and to look
for evidence. Subsequently, the observers testified that they found no evidence
of genocide or systematic destruction of property, although there was
considerable evidence of famine and death as a result of the war. Furthermore,
under Gowon's close supervision, the federal government ensured that Igbo
civilians would not be treated as defeated enemies. A program was launched to
reintegrate the Biafran rebels into a unified Nigeria. A number of public
officials who had "actively counselled, aided, or abetted" secession
were dismissed, but a clear distinction was made between them and those who had
simply carried out their duties. Igbo personnel soon were being reenlisted in
the federal armed forces. There were no trials and few people were imprisoned.
Ojukwu, in exile, was made the scapegoat, but efforts to have him extradited
failed.
An Igbo official, Ukapi "Tony" Asika, was named administrator of
the new East Central State, comprising the Igbo heartland. Asika had remained
loyal to the federal government during the civil war, but as a further act of
conciliation, his all-Igbo cabinet included members who had served under the
secessionist regime. Asika was unpopular with many Igbo, who considered him a
traitor, and his administration was characterized as inept and corrupt. In three
years under his direction, however, the state government achieved the
rehabilitation of 70 percent of the industry incapacitated during the war. The
federal government granted funds to cover the state's operating expenses for an
interim period, and much of the war damage was repaired. Social services and
public utilities slowly were reinstituted, although not to the prewar levels...
During the five years immediately preceding the civil war, 124 riots were
reported. The civil war between 1967 and 1970 produced about 2 million deaths.
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