@vanguardngrnews Very wonderful Film : At least the children look healthy. Their smiles are still there, and they don't appear traumatized. That alone says this video tells a bigger story than words can. Praise be to Allah for their safe return.
Did You Know?
All 4 Nigerian women who have served as World Bank Vice Presidents are Igbo: Arunma Oteh, Oby Ezekwesili, Sandie Okoro, and Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala.
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"Following the comments by a South African minister that no compensation will be paid to Nigerians whose properties were lø øted or burnt, or whose lives were løst, the Nigerian government should reciprocate by appropriating the profits of South African companies operating in Nigeria, including their banks, seize the funds, and use them to compensate affected Nigerians."
— Senator Adams Oshiomhole addresses the Senate over the xenophobic att@cks on Nigerians in South Africa.
@NigeriaStories Hahaha. Peter Obi sent that Sunday Igboho. Most people don't know that Ibgoho is an igbo word, it means I am igbo. Yorubas still call him terrorists even when he's protecting the Yorubas. Anyone who thinks the Yorubas are sensible is just a foolish 1diot.
On This Day in 1982: Emeka Ojukwu returned to Nigeria in all his glory after twelve years in exile.
He was granted asylum by Ivory Coast President, Felix Houphouët-Boigny, on January 11, 1970.
Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu remained in exile for 12 years until the administration of President Shehu Shagari.
There were widespread calls for Ojukwu's pardon.
Some of the key people who pushed for Ojukwu's pardon were Dr. Nwafor Orizu, a close friend of President Shehu Shagari; Chief Adeniran Ogunsanya; People’s Redemption Party leader Alhaji Aminu Kano; and Dr. Alex Ekwueme.
He was granted a pardon by Shehu Shagari on May 18, 1982, and returned to Nigeria a month later, on June 18, 1982. He was accompanied back by an 11-man NPN delegation led by Dr. Chuba Okadigbo.
He received a rousing hero's welcome in Aba, complete with a 21-gun salute. His reception was one of the biggest celebrations ever witnessed in Igboland. Izuchukwu and Ekene Dili Chukwu Motors helped transport thousands of people to the venue free of charge.
Legendary Igbo highlife musician Oliver De Coque composed a special song for his return titled “Nnata Chief Emeka Odumegwu Ojukwu.” 🎶
He declared his candidacy for the Nigerian Senate in 1983, though he did not win. However, Shagari's government fell during the 1983 Nigerian coup d'état on December 31.
In early 1984, the Muhammadu Buhari regime jailed hundreds of political figures, including Emeka Ojukwu. He was held at Kirikiri Maximum Security Prison and released later that year after spending 10 months there.
Ojukwu died on November 26, 2011, at the age of 78.
Gone but not forgotten! 🤍
Follow @IgboHistoFacts for more history.
Exactly 21 years ago today, five Igbo traders, along with their female friend, were brutally murdered in cold blood by men of the Nigerian Police Force led by then-DCP Danjuma Ibrahim at a police checkpoint on Gimbiya Street, Area 11, Garki, Abuja, after the female victim turned down the romantic advances of the senior police officer at an evening gathering in the city.
The names of the five Igbo traders were:
(1) Ifeanyi Ozor
(2) Chinedu Meniru
(3) Anthony Nwokike
(4) Paulinus Ogbonna
(5) Ekene Isaac Mgbe, and
(6) Augustina Arebu, the only female victim and fiancée of Ifeanyi Ozor.
All six were traders at the Apo Auto Spare Parts Market, Abuja.
They were killed after DCP Danjuma made romantic advances to the only lady among them, Augustina (Tina) Arebu, at an evening gathering, which she rejected. A minor disagreement reportedly ensued, and the officer immediately stormed out of the gathering to the nearby police checkpoint on Gimbiya Street, where he told the policemen on duty that he had sighted a gang of armed robbers.
When the Apo Six drove to the checkpoint, Officer Danjuma reportedly blocked them with his vehicle and ordered the junior policemen on duty to open fire on them.
"Obey my last order," Danjuma reportedly shouted. "Shoot them! Shoot them! They refused my advances."
The junior policemen obeyed the order and opened fire on the innocent traders.
Four of the Apo Six were killed on the spot. The remaining two — the lady, Tina Arebu, and one of the five young men — were killed the following day.
According to the findings of the Judicial Commission of Inquiry, Tina Arebu was strangled to death by DCP Danjuma Ibrahim.
This is according to the findings of the Judicial Commission of Inquiry set up by then-President Olusegun Obasanjo and headed by Justice O.O. Goodluck.
Immediately after the killings, the Nigerian Police reportedly went to work in a desperate bid to cover up the crime.
First, Officer Danjuma Ibrahim obtained weapons from the Garki Police Station, planted them inside the Peugeot 406 car of the victims, and ordered the official police photographer to take photographs in an attempt to create the false narrative that the innocent traders were armed robbers killed in a gun battle with the police.
However, both the Administrative Panel of Inquiry set up by the Police and the Judicial Commission of Inquiry established by the Federal Government concluded that DCP Danjuma led other officers in the killing of the six victims, including the strangulation of the only female among them and the burial of their bodies in shallow graves in what the Commission described as "a continuous single exercise of elimination to conceal facts."
The Commission established the following facts: (Read carefully)
The Peugeot 406 being driven by one of the deceased persons had six occupants, including the driver, five males and one female.
The police buried the corpses of the six deceased persons in two shallow graves in the Utako District of the FCT, Abuja, under the supervision of the DPO of Garki Police Station, CSP Othman Abdulsalam.
At the first point of contact between the police and the deceased persons on Gimbiya Street, Area 11, Garki, Abuja, not all the victims were killed there.
No shooting came from the Peugeot 406 car being driven by one of the deceased persons.
The only female occupant of the Peugeot 406, Tina Arebu, was strangled to death by DCP Danjuma Ibrahim and PC Dennis Asawa.
The two locally made pistols, two live cartridges, two expended cartridges, a cutlass, and daggers found in the Peugeot 406 car were planted by officers, according to the Commission's findings.
Thread continues below ⬇️
The then-and-now pictures of DSP Danjuma, the alleged mastermind of the Apo Six killings.
Survivors speak, internet erupts over framing.
BBC’s “Surviving Biafra” documentary revisits the 1967–1970 civil war through survivor testimonies and archival footage, but the reaction online is already divided before release.