Sunday 4 June 2017

BIAFRA CAN BE LIKE SOUTH SUDAN




BIAFRA CAN BE LIKE SOUTH SUDAN
BY ABDULMUMINI ADEKU,Related imageTHERE IS SERIOUS CRISIS IN SOUTH SUDAN PRESENTLY WITH RIVAL TRIBES ON EACH OTHER'S THROAT WITH RESOURCES AT THE EPICENTER OF THE CRISIS

If the people of the South East and South South geo-political zones in Nigeria eventually have their way and are able to muster all the courage to create its planned ,United states of Biafra ,feelers now suggests very strongly that there problems as a group of people living together in a nation may have just started after all.
Checks by The News office Desk of Paedia Express Multimedia Group in Lagos,Nigeria ,shows that due to the hot headed nature of the Ijaws,itshekiri and Urhobo people fighting each other on one side of the divide and on the other side of the divide ,the Igbo people  are also  expected to be in division especially where teh issue of resource control and distribution was being discussed .
A source told this reporter that the war that will break out between the NIger Delta militants and Ndi- Igbo especially on oil will be very fierce as the piece of Diamond is not found in commercial quantities in Igbo land .
The source assured that if the people of Biafra finally have their way he will not be too surprised if they ended up like the situation of the war now playing out in South Sudan  due to the contrasting philosophies of the Igbos and the NIger Deltans.
Juba, June 3, 2017 (SSNA) — South Sudan’s civil war has been ranked fourth on the list of the world’s ten most neglected displacement crises, a 2017 report released by the Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC) has shown.
The report, seen by the South Sudan News Agency, ranks the top ten countries based on “insufficient economic support to meet the most basic humanitarian needs, limited media attention and lack of political will to solve the crises.” The NRC also says it analyzed all countries with more than 100,000 people displaced.
The report also blames the international community for not doing enough to minimize or end the crises.
“The international community has not only forgotten these crises but has never really shown sufficient willingness to contribute to a solution. Many of the displaced people have fled their homes multiple times, and each time they get increasingly vulnerable,” Norwegian Refugee Council’s Secretary General Jan Egeland said.
“Economic support to alleviate humanitarian crises must be given based on needs, and not be subject to geopolitical interests. In addition, we need to work for long-term political solutions, which can lift countries out of a negative spiral of violence, war, and poverty,” Egeland added.
The top ten neglected displacement crises are ranked as follow: Central African Republic (CAR) took the first spot and Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) has been ranked second followed by Sudan, South Sudan, Nigeria, Yemen, Palestine, Ukraine, Myanmar, and Somalia.
NRC said in its report that the mains factors that influenced South Sudan ranking are February 2017 UN declaration of famine in some parts of South Sudan and the fact that half of population needs humanitarian assistance. The NRC further added, “…the crisis in South Sudan has gained little media attention and is among the neglected crises with the lowest media coverage per displaced person.”
editor's footnote:
additional reports from South Sudan News Agency ..

No comments:

Post a Comment