Skip to main content

I Wish Nigeria Found More Crude Oil In The North So The South Would Be Left Alone –US-Based Nigerian Professor, Obiwu Iwuanyanwu

I Wish Nigeria Found More Crude Oil In The North So The South Would Be Left Alone –US-Based Nigerian Professor, Obiwu Iwuanyanwu
December 1, 2022

Obiwu, the author of "Igbos of Northern Nigeria," said he wished they would find more oil in the North so they would leave the South alone.

 

Prof Obiwu Iwuanyanwu, who teaches World History and Critical Theory at Central State University in Ohio, USA, has said he wished more crude oil was found in Northern Nigeria so the Southern region would be left alone.

For decades, Nigeria has relied on revenue generated from the sale of crude oil extracted in the South. Meanwhile, the southern part of Nigeria, especially the Niger Delta area has endured environmental degradation, caused by oil spills and other related issues on a massive scale.

Speaking about the discovery of oil in the North during his appearance on 90MinutesAfrica, Obiwu, the author of "Igbos of Northern Nigeria," said he wished they would find more oil in the North so they would leave the South alone.

The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC, recently announced that it has discovered crude oil, gas and condensates in the Kolmani River II well in northern Nigeria. The crude oil deposit is said to be over a billion barrels.

Meanwhile, reactions to Umem Akpan’s charges in his novel, New York, My Village, that Biafran soldiers maltreated Southern minorities have continued unabated.

For instance, Obiwu in the interview took issues with Uwem Akpan.

"I've been keeping my quiet, trying to maintain civility, not to talk about Uwen Akpan, the writer," said Obiwu to host Rudolf Okonkwo. "Our friend, Uwem Akpan, doesn't know what he was talking about. Let him talk about things he knows. He shouldn't talk about things he doesn't know."

Obiwu, who teaches World History and Critical Theory at Central State University in Ohio, USA suggested, "If Uwem Akpan wants to be like Ken Saro Wiwa, let him be like Ken Saro-Wiwa," he said. "Let him see if he will live and die like Ken Saro-Wiwa."

Obiwu was unhappy that Uwem Akpan stated that Igbo writers like Chimamanda Adichie, Chinua Achebe and others have been presenting a one-sided aspect of the Biafran War story that made the Igbo people look like saints while the Nigerian side looked like the devil.

In a penultimate week's interview on the same show, Uwem Akpan stated that there was no evil that the Nigerian military committed in the East during the war that the Biafrans didn't commit within the minority areas of the then Eastern Region. In one clip played to Obiwu, Uwem Akpan stated that writers like Achebe knew about the atrocities the Biafran soldiers committed in minority lands.

"What did Uwem want Achebe to do?" Obiwu asked. The author of "The Critical Imagination in African Literature: Essays in Honor of Michael J. C. Echeruo" urged Uwem to lower his temper. "I've not read anything written by Uwem Akpan," he said, "I know he is anti-Biafra."

Obiwu also weighed in on trending Nigerian writer Akwaeke Emezi. He had a problem with Akaeke's antagonistic relationship with Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie.

"I don't know what to say about Akwaeke Emezi," he said while discussing Akwaeke's gender advocacy, "I have been having difficulties talking about Akwaeke… to her, everybody is a suspect."

While defending poet Christopher Okigbo, who fought and died during the Biafran War, against critics like the late scholar Ali Mazrui, Obiwu, whose latest work is "What Is Literature?: Critical Essays on Ezra Pound, Chinua Achebe, Roy Campbell, Nnamdi Azikiwe, Langston Hughes, Christopher Okigbo, Dennis Brutus, and Archilochus," stated that, "Ali Mazuri's book (The Trial of Christopher Okigbo) has no basis at all. It is better forgotten the way it has been. What Ali Mazrui was writing was nonsense."