One of the great tragedies of Africa is not only the fact that a
million people mostly civilians and a large proportion of them
children died in one of Africas first post-independence wars, but that
until it happened the world thought Nigeria was immune from the
wasting disease of tribalism. It certainly was not because the Biafran
War is still the most expansive tribal conflagration that the
continent has experienced barring perhaps the ongoing Great Lakes
conflict involving the forces of East and West, only this time, with
the British siding with the Soviets.Worse, some of the religious
differences that emerged before and after that dreadful carnage are
still with us today. During the course of hostilities that lasted
almost four years, a lot of other shortcomings surfaced in Africas
most populous nation, including the kind of corruption that, until
then, had always been linked to countries rich in oil. Disunity,
incompetence and instability from which Nigeria never really recovered
also emerged. Two bloody army coups followed after the rebels
capitulated, together with an appalling series of massacres, mostly of
southern Christians by Muslim northerners. Half a century later the
slaughter continues.
Les mer
Nigeria: Bloodletting and Mass Starvation, 1967–1970
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781526729149
Publisert
2018
Utgiver
Independent Publishers Group (Chicago Review Press)
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter