Main menu:
Letters, Petitions, Articles and Speeches
|
The premier web site of Edo speaking people. Nation of people who are mostly
located in the Midwestern part of Nigeria, Western Africa. |
|
BENIN AND THE MIDWEST
REFERENDUM By Dr. Nowamagbe A. Omoigui, MD, MPH, FACC Chief Executive Officer Cardiovascular Care Group, PA Columbia, SC, USA Speech
delivered on Friday, December 20, 2002 at the Oba Akenzua II Cultural
Complex, Airport Road, Benin City on occasion of the Fifth Late Chief (Dr.)
Jacob Uwadiae Egharevba (MBE) Memorial Lecture and Award Ceremony, under the
distinguished Chairmanship of S. A. Asemota Esq. (SAN), sponsored by the
Institute for Benin Studies. INTRODUCTION It is a
great honor to me to be invited to address this gathering of important sons,
daughters and friends of Benin on the occasion of the 5th Chief (Dr.) Jacob Uwadiae Egharevba (MBE)
memorial lecture. Therefore,
I would like to express my profound appreciation to the Institute for Benin
Studies, ably coordinated by Uyilawa Usuanlele. The
Institute�s foresight and persistence in organizing this annual event
rightly honors a deserving son of Benin, whose priceless historical
scholarship in difficult circumstances has placed key aspects of our history
as a people on record for present and future generations. In
coming before you today, I am humbly following the path of more eminently
qualified individuals before me. Professor
Unionmwan Edebiri set the tone when he spoke on "Benin and the outer
world." Professor Eghosa Osagie reflected on "Benin in contemporary
Nigeria." Dr. Iro Eweka reminded us
that "We are, because he was." Professor Peter P. Ekeh then reached deep into
the archives of our ancestry when he presented " Ogiso Times and Eweka
Times: A preliminary history of the Edoid Complex of Cultures." I am
neither a professional political scientist nor historian. However,
story telling is part of our culture and tradition. It is one of
the ways ordinary folk have passed the story of our people from one
generation to another for centuries. When I was originally invited
to deliver today�s lecture, I tossed and turned for many
months. What singular event in my lifetime, I wondered, did the
most, even at a tender age, to shape my sense of whom I
am? What was so singularly unique in its
ramifications, as told to me by my father, that I could sit in the moonlight
and tell it again and again to my children, and someday, God willing, to my
grandchildren and great grandchildren? That event was the MIDWEST
REFERENDUM OF 1963, when I was four years old. The
title of my essay today is the story of �Benin and the Midwest
referendum�. Why
Benin? After all, two provinces (Benin and Delta), and many divisions
(including the Benin division) in what became the �Mid-West� were
involved in the �War� to create the Midwest region in 1963. There
are two reasons. First, the history of the
Midwest referendum and events leading to it is exceedingly vast and cannot in
all honesty be addressed in a single lecture without losing focus. Secondly, I found a curious excerpt in the report
of the Henry Willink Commission: �In
general, it is our view that desire for the State is strong in Benin City and
Benin division, the heart of the old Benin Kingdom, and that the idea has
progressively less appeal as one moves outwards from this centre.� [Colonial
Office: Nigeria - Report of the Commission appointed to enquire
into the fears of Minorities and the means of allaying them. July 30th, 1958.
Chapter 4, page 31] This
prompted me to know more about why Benin came to be considered by the
Minorities Commission as the epicenter of the Midwest State Movement and how
she mobilized herself and others to join hands to prosecute the �war for
the Midwest�. I shall
conclude with two take-home messages: a). Political parties come and go, but nationalities
remain. b). Organized and united across traditional and contemporary
forms of leadership, nothing can stand in the way of the peoples of the
Midwest. PREAMBLE On
March 29th, 1963 the Federal Ministry of Internal Affairs of
Nigeria was given the responsibility for the organization of a referendum to
decide whether a new Region should be created out of the Western region in a
sub-region called �the Mid-West�, comprised of the Benin and Delta
provinces. Preliminary
guidelines were contained in an official letter signed by Mr. F.B.O. Williams
on behalf of the Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Internal Affairs. In accordance with the Constitutional Referendum
Regulations, 1963, Mr. Gabriel Esezobor Edward
Longe,
Barrister-at-Law was earlier appointed on January 21st as the Supervisor and empowered to appoint other
referendum officials. It was projected that about 71 officials, all Nigerians
of Midwest origin, drawn from the Federal Public Service, Corporations in the
Federal territory and from other suitable institutions, working full time for
about three months, would be required. On the
day of the referendum, about 9,300 additional officials were anticipated to
be required for operations. The
Command Center for the Referendum was designated as No. 2 King�s Square,
Benin City. It was
to that office that all referendum officials reported on Saturday, April 6,
1963 to begin their historic assignment. The
appointed Referendum and Assistant Referendum Officers for the various
districts of the Mid-West are listed in Appendix One (1). On the
24th of June 1963, by order of the Federation of
Nigeria Extraordinary Official Gazette No. 43, Volume 50, the Supervisor of
the Mid-West referendum issued Government Notice No. 1265. It
declared that voting at the Constitutional referendum for the creation of the
Mid-Western Region would proceed on Saturday, the 13th day of July 1963. The
referendum question was as follows: �Do
you agree that the Midwestern Region Act, 1962, shall have effect so as to
secure that Benin Province including Akoko Edo District in the Afenmai
Division and Delta Province including Warri Division and Warri Urban Township
area shall be included in the proposed Mid-Western Region?� Hours
of voting at designated Polling Stations extended from seven o�clock in the
forenoon until six o�clock in the evening. It is
important to note that a new Voters registration List was not compiled for
the purposes of the Mid-West referendum. Only
those listed four years earlier in the Federal Electoral Register of 1959
were entitled to vote. Those
who wished to vote �yes� were to place their ballot papers in the �white box�. Those who wished to vote �no� were to
place their ballot papers in the �black
box�. The
results of the Referendum were as follows [GE Longe: Results of the Midwest
Referendum, 1963. July 18, 1963. From
D.A. Omoigui archives.]
The total
number of eligible voters, being persons whose names appeared in the Federal
Electoral register of 1959 was 654,130. Of this
number the percentage that voted in the affirmative was 89.07%, well in
excess of the required 60% (or 392,478) for the creation of the Mid-West
region. The region that was born on August 9, 1963 as a
result of the July 13th plebiscite
remains the only major administrative unit of Nigeria created by due
constitutional process. EVENTS LEADING UP TO THE REFERENDUM FROM 1897 � 1933 As is
well known, Benin City, capital of the independent Benin Kingdom and Empire,
and traditional spiritual center of Edo speaking people fell to British
troops on February 19, 1897. From that
day onwards we became part of the British colonial system and whatever
administrative structures its agents and latter day surrogates
created. The
last independent Oba, Idugbowa Ovonramwen Ogbaisi, was deported to Calabar on
September 13th, 1897, where he died in 1914. [Jacob Egharevba: A Short History of Benin.
Ibadan University Press, 1968, p60] In the
meantime, Benin was administered as part of the Niger Coast Protectorate,
which later became the Protectorate of Southern Nigeria in 1900. From 1906 �Southern Nigeria� was administered
as three main provinces, Western, Central and Eastern, along with the Lagos
colony with which it had been merged that year. The
Eastern province was run from Calabar, the Central Province from Warri, and
the Western Province from Lagos. The
Central Province was also known as the Niger province. It consisted of the
Aboh, Agbor, Asaba, Awka, Benin, Forcados, Idah, Ifon, Ishan, Kwale, Okwoga,
Onitsha, Sapele, Udi and Warri districts. The
protectorate of Northern Nigeria, on the other hand, was initially organized
into 13 provinces (run by Provincial residents) before Ilorin and Kabba were
merged into one. According to the �Anthropological Report on
the Edo speaking peoples� by Northcote Thomas in 1910,
Edo-speaking peoples were mainly located in the Central Province of
�Southern Nigeria� and the Ibie and Ukpilla districts of Kabba province
of �Northern Nigeria.� The
protectorates and colonies of Northern and Southern Nigeria were later
amalgamated on January 1st 1914 to
create �Nigeria�. [FD Lugard: Report on the Amalgamation of
Northern and Souther Nigeria, and administration, 1912 � 1919. H.M.
Stationery Office, 1920]. In
Benin, after a 17 year interregnum, Prince Aiguobasimwin, (also known as
Ovbiudu � the courageous one) eldest son of Oba Ovonramwen, was crowned Oba
Eweka II on July 24, 1914. Indeed,
the splendor of that coronation ceremony is what initially triggered the
interest of the late Jacob Egharevba to write down the history of his
people. Dr. Ekhaguosa Aisien has eloquently discussed the
remarkable story of how Eweka II regained the throne against incredible odds
in his paper �Edo Man of the Twentieth
Century.� [http://www.dawodu.net/aisien.htm] The Ibie and Ukpilla districts of Kabba province
of �Northern Nigeria� were merged with their kith and kin in the Benin
province of �Southern Nigeria� in 1918. After
1897, the opening of core traditional Benin lands to so-called �legal
trade� in Oil Palm and Forestry by British agents and surrogates created
new opportunities and encouraged mass migrations of southern Edoid peoples,
among who were the Urhobo. The
period of the interregnum also witnessed aggressive missionary activity,
establishment of schools, institution of a system of Warrant Chiefs and the
beginnings of what later became the western educated elite. After 1914, the structure of the colonial Benin
Native Council provided a platform for competition between elements of the
new elite (like Iyase Agho Obaseki) who controlled the District Council, and
the Oba. The Oba was further weakened by
not being allowed to collect taxes, appoint chiefs without British consent or
control land designated as reserved for Government activity. Following the introduction of polls and direct
taxation in 1920, the new westernized elite in Benin became increasingly
epitomized in the years to come by social and later political groups known at
various times as the �Benin Tax-Payers Association� and �Benin Community�. With the restoration of the indigenous monarchy
on one hand, and the simultaneous nurturing of a colonial proxy elite on the
other, therefore, two tracks in the leadership of Benin were invoked and
waxing and waning tensions inevitably developed between them [Igbafe:
Benin under British Administration]. In
spite of British gerrymandering, primordial linguistic and cultural bonds
(and differences) that had evolved over centuries could not be wished away
overnight. The appropriate administrative structure for
Nigeria was, therefore, always a source of controversy during the colonial
era, as evidenced by the number of constitutions that were promulgated in
1922 (Clifford), 1946 (Richards), 1951 (Macpherson), 1954, and finally
1960. Since independence in 1960, our
flirtation with numerous constitutions in 1963, 1979, 1989, 1995 and 1999 as
well as states creation exercises and calls for a �sovereign national
conference� continues to reflect this dilemma. For example,
early British administrators toyed with various proposals for combining
groups of provinces into regions and thus nullifying the distinction between
�Northern Nigeria� and �Southern Nigeria�. In 1912, the Editor of the African Mail, Mr. E.
D. Morel, suggested that Nigeria be consolidated into the Northern, Central,
Western and Eastern provinces [ED Morel: Nigeria,
Its Peoples and Problems, London, 1912, p201-10, 2nd Edition]. Charles
L. Temple, one time Resident of Bauchi and later Lt. Governor of Northern
Nigeria, proposed seven provinces, namely, the Hausa States, Benue Province,
Chad Territory, Western, Central and Eastern provinces along with the Lagos
colony. The Governor-General, Sir Frederick John Dealtry Lugard accepted
neither of these proposals. Thus after amalgamation, Northern and Southern
Nigeria were left intact under powerful Lt. Governors while the three
previous large provinces of Southern Nigeria, which had been run by
Provincial Commissioners, were broken down into smaller provinces and placed
under Provincial Residents. Northern
Nigeria comprised the Sokoto, Kano, Bornu, Bauchi, Zaria, Nupe, Kontagora,
Ilorin, Nassarawa, Munshi (Tiv), Muri and Yola provinces. The old �Central province� of Southern
Nigeria was split into the Benin and Warri provinces. The �Eastern Province� was divided into the
provinces of Calabar, Ogoja, Onitsha and Owerri. The �Western province� became the Abeokuta,
Ondo and Oyo provinces, joined thereafter by the new Ijebu province in 1916. Lagos remained The
Colony. But some provinces were more equal than others,
in Lugard�s eyes. Those that were �more
important� were classified as �First Class� provinces. These were the Sokoto, Kano, Bornu, Bauchi,
Zaria, Oyo, Owerri and Abeokuta provinces. [FD Lugard: Report on the Amalgamation of
Northern and Souther Nigeria, and administration, 1912 � 1919. H.M.
Stationery Office, 1920]. The
headquarters of the Southern Provinces was later moved from Lagos to Enugu in
1929. Even in
those early days, there were already stirrings of nationalism. In October 1923, Humphrey Omoregie Osagie, then
only a 27-year-old clerk, delivered a political lecture in Lagos under the
auspices of Herbert Macaulay and the Nigerian National Democratic Party. The young man from Benin would one day become a
Titan in the struggle for emancipation of his people. [A. J. Uwaifo:
Omo-Osagie and Party Politics in Benin, Department of History, University of
Ibadan, May 1985] Meanwhile,
Oba Eweka II became increasingly concerned about the long-term implications
of various administrative proposals for new regions that would ride roughshod
over the unique history and independence of most of the peoples of the
Central Province, which later became the Benin and Warri Provinces. Therefore, in 1926, he requested the British to
bring all the Edoid and Anioma (Western Ibo) areas together in one region
that would have a direct reporting relationship with the center. He argued that
the people of the Benin and Warri provinces were predominantly of one
linguistic, cultural, religious, chieftaincy and historical stock and had
functioned in the same cultural system before the British came. [File BP
44,VOL 1, The Oba of Benin. National Archives, Ibadan]. To the
best of my knowledge, therefore, Oba Eweka II, in 1926, was the first,
following the dissolution of the old Central province, to conceptualize the
consolidation of what later became the Midwest region of Nigeria in
1963. It was during his reign that the first pan-Edo association
called the Institute for Home-Benin improvement emerged in 1932. Its mandate
- according to its own documents - was to represent the "Edo speaking
people of Nigeria viz: Benin City, Ishan, Kukuruku, Ora, Agbor, Igbanke, Sobe
etc." [Uyilawa Usuanlele: The Edo Nationality and the
National Question in Nigeria: A Historical perspective. In Osaghae and
Onwudiwe (Eds). The Management of the National Question in Nigeria. PEFS.
Ibadan 2001] In the same year, Thomas Erukeme, Mukoro
Mowoe, Omorowhovo Okoro and others formed the Edoid Urhobo Brotherly Society
in Warri. Unfortunately,
Oba Eweka II joined his ancestors on February 8, 1933 and did not live to see
his dream come true. It was, therefore, on the
shoulders of his son, Oba Akenzua II, crowned on April 5, 1933, after
overcoming opposition from his older sister that the spiritual and royal
leadership of the future Midwest State Movement was to fall. [H Osadolo
Edomwonyi: A Short
Biography of Oba Akenzua II. Bendel Newspapers Corporation, 1981.] FROM 1934 - 1945 The
Urhobo Brotherly Society evolved into the Urhobo Progressive Union in 1934,
and was later known as the Urhobo Progress Union (UPU). This tightly knit organization would prove to be
a powerful ally in the fight for the Midwest. In
1935, the Institute for Home-Benin improvement lobbied for an Edo speaking
person to represent the Benin province in the Legislative council. Up until then Benin was represented by a Yoruba
trader called Mr. I. T. Palmer who was living in Sapele. This wish was eventually granted when Gaius
Obaseki became the first Edo speaking representative on the Legislative
council in the early forties (Usuanlele op. cit.). In 1937, the first conference of traditional Obas
and rulers in the Southern Provinces of Nigeria took place in Oyo. At that meeting a decision was taking to rotate
the venue of the meetings to the domains of various prominent
rulers. Coincidentally, the Ibo State Union was also formed that year. Then in
1939, what Oba Eweka II had feared came to pass. The ten Southern Provinces (along with the
Cameroon trusteeship province) were consolidated around the Igbo and Yoruba nationalities
into two groups now called the �Eastern provinces� based at Enugu, and
the �Western Provinces� based at Ibadan. In this new set-up, the Benin
and Warri provinces of the independent old �Central Province� were now
part of the so-called �Western group� with the River Niger as a natural
boundary. The �Anioma� or �Western Ibo� subgroup of
the Benin province, led by Asaba indigenes, requested to be merged with the
Aboh division of the Warri province in a new Western Ibo province, but were
overruled by the British because of the advent of the Second World War. [JIG Onyia: My role
in Nationalism. 1986 JID Printers Ltd. Asaba]. Oba Akenzua II took note of the Asaba-led
agitation. However, in the years preceding it, he was distracted by internal
problems in Benin like the Forest reserve dispute of 1934, the abolition of
District Heads in 1935, Uzebu uprising and Benin water rate agitation of 1936
� 1940 [Igbafe, op. cit.] . It was
not long, however, before the Richards Constitution of 1947 crystallized both
groups of provinces into the Eastern and Western �regions� of Southern
Nigeria, each with its own Regional Assembly. The old
�Northern Nigeria� remained as one large region. Professor
P.A. Igbafe has discussed much of the dynamics of colonial rule and its
impact on traditional Benin in his outstanding book �Benin
under British Administration�. The
late Jacob Egharevba also discussed tensions between Oba Akenzua, a few of
his prominent chiefs (like Iyase Okoro-Otun) and the emerging Benin educated
and commercial elite in his seminal book �A
Short History of Benin.� Such
tensions were driven by different agendas but manifested opportunistically
from time to time. Nevertheless, these tensions -
which undermined the Oba�s stature and even threatened his throne - were
temporarily resolved after negotiated concessions following appeals from
British officials and Traditional Rulers in other jurisdictions, like
Warri. During
this era too, Oba Akenzua II, motivated by visions of a united pan-Edoid
nation, agreed to the British proposal for transfer of large tracts of land
from the Benin province to the Warri province for �administrative
convenience. Affected tenants, who agreed to continue to pay royalty in
return, populated such lands, many of which had opened up after 1897,
including places like Jesse, Ogharefe and other lands across the Ethiope
River - which are now in the Delta State portion of the former Midwest. In
August 1942, the conference of traditional Obas and rulers in what was now
the Western Provinces of Nigeria took place in Benin City. It is said that at that meeting, there was an
attempt to speak Yoruba as the Lingua Franca, thus causing some irritation
among delegates from the Benin and Warri provinces. Nevertheless, the Second World War was in
progress and all efforts were focused on its successful prosecution, so
sleeping dogs were allowed to lie. The war
was interrupted only by reports that the Institute for Home-Benin Improvement
had transformed into the Edo National Union in 1943 and that Nnamdi Azikiwe proposed eight (8) protectorates
in his �Political Blueprint for Nigeria� [RL Sklar: Nigerian Political
Parties. Princeton, 1963]. At about this time tribal unions like the
Bauchi Improvement Association, Ibibio State Union, and the Pan-Ibo Federal
Union became known. The pro-independenceNational Council for Nigeria and
the Cameroons (NCNC) was formed by Herbert Macaulay in
1944. It attracted many young educated elite from the
Benin and Warri provinces initially. Among
them were men like Mr. Anthony Enahoro, TJ Akagbosu, Chief Gaius Obaseki,
Arthur Prest, O.N. Rewane, Begho and Edukugho. [EA Enahoro: Fugitive
Offender, London: Cassell, 1966] AFTER
WORLD WAR II In 1945,
two significant events occurred in Benin. Chief Humphrey Omo-Osagie, already mentioned
earlier in this essay, retired from the public service and quietly returned
to Benin. He was an ex-student of King�s College Lagos
where he was a Schoolmate of Oba Akenzua. 1945
was also the year that Oba Akenzua re-established the Aruosa Church as the
Edo National Church of God. He
later wrote its catechism and published two volumes of liturgical books as
well as a rule-book based on its constitution. In the
same year, Michael Adekunle Ajasin and Jeremiah Obafemi Awolowo
conceptualized founding the �non-political� exclusively Yoruba vanguard
cultural group called the Egbe
Omo Oduduwa (Society
of Descendants of Oduduwa) in London. It
would later be formalized in 1947 and then metamorphose into the Action Group
political party in 1950/51. [Sklar, op cit] After
the war, the momentum for independence began to gather strongly, led by
Macaulay until his untimely death in 1946 when Nnamdi Azikiwe took over the
leadership of the NCNC. By this time Obafemi Awolowo
had begun staking positions publicly and was quoted in 1947 as saying,
�Opportunity must be afforded to each group to evolve its own peculiar
political institutions.� [Awolowo: Awo � The autobiography of Chief
Obafemi Awolowo. Cambridge University Press, 1960] Indeed,
one of the controversial issues of that era was the extent to which Edo based
parties and groups should ally themselves with parties and groups outside the
Edoid region. Oba Akenzua II was opposed to external alliances because he saw
them as a threat to Edo National aspirations. In 1947, for example, there was a conference of
delegates from the Benin and Warri provinces at the old Conference Hall in
Benin City, where fears of domination in the West were
articulated. On the
other hand, some Edo speaking politicians like Anthony Enahoro and Gaius
Obaseki, for example, became disillusioned with Nnamdi Azikiwe and the NCNC
allegedly for Ibo leanings after Macaulay�s death. [Enahoro, op. cit.] The Pan-Ibo Union had
been one of the founding organizations of the NCNC. However, Azikiwe later assumed its Presidency in
1948. The West African Pilot later quoted him in 1949
as saying �It would appear that the God of Africa has created the Ibo
nation to lead the children of Africa from the bondage of ages�.� Meanwhile
deep discomfort in Benin with the provincial administrative changes of 1939
was heightened by proposals in the new Richards Constitution of 1946 for the
formal creation of the Eastern, Western and Northern Regions in
Nigeria. The new constitution created a separate House of
Assembly and House of Chiefs in the Northern region. Initially, the Eastern
and Western regions were allotted a unicameral House of Assembly each, to
which were later added a House of Chiefs for each of the Regions. But back in Benin, Oba Akenzua II found himself
once again in dispute with elements of the �new elite� even as he kept an
eye on events at the national level. Following
the death of Iyase Okoro-Otun in 1943, efforts by the Oba in November 1947 to
abolish the title of Iyase (�Prime Minister�) on account of his
experience during the water rate agitation were strongly opposed. Opposition was mobilised by the new �Benin
Community Tax-Payers Association� primarily formed to pressure the Oba to
confer the title of Iyase on a literate individual. Thus he reconsidered his position, even though
supported by a group of chiefs and prominent citizens including Omo-Osagie, Egbe
Omorogbe, Ogieva Emokpae, J. O. Edomwonyi, D.E. Uwaifo, C.Y. Legemah
etc. These chiefs and other men later created the Edo
Young People�s party [Edomwonyi, op. cit.] . After
an unsuccessful attempt to confer the title on Idehen, then the Esogban of
Benin, Oba Akenzua eventually conferred it in April 1948 on Hon. Gaius
Obaseki, son of the late Iyase Agho Obaseki, some say under pressure from
British authorities. In the next few years to follow
the Oba was subjected to humiliations such as a decrease in his salary and
ban from conferring titles without permission [CN Ekwuyasi: Benin Situation as it is today.
Daily Times, April 26 1950, p8]. As the
Iyase, Gaius Obaseki was executive Chairman of the newly re-organized Benin
Divisional Council while Oba Akenzua II was the President. Obaseki was also the concurrent Chairman of the
Benin City Council and its powerful Administrative Committee. In addition he was elected the Oluwo or Leader of the influential Reformed Ogboni
Fraternity (ROF), a fact that would assume great significance in the politics
of Benin. The ROF was a religious order said to be have
been in existence since the late 19th century
but formally founded in 1914 by African Christian clergy led by Anglican
Archdeacon Ogunbiyi. It was later introduced into
Benin society from Yoruba land, (but is different from the much older
traditional Ogboni society of Yoruba Obaship). The ROF
describes itself as the equivalent in the United States of �the Freemasons,
Odd Fellows Fraternity, The Rosicrucians, etc. [Morton,
Williams. The Yoruba Ogboni Cult in Oyo. AFRICA
Vol. xxx 1960, p 362-374]. At the
Benin provincial level, there were two conferences that year, both marked in
part by growing rivalries between two prominent sons of Benin � Chiefs
Gaius Obaseki and Humphrey Omo-Osagie. It was
also in May 1948 that Bode Thomas, an emissary of Obafemi Awolowo paid a
visit to the Benin and Warri provinces to canvass support for a new political
party with a �Yoruba orientation�. The
result of Bode Thomas�s visit was to split the hitherto united nationalist
front of young Midwest based politicians into pro-NCNC and anti-NCNC
factions. At about this time, midwesterners barely took
note of a new northern organization called the Jamiyya Mutanen Arewa, which
was founded in May 1948. It would later evolve into the Northern Peoples
Congress (NPC), a political party that was destined to play a critical role
in the creation of the Midwest region after independence. Anyway,
having accepted the Iyase situation, on October 16th, 1948, Oba
Akenzua II addressed the inauguration of what was known as the �Reformed Benin Community�, formed by Chief Humphrey Omo-Osagie in
Benin: He
said, inter alia: �The
aims and ideals of this new political body seem very laudable and there is no
doubt that it will help develop usefully like its counterparts, the Egbe Omo
Oduduwa of the Yorubas, the Federal Union of the Ibos and so on�. In the
scheme of things, all Benins should strive for a state or principality of
Benin in the new Nigeria in the making. The
Hausas, the Yorubas, the Ibos, and so on are on the move and the fact that
this or that non-Benin political party has awarded scholarships to Binis for
higher studies should not deprive us of our identity, custom, tradition,
language and culture, or lull us into a false sense of security. �.. I
believe Nigeria expects each of her states to do or mind its own business, though
all states have one common business to perform, that is work together in
order to achieve in a short time independence for a United States of
Nigeria..... Therefore,
the Richards Constitution in 1950 must aim at creating more regions with full
autonomy than there are at present, each with its own Governor. At least
there must be a fourth region to be known as the Central or South West
provinces�� I
sincerely hope that the day will come when there will be a larger body to be
known as the Federal Union of the Central or South West Provinces in which
the Edo, Urhobo, Itsekiri, Ishan, Ora, Ivbiosakon, Sobe and so on will be
principal members of the union�." [SOURCE: National Archives of Nigeria,
Ibadan; File BP2647. Reformed Benin Community. ] Akenzua further advised the Reformed Benin
Community to unite all the Edos, critically study the Richards Constitution,
which was due for review, and make the creation of the new region the main
focus of the organization. At about this time, the only other voice that was
loudly heard in the wilderness of States agitation was that of Barrister Udo
Udoma who was the first to conceptualize the Calabar-Ogoja-Rivers (COR)
State. Meanwhile, the new Iyase of Benin, Gaius Obaseki,
was waxing stronger, exploiting his unique concentration of powers. Jacob Egharevba wrote: �As a result of various differences,
ill-feeling grew up between the Oba and the Iyase.� Professor Igbafe was more direct: �Like
Cardinal Wolsey of Tudor England, Gaius Obaseki concentrated power in his own
hands with ruthless efficiency and uncompromising vindictiveness against
known opponents��..The Ogboni began to indulge in excesses. Gaius
embarked on a vigorous membership drive. Those
who held out were persecuted. The
result of this over-concentration of power in the hands of a single
individual and the excessive exercise of that power vis-�-vis the Oba�s
loss of prestige, stipend and power, produced an inevitable but opposite and
equal reaction. There was bitterness against
the Ogboni, which now began to dominate the councils and to infiltrate all
walks of life in Benin. Progressive young men found the Ogboni influence a
social menace and unacceptable to their way of thinking. Possibly the
Iyase�s position in the council and in the Ogboni gave excessive political
importance to this cult. Having struggled to place a
literate young Iyase in a position of power in order to deflate the Oba�s
palace autocracy, the people found that the Ogboni cult was now too powerful
and sinister for their comfort.� [Igbafe: op. cit.] At the
Warri and Benin provincial conferences of 1949, all Edo-speaking people
(including Urhobo) supported calls for a Midwest State [Files BP/2328,
BP/2678/1, BP/742; WP/569/1 National Archives, Ibadan]. During this period opinion among leaders from
Asaba division was predominantly in support of consolidation with the Eastern
region or creation of a western Igbo province within the Western region.
Asaba, western Ijaw, and an Itsekiri faction all opposed creation of the
Midwest. When Benin and Warri delegates in favor of creation of the Midwest
region attempted to raise the issue at the Western regional conference on
Constitutional reform that year, they were prevented from doing so. Therefore, with Oba Akenzua in the lead, they
walked out. Meanwhile both Obafemi Awolowo
and Nnamdi Azikiwe at this stage were expressing preference for a
Three-States based Nigeria, a position they elucidated at the All-Nigeria
Constitutional Conference in Ibadan in January 1950, preparatory to the
take-off of the MacPherson Constitution. Back in
Benin, the fear and resentment of the Ogboni was amplified the suspicion that
it was some sort of mechanism for the Yoruba infiltration and control of
Benin society [Abiodun Aloba: It is a
choice between Ogboni and Benin. Daily Times, October 1st, 1951,
p8]. This later became the template for a popular
uprising. Many who had tormented Oba Akenzua in the
difficult days of the 1930s and early forties became royalist. The
�Reformed Benin Community� noted above, later evolved, first to
�Otu-Adolo� and then to �Otu-Edo� on March 15th, 1950,
specifically, according to J. Osadolo Edomwonyi, to �counter the excesses of
the ill-motivated activities of the so-called Taxpayers Association cum
Ogboni.� [Edomwonyi, op. cit] After a
crack-down by Obaseki against local demonstrations, a delegation of leaders
led by E. O. Imafidon was sent to Lagos to invite Humphrey Omo-Osagie back to
Benin from a meeting in Lagos, to lead the Otu-Edo. The new party was dedicated to the �development
of Benin and the unification of all Edo-speaking peoples of Nigeria.� In its constitution it also said it would promote
�a sense of nationalism among the people of Benin� and combat threats to
�the structures of our laws and custom� and �national unity.� [Orobosa Oronsaye: Cultural Organisation and
Political Development � The case of the Otu-Edo. University of Ibadan, Department
of History, June 1977.] It was
in this context that the Otu-Edo party was formed in a crisis atmosphere, to
support the Oba in his fight against the taxpayers association under Iyase
Gaius Obaseki at the local level while mobilizing support for the Midwest
State Movement at the provincial level. [Otu-Edo Union, File No. 1170/1
National Archives, Ibadan] Although,
there were some initial problems with key NCNC leaders like Ernest Ikoli,
Mbonu Ojike and Nnamdi Azikiwe, some of whom were suspected of being members
of the ROF in Lagos, Otu-Edo later entered into an alliance with the NCNC at
the national level. Meanwhile, at the local level
in Benin, according to Professor Igbafe: ���..the
Ogboni allied with the Action Group founded by Chief Obafemi Awolowo out of
the Egbe Omo Oduduwa in Yorubaland�� How did
all this play out? After
Otu-Edo was created, another political party, called the Benin Action Group
was created in Benin in March 1951, in response to the activities of Bode Thomas
mentioned earlier. They were both opposed to
Ogbonism in Benin politics, as crystallized, in their opinion, by the Benin
Community Taxpayers Association. Indeed both parties overlapped and shared
membership. In the
weeks preceding the formal launching of the united �Action Group� at Owo
from April 28 � 30, 1951, Anthony Enahoro had organized a meeting of Benin
and Warri leaders of thought in Sapele, ostensibly to discuss Midwestern
solidarity. People like Gaius Obaseki,
Arthur Prest, Festus Edah (Okotie-Eboh), Okorodudu, S. O. Ighodaro etc. were
present. At the meeting, most participants expressed
sentiments against the creation of a separate midwestern region. However, two dissenters, Chike Ekwuyasi and E. O.
Imafidon who were present, rushed back to Benin to alert Omo-Osagie who then
called a rally of his own and initiated counter-measures [Oronsaye, op.
cit.; Uwaifo, op. cit]. On
April 28, delegates from Benin and Warri provinces attended the main Action
Group conference at Owo, at which merger of the Midwestern and Western
components was accomplished. Gauis
Obaseki emerged as the Vice President for Benin Province, S.O. Ighodaro, as
Treasurer, Anthony Enahoro as Assistant Secretary, while Arthur Prest and W.
E. Mowarin emerged as Vice Presidents from the Warri province. However, Benin Action Group delegates, like D.N.
Oronsaye, C. N. Ekwuyasi, S. O. Ighodaro, and others, who were not members of
the Reformed Ogboni Fraternity, opposed Gaius Obaseki�s election at
Owo. When they returned, the Benin Action Group
dissociated themselves from Chief Awolowo�s Action group and later allied
themselves with H Omo-Osagie�s Otu-Edo party in what was known as
Otu-Edo/Benin Action Group Grand Alliance. Iyase
Obaseki, now Vice President for the Awolowo Action group, moved immediately,
some say ruthlessly, to consolidate his hold on Benin division [Oronsaye.
Op. cit.]. The
stage was set, therefore, for a bitterly fought council election, which took
place in December 1951. The period preceding it was
associated with waves of violence, including arson and murder, in an uprising
against the Awolowo Action Group/Benin Taxpayers Association/Ogboni known
locally as �Airen Egbe Ason�, meaning �people do not recognize each other
at night�. Beginning in July, but with its
high point on September 6th, it was allegedly triggered by actions
of two members of the �Ogboni Action group�, namely Iyare and Obazee, at
Evbowe in Isi district. [File 1818/6/B National Archives, Ibadan] Farmers who opposed the Ogboni were allegedly
mobilized and concentrated at Eguaholor from where they proceeded to burn
down the houses of leaders of the Ogboni in villages all over Isi
district. The epidemic breakdown of law
and order necessitated massive mobilization of Policemen to many parts of
rural Benin province [File B.D. 1818/7. Benin Situation Report. National
Archives, Ibadan]. Many were detained,
subsequently charged to court, fined and even jailed. GCM Onyiuke, Charles Idigbe, and Mr. S. O.
Ighodaro, then the Secretary of the Benin Action group, comprised the legal
team hired by Otu-Edo to defend its members. Nevertheless,
after the mayhem, with the Ogboni infrastructure broken in the rural areas,
Otu-Edo, under Humphrey Omo-Osagie, with the Oba as its patron, came to power
in Benin in 1952 - while at the regional level, the Awolowo Action Group
dominated the legislature in Ibadan. The
Macpherson Constitution replaced the Richards Constitution in 1952. It
created a central legislature that was called the House of Representatives
and initially led to false hopes that a quick mechanism for States Creation
would be established. Meanwhile, Oba Akenzua had to
preside over the residual bitterness that accompanied the recruitment drive
for ROF, followed by the uprising of 1951 in Benin division. It tore
families and communities apart. However,
with no justification intended for the violence, had Chief Humphrey
Omo-Osagie not come to power that year to align the �new elite� with the
�traditional leadership�, the subsequent unified role of Benin as the
heartland of the agitation for the creation of the Midwest may never have
seen the light. When
the Western House of Assembly opened in January 1952, 21 out of 24
Midwesterners were allied with the NCNC while three � S.O. Ighodaro, Arthur
Prest, and Anthony Enahoro - were allied with the Action Group. One immediate source of irritation was the
government�s official pamphlet, which insensitively described the
Parliamentary Mace with four ceremonial swords as representing the authority
of Yoruba Chiefs. To aggravate matters, when the
unicameral Western House of Assembly was formally declared open by then Lt.
Governor Sir Hugo Marshall, the Alake of Abeokuta, rose to speak immediately
after Sir Marshall and said: �On
my right sits the Oni of Ife; On my left, the Leader of our Government,
Obafemi Awolowo. The Voice of the West is complete.� [Hansard of Western
House of Assembly: January 7, 1952] In
other words, as the delegates from Benin and Delta saw it, the �voice of
the West� did not include those of the people of Benin and Delta
provinces. To compound matters, Benin and Delta delegates
later complained too about derogatory epithets that had allegedly been hurled
at them, such as �KoboKobo�, used to refer to persons (or barbarians)
whose diction cannot be understood. [File
BP/2328/1 National Archives, Ibadan] From
this point on, the Oba of Benin, Akenzua II, supported by the Benin and Warri
(Delta) legislative delegation, began openly touring Benin and other
Divisions of Benin province as well as the Delta province to campaign for the
Midwest (Central) region. According to Professor Michael
Crowder: �In
the Western region, as a reaction against the allegedly Yoruba-dominated
Action group, the Mid-West State movement was started, supported largely by
non-Yoruba-speaking peoples and in particular the people of the old Benin
Empire.� [M Crowder: The Story of Nigeria. 3rd Edition, 1972. Faber] Indeed,
at the very next Benin Provincial Conference at Ogwashi-Uku in June 1952,
attended by pro-Midwesterners like JO Odigie of Ishan, Chike Ekwuyasi of
Benin and Dennis Osadebay of Asaba, separatist sentiments were strongly
expressed, resulting in the creation of the �Central State
Congress�. [File BP/2328/1 National
Archives, Ibadan] One of the criticisms of the Western region government
was the alleged decision to spend 225,000 pounds in Awolowo�s home province
of Ijebu with a population of 383,000, as compared with 169,000 pounds in the
Benin province with a population of 624,000. Subsequently,
a subgroup known as the Committee of the Midwest Organization emerged under
R.O. Odita. Before
the end of 1952 another significant event occurred. It was the decision of the Action Group
government based in Ibadan to restore the title of the �Olu of Itsekiri�
to �Olu of Warri� as it had been known in previous centuries. Non-Itsekiris in Warri Province reacted
violently, concerned that there was an implication of suzerainty over the
whole province. Thus a compromise was
reached. In exchange for acceptance of the designation of
the Olu as �Olu of Warri�, the province was renamed �Delta province�.
[personal papers, Alfred O. Rewane] In spite of this compromise, the experience
soured the relationship between many Urhobo leaders of thought and the Action
group leadership, which they felt, had been beholden to a powerful Itsekiri
lobby. It served to drive Urhobos, already so inclined,
further into the warm embrace of the Midwest Separatist Movement. Back in
Benin, another one of the many clashes between H. Omo-Osagie and Gaius
Obaseki was playing out. In 1953, Otu-Edo got Iyase
Obaseki deposed as Chairman of the Executive Committee of the Benin
Divisional Council allegedly for not attending meetings. His Orderly and
Police escorts were withdrawn and monthly salaries stopped [Oronsaye, Op.
Cit.]. However, the Oba did not cooperate in the attempt
to strip him of his title as Iyase, allegedly for not performing the rites of
the office. Thus Obaseki retained his title as Iyase �
although he never really performed the formal traditional ceremonies of
acceptance of the title in the first place. Nevertheless,
colonial authorities removed the Resident in Benin province, Mr. H. Butcher
for his role in during and after the controversial Iyase affair of 1948. In
July/August 1953, Councilor J. Osadolo Edomwonyi moved a motion in the Benin
Divisional Council praying the Constitutional Conference in London to include
on its agenda, the creation of a separate region for the Benin and Delta
provinces [Edomwonyi, Op. Cit.]. However,
overshadowed by a bitter fight between Obafemi Awolowo of the Western region
and Nnamdi Azikiwe of the Eastern region over excision of Lagos on one hand
and Southern Cameroons on the other, creation of new States was overruled at
the London Constitutional conference [Report of the Conference on the
Nigerian Constitution, held in London, July-August, 1953 Cmnd. 8934, (London:
H.M.S.O., 1953, p4)]. When he returned from London, Chief Omo-Osagie
briefed Oba Akenzua II, who then made arrangements to host a conference of
traditional and political leaders of the Benin and Delta provinces on
September 18, 1953 in Benin City. Anthony Enahoro, S. O. Ighodaro,
Arthur Prest and the Olu of Warri boycotted this well attended meeting. In his address, Oba Akenzua II said, among other
things that Midwesterners were seeking freedom, �not only from the white man,
but also from foreign african nations�� He went
on to state that, �Benin-Delta
was a sovereign nation before the occupation of the country by the
British.� Akenzua also said, �The divide and rule policy
of the British Government had done much harm to the national solidarity of
Benin-Delta Province in the past but as God now wants things to be what they
were before the advent of the British Government, that is, the Yoruba State
for the Yorubas and Benin-Delta State for the �BENDELITES�, that is, the
inhabitants of the Benin-Delta Province, steps should now be taken without
further delay or fear to move the British Government to repair the damage
they have done by restoring the national status of Benin-Delta Province
before they transfer power back to the Nigerians from whom they have taken
it.� Mr. JIG
Onyia of Asaba then moved a motion, which said inter-alia: �Be
it resolved, and it is hereby resolved that: 1. We (the peoples of Benin-Delta Province) in a
conference holding at Benin City this 18th day of
September, in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and fifty three,
demand as of right an immediate creation of a separate State for the peoples
of Benin-Delta Province��.� [Edomwonyi,
Op. Cit.] Spurred
on by stronger and stronger perceptions of discrimination in the West,
exemplified by matters such as the state ment of Alake of Egbaland in 1952,
Adegoke Adelabu�s emergence over Osadebay as NCNC leader of Opposition in
the West, threats of Western regional control of Midwestern forests, etc. H
Omo-Osagie urged the assembly to create a �party which will serve as the
Vanguard in the battle for the Midwest.� The
envisioned party was to be independent
of parties based in other regions. After
overruling an alternative concept put forward by JIG Onyia of Asaba, that the
organization so created should be a �movement� rather than a �political
party�, the Benin Delta Political Party (BDPP) was created. It was to
function under the patronage of a President General (Oba Akenzua II) and six
Vice Presidents (Ogirrua of Irrua, Emeni of Obiaruku, Ovie of Ughelli, Momodu
of Agbede, Ovie of Effurun and Ogenieni of Uzairue). Members of the Executive Committee were D.E.
Odiase, T.O. Elaiho, G. Brass Ometan, J. W. Amu, J. D. Ifode, J. Igben,
Martins Adebayo, John Uzo, H. O. Uwaifo and Barrister Gabriel Edward Longe.
Chief Oweh later replaced JD Ifode. Other
BDPP stalwarts included Onogie Enosegbe II of Ewohimi, E. A. Lamai of Fugar
and Martins Adebayo of Akoko-Edo. [File Ben Prof 2/BP/3022, National
Archives, Ibadan] Oba
Akenzua II subsequently notified the Western House of Chiefs of this
development, quipping, �I think that the Benin Delta State can succeed very
well without being tied to the apron strings of the Yoruba State.� He also said �The fact is the Benin/Delta
People�s Party will not allow the Benin/Delta State to be annexed to the
Yoruba State whether the North and the East are broken into small States or
not.� [Western House of Chiefs Debates, Oct. 20, 1953] Then he proceeded to lead a series of tours all
over the Midwest to campaign for the Midwestern region. Such tours were undertaken in December 1953,
February and May 1954. The BDPP hinged its success on
the prestige of various traditional rulers, inspite of undercurrents of
tension with some western Ibo, specifically Asaba leaders like F. Utomi and G
Onyia, who issued public statements after the Western Igboid Conference of
December 1953, that Asaba people should not attend BDPP meetings. In his memoirs, Dennis Osadebay says �they
feared that the creation of the region would mean the resuscitation of the
old Benin Kingdom and it�s alleged oppressive rule and domination of
minorities.� [DC Osadebay: Building
a Nation: An Autobiography. MacMillan, 1978.] In
1954, Obafemi Awolowo became Premier of the Western region under the 1954
Constitution that created the Federation of Nigeria. At the same time Chief
Festus Okotie-Eboh of Warri, representing the NCNC, became the Regional Minister
of Labour and Welfare. Dennis Osadebay emerged as NCNC
Opposition leader in the West, while V.I. Amadasun became NCNC Chief
Whip. Meanwhile the BDPP relied increasingly on the
local NCNC operational infrastructure, even while foreswearing any party
links in public. As time went on, therefore, pressure grew from within the
BDPP to formally ally the party with the NCNC � which the Oba was opposed
to. Meanwhile there were unconfirmed rumors at the
end of 1954 that the Oba had reached a secret deal with Chief Awolowo. [Michael
Vickers, Ethnicity and Sub-Nationalism in Nigeria, p93] Concerned about these rumours, Chief Omo-Osagie
decided to ignore the General Secretary of Otu-Edo, Mr. J. Osadolo Edomwonyi,
who had close links to the Palace, and unilaterally nominate Mr. Eric
Imafidon to contest the All-Nigerian Parliamentary elections. Both Omo-Osagie and Imafidon defeated
Edomwonyi�s �Oba of Benin BDPP faction� candidates. [Uwaifo, Op.
Cit.; Oronsaye, Op. Cit.] The
Action Group had in the meantime conceptualized a plan to seize political
control of Benin by co-opting the Oba and destroying Chief H
Omo-Osagie. According to testimony from Dr. Obas. J. Ebohon, �My
father was the personal driver of Chief Omo-Osagie through out his political
career and what both himself and B2 went through before, during, and after
the creation of Mid-West is unimaginable and sometimes better than some of
007 epic films. My father once told me that the
journeys to and from the Western House of Assembly in Ibadan was the type of
journeys one makes to and from the battle field. Firstly, they never exceeded
four people and they travelled by Bedford Lorry instead of a car to which his
status demanded. The reason for this was security as his life was threatened openly
by those enraged by his demands for Mid-West State. He said on approaching
Ore, they would disembark and B2 would come out of the comfortable second row
and climb into the back of the Bedford lorry and be covered with trampoline
and that is where he would remain through the numerous roadblocks put out to
hunt him down and, that is how he would remain until they arrive Ibadan.
Sometimes, for the need to confuse his detractors, he would be hidden in
lorries carrying plantain to Ibadan and guess where he would be sitting -
buried among the plantain and that is how he remains until the outskirts of
Ibadan and be transferred into the Bedford lorry again. On numerous occasions
they escaped death with the skin of his teeth. My father indicated that when
they are travelling, it usually was like preparing for a funeral at B2's
house and those of his entourage and the worst is expected and, when they
return unharmed, it was jubilation.� (Source: OJ
Ebohon. Edo-Nation Egroup, July 5, 2002. RE: [Edo-Nation] The Last Edo
Political Titan: Chief Humphrey Omo-Osagie) Under these circumstances, on March 8th,
1955, Obafemi Awolowo invited Oba Akenzua II for a meeting in Ibadan. According to the minutes of the meeting, Chief Awolowo
told Oba Akenzua II to disengage himself from politics before it becomes a
disadvantage. Awolowo told him that he had
planned to preserve the position of traditional rulers as an "important
part of the social and spiritual life of the people" outside the
political arena. In response, Oba Akenzua II
politely but firmly drew a distinction between politics and his activities
with the Midwest State movement. He went further to query why the Ooni of Ife and the Alake
of Abeokuta were open supporters and contributors to the
Action Group but were not being similarly advised. Awolowo reacted by promising to give other Obas
similar advice, but also told Oba Akenzua II to go back to Benin and
seriously reflect over his comments. [National
Archives, Ibadan; File B.P.215 Correspondence with the Oba of Benin.] This meeting between Oba Akenzua and Chief
Awolowo was to presage a complex series of intrigues that would unfold in the
next few months. Just as Chief H Omo-Osagie was
to leave for Lagos in March 1955 to take up a new position as Parliamentary
Secretary to the Ministry of Finance, he was involved in a factional split
with a sub-faction of the Edomwonyi group led by A.G. Bazuaye within the
Otu-Edo [Otu-Edo Secretariat: Confusion in the Otu Edo. March 4, 1955].
This was coming to a head just as the mandate of the Benin Native Authority
Council was expiring. The
Action Group Government in Ibadan refused to renew the mandate of the
council, preferring instead to appoint a provisional caretaker council. This caretaker committee was under the
chairmanship of the Oba, but consisted of a mixture of the pro-Action Group
Bazuaye faction of Otu-Edo and elements of Iyase Gaius Obaseki�s pro-Action
Group Benin Tax Payers Association, pending new elections. The new provisional council included well-known
Action Groupers like S.Y. Eke and V.O.E. Osula [Benin Native Authority
Files 730/4 (April 2, 1955) and 730/5 (May5, 1955)]. It increased the salary of the Oba in a move that
appeared to signal a rapprochement between Oba Akenzua and Iyase Gauis
Obaseki. It was hoped that the Oba would cooperate with an
alliance of the Bazuaye and Obaseki groups to oust Omo-Osagie from
power. But the Oba wanted some kind of public indication
that the Action Group would stop being ambivalent or even hostile toward the
creation of the Midwest. Therefore, on June 14th, 1955, a
legislator, MS Sowole, moved a motion, seconded by JG Ako, a minister of
state, which was carried in the Western House of Assembly titled �Creation
of a Separate State for Benin and Delta Provinces.� Chief Awolowo�s curious reaction to this
development on the floor of the House was to announce that �the Government
adopts no official attitude whatsoever� towards the Sowole motion [Western
House of Assembly Debates, 14 June, 1955]. According to Professor Michael Crowder, at this
stage, the Action Group: ��..gave
its blessing to this movement, partly because it was beginning to find the
Mid-West an electoral and economic
liability and partly because it realized that if it were to
champion the creation of new states in the Eastern and Northern Regions it
could hardly object to the creation of one in the Western region
itself.� The problem, though, was that the Action group
was never trusted by core Midwest Protagonists, who saw opportunism and
duplicity in its behavior. Dennis Osadebay, for example, was of the opinion
that the Sowole motion was little more than a vote catching gimmick to secure
victory at the 1955 and 1956 general elections [Osadebay, Op. Cit.]. In time to come his suspicions would be confirmed
when, after independence, Chief Awolowo openly said that the Sowole motion
was not binding on the Western region. It was in this situation that local government
elections took place in Benin in September 1955. Once again, Chief Omo-Osagie and the Otu-Edo were
victorious [Oronsaye, Op. Cit.]. A few
weeks later, on October 25th, 1955 Oba Akenzua was appointed
Minister without portfolio in Awolowo�s government at Ibadan � an
announcement that practically destroyed the BDPP. The Oba explained that henceforth he would use
his membership of the Action group Government of the Western region to push
for the creation of the Midwest. In
response, members of Otu-Edo in Benin staged a mock funeral of the Oba right
in front of his Palace. Meanwhile, according to Michael Vickers, in
December 1955, western Ibo leaders, not unmindful of developments in Benin,
but also confident in their trained manpower advantage over others, decided
that a future Midwest would best serve their interests, rather than either
the West or East. Thus they began renegotiating
the terms of renewed cooperation with the now moribund BDPP. [Vickers: Ethnicity
and Sub-Nationalism in Nigeria. Worldview Publishing, 2000. p121] Thus, inspite of his stature as the earliest and
most consistently committed advocate of the Midwest cause, H. Omo-Osagie
would later concede the leadership of the Midwest State Movement to Dennis Osadebay,
also known as the �Gentleman Leader of the Opposition� in exchange for
support. In January 1956, the Oba removed himself as
a Patron of Otu-Edo, and stopped making public demands for the creation of
the Midwest, hoping to achieve it, nonetheless, by some kind of internal
understanding with Chief Awolowo�s government. The Oba�s high stakes moves throughout 1955
caused a lot of mistrust within Otu-Edo as well as pro-Midwest sympathizers
in other parties. But Oba Akenzua remained
convinced that his presence in the government was the tactical thing to do in
the circumstances. He would give Chief Awolowo
time to fulfill his promise. In
February, he hosted the Queen at the Benin Airport and made a point of
emphasizing the uniqueness of the grand Benin-Delta reception. Tragically, Iyase Gaius Obaseki died in April and
was mourned throughout the region as a man of great stature. [Egharevba, Op. Cit.] Another development in the Western Regional
Assembly that created consternation in the Benin and Delta provinces was the
attempt in 1956 to enforce Yoruba as a language medium in all schools
throughout ALL the provinces. The
British Lt. Governor, Sir John Rankine, vetoed compulsory implementation in
the Benin and Delta provinces, explaining that it was a time�bomb. It is not clear what role Oba Akenzua II played in securing this veto. [personal
communication, D. A. Omoigui] On May 5, 1956, the Midwest State Movement (MSM)
was inaugurated from the ashes of the BDPP. Its
patron was the Obi of Agbor. Members of the Executive Committee were Dennis
Osadebay (Leader), Chief H. Omo-Osagie (Deputy Leader), J. E. Otobo
(Secretary), G.E. Odiase, O. Oweh, F. Oputa-Otutu and M.A. Kubeinje. Its legal advisers were A. Atake, M. Edewor, W.
Egbe, GE Longe, and JM Udochi. [JA
Brand. The Midwest State Movement in Nigerian Politics. Political Studies,
Vol. XIII, 3 (1965), p351] In preparation for the September 1956 London
Constitutional Conference, the MSM embarked on fund raising drives and
political tours through the Delta and Benin provinces [Vickers, Op. Cit.]. It also began developing detailed arguments to
justify the creation of a new region. Such
arguments included the proposed region�s distinct way of life, various
examples of discrimination including allocation of funds to various line
items in the budget. The proposed region�s
economic viability was also studied, taking note of its agricultural base,
Rubber, Timber, Palm oil, brown coal, water resources, ports and its capacity
to create secondary industries from the African Timber and Plywood Factory in
Sapele. The conference was, however, later deferred until
1957. Meanwhile on May 26, during Western parliamentary
regional elections in Benin, Otu-Edo secured victory once again. Notably, G.I. Oviasu of Otu-Edo/NCNC defeated
S.O. Ighodaro of the Action Group and the Oba�s second son, Felix Akenzua,
lost to VI Amadasun. One irritant during this
election was the complaint that many students from the Benin and Delta
provinces at the University College Ibadan were so mistrusted by Action group
operatives on campus that their names were surreptitiously removed from
voters� registration lists in Ibadan. LONDON
CONSTITUTIONAL CONFERENCE OF 1957 During the 1957 London Constitutional Conference,
the MSM declared that it would be willing to accept a plebiscite in the
Benin-Delta area. However, efforts by the MSM to
insist that the creation of states be discussed before self-government were
outflanked as the NCNC and AG resisted any effort to create new states in
their own regions [Report by the Nigeria Constitutional Conference held in
London, May and June 1957. Cmnd. 207. London: HMSO, 1957]. The AG, for example, accused the NCNC of stalling
about the proposed COR State because of the possibility of discovery of Oil,
even as it was busy proposing regions elsewhere. The NPC was also uninterested in the creation of
new regions in the North. All three parties did not want
any delays in independence merely on account of creation of new states for
minorities. Eventually, Chief Awolowo, while opposing all
State requests except those of the Midwest, COR and Middle Belt, which he
said should be created simultaneously, got
his rivals in the NCNC and Northern Peoples Congress (NPC) to accept certain
fundamental principles which would guide creation of new regions and which
would be enshrined in the proposed new constitution. These requirements included a two-thirds majority
consent of the legislature of the concerned state from which the new state
was to be created, as well as the federal parliament; that ethnic groups
should not be split; that ethnic groups that chose not to separate could stay
with the original state; and that both the proposed new state and the
residual state from which it was created should meet tests of
viability. For the Midwest in particular, Anthony Enahoro
proposed an idea patterned after the Ministry of Welsh Affairs that had been
created in 1951 in the United Kingdom by the Conservative government. This concept meant that rather than a new Midwest
region, the Midwest would be managed under a �Ministry of Midwest
Affairs� concurrently under his supervision as the Western region Minister
for Home Affairs. Chief Awolowo accepted this concept. By the time the conference came to an end,
delegates from the three major ethnic groups had agreed that in addition to
tough legislative requirements at federal and regional levels, a plebiscite
should be conducted in the area of any proposed new state to determine if 60%
of registered voters in the area wanted a new state [Joint Proposals by
the NPC, NCNC and Action Group Delegations: The creation of New States.
Statement submitted to the Nigerian Constitutional Conference, London, June
1957.]. As a consolation prize, a Commission of Inquiry
was recommended to ascertain the facts about the fears of minorities and
consider what safeguards should be included in the new constitution, with the
proviso that creation of states only be considered as a last resort. The Rt.
Hon. Alan Lennox-Boyd, Secretary of State for the Colonies, appointed this
commission in September 1957. It later came to be known as the Willink
Commission. Its members were Henry Willink, Gordon Hadow,
Phillip Mason and J.B. Shearer. It
arrived in Nigeria on November 23rd, 1957 and held public sittings
and private meetings from December 8th to 23rd at Benin and Warri. Following
an extensive schedule of visits all over the country, it left for the UK on
April 12th, 1958 and eventually submitted its report on July 30th,
1958. [Cmnd. 505. London: HMSO, 1958] Before settling down to prepare for the Willink
Commission visit, reaction to the outcome of the London Conference among
members of the MSM was extremely negative. Chief
Omo-Osagie, for example, said, �The people of the Midwest
would willingly submit to the use of nuclear weapons, devastating bombs or
machine guns to annihilate them, rather than remain in a self governing
West.� [West African Pilot. July 14, 1957] TESTIMONY AT THE WILLINK
COMMISSION It has been said that the Midwest State Movement
flew the two expatriate counsels that led the testimony of the pro-Midwest
witnesses at the Willink Commission, into the country. In point of fact Chief Omo-Osagie paid for their
round trip fares and expenses out of his own pocket. Money was not forthcoming from the NCNC. The more
senior of the pair was George G. Baker. Three major sets of opinion were canvassed. The Midwest State movement was only interested in
the creation of the Midwest (meaning Benin and Warri provinces en bloc) �
to which it wanted the Edo-speaking Sobe and Ijagba areas of Ondo province
appended. The Action Group, represented
by its lawyer, Fani Kayode, conceded that the Midwest might, as a last
resort, be allowed to go (after all the legislative hurdles) but that Warri
division and Akoko-Edo should join Ondo province, while the western Ibo
should join the Eastern region and the western Ijaw should join eastern
Ijaw. He even went further to suggest that Ishan
division should be excluded from the �residual Midwest� for no other
reason than because Ishan had a significant number of Action Group
supporters. The government of the Western region, represented
by Rotimi Williams, differed slightly from Fani-Kayode, by accepting that Afemai
and Ishan divisions could join the proposed �residual Midwest�, implying
the Benin and Urhobo divisions, if they wished. [Willink
Commission report. Cmnd. 505. London: HMSO, 1958] The position of the MSM was based on fear of
colonization by the Yoruba. Detailed
testimony was heard from a broad range of witnesses, including Chiefs Ezomo,
Oliha, Ineh and Osula. Other witnesses included the
Chairmen of the Iyekovia, Uhunmwode and Benin City councils, namely Messrs
Adonrin, Atohengbe and Ogbebor. Edo
women made a submission through Madam Eweka. Complaints
included lack of rubber markets and processing facilities, excessive local
taxation, including �head taxes� which would then be remitted to Ibadan,
poor infrastructure, and discrimination in the award of scholarships and
opportunities for Edo women traders at Ibadan. More
recently, Mr. Isaac Asemota recalled that, �While Benin- City stayed in the
dark with no electricity, running water, good roads, separate and unequal
schools and grossly inadequate health clinics, there in Ibadan, Edo tax
monies were being squandered in the construction of Cocoa House, Mapo Hall
and Commercial Broadcasting Service Radio Station whose frequency we
couldn�t even pick up in Benin-City. The best we could hope for was
Redifussion radio which had a very low frequency and could not be heard more
than two miles away from the broadcasting booth. � (Isaac Asemota: �The
last Edo Political Titan: Chief Humphrey Omo-Osagie�
unpublished manuscript, Edo-Nation Egroup, July 2, 2002.) The most powerful and emotional testimony from
Benin came from Chief H Omo-Osagie. He
lamented the insidious cultural role of Ifa divination and Ogboni activities in inserting
Yoruba values and ways into Benin society. He
explained that Ifa divination
required knowledge of Yoruba, while the Yoruba derived Ogboni society, was,
according to him, �more dangerous than freemasonry.� In fact he openly stated that after independence,
laws would likely be passed, making membership of the ROF compulsory. He went on to criticize the Western region Chiefs
Law No. 20 of 1957 which was being used with effect to intimidate traditional
rulers and influence the selection of chiefs and Dukes inside the
Midwest. The Chief also went into additional detail about
perceptions of Yoruba domination of the Police, government boards, the public
service, and the use of scholarships as a tool for punishing separatist
divisions. The Benin division, for example, had not, under
the period of review, received any scholarships, while the Ijebu province
(home to Chief Awolowo) had secured 17 such awards. Another complaint was that Rubber was being
developed in the Ijebu province when investment in the promised Ikpoba Rubber
processing factory for already established rubber plantations of the Midwest
was being help up. A similar shenanigan affected
the Koko port. He went on to use examples of
the decision by the Action Group government to dissolve the Benin Divisional
Council in 1955 as an example of arbitrary misuse of power. In conclusion, Chief Omo-Osagie opposed the new
�Welsh-type� arrangement implemented by the Action Group through the
establishment of the �Ministry of Midwest Affairs� and the Midwest
Advisory Council, and demanded either the creation of a Midwest region or a
return to a unitary government at the center with provinces at the
periphery. Supporting testimony from the Ishan division,
where the Action Group had deposed the Onogies of Idoa and Ubiaja was also
heard from G. Ebea, A. Ibhazo, Prince Shaka Momodu, and His Royal Highness,
Enosegbe II, Enogie of Ewohimi. Similarly,
the Commission heard from the Oba of Agbede who bluntly stated that the Oba
of Benin, and not any of the Yoruba Obas, was his Oba. On their part, Messrs Utomi, Onyia and Odiakosa
provided the views of the Asaba division. Interestingly,
while scholarship complaints were commonplace in the Benin division, the
Asaba division was doing very well with scholarships under the guidance of
its representative, Dennis Osadebay, who was then the Chairman of the
Regional Scholarships Board. In
Warri, there was a split among the Itsekiri. While
Chiefs Arthur Prest and Festus Okotie-Eboh were in support, at this stage, of
creation of a Midwest region, O.N. Rewane and the Olu of Warri were against
it. In response to testimony of pro-Midwest
witnesses, a shadowy organization called the �Anti-Midwest State
Movement� was put forward by the Action Group. It asserted that Edos had more to fear from Igbo
than Yoruba domination, and that creation of a Midwest region would expose
Edos to Igbo domination. Among its observations, the commission noted that
actual expenditure on road development in the Midwest area up to March 31,
1957, was only 15% of the estimates, compared with 50% in the Yoruba
West. It also made the following observation: �What
is feared is a permanent Action Group majority in the Western House of
Assembly. The Action Group drawing its inspiration from a
Yoruba society, the Egbe Omo Oduduwa expressing itself�.through the Ogboni
Fraternity, controlling Boards, Corporations and Commissions, eventually even
the Magistracy and Judiciary, aiming at the obliteration of all that is not
Yoruba. That is what is meant by Yoruba domination.� But in its recommendations, the Willink
Commission advised that short of a new state, the �Midwest area� for
which the Ministry of Midwest Affairs of the Western region was being
established be reduced to a �Council for Edo Affairs� with responsibility
for development, welfare and culture preservation, covering the Edo-speaking
divisions of Benin, Urhobo, Afenmai and Ishan. In
addition to a similarly proposed �Calabar Council� in Eastern Nigeria,
the commission felt that �these two are the areas in which it seems to us,
there is the strongest and most united local sentiment and the most clearly
distinguishable culture.� (see Willink Report, Chapter 14, Section 4, Item
36, page 97.) In reaction, the MSM rejected the Willink report,
insisted on creation of the Midwest region, but left open the possibility of
a �Provincial Commissioner for Benin and Delta provinces� at the federal
level � an option the Action Group rejected outright. 1958 � 1960 While the Constitutional Conference and Willink
Commission were finalizing their activities, the Western region passed what
was known as �amendment No. 4� to the local government law of 1957, which
gave it new powers by which it could manipulate the control of local
councils. The combination of the local government and
chieftaincy laws, control of customary courts and heavy handed use of tax
assessments was then exploited in an aggressive drive by the Action Group to
take control of the Benin and Delta provinces [Sklar - Benin: A Study in
the Mechanics of Chieftaincy Control. P238-42, In: Sklar, Nigerian Political
Parties.]. During the Lancaster House conference in London
which took place in September and October 1958, the concept of a minority
area inclusive of Benin and Delta provinces, except Warri division and
Akoko-Edo district was discussed and vaguely agreed to, pending further
consultation, without plans for a Special Ijaw Area Board. [Report by the Resumed Nigeria Constitutional
Conference Held in London, September and October 1958, Cmnd. 569, London:
HMSO, 1958] In the meantime, the rising political profile of
key Midwesterners who would come to play critical roles in the creation of
the Midwest was unmistakable. A national government was
formed based on the 1957 constitution, in preparation for
independence. In this government Chief Festus Okotie-Eboh of Warri
emerged as the Minister for Labor and Welfare (NCNC), a position which gave
him direct access to northern leaders with whom he consolidated strong personal
relationships which would be used by the Midwest movement with devastating
effect after independence. The Action Group was represented by
Chief SL Akintola (Communications and Aviation) and Mr. Ayo Rosiji
(Health). Other Midwesterners like H. Omo-Osagie, James Otobo, V.
I. Amadasun, Oputa-Otutu, Shaka Momodu, FH Utomi and others also became more
prominent in party and legislative affairs at regional and national
levels. It was in May 1958 that initial talks to enter into
a post-independence government coalition were held between the NCNC and the
NPC [Enahoro, Fugitive Offender, Op. Cit.]. Back in Benin, the battle to undermine Chief
Omo-Osagie�s power base was continuing � on all fronts. Local government elections took place in Benin on
May 17th, 1958 [Oronsaye, Op. Cit.]. The manipulation of post-election council
nominations made it possible for the Action group to dominate the council
although the party did not win the elections. On
November 25th, Action group stalwart S. Y. Eke, moved a motion to
ban Owegbe �juju� (also known as Isigidi, Aimuekpensulele or Iselogha)
from the Benin division. The motion was carried and
confirmed on March 19th, 1959 by an order of the Western region
Governor-in-Council � with the support of Oba Akenzua II [West Regional
Gazette, No. 14 of 19 March, 1959]. The
Oba, who was then a Minister in the government, had commented in a letter on
January 23rd, 1959, that Owegbe was an imported juju and that its
existence in Benin was a threat to peace. Chief Omo-Osagie demanded a formal judicial
inquiry, saying the ban was politically motivated, and explained that that
there was no �juju� or �cult� as such, but that there was indeed an
�Owegbe society� which was the �youth wing� of the Otu-Edo party. The existence of youth wings was by no means a
new phenomenon in Nigeria. The
Zikist National Vanguard and Awo National Brigade were examples, according to
the Chief, who also directed attention to the violations of fundamental human
rights and freedom of association which the ban implied [Debates of the
Western House of Assembly, May 27, 1959; col. 863]. When however, Chief Omo-Osagie asserted that the
Oba would testify that there was no such thing as �Owegbe juju� known in
the Benin division, the Oba, in a letter dated July 22nd, 1959
stated that there was such a �juju� which, in his opinion at that time,
as a Minister in the Action group government, was dangerous. In what seemed
to reflect the underlying political fear, the Oba said the danger was not
with claims of powers to kill or save but in the ability of intelligent
citizens based in Benin, having convinced less sophisticated rural based folk
to take oaths, could then by order, cause disturbances anytime they wished
� a veiled reference to the disturbances of 1951. Using this cover, the western region government
moved to emasculate the Owegbe society, which was actually originally created
to provide sanctuary for those who wanted a way to fortify themselves from
Ogboni recruitment drives. To
illustrate the political nature of this development, the Oba reversed himself
when he wrote a letter in 1962 (having since left the Action group) to the
government saying he no longer had any concerns about Owegbe (see below). At the same time, the national wing of the NCNC
was seeking to wean itself from its dependence on the Otu-Edo. It accused Otu-Edo of restricting choices for
candidates in elections to Benin indigenes, to the detriment of resident
Igbos who wanted to contest in Benin and represent the party at the
center. This complaint was curious, considering that
Chike Ekwuyasi, an Ibo speaking Midwesterner from Ogwashi-Uku was actually
elected on Otu-Edo platform to represent Benin back in 1951 � and no Benin
indigene had ever been elected from any Igbo district. Nevertheless, the party established the Orizu and
Onyia Commissions of inquiry to probe Otu-Edo � resulting in a
recommendation by J.I.G. Onyia of Asaba to dissolve Otu-Edo and replace it
with straight party membership of the NCNC, also known as �NCNC
simplicita.� The report also pointed out
that Omo-Osagie had not held elections for the position of President-General of Otu-Edo since 1950. This aspect of the report was attractive to
Omo-Osagie�s critics within Otu-Edo � like GI Oviasu, DEY Aghahowa etc,
who then formed a faction called �NCNC pure.� Nevertheless,
Omo-Osagie, leery of non-Edo based political parties, insisted that Otu-Edo
would not be swallowed by any national party but would remain independent. [Oronsaye, Op. cit.] Other noteworthy developments in 1959 include the
decision of the NCNC to establish a Midwest secretariat in Benin and the
emergence of the States creation issue in the campaigns for federal elections
in December 1959. In that election, the Action
Group � which said it would also support the creation of the Midwest,
but only if it occurred simultaneously with states creation in other regions - won three out of fifteen seats in the Midwest,
two of which were in Ishan (A. Enahoro and P.D. Oboh) and one in Afenmai (M.
Obi). The other twelve federal legislators from the
Midwest were all members of the NCNC, including A. Opia, U.O. Ayeni, E. A.
Mordi, J.B. Eboigbodi, Jereton Mariere, J.K. Deomonadia, O. Oweh, Festus
Okotie-Eboh, and N. A. Ezenbodor. In the
Benin division, H.O. Osagie, D.N. Oronsaye and D.E.Y. Aghahowa secured the
federal seats. (Daily Times, December 14, 1959, pp5-6). These legislators would all play crucial roles in
the fight for the Midwest after independence. For example, Jereton Mariere, a distinguished
member of the Urhobo Progress Union, and businessman who had managed the late
Mukoro Mowoe�s business at Agbor, would later emerge the first Governor of
the Midwestern region. [personal communication, Professor PP Ekeh] 1960 As was the case in previous years, 1960 was full
of action, for and against the creation of the Midwest, including false and
real hopes and intrigue. [Isuman JU. Facts about the
Midwest State. Amalgamated Press, Lagos, 1960] On July 7th, the Oni of Ife, Oba
Adesoji Aderemi, became the Governor of the Western region while the Alake of
Abeokuta became the President of the House of Chiefs. Chief Omo-Osagie wasted no time in making a
public statement about the development. Oba
Akenzua II, who had been generally snubbed and cut off from many day to day
decisions in the Ministry of Midwest Affairs except his approval was
important to some Machiavellian scheme or the other, finally had
enough. Independence was approaching and the Midwest region
had still not been created. The
post-independence federal government was going to be formed by the NCNC and
the NPC. The vast majority of the federal legislators from
the Midwest belonged to the NCNC. Therefore,
the Oba decided to abandon the Action group, resigning his position as a
Minister without portfolio. By so
doing, he realigned the traditional establishment with the �new elite�
for the final push to secure the Midwest. But shortly after he did so, the Action Group won
15 out of 30 seats from the Midwest in the Western House elections of August
8, 1960, even barely beating an Otu-Edo candidate in Benin as well Prince
Shaka Momodu in Irrua, in what was regarded as an upset, perhaps influenced
by manipulation of the 1959 voter�s register. This
outcome emboldened Awolowo and Akintola to publicly declare that they would
not support the creation of the Midwest untilafter the 1964 federal elections when
they would be in power at the center � although they kept up pressure for
creation of the Calabar-Ogoja-Rivers and Middle Belt States in other
regions. Meanwhile, Barrister SO Ighodaro had taken over
the Ministry of Midwest Affairs from Anthony Enahoro, when the latter elected
to go federal, having lost out to SLA Akintola who returned to the West to
succeed Awolowo as the Premier. The 1960 constitution specified that for a
referendum to take place seeking to establish support for a new region,
two-thirds majority must approve it in the Federal House of Representatives
and Senate, followed by majority approval in two-thirds of regions. Recognizing the key role which the governing
party in the federal government in Lagos would have in initiating any
legislative move toward the creation of the Midwest, Festus Okotie-Eboh and
his mentor, Humphrey Omo-Osagie, were busy lobbying northern
leaders. Eventually Festus Okotie-Eboh
almost single handedly got Alhaji Muhammadu Ribadu and Alhaji Ahmadu Bello of
the NPC to agree in principle to make an exception for the Midwest based on
its unique history, knowing they were generally opposed to States
creation. Without this crucial
achievement on the part of Chief Okotie-Eboh, the creation of the Midwest
would have been dead in the water. It was
in recognition of this strategic feat that Festus Okotie-Eboh was given a
chieftaincy title in Benin, the
Elaba of Uselu. Chief
Humphrey Omo-Osagie, the indefatigable fighter with whom Oba Akenzua II had
had his ups and downs but whose firm resolve and loyalty to his people had
stood the test of time, was conferred with the title of Iyase of Benin. [Egharevba, Op. Cit.] Nevertheless, the Akintola government in Ibadan
moved quickly to consolidate its gains. It
appointed many Midwesterners to ministerial positions, created a Midwest
minority area and advisory council, and reorganized its administrative
structure to create six new regional conferences, as if in tacit recognition
of the six regions it was canvassing for the country. Chief Anthony Enahoro became the Chairman of the
Midwest regional executive � which did not include Akoko-Edo district and
Warri division. Dalton Ogieva Asemota, a well known independent,
distinguished retiree from the United African Company (UAC), personal friend
of Oba Akenzua II and first Chairman of the Midwest Advisory Council, became
appointed by the Western region as the first post-independence Senator from
Benin Province in Lagos, while Senator M.G. Ejaife, a household name in
Urhoboland, was appointed to represent the Delta. Dennis Osadebay, leader of the Midwest State
movement, left Ibadan for Lagos to take up his new position as Senate
President, to replace Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe who had become the
Governor-General. Chief Festus Okotie-Eboh became
the Federal Minister of Finance and leader of the parliamentary
party. The straight shooting Michael
Okpara replaced Nnamdi Azikiwe as Premier of the Eastern region and leader of
the NCNC. Alhaji Tafawa Balewa of the NPC became the Prime
Minister. Alhaji Ahmadu Bello held fort in the Northern
region. The ducks were lining up in a row. 1961-62 The years 1961 and 1962 moved with dizzying
speed. At the Midwest regional conference of the AG,
Chief Awolowo kept up his oft repeated statement that he would work for the simultaneous creation of the Midwest, COR
and Middle Belt States. In the
Midwest, however, his comments were regarded with skepticism, all the more so
considering what was regarded as his preference for a balkanized version of
the Midwest. In any case, in March 1961, the NCNC � urged by
Chief Okotie-Eboh - formally opposed the exclusion of Akoko-Edo and Warri
from the Midwest minority area. When
Chief Awolowo was confronted with the commitment the Western regional House
of Assembly had made to creation the entire
Midwest back in 1955 by approving the Sowole motion, he
replied that he was no longer bound by that motion because the country was
under colonial rule at the time [Federal Parliamentary debates, April 4,
1961]. The comment merely served to confirm
suspicions that he did not support the creation of the Midwest � under any
circumstances � even though he challenged Balewa to create the Midwest
before the end of May 1962. Meanwhile, back in the Midwest, the NCNC and
Action Group were locking horns in increasingly aggressive confrontation
between party thugs regarding the alleged misuse by the AG of customary
courts and tax assessments to harass political opponents, particularly in
Ishan division, where the pro-Midwestern Prince Shaka Momodu was active, but
just as much elsewhere [West African Pilot, August 30, 1961]. In the near crisis atmosphere that this created
in the Midwest, Michael Okpara and the NCNC wanted the Balewa government to
declare a state of emergency in the West, but Balewa resisted the temptation,
seeing as it had other problems on its hands such as the controversy over the
Anglo-Nigerian defence pact and the Congo controversy. Balewa also wanted to reach out to the Action
Group during this period. On April 4th, 1961, what is now known
in history as the first Midwest motion was moved and carried by voice acclamation in the
federal House of Representatives [Federal Parliamentary Debates, 4 April,
1961, col. 802]. It was
a private member�s motion, which would run into legal trouble later because
no formal count had been taken, as constitutionally required, of those in
favor or against, and many complained that they had left the council chamber
before the voice vote was taken. The
April 1961 Midwest motion in the federal legislature was followed by initial
approval in June 1961 in the Eastern region and in September 1961 in the
Northern region. During this period newspaper
articles written by AG loyalists appeared in which various ethnic groups of
the proposed Midwest were warned of �Benin domination.� In the smear campaign, designed to derail Midwest
unity, rumors were spread about how certain posts were going to be dominated
by �Benin.� In early 1962, Dr. Okpara�s plans for a
contrived state of emergency in the Midwest petered out, reportedly because
it had been leaked by a reporter. In
February, faced with what seemed to be a constitutional certainty, the AG met
with the NCNC in Lagos, in order to get an agreement on the proposed Midwest
Constitution Act which would respect its views on what should constitute the
Midwest. By this time it was obvious that the first
Midwest motion was inadequate because no vote count was taken. Therefore, on March 22nd, 1962, Alhaji
Tafawa Balewa introduced the second
Midwest motion. Late on March 23rd, 1962, Senator
Dalton Asemota of the Benin province received an important visitor in his
apartment at the federal legislator�s Legco Flats in Victoria Island,
Lagos. His visitor was none other than Chief Anthony
Enahoro, Vice President of the Action Group and leader of the Midwest
Regional Executive. Enahoro stayed on in Senator
Asemota�s flat until the early hours of the morning lobbying him to adopt
the party position of the AG to vote against the second Midwest motion. The Senator, who was not a party man, was
nonetheless reminded that he owed his position to the goodwill of the Action
Group government in Ibadan. Early
on the 24th, late Senator Asemota�s wife, late Mrs. Onaiwu
Asemota (nee Obinwa family of Onitsha) rushed to my parent�s house to
report the conversation Enahoro had with Senator Asemota. On this basis, the Senator�s brother in Benin,
late Pa Elekhuoba Asemota was contacted emergently by phone with a report of
what had transpired. My parents rushed to the
Senator�s flat to ask him whether he had decided to oppose the
motion. The late Senator, to his eternal credit, smiled
and told my parents, �Do not worry, my children, even if it costs me this position,
I shall not act against the interests of my people.� (personal communication, GO
Omoigui) After overcoming an attempt by Action group
legislators, therefore, to amend the motion by deleting Akoko-Edo, Warri and
western Ijaw from the definition of �Midwest� and then obfuscate issues
by adding the creation of 11 new states as a pre condition, the Federal House
of Representatives and Senate approved the second Midwest motion by 214-49 on
March 24, 1962. The final count-down had begun. Six days later on March 30th, 1962 the
Midwest referendum Bill was passed. It was
followed on April 17th and 18th by the Midwest Parliamentary Bill which specified
the addition of Akoko-Edo, Warri and Western Ijaw areas to the proposed
Midwest. No sooner did this vote take place than Barrister
S. O. Ighodaro, Attorney General of the Western region, went to court to
challenge the validity of the Midwest Parliamentary Bill and the Eastern
region�s approval of the federal Midwest Bill. Separately, the Olu of Warri and Chief Reece
Edukugho filed court proceedings to contest the inclusion of Warri in the
Midwest. Meanwhile, on April 4th the Eastern region passed the second Midwest
motion, followed on April 5th, by the Northern region. On April 13th, a counter-motion was
passed by the Western House of Assembly, opposing the federal Midwest motion [Daily Times, April
14, 1962]. In May 1962, an important development occurred
within the Western region and Action Group which would open the way for the
Midwest to bolt out of the West. A
crisis erupted between Chiefs Obafemi Awolowo (Party Leader and Leader of the
Federal Opposition in Lagos) and Samuel Akintola (Premier of the West). This crisis had many causes [Sanya Onabamiro,
Glimpses into Nigerian History. MacMillan Nigeria, 1983. p149]. For one, the positions of party leader (Awolowo)
and head of government in the western region (Akintola) were held by two
different persons, one from the non-Oyo group of rain forest Yorubas (Awolowo
from Ijebu) and the other from the Oyo group of savannah Yorubas (Akintola
from Ogbomosho). Secondly, Akintola felt that
Awolowo ought not to have allowed any competition with him as �deputy
leader� for the position of Premier when Awolowo left Ibadan to go to Lagos
as Federal Leader of Opposition at the end of 1959. Thirdly, control over spending of the Cocoa
Marketing Board investment funds built up during the Second World War from
caused friction between them. Fourthly,
they disagreed over whether to accept an invitation by Prime Minister Balewa
for the Action Group to join the federal government. In this proposal, Balewa intended for Awolowo to
be deputy-Prime Minister and Minister for Finance � which would have
displaced Okotie-Eboh from that position. To all
of this was added the undercurrent of a serious conflict between their wives. On April 19, 1962, one day after S. O. Ighodaro
went to court on behalf of the Akintola government to challenge the Midwest
motion, Chief SL Akintola was expelled from the Action Group by Chief Obafemi
Awolowo after an unsuccessful attempt at reconciliation. The Governor of the West, Sir Adesoji Aderemi was
advised by a majority of Action Group legislators at Ibadan to dismiss
Akintola as Premier and replace him with Alhaji D. S. Adegbenro � an act
that was challenged all the way up to the Privy Council in London. On May 26, 1962 an attempt by the Western House
to meet and ratify Akintola�s dismissal ended in confusion, leading to
Police intervention. Armed with
his wet handkerchief as an antidote to teargas, V.E. Amadasun was one of the
first to rush to Lagos from Ibadan to inform the Midwest community in the
federal government of the development, which led to the eventual declaration
of a State of Emergency in the West on May 29 [Federation of Nigeria
Official Gazette, supplement to No. 38, Vol. 49, May 29, 1962]. Although the Privy Council eventually approved
the Governor�s action, its �approval� had been overtaken by events in
Nigeria because of a constitutional amendment by the Federal House of
Representatives. Meanwhile, under the
�emergency administration� of the West led by Senator MA Majekodunmi, a
fresh slate of predominantly pro-Midwest Midwesterners became ministers,
including Mark Uzorka, T. E. Salubi, Webber Egbe, A. Y. Eke etc, with Oba
Akenzua II and the Olu of Warri as �advisers.� It was the emergency administration in the West
which gave the Western region�s approval for the Midwest referendum to
proceed. In May, there was an All-party Midwest conference
in Benin at which Senator Dalton Asemota of Benin was made Chairman of the
Midwest United Front Committee (UFC). The
conference � which was boycotted by most members of the Action Group - was
a confidence building measure designed to iron out party differences and
differences between ideological and ethnic interest groups. The conference resulted in the creation of many
committees to plan for the future Midwest. In addition to the UFC, these committees were the
constitutional and legal, finance and general purposes, civil service,
delimitation, and minority protection committees. In June, the Majekodunmi regime filed a motion to
withdraw the court cases that were pending against the Midwest motion. Both motions were eventually dismissed in July by
the Supreme Court. On September 9th, there was another
all-party round-table at the Oba�s Palace in Benin which most members of
the Action Group, except Ja Isuman and JE Odiete boycotted. At this meeting, a 75 man Midwest Planning
Committee including all Midwest legislators at regional and federal levels
was created. It too was chaired by Senator Dalton Asemota,
assisted by EB Edun-Fregene, JAE Oki, Dr. Christopher Okojie, Chief Festus
Okotie-Eboh, Dennis Osadebay and Humphrey Omo-Osagie. Various sub-committee chairmen were Olisa
Chukwura for the constitutional and legal, Chief A. Y. Eke for the finance
and general purposes, J.I.G. Onyia for the civil service, Chief Obasuyi for
delimitation, Ja Isuman for the Plebiscite, and Chief Odiete for minority
protection. About one week later a new
political party called the Midwest Peoples Congress (MPC) was formed. It was allied to the Northern Peoples Congress
and led by Apostle Edokpolo. [Vickers, Op. Cit.] A week later on September 22, Chief Awolowo and
many others were arrested for an apparent plot to overthrow the government of
Prime Minister Balewa. Chief Anthony Enahoro initially
escaped into exile in Ireland but was extradited back to Nigeria in May 1963
to stand trial. With the Promised Land in sight, there was need
for all resources to be mobilized for known and unknown threats during the
referendum. Therefore, Oba Akenzua II wrote an interesting
letter to the Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Midwest Affairs on
October 2nd, 1962, in which he said: Dear Permanent Secretary, Your MWP144/358 of
26/9/62. I do
not now see any justification for the continued ban on �Owegbe�. I, therefore, support the
suggestion that the ban on �Owegbe� should be lifted. I recommend that the ban on
�Owegbe� in the Benin Division and elsewhere should be lifted.� Yours sincerely, (sgd) Oba of Benin (see Exhibit 63/5 p143, Owegbe
Commission of Inquiry, 1966) 1963 With unity and security on the home front, all hands
were now on deck for the final push. Balewa
had decided that he would not conduct the referendum until there was a formal
government back in office at Ibadan. By
order of the federal government, the Akintola government was reinstated on
January 1st, 1963 as Premier, this time with support from a new
coalition consisting of the NCNC and his new party called the United
People�s Party (UPP). This action caused an
additional misunderstanding within the old Action Group just as it was
reeling from the report of the Coker Commission of Inquiry into management of
Cocoa Marketing Board investments and newspaper coverage of the ongoing trial
of Chief Awolowo and others for treasonable felony [Enahoro, Op. Cit.]. On January 21, Mr. Gabriel E. Longe, from Owan
district of the Afenmai Division was appointed the Supervisor of the Midwest
referendum. He had been the legal adviser to the Benin Delta
Peoples Party back in the fifties. No
civil servants from the Western region were to be selected (to avoid a conflict
of interest or fear of victimization) and no non-Midwesterners were to be
given any significant roles in the exercise. Chief
Festus Okotie-Eboh was the link man to the Prime Minister to make sure there
were no mistakes at federal level. A few days later on January 24th, the
Midwest Planning Committee met again to get updates on developments and plan
for the referendum. Two days later, on January 26th,
KSY Momoh, who had taken over from Chief Anthony Enahoro as Chairman of the Midwest
Regional Committee of the Action Group publicly announced that the Action
group would oppose the creation of the Midwest, but, unknown to him, the
horse had left the barn. On February 23rd,
Midwestern dissenters from the Action group and elements of the Midwest State
Movement and NCNC entered a secret pact to make sure the Midwest referendum
was hitch free. Faced with a choice between the
party and their region, and urged on by appeals from Senator Dalton Asemota,
many opted for their region. Under
such pressure Action Group hardliners and anti-Midwest region politicians
like KSY Momoh, C. Akere and Olatunji Oye, who were all former Ministers
under Akintola before the split in the AG, decided to attend the next meeting
of the Midwest Planning Committee (MPC) on March 9th. [Vickers, Op. Cit.] Thereafter, Oba Akenzua II resumed his tours of
the Midwest to garner support for the �Yes� vote. He was quoted as saying, �Whoever
does not drop his or her ballot paper into the WHITE ballot box will be
condemned by future generations. Even
those who die before the plebiscite takes place will be condemned in the
other world, if they die with the bad intention of voting against or
persuading people to vote against the creation of a Midwest region.� [Speech
by Oba Akenzua at Agbor, March 12, 1963] On
April 23rd, Mr. James Otobo, a pro-Midwest politician who had
decamped from the NCNC to the AG before independence and had since crossed
over to the UPP requested for a postponement of the referendum pending
clarification of certain issues. Therefore,
another meeting of the Midwest Planning Committee was called on May 20th,
followed by yet another meeting on May 30th at which final agreement was reached on the
creation of new divisions for the Akoko-Edo and Isoko people, as well as the
composition of the interim Midwest administration. In the
meantime, on May 2nd, tragedy struck. Senator Dalton Ogieva Asemota, Chairman of the
Midwest Planning Committee died suddenly. THE
DEATH OF SENATOR DALTON ASEMOTA At the
end of April 1963, Senator Asemota came to Lagos to attend a scheduled
meeting of the Senate. The Senate adjourned on April
29th, and so he made plans to return to Benin on May 2nd. On May 1st, however, he woke up early and
telephoned his older brother Pa Elekhuoba Asemota to tell him that he would
be returning to Benin the next day. Then he
went to the General Hospital in Lagos to see Dr. Laja in follow-up to a Chest
X-ray he had earlier ordered. Dr. Laja gave him a prescription, some of
which the Hospital pharmacy did not have, so he was asked to find them at a
private pharmacy. From the hospital he went
shopping but returned home at about 3 pm to take his medications on an empty
stomach. After this he left for the Commercial Medicine
Store on Nnamdi Azikiwe Street owned by his friend, Senator Wusu from
Badagry. On arrival he handed the
prescription to his friend who in turn gave it to his assistants to get the
medications. Meanwhile Senator Asemota was resting on the
counter along with his wife, Onaiwu, waiting on the prescription. Then suddenly, and without warning he
slumped. He was
then rushed to the General Hospital Casualty department. His wife then came to my family house on MacDonald
Avenue in Ikoyi, Lagos, where we were neighbours to Chief Anthony Enahoro on
our back side and Dr. Rilwan, a well known Lagos physician, on the
other. Dr. Rilwan, my parents, and Mrs Onaiwu Asemota
rushed back to the hospital to find out what was happening, only to be
directed to the mortuary where the Senator�s lifeless body was
lying. It was my father that had the unenviable
responsibility to break the devastating news to Chiefs Omo-Osagie and
Okotie-Eboh. Chief Omo-Osagie notified Pa Elekhuoba Asemota in
Benin. Meanwhile,
my father went to Dr. Laja�s house to get permission for release and
embalmment. While on their way to the hospital the Doctor
said the Senator had had an enlarged Heart on Chest X-ray. When Senator Asemota asked him how his Chest
X-Ray looked, he told him: �It
is okay, Papa.� to which the Senator responded by smiling. Senator
Dalton Asemota, the consensus builder, did not live to see the Midwest he
worked so hard to make possible. Descended
from Chief Osemwota, the Eson, and a descendant
of the Ezomo Nehenua family of Benin, and Madam Iyeye Ero, the later
Senator was buried in the Asemota family compound after a
sermon led by Reverend Akinluyi at the St. Matthew�s Cathedral in Benin
City [personal communication, Mr. DA Omoigui]. He was replaced as Chairman of the Midwest
Planning Committee by Chief Morgan Agbontaen. ACTIVITIES
AT THE OBA'S PALACE AND AT WARD LEVEL IN PREPARATION FOR THE REFERENDUM Once it
became apparent that the referendum was indeed going to be held, a tactical
forward HQ was established at the Oba's Palace, Benin City. Representatives of the Midwest State Movement met
there regularly for briefing. At one
of the early meetings Oba Akenzua II warned all concerned that it was a rare
event indeed for a government to lose a referendum in its area of
jurisdiction. He reminded them that in 1962
General DeGaulle had conducted a successful referendum for a new constitution
in France. The government
of reference in the Midwest, Oba Akenzua II was referring to, was that of the
Western region, which, inspite of public pretensions Oba Akenzua said, was opposed to the creation of the new region. He told those gathered that no stone must be left
unturned to ensure victory in this last lap of what he said was a war of
liberation. Midwest patriots like the late Israel
Amadi-Emina, Senior Divisional Adviser for the Benin and Delta provinces to
the Western region Government were in regular attendance, at a risk to their civil service careers in the
western region, explaining the inside mechanics of Action group rigging
methods. It was from him and others in
the system that all the administrative traps in the 1959 voters� register
were learnt, including fake names that had been planted there at the time of
the voters� registration in 1959. Without
knowing the number and identity of the fake names, he explained, it would be
impossible to get 60% of those registered after accounting for �No� votes. It was not the intention of those who wrote such
difficult clauses into the constitution that any new region would ever be
created. Quite
apart from open campaigning for voters to vote "YES", as well as
tours to various parts of the Midwest, detailed operational plans were made
to ensure victory on polling day. Fleets
of Armels buses, for example, were leased by Chief Humphrey Omo-Osagie and
sent around the Benin province in operational support. The Otu-Edo party machine went into high
gear. Prince Shaka Momodu and his �militia� were on
alert. The Owegbe society was completely
mobilized. The Urhobo Progress Union used every avenue known
to man, including churches, to mobilize voters. Turn-out
at ward level all over the state was planned to be close to 100% to make up
for unknown ghost voters. About
two weeks prior to the official referendum, to minimize uncertainty, at every
potential polling station in every ward vote forecasts were generated by
Midwest enthusiasts, based on a pre-referendum poll. Records were meticulously collected from hut to
hut and house to house and recorded with entries for "Total
Electors", "Total entitled to vote (based on the 1959 federal
register)", "Number of people dead (since the 1959 federal elections)",
"Number of people that have left the area (since the 1959 federal
elections)", "Number of people likely to vote 'Yes'", and
"Number of people likely to vote 'No'." On this basis detailed plans were made to target
potential "No" votes to convince them otherwise, through education,
direct lobbying, and traditional sanctions. Many of
such "No" votes had been confused by conflicting campaigns to vote
against the creation of the Midwest by some interests. Anti-Midwest campaigners told villagers that
putting their votes in the �white box�, was a vote for return to the rule
of �white men�. Pro-Midwest campaigners told
villagers that a vote in the �black box� was a vote for
�Evil�. But
more mundane methods were also used to campaign. For example, in one case, the retired Head of a
Household asked his visitor what the whole referendum controversy was
about. What, he wondered, was he to gain from going to
the polling station at his age? The
Midwest protagonist he spoke to explained it very simply in this
way: If the referendum were to approve the creation of
the Midwest, he would no longer have to travel all the way to Ibadan to
collect his pension. All he would have to do was to
go to Benin City nearby. The old man thought about what
he had just heard and said: "In
that case my son, everybody in this house will go there and vote 'Yes'.� In yet
another case, this time in Benin City itself, a local ward leader of the
Action Group was approached by some colleagues in the Action Group to notify
him that party policy was to oppose the creation of the Midwest. The gentleman concerned calmly told his visitors
that it would be sacrilege for him to go against the wishes of Oba Akenzua
II. From
June 5th until June 14th, and
again from June 20th until the 25th,
massive campaign tours were undertaken by the MSM, led by Dennis
Osadebay. On July 1st, Michael
Okpara, Premier of the Eastern region, came on tour to encourage the people
of the Midwest to vote �Yes�. Also in
attendance during the referendum were many other NCNC national leaders who
were made interim divisional team leaders. They
included GC Mbanugo, TOS Benson, RA Fani Kayode (who had since decamped from
the AG), RA Akinyemi, KO Mbadiwe, Akinfosile, as well as Okotie Eboh and Omo
Osagie. On or about July 10th, with all the
signs pointing to a successful referendum, even Chief Obafemi Awolowo, leader
of the Action Group, faced with dissension within the ranks of the Midwest
Action Group, sent a note from prison to his supporters urging them to vote
�Yes.� (Vickers, Op. Cit.) THE
BAUCHI MEETING: OKOTIE-EBOH
AND BALEWA�S SECOND THOUGHTS On the surface, all had seemed set to go for the referendum, once all the legislative bills had been passed and the supervisor appointed. Behind the scenes, however, Chief SL Akintola had been warning some of friends in the NPC that they were setting a precedent by supporting the creation of the Midwest region which would someday come back to haunt the North. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||