Republic of Biafra Government in Exile

Biafra government
Biafra government
  • Version
  • Download 4
  • File Size 618.54 KB
  • File Count 1
  • Create Date 8 January 2023
  • Last Updated 8 January 2023

Republic of Biafra Government in Exile

The Republic of Biafra Government in Exile (REPBGIE) is an entity that works tirelessly to
promote the well‐being of Biafrans, numbering over 70 million people in Nigeria and in the global
Diaspora, including the United States. REPGBIE is a proverbial child of necessity Headquartered
at Biafra House, 6188 Oxon Hill Road, Oxon Hill, Maryland 20745, in the Washington, D.C.
Metropolitan Area. It was birthed as a self‐defense response to the military occupation, thinly‐
clothed exclusion, unvarnished marginalization, de‐industrialization, and genocide of the Igbo
and other Biafrans that have gone on in Nigeria since the supposed end of the Nigerian civil war
in 1970. These atrocities reached new heights of repressiveness under the nominal democratic
Fourth Republic of Nigeria since 1999, particularly under the Fulani Jihadist government of
General Muhammadu Buhari since 2015. The REPBGIE resolutely commits itself to a peaceful
and nonviolent dissolution of Nigeria.
The Buhari government has depended heavily on foreign and domestic loans to finance its
operations. But Biafrans will not be held liable for these reckless loans. There is no point in
bringing suit against the government of a country in dire need of a new social contract after its
100‐year lease of life expired in 2014. Instead, via this open letter, the more limited aim of the
Republic of Biafra Government in Exile (REPBGIE) is to put the world on notice that Biafrans, for
over 50 years now excluded by Nigeria’s Fulani‐dominated government, will not be liable for
repayment of loans that they had no hand in accumulating nor in any way benefitted from.
In March 2020, the Senate, Nigeria’s upper legislative house, approved the request for a loan in
the amount of US $22.7 billion that President Muhammadu Buhari presented to it. According to
news reports, about $17.06 billion of the loans tied to various projects, none of which is sited in
Biafra‐land, will be provided by China’s Exim bank, said to be Nigeria’s biggest bilateral creditor
in over two decades. In no particular order, the rest of the loan will come from the African
Development Bank, the World Bank, the German Development Bank, and the Islamic
Development Bank. The Senate approved Buhari’s request, despite protests by states in the
southeast, homeland of the Igbo, complaining of being excluded from the infrastructural
development captured in the loan.
On March 11, 2020, Igbo Board of Deputies, a Southeast civil society organization, petitioned
China’s Exim Bank to suspend or cancel the loan. In its letter to the bank signed by one Austin
Okeke, and delivered at the bank’s office in Johannesburg, the group warned that it would join
the bank in projected suit against the Nigerian government if it fails to heed to its demand.
Characteristically, the Buhari government ignored them. The group indicated that Igbo will not,
“as a matter of principle, fact, and law,” participate in the servicing and repayment of loans
whose proceeds they did not benefit from. It poignantly added that: “The Igbo shall not be held
liable for these loans, not now and in the future. We will not mortgage the rights and interests of
our future generations for something they neither partook in nor benefited.”
This is the same position that, by this open letter to lenders, Biafrans all across the world, the
U.S. government and the international community in general, the REPBGIE canvasses.

You may also like

Leave a Reply