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US group faults Gowon for allegedly distorting facts on failure of Aburi Accord

 Sylvia Runor

 June 23, 2025

4 minutes read 

A United States-based group, Rising Sun, has faulted the former Head of State, Retired General Yakubu Gowon, over a statement he made on the reasons for the failure of the historic Aburi Accord of 1967.

The group said the reasons canvassed by Gowon for the breakdown of the Accord were not a true reflection of history but an attempt to distort the facts.

The group stated this on Sunday in Abuja in a statement jointly signed by Chief Maxwell Dede and Rev. Fr. Augustine Odimmegwa, President and Secretary of the group, respectively.

The statement condemned Gowon’s position that the Aburi Accord failed because General Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu wanted regional governors to control the military.

The statement added that the demand by the regional leaders to control the security forces in their territories was made in good faith, in pursuit of justice and true federalism.

The group noted that if Nigeria had followed the Aburi Accord in its true form, there would have been no war, genocide, or famine.

“The attention of the global family of the Rising Sun, USA, has been drawn to a recent statement credited to retired General Yakubu Gowon, in which he attempted to distort the true reasons behind the failure of the historic Aburi Accord of 1967.

“His claim that the breakdown occurred because General Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu wanted regional governors to control the military is both laughable and dishonest.

“If Nigeria had followed the Aburi Accord in its true form, there would have been no war. There would have been no genocide. There would have been no famine used as a weapon of war. There would have been no carpet-bombing of villages. Instead, Gowon reneged, Nigeria reneged, and the blood of millions is on their hands.

“The Aburi Accord, held on January 4-5, 1967 in Ghana, was a last-ditch effort to salvage what was left of Nigeria after the first military coup of January 1966 and the counter-coup of July 1966, which saw thousands of Easterners slaughtered in cold blood across the North. The agreement, which was documented in writing and tape recordings, was unambiguous:

“It reaffirmed the sovereignty of the regions, with each region to control its own affairs. It called for a loose federation, or confederation, where the center would be weak and the regions strong. It called for joint control of the armed forces, not central command.

“It agreed that appointments to the Nigerian Military Council must be regional and consensual.

“These positions were not Ojukwu’s invention, they were the collective resolutions agreed to by all Nigerian military leaders present at the meeting. Gowon’s later repudiation of the Aburi Accord upon return to Lagos was not due to disagreement with the terms, but under direct pressure from the British High Commission and the Northern oligarchy, who feared a return to the economically successful and politically autonomous regions of the First Republic.

“Is General Gowon genuinely unaware that in the United States – the very model of federalism – state governors control their National Guards and can activate them independently of the federal government?

“Is it treasonous in a federal system for regional leaders to demand control over security forces in their territories? Ojukwu’s position was the position of reason, of justice, and of true federalism. It is Gowon who betrayed that spirit and plunged Nigeria into chaos.

“By confessing that the dispute at Aburi was over control of the military and not over oil or so-called secession, Gowon has inadvertently vindicated Ojukwu and all Biafrans. The world can now see that Biafra did not seek war, it sought autonomy, safety, and self-governance, in the face of an unrelenting genocidal machine.

“We also remind the world that it was the British government, through its High Commissioner in Lagos, Sir David Hunt, that instructed Gowon to reject the Aburi Accord and ensure that power remained concentrated in the hands of the Northern establishment.

Britain did not want a successful federation of autonomous regions; it wanted a unified, centrally-controlled Nigeria under Fulani dominance, to protect Shell BP and other colonial-era corporate interests. That is why Britain armed Nigeria with bombs, aircraft, and diplomatic cover to annihilate Biafra”, the statement noted.

The group further explained that millions of Nigerians are living with the consequences of the Aburi Accord’s betrayal, which has led the country into insecurity, economic collapse, fake federalism, and a unitary state masquerading as a federation.

“His words are not just a distortion of the past, they are a dangerous attempt to sanitize tyranny and genocide.

“We call on all truth-seeking historians, scholars, and lovers of justice to revisit the original tapes and documents of the Aburi Accord, many of which are publicly available, to expose Gowon’s lies”, the statement added.

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