Skip to content
Tuesday 2 June 2026
  • Home
  • Advertise with us
  • Contact
The Frontier
Click to read
The Frontier
  • News
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Headlines
  • Education
  • Health
  • Business & Economy
  • Sports
  • More
    • International
    • Religion
    • Entertainment
    • Info Tech
    • Matilda Showbiz
      • Gists
      • Music
      • Gossips
      • Oga MAT
      • Romance
    • Arts & Culture
    • Environment
    • Opinion
    • Features
    • Epistles of Anthony Kila
    • EyeCare with Dr Priscilia Imade
The Frontier
  • News
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Religion
  • Headlines
  • Education
  • International
  • Business & Economy
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Arts & Culture
  • Environment
  • Health
  • Matilda Showbiz
    • Gists
    • Music
    • Gossips
    • Oga MAT
    • Romance
  • Opinion
  • Epistles of Anthony Kila
  • EyeCare with Dr Priscilia Imade
  • Info Tech
  • Interview
The Frontier
Click to read
News
News

Ojukwu’s genocide warning was truth, not propaganda – Tinubu’s former Southeast spokesman, Onoh blasts Shiek Gumi

The FrontierThe FrontierNovember 4, 2025 1715 Minutes read0

•Gumi and Onoh

Denge Josef Onoh has described as a historical lie statements credit to the Islamic cleric, Shiek Ahmad Gumi, that the late Biafra Head of State, General Chukwuemeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu attempted to deceive the world that Nigeria prosecuted genocide on Biafra in the events leading to and during the Nigeria civil war.

Gumi had in a recent interview while reacting to United States President Donald Trump’s treat that America may send troops to Nigeria if the alleged Christian genocide continues, alleged that Ojukwu has used such genocide narrative to deceive the world but did not fly because the then Nigeria leader and his deputy were Christians, reports Vanguard.

In a reply to Gumi, Onoh stated that Gumi’s invocation of the memory of late Odumegwu Ojukwu was not just factually bankrupt but a deliberate attempt to rewrite the blood-soaked pages of Nigeria’s Civil War (1967–1970) for petty and divisive ends.

Gumi said that Ojukwu allegedly wanted to use it (genocide) before, saying that Muslims were killing Christians, only to be undermined by the fact that General Yakubu Gowon, the federal head of state, and his deputy were Christians.

“This is not scholarship; it is sophistry, a cheap sleight of hand meant to gaslight survivors and sanitize atrocities under the guise of peace and stability,” Onoh quipped.

Setting the record straight, Onoh said that with the unyielding truth of history which the cleric’s revisionism cannot erase, Ojukwu never made such claims.

“Absolutely, and with profound justification rooted in the pogroms that ignited Biafra’s tragic bid for survival in the fall of 1966, orchestrated by massacres that swept through northern Nigeria — regions under federal influence — claiming over 30,000 Igbo lives in weeks.

“These were not random clashes but targeted ethnic and religious cleansings: Igbo Christians hunted in their homes, churches burnt, women and children slaughtered in mosques turned killing grounds. Eyewitness accounts from the time, corroborated by international observers like the International Committee of the Red Cross and British diplomats, describe mobs chanting “Araba!” (secessionist cries) as they wielded machetes against ‘infidels” and “saboteurs.’

“Ojukwu did not invent this; he documented it in his seminal – A Statement on the Nigerian Crisis (September 1966) and in his Ashram Declaration (May 1969), where he decried the genocide of Igbos as a calculated extermination by northern elements, often framed in jihadist rhetoric. “The war itself saw federal forces — predominantly northern Muslim troops bombard Biafran civilians with impunity, leading to a famine that claimed two million souls, mostly children, in what even Gowon’s own advisors privately called a “final solution.”

“Gumi’s pivot to Gowon’s Christianity is a risible deflection, ignoring that leadership faith does not absolve systemic complicity. Gowon, a devout Anglican, presided over an army where northern Muslim officers like Murtala Muhammed wielded outsized power, directing operations that blurred ethnic vendettas with religious fervor. The war’s architects included figures like the Emir of Kano, whose inflammatory sermons fueled the pogroms. To claim “we didn’t mind” because of Gowon’s deputy (Major-General Philip Effiong, an Igbo as then accepted, and Catholic who defected to Biafra) is to mock the graves of millions.

“Ojukwu fought not against Muslims as a monolith but against a federation that failed its minorities — a fight for equity that echoes my own pleas today for inclusive governance under President Tinubu.

“Gumi’s narrative isn’t peace; it’s erasure, designed to delegitimise legitimate grievances and stoke fresh sectarian fires. I honor Ojukwu’s memory by rejecting such lies, not indulging them.

“But Gumi’s mendacity is no isolated sermon; it is the rotten fruit of a career spent undermining Nigeria’s peace, past and present. “This is a man who has positioned himself as a self-anointed “mediator” to bandits and terrorists, yet whose actions have prolonged their reign of terror, emboldened killers, and fractured our national fabric. Let us catalog his trail of discord, lest his clerical robes blind us to the blood on his hands.

“In the past, Gumi’s interventions sowed chaos under the banner of “dialogue.” During the 2021 wave of school abductions in Kaduna and Niger states— where over 1,000 children were seized by Fulani militants—he led “peace missions” into forest enclaves, distributing Korans and medical aid while advocating a “blanket amnesty” for these criminals, akin to the Niger Delta reprieve. Far from disarming them, his visits romanticised their “militancy,” shifting public lexicon from “bandits” to “militants” and inviting foreign jihadists to view Nigeria as a “new business branch” for investment, as he infamously quipped.

“The result? Escalated kidnappings: from 3,620 in 2020 to over 5,000 by mid-2025, with ransoms exceeding ₦2.57 billion, displacing millions and sacking 638 villages in Zamfara alone. Groups like the World Institute for Peace demanded his arrest in 2024, accusing his rhetoric of “emboldening perpetrators” by undermining military resolve— precisely what he did when he accused the Nigerian Army of “religious division” in 2021, claiming Muslim officers spared bandits while Christians prosecuted them.

“The Army rightly warned him to “mind his utterances,” yet he persisted, quitting mediation only when bandits were legally proscribed as terrorists, feigning victimhood after endangering his life for photo-ops.

“Today, Gumi’s poison spreads wider. In 2025, he accused “white evangelical Christian supremacists” of engineering Nigeria’s woes— blaming them for toppling governments in the Middle East, Venezuela, and now us— while dismissing Boko Haram as a “CIA creation” terrorizing Muslims. This conspiracism deflects from Islamist radicals he once defended, even as they bomb mosques alongside churches. His push for “peace deals” with bandits in Katsina mirrors failed 2019 pacts that collapsed, leaving rural communities undefended and accusing security forces of “sabotage.”

“Just last month, he urged Tinubu to emulate the Israel-Hamas truce by negotiating with “terrorists,” ignoring how such appeasement rewards extortion. And amid U.S. concerns over violence—concerns Gumi labels “politically motivated” election meddling—he demands we sever ties with America, prioritising sovereignty over alliances that could arm our fight against the very insurgents he coddles.

“Gumi’s gospel is not stability but selective impunity: amnesty for northern armed groups, scorn for southern agitators, and historical amnesia that pits brother against brother. It has cost lives — over 2,266 slain by bandits in early 2025 alone— and deepened our wounds, rewarding violence in one region while criminalizing dissent in another. True peace demands justice for all victims, not alibis for perpetrators.

“To Sheikh Gumi: Cease your distortions. To Nigerians: Reject division. Let us build the unity Ojukwu died dreaming of—one where no cleric’s word trumps the people’s will, and where equity, not ethnicity or faith, guides us. President Tinubu’s Renewed Hope calls us to heal, not hate. I stand ready, as always, to bridge our divides — for Enugu, for Sokoto, for Nigeria eternal.”

Tags
genocide warningOjukwuOnohpropagandaShiek GumiTinubutruth
FacebookTwitterWhatsAppLinkedInEmailLink
Previous post Gas marketers elect new leaders, pledge to improve LPG distribution
next post Senate set for debate over Trump’s genocide claims
Related posts
  • Related posts
  • More from author
News

CBN redeploys all four deputy governors

June 2, 20260
News

FG scraps three-month terminal leave for civil servants

June 2, 20260
News

Governor Nwifuru urges FG to provide natural disaster fund for Ebonyi

June 2, 20260
Load more
Read also
Inside Akwa Ibom Today

inside the Hill top newspaper

February 9, 20250
Politics

JUST IN: Six House of Rep members dump PDP for APM •FULL LIST

June 2, 20260
Health

Cholera outbreak: Borno records 274 new cases in 24 hours as toll hits 4,204

June 2, 20260
Education

Ondo LG chairman shuts schools over security concerns

June 2, 20260
International

US reduces African countries for full visa processing to 20 •FULL LIST

June 2, 20260
Crime

BREAKING: Real reason we waylaid US-based Nigerian journalist Prof Ndibe at Lagos airport – DSS

June 2, 20260
Headlines

JUST IN: Redeemed Church opens up on viral claims Pastor Adeboye protested against President Goodluck Jonathan’s administration

June 2, 20260
Load more

inside the Hill top newspaper

February 9, 2025

JUST IN: Six House of Rep members dump PDP for APM •FULL LIST

June 2, 2026

Cholera outbreak: Borno records 274 new cases in 24 hours as toll hits 4,204

June 2, 2026

Ondo LG chairman shuts schools over security concerns

June 2, 2026

US reduces African countries for full visa processing to 20 •FULL LIST

June 2, 2026

BREAKING: Real reason we waylaid US-based Nigerian journalist Prof Ndibe at Lagos airport – DSS

June 2, 2026

inside the Hill top newspaper

0 Comments

JUST IN: Six House of Rep members dump PDP for APM •FULL LIST

0 Comments

5 burnt to death scooping fuel from fallen tanker

0 Comments

Naira slumps further as dollar scarcity bites harder

0 Comments

BREAKING: Appeal Court sacks Senate Minority Leader, orders election rerun

0 Comments

Again, Trump fined $10,000 for violating gag order

0 Comments

Follow us

FacebookLike our page
InstagramFollow us
YoutubeSubscribe to our channel
WhatsappContact us
Latest news
1

inside the Hill top newspaper

February 9, 2025
2

13 killed, houses burnt in fresh suspected Fulani herdsmen attack on Plateau communities

June 20, 2025
3

Namibia reach AFCON last 16 after Mali stalemate

January 25, 2024
4

Australia increases minimum wage to $915 per week for lowest paid workers

July 9, 2024
5

Senator unveils 200 university scholarship beneficiaries

December 28, 2024
6

Mitoma gem inspires Brighton’s defeat of toothless Chelsea

February 15, 2025
Popular
1

inside the Hill top newspaper

February 9, 2025
2

Economic challenges forcing Nigerian entertainers to relocate abroad

September 28, 2024
3

Kidnapper of 12-year-old girl in Rivers, traced to Enugu Prison

April 18, 2025
4

American companies ready to invest in Nigeria – Blinken •Highlights corruption as hindrance

January 24, 2024
5

REVEALED: What Atiku, others told former President Obasanjo at Abeokuta meeting

February 16, 2025
6

Tinubu’s weaponization of ethnicity, By Erasmus Ikhide

March 11, 2024

About The Frontier

The Frontier is Nigeria’s leading online newspaper. It is published by Okims Media Links Limited headed by Sunny Okim, a veteran journalist who is widely known as The Grandmaster, fondly called so by colleagues and friends for being Nigeria’s pioneer movie journalist.

Most viewed

inside the Hill top newspaper

February 9, 2025

Nigerian politicians in office to kill, steal, remain in power – Former Transport minister Rotimi Amaechi

January 30, 2025

Ronaldo hunts Asian Champions League glory in Saudi-hosted finals

April 23, 2025

Alleged N80.2 billion fraud: Ex-Governor Yahaya Bello’s arraignment stalled as lawyer absent in court

November 29, 2024

AFCON hosts Cote D’Ivoire facing exit after 4-0 loss to Equatorial Guinea

January 23, 2024
Top posts

Categories

  • News4594
  • Politics4196
  • Crime3945
  • International2778
  • Sports2302
  • Business & Economy2139
  • Headlines2086
  • Education1273
  • Matilda Showbiz906
  • Health812
  • Entertainment751
  • Africa486
  • Religion462
  • Environment322
  • Special264
  • Arts & Culture227
  • Hunger protests in Nigeria224
  • Info Tech222
  • Interview177
  • Inside Akwa Ibom Today175
  • Opinion147
  • EyeCare with Dr Priscilia Imade119
  • Advert30
  • Epistles of Anthony Kila19
  • Trends16
  • Local News5

© 2026 The Frontier, Published by Okims Media Links Limited.

designed by winnet services

  • Home
  • Advertise with us
  • Contact