Reuben Abati sparks debate with unverified accusations against South-East Igbos

Reuben Abati sparks debate with unverified accusations against South-East Igbos


PEOPLES GAZETTE 

Media commentator Reuben Abati on Thursday peddled a long-debunked conspiracy theory about land transactions in Igboland, claiming without evidence during a morning segment on Arise TV that no Nigerian of Yoruba origin can purchase land assets in the country’s South-East region.

His comments followed Senate President Godswill Akpabio’s praise of the entrepreneurial spirit of late Senator Ifeanyi Ubah, an Igbo lawmaker who passed away in July.

While acknowledging the industriousness of the Igbo people, Mr Abati quickly inserted his commentary that as hardworking as the Igbos are, they withhold their lands from outsiders, implying that they are generally hostile to other tribes.

As part of his argument, Mr Abati recounted a story he purportedly heard from T.O.S. Benson, a late Nigerian minister. According to Mr Abati, the minister, despite having an Igbo wife and daughter, was allegedly denied the opportunity to buy land in the South-East because he was not Igbo.

“It is the irony of Nigeria that the same Igbos who are so industrious that they’re all over and they do well in other parts of Nigeria,” the TV host said in his commentary on Thursday.

“You go there as a non-Igbo man to go and buy land, you’ll be told that you don’t belong, even as an in-law. These are the issues in my view,” Mr Abati said in his contemptuous hot take on Thursday.

However, Mr Abati’s claims were found to be false in that a Yoruba entrepreneur like Adetayo Amusan owns Polo Mall in Enugu, the region’s heartland.

Peoples Gazette also confirmed that businessman Mike Adenuga, a non-Igbo, has private and commercial assets on vast swathes of land across Abia state.

Nigerians of Yoruba origin are also known to live in South-East commercial hubs like Aba, Awka and Independence Layout neighbourhoods in Enugu State. Google Maps confirmed a street named after a Yoruba man, Dayo Okunlola, exists in Ugwuaji, Enugu state.

On Friday, Mr Abati adamantly refused to walk back his claim when his colleague, Ojy Okpe, asked him to, reading out a social media comment that said, “You cannot paint a whole tribe with one brush.”

Instead, he interrupted his colleague at intervals and yelled at her to “replay the tape again(sic). Ah! Replay the tape!”

“I was specific about what I said. Nobody should tell me any nonsense,” the Arise TV host blustered on air.

Despite Ms Ojy’s attempts to placate him by explaining that it was her “duty” to seek clarification on his anti-Igbo remarks, Mr Abati interrupted sharply, retorting, “No! No nonsense duty!” displaying a level of indignation that did not shock his other colleagues who seemed accustomed to his tactlessness and made no efforts to intervene.

“If people have a different opinion, they have anthropological evidence to support it, It is not for me to reverse…

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Reuben Abati sparks debate with unverified accusations against South-East Igbos

 

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