Monday, July 14, 2014
Commonwealth gold medalist Emmanuel Ifeajuna facing firing squad.
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12:43 PM
The Nigerian high
jumper became the very first Black African to win a gold medal, his
remarkable story has however become tragic.
According to The Guardian The Guardian :
The
first time Emmanuel Ifeajuna appeared before a crowd of thousands he
did something no black African had ever done. He won a gold medal at
an international sporting event. “Nigeria Creates World Sensation,”
ran the headline in the West
African Pilot after
Ifeajuna’s record-breaking victory in the high jump at the 1954
Empire and Commonwealth Games in Vancouver. He was the pride not just
of Nigeria but of a whole continent. An editorial asked: “Who among
our people did not weep for sheer joy when Nigeria came uppermost,
beating all whites and blacks together?”
In
the words of a former schoolmate, Ifeajuna had leaped “to the very
pinnacle of Nigerian sporting achievement”. His nine track and
field team-mates won another six silver and bronze medals, prompting
a special correspondent to write “Rejoice with me, oh ye sports
lovers of Nigeria, for the remarkable achievements of our boys”.
Ifeajuna,
feted wherever he went, would soon see his picture on the front of
school exercise books. He was a great national hero who would remain
Nigeria’s only gold medalist, in Commonwealth or Olympic sport,
until 1966.
The
next time Ifeajuna appeared before a crowd of thousands he was
bare-chested and tied to a stake, facing execution before a seething
mob. He had co-led a military coup in January 1966 in which,
according to an official but disputed police report, he shot and
killed Nigeria’s first prime minister. The coup failed but Ifeajuna
escaped to safety in Ghana, dressed as a woman and was driven to
freedom by a famous poet. Twenty months later, he was back, fighting
for the persecuted Igbo people of eastern Nigeria in a brutal civil
war that broke out as a consequence of the coup.
Ifeajuna
and three fellow officers were accused by their own leader,General
Emeka Ojukwu,
of plotting against him and the breakaway Republic of Biafra. They
denied charges of treason: they were trying to save lives and their
country, they said, by negotiating an early ceasefire with the
federal government and reuniting Nigeria. They failed, they died and,
in the next two and a half years, so did more than a million Igbos.
The
day of the execution was 25 September, 1967, and the time 1.30pm.
There was a very short gap between trial and execution, not least
because federal troops were closing in on Enugu, the Biafran capital,
giving rise to fears that the “guilty four” might be rescued.
As
the execution approached, the four men – Ifeajuna, Victor Banjo,
Phillip Alale and Sam Agbam – were tied to stakes. Ifeajuna, with
his head on his chest as though he was already dead, kept mumbling
that his death would not stop what he had feared most, that federal
troops would enter Enugu, and the only way to stop this was for those
about to kill him to ask for a ceasefire.
A
body of soldiers drew up with their automatic rifles at the ready. On
the order of their officer, they levelled their guns at the bared
chests of the four men. As a hysterical mass behind the firing squad
shouted: “Shoot them! Shoot them!” a grim-looking officer gave
the command: “Fire!” The deafening volley was followed by lolling
heads. Ifeajuna slumped. Nigeria’s great sporting hero died a
villain’s death. But he had been right. By 4pm two and a half hours
after the executions, the gunners of the federal troops had started
to hit their targets in Enugu with great accuracy. The Biafrans began
to flee and the city fell a few days later.
Of
all the many hundreds of gold medallists at the Empire and
Commonwealth Games since 1930 none left such a mark on history, led
such a remarkable life or suffered such a shocking death as Ifeajuna.
His
co-plotter in the 1966 coup, Chukwuma Nzeogwu, was buried with full
military honours and had a statue erected in his memory in his home
town. But for Ifeajuna, the hateful verdict of that seething mob
carried weight down the years. His name was reviled, his sporting
glory all but written out of Nigeria’s history. His name is absent
from the website of the Athletics Federation of Nigeria, appearing
neither in the history of the Federation nor in any other section.
There is no easy road to redemption for the gold medallist who
inadvertently started a war and was shot for trying to stop it.
Nigeria’s
first foray into overseas sport was in 1948, when they sent athletes
to London to compete in the Amateur Athletic Association
Championships, and to watch the
Olympic Games before
a planned first entry in the next Olympiad. In 1950 there was cause
to celebrate when the high jumper, Josiah Majekodunmi, won a silver
medal at the Auckland Commonwealth Games. He also fared best of
Nigeria’s Olympic pathfinders, the nine-man team who competed at
Helsinki in 1952. Majekodunmi was ninth, with two of his team-mates
also in the top 20. Nigerians clearly excelled at the high jump.
With
three men having competed in that 1952 Olympic final, the Nigeria
selectors had plenty of names to consider for the Commonwealth Games
high jump in Vancouver two years later. Ifeajuna, aged 20, was not a
contender until he surprised everybody at the national championships
in late April, less than two months before the team were due to
depart. His jump of 6ft 5.5in, the best of the season, took him
straight in alongside Nafiu Osagie, one of the 1952 Olympians, and he
was selected.
The
high jump was on day one of competition in Vancouver and Ifeajuna
wore only one shoe, on his left foot. One correspondent wrote: “The
Nigerian made his cat-like approach from the left-hand side. In his
take-off stride his leading leg was flexed to an angle quite beyond
anything ever seen but he retrieved position with a fantastic spring
and soared upwards as if plucked by some external agency.”
Ifeajuna
brushed the bar at 6ft 7in but it stayed on; he then cleared 6ft 8in
to set a Games and British Empire record, and to become the first man
ever to jump 13.5in more than his own height. This first gold for
black Africa was a world-class performance. His 6ft 8in – just over
2.03m – would have been good enough for a silver medal at the
Helsinki Olympics two years earlier.
The
team arrived back home on 8 September. That afternoon they were
driven on an open-backed lorry through the streets of Lagos, with the
police band on board, to a civic reception at the racecourse. The
flags and bunting were out in abundance, as were the crowds in the
middle and, for those who could afford tickets, the grandstand. There
was a celebration dance at 9pm. Ifeajuna told reporters he had been
so tired, having spent nearly four hours in competition, that: “At
the time I attempted the record jump I did not think I had enough
strength to achieve the success which was mine. I was very happy when
I went over the bar on my second attempt.”
After
a couple of weeks at home Ifeajuna was off to university on the other
side of the country at Ibadan. His sporting career was already over,
apart from rare appearances in inter-varsity matches. He met his
future wife, Rose, in 1955. They married in 1959 and had two sons.
After graduating in zoology he taught for a while before joining the
army in 1960 and was trained in England, at Aldershot. Ifeajuna had
first shown an interest in the military in 1956 when, during a summer
holiday in Abeokuta, he had visited the local barracks with a friend
who later became one of the most important figures in the
Commonwealth.
Chief
Emeka Anyaoku joined the Commonwealth Secretariat in 1966, the year
of Ifeajuna’s coup attempt. While his good friend escaped,
returned, fought in the war and died in front of the firing squad,
Anyaoku moved to London, where he rose to the highest office in the
Commonwealth,secretary-general,
in 1990. For
four years at university he lived in a room next door to Ifeajuna,
who became a close friend.
Why
did the record-breaking champion stop competing? “From October,
1954, when he enrolled at Ibadan, he never trained,” said Anyaoku,
nearly 60 years later. “He never had a coach – only his games
master at grammar school – and there were no facilities at the
university. He simply stopped. He seemed content with celebrating his
gold medal. I don’t think the Olympics ever tempted him. I used to
tease him that he was the most natural hero in sport. He did no
special training. He was so gifted, he just did it all himself.
Jumping barefoot, or with one shoe, was not unusual where we came
from.”
Another
hugely influential voice from Nigerian history pointed out that
Ifeajuna, in his days as a student, had “a fairly good record of
rebellion”. Olusegun Obasanjo served as head of a military regime
and as an elected president. He recalled Ifeajuna’s role in a
protest that led to the closure of his grammar school in Onitsha for
a term in 1951, when he was 16. Three years after winning gold, while
at university, Ifeajuna made a rousing speech before leading several
hundred students in protest against poor food and conditions.
The
former president also held a manuscript written by Ifeajuna in the
aftermath of the coup but never published. It stated: “It was unity
we wanted, not rebellion. We had watched our leaders rape our
country. The country was so diseased that bold reforms were badly
needed to settle social, moral, economic and political questions. We
fully realised that to be caught planning, let alone acting, on our
lines, was high treason. And the penalty for high treason is death.”
In
1964 the Lagos boxer Omo Oloja won a light-middleweight bronze in
Tokyo, thereby becoming Nigeria’s first Olympic medallist. It was a
rare moment of celebration in a grim year that featured a general
strike and a rigged election. Another election the following year
was, said the BBC and Reuters correspondent Frederick Forsyth,
seriously rigged – “electoral officers disappeared, ballot papers
vanished from police custody, candidates were detained, polling
agents were murdered”. Two opposing sides both claimed victory,
leading to a complete breakdown of law and order. “Rioting, murder,
looting, arson and mayhem were rife,” said Forsyth. The prime
minister, Tafawa Balewa, refused to declare a state of emergency.
There was corruption in the army, too, with favouritism for northern
recruits. A group of officers began to talk about a coup after they
were told by their brigadier that they would be required to pledge
allegiance to the prime minister, from the north, rather than the
country’s first president, an Igbo. Ifeajuna’s group feared a
jihad against the mainly Christian south, led by the north’s Muslim
figurehead, the Sardauna of Sokoto.
The
coup, codenamed Leopard, was planned in secret meetings. Major
Ifeajuna led a small group in Lagos, whose main targets were the
prime minister, the army’s commander-in-chief, and a brigadier, who
was Ifeajuna’s first victim. According to the official police
report, part of which has never been made public, Ifeajuna and a few
of his men broke into the prime minister’s home, kicked down his
bedroom door and led out Balewa in his white robe. They allowed him
to say his prayers and drove him away in Ifeajuna’s car. On the
road to Abeokuta they stopped, Ifeajuna ordered the prime minister
out of the car, shot him, and left his body in the bush. Others say
the Prime Minister was not shot, nor was the intention ever to kill
him: Balewa died of an asthma attack or a heart attack brought on by
fear. There has never been conclusive evidence either way.
Ifeajuna
drove on to Enugu, where it became apparent that the coup had failed,
mainly because one of the key officers in Ifeajuna’s Lagos
operation had “turned traitor” and had failed to arrive as
planned with armoured cars. Major-General Ironsi, the main military
target, was still at large and he soon took control of the military
government. Ifeajuna was now a wanted man. He hid in a chemist’s
shop, disguised himself as a woman, and was driven over the border by
his friend Christopher Okigbo, a poet of great renown. Then he
travelled on to Ghana, where he was welcomed.
Ifeajuna
eventually agreed to return to Lagos, where he was held pending
trial. Ojukwu, by now a senior officer, ensured his safety by having
him transferred, in April, to a jail in the east. Igbos who lived in
the north of the country were attacked. In weeks of violent bloodshed
tens of thousands died. As the death toll increased, the outcome was
civil war. In May, 1967, Ojukwu, military governor of the south-east
of Nigeria, declared that the region had now become the Republic of
Biafra. By the time the fighting ended in early 1970, the number of
deaths would be in the millions.
Arguably,
if either of Ifeajuna’s plots had been a success, those lives would
not have been lost. The verdicts on his role in Nigerian history are
many and varied: his detractors have held sway. Chief among them was
Bernard Odogwu, Biafra’s head of intelligence, who branded Ifeajuna
a traitor and blamed him for “failure and atrocities” in the 1966
coup. Adewale Ademoyega, one of the 1966 plotters, held a different
view of Ifeajuna. “He was a rather complicated character ...
intensely political and revolutionary ... very influential among
those close to him ... generous and willing to sacrifice anything for
the revolution.”
The
last time Anyaoku saw Ifeajuna was in 1963, in Lagos, before
Anyaoku’s departure for a diplomatic role in New York. He later
moved to London and was there in 1967. “I was devastated when I
heard the news of the execution,” he said. As for Ifeajuna being
all but written out of Nigeria’s sporting history, he noted that:
“The history of the civil war still evokes a two-sided argument. He
is a hero to many people, though they would more readily talk about
his gold medal than his involvement in the war. There are people who
think he was unjustifiably executed and others who believe the
opposite.”
One
commentator suggested recently that the new national stadium in
Abuja, the Nigerian capital, should be named after Ifeajuna. It will
surely never happen.
Brian
Oliver is a former sports editor of the Observer. This is an edited
extract from his book, The Commonwealth Games: Extraordinary Stories Behind The Medal, published by Bloomsbury.
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