Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • Fresh Embarrassment For Pakistan As Saudi Hajj Minister Snubs NAHCON After ₦20m Spending Spree, Office Shutdown
    • VICTIMS’S LIST: Court Orders UK To Pay £420m To 21 Nigerians Families Over 1949 Miners Massacre
    • ‘Very Respected Woman’, Trump Praises Remi Tinubu At US Prayer Breakfast
    • APC Sets Stage For Inclusive Convention Following Tinubu’s Meeting With Party Leaders
    • Why Senate Approved Electronic ‘Transmission’ Of Results, Not ‘Transfer’ – Senator Umeh
    • Governor Yusuf Donates N100 Million To Kano Market Fire Victims
    • Can We Quench The Fire That Might Start In Mali? – By Azu Ishiekwene
    • Lookman Scores On Debut To Help Atletico To Copa Del Rey Semis
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    NEWS POINT NIGERIANEWS POINT NIGERIA
    • HOME
    • NEWS

      Fresh Embarrassment For Pakistan As Saudi Hajj Minister Snubs NAHCON After ₦20m Spending Spree, Office Shutdown

      February 6, 2026

      VICTIMS’S LIST: Court Orders UK To Pay £420m To 21 Nigerians Families Over 1949 Miners Massacre

      February 6, 2026

      ‘Very Respected Woman’, Trump Praises Remi Tinubu At US Prayer Breakfast

      February 6, 2026

      APC Sets Stage For Inclusive Convention Following Tinubu’s Meeting With Party Leaders

      February 6, 2026

      Why Senate Approved Electronic ‘Transmission’ Of Results, Not ‘Transfer’ – Senator Umeh

      February 6, 2026
    • COLUMN

      Can We Quench The Fire That Might Start In Mali? – By Azu Ishiekwene

      February 6, 2026

      The Abuja Snake Bite That Exposed A Dangerous Truth – By Boma West

      February 4, 2026

      Iran, Beware The Fangs Of January, The Scourge Of February, The Ides Of March (2) – By Dr Hassan Gimba

      February 2, 2026

      IPOB’s Sit-At-Home Order And The South East Economy – By Kazeem Akintunde

      February 2, 2026

      Time To Celebrate Murtala, Abuja And G-7 @ 50 – By Martins Oloja

      February 2, 2026
    • EDUCATION

      FG Names Prof. Adamu Acting Vice-Chancellor To Steer UniAbuja For Three Months

      August 9, 2025

      13 Countries Offering Free Or Low-Cost PhD Programmes For Non-Citizens

      January 25, 2025

      NECO: Abia, Imo Top Performing States In Two Years, Katsina, Zamfara Come Last

      October 3, 2024

      NBTE Accredits 17 Programmes At Federal Polytechnic Kabo

      August 20, 2024

      15 Most Expensive Universities In Nigeria

      May 19, 2024
    • INTERNATIONAL

      Gaza Patients Head To Rafah Crossing As People Return Amid Israeli Attacks

      February 6, 2026

      Man Sentenced To Life In Prison For Plotting To Kill Trump In 2024

      February 6, 2026

      Israeli Attacks On Gaza Kill 23 In One Of Deadliest Days Since ‘Ceasefire’

      February 5, 2026

      US-Iran Nuclear Talks Set For Oman On Friday, Tehran Confirms

      February 5, 2026

      UN Chief Urges Gaza Aid As Israel Blocks Most Medical Evacuees At Rafah

      February 4, 2026
    • JUDICIARY

      FULL LIST: Judicial Council Recommends Appointment Of 11 Supreme Court Justices

      December 6, 2023

      Supreme Court: Judicial Council Screens 22 Nominees, Candidates Face DSS, Others

      November 29, 2023

      FULL LIST: Judicial Commission Nominates 22 Justices For Elevation To Supreme Court

      November 16, 2023

      Seven Key Issues Resolved By Seven Supreme Court Judges

      October 26, 2023

      FULL LIST: CJN To Swear In Falana’s Wife, 57 Others As SANs November 27

      October 12, 2023
    • POLITICS

      What Peter Obi May Lose If He Joins Coalition As VP Candidate

      May 25, 2025

      Atiku Moves To Unseat Wike’s Damagum As PDP Chairman, Backs Suswam As Replacement

      April 15, 2024

      Edo’s Senator Matthew Uroghide, Others Defect To APC

      April 13, 2024

      Finally, Wike Opens Up On Rift With Peter Odili

      April 2, 2024

      El-Rufa’i’s Debt Burden: APC Suspends Women Leader For Criticising Kaduna Gov

      March 31, 2024
    • SPORTS

      Lookman Scores On Debut To Help Atletico To Copa Del Rey Semis

      February 6, 2026

      Eagles Goalkeeper Nwabali Leaves Chippa United After Submitting Transfer Request

      February 6, 2026

      Lookman Takes No. 22 At Atletico, Pens Emotional Farewell To Atalanta

      February 5, 2026

      Morocco To Appeal AFCON Bans, Fines After Final Chaos

      February 5, 2026

      ‘I Trained With Roy Keane’, Mikel Obi Opens Up On Failed Man United Move

      February 4, 2026
    • MORE
      • AFRICA
      • ANALYSIS
      • BUSINESS
      • ENTERTAINMENT
      • FEATURED
      • LENS SPEAK
      • INFO – TECH
      • INTERVIEW
      • NIGERIA DECIDES
      • OPINION
      • Personality Profile
      • Picture of the month
      • Science
      • Special Project
      • Videos
      • Weekend Sports
    NEWS POINT NIGERIANEWS POINT NIGERIA
    Home - A British War Journalist’s Account Of How January 15 Changed Nigeria – By Azu Ishiekwene

    A British War Journalist’s Account Of How January 15 Changed Nigeria – By Azu Ishiekwene

    By Azubuike IshiekweneJanuary 16, 2026
    Azu

    FREDERICK Forsyth’s account of the Nigerian Civil War, mainly from the Biafran lens, is perhaps one of the most riveting you would find. Yet, it is remarkably deficient in its one-sidedness, for which the author made no pretences or apologies.

    BORNO PATRIOTS

    As Nigeria marks the 60th anniversary of the beginning of events that changed the country forever this week, I reread, not Forsyth’s The Biafra Story, but John de St. Jorre’s The Brothers’ War: Biafra and Nigeria, a book that contains some of the most intimate accounts of January 15, 1966, highlighting the tragedy of elite failure.

    The Day Before
    People often talk about ‘The Day After,’ but ‘The Day Before’ sets the stage. It is quite remarkable how ‘The Day Before’ can appear so ordinary, sometimes with hardly any telltale signs, only for an eruption to follow. According to de St. Jorre, Friday, January 14, was a day like that. It was a day, he said, that began more hopefully than most, only to yield to a tragic dawn.

    Silk

    Nigeria, considered by many to be the star of independent black Africa, had just finished hosting the meeting of the Commonwealth in Lagos, the first outside London. Contrary to the British colonial rule principle of no independence before majority rule, Ian Smith had unilaterally declared independence in Rhodesia in November 1965, a country with 250,000 whites and over five million black Africans.

    Rhodesia was the hot topic at the Commonwealth conference in Lagos, hosted by Prime Minister Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, with British Prime Minister Harold Wilson and 24 other foreign leaders in attendance. I laughed the other day when former British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said he felt perfectly safe in Nigeria, concluding his flattery by saying, apart from oil, the country was also an “exporter” of future prime ministers to the UK.

    The House That Britain Built
    Barely a year after Johnson was born, Nigeria was, in fact, a shelter for a British prime minister. Wilson, assailed at home for his weakness in handling Rhodesia, was pleased by the respite to travel to Nigeria as Balewa’s guest. If only Wilson knew that the house built by Britain’s squalid duplicity was about to collapse.

    Nigeria was the toast of the world, especially after its role in reconciling rival pan-African blocs that had been at loggerheads, and also sending troops to Central Africa.

    Nigeria’s Western region was in deep political turmoil as a result of the disputed Federal elections and the crisis in the Western House. Despite reports of widespread violence, however, Prime Minister Balewa had stated on January 13 that the Federal Government would not intervene.

    ‘Operation Damisa’
    The worst was yet to come. As delegates to the Commonwealth conference departed (Archbishop Makarios of Cyprus stayed back in Enugu), the old Nigeria was to die that weekend. That was the weekend of ‘Operation Damisa’, the codename for the first military coup, and the first shot in what would later degenerate to Nigeria’s 30-month civil war.

    Nigerian TAX Reform - Federal Goverment

    “Nigeria awoke on Saturday (January 15) morning in total confusion,” de St. Jorre wrote. “In three major cities (Lagos, Ibadan and Kaduna), there had been the most violent and bloody coup d’etat Africa had ever seen; but only in the Northern capital had it been fully successful, leaving its leaders in control…the political leadership and government of the day had been swept away. The old order, for better or for worse, had gone.”

    Many accounts suggest that at least 22 persons, including Balewa, Sir Ahmadu Bello, Akintola, Okotie-Eboh, and several top military officers, were targeted and killed that morning.

    De St. Jorre’s book covers much more than what happened on January 15. The first chapter, however, is quite extraordinary in highlighting some key aspects of Nigeria on the eve of January 15.

    National Orientation Agency Page UP
    National Orientation Agency - Down

    Once Upon A Force
    The role of the police force, for example. It’s difficult to imagine that the police we’re now trying to save from the ruins of run-down barracks and menial duties for very important persons was the institution that soldiers ran to for refuge after turning on themselves and the country.

    “Within an hour and a half of the first shots,” de St. Jorre wrote, “the counter coup had begun. The post office exchange and external telecommunications office were successfully taken over, but the plotters failed to secure the police headquarters and the radio station.”

    Major-General Aguiyi Ironsi, who had been alerted by the wife of one of the murdered officers, ran to the police headquarters in his car to plot a counter-offensive. According to the book, Ironsi spent most of the morning of January 15 in the Lagos police headquarters trying to consolidate his position.

    Sixty years later, no one can say where a general confronted with a similar situation might turn for refuge and reinforcement. However, most would likely agree that it certainly would not be the police headquarters in Lagos or Abuja.

    Igbo Coup?
    As for the roles of Ironsi and Lt.-Col. Odumegwu Ojukwu, and whether it was an “Igbo coup,” de St. Jorre takes a nuanced position. His argument, quite plausible, is that the number of Igbo officers involved is best understood in context.

    “The fact is that about 50 percent of the middle officer ranks in the Nigerian army, the pre-independence ‘Sandhurst generation’ who were commissioned between 1954 and 1960, were Ibos, and it was from this group, some of whom had also been to university, that discontent with the old order and the older generation was likely to come,” he wrote.

    De St. Jorre agreed with several accounts from January 15 that Ojukwu, deeply distrusted by Nzeogwu, was essentially an outsider – the core plotters being Majors Emmanuel Ifeajuna and Don Okafor. Ojukwu’s decision to close the Kano airport and hold inbound aircraft and passengers suggested that he could have been acting for or against the coup – or just playing a self-interested game of watch and see.

    Of course, other issues tend to inflame the suspicion of the so-called “Igbo plot:” the failure of the coup in Enugu, where Ifeajuna was in charge and his unexpected escape into Kwame Nkrumah’s warm embrace in Ghana; Ironsi’s prevarication and the role of his top advisers like Francis Nwokedi, and the lack of restraint amongst the ordinary Igbo folks in the streets, especially in the North.

    ‘January Boys’
    If the ‘January boys’ thought that striking on January 15 was a patriotic duty to save Nigeria from the ten-percenters, the corrupt politicians and ethnic chauvinists, their action only unleashed the worst of the demons they set out to defeat.

    Yet, there was something that de St. Jorre captured in the deadly gunfire on January 15 which gives a rare insight into the courage of the human spirit even in the face of danger: how the Premier of the Western Region, Samuel Ladoke Akintola, refused to surrender without a fight, exchanging gunfire with them until he ran out of ammunition; how at least 30 members of the Federal parliament still managed to show up for an emergency meeting, at a time when Ironsi had told journalists that the situation in Lagos was “very bad indeed.” And how unarmed Nzeogwu addressed soldiers in Kaduna (nearly all Northerners) who didn’t know about the coup, even when the soldiers had loaded rifles.

    Collapse Of Trust
    While Forsyth’s The Biafra Story is exceptional for its moral charge, and Adewale Ademoyega’s Why We Struck provides the legal brief for January 15, de St. Jorre’s book frames the tragedy as a collapse of elite trust.

    As the days turned into weeks, and the weeks into decisive months, I wonder if the ‘January boys’ might have acted differently if, as de St. Jorre said, they knew that the country they were trying to save would be far worse than anything they might have imagined on the morning of January 15.

    • Ishiekwene is the Editor-In-Chief of LEADERSHIP and author of the book, Writing for Media and Monetising It.

    Azu Ishiekwene's Column Coup Janaury 15
    Share. Facebook Twitter WhatsApp LinkedIn Telegram Email

    Related Posts

    Can We Quench The Fire That Might Start In Mali? – By Azu Ishiekwene

    February 6, 2026

    The Abuja Snake Bite That Exposed A Dangerous Truth – By Boma West

    February 4, 2026

    Iran, Beware The Fangs Of January, The Scourge Of February, The Ides Of March (2) – By Dr Hassan Gimba

    February 2, 2026

    IPOB’s Sit-At-Home Order And The South East Economy – By Kazeem Akintunde

    February 2, 2026
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Latest Posts

    Fresh Embarrassment For Pakistan As Saudi Hajj Minister Snubs NAHCON After ₦20m Spending Spree, Office Shutdown

    February 6, 2026

    VICTIMS’S LIST: Court Orders UK To Pay £420m To 21 Nigerians Families Over 1949 Miners Massacre

    February 6, 2026

    ‘Very Respected Woman’, Trump Praises Remi Tinubu At US Prayer Breakfast

    February 6, 2026

    APC Sets Stage For Inclusive Convention Following Tinubu’s Meeting With Party Leaders

    February 6, 2026

    Why Senate Approved Electronic ‘Transmission’ Of Results, Not ‘Transfer’ – Senator Umeh

    February 6, 2026
    Advertisement
    News Point NG
    © 2026 NEWS POINT NIGERIA Developed by ENGRMKS & CO.
    • Home
    • About us
    • Disclaimer
    • Our Advert Rates
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Use

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    Join Us On WhatsApp