By
Nowa Omoigui
Every war tends to be associated with its own
peculiar and unique vocabulary. For example, today in the English language we
use the term “Hooker” to describe prostitutes, not knowing that it was derived
from the name of American Major General Benjamin Hooker who liked the company of
women of easy virtue during the American civil war. Likewise ‘side-burns’ is
used to describe hair along the side of the face in men. The term actually
comes from Major General Burnside, a civil war era American General who had a
huge extension of hair down the side of his face.
The Nigerian civil war and the crises that
preceded it, beginning on January 15, 1966 until January 15, 1970, was no
different. I have summarized below a sample of such nicknames, slogans, and
local names and operational code-names.
This is an academic exercise. No offense is
intended.
Nickname, Slogan, Local Name or Operational
Name |
Definition/Meaning |
A
|
|
Agbekoya
|
Yoruba term for “old peasant farmer.” The tax
revolt of the “old farmers” proved to be a serious internal security issue
during the war. |
“Ahiara” Declaration |
Modeled after Tanzania’s Arusha declaration,
Ojukwu issued this ‘Biafran revolutionary’ declaration on June 1st,
1969 ostensibly to address nepotism and corruption within the Biafran
military and society.
|
“Air Raid”
|
Nickname for Biafran Colonel Joe Achuzia,
acquired during attempt to retake Okigwe in late 1968. |
Ajuku soja
|
Nickname for Biafran troops among illiterate
and semi-illiterate Nigerian soldiers. It stands for “Ojukwu’s soldier.”
The term “soja” has entered mainstream use in Nigeria. |
Alalaba tactics |
Alalaba means “sneaking” in Hausa. Designed
by then Major MJ Vatsa, it was an infantry method of tactically gaining
ground on a Biafran armored vehicle before destroying it at close
quarters.
|
Annabelle
|
Operational code-name for Biafra’s Uli-Ihiala
airstrip |
Apollo Battalion |
This was the nickname given to a 3rd
Marine Commando self contained independent Divisional reserve battalion
created by Colonel Obasanjo after the landing of Apollo 11 on the moon in
July 1969. It was used in a “fire brigade” role as a “special forces”
raiding unit. It was, therefore, similar to Ojukwu’s “Umuahia Brigade”
and may well have been inspired by it. |
Araba
|
Araba in Hausa means to separate. The
term first appeared on placards carried by rioters in Bauchi in May 1966
after promulgation of the ill-advised Unification decree #34. That is why
the May riots, which quickly spread to other towns in the north, are
sometimes called the araba riots. |
Atomati
|
Nickname for “automatic weapon” among
illiterate Nigerian soldiers.
|
B |
|
“Baba”
|
Used fondly, this was the nickname for Lt.
Col. David Ogunewe, the last Commander of the 1st battalion in
Enugu before outbreak of the war. He played a critical role in containing
tension between northern and eastern soldiers during the July 29 northern
counter-coup. |
“Basha”
|
Federal Nigerian nickname for temporary
makeshift billets (tents) constructed for troops using zinc sheets or
tarpaulin. The term survived the war and is still in use. |
“Biafra Gin”
|
Home made Biafran Incendiary weapon produced
by the Chemicals and Materials Workshop subsequently subsumed under the
Research and Production (RAP) Organization. Used against federal personnel,
defensive positions and armored vehicles. |
‘Black Eagle’
|
Nickname for Colonel Hubert Julian (Biafran
mercenary) |
‘Black Jack’
|
Nickname for Col. Jean Schramone (Biafran
mercenary) |
‘Black Scorpion’
|
Nickname conferred by foreign correspondents
on Colonel Benjamin Adekunle, Commander of the Federal 3rd Marine
Commando Division |
“BOFF”
|
Acronym for Biafran Organization of Freedom
Fighters. Colonel Aghanya led it.
|
‘Boozy Bonzo Bond’
|
Nickname for a South African mercenary who
flew jets for the Federal Nigerian AirForce, drank whiskey while flying and
liked to fly his aircraft back riddled with bullet holes – as evidence. |
“Bottoms”
|
Residue of Biafran fuel refining process which
was then used as fuel oil |
The “Brave”
|
Nickname for Armand Iaranelli, a Corsican
mercenary fighting for Biafra |
|
|
Corporal Nwafor
|
Named after the Biafran soldier that captured
it, the nickname ‘Corporal Nwafor’ was bequeathed to a federal Nigerian Army
Saladin armored vehicle captured from the federal 2DIV during one of
several Biafran attempts to retake Onitsha.
‘Corporal Nwafor’ was recaptured by federal
troops of the 3MCDO during the unsuccessful Biafran attempt to retake Ohoba
in July 1969. |
D
|
|
Exercise Damisa |
Damisa is the Hausa word for “Leopard”.
Code-name for the Kaduna component of the January 15, 1966 mutiny |
Delfin
|
Czech L-29 armed fighter jet/trainer used by
Federal Nigerian Air Force |
“Doctor Wise”
|
Nickname of a Biafran spiritualist who wielded
great (and controversial) influence over military operations, particularly
in the latter stages of the war. He was a kind of Rasputin for many
elements of the Biafran political and military leadership.
The use of juju men and spiritualists was
common to both sides during the war and remains a common practice in modern
Nigeria. |
E
|
|
F
|
|
“Final Offensive”
|
Nigeria launched many unsuccessful “final
offensives” during the war until the real final offensive of December
1969/January 1970. The term became an object of scorn on Biafra radio. |
“FOB”
|
Acronym for ‘Forward Operating Base’. This
was a term used by the Federal Nigerian Air Force for bases located in
Makurdi, Benin, Calabar and Lagos. |
‘Foot cutter’
|
A type of home made Biafran mine |
|
|
Operation “Giwa” |
Giwa is the Hausa word for elephant. This
so-called operation was alleged as the final act in the complete Igbo
take-over of the country in 1966 after execution of Operations Damisa,
Kura, and Zaki. The existence of such an operation has
never been independently confirmed. Nevertheless such propaganda was
widely disseminated in certain northern circles and may well have been
believed. |
“Genocide”
|
Call-sign/code-name for a South African
mercenary who flew for Biafra
Also the nickname for a home made Biafran
armored vehicle used during the battles for Ikem and Obollo Eke in 1967.
Federal forces destroyed it. |
“Genocide Squadron”
|
Biafran nickname for Federal Nigerian Air
Force IL-28 Bombers, converted DC-3s and DC-4s at the Benin City Forward Air
Base in the Midwest. |
“Go on with One Nigeria”
|
Federal Nigerian wartime slogan created from
the alphabets in GOWON. |
‘Good morning’ artillery barrage
|
Biafran nickname for highly predictable
Federal Nigerian Army harassing artillery fire aimed at nobody in
particular, usually the trees and bushes, but occurring at exactly the same
times every morning. Used as an “alarm clock” by Biafran units.
|
‘Gowon’s Boots’
|
Biafran nickname for swelling of both feet
caused by Kwashiorkor – resulting from wartime protein malnutrition. |
‘Guitar Boy’
|
Nigerian nickname for the Soviet AK-47
automatic rifle. Likely related to the curved shape of its ammunition
magazine and unique sound it makes when switched from full automatic mode to
semi-automatic grouped shots of three rounds each. |
Gwodo-Gwodo |
Biafran nickname for very huge “Nigerian”
soldiers suspected (but never confirmed) to be of Chadian origin |
H
|
|
‘Hannibal’
|
Nickname for Biafran Colonel Joe Achuzia,
acquired after the Federal Nigerian Army Abagana disaster. Inspired by
Carthaginian General Hannibal who defeated Roman troops at Cannae. |
Lord “Haw-Haw”
|
Federal nickname for Okokon Ndem, a minority
easterner who nevertheless, worked as a highly effective Biafran radio
propagandist. Biafran radio also used the same nickname for Mr. Ukpabi
Asika, a pro-federal Igbo intellectual who was appointed on October 27, 1967
by General Gowon as Administrator of the East-Central State.
The term dates back to the Second World War.
‘Lord Haw-Haw’ was the name British radio fans called William Joyce, an
American born British man with an English mother and Irish-American
father. He had nazi sympathies and worked for Goebbels as a German weekly
radio broadcaster. The British hanged him for treason in 1946. |
|
|
‘Intruder’
|
Biafran nickname for a specific Federal
Nigerian Airforce Ilyushin IL-28 Russian bomber based at the Benin City
Forward Air Base in the Midwest. By flying at altitudes above 10,000 feet,
usually at night, it avoided Biafran ack-ack and home made ground to air
rockets. It was part of the so-called “Genocide Squadron.”
The Intruder was destroyed on the
ground in May 1969 during Count Von Rosen’s Operation Biafra Baby |
“Ironside”
|
British nickname for Major General JTU
Aguiyi-Ironsi, first GOC Nigerian Army and first military Head of State of
Nigeria. Killed during the northern counter-coup of July 1966. |
J
|
|
“Jack”
|
British nickname for General Yakubu Gowon.
Derived from YAKUBU. |
“Jet” 22
|
Federal nickname for the 22 Battalion under
Major Abdullai Shelleng in the Nsukka sector of the 1st Infantry
Division. The name was acquired on the basis of a sitrep Shelleng
sent back to 1DIV HQ stating that he had advanced with “jet speed” after
successfully catching up with his fellow 21 and 5 battalions during the
drive towards Opi junction. Both sister battalions had originally left him
behind in Nsukka while he was awaiting weapons, ammo and support units.
|
“Jet 77” |
Biafran propaganda company attached to the “S”
Division when it was under command of Lt. Col. Onwatuegwu. |
|
|
“Kaduna”
|
One of the middle names of Major Patrick
Chukwuma “Kaduna” Nzeogwu, leader of northern operations during the January
15, 1966 mutiny.
|
‘Kamikaze Brown’
|
Nickname for a Czech mercenary pilot called
Brown who piloted Biafra’s B-26 bomber until it was destroyed on the ground
at Enugu airport. |
Operation “Kura”
|
Kura is the Hausa word for Hyena. This was
the alleged Igbo operation to eliminate northern traditional rulers at
Ibadan on July 28, 1966, as a follow-up to “Damisa.” The existence of
such an operation has never been independently confirmed. Nevertheless
such propaganda was widely disseminated in certain northern circles and may
well have been believed. |
L
|
|
“Land Army”
|
A subgroup of the Biafran
“Science Group” dedicated to production of food under economic blockade. |
M
|
|
“Mad Mike”
|
Nickname for Col. Mike
Hoare (Biafran mercenary) |
“Marshals”
|
Extra large, home made,
Biafran multiple mine throwers |
“Monty of the Midwest”
|
Drawing inspiration from
Britain’s Field Marshall Montgomery of Alamein, this was a nickname for
Federal Nigerian Lt. Col. Murtala Mohammed, Commander of the 2nd
Infantry Division on account of his successful campaign to contain and evict
Biafran forces from that region in 1967. |
|
|
“Na Cinema”
|
Nickname for Colonel
Benjamin Adekunle, mainly used among his people, the Yoruba. |
“Ndidi”
|
Biafran nickname meaning
“patience.” It was given to a captured Federal Nigerian Army Armored
Personnel Carrier at Uzuakoli. |
“No Victors; No Vanquished”
|
Federal Nigerian Wartime
slogan, particularly after the war |
|
|
Ogbunigwe
|
Very deadly home made
Biafran multipurpose bomb produced by the Weapons and Equipment Workshop
subsequently subsumed under the Research and Production (RAP) Organization.
Ogbunigwe was based on the physics of the “Monroe” effect. It
killed and maimed by wave effect percussion and dispersal of shrapnel. It
was shaped either as a cone or cylinder and could be used as a land mine, a
ground to ground projectile against troop concentrations or ground to air
anti-personnel “air burst” cluster bomb.
|
“Oguta Boy” |
Biafran nickname for a
Nigerian Panhard armored vehicle captured at Oguta in September 1968. The
vehicle was later destroyed using “Alalaba” by elements of the Federal Army
21 Battalion under Major Vatsa during the battle for Uzuakoli in April 1969 |
Operation ‘Aure’
|
Aure is the Hausa word
for “marriage”. When planning for the northern counter-coup of July 1966,
conspirators in southern Nigeria made coded reference to it by talking about
“Paiko’s wedding”, Paiko being the nickname for (and hometown in Niger
Province of) Lt. Garba Dada, a northern subaltern at the 4th
battalion who was to be the spearhead. |
Operation
Biafra Baby (Babies) |
Biafran mercenary Count
Von Rosen’s Minicon air raids against Federal Nigerian AirForce aircraft at
Port Harcourt, Enugu and Benin airports on May 24 and 25, 1969. Later on,
raids were carried out against oil and shipping facilities at Port Harcourt,
Sapele, Warri and Forcados. |
Operation Do or Die |
Biafran offensive in late
October 1969 to reopen the route to the Otuocha food producing area between
Onitsha and Abagana. This was a direct response to the Federal Operation
‘Finishing Touch’ |
Operation ‘Finishing
Touch’ |
Federal Nigerian Army HQ
offensive launched in October 1969 to break the stalemate of ‘trench
warfare’ that characterized the preceding months.
|
Operation Hiroshima |
Unsuccessful Biafran
offensive to retake Onitsha in November 1968 |
Operation ‘Kinshasha
Special’ |
Alleged coup attempt
uncovered on September 21, 1967 against Biafran leader Emeka Ojukwu by
Colonel [Brigadier] Banjo, [Major] Alale, Major [Lt. Col.] Ifeajuna and
[Major] Sam Agbamuche. All four men were executed within four days after a
court-martial. Ojukwu claimed in his
diary that Ifeajuna was seen coming out the premises of the British High
Commissioner and that Banjo had thousands of pounds given to him by the
British, and that British-paid saboteurs were indoctrinating Biafran troops
in the trenches. He later accused Banjo of deliberately withdrawing from
Benin in the wake of Lt. Col. Mohammed’s 2DIV offensive.
|
Operation Leopard |
Federal Nigerian Army 1st
Infantry Division military offensive to take Umuahia in March and April
1969. Umuahia was then the capital of Biafra.
|
Operation Mabel |
French Secret Service
airlift operation directed by Jacques Foccart to supply Biafra with weapons
(It began in September 1968, after an earlier public declaration on August
1st that France was in support of Biafran “self determination”) |
Operation OAU |
Federal Nigerian Army
Offensive of September 1968 launched by 3MCDO Commander, Colonel Benjamin
Adekunle. Originally announced by Adekunle on July 30 at an international
press conference. It was aimed at the near simultaneous capture of Owerri,
Aba and Umuahia by Independence day October 1st 1968. Intended
as a “present” for Nigeria’s Head of State, it ended in disaster.
|
Operation Tailwind |
Final Federal
Nigerian Offensive of the war, launched in December 1969 by 3 Marine
Commando Division under Colonel Olusegun Obasanjo. |
Operation Tallman |
“Final” Federal Nigerian
AHQ Offensive of August 1968 |
Operation Tiger-Claw |
Federal Nigerian 3MCDO
Offensive led by Colonel Adekunle to take Calabar in October 1967. |
Operation Torch |
Biafran invasion of the Midwest, August 9, 1967. Colonel Victor Banjo led the 101 Division. The same code-name
appears to have been used for the unsuccessful Biafran offensive in
September 1967 to retake Nsukka. |
Operation Unicord |
Code name for federal
strategic effort to keep Nigeria united. The term was originally used in an
operational order by 1 Area Command dated July 2, 1967. |
Ore |
Better known as a rest
and recreation stop for road travelers, this small junction town inside then
Western State (now Ondo State) was the site of a decisive battle on August
23, 1967. There are historians who consider that battle (“The Battle of
Ore”) the turning point in the Nigerian Civil War. |
|
|
“Paddy”
|
Nickname for an Irish
mercenary fighting for Biafra |
“Paiko”
|
Paiko is a name of a town
in Niger State. However, it was often used to refer to Lt. Garba Dada,
adjutant of the 4th battalion Ibadan in July 1966. He was one of
the storm troopers during the northern counter-coup. |
“Papa” |
Nickname for then
Commodore J. E. Akinwale Wey, Federal Nigerian Chief of Naval Staff during
the war. |
“Police action” |
Initial public
description of “Operation Unicord”, the 1 Area Command federal offensive
launched at 5am on July 6, 1967 by Colonel Mohammed Shuwa, then ‘Northern
Front’ Commander, Major Martin Adamu, then ‘Ogoja Sector’ Commander, and Lt.
Col. Sule Apollo, ‘Nsukka Sector’ Commander. OP UNICORD was supported by
‘southern front’ operations led by Lt. Col. Benjamin Adekunle. Major
General Gowon first publicly used the term “Police action” in a Press
Conference on July 13, 1967, in which he said inter-alia, “I must
emphasize that this is not a civil war. It is not an attempt to crush the
Ibos. It is a police action restricted to the purpose of bringing
down the Ojukwu regime…” The phrase was, however, discarded when, on
August 11, 1967, in reaction to the Biafran invasion of the Midwest, Gowon
declared “total war.” |
|
|
“Quisling”
|
Another Biafran radio
nickname for Ukpabi Asika. [Derived from the name of the Norwegian Minister
who served the Nazis during the Second World War].
|
R
|
|
RAP
|
Acronym for Biafran
“Research and Production” Organization. This organization brought together
and coordinated the efforts of different science groups focusing on Airports
and roads, chemicals and materials, Heavy equipment and industrial
materials, weapons production, biological processes, fuel refining,
rocketry, explosives, electronics and essential foods. |
Rebels
|
Name frequently used by
federalists to describe Biafran troops and the Biafran leadership. |
“Red Devil”
|
Biafran home made Armored
vehicle adapted from tractors and other earth moving equipment or captured
or old vehicles. Produced by the Heavy Equipment and Industrial Materials
Group.
|
“ROB”
|
Biafran pneumonic for
“Republic of Benin”, the republic declared in the Midwest State on September
20, 1967 by Major Albert Okonkwo, acting on behalf of Ojukwu. It was a last
ditch effort to win support from the minority ethnic groups in that State by
purporting to change its “status” as Biafran “Occupied Territory” to one of
an independent nation. Less than 24 hours later the “ROB” collapsed when
federal troops took Benin City, its capital. The 101 Division, which
originally invaded the State under Colonel Banjo on August 9, 1967, was
later renamed the “ROB” Division. Under Colonel Achuzia, it carried out
numerous raids into the Midwest in 1968 and 1969 from across the River
Niger. |
|
|
“Sabo” |
Nickname for “saboteur”,
a common Biafran tendency, encouraged by the Ojukwu regime, to refer to any
Biafran commander who lost a battle to federal forces irrespective of the
odds. Virtually all senior Biafran commanders (except General Odumegwu
Ojukwu) were branded saboteurs at one point or another. The custom began
after the disastrous withdrawal of the Biafran 101 Division from its
ill-fated Midwest campaign of 1967. |
“S” Brigade
|
“S” stood for “Special”.
It was a Brigade originally conceived as a personal protection force for
Biafran leader Ojukwu, with direct reporting relationship to him, outside
Biafran Army control. This created a lot of
envy and operational problems. |
“S” Division
|
When the Biafran “S”
Brigade was expanded to Division size it became known as the “S” Division. |
“Shettima”
|
Nigerian nickname for the
Spanish CETME automatic rifle – a variant of the Gewehr 3
(G3) German rifle. [Shettima
is a real northern name, particularly in the northeast among the Kanuri.
It appears its phonologic similarity to CETME led to its adoption as the
local name of that rifle]. |
‘Shore Battery’
|
Biafran home-made weapon
system. It was a combination of many different weapons including
Ogbunigwe, conventional bombs, rockets etc. set up together for mass
effect, electronically connected in series along coastlines and detonated in
predetermined sequences. The idea was to make casualty evacuation, retreat
and tactical dispersal extremely hazardous from secondary detonations. |
“Show Boy”
|
Nickname shared by
Federal Lt. Cols. Abdul D.S. Wya and Sotomi. It is not entirely clear why
they were called “Show Boys” |
|
|
“Taffie” or “Taffy”
|
Nickname for a South African mercenary (Major
Williams) fighting for Biafra along with Steiner. Some say he was of Welsh
origin.
|
“Tel”
|
An important chemical used in petroleum
blending by the Biafran Refinery and Fuel Group
|
“Thunder
Division”
|
Name given (by Ojukwu) to detachment of the
“S” Division that took part in the siege of Owerri
|
‘Tiger’ Battalion
|
Interestingly, both Nigerian and Biafran units
used this nickname. The Nigerian 82 Battalion under Major Ibrahim Bako at
Uzuakoli was nicknamed the “Tigers.”
Similarly there was a “Tiger” Battalion in the
66 Brigade under Major Osuagwu during Biafra’s Operation Do or Die.
|
“To keep
Nigeria one is a task that must be done”
|
Federal Nigerian wartime slogan
|
“Tortoise Division”
|
Federal Nigerian Army HQ
nickname for its 2nd Infantry Division – which made very little
progress after March 1968.
|
“Twiggy”
|
Nickname for Jack Mulloch |
|
|
Umuahia Brigade
|
Nickname for Colonel
Ojukwu’s special reserve force based at Umuahia under Major Njoku. |
Uzuakoli Boy
|
Biafran nickname for a
recommissioned Federal Army Ferret armored vehicle captured at Uzuakoli |
|
|
Vandals
|
Name frequently used on
Biafra radio to describe federal forces. |
W
|
|
X
|
|
Y
|
|
“Yellow Bar”
|
Nickname for a Federal
Nigerian Air Force mercenary Pilot |
“You are keeping Unity
between us” |
Federal Nigerian wartime
slogan derived from YAKUBU, Major General Gowon’s first name. |
Z
|
|
Operation “Zaki” |
Zaki is the Hausa word
for Lion. This was the alleged Igbo inspired ethnic cleansing operation
against the North to follow-up ‘Operation Kura’ in 1966. The existence of
such an operation has never been independently confirmed. Nevertheless
such propaganda was widely disseminated in certain northern circles and may
well have been believed.
|