Biafra war hero, third in command Gen Nwawo dies at 92 Featured
Tuesday 1 March 2016
Conrad Dibia Nwawo, the most senior officer in
the entire People’s Army of Biafra, died on Sunday morning at his
hometown, Onicha-Olona, Aniocha Local Government Area of Delta State.
A colonel in the Nigerian Army, but a
Brigadier-General of the People’s Army of Biafra, Nwawo was
functionally the third in command in the Biafran Military High
Command, although he was senior to both Ojukwu and General Philip
Effiong, Ojukwu’s deputy. Nwawo was Commissioned in 1954, Effiong in
1956, and Ojukwu in 1957.
According to close family sources, Nwawo died
in his sleep in the early hours of yesterday February 28. Nwawo, born in
1924, died at his home in Onicha-Olona, Aniocha North L.G.A. of Delta
State, at the ripe age of 92, after a brief illness associated with old
age.
Colonel Nwawo, whose number was the Number 10 in
the Nigerian Army, was, therefore, the tenth officer to be
commissioned of the Nigerian Army having joined the Army on the 1st
December, 1950 and commissioned on the 28th of May, 1954 as a 2nd
Lieutenant in the then Queen’s Own Regiment, as the colonial Nigerian
Army was then called.
Officers who served in the defunct Biafran Army
told The AUTHORITY that the war exploits of the late war commander,
were sources of inspiration to most Biafran officers and soldiers.
Nwawo was said to have been trusted for his loyalty and competence by
Ojukwu who was said to have handed him many sensitive and herculean
commands in the Biafran Army.
These, our correspondent learnt, included
Administrative Officer, Biafran Army Head Quarters, Commander of the
11th and 13thDivisions of the Biafran Army both of which he commanded at
different times, and lastly the Guerilla Commando Unit.
He will, however, be better remembered for his
many war exploits both in Biafra (1967-1970) and earlier on in the
Congo campaigns, alongside General Ironsi in 1961.
Notably also were his gallant military campaigns
in the Onitsha, Abagana and Umuahia sectors. At a particular incident
in Umuahia, he was said to have held the Federal troops with a handful
of his men who were already cut off and isolated from their Biafran
compatriots, for two long days and nights, eventually clearing the lines
in favour of the Biafran Army.
In the Congo, then a Major, he had fought
alongside a compatriot, the late Colonel Adekunle Fajuyi. The two young
officers had been so outstanding that they earned the prestigious
award of the Military Cross given to them personally by the Queen of
England. Nwawo and Fajuyi were to be the first and only recipients of
the Queen’s award in the Nigerian Army. With his death the only
surviving awardee of the Military Cross is thus no more.
Nwawo started his career in 1946 after he
graduated from the School of Agriculture in Ibadan in that same year. He
worked as a civil servant first in the Moore Plantation in Ibadan,
Nigeria and then the Cameroons until 1950 when he joined the Nigerian
Army as a foot soldier. He received officer training at the
prestigious Mons Officer Cadet School in Aldershot, the United Kingdom.
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