Close Menu
Ikenga Online
    What's Hot

    Tinubu celebrates ‘shining star’ Wike at 58

    December 13, 2025

    Kanu’s royal father, cabinet write Tinubu, seek presidential pardon

    December 12, 2025

    Abia’s maternal mortality rate drops from 1,114 to 136 per 100,000 births

    December 12, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Ikenga Online
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    Donate
    • Home
      • Igboezue
      • Hall of Fame
      • Hall of Shame
    • News
      1. Other States
      2. National
      3. International
      4. Interviews
      5. Personalities
      6. View All

      Bayelsa deputy governor dies after sudden collapse, PDP mourns

      December 11, 2025

      Gov Adeleke joins Accord Party, declares bid for second term

      December 9, 2025

      100 of remaining kidnapped Niger school children regain freedom

      December 8, 2025

      Bandits hit Kogi church, abduct pastor, wife, members

      November 30, 2025

      Kanu’s royal father, cabinet write Tinubu, seek presidential pardon

      December 12, 2025

      Ex-labour minister, Ngige docked, remanded in Kuje prison

      December 12, 2025

      Tinubu insists on immediate withdrawal of police orderlies from VIPs, directs strict enforcement

      December 10, 2025

      Senate approves Tinubu’s request to deploy troops to Benin Republic

      December 9, 2025

      Coups: ECOWAS declares state of emergency in West Africa

      December 9, 2025

      Senate approves Tinubu’s request to deploy troops to Benin Republic

      December 9, 2025

      Burkina Faso grounds Nigerian military aircraft over alleged airspace violation

      December 9, 2025

      Tinubu praises Nigerian troops for helping  to foil coup in Benin Republic

      December 8, 2025

      Slash jumbo salaries to pay minimum wage, Bishop tells Tinubu

      June 19, 2024

      Nigeria remains a country in crisis that needs to heal – Chido Onumah

      January 24, 2024

      The Ekweremadus: Obasanjo writes UK court, seeks pardon for them

      April 5, 2023

      I’m coming with loads of experience to re-set Abia – Greg Ibe

      February 1, 2023

      Anambra-born Ugochi Nwizu shines as UNN best graduating doctor with multiple distinctions

      September 29, 2023

      Bulwark for women, girls: Meet Ikengaonline September town-hall guest speaker, Prof Joy Ezeilo

      September 27, 2023

      Rufai Oseni, the most dangerous man on Nigerian TV by Okey Ndibe

      February 13, 2023

      Stanley Macebuh: Unforgettable pathfinder of modern Nigerian journalism by Uzor Maxim Uzoatu

      February 7, 2023

      Tinubu celebrates ‘shining star’ Wike at 58

      December 13, 2025

      Kanu’s royal father, cabinet write Tinubu, seek presidential pardon

      December 12, 2025

      Abia’s maternal mortality rate drops from 1,114 to 136 per 100,000 births

      December 12, 2025

      RULAAC condemns alleged police compromise in defilement case of 9-year-old in Imo

      December 12, 2025
    • Abia

      Kanu’s royal father, cabinet write Tinubu, seek presidential pardon

      December 12, 2025

      Abia’s maternal mortality rate drops from 1,114 to 136 per 100,000 births

      December 12, 2025

      MOUAU VC lauds varsity women for support, says unity remains his greatest legacy

      December 11, 2025

      We’ve restored Abia’s dignity – Gov Otti

      December 11, 2025

      Abia SSG, Prof Kalu, embarks on leave of absence — Otti

      December 10, 2025
    • Anambra

      Group vows to shame more sexual offenders in 2026

      December 9, 2025

      PWDs urge Soludo to strengthen disability commission, enforce rights law

      December 6, 2025

      LAP awards 36 Anambra students ₦1m annual full scholarship

      December 6, 2025

      FirstPower electricity announces planned outage in Anambra

      December 5, 2025

      GPSDC, WACOL train journalists on GBV reporting, seek stronger collaboration

      December 5, 2025
    • Ebonyi

      Ebonyi launches one health initiative to strengthen disease prevention

      December 11, 2025

      Ebonyi distributes relief materials to victims of varsity hostel collapse

      December 10, 2025

      Lawyer remanded for alleged cyberbullying of lawmaker

      December 9, 2025

      How Governor Nwifuru is transforming Ebonyi’s health sector

      December 9, 2025

      Ebonyi LG poll: Ezillo stakeholders adopt power shift to Ezzagu zone

      December 2, 2025
    • Delta
    • Enugu

      CAPPA bemoans deteriorating rights protection in Nigeria, calls for end to impunity

      December 11, 2025

      Group calls for unity in Enugu North senatorial zone

      December 10, 2025

      Enugu govt inaugurates task force on GBV

      December 9, 2025

      Retirement: Courier company trains 100 customs officers on export, solid minerals, agro-industrial businesses

      December 9, 2025

      Enugu assembly urges Mbah to constitute roads maintenance board

      December 8, 2025
    • Imo

      RULAAC condemns alleged police compromise in defilement case of 9-year-old in Imo

      December 12, 2025

      Pro-Biafra groups condemn Nnamdi Kanu’s sentence, vow to sustain agitation

      December 5, 2025

      Gunmen hijack Aba-bound bus, abduct 14 passengers in Imo

      December 3, 2025

      Catholic bishops condemn violence in Nigeria, call for govt action to restore peace

      November 26, 2025

      MASSOB blasts Ayodele over anti-Igbo comment

      November 26, 2025
    • Rivers

      Tinubu celebrates ‘shining star’ Wike at 58

      December 13, 2025

      Defection: PDP replies Fubara, says gov’s woes self inflicted 

      December 10, 2025

      BREAKING: Governor Fubara finally defects to APC

      December 9, 2025

      For the second time, Rivers speaker Amaewhule, 15 other lawmakers defect to APC

      December 5, 2025

      DSS quizzes social media user for allegedly advocating coup d’état

      October 29, 2025
    • Politics

      Bayelsa deputy governor dies after sudden collapse, PDP mourns

      December 11, 2025

      Defection: PDP replies Fubara, says gov’s woes self inflicted 

      December 10, 2025

      Gov Adeleke joins Accord Party, declares bid for second term

      December 9, 2025

      BREAKING: Governor Fubara finally defects to APC

      December 9, 2025

      Abia APC group endorses Tinubu for 2027, Ikoh for governorship

      December 8, 2025
    • Opinion & Editorial
      • Editorial
      • Columnists
        • Osmund Agbo
        • Chido Onumah
        • Uche Ugboajah
        • Hassan Gimba
        • Edwin Madunagu
        • Rudolf Okonkwo
        • Azu Ishiekwene
        • Osita Chidoka
        • Owei Lakemfa
        • Chidi Odinkalu
      • Opinion
    • Special Reports
    • Art & Entertainment
      • Nollywood
      • Music
      • Ikengaonline Literary Series (ILS)
      • Life
      • Travels
    • Sports
    Ikenga Online
    Home » Bring Bibi’s head by Azu Ishiekwene
    Azu Ishiekwene

    Bring Bibi’s head by Azu Ishiekwene

    EditorBy EditorOctober 12, 2023No Comments7 Mins Read
    Azu Ishiekwene

     By Azu Ishiekwene

    This is the moment the Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin “Bibi” Netanyahu always feared with great anxiety. Yet when Hamas launched a deadly attack on Southern Israeli border towns in the early hours of October 7, Bibi and Israel’s elite security forces were unprepared. 

    In a bizarre fabrication intended to complete Bibi’s humiliation a few days into the war, social media claimed, falsely, that an antisemitic crow had given the victory to the Palestinians in a mystic moment of avian fury.

    The truth is more nuanced and complicated. After over five decades of bloody conflicts, the Israeli-Palestinian war has not produced winners or losers. Only a cycle of senseless violence that appears totally avoidable to everyone except the combatants and those who occasionally use them for their proxy war.

    The current war, which Hamas claimed was to avenge Israeli attacks on the Al Aqsa Mosque, is one of the bloodiest in a long time, but will not produce a result different from all the rest.

    Bibi’s war? 

    In the popular imagination, no thanks to the Israeli left-wing press, Bibi is a warmonger. The popular view is that he will make war even when peace would cost him nothing, to gratify his anti-Palestinian obsession and deflect from his ruthless control of power and domestic woes. An omen of his just desserts was summed up by the video of a crow tearing up an Israeli flag from a pole on a building in the occupied territories. It didn’t matter that it was an old video which had gone viral nearly six months before the recent outbreak of hostilities. All is fair in war.

    Bibi can hardly escape some responsibility for the present state of affairs in the Middle East. After 35 years of being a part of the Israeli political establishment and 16 years as Prime Minister, it is fair to say that if he genuinely wanted a different outcome in Israeli-Palestine relations, there would be no need for the parable of the crow to achieve one. 

    Within the first four days, the current conflict claimed over 1,500 lives on both sides, with thousands more injured or displaced, and communities leveled in the most brutal ways. In figures that seem very conservative, the UN reports that about 6,400 Palestinians and 300 Israelis have been killed in the conflict since 2008. And that is discounting casualties in the ongoing clashes.

    Anatomy of anger 

    But every story has at least two sides. While the world struggles for a ceasefire to bring relief to millions of innocent victims trapped in this conflict and hopefully, drag the parties back to the forlorn two-state road map for peace, those who want Bibi’s head on a platter might also do well to hear his side of the story. 

    Perhaps he might never have been prime minister or he might have been a different one if his brother, Yonathan, had not been brutally killed in 1976 in Entebbe when Yonathan led Israeli special forces to rescue mostly Jewish passengers who were taken hostage and their plane hijacked to Uganda by Arab terrorists. Bibi was only 27-years-old then. 

    Perhaps he might not have been prime minister or he might have been a different one, if Egypt, Syria and Jordan did not join hands in a single-minded pledge to wipe out Israel in the Six Day War in 1967 or in Yom Kippur six years later. Israel has mended fences with Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and a number of other Arab countries since, but one or two old foes in the region have become implacable enemies, too.  

    Perhaps Bibi might never have been a prime minister or he might have been a different one altogether, if the Palestinian leadership from Yasser Arafat’s PLO to the current leaders of Hamas were not sworn to the destruction of Israel, at all costs. Sadly, the PLO has either become irrelevant or at best is playing second fiddle to Hamas, while the chaos in Lebanon has given Hezbollah free reign. 

    Is it about Gaza? 

    If the Israeli occupation of Gaza was its worst crime all these years, then Ariel Sharon’s withdrawal from there in 2005, in defiance of Bibi and other doubters at the time, might have changed the course of that region’s history. Maybe it might even have forestalled Bibi’s emergence as prime minister many years later. Unfortunately, what Bibi said then, that withdrawing to escape terror is inviting terror to chase you, appears to have been proved right. 

    Author and syndicated columnist, Jonathan Power, holds a clearly different view, of course. In an article entitled, “Government supporters in Israel are dangerously ignorant of their own history,” he suggests that the same painful memories that radicalised Bibi also radicalised a significant number of five million Palestinians over the years, admonishing those who always talk about the blood libel and the Holocaust not to also forget biblical “genocides” committed by Moses on the journey to the Promised Land or the kindness of Muslim Turks or medieval Spain.

    Who owns the land? This is where Bibi’s story gets even more interesting. In his book, Bibi: My story, he accuses an Arab Knesset member of twisting historical facts, in answering the question. 

    “The first thousand years or so,” he writes, “are covered in the Bible, and are attested to by archeological and the historical records of other contemporaneous peoples.”

    He traces the history of the Jews from Ur in the Chaldeans through Abraham’s burial in a cave he bought in Hebron, to Egypt and from there to the wilderness where the children of Israel received a moral code that would change the world on their journey to the Promised Land. He recalls the conquests by Joshua and how after Solomon built the Temple in Jerusalem, David and his siblings in the battle for control split the realm in two.

    “The northern kingdom, Israel, is destroyed, its ten tribes lost to history,” Bibi writes. “The southern kingdom, Judea, is conquered and Solomon’s temple destroyed by the Babylonians by whose rivers the exiled Judeans weep as they remembered Zion.”

    He then traces the history of the Jews from Roman rule and the destruction of Herod’s Temple in 70 CE to the times of the Byzantines when the Jews were finally reduced to an insignificant minority. “It is not the Jews who usurp the land from the Arabs,” Bibi writes, “but the Arabs who usurp the land from the Jews…the Jews are the original natives; the Arabs the colonialists.”

    Lion and the lamb 

    This is a story that is hardly told, understood or believed. And perhaps the course of history might also have been completely different if Britain, which maintained control over Palestine under the League of Nations mandate, had implemented the two-state solution instead of dumping the problem at the doorstep of the UN in 1948. 

    Anyone familiar with Britain’s legacy of elegantly concealed systematic violence against its colonies which watered the seed of apartheid in South Africa and created the Kashmiri and Cypriot problems, will not waste time blaming that country for the 75-year-old problem in the Middle East. To adapt Max Siollun, the whole object of British occupation was not only to protect the people from themselves, but also to set them against each other.

    Yet, the choices made by Palestinians and Israelis over the years have mostly worsened a bad legacy. Blighted as the region may be from its colonial legacy, it cannot be hostage to the hate or personal injuries of its present elite. After the depredations of COVID-19 and the serious supply chain problems caused by the Russia-Ukraine war, the world could use some respite.

    Bibi is right to feel that his worst fears about Gaza and the West Bank under the current Hamas leadership and a weakened PLO was confirmed by the recent unprovoked attack of innocent civilians at a peace concert in Israel. 

    But his current objective of “wiping out Hamas” even if it succeeds, which is improbable, is not a guarantee that a worse mutation of Hamas will not rise again in Gaza. A stubborn pursuit of his goal might produce in young, innocent Palestinians today the same sentiments that pushed him to the far right. 

    The lion and the lamb must find a common ground in their shared, chequered history.

    Ishiekwene is Editor-In-Chief of LEADERSHIP

    Editor
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Sam after five by Azu Ishiekwene 

    December 11, 2025

    Manufacturers of coups and bandits by Uzor Maxim Uzoatu  

    December 10, 2025

    IMILI and Nigeria’s global duty: Getting leadership right by Chido Onumah 

    December 10, 2025
    Editors Picks

    Tinubu celebrates ‘shining star’ Wike at 58

    December 13, 2025

    Kanu’s royal father, cabinet write Tinubu, seek presidential pardon

    December 12, 2025

    Abia’s maternal mortality rate drops from 1,114 to 136 per 100,000 births

    December 12, 2025

    RULAAC condemns alleged police compromise in defilement case of 9-year-old in Imo

    December 12, 2025
    Latest Posts
    Life

    Tinubu celebrates ‘shining star’ Wike at 58

    Abia

    Kanu’s royal father, cabinet write Tinubu, seek presidential pardon

    Abia

    Abia’s maternal mortality rate drops from 1,114 to 136 per 100,000 births

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest news from Ikenga Online.

    Advertisement
    Demo

    IkengaOnline is a publication of the Ikenga Media & Cultural Awareness Initiative (IMCAI), a non-profit organisation with offices in Houston Texas and Abuja.

    We're social. Connect with us:

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn WhatsApp RSS
    • Home
      • Igboezue
      • Hall of Fame
      • Hall of Shame
    • News
      • Other States
      • National
      • International
      • Interviews
      • Personalities
    • Abia
    • Anambra
    • Ebonyi
    • Delta
    • Enugu
    • Imo
    • Rivers
    • Politics
    • Opinion & Editorial
      • Editorial
      • Columnists
        • Osmund Agbo
        • Chido Onumah
        • Uche Ugboajah
        • Hassan Gimba
        • Edwin Madunagu
        • Rudolf Okonkwo
        • Azu Ishiekwene
        • Osita Chidoka
        • Owei Lakemfa
        • Chidi Odinkalu
      • Opinion
    • Special Reports
    • Art & Entertainment
      • Nollywood
      • Music
      • Ikengaonline Literary Series (ILS)
      • Life
      • Travels
    • Sports

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest news from Ikenga Online.

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram LinkedIn WhatsApp RSS
    © 2025 Ikenga Online. Ikenga.

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