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Biafra

Biafra
Flag of Biafra
Enlarge
Flag of Biafra
Currency of Biafra (£1 denomination)
Enlarge
Currency of Biafra (£1 denomination)
National motto: None
Languages Igbo, English
Capital Enugu
Head of State (Jan 10-15, 1970) Philip Effiong
Area
 - Total
 - % water

 
Population
 - Total

13,500,000 (1967)
Independence
 - Declared
 - Complete Nigerian control restored
From Nigeria
 - 30 May 1967
 
 - 15 January 1970
Currency Biafran Pound (BIAP)
Time zone UTC +1
National anthem "Land of the Rising Sun" (to tune of Finlandia)
Internet TLD (no international TLDs existed in its time)
Calling Code none

The Republic of Biafra was a short-lived secessionist state in southeastern Nigeria. It existed from May 30, 1967 to January 15, 1970, with the military's Chief of Staff formally announcing capitulation on January 12. The country was named after the Bight of Biafra, the bay of the Atlantic to its south.

It was recognised by a small number of countries during its existence, including South Africa; however that country's support of apartheid discouraged wider recognition by other African nations that might otherwise have been sympathetic to the Biafran cause.

In January 1966, Ibo officers in the Nigerian army attempted a coup, which was bloody and short-lived. In the months of May and September of 1966, Ibo migrants living in northern Nigeria were the targets of mass killings. Most of Nigeria's 8 million Ibo (or Igbo) people live in what was then the Eastern Region of Nigeria, which had as military governor the Ibo Lieutenant Colonel Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu. He declared the region an independent state with a capital at Enugu, and his troops began seizing Federal resources such as inbound postal vehicles.

Nigeria responded initially with an economic blockade, and brought military force to bear starting on July 6, 1967. In the ensuing Biafran War, raids were made by Biafran troops west into Nigeria in July and August. Nigerian troops soon recovered however, advancing into Biafra, and forcing the repeated transfer of the Biafran capital from Enugu to Aba and then Umuahia by the end of the year, and to Owerri in 1969.

By 1970, Biafra had been ravaged by war and was in great need of food supplies. Amid economic and military collapse, Ojukwu fled the country and the rest of the republic's territory was re-incorporated into Nigeria. Around a million people are thought to have died in the conflict, mostly through starvation and illness.

Biafra's national anthem used the Finlandia tune by Jean Sibelius.

This conflict inspired musician Jello Biafra in his choice of name.

Nigeria later renamed the Bight of Biafra as the Bight of Bonny.

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