OPINION: Kalu, You Spoke Too Late. Where Was This Energy When Ariaria Fell?
By Tobi Akinnubi
October 5, 2025
Senator Orji Uzor Kalu has finally found his voice lamenting that Igbo traders are being targeted in the ongoing demolition exercise at the Lagos Trade Fair Complex. But many canโt help asking: where was this outrage when bulldozers rolled into Ariaria International Market in Aba, displacing more than 50,000 Igbo traders, his own people, in his own state just a few months ago?
Silence then.
Sympathy now.
Convenience, not conviction.
SELECTIVE OUTRAGE IS NOT LEADERSHIP
Letโs be clear: if the demolitions in Lagos are unjust, they must be condemned. Nobody should lose their lifeโs work under the weight of a government bulldozer. But for a man who looked away while the economic soul of Aba was being crushed, Kaluโs sudden concern rings hollow.
Leadership is not about choosing outrage when itโs politically safe, itโs about speaking truth even when itโs uncomfortable. You cannot ignore the cries of traders in Abia and suddenly find your conscience in Lagos.
THE IGBO QUESTION AND THE HYPOCRISY OF POWER
Kaluโs statement tries to cloak itself in ethnic defense portraying the demolitions as an anti-Igbo agenda. But this is the same Kalu who said nothing when Igbo livelihoods were erased under his own nose.
Whatโs worse? The Ariaria victims werenโt outsiders. They were sons and daughters of Abia, his home, his base, his people. Yet their cries met silence.
Itโs not tribal defense if your compassion depends on location. Itโs political posturing.
WHEN THE PEOPLE NEEDED A VOICE
Ariaria Market isnโt just a commercial hub, itโs a heritage of Igbo creativity and resilience. For decades, itโs been the factory floor of West Africa, the heart of Abaโs economic power.
When the Abia government began tearing it down, Kalu said nothing. No statement. No solidarity. No defense of those same Igbo he now claims to represent.
Now, as the Lagos Trade Fair faces demolition, his sudden โIgbo defenseโ is too convenient to be convincing.
LEADERSHIP WITHOUT CONSISTENCY IS EMPTINESS
Real leaders donโt speak only when it serves their narrative. They defend justice wherever itโs under threat, in Aba or in Lagos, in the North or in the South.
Kaluโs selective empathy exposes a deeper sickness in Nigerian politics: leaders who see through tribal lenses, not moral ones.
You canโt claim to be a defender of Igbo interest when you kept quiet while Ariaria which is the symbol of Igbo enterprise was razed to the ground.
FINAL WORD
Kaluโs words about Trade Fair may sound noble, but they come too late and lack the moral backbone of a leader who truly stands for his people.
If he had spoken with the same energy during the Ariaria demolitions, his outrage today might have carried weight.
But when you choose silence in your backyard and noise in another manโs compound, the people can tell the difference.
History will, too.
