Former President Olusegun Obasanjo has said it was not the intention of the Federal Government to wipe out Igbo during the civil war.
Obasanjo said this at an event tagged, ‘Memory and Nation Building: Biafra 50 years later’, which held in Abuja on Thursday.
The event was held to commemorate 50 years of the declaration of an independent state of Biafra by the late Dim Chukwuemeka Ojukwu on May 30, 1967.
Obasanjo as the Commander, Third Marine Commando Division, was the military officer who accepted the surrender of Biafran forces on January 12, 1970, after three years of war.
Recalling his role in the civil war, Obasanjo said it was never the plan of the Nigerian government to exterminate the Igbo.
He said everything that the federal troops did was in a bid to unite the country.
Obasanjo added, “We had in our pocket the Geneva convention to guide us. In addition to that, we had a special code of conduct. Third, we had foreign observers. We had people who were like umpires.
“If it was a war to exterminate and we had no reconciliation in mind, what would foreign observers be doing? The foreign observers reported periodically and even had powers to investigate any allegation and they did.
“As one of the commanders in the field, I have said it before and I say it again. Civil war is more difficult than fighting in a foreign land. In a foreign land, you fight to exterminate and destroy but in a civil war, you fight to unite and when you’re fighting to unite, how much do you have to do to prevent destruction and alienation.”