Onitsha Explained

Official Name:Onitsha
Native Name:Ọ̀nị̀chà Mmílí
Other Name:Port City
Settlement Type:Metropolis
Nickname:Port City, Onitsha(Osha), Otu, Otu Nkwo
Pushpin Map:Nigeria#Africa
Pushpin Label Position:bottom
Pushpin Map Caption:Location of Onitsha in Nigeria
Coordinates:6.1667°N 53°W
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name: Nigeria
Subdivision Type1:State
Subdivision Type2:LGA(s)
Subdivision Name1:Anambra State
Established Title:Founded
Established Date:1550
Established Title2:Settled
Established Date2:15th century
Established Title3:Incorporated city
Established Date3:19th century
Government Type:Constitutional Monarchy, Executive Government, Local Government
Leader Title:Governor
Leader Name:Charles Chukwuma Soludo
Leader Title1:Legislature
Leader Name1:Anambra State House of Assembly
Area Footnotes:[1]
Area Total Km2:830
Area Land Km2:614.12
Area Water Km2:0.067
Area Urban Km2:1,965
Area Metro Km2:1,965
Area Blank1 Title:Onitsha
Population Total:1,695,000[2]
Population As Of:2022
Population Density Km2:auto
Population Urban:7,985,643
Population Density Urban Km2:auto
Population Density Urban Sq Mi:auto
Population Metro:8,320,664[3]
Population Density Metro Km2:auto
Population Density Metro Sq Mi:auto
Population Blank1 Title:Ethnicity
Population Blank2 Title:Demonym
Population Blank2:Onye Onicha (singular)
Ndi Onicha (plural) (Igbo)
Demographics Type1:GDP (PPP, 2015 int. Dollar)
Demographics1 Title1:Year
Demographics1 Info1:2023
Demographics1 Title2:Total
Demographics1 Info2:$18,5 billion[4]
Demographics1 Title3:Per capita
Demographics1 Info3:$11,400
Timezone1:WAT
Utc Offset1:+1
Postal Code Type:Postcode
Postal Code:430...[5]
Area Code:046
Leader Title2:Anambra North District
Leader Title3:Constitutional Monarchy
Leader Name3:HRH, Alfred Achebe. Obi Of Onitsha
Blank Name:Climate
Blank Info:Aw
Anthem:"With all our hearts, We Pray and ask"
Leader Party:APGA
Blank Name Sec1:National language
Blank Info Sec1:Igbo

Onitsha ([6] or simply Ọ̀nị̀chà) is a city on the eastern bank of the Niger River, in Anambra State, Nigeria. Onitsha along with various cities and towns in southern Anambra State, northern Imo State and neighboring Delta State on the western bank of the Niger River, form a continuous metropolitan area.[7] [8]

As of 2016, the greater Onitsha area had an estimated population of around 8 million people in central and southern Anambra state extending into neighboring Delta state to the west and Imo state to the south.[9] Spread across parts of these 3 states, the greater Onitsha area is regarded as one of the largest metropolitan areas in Nigeria by both population and landmass.[10] The continuous urban sprawl or conurbation of greater Onitsha spreads across several separate cities and their satellite towns and suburbs including Asaba, Obosi, Ogbaru, Nnewi, the Anambra State capital Awka down to Orlu in Imo State.[11] As of early 2024, Onitsha city proper has an estimated population of 1,695,000.[12]

The indigenous people of Onitsha are Igbo and speak the Igbo language with Onitsha being the largest urban area and commercial hub of the Igboland region of Nigeria, the Igbo people’s indigenous homeland. The Onitsha people are referred to as Ndi Onicha in Igbo. English and Nigerian Pidgin English are also widely spoken. Although the population is largely Igbo, there are many other ethnic groups in the Onitsha area mainly from other Nigerian ethnicities indigenous to the southeast of the country due to Onitshas position as an economic hub in the region.

According to Africapolis,[13] [14] the greater Onitsha metropolis will be regarded as one of the most densely populated areas in the world by 2050. In 2023, McKinsey predicted that the greater Onitsha metropolis area will double in human development by 2045 with the current expansion rate.

Modern history

Onitsha slowly grew to become an important trading port for the Royal Niger Company in the mid-1850s following the abolition of slavery and with the development of the steam engine when Europeans were able to move into the hinterland[15] .[16] [17]

Trade in palm kernels, palm oil, and other cash crops on the coast of the Bight of Biafra increased around this river port in the 19th century.

In 1857 British palm oil traders established a permanent station in the city with Christian missionaries joining them.[18]

In 1900 Onitsha became part of a British protectorate.[19] The British colonial government and Christian missionaries penetrated most of Igboland to set up their administration, schools and churches through the river port at Onitsha.

In 1965, the Niger River Bridge was built across the Niger River to replace the ferry crossing. This has helped to grow trade routes with western Nigeria and created significant economic linkages between Onitsha and Benin City and Lagos particularly.[20] [21]

The Nigerian-Biafran war brought devastation to Onitsha as the city was a major theatre of war for forces entering Biafra from the western front. The subsequent oil boom years of the 1970s and early 1980s witnessed a huge influx of immigrants into the city. The result has been hastily constructed and haphazard building which has created a huge number of slums.[22]

Festival

Once a year in October the kingdom of Onitsha holds the Ofala Festival which coincides with the traditional New Yam festival held in many parts of Igboland. The Ofala Festival in ancient times offered the people the opportunity to see the king and receive blessings from him. Nowadays, it is a way for the people of Onitsha to keep their culture alive, take stock of the communal activities and it has become a major event that draws visitors from far and wide to the city.[23]

Geography

Onitsha lies at a major east–west crossing point of the Niger River and occupies the northernmost point of the river regularly navigable by large vessels. These factors have historically made Onitsha a major center for trade between the coastal regions and the north, as well as between eastern and western Nigeria. Onitsha possesses one of the very few road bridge crossings of the mile-wide Niger River[24] [25] and plans are in place to add a second bridge near it.

Rapid urbanization in recent years negatively affects natural vegetation and local landscape.[26]

Climate

Onitsha has two seasons, the wet season, which is warm, oppressive, and overcast, and the dry season that is hot, muggy, and partly cloudy. Over the length of the year, the temperature commonly varies from 19 °C (67 °)F to 31 °C (88 °F) and is rarely below 15 °C (59 °F) or above 33 °C (92 °F).[27]

Urbanization

In the early 1960s, before the Nigerian Civil War (see also Biafra), the population was officially recorded as 76,000, and the town was distinctive in a number of dimensions; the great Nigerian writer Chinua Achebe (born and raised in the contiguous town of Ogidi) characterized it as harboring an "esoteric region from which creativity sallies forth at will to manifest itself," "a zone of occult instability" (see "Onitsha Matters").

Indeed, Onitsha has played a creative role in the transformation to urban life in Eastern Nigeria famous as the setting for Onitsha Market Literature and as one of the hubs for the financing and distribution of Nollywood films.[28]

However, infrastructure has not kept pace with urbanization and haphazard building practices without zoning regulations has left in its wake a chaotic and congested city rife with lawlessness. The World Health Organization Global Urban Ambient Air Pollution database's 2016 update indicates that Onitsha is the most polluted city in Africa.[29] [30]

In recent times with the encroachment of neighboring communities, the Onitsha people have been involved in disputes over land ownership in the surrounding area with the people of Obosi and Nkwelle Ezunaka.[31] [32] Fegge, Awada, and 3-3 are Onitsha metropolitan areas being disputed by the communities of Obosi and Nkwelle Ezunaka, respectively.

Economy

In 2012 the state government, through a joint venture, attracted SAB Miller to invest in Onitsha Brewery, which started production in August. It was the first large-scale investment in Onitsha since Premier Breweries, makers of the Premier Beer established production in Onitsha in the early part of the 1980s. In January it was announced that upgrades to the value of $110 million would triple the output of beer and malt drinks.[33]

Transport

Onitsha is not only accessible by rivers and land, but also by air. The city has an international cargo and passenger airport located at Umueri.

Religion and politics

Onitsha is a predominantly Christian city. People from Northern and Western Nigeria also practice Islam. In February 2006, armed militants killed at least 80 ethnic Hausa Fulani (Muslims) and burned a few Muslim sites, including two mosques.[34] [35] [36] The riots were in response to riots by Muslims in the city of Maiduguri days earlier, where at least 18 Christians were killed, sparked by the cartoon controversy in Denmark.

In Popular Culture

Onitsha Market Literature

See main article: Onitsha Market Literature. It refers to the 20th century genre of sentimental, moralistic novellas, pamphlets and other publications sold at the Onitsha Market in Nigeria in the 1950s and 1960s. Much of it was written in pidgin English.[37] The Onitsha writings have two distinct characteristics: a fascination with westernized urban life and the desire to warn the newly arrived against the corruption and dangers that accompany it. Typical titles are “Rose Only Loved My Money,” “Drunkards Believe Bar as Heaven,” “Why Some Rich Men Have No Trust in Some Girls,” and “How to Get a Lady in Love.” Sentimental novelettes, political tracts, and “how to” guides on writing love letters, handling money, and attaining prosperity all have achieved great commercial success, and booksellers hawk these cheap, locally produced pamphlets (which are printed on handpresses) at Onitsha.

Environment

The amount of waste generation is attributed to the city's high population being a commercial area that draws in people from within and outside Nigeria for business purposes. They generate mostly food waste, polythene bags, paper and its related wastes and metal. Others are pieces of clothes, plastic, tins, bottles and glass materials.[38] In 2016, PM10 levels exceeded the WHO's standard by 30 times.[39] [40] The city's noise levels exceeds the federal ministry of environment stipulated limits of 90 dB (A) and that of NESREA's 70 dB (A) for an 8-hour working period, varying in dry season and wet seasons.[41] The city's vast surface water, shallow subsurface water, and permeable soils put it at high risk of water pollution.

Twin towns

Onitsha is twinned with:

Notable people

The Onitsha people were among the first Igbo to embrace western education,[44] producing notable people like Bishop Alphonsus Chukwuma Onyeabo, Order of the British Empire, 1879–1954, and the main contributor of the English to Igbo bible,[45] Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe, Owele of Onicha, Zik of Africa, and the first president of the post-independent Nigeria.

See also

References

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Book: Structure Plan for Onitsha and Satellite Towns . UN Habitat . UN-HABITAT . 2009 . 978-92-1-132117-3 . UN Habitat . 2010-06-20 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110927060753/http://www.unhabitat.org/pmss/getElectronicVersion.aspx?nr=2687&alt=1 . 2011-09-27 . dead .
  2. Web site: Onitsha, Nigeria Metro Area Population 1950-2024 .
  3. Web site: Africapolis . 2024-02-23.
  4. Web site: TelluBase—Nigeria Fact Sheet (Tellusant Public Service Series). Tellusant. 2024-01-11.
  5. Web site: Nipost Postcode Map . Nigerian Postal Service . 2010-05-08 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20121126042849/http://www.nipost.gov.ng/postcode.aspx . 2012-11-26 .
  6. Book: Okanga, Eloka Chijioke Paul Nwolisa . Njepu amaka--migration is rewarding: a sociocultural anthropological study of global economic migration . 63 . Peter Lang . 2003 . 0-8204-6090-7.
  7. Web site: 2023-10-11 . Onitsha Nigeria, Map, & History Britannica . 2023-11-08 . www.britannica.com . en.
  8. Web site: https://www.ajemates.org/index.php/ajemates/article/download/278/247 . 2023-11-08 . www.ajemates.org.
  9. Web site: Africapolis . 2024-02-23.
  10. Web site: Reimagining economic growth in Africa . www.mckinsey.com.
  11. Web site: Reimagining economic growth in Africa . www.mckinsey.com.
  12. Web site: Onitsha, Nigeria Metro Area Population 1950-2022 . 2022-03-08 . www.macrotrends.net.
  13. Book: OCDE/CSAO (2020), Africa's Urbanisation Dynamics 2020 : Africapolis, Mapping a New Urban Geography, West African Studies, Éditions OCDE, Paris . 2020 . 10.1787/b6bccb81-en . 978-92-64-57958-3 . 2024-02-23.
  14. Web site: Africapolis . 2024-02-23.
  15. Web site: 2014-07-25 . Bridges and the cost of democracy .
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  18. Book: Taylor, Crowther & . The Gospel on the Banks of the Niger: Journals and Notices of the Native Missionaries Accompanying the Niger Expedition of 1857–1859 . Cambridge University Press . 2010 . 1859 . 978-1-108-01184-6. .
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  20. Web site: With New Funding, Second Niger Bridge Offers Hope of Economic Revolution. The Business Year. 30 December 2018. 2020-02-07.
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  26. Nwaogu. Chukwudi. Okeke. Onyedikachi J.. Fadipe. Olusola O.. Bashiru. Kehinde A.. Pechanec. Vilém. 2017. Is Nigeria losing its natural vegetation and landscape? Assessing the land use-landcover change trajectories and effects in Onitsha using remote sensing and GIS. Open Geosciences. 9. 1. 707–718. 10.1515/geo-2017-0053. 2017OGeo....9...53N. free.
  27. Web site: Climate and Average Weather Year Round in Onitsha Nigeria .
  28. Madichie. Nnamdi. Nkamnebe. Anayo. 2010-11-01. 51 Iweka Road (Onitsha, Nigeria): Could this single African address redefine business cluster development?. World Review of Entrepreneurship, Management and Sustainable Development. 6. 3. 229–243. 10.1504/WREMSD.2010.036677.
  29. Web site: A New Air Pollution Database Is Good, but Imperfect Data-Driven Yale. datadriven.yale.edu. 2016-11-25. 2016-11-26. https://web.archive.org/web/20161126064843/http://datadriven.yale.edu/2016/06/06/a-new-air-pollution-database-is-good-but-imperfect/. dead.
  30. Web site: Amid Staggering Pollution, Nigerians Struggle to Catch Their Breath. Cunningham. Anna. October 22, 2018. Undark. en-US. 2019-09-27.
  31. Vincent Ujumadu (June 17, 2013). "17 injured, bus burnt as Onitsha, Obosi youths clash over land". Vanguard. Retrieved September 2, 2014.
  32. http://www.ezunaka.com/node/27 Nigeria: "Nkwelle-Ezunaka Battles Onitsha Over Land"
  33. Web site: SAB Miller investing $110 m to triple Onitsha brewery capacity . 28 February 2014 . 7 March 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140307121807/http://businessdayonline.com/2014/01/sab-miller-investing-110-m-to-triple-onitsha-brewery-capacity/ . dead .
  34. News: Scores killed in Nigeria riots . Al Jazeera . 2006-02-23 .
  35. News: Toll rises in Nigeria sectarian riots . Al Jazeera . 2006-02-24 .
  36. News: Nigerian Christians Burn Corpses . The Washington Post . 2006-02-24 . Timberg . Craig . 2007-04-06 . A10 .
  37. Web site: Onitsha market literature | Igbo culture, oral tradition, satire | Britannica .
  38. Nwachukwu M. U. . December 2010 . Solid Waste Generation and Disposal in a Nigerian City: An Empirical Analysis in Onitsha Metropolis . Journal of Environmental Management and Safety . 1 . 1 . 180–191 . Researchgate.
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  40. News: 2017-02-13 . Welcome to Onitsha: the city with the world's worst air . 2022-03-02 . The Guardian . en.
  41. Chris Onyeka Ekweozor . Johnbosco Emeka Umunnakwe . Leo O Osuji . Vincent C Weli . October 2021 . Noise Pollution in Onitsha Metropolis: Challenges and Solution . Open Access Research Journal of Engineering and Technology . 1 . 2 . 32–40 . 10.53022/oarjet.2021.1.2.0110 . 244139245 . Researchgate.
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