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* [[English language|English]]
* [[English language|English]]
* [[Ezaa language|Ezaa]]
* [[Idoma language|Idoma]]
* [[Igala language|Igala]]
* [[Igbo language|Igbo]]
* [[Igbo language|Igbo]]

* [[Ikwo language|Ikwo]]
* [[Izi language|Izi]]
* [[Mgbo language|Mgbo]]
* [[Nigerian Sign Language]]
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Although the South East is the smallest geopolitical zone, it contributes greatly to the Nigerian economy due to oil and natural gas reserves along with a growing industrialized economy. The region has a population of about 22 million people, around 10% of the total population of the country. [[Aba, Nigeria|Aba]] and [[Enugu]] are the most populous cities in the South East as well as the [[List of Nigerian cities by population|tenth and fourteenth most populous cities]] in Nigeria. Other large southeastern cities include (in order by population) [[Onitsha]], [[Umuahia]], [[Owerri]], [[Nnewi]], [[Awka]], and [[Abakaliki]].<ref>{{cite web |title=Population of Cities in Nigeria (2022) |url=https://worldpopulationreview.com/countries/cities/nigeria |website=World Population Review |access-date=11 May 2022}}</ref>
Although the South East is the smallest geopolitical zone, it contributes greatly to the Nigerian economy due to oil and natural gas reserves along with a growing industrialized economy. The region has a population of about 22 million people, around 10% of the total population of the country. [[Aba, Nigeria|Aba]] and [[Enugu]] are the most populous cities in the South East as well as the [[List of Nigerian cities by population|tenth and fourteenth most populous cities]] in Nigeria. Other large southeastern cities include (in order by population) [[Onitsha]], [[Umuahia]], [[Owerri]], [[Nnewi]], [[Awka]], and [[Abakaliki]].<ref>{{cite web |title=Population of Cities in Nigeria (2022) |url=https://worldpopulationreview.com/countries/cities/nigeria |website=World Population Review |access-date=11 May 2022}}</ref>

South East is 100% Igbo ethnically and language.
Various Igbo subgroups and their dialects in South East are:
[Owerri people|Owerri]
[Nkanu people|Nkanu]
[Ngwa people |Ngwa]
[Omambala people|Omambala]
[Nsukka people|Nsukka]
[Enuani people|Enuani]
[Ezza people | Ezza]
[Afikpo people|Afikpo]
[Arochukwu people|Arochukwu]
[Oguta people |Oguta]
[Aguata/Orumba people|Aguata/Orumba]
[Okigwe people|Okigwe]
[Egbema people|Egbema]
[Izzi people|Izzi]
[Effium people|Effium]
[Idemili people|Idemili]
[Agbaja people|Agbaja]
[Ikwo people|Ikwo]
[Ndoki people|Ndoki]
[Abriba people|Abriba]
[Ohafia people|Ohafia]
[Orlu people|Orlu]
And many others.


==Economy==
==Economy==

Revision as of 19:29, 30 May 2023

South East
Country Nigeria
States
Largest cityAba
Major cities
Time zoneUTC+1 (WAT)
Major languages

The South East (often hyphenated to the South-East) is the one of the six geopolitical zones of Nigeria representing both a geographic and political region of the country's inland southeast. It comprises five statesAbia, Anambra, Ebonyi, Enugu, and Imo.

The zone is bounded by the River Niger on the west, the riverine Niger Delta on the south, the flat North Central to the north, and the Cross River on the east. It is divided between the Cross–Niger transition forests ecoregions in the south and the Guinean forest–savanna mosaic in the drier north. Culturally, the vast majority of the zone falls within Igboland–the indigenous cultural homeland of the Igbo people, a group which makes up the largest ethnic percentage of the southeastern population at over 90%.

Although the South East is the smallest geopolitical zone, it contributes greatly to the Nigerian economy due to oil and natural gas reserves along with a growing industrialized economy. The region has a population of about 22 million people, around 10% of the total population of the country. Aba and Enugu are the most populous cities in the South East as well as the tenth and fourteenth most populous cities in Nigeria. Other large southeastern cities include (in order by population) Onitsha, Umuahia, Owerri, Nnewi, Awka, and Abakaliki.[1]

South East is 100% Igbo ethnically and language. Various Igbo subgroups and their dialects in South East are: [Owerri people|Owerri] [Nkanu people|Nkanu] [Ngwa people |Ngwa] [Omambala people|Omambala] [Nsukka people|Nsukka] [Enuani people|Enuani] [Ezza people | Ezza] [Afikpo people|Afikpo] [Arochukwu people|Arochukwu] [Oguta people |Oguta] [Aguata/Orumba people|Aguata/Orumba] [Okigwe people|Okigwe] [Egbema people|Egbema] [Izzi people|Izzi] [Effium people|Effium] [Idemili people|Idemili] [Agbaja people|Agbaja] [Ikwo people|Ikwo] [Ndoki people|Ndoki] [Abriba people|Abriba] [Ohafia people|Ohafia] [Orlu people|Orlu]

And many others.

Economy

The zone has eighty five local Government area with over twenty millions population. The zone has about ten commercial cities. Apart from agriculture as the major economic activities. The zone is also known as commercial and trading zone with small and medium indigenous industries that are manufacturing goods and services.[2] the main Agriculture products in the zone are yam, cassava, rice, cocoyam etc. The zone has solid minerals and nature resources such as Crude oil, natural gas, bauxite, iron ore, sand stone, lignite, clay, coal, tin and columbite.[3]

The zone has recently been plagued by crisis as the call for secession and the creation of the State of the Independent people of Biafra (IPOB) by the leader of the movement in person of Nnamdi Kanu. Nnamdi Kanu has recently declared Biafra but some leaders have declared that he doesn't represent the voice of the Igbo nation as well as lacking capacity to do so.[4]

The (IPOB) has recently introduced the sit-at--home order in the zone to press home their demand as well as in solidarity for their leader - Nnamdi Kanu that has been detained by the Nigerian Government.[5]

Origin and people

The South East came about with Alex Ekwueme's recommendations, although is formerly known as Eastern Nigeria, or simply East, following the division of the country into three parts in 1950s. In 1967, it was later split into three under the Gowon Administration (1967–1975). It was in 1976 that more states, including Imo and Anambra began to emerge.[6]

South East is occupied by Igbos.[6]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Population of Cities in Nigeria (2022)". World Population Review. Retrieved 11 May 2022.
  2. ^ "South East Archives | Premium Times Nigeria". Retrieved 2022-02-25.
  3. ^ "South East Archives | Premium Times Nigeria". Retrieved 2022-02-25.
  4. ^ guardian, nigeria (2018-10-27). "'Nnamdi Kanu lacks capacity to declare Republic of Biafra'". Guardian Newspaper.
  5. ^ vanguard, ngr (2022-02-02). "IPOB sit-at-home inflicting immeasurable hardship, pains on us — South-East residents". Vanguard newspaper.
  6. ^ a b Obaro, Ikime (2006). History, the historian and the Nation:The voice of a Nigerian. Heinemann Educational Books.