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Arondizuogu Patriotic Union

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succession of secretaries that included John Okereke, Louis Nwakire Obioha and Egboo Nwankwo; Mazi David O. Mbadiwe (who had served as the President pro tempore of the Oct. 1932 inaugural convention) and was elected to serve as APU President from 1947 to 1949 when the National College dispute created an impasse between Ndianiche (from where the president hailed) and APU; Mazi Albert Nwosu Igbo "Ogbuanukwu" from Ndiukwu who was appointed to serve as President of APU from 1950 to 1953; and Mazi D.T. Okoro took over as APU President and served from 1953 to Jan 15 1966 when all ethnic unions were proscribed by military decree. Between 1966 and 1974 APU was in limbo. However, the leadership role of APU during this interregnum was carried out by other organisations. First, (between 1967 and 1970) by the Arondizuogu War Emergency Council, one of the impromptu bodies formed in various clans at the instance of the authorities of the short-lived
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Reuben O. Egbuonu, who served under Unegbu as 1st Vice President, succeeded him and served as President till 1984 when he lost the APU Presidency to an Aba based business mogul Chief Clement Moore Obioha who was succeeded in 1991 by Dr. Chukwuma Nkemdi Obioha. In 1993, Chief Joel West Umeh took over from Chukwuma Obioha and served as President till 1996; Chief L. Iheanyi Okoro took over in 1996 and served first as Chairman of a Caretaker Committee of the National Executive of APU and, later, as President General by acclamation; and Mazi Oguguo Okereke served as President General of the union between 2000 and 2008. Hon. Barr. Uche Ohia from Ndiakeme Ohiauchu who was elected on October 25, 2008, served as President - General till October 20, 2012, when Chief Chris Robins Okoro, the current President - General of APU was elected
153:. The youngmen of Arondizuogu who laid the foundation for APU left their homes for the first time in the 1920s and early 1930s to seek a better life in the emerging urban centres of colonial Nigeria. They found themselves in social, economic and political environments different from the life they knew at home. Refusing to be intimated or alienated, they held on to that deep feeling of love for the community with which they grew up. They assembled at Aba on October 8, 1932, to aggregate ideas on how best to convey the concomitants of modern development with which they were surrounded in the city (such as wide roads, schools, hospitals, post offices, potable water, electricity, court rooms, etc.) to their village community. 22: 166:. Second, (between 1971 and 1974) by the 1st Arondizuogu Community Council set up in consequence of the Divisional Administration Edict passed ion 1971 by the Government of the old East Central State. Mazi R.O. Ikoro served as chairman of both the Arondizuogu War Emergency Council and the Arondizuogu Community Council. 174:
After the Nigerian Civil War, Mazi Ben Ozonede Onwuka became the Union’s President following the resuscitation of APU in 1974 and served till 1976; Mazi Remy Nwafor Unegbu who was nicknamed the "Perfect Peacemaker" served as President - General of APU from 1976 till he died in office in 1981, Mazi
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The objectives of APU since 1932 have since expanded to include the changing concerns of its massive membership spread around the world. Over the years, APU, at the national level, has been led by a succession of twelve Presidents General: Rev Chima Nwana who served from 1933 to 1947 with a
43: 94: 66: 73: 80: 62: 113: 51: 47: 87: 32: 36: 145:, APU is one of the earliest and most enduring organs of community development set up by an 187: 8: 192: 163: 150: 181: 142: 146: 134: 21: 138: 179: 50:. Unsourced material may be challenged and 141:and the Diaspora. Established in 1932 in 114:Learn how and when to remove this message 180: 133:) is the umbrella organisation of all 48:adding citations to reliable sources 15: 13: 14: 204: 20: 1: 156: 63:"Arondizuogu Patriotic Union" 7: 127:Arondizuogu Patriotic Union 10: 209: 169: 44:improve this article 164:Republic of Biafra 124: 123: 116: 98: 200: 151:colonial Nigeria 119: 112: 108: 105: 99: 97: 56: 24: 16: 208: 207: 203: 202: 201: 199: 198: 197: 178: 177: 172: 159: 137:communities in 120: 109: 103: 100: 57: 55: 41: 25: 12: 11: 5: 206: 196: 195: 190: 171: 168: 158: 155: 122: 121: 28: 26: 19: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 205: 194: 191: 189: 186: 185: 183: 176: 167: 165: 154: 152: 148: 144: 140: 136: 132: 128: 118: 115: 107: 96: 93: 89: 86: 82: 79: 75: 72: 68: 65: –  64: 60: 59:Find sources: 53: 49: 45: 39: 38: 34: 29:This article 27: 23: 18: 17: 173: 160: 130: 126: 125: 110: 101: 91: 84: 77: 70: 58: 42:Please help 30: 188:Igbo unions 135:Arondizuogu 193:Aro people 182:Categories 157:Objectives 104:March 2010 74:newspapers 31:does not 149:clan in 170:Present 139:Nigeria 88:scholar 52:removed 37:sources 90:  83:  76:  69:  61:  95:JSTOR 81:books 147:Igbo 67:news 35:any 33:cite 143:Aba 131:APU 46:by 184:: 129:( 117:) 111:( 106:) 102:( 92:· 85:· 78:· 71:· 54:. 40:.

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