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0:00 – The Ghost of Peduase Lodge 0:46 – Nigeria on the Edge 2:28 – Why Aburi Was Chosen 2:45 – Enter the Military Leaders and The Rank Explosion 3:20 – Equality vs Command / The Agreement on Paper 4:02 – General Ankrah's Role In Aburi 5:55 – Confederation Debate 7:07 – When Aburi Left Ghana 8:20 – The Collapse of Trust 9:14 – Why Aburi Failed to the Point of No Return 10:29 – Final Reflection The Nigerian Civil War did not begin on the battlefield. It began when peace collapsed. In January 1967, Nigeria’s military leaders met at Peduase Lodge in Aburi, Ghana, in a final attempt to prevent national disintegration. Present were Yakubu Gowon, Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu, and members of the Supreme Military Council, under the mediation of Lt. Gen. Joseph Ankrah. This meeting was meant to save Nigeria. Instead, it became the moment its fate was sealed. Rather than revisiting the coups of 1966, this documentary examines what followed — how disagreements over military authority, command structure, and implementation turned Aburi into a turning point instead of a solution. As interpretations of the accord diverged between Lagos and the Eastern Region, trust between military leaders collapsed. The Nigerian Army, already fractured, lost its final mechanism for unified command. This episode explains why the Aburi Accord failed, how that failure reshaped military decision-making, and why it became a direct step on the road to the Nigerian Civil War. This documentary is based on historical records, public statements, and documented events. #militarydocumentary #nigerianhistory #civilwar #aburiaccord #africanhistory #militaryhistory #ojukwu #gowon