Tag: IPOB

  • Army searches Kanu’s home for arms

    Army searches Kanu’s home for arms

    Prince Emmanuel Kanu, the younger brother of the Leader of the Indigenous Peoples of Biafra ( IPOB), Nnamdi Kanu, has alleged that soldiers have again invaded their Afaraukwu Umuahia family home and carted away some household items.

    Prince Kanu said that the invasion by the soldiers took place on Sunday afternoon.

    He accused the invaders of looting the palace and making away with such items as television, generating sets, clothes among others belongings of the family.

    Kanu called on the international community to prevail on the Nigerian Army to stop raiding their home, and to produce his bother whose whereabouts according to him has remained unknown  since after the September 14 military invasion of the compound.

    But when contacted the Desk Officer of Operation Python Dance in charge of Abia State said no household items were removed from Kanu’s home.

    According to him, the operation was based on the intelligence that arms were hidden in the compound.

    He said “the things  removed may be technical items”, adding that “somebody was arrested with weapon in the compound”.

    The Army Officer who preferred to be simply identified as Desk Officer for the operation also said it was a joint operation with the police, and directed further enquiries  to the police.

    Efforts to get the reaction of the police however was not successful  as the Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO) in the state, Mr. Geoffrey Ogbonna did not pick the calls to his cell phone.

    He also did not respond to a text message sent to his phone as at the time of filing this report.

    The Commissioner of Police Mr. Anthony Ogbizi did also not pick his calls even though it rang out twice.

  • Kinsman seeks Kanu’s repatriation from UK to face trial

    Kinsman seeks Kanu’s repatriation from UK to face trial

    For fear that Nnamdi Kanu’s sureties may be held responsible should he fail to return for his trial, a Federal High Court in Abuja has been asked to compel the Nigerian government to have him brought back to the country.

    The request is contained in a suit filed on October 5 by an indigene of Abia State, Ugochukwu Kenneth, through his lawyers,Obor John and Tersagh Unande.

    Named as de‎fendants in the suit marked: FHC/ABJ/CS/930/17 are the British High Commission, the Comptroller-General of Nigerian Immigration Service (NIS) and the Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF).

    Kanu and some other member of his group, the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) are being tried before Justice Binta Nyako (also of the Federal High Court, Abuja) on treason related offences.

    The court, however granted only Kanu bail on health ground on April 25 this year. In meeting the bail conditions, three individuals, including Senator Eyinanaya Abaribe and two others stood surety for him to guarantee that he would attend court until the trial is concluded.

    But, in a suit filed in his name on September 26 this year, before the Federal High Court, Abuja, marked: FHC/ABJ/CS/908/2017, his lawyer, Ifeanyi Ejiofor accused the Nigerian Army of abducting Kanu..

    Ejiofor stated among others, that Kanu has not been seen since some soldiers allegedly invaded his house on September 14, during which shots were fired and people dead and some wounded.

    Kanu lawyer’s claim about his whereabouts was however, countered in a recently by former Governor of Abia State, Orji Kalu, who in an interview, said Kanu had escaped to the United Kingdom.

    The plaintiff in the fresh suit, Uguchukwu Kenneth agrees with the ex-Governor on Kanu’s whereabouts and requested that the NIS be compelled to repatriate him to enable him face his trial, expected to resume on October 17.

    Kanneth stated, in a supporting affidavit, that “Senator Enyinnaya Harcourt Abaribe, representing the good people of Abia South Senatorial District of Abia State; Tochukwu Uchendu and Jewish Chief High Priest Immanuel –El Shalom Oka-Ben Madu perfected the bail bond which facilitated the release of Mazi Nnamdi Kanu.

    “Upon the perfection of the bail and consequent released of Mazi Nnamdi Kanu from prison custody, Mazi Kanu has, to the best of my knowledge, breached all the bail conditions to wit; granting press interviews while on bail, participating in any rally, or being found in a crowd of more than ten persons in the course of the bail.

    “And to make matters worse, Mazi Kanu has finally travelled to the United Kingdom in an attempt to escape trial and the arm of the law..

  • IPOB: disaster averted in Nigeria

    SIR: “We the SE governors have no regret proscribing the IPOB. The group’s activities had endangered the lives of over 12 million Igbos living in the north and other parts of the country. Their activities were also threatening the lives of people from other parts of the country living in the South East. So we had to take the action we took and I have no regret about it,” ~ Gov .Umahi .

    The above statement credited to this educated and wise governor shows that he does not speak from the two sides of his mouth.I have been shouting from the roof top that even though Igbo have been structurally, systematically and officially marginalized in the project Nigeria since the end of the Civil war in 1970, the quest for Biafra may not be an option in this stage and age. I have written that even though South-east gets the least in everything being shared in Nigeria, we are not the last when you place all the six zones on a scale. This is because historians and the fathers of the second Vatican Council have proved beyond reasonable doubt through years of research that all acts of indignity, marginalization, suppression, oppression, repression against human persons debase the perpetrators more than the victims

    I have maintained that no act of separation could be anchored on temporary loss of political powers as the present Biafran quest is.  Some of us have warned also that hate and ethnic bigotry from IPOB leadership may endanger Igbo living in other parts of Nigeria and even hurt those other Nigerians living in Igboland.

    When the South-east governors and the federal government saw the real danger and threat, nobody told them to proscribe IPOB. Again, the rest is now history. In one fell swoop, what would have been a monumental tragedy of unequal dimension was technically and systematically averted. It could have been worse. Every sane voice in Igboland has risen to acknowledge this fact.

    Nobody is beating his or her chest for the proscription of IPOB. Those who opposed IPOB are fighting for Igbo interest. I also assume genuine agitators in IPOB are also fighting for Igbo interest. But time has come for us to find a middle course and then move on.

    Let other Nigerians labour now to bring Igbo question and other questions to the fore. Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. Let us reason together in order to solve our common problem.

     

    • Joe Igbokwe,

    Lagos.

  • Ebonyi begins data capturing of IPOB members

    Ebonyi begins data capturing of IPOB members

    Ebonyi State government has commenced the data capturing and registration of Indigenous People Of Biafra (IPOB) members from the state.

    The state Commissioner for Economic Empowerment and Job Creation, Uchenna Orji, disclosed this in Abakaliki.

    He said the exercise is going on simultaneously in the 13 local government areas of the state.

    According to him, the present administration has done a lot in the area of youth empowerment.

    He said the initiative by the state government apart from making the IPOB members economically independent, would also help to reduce social vices and other forms of criminality currently plaguing the society.

    The commissioner, who said the state government had extended its empowerment schemes to Ebonyi youths in other states of the federation, added that over 3,000 youths had been empowered in the state.

    “These IPOB youths are being registered in the Department of Education and Social Welfare in the LGAs. After their capturing, the state government will create a programme to train them in their chosen career,” Orji said.

  • IPOB: Matters arising

    IPOB: Matters arising

    •All may be quiet in the agitators’ camp but all is not well yet

    Now that Nnamdi Kanu and his band of Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) agitators have been subdued and quietened, we think that time is now for the Federal Government to embark on deep introspection with a view not only to understanding the grouse of the group but also weighing in with some rapprochement in the southeast.

    The IPOB uprising and its vanquishing would surely be recorded in the annals of Nigeria as one of the most momentous incidents of the social media age. Kanu had taken that country by storm armed with a satellite radio and other social media devices.

    With hate speech and resentment as his mantra, he had preached separation and a renaissance of Biafra – a long forgotten attempt in the 60s to forcefully excise the southeast of Nigeria from the rest of the country. His angry message had found fertile soil among Igbo youths who feel marginalised by the federal system. As the number of his followers grew, Kanu became more emboldened and even reckless.

    He began to over-reach himself. He flouted his bail conditions; called for a boycott of a November gubernatorial election in Anambra State and challenged constituted authorities at every turn. He eventually crossed the line when he assembled a band of young men and women, made uniform for them and called it Biafra Security Service (BSS).

    Though they were not known to be armed, videos were posted of him inspecting a guard of honour as ‘supreme commander’.

    This must have spurred the Federal Government to move against him a few weeks ago, perhaps to pre-empt what obviously was youthful exuberance gone too far, from getting completely out of hand.

    In what the military termed “Operation Python Dance 2”, the Federal Government mobilised against Kanu and his IPOB movement in what has been termed a deployment of excessive force by many observers. IPOB claimed about five people were killed but the military said no life was lost and that only two people were injured, including a policeman, especially in Umuahia, capital of the southeast state of Abia, the residence of Kanu and headquarters of IPOB. Either side could have been economical with the actual number of casualties.

    In another rather disturbing move, the Federal Government hastily moved to proscribe IPOB and declared it a terror group. This further raised eyebrows, considering the fact that the group was not armed and was never reported to have killed or maimed apart from purveying hate speech and causing occasional public disturbance.

    While we abhor the dangerous agitations of Kanu and his band, we once again condemn government’s use of excessive force and deployment of the entire military might of the country to crush the group. We believe that quelling the ‘uprising’ could have been better managed with minimum force and little or no casualties.

    The court process was not exhausted and dialogue was not even considered, not to mention carrot and stick methods. We are apprehensive that the government is becoming adept at deploying troops at the slightest civil disturbance, especially in situations better left to the police and paramilitary forces.

    It is in the light of this that we urge the Federal Government to embark on introspection at this moment. Though IPOB may seem to have been decimated and defeated, unless government tackles the issues they raised with the same aggression, then it may have only scorched the snake without killing it.

    Though most parts of the country have suffered the brunt of serial bad governance over time, the southeast may well be an especial case. Since the end of the civil war nearly 50 years ago, not much of infrastructural overhaul has been done as no special ‘Marshall Plan’ to rebuild the zone was adopted and executed.

    A second Niger Bridge linking the southeast to other parts of the country has been on the drawing board for decades; erosion ravages and most federal roads are impassable.

    We urge the Federal Government to move hastily into the southeast armed with some of these palliatives. That is the right thing to do. And of course, the raging matter of restructure should also be considered.

  • Ohanaeze must help to promote peace – Presidency

    Ohanaeze must help to promote peace – Presidency

    The Presidency urged the Ohanaeze Igbo leaders to see themselves as partners with the FG in the bid to promote peace and stability in the country.

    The Senior Special Assistant to the President on Media and Publicity, Garba Shehu, made the call while reacting to criticisms of the President’s Independence Day speech by the Ohaneze leadership.

    In a statement issued in Abuja, Shehu said it was unfair for the group to blame the recent unrest in the South East region on the Federal Government.

    He said: “President Buhari was not abdicating his responsibilities. He didn’t request any political leader to do anything seminal or out of the box. All he said is, talk to your out-of-the-line-youth so that we have some peace.

    “Igbo leaders need not to be on the defensive for the misbehaviour of the IPOB which they rightly condemned.

    “The President was simply saying that the regional leaders also have a role to play in keeping their hot-headed youth in check.”

     

  • Poor leadership caused Nigeria’s problems – Segun Adeniyi

    Poor leadership caused Nigeria’s problems – Segun Adeniyi

    Mr. Segun Adeniyi, the former spokesman to late President Umaru Yara’dua, on Monday urged Nigerians to see themselves as allies and strive for a better country.

    Adeniyi made the call in a paper he delivered at “The Platform,” an annual programme organised by Covenant Christian Centre to awaken national consciousness.

    He said the challenges facing the country would be surmounted if all Nigerians approached them with unity of purpose.

    Adeniyi declared that the country’s problems were not rooted in ethnicity or religion, adding that Nigerians playing ethnic and religious cards were part of the problem.

    He said: “The problems of the country are not caused by ethnicity or religion, but by poor leadership.

    “So those who are directing their anger at people from other ethnic groups or faiths are missing the point.

    “Once the leadership lives up to its responsibilities to the people, most of these challenges will be solved.”

    He condemned the activities of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), saying the agitations of the group lacked focus.

    He said the approach adopted by IPOB to pursue its agenda, not only threatened unity but also smacked of ethnicity.

    He said it was wrong for IPOB to create the impression that the rest of the country was against the Igbos.

    Adeniyi said the group squandered an opportunity to raise genuine concerns about the South-East zone by resorting to hate messages.

    He also described as unfortunate the quit notice issued to Igbos in the North by some Arewa youths.

    He said the action of the youths was condemnable as the activities of IPOB.

    NAN

     

  • Group threatens to occupy U.K embassy if Kanu is not extradited

    The Advocate of Social Justice for All has threatened to occupy the embassy of United Kingdom if the leader of Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), Nnamdi Kanu is not extradited to Nigeria.

    The group in a statement by its Executive Director, Asongo Venatius , said it was disappointed to learn that the Kanu is hiding in the United Kingdom after illegally travelling through Cameroon and Malaysia.

    According to Venatius, this implies that the UK is harbouring a fugitive from Justice and this is irrespective of him holding dual nationalism – Nigeria and the United Kingdom.

    “The proper thing is for the UK to have allowed Kanu answer the treason charges against him in Nigeria before making any intervention.

    “We find it supremely irresponsible for the UK High Commission in Nigeria to have issued its statement seeking clarification on Nnamdi Kanu when it knows it was in cahoots with the terrorist leader.

    “The irresponsible behaviour became diabolic when the UK issued him an emergency travel document in collaboration with crisis merchants. This is the worst form of double standard ever.

    “We are at a loss to understand what the UK Mission in Nigeria or even the home country stands to gain by mischievously sinking so low to aid a terrorist and facilitate his sneaking out of the country.

    “This is a disgrace to the government and people of the United Kingdom, it is a blot that can only be erased by the government of the UK flushing out Kanu and all other bad elements that are trying to sabotage Nigeria.
    If the UK truly believes in freedom, it must extradite Kanu, who is facing charges in a Nigerian court, so that those who stood surety to perfect his bail conditions do not end up in jail if he fails to show up for his trial.

    “Even where the UK has decided to spurn the ties that existed between it and Nigeria, we advise it to revisit the ill advised choice of backing a terrorist against the Nigerian state.

    “As the UK should have learnt from initially supporting ISIS terrorists, the attacks by these sick minds would eventually take place on its soil.

    “The Advocates of Social Justice for All [ASJA] therefore demands that the UK High Commission in Nigeria immediately extradite Nnamdi Kanu to stand trial for his crime before his October 17, 2017 court appearance.

    “Failure to do this will see ASJA leading Nigerians to occupy the UK High Commission’s premises in a manner it has never experienced before in any other part of the world,” the statement said.

  • IPOB and duplicity of failed empires

    The secessionist insurrection of the Indigenous Peoples of Biafra (IPOB) took a dramatic turn in the week ended Saturday, September 23, during which the secessionist group was proscribed and its erstwhile boastful leader, Nnamdi Kanu, took to his heels when confronted with fired up soldiers. Reminds you of Biafra 1 – Emeka Odimegwu Ojukwu – who also went on the lam when federal troops closed in on him back in January 1970?  At least, Ojukwu walked the talk of war, but this wet pants peed on only hearing the sound of guns! So much for the empty braggadocio. Also during the week, there was an international angle to the secessionist agitation as the federal government decided to name two countries – Britain and France – as collaborators in IPOB’s partitioning agenda.

    Minister of Information, Culture and Tourism, Lai Mohammed, told the nation on Wednesday, September 20, how Britain and France have been tacitly complicit with IPOB in its destabilization of Nigeria.  Britain, stated the minister, continues to tolerate Radio Biafra’s hate and incendiary broadcasts from London while France is said to be the financial clearing house of IPOB from where funds flow to the secessionist group. The minister had asserted: “Let me tell you, the financial headquarters (of IPOB) is in France, we know” and also posed a rhetorical question: “Who does not know that IPOB internal radio is located in London?”

    Mohammed explained how Britain had been frustrating Nigeria’s diplomatic efforts with the British authorities to shut down the pirate radio station only to be given the nebulous excuse of freedom of expression. He had wondered: “If we have a person in Nigeria openly soliciting arms to come and fight in the UK, what would you think of it.  Would you consider that freedom of expression? “. The minister implied that the two countries have been engaged in semantics or what I would call diplomatic jousting. Minister Mohammed spoke of “knotty diplomatic issues which you need to skip” only to add in a double talk “I don’t want any diplomatic row”. Of course, the minister knew the charges against the two countries would spark diplomatic skirmishes, perhaps low level, for now.

    Well, these are trying times in Nigeria and nationalist fervour demands that the country must be ready to ruffle some diplomatic nests in defence of the sanctity of her territorial integrity and sovereignty. There is reciprocity in diplomatic relations. We need to remember that Britain and France have played ignoble roles in the international arena in recent times under the self-serving subterfuge called ‘International Community’. Britain followed the United States to declare war on Iraq on the lie that Iraqi President, Saddam Hussein, had ‘weapons of mass destruction’ which must be neutralized. They ended up destroying that country and got its president hanged, as a rub in. Yet, Tony Blair, the then British Prime Minister, who stridently orchestrated Gulf War 11 could still face the world and declare that he had no apology for the destruction of Iraq, a country that has not known peace since. Such brazenness! Such denial of criminal culpability by a British Prime Minister who had made a past time of pillorying President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe whose main offence was winning re-elections in his country. Apparently, Blair, with imperialist hang-over, wanted a regime change in Zimbabwe but met more than his match in President Mugabe, who once derisively called him Tony b-Liar.  The old Zimbabwean war horse was right, Tony Blair lied on Iraq. So, if Britain condoned the Iraqi war, why is the Nigerian government peeved by the British High Commission’s statement condoning Radio Biafra’s hate and inciting broadcasts on the puerile doctrine of freedom of expression? The same Britain that shut down the internet when youths went on rampage in London on the excuse that they were using it to network and mobilize others for the riot. Talk of diplomatic duplicity or double standard. The immediate past British Prime Minister, chubby boy, David Cameron, in an expansive mood, once described Nigeria as a fantastically corrupt country, another brazenness from a country that is fantastically a receiver of stolen funds, being the financial capital of the world, both legitimate and illicit. Well, it was good riddance, as the political gambler fantastically lost the Brexit vote that saw to his exit from 10, Downing Street, the Prime Minister’s official residence.

    As for France, it supported Biafra 1 and facilitated Emeka Ojukwu’s exile in Ivory Coast, her satellite nation, so, it should be no surprise that it is the financial clearing house for IPOB, the leading agent for Biafra 11. France was indicted in the Rwanda Genocide of 1994, in which an estimated 800,000 Tutsis lost their lives, for being complicit with the then Hutu-led government. France also led the Western onslaught on Libya that saw the killing of Libyan leader, Muamar Gaddafi. In 2011, France, brazenly thwarted the will of the Ivorian people, when under the cover of ‘International Community’ mandate, it provided military support for a candidate, Alassane Quattara, in Cote D’Ivoire’s disputed presidential election conflict to capture a sitting African President, Laurent Gbagbo! Gbagbo had won the majority vote in the main election and was pronounced winner of the re-run election by the country’s Constitutional Court only for the UN Representative in Cote D’Ivoire to assume the role of electoral commission to declare Quattara as the winner! Sadly, Nigeria’s naïve President Goodluck Jonathan, as ECOWAS leader, had endorsed the UN envoy’s verdict, and consequent UN mandate, which accorded French military partisan involvement a dubious legitimacy. Cote D’Ivoire is France’s milking cow, a situation President Gbagbo had ended, so the empire struck back. With Quattara, who is married to a French woman, in charge, France has returned to gravy train in Cote D’Ivoire while President Gbagbo languishes in detention at The Hague facing criminal charges at the International Court of Justice. The West sent Gbagbo to jail for a domestic conflict arising from an election dispute, but Tony Blair still struts around, a free man. Talk of the hypocrisy of the ‘International Community’!

    Nigeria’s political leadership should be under no illusion about any affectionate love from Britain or France, and, by extension, western countries. Britain and France are yesterday’s countries, over whose empires the sun has set, now playing a fickle third fiddle in international power relations and  struggling for residual relevance in Africa. Nigeria, on the other hand, is a country of the future with great potentials which some vested interests may not want manifested being a threat to their hegemonic hold. You see, no country in Europe has Nigeria’s landmass, natural resources or population. According to worldometers.info (2017) the combined population of Britain (66.2 million) and France (64.9 million) is 131.1 million compared to Nigeria’s 192.06 million while the combined landmass of Britain and France is 789,487 sq km as against Nigeria’s 910,770 sq km. Given these endowments plus high calibre human capital, the prospects of Nigeria as the great Black Hope is bright.  We can now begin to understand why many countries would have dubious designs on Nigeria and would not be averse to its disintegration.

     

    • Dr. Olawunmi is Senior Lecturer, Department of Mass Communication, Bowen University, Iwo, Osun State.
  • Kanu has not escaped, military should produce him, says lawyer

    Kanu has not escaped, military should produce him, says lawyer

    Mr. Ifeanyi Ejiofor, lawyer to the leader of the pro-Biafra group, Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), Nnamdi Kanu has faulted the claim by former Abia State Governor, Orji Kalu that his client has escaped.

    Ejiofor, who was reacting to a media report credited to the ex-Governor, wondered how Kalu could be authoritative about his client’s whereabouts when he did not claim to be present the day soldiers invaded Kanu’s abode.

    The lawyer, who referred to the processes he filed in relation to a recent suit, seeking to compel the Chief of Army Staff to produce his client in court, said he stood by the claim in the suit that the Nigerian Army should account for Kanu’s whereabouts.

    Ejiofor and others had, in the suit marked: FHC/ABJ/CS/908/2017, claimed that Kanu, who was in his house during the September 14, 2017 attacked on his premises by some soldiers, “has not been heard from or seen after this bloody attack in his home by the agents of the respondent (COAS) since the 14th day of September 2017.”

    In a statement sent through an electronic means on Sunday, Ejiofor used unfriendly words on the ex-Governor and challenged him to apply to be part of the suit if indeed; he has a position contrary to that of the plaintiff in the suit.

    Ejiofor said: “Orji uzo Kalu is a drowning man, looking for where to perch. He has since outlived his usefulness in Igbo land.

    “What do you expect from a man who is enjoying a temporary freedom? Struggling to get his head out of grievous corruption charge hanging on his neck.

    “It’s not unlikely that he may spend the rest of his life in prison, sooner than expected.

    “He saw Nnamdi Kanu’s travail as opportunity to seek relevance from the prosecuting authority.

    At some time, he attempted deceiving the state into believing that he has the magic wand  to Nnamdi Kanu’s peaceful agitation.

    “Now, he has turned into government /military spokesperson. Please ask that confuse man, if he was in the company of the rampaging soldiers at the time of their murderous invasion of my client’s home?

    He is seeking for possible relevance where none exist, opportunity to divert attention.  May be he has forgotten he is no longer the Governor of Abia State.

    “I advise the discerning mind to kindly disregard his tantrums as that coming from a drowning man.

    “The military should produce my client wherever they kept him. The matter is now in court,  let’s meet in court.

    “Orji Uzo Kalu, can as well apply to be joined as a party in the suit. Let his position be on oath.”