Tag: Nnamdi Kanu

  • Southeast Reps caucus seeks presidential pardon for Nnamdi Kanu

    Southeast Reps caucus seeks presidential pardon for Nnamdi Kanu

    The South East caucus of the House of Representatives has appealed to President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to invoke his constitutional powers to grant the leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), Nnamdi Kanu presidential pardon.

    The caucus said in a statement that granting Kanu, who was sentenced to life in prison, a presidential pardon would douse tension in the southeast.

    The statement read by the leader of the caucus, Igariwey Iduma Enwo reads, “The Southeast Caucus of the House of Representatives met today, the 24th of November 2025, in Abuja, to review the recent judgment in the case of Mazi Nnamdi Kanu and to assess its implications for peace, security, and stability in the Southeast region, and the nation at large.

    “As elected representatives, we reaffirm our total respect for the judiciary and the processes that led to the conviction. However, our responsibility also requires us to speak with clarity when a legal matter evolves into a broader national concern with serious humanitarian, economic, and security consequences.

    “After extensive deliberation, the Caucus resolved to humbly appeal to the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, His Excellency Bola Ahmed Tinubu, GCFR, to consider a political and humanitarian intervention using the constitutional powers granted under Section 175 of the 1999 Constitution, to grant pardon to Mazi Kanu.

    “Our appeal is grounded on the considerations that the continued detention of Mazi Kanu has contributed significantly to tension and agitation in the Southeast. Despite numerous calls for calm, the atmosphere remains strained. A presidential act of mercy at this time has the potential to de-escalate tensions, restore normalcy, and reduce the cycle of security operations and civil resistance.

    “Beyond its political nature, this matter has taken a deep emotional toll on families, communities, and the general population. The Southeast has experienced profound social disruptions — closed markets, interrupted schooling, reduced commercial activity, and fear. A political resolution would ease these human burdens and allow communities to return to a dignified life.

    “Nigeria has, in critical moments, relied on presidential magnanimity to heal divisions and consolidate peace. Indeed, the authors of our constitution conceived of Section 175, in anticipation that the bare dictates of the law may sometimes prove insufficient in tackling complex legal issues that are better handled politically via Presidential discretion.

    “It is our belief that an act of clemency by the President would resonate deeply across the country as a symbol of inclusiveness, fairness, and leadership that prioritises healing over division. It would send a clear message that dialogue is still possible, even in difficult circumstances.

    “The Caucus believes that the release of Mazi Kanu, through pardon, would open space for broader engagement between the Federal Government, elected leaders, and community stakeholders to chart a sustainable and peaceful path forward.

    “Therefore, in the spirit of national healing, unity, and responsible leadership, we respectfully urge the President to consider this request as an investment in Nigeria’s long-term peace and cohesion.

    “We call on all citizens of the Southeast to remain calm, law-abiding, and supportive of ongoing efforts to secure a peaceful resolution.

    “The Southeast Caucus remains committed to working with the Federal Government to advance national unity, inclusive governance, and lasting stability across all regions”.

  • Abia monarchs rise for Nnamdi Kanu

    Abia monarchs rise for Nnamdi Kanu

    • ‘Our crown prince is not a terrorist’

    Traditional rulers in Umuahia North Local Government Area of Abia State have absolved the leader of proscribed Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), Nnamdi Kanu, of being a terrorist, as the Federal Government has called him.

    The traditional rulers were reacting to the judgment delivered by Justice James Omotosho of the Federal High Court in Abuja, who sentenced Kanu to life imprisonment.

    The judge held that the IPOB leader, based on evidence presented before the court by the prosecution, was a terrorist.

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    But the traditional rulers told reporters in Umuahia, the state capital, that Kanu is their illustrious son and Crown Prince of Isiama Afaraukwu-Ibeku community.

    They insisted that contrary to the court’s pronouncement, the IPOB leader is not a terrorist but a freedom fighter who consistently spoke against alleged injustices and marginalization of his people in the Southeast and other parts of Nigeria.

    In a statement by its Chairman, Eze Innocent Adiele Nwaigwe; the Secretary, Eze Chiabuotu Emelike; as well as Eze Nzenwata Mbakwe and Eze Eddy Ibeabuchi, the monarchs said: “For over a decade, our son has stood before the courts of this nation, enduring trials, detentions, and unimaginable hardships.

  • Nnamdi Kanu: Court faults reports of attempt on Justice Omotosho’s life

    Nnamdi Kanu: Court faults reports of attempt on Justice Omotosho’s life

    The authorities of the Federal High Court have faulted reports that there was an attempt on the life of Justice James Omotosho, the trial judge in the terrorism trial of Nnamdi Kanu of the proscribed separatist group, Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB).

    The court’s Chief Registrar, Sulaiman Hassan, in a statement, urged relevant security agencies and regulatory authorities to conduct a thorough investigation and apprehend those behind the report and have them prosecuted.

    The statement reads, “The attention of the Federal High Court has been drawn to a publication by a celebrity blogger, alleging that the Honourable Justice James Omotosho of the Federal High Court, Abuja, survived an assassination attempt following the life sentence imposed on Nnamdi Kanu.

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    “We hereby firmly and unequivocally declare that the said report is completely false and unfounded.

    “The public is advised to treat this publication as fake news and refrain from further dissemination to prevent the spread of misinformation.

    “Given the gravity of the report, which has the potential to cause panic and undermine confidence in the judicial system – possibly intended as a form of intimidation – we call on the relevant security agencies and regulatory authorities to conduct a thorough investigation.

    “The goal is to identify and apprehend the perpetrators responsible for this false report and prosecute them in accordance with the laws of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, particularly those relating to cybercrime, defamation, and public misinformation.”

  • The wages of terrorism

    The wages of terrorism

    It is good that finally, the slow wheels of justice in the country crawled to its destination in Nnamdi Kanu’s case

    Unless two things happen, Mazi Nnamdi Kanu, the separatist leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), will spend the rest of his life in prison, following his conviction on terrorism-related charges by the Federal High Court, Abuja, on Thursday, November 20. One, Kanu may be off the hook if President Bola Tinubu decides to exercise his prerogative of mercy powers and, two, if the convict appeals the judgment and finds favour in the eyes of the appellate court.

    Justice James Omotosho who delivered the judgment said that prosecutors had proved beyond reasonable doubts that Kanu’s orders and broadcasts incited deadly attacks on security forces and citizens in the southeast. Not only businesses but the entire south east region was usually paralysed whenever Kanu issued sit-at-home orders to the people in the region, banning businesses, schooling and other activities.

    Kanu, who was arraigned on a seven-count charge, was convicted on all. The least of the sentence for the offences was imprisonment for five years without an option of fine for count seven, whilst the maximum punishment for terrorism was death penalty. However, Justice Omotosho noted that death sentence was becoming anachronistic; he also considered the allocutus made on Kanu’s behalf to hand him the life sentence despite the prosecutor’s plea that he be handed the stiffest punishment of death by hanging till he be pronounced dead. A fair deal, if you ask me; considering the havoc Kanu and his goons had caused not only to security agencies but also his people who defied his sit-at-home orders in his heyday.

    According to Justice Omotosho, “The court finds that the defendant, Nnamdi Kanu, is an international terrorist and must be treated accordingly.” He added that “His intention was quite clear as he believed in violence. These threats of violence were nothing but terrorist acts.”

    It is significant that Kanu was cantankerous for the better part of the trial. Indeed, on the day of judgment, this cantankerousness reached a crescendo as he lambasted Justice Omotosho who he said did not know the law. The 58-year-old secessionist leader who had earlier dismissed his legal team and represented himself during the trial, had to be ejected from the court for “unruly” behaviour. “Which law states that you can charge me on an unwritten law? Show me,” Kanu said before he was removed from the court. “Omotosho, where is the law? Any judgment declared in this court is complete rubbish”, he said.

    Kanu was first arrested in 2015, and taken into custody in October of the same year, and slammed with multiple charges, including treasonable felony. He was granted bail 18 months later from where he disappeared, or jumped bail, as it were, before he was reportedly arrested in Kenya in controversial circumstances in 2021.

    IPOB, like some other Igbo separatist movements sought to revive the short-lived state of Biafra, which seceded from Nigeria in 1967. The secession sparked a three-year civil war that lasted from 1967 to 1970, and which claimed the lives of about three million people. But, after Biafra troops surrendered to the federal troops in 1970, the then General Yakubu Gowon military regime came up with a policy to reintegrate the Eastern Region back into the country under its three ‘Rs’ of  Reconciliation, Rehabilitation, and Reconstruction.

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    Somehow, years after, some people in the eastern region still felt the country was not fair to them and had formed several secessionist movements to protest against what they see as political and economic marginalisation. In the course of doing that, some of them have had to rally indigenes of the region in the diaspora to donate to the agitation for independence, including training militia in the region’s forests.

    It is unfortunate that IPOB that was formed in 2012 as a peaceful movement later metamorphosed and launched an armed wing in south-eastern Nigeria in 2020, ostensibly to defend the Igbo ethnic group.

    We have had other Igbo separatist groups like the Movement for the Actualization of the Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB), which was founded by Ralph Uwazuruike in 1999. But he adopted the principle of nonviolence as propagated by Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr., as the philosophy of the struggle. Naturally, he was detained several times and charged with treason in Nigerian courts.

    Of course we also had the Simon Ekpa wing of IPOB that broke away from its parent body and was led by Ekpa, who was only in September jailed for terrorism against Nigeria, in faraway Finland. Between the two factions of IPOB, the geopolitical risk consultancy SBM Intelligence, had claimed that as many as ”700 deaths have been linked to separatist militants since 2021, including a May 2024 incident where five soldiers and six others were killed in an ambush in Abia State. During the conflict, military personnel have also been implicated in multiple cases of human rights abuses.” 

    Even the court that sentenced Kanu said that the prosecution proved that about 175 security personnel lost their lives; 134 police stations were destroyed and nine offices of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) were burnt on the orders of Kanu in his broadcasts. This was apparently why the court said Kanu should forfeit the transmitter used for his broadcasts to the Federal Government.

    These are not all. The court also found Kanu culpable of incitement in the destruction of government properties in Lagos during the EndSARS protest in 2020, as well as that Kanu had called upon his listeners or supporters to attack the British High Commission in Nigeria.

    All of these made Justice Omotosho to conclude that ”His action was aimed at causing anarchy, which will in turn lead to the breakdown of law and order. His evil intention was to wreak havoc on the people of Nigeria. Were all these actions for self-determination? The answer is No”, Justice Omotosho concluded.

    It is instructive that it is not only the Igbo in the southeastern part of the country that are crying of marginalisation. Several other parts of the country also have one grievance or the other against the Nigerian state, including the south-south region where the country’s golden eggs are being laid. Other parts of the country had also suffered one form of marginalisation or the other at one time or the other.

    Even at that, it is not that people cannot agitate for ethnic or whatever freedom. But there are constitutionally laid-down processes for doing this, as Justice Omotosho noted while delivering his judgment. ”Agitations for self-determination can only pass through the constitutional amendment through the National Assembly”, the judge said. But Kanu’s model deviated from this norm to embrace violence, illegal broadcasts, incitement, intimidation, threats and actual commission of crimes, including murder, to promote whatever cause he believed he was promoting.

    In actual fact, both Kanu and Ekpa committed virtually the same crime. While Kanu committed his own crime within, Ekpa was throwing violence across the seas to Nigeria from abroad. Ekpa activated the Biafra Government In Exile (BGIE) in 2022, and in 2023 declared himself leader of the government. The Federal Government protested to the Finnish authorities which initially seemed not keen on arresting him (a thing some people initially attributed to his being a Finnish citizen of Nigerian origin). Indeed, at a point, the Nigerian government called for his extradition, so he could come and face justice at home. In March, 2024, the Nigerian Army declared him and 96 others wanted for terrorism, violent extremism and secessionist threats.

    He was eventually arrested in Finland, in 2023. Ekpa’s trial which ran from May 30, 2025, to June 25, 2025, consisted of only 12 days of hearings as the verdict which sentenced him to six years in prison was delivered on September 1, 2025.

    This was a remarkable difference from that of Kanu that lasted a whole 10 years (2015-2025). Granted that the wheel of justice travels at a snail’s speed in Nigeria, Kanu made his spectacularly so.   Apart from jumping bail, he has had cause to use delay tactic to prolong his trial. He had cause to reject at least three justices from sitting on his matter, citing either bias or lack of jurisdiction. Justice Omotosho who eventually decided the case was the fourth judge to sit on it. He too might have been put off by Kanu’s unruly behaviour even in the face of the court, but for his patience. All kinds of excuses that would not be tolerated in courts elsewhere were tolerated in the matter. So, Kanu is the architect of his own fortune as he even at a point fired his entire defence team and decided to defend himself.  However, despite its slow pace, and Kanu’s grandstanding, it is gratifying that a court of competent jurisdiction eventually found him guilty and sentenced him accordingly. If Ekpa could be convicted in Finland, why should Kanu’s case be different? This is why it is surprising that some people are wondering why Kanu should be convicted. Why did they not raise eyebrows when Ekpa was convicted? Is it because Kanu was tried in Nigeria?

    It would seem to me that Obi Aguocha, a member of the House of Representatives representing the Ikwuano/Umuahia North/Umuahia South Federal Constituency of Abia State, who delivered the allocutus on behalf of Kanu at the court shortly before Justice Omotosho delivered his judgment in the case of the Federal Government of Nigeria vs. Mazi Nnamdi Kanu, loved the accused more than the accused loves himself, given the sober manner he delivered the allocutus.  “My lord, I am the direct representative of Mazi Nnamdi Kanu. That is why you see me here almost every time, showing presence and solidarity with him.”  Aguocha explained that he and Kanu attended primary and secondary school together, noting that despite being Kanu’s senior, he felt a personal responsibility to speak for him, especially in his capacity as a federal lawmaker.

    But Kanu and his co-travellers should have seen what eventually befell him coming. It could not have been otherwise, given the gravity of the charges levelled against him. Neither terrorism nor treasonable felony is a minor crime.

    I know Kanu has his admirers as he indeed received royal treatment in his heyday; with some prominent Igbo personalities paying homage to him. The fact of the matter is that the law is the law. It is no respecter of anybody.

    It is good we have finally had a closure to the matter, unless Kanu appeals the judgment. If he does and the judgment is reversed, fine. Otherwise, it is President Tinubu we should all look up to for prerogative of mercy. Given Kanu’s recalcitrance, the latter option seems more like it.

  • How Kanu was misled into life jail, by erstwhile lawyer

    How Kanu was misled into life jail, by erstwhile lawyer

    • Wife threatens to inflict stress on those stressing her

    Sir Ifeanyi Ejiofor, a former counsel to the leader of the Independent People of Biafra (IPOB), Nnamdi Kanu, who was sentenced to life imprisonment for treasonable felony and terrorism charges by the Federal High Court in Abuja on Thursday, has highlighted the legal misrepresentation that culminated in his conviction.

    In a statement titled ‘Nnamdi Kanu’s Avoidable Ordeal: How Amateur Legal Showmen Led a High Profile Case into a Judicial Ambush’, Barrister Ejiofor recalled that he was a member of the Kanu legal team for about eight years from 2015 until Prof. Mike Ozekhome, SAN, assumed leadership of the legal team in 2022.

    He said: “During the period our team handled this matter from 2015 to December 2023, up until Prof. Mike Ozekhome, SAN, assumed leadership of the legal team in 2022, we were on the threshold of securing yet another major relief for Mazi Nnamdi Kanu, particularly after the Court of Appeal discharged and acquitted him in 2022.

    “Sustained pressure, strategic diplomacy and airtight legal maneuvering had placed us on the verge of another monumental breakthrough.

    “Regrettably, certain sensitive details of this progress were, perhaps innocently, disclosed by Mazi Nnamdi Kanu to some of these clueless clowns.

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    “Rather than support a strategy they barely understood, they seized the information as an opportunity to derail the entire process and treacherously orchestrated a change in the status quo.

    “Consequently, we exited the team, gloriously, and with our integrity intact.”

    Noting that a high-profile, internationally sensitive criminal trial is not a circus ring, Ejiofor noted that “once these bloated, delusional entertainers-in-wigs inserted themselves into the process, everything degenerated into a grotesque parody of legal representation.

    “Instead of crafting legal strategy, they crafted Instagram stories. Instead of mastering case law, they mastered camera angles. At every court session, their priority wasn’t research or preparation, it was posing, filming, updating, grandstanding, and “going viral. Meanwhile, the accused man’s fate hung by a thread,” he said.

    Ejiofor said the most tragic part of it all was that even after the court explicitly warned that self-representation in a complex constitutional and criminal matter was dangerous, “these ‘consultants’ encouraged it, clapping like paid spectators in a village arena.”

    He lamented that the unthinkable happened in a trial that could have been paused or avoided if the proper methodology and engagement had been applied. Yet, he said, a conviction that could have been prevented and an outcome that was entirely avoidable was allowed to proceed “under the guidance of legal lightweights intoxicated by social-media relevance.

    “They railroaded him, knowingly or unknowingly, into the savage pit of a full criminal trial, fully aware that other lawful avenues existed.

    “Even while the trial was ongoing, they busied themselves with dishing out falsehoods, half-truths, and misleading “updates” to an unsuspecting public. Every lie told outside the courtroom became a landmine inside the courtroom.

    “Every exaggerated “update” became a contradiction the prosecution gleefully documented. Every camera stunt became a professional embarrassment.

    “And now, instead of remorse, they have resumed their post-trial routine: fresh videos, fresh lies, fresh false hopes, desperate for clicks.

    “The tragedy continues because the vulnerable still believe them.”

    The legal practitioner said the greatest puzzle of all was how foremost legal minds, globally respected Senior Advocates of Nigeria such as Chief Kanu Agabi, SAN; Chief Onyechi Ikpeazu, SAN; “and other erudite members of the Inner Bar; men fully versed in the anatomy of high-wire criminal litigation, became disengaged at the most critical moment of the trial, only for mediocre adventurers to hijack a matter of international significance and reduce it to a TikTok legal carnival.

    “Who replaces world-class physicians with herbal storytellers during brain surgery? Who replaces strategic diplomacy with reckless grandstanding? Who replaces law with theatrics? Only a system already preparing for disaster,” he said.

    On the way forward for the convicted IPOB leader, Ejiofor said for any meaningful rescue effort by globally respected legal experts, “the first task must be to clean up the monumental damage inflicted by these self-advertising jesters.”

    “A comprehensive review of methodology, effective engagement, and drastically reduced publicity must precede any intervention.

    “Only then can a coherent, sophisticated legal and political strategy be fashioned.

    “This is not the time for comedy; not the time for inflated egos and certainly not the time for social media theatrics.

    “It is time for soberness, time for competence, time for real advocacy. #EnoughIsEnough,” he said.

    Kanu’s wife slams lawyers for not briefing her on transfer to Sokoto

    Uchechi Okwu-Kanu, wife of the leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), Nnamdi Kanu, yesterday criticised her husband’s legal consultants for failing to brief her on his transfer to Sokoto prison.

    The IPOB leader’s counsel, Aloy Ejimakor, had announced on X (formerly Twitter) on Friday that Kanu had been transferred to a correctional centre in Sokoto following his conviction.

    Okwu-Kanu said she only received information about her husband’s transfer to Sokoto after he had arrived at the facility in the Northwest state.

    She said certain persons who had visited him earlier in the day did not inform her of the development.

    Instead, she said, his lawyers “ran to social media to broadcast it”.

    Okwu-Kanu said the behaviour was unprofessional and unacceptable.

    “If you all do not sit up and behave in a civilised and professional manner, I will stress you with my ‘stress’, and I promise you, you will be stressed,” she wrote.

    “Enough of your theatrics! Be warned!”

    Meanwhile, Enyinnaya Abaribe, senator representing Abia south, says the life sentence handed to Kanu was not surprising.

    We’ll explore available options for Kanu’s release, says Otti

    Abia State governor, Dr. Alex Otti, has assured that all hope was not lost with regard to securing the release of the leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), Nnamdi Kanu, despite his conviction by Justice James Omotosho.

    He also cautioned politicians who have positioned themselves to play petty and dirty politics with Kanu’s travails to jettison the idea and rather work with others to secure his freedom.

    In a statement he personally signed yesterday, Otti disclosed that the issue of IPOB was poorly managed at the earliest stage, but he had on a personal note engaged the authorities concerned since December, 22, 2023, shortly after he assumed office.

    The governor said he was ready to collaborate with any person or group who genuinely wants to push for Kanu’s freedom through diplomacy and dialogue with the federal government.

    The governor said: “I still strongly believe that poor management of the IPOB issue at the incubation stage created the problem we have today, hence we cannot allow it to linger and create a bigger monstrous situation for us.

    “While the trial that led to this conviction lasted, I personally engaged the authorities at the highest level, starting from December 22, 2023, on alternative resolution strategy.

    “I must state that some agreements were made, which were dependent on quick dispensation of the matter at the Federal High Court. Unfortunately, the matter dragged until this time.

    “I am confident that judgment having been delivered, the alternative resolution will now kick in.

    “It is instructive that this strategy was explained to Mazi Nnamdi Kanu when I visited him while he was in the DSS custody earlier in the year.

    “While Mazi Nnamdi Kanu is free to appeal his conviction, I’m happy to inform you that I have activated and will continue to work on the already agreed strategy until his freedom is secured.

    “I’m also happy to collaborate with other well-meaning Nigerians who genuinely want this problem resolved, to push for his freedom through the same diplomacy and dialogue with the federal government, which though did not create the problem, can courageously and compassionately solve it and take the credit.

    “I’ll like to use this opportunity to appeal to our people to remain calm and refrain from utterances and actions capable of stoking fear, violence and insecurity and may negatively affect the outcome of the engagements we are already having.

    “I have no doubt that with the assurances I have received from the Federal Government, a resolution is in sight and Mazi Kanu will regain his freedom.

    “May I also caution politicians who have positioned themselves to play petty and dirty politics with the travails of Mazi Nnamdi Kanu to jettison the idea and rather work with us to secure his freedom?

    “I want to assure our people of my unwavering resolve and commitment to genuinely solving this problem with wisdom, high level dialogue and diplomacy, with a view to ensuring that genuine peace returns to the Southeast.”

  • Kanu: Southeast’s troubling view

    Kanu: Southeast’s troubling view

    It took about 10 riveting years and incompetent legal defence to earn the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) leader Nnamdi Kanu a life sentence. A Federal High Court in Abuja presided over by Justice James Omotosho handed down the sentence last week, ending years of legal rigmarole begun since his arrest in October 2015. IPOB itself was founded in 2012. While delivering his judgement, the judge said of Mr Kanu that “He remained arrogant, cocky, and full of himself without realising the magnitude of his crime and the effect of what he has done against his people in the south-east.” But moments after the sentencing, many notable members of the Southeast elite groaned that they were disappointed and had expected his crimes to be expiated by his freedom fight justifications. A day or so before the sentence was handed down, some 44 members of the House of Representatives acting under the aegis of Concerned Federal Lawmakers, mostly south-easterners, incomprehensibly asked the federal government to discontinue the case in favour of a political solution.

    Former senate president Adolphus Wabara decried the life sentence as unjust and tantamount to jailing the whole Igbo race, especially when some Boko Haram commanders had in contrast received lenient sentences. Foreign Affairs minister of state Bianca Ojukwu surprisingly groaned that the judgement was not the outcome they expected, indicating that she was saddened by how the whole affair ended. A political solution would be found, she whined. Some other south-eastern political elites and commentators have threatened electoral backlash should Mr Kanu remain in jail by the next elections. Former Anambra State governor Peter Obi ignored the juridical part of the Kanu affair and adopted sophistry suggesting that the arrest and trial should not have happened in the first instance. In sum, the dominant and vocal Southeast elite are behind Mr Kanu to a man and are unalterably opposed to his jailing. Those in favour of the outcome of the case, including the thousands of victims who suffered untold losses, are not only in the minority, their voices are muted. Given the prevalent mood in the Southeast, their voices will likely not be heard, going forward. Worse, they may even suffer some backlash.

    The resentment manifesting in the Southeast is a reflection of the curious logic expounded by their elite. They ignore the deaths and destructions, the economic losses, the trauma suffered by the region, and the dislocations. Instead, they focus on Mr Kanu himself, his charisma, his apparently disarming imperiousness, his legal and radio histrionics, and his boldness and claims of being a freedom fighter. Does the region really believe his story, especially his cartographic fantasies of including parts of Kogi, Benue and the entire South-South in Biafra? Having spread all over Nigeria transacting businesses of all kinds, thus transcending their spatial limitation, do the Igbo political and business elites really support self determination? The truth may never be known. But what is known at the moment is that Mr Kanu’s supporters compare the jailing of their freedom fighter, particularly what they describe as the harshness of his jail term, to how the so-called repentant and captured Boko Haram fighters have been treated. Sen. Wabara even persuaded himself to believe that Mr Kanu never projected violence. Indeed, those who have taken umbrage at his jailing appear to think that the collateral damage suffered by thousands of Igbo in the heat of IPOB campaigns makes the victims expendable and their blood desirable to be shed ‘to water the tree of liberty’.

    It is unclear why those who have bawled at alleged serial miscarriage of justice expected the judgement to favour Mr Kanu. In the strictest consideration of the law, and in every material particular, there was no way, even with the best defence, the IPOB leader would have been exculpated. But never one to let bad enough alone, he worsened his own case by repeatedly sacking his legal teams, and finally taking over his defence and botching it. Secondly, despite his personal failings, the weakness of his political cause, his promotion of indiscriminate violence, and his megalomaniacal inclination, it is shocking that someone as abusive and narcissistic like US president Donald Trump could be the darling of the Southeast elite. Has the region not suffered enough? Or do they think the cause of Biafra Mr Kanu claimed to be fighting could be divorced from his personality? Looking at the Southeast, the tragedy is not just the foibles of Mr Kanu but the irresponsibility of the regional elite. Had they sensibly read through Mr Kanu’s motives, and had they courageously defied him and his methods, the Southeast would have escaped the atavism he promoted and the tragic losses many Igbo families endured while Igbo-on-Igbo violence bled the region.

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    While nothing could exculpate Mr Kanu, given the weight of evidence before the court, the Southeast elite were justified to compare the treatment meted out to Mr Kanu with the mild treatment meted out to terrorists and bandits in the North. Since the outbreak of Boko Haram and later banditry, a powerful section of the northern elite has been supportive and even protective of their terrorists. They inspired an ill-conceived and ill-advised programme of deradicalisation and rehabilitation of so-called repentant Boko Haram fighters, while victims of insurgency enjoy incommensurate attention. And ultimately, they have seemed reluctant to promote or back measures that would lead to the extermination of the insurgents and bandits. Without saying so openly, the ham-handed manner the insurgents and bandits have been treated has given rise to the suspicion that the region sees the militants as a potential standing army for political purposes or projection of power in the event of a fight ensuing between warring ethnic groups for the soul and body of Nigeria. It is not unlikely that the Southeast reasons the same way. If there is any question or confusion about the ineffectiveness of the fight against banditry, insurgency and IPOB, the answer may be located in the special relationships the regional elites have formed with their militant groups.

    President Bola Tinubu has the unenviable job of presiding over a government whose members are still torn between the nation’s interest and ethnic, religious and primordial affinities. The case is so bad that some cabinet members’ loyalties cannot be assumed at a time the country is at war with itself. There are some powerful interests in the North sponsoring terrorism, sometimes due to economic/mineral resources interests. And there are also now clearly many powerful interests supporting Mr Kanu and what he represents, and who resent and defy the special treatment they believe the northern militants have received from powerful interests in and out of the federal government. These influential regional interests have given indications that their militants can be deployed during national elections for social, religious, political and territorial objectives. The Southwest remains a comparatively peaceful region today partly because its elite, after some initial hesitations, finally ensured that their incubating militants did not hatch. Time will tell whether they did right, or whether they have not become too complacent and liberal for their own existential good.

    Whether other regions outside the Southeast show outrage or not, the campaign to free Mr Kanu will acquire impetus in the coming weeks and months, especially as conjured stories of his treatment in jail get disseminated. Expect passions to be inflamed, as disgruntled regions synergise their efforts to render the Tinubu administration impotent. Abductions will become rife, rescue efforts will be stymied by sabotage, and great national distress will be fomented. But the Kanu affair will be nothing more than a symptom of a great underlying disease gnawing at the body politic. The main will thus disease require brilliant and radical measures to extirpate, assuming that the powerful and embedded interests in the country can be neutralised first.

  • Anyaso urges Tinubu to grant presidential pardon to Nnamdi Kanu

    Anyaso urges Tinubu to grant presidential pardon to Nnamdi Kanu

    Prominent businessman and YPP deputy governorship candidate in the last Abia State election, Dr. Chima Desmond Anyaso, has called on President Bola Tinubu to exercise his constitutional powers and grant a presidential pardon to the detained leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), Mazi Nnamdi Kanu, following Thursday’s court verdict. 

    Anyaso joined a growing list of Igbo leaders making similar appeals.

    In a weekend statement issued from his country home in Igbere, Bende Local Government Area of Abia State, Dr. Anyaso said the time is ripe for a decisive political solution to the lingering issue.

    He explained that he had intentionally avoided public commentary while the matter was before the courts to prevent any perception of interference. 

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    However, with a verdict now delivered—despite the possibility of appeal—he said it is appropriate for the President to intervene in the interest of national unity.

    “Now that the courts have spoken and the judicial process has advanced to a point where executive discretion may be applied, I respectfully call on President Tinubu to grant a presidential pardon to Mazi Nnamdi Kanu,” he said.

    “This is the time for the President to demonstrate magnanimity, heal divisions, and unite our nation behind a common purpose.”

    Anyaso noted that traditional rulers, political leaders, business groups, civil society organisations, religious bodies and ordinary Nigerians have consistently advocated a political resolution. Granting a pardon now, he said, would ease tension, promote reconciliation and strengthen the nation’s pursuit of peace.

    “Nigeria stands at a defining moment,” he added. “We need unity, healing and a renewed sense of collective responsibility. A presidential pardon for Nnamdi Kanu would send a strong signal that this administration is committed to peace, justice and the future of our nation.”

    He further urged all stakeholders to embrace dialogue, national cohesion and constructive engagement rather than division or confrontation.

  • Kanu moved to Sokoto prison

    Kanu moved to Sokoto prison

    Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) leader Nnamdi Kanu is starting his life jail sentence in the Sokoto Custodial Centre.

     His legal consultant Aloy Ejimakor said yesterday that Kanu, who was convicted on all seven counts of terrorism on Thursday, had been relocated from the custody of the Department of State Services (DSS) in Abuja, his abode since his extradition from Kenya in June 2021.

     Ejimakor said he had gone to the DSS to see Kanu only to be told that he had been sent to Sokoto.

     “MAZI NNAMDI KANU has just been moved from DSS Abuja to the custodial facility (prison) in Sokoto; so far away from his lawyers, family, loved ones and well wishers,” he said on X.

     He urged calm but queried the decision to send Kanu to Sokoto, saying “when Awolowo was convicted in 1963, he was sent to the East, a neutral zone in his feud with the North.”

     A source at the DSS confirmed Kanu’s relocation.

     In sentencing the IPOB leader ,Justice Kolawole Omotosho had said that Kuje Custodial Centre,Abuja would not be suitable for him because of likely danger to his life given the number of killings associated with his directives.

     Security remained tight in many parts of the South East yesterday as the Thursday judgement continued to generate reactions.

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     IPOB said it remained committed to peaceful self-determination despite Kanu’s conviction.

     It deplored the judgement because, as it claimed, no weapons and “no attack plan” were ever found on Kanu.

     Besides,it said  he did not commit any offenses under Nigerian or international law.

     “We reaffirm our commitment to peaceful advocacy, international law and the pursuit of a United Nations-supervised referendum,” IPOB’s spokesperson, Emma Powerful, said in a statement.

     The Movement for the Actualization of Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB) also condemned the judgement,saying it was like sentencing the entire Igboland.

     Judgement not anticipated, nor prayed for, but reality – Bianca

    The Minister of State for  Foreign Affairs, Amb. Bianca Odumegwu-Ojukwu called for calm over the judgement.

     The minister who has just returned from a foreign trip described the conviction as sad news.

     “This is not the outcome we anticipated,  nor prayed for, but a reality that is now upon us,” she said on X.

     Continuing, she said:“There comes a time in the history of a people when there is  need for calm.

     “I therefore advise Ndigbo, and Nigerians as a whole, that such a period is now! There is utmost need to exercise restraint in response to this situation.

     “All actions which could be deemed incendiary, and which might escalate the situation at home or in the diaspora should be curtailed. A word is enough for the wise.

     “This situation requires careful reflection and constructive dialogue involving  all Igbo stakeholders, Governors, senators, Members of the House of Representatives, clergy, traditional rulers,  politicians and business people to engage with government authorities collectively. Beating the drums of fury and sabre rattling will only generate diminishing returns, and in the worst case scenario, yet another wasteland.

     “The most effective path toward resolution of this crisis is dialogue. The quest for  mutual coexistence of Ndigbo in Nigeria with justice, equity and dignity is a commitment which requires our collective resolve, and maintaining peace and order is essential to ensuring the security of all citizens, regardless of tribe or creed.

     “I would like to reassure Ndigbo, Nigerians and our foreign partners that there are still prospects of resolving this impasse in a manner that reduces national anxiety and societal trauma. I oblige everyone to remain calm and patient. Over the years I have continued to engage on these issues with several stakeholders. Now is the time for us all in Ala Igbo to put all hands on deck, and to  have a joint engagement , sincerely,  involving all the South Eastern States, to seek a political resolution to this matter.”

     Igbo Youth Leaders and Stakeholders Assembly called the  life imprisonment sentence as  a welcome development.

     Leader of the Assembly, Mazi Chukwuma Okpalaezeukwu said it  would open room for other developments.

    He regretted that Kanu’s continued detention without trial over the years had kept people of the Southeast in perpetual mental torture and belief that they were not regarded in Nigeria.

     “The judgement passed on Mazi Nnamdi Kanu is a welcome development. The judiciary, has after a long time, finally heeded to the yearning of our people.

     “No matter how that judgement looks, there is room for appeal. Also, justice has been served,” he said.

    Okpalaezeukwu, however, noted that the judgement has given President Bola Tinubu the avenue and platform to proceed with granting Mazi Kanu pardon.

    A former National Vice President of Ohanaeze Ndigbo Worldwide, Chief Demian Okeke-Ogene,  called the judgement unacceptable.

     Ogene appealed to President Bola Tinubu to, as matter of urgency, intervene to prevent unnecessary tension in the Southeast region of Nigeria.

    “We want Nnamdi Kanu to be released unconditionally for the sake of peace, unity, togetherness, equity equality fairness and justice,” he said.

     An  Aba-based lawyer, Gabriel Emperor Ogbonna  said:“If  Kanu had defended himself, maybe, we could juxtapose his defence together with the allegations against him, then arrive at a conclusion that is fair enough.

     “But today, because he didn’t defend himself, it is the prosecution facts that we are dealing with and the prosecution facts are incontrovertible. So, you now see the reason there is no way anybody can fault the judgment of Justice Omotosho.

     “There is a window of getting a pardon. Pardon is a political act. If the President decides to pardon him, he has to contend  with other people in the country who feel that Nnamdi Kanu ought to be in prison:the people  in  Orsu, Ozubulu, Agulu, Orlu, Okigwe and Arondizuogu and other parts of Igbo land where the Eastern Security Network, ESN (the security arm of IPOB) had their camps or killed their loved ones.

      “The President can grant him pardon, but he has to contend with all the people who were also victims of the activities of these proscribed groups. “

     “You have to also consider the fact that, if you say that you want to pardon somebody, there must be a reason for the pardon. Before Nnamdi Kanu will be pardoned, there must be discussions  on the terms and condition of the pardon. The government and Nnamdi Kanu and his team will look at the terms and conditions. There are a lot of issues that must be  look at to be able to agree whether they are going to pardon or not. But to me, I am of the opinion that a political solution will be the best thing to do.’

    Police deploy personnel

    Imo State Police Commissioner Aboki Danjuma, warned that the command would not tolerate any breakdown of law and order on account of the judgement.

     “We will not hesitate to arrest and prosecute anyone found engaging in activities capable of disrupting public peace,” CP Danjuma said.

     According to him, the police command has intensified visibility patrols, conducted intelligence-led raids on suspected criminal hideouts, and deployed a show of force across the state to deter criminal activity.

     A former counsel to Kanu, Vincent Obetta, urged President Bola Tinubu to adopt a political solution “in the interest of justice and national peace.”

     Speaking in Enugu, Obetta said the non -release  of the IPOB leader—despite several court orders—remains a grave violation of both the Constitution and international law.

  • DSS mum as lawyer alleges Kanu’s movement to Sokoto custodial centre

    DSS mum as lawyer alleges Kanu’s movement to Sokoto custodial centre

    Security sources have failed to debunk allegation that the Department of State Services (DSS) on Friday moved leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) Nnamdi Kanu to the Sokoto Custodial Centre.

    A lawyer to Kanu,  Aloy Ejimakor, on Friday alleged his client had been moved to the Sokoto Custodial Centre by the Department of State Services (DSS).

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    Ejimakor on an X post, said: “While urging #Ndigbo to remain calm, I must question the wisdom of sending #MNK to Sokoto prison. When Awolowo was convicted in 1963, he was sent to the East, a neutral zone in his feud with the North. Pres. Tinubu can still halt this drift, as I said in this video.”

    Several enquiries to the Service on the matter failed to get any response.

  • Nnamdi Kanu gets life sentence for terrorism

    Nnamdi Kanu gets life sentence for terrorism

    • IPOB chief found guilty on all seven counts

    The Federal High Court in Abuja yesterday sentenced the leader of the proscribed Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), Nnamdi Kanu, to life imprisonment after finding him guilty of terrorism-related offences.

    In a judgment that lasted for hours and kept the courtroom tense from the start to the finish, Justice James Omotosho held that the prosecution had led “sufficient, credible and compelling evidence” to establish its case against the defendant in the seven counts filed by the Department of State Service (DSS).

    But the drama that unfolded inside Court 7 before the sentencing underscored the intensity of a trial that has gripped the nation for years.

    Courtroom tension before judgment

    From the moment the court doors opened shortly after 9 a.m., it was clear that the day would not proceed quietly.

    Dozens of security operatives took positions within and outside the courtroom.

    Their presence – stern faces, firm stances, and tight formations – announced that this was not an ordinary sitting.

    At exactly 9:32 a.m., when Justice Omotosho walked into the courtroom, murmurs ended abruptly.

    All eyes shifted to the man sitting surrounded by securitymen: Kanu.

    The IPOB leader, dressed in his customary white outfit, rose instantly and shouted toward the judge’s seat even before the case was called.

    “There is no judgment today!” he declared in a raised voice.

    “We have joined issues. There cannot be judgment when issues have been joined!”

    His sudden outburst startled some observers seated at the rear rows.

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    Lawyers exchanged glances.

    Security men adjusted their positions.

    Justice Omotosho, unfazed, calmly advised him to wait until the case was formally called.

    Minutes later, the court registrar announced the case, and Kanu was directed into the dock.

    He complied, but with visible agitation.

    Judge condemns ‘barbaric’ conduct

    In his judgment, Justice Omotosho held that Kanu had chosen to rest his case on the prosecution’s evidence.

    He described the approach as “a risky gamble that failed.”

    By doing so, he said, Kanu “impliedly admitted” the prosecution’s case.

    After reviewing the evidence led by the DSS, the judge concluded that Kanu’s actions, including numerous inciting broadcasts, resulted in deaths, destruction of property and created widespread fear.

    “From his terrorist activities, many innocent lives have been lost. All prosecution witnesses were witnesses of truth,” the judge said.

    According to him, Kanu’s conduct during the trial was “cocky, unruly,” and punctuated by threats that “no court can jail him.”

    The judge noted that the sit-at-home orders, which Kanu announced from overseas, had crippled life in the Southeast, subjecting the very people he claimed to be fighting for to fear, economic hardship and violence.

    “Those killed for defying the sit-at-home order were the same people he claimed he wanted to liberate,” he said.

    Justice Omotosho held that Kanu was never elected by the people of the Southeast, yet acted as though he possessed the legal authority to dictate their movement.

    “By his conduct, he qualified only as a terrorist and should be treated as such,” the judge said.

    The sentencing

    After convicting him on all the counts, Justice Omotosho imposed life imprisonment on counts 1, 2, 4, 5 and 6 (terrorism-related offences), 20 years imprisonment (no fine option) on Count 3 (membership of a proscribed terrorist group), and five years imprisonment (no fine option) on Count 7 (unlawful importation of a radio transmitter to further Radio Biafra broadcasts).

    The judge remarked that although the Terrorism Prevention Act under which Kanu was convicted prescribes the death penalty, he chose not to impose it “as a Christian.”

    He cited an admonition from Matthew 23:22-23 on the virtues of mercy.

    Nonetheless, he insisted that Kanu showed no remorse for the “atrocities” he committed.

    Given the violent nature of the offences and the defendant’s conduct, Justice Omotosho held that Kanu should be placed in a suitable facility—not Kuje Prison.

    “Because of his atrocities, he deserves protection. He should be kept in protective custody in any part of the country,” the judge said.

    He further ordered that Kanu must not be allowed near any communication device except under monitoring by the National Security Adviser (NSA).

    The judge said: “Our God Himself is merciful. Nnamdi Kanu has been convicted, and this court is only being merciful to him because we, too, must be merciful.

    “The court is minded to sentence the convict to death due to the atrocities he committed. The convict has not shown any remorse for his actions; he remains arrogant and cocky, without realising the magnitude of his crime and the effect of what he has done against his people.

    “Although I am not fully persuaded, I must temper justice with mercy.

    “The death penalty is now being frowned upon globally by the international community.

    “In the interest of justice, I hereby sentence the convict to life imprisonment on counts 1, 4, 5, and 6, instead of the death sentence, for life is sacred to God.”

    How the court found Kanu guilty

    Count One (broadcasts threatening violence): the judge reviewed several broadcasts, including an interview on Sahara TV, where Kanu used words that were “not mere words but threats to harm people.”

    He held that Kanu endorsed violent actions and believed violence was necessary to achieve Biafra.

    “These threats are terrorist acts,” he ruled.

    Count Two (sit-at-home orders): Justice Omotosho found that the sit-at-home directives issued by Kanu led to killings, including that of former presidential aide Ahmed Gulak.

    He ruled that only the President, under the Emergency Powers Act, could restrict movement nationwide, not an individual acting without lawful authority.

    Count Three (membership of IPOB/ESN): Kanu, the judge said, never denied being founder and leader of IPOB and the Eastern Security Network (ESN), both proscribed.

    The court admitted the Federal Government’s gazette proscribing the groups.

    Counts Four and Five (incitement to kill security personnel): According to the judge, evidence showed that over 75 security personnel and civilians were killed as a result of Kanu’s broadcasts.

    Justice Omotosho recalled broadcasts where Kanu directed his followers on how to attack security operatives, including issuing violent instructions during the EndSARS protests.

    “He turned himself into a tyrant,” Justice Omotosho said.

    Count Six (teaching followers how to make bombs): The judge found evidence, including audio clips, showing Kanu teaching IPOB members how to build improvised explosive devices.

    “This tutoring shows his barbaric mindset,” he said.

    Count Seven (smuggling radio transmitter): The court held that the prosecution proved that the transmitter used for Radio Biafra broadcasts was imported illegally and concealed.

    Radio Biafra, the court noted, is not registered in Nigeria.

    How the court resolved preliminary issues

    Before delivering the main judgment, the judge addressed Kanu’s preliminary objections.

    Kanu argued that the Terrorism Prevention (Amendment) Act 2013 had been repealed by the 2022 Terrorism Prevention and Prohibition Act.

    Justice Omotosho disagreed.

    He held that offences were committed between 2018 and 2021, when the 2013 Act was still in force.

    Section 98(3) of the 2022 Act, he explained, preserves ongoing cases filed under the repealed law.

    Extraordinary rendition claim

    Kanu claimed he was unlawfully abducted from Kenya, rendering his trial invalid.

    The court held that even if his return was questionable, the manner of arrest did not invalidate the charges.

    The judge added that Kanu had already obtained compensation from a Kenyan court in a separate case on alleged violation of rights.

    Application for Bail and Stay of Proceedings

    Justice Omotosho rejected Kanu’s bail request and his plea to halt proceedings pending the determination of constitutional questions at the Court of Appeal.

    A courtroom gripped by drama

    From the beginning of the proceedings, it was clear that Kanu was not ready for the judgment.

    Immediately the judge entered the courtroom, Kanu rose from where he sat among the security officials, and shouted that there would be no judgment.

    He said: “There is no judgment today. We have joined issues. There cannot be judgment when we have joined issues.”

    The judge then cut in and advised him to wait for the case to be called before he could address the court.

    The case was then called by the court registrar, following which Kanu went into the dock.

    By the prompting of the judge, Kanu identified some fresh applications and motions he just filed, including one seeking to arrest the judgment.

    The judge later took arguments from both Kanu, who represented himself and Awomolo.

    Justice Omotosho dismissed all the applications and motions.

    As the judge announced his intention to proceed to deliver the main judgment, Kanu lost his cool and started shouting at the top of his voice.

    He accused the judge of being biased, adding that the judge did not know the law.

    As Kanu continued to rant, Awomolo rose to his feet and applied to the court to exercise his power under Section 266 of the Administration of Criminal Justice Act (ACJA) to order the removal of the defendant from the courtroom in view of his unruly behaviour.

    Justice Omotosho agreed with Awomolo and ordered the security personnel in court to take the defendant out of the courtroom.

    The judge further ordered that, in view of his unruly conduct, subsequent proceedings in the case shall be conducted in his absence.

    The judge stood down proceedings briefly for the security personnel to carry out his order.

    Kanu, who by then had become so enraged, initially refused to accompany the security officials out of the courtroom by shouting: “Don’t come close to me. Don’t come close to me.”

    A moment later, he changed his mind and was walked out of the courtroom by the security personnel, who relocated him to one of the offices in the court building.