Tag: Nnamdi Kanu

  • Nigeria’s and the Nnamdi Kanu dilemma

    Nigeria’s and the Nnamdi Kanu dilemma

    Sir: Nnamdi Kanu’s trial long ago stopped being about one man or one movement. The case now extends beyond personal guilt or innocence, touching deep questions of regional loyalty, federal legitimacy, and the emotional residue of post-war Nigeria. Every adjournment, ruling, or protest is read less as a point of law than as a signal of power.

    A lenient ruling could unsettle parts of the security and political establishment, while a harsh one might ignite unrest in the Southeast. Caught between these fears, both the judiciary and the executive have settled into a cautious holding pattern, buying time under the guise of process, managing optics rather than enforcing justice. Each adjournment now feels less like due process and more like a rehearsal of fear.

    The prolonged detention of Nnamdi Kanu, leader of IPOB, has evolved beyond a legal matter; it now sits at the intersection of politics, power, and fear. What should have been a straightforward judicial process has turned into an emblem of how justice itself has been securitised in Nigeria.

    Years after his arrest, rendition, and multiple adjournments, Kanu’s case remains suspended between legal procedure and political hesitation. An acquittal might be read as weakness, potentially emboldening separatist sentiments in the Southeast. A conviction, on the other hand, could reignite anger and alienation, undoing fragile peace in a region already wary of federal authority. The case, once confined to the courtroom, has migrated into the bloodstream of national politics, where perception often outweighs law.

    The difficulty in resolving Kanu’s case lies in a convergence of overlapping fears—political, regional, institutional, and even personal. At the political level, the government worries that any leniency toward Kanu might be interpreted as surrender.

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    In a country still defined by ethnic arithmetic, every move carries electoral and symbolic weight. For the Tinubu administration, managing this legacy case involves balancing national unity with political survival.

    President Bola Tinubu inherited this case, but he now owns its outcome. With his administration struggling to stabilise the economy, the prevailing instinct within his circle is caution — a reluctance to open new fronts while the state is already stretched thin by economic strain and insecurity.

    Internationally, the memory of Kanu’s controversial rendition from Kenya still lingers. A transparent trial might reopen diplomatic wounds and challenge the legality of his extradition. Delay, therefore, becomes anesthesia numbing the wound without healing it. But nations do not heal by avoidance; they heal by courage.

    Nigeria is not the first country to face a dilemma where justice and national unity collide. Spain’s handling of the Catalan separatist movement offers a cautionary but useful comparison. After years of imprisonment and confrontation, Madrid shifted toward limited amnesty and structured dialogue, not as capitulation, but as a strategy of containment through inclusion.

    Ethiopia’s uneasy truce with Tigray rebels similarly reflected the painful recognition that no military or legal standoff can substitute for political accommodation. Even South Africa’s post-apartheid Truth and Reconciliation process illustrates that sustainable peace requires moral imagination, the courage to see justice not merely as punishment, but as repair.

    Nigeria’s leadership could borrow from these lessons: that dialogue and due process are not signs of weakness, but of confidence in the institutions that define a modern state. The real question is not whether Kanu is guilty, but whether Nigeria’s institutions are capable of administering justice without fear.

    Allowing justice to run its course would send a powerful message that the Nigerian state still believes in the rule of law as the ultimate guarantor of security. Continuing to suspend it, however, implies that power, not principle, remains the true authority.

    •Lekan Olayiwola, lekanolayiwola@gmail.com

  • NMA gets one week extension on Kanu’s health status

    NMA gets one week extension on Kanu’s health status

    A Federal High Court in Abuja has granted a week’s extension to the medical panel set up by the President of the Nigerian Medical Association (NMA) to assess the health status of detained leader of the proscribed Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), Nnamdi Kanu.

    The time extension is meant to enable the panel to conclude its assignment.

    The extension of time became necessary owing to the panel’s inability to conclude its assignment within the eight days allocated to it by the court.

    In a ruling on September 26, Justice James Omotosho ordered the NMA president to, among others, set up a team of medical experts to examine Kanu’s health status and ascertain whether or not he is still fit to undergo his ongoing terrorism trial.

    The judge said it was necessary to require the NMA, which is the body of medical practitioners in the country, to nominate experts to ascertain the defendant’s health status in view of the conflicting claims by the defence and prosecution on the state of Kanu’s health.

    At the mention of the case yesterday, counsel to the prosecution, Suraj Sa’ada (SAN), told the court that he was informed that the medical panel was yet to conclude its assignment.

    Sa’ada said the panel planned to do a thorough job and should be given adequate time.

    He suggested that the panel be given another week to enable it to conclude its task.

    The defence lawyer, Onyechi Ikpeazu (SAN), did not object to the one-week adjournment the lawyer to the prosecution sought.

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    Justice Omotosho adjourned till October 16 for the NMA team to submit its report and determine what next steps to take on the case.

    In the September 26 ruling, Justice Omotosho had ordered the NMA president to set up a team of between eight to 10 members to determine whether or not Kanu’s health status made him unfit to continue to stand trial.

    The ruling was on Kanu’s application in which he sought to be transferred to a private ward in the National Hospital for urgent medical attention for alleged life-threatening ailments.

    The judge ordered that the team, to be constituted by the NMA’s president, should assess the health facilities of the Department of State Services (DSS) to determine if they were adequate to effectively take care of Kanu’s ailments.

    According to the judge, the team is also to determine whether or not it was necessary to transfer Kanu to the National Hospital, as he requested, and if Kanu’s medical status was such that could make him unfit to continue to stand trial.

    Justice Omotosho also ordered that the Chief Medical Director (CMD) of the National Hospital or his representative be made a member of the team because the National Hospital is the defendant’s choice.

    The judge also ordered that the report of the team’s findings be signed by both its Chairman and Secretary and should be filed in the court’s registry within eight days from today, which became impossible yesterday.

  • Release Nnamdi Kanu as October gift, Abians beg Tinubu

    Release Nnamdi Kanu as October gift, Abians beg Tinubu

    Indigenes and residents of Abia State have appealed to President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to release Nnamdi Kanu, leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) as an October 1st gift.

    The residents who made the demand Saturday, said the release of Nnamdi Kanu and end to his prolonged trial would be the best October 1st gift that President Tinubu will give not just to the people of Southeast, but to the Isiama Afara Community in Umuahia North Local Government Area of the state, where the IPOB leader comes from.

    According to some of the respondents including Mr. Godson Chike who stated that the nostalgia of October 1st celebration in the southeast has been eroded by the continued incarceration of Kanu.

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    Chike, who equally lamented the financial economic loss the zone and the country suffer as a result of the continued sit-at-home in the region, said, the release of the IPOB leader would end the continued insecurity in the zone by people who hide under the shield that they were pushing for the release of Kanu to perpetuate evil.

    The Aba resident who commended the President for the job he is doing and successes his administration has recorded in some sections of the country’s economy, also begged the President to push for the completion of ongoing and abandoned federal roads and other people oriented projects in the region, demanding that the President should focus its energy on issues that will help in ensuring that history would be kind on him (Tinubu’s)) by the time he leaves office as the fifth President of the of the country.

  • Alleged terrorism: You have case to answer, court tells Nnamdi Kanu

    Alleged terrorism: You have case to answer, court tells Nnamdi Kanu

    • Orders NMA President to determine whether Kanu is still fit to stand trial

    A Federal High Court in Abuja has rejected the no-case submission made by the detained self acclaimed leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), Nnamdi Kanu in his ongoing terrorism trial.

    Justice James Omotosho, in a ruling yesterday, held that the prosecution has established a prima facie case against Kanu to warrant that he be ordered to enter his defence.

    The judge, who overruled Kanu’s no-case submission, found that the evidence led by the prosecution and the exhibits it tendered have raised serious allegations of Kanu’s involvement in terrorism activities to warrant that he be given the opportunity to defend himself.

    On the defendant’s argument that the court lacked jurisdiction because of his alleged extraordinary rendition from Kenya, the judge held that evidence to that effect were not placed before the court, and so the court cannot make a finding on it.

    He said: “The defence raised the issue of jurisdiction of the court as a result of the alleged extraordinary rendition of the defendant.

    “It must be known that no evidence of extraordinary rendition has been placed or given in this court.

    “It is when such evidence relating to extraordinary rendition of the defendant is given on oath that the issue of jurisdiction relating to it can be considered by this court.

    “Laws are not based on evidence that are not placed before the court,” the judge said.

    Justice Omotosho held that the evidence and exhibits and the need for him to demonstrate and lead evidence on his allegations of an extraordinary rendition requires that the defendant is given the opportunity and afforded his fundamental rights to fair hearing to be allowed to enter his defence.

    Read Also: JUST IN: Court orders NMA’s President to determine whether Nnamdi Kanu is still fit to stand trial

    Kanu is being prosecuted by the Department of State Services (DSS) on a seven-count amended charge bordering of his alleged involvement in terrorism activities.

    Justice Omotosho said: “I have carefully gone through the evidence presented to the court by the prosecution with respect to this charge. The evidence all point to the establishment of a prima facie case against the defendant.

    “The evidence is such that the defendant must proffer some explanation or defence to the allegation made against him especially considering the seriousness of the offence as they are such that the life of the defendant is at stake.

    “This court will refrain from evaluating the evidence, but will limit itself to stating that, on the whole, a prima facie case of engaging in terrorist activities has been made out against the defendant.

    “This is not to say that the defendant is guilty as charged, but simply that he be afforded his right to fair hearing and put in his defence before this court.

    “The evidence of the prosecution has founded sufficient ground for proceeding with this trial.

    “A connection of the defendant with the offence, no matter how slight, constitutes prima facie evidence, and as such the Defendant would be required to enter his defence to the charge or a rebuttal of some sort.

    “I must say here that holding that a prima facie case has been established does not necessarily imply that the court finds the defendant guilty of the charge.

    “It is simply to allow the defendant exhaust his options for his defence and to clear every unresolved issue which may weigh on the mind of the court in reaching a final decision.

    “The defendant is still presumed innocent until proven guilty, and the prosecution still has the duty to prove the charge beyond reasonable doubt.

    “I must say here that in determining a no case submission, no other issue including credibility of witnesses, competence of charge, pre-trial detention, lack of fair hearing, etc will be entertained.

    “It is only whether a prima facie case is made out that will be considered.

    “The right of a defendant to defend himself/herself is a fundamental right provided under section 36 of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 (as amended).

    “Such right cannot be taken from a defendant except where a Defendant expressly or by conduct waives same.

    “This defendant, having not waived his right to defend himself either expressly or by conduct, and the no case submission made by him having been overruled, he is hereby called upon to put in his defence to the charge against him.

    “The evidence by the prosecution witnesses, exhibits and the need for the defendant to give evidence on how the extraordinary rendition took place and for the defendant to react to the evidence led by the prosecution through its five witnesses and the exhibits tendered, have occasioned a need for the defendant to put in his defence.

    “The address of counsel, no matter how beautifully constructed, cannot take the place of evidence.

    “Based on the fundamental right to fair hearing, as contained in Section 36 of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 (as amended), which the defendant is entitled to, this court is inclined to give him the opportunity and afford him his fundamental right to fair hearing.

    “Consequently, the no-case submission is overruled and the defendant is hereby ordered to enter his defence and make some explanations relating to the prima facie case against him.”

    In an earlier ruling, the judge ordered the President of the Nigerian Medical Association (NMA) to set up a team of between eight and 10 members to determine whether Kanu’s health status makes him unfit to continue to stand trial.

    Justice Omotosho issued the order while ruling on an application by Kanu, seeking to be transferred to a private ward in the National Hospital for urgent medical attention for alleged life threatening ailments.

    Justice Omotosho, who reviewed arguments by Kanu’s lawyer, Onyechi Ikpeazu (SAN), and that of the prosecution, Adegboyega Awomolo (SAN), ordered that the team, to be constituted by the NMA’s President, should assess the health facilities of the Department of State Services (DSS) to determine if they were adequate to effectively take care of Kanu’s ailments.

    According to the judge, the team is also to determine whether or not it was necessary to transfer Kanu to the National Hospital as he requested and whether Kanu’s medical status was such that could make him unfit to continue to stand trial.

    The judge also ordered that the Chief Medical Director of the National Hospital or his representative should be a member of the team because the National Hospital is the hospital of choice of the defendant.

    Justice Omotosho ordered that the report of the team’s findings should be signed by both its Chairman and Secretary, and should be filed in the court’s registry within eight days.

  • UPDATED: Alleged terrorism: ‘You have case to answer,’ Court tells Nnamdi Kanu

    UPDATED: Alleged terrorism: ‘You have case to answer,’ Court tells Nnamdi Kanu

    …orders NMA’s president to determine whether or not Kanu is still fit to stand trial

    A Federal High Court in Abuja has rejected the no-case submission made by the detained self-acclaimed leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), Nnamdi Kanu, in his ongoing alleged terrorism trial.

    Justice James Omotosho, in a ruling on Friday, held that the prosecution has established a prima facie case against Kanu to warrant that he be ordered to enter his defence.

    The judge, who overruled Kanu’s no-case submission, found that the evidence led by the prosecution and the exhibits it tendered have raised serious allegations of Kanu’s involvement in terrorist activities to warrant that he be allowed to defend himself.

    On the defendant’s argument that the court lacked jurisdiction because of his alleged extraordinary rendition from Kenya, the judge held that evidence to that effect was not placed before the court, and so, the court cannot make a finding on it.

    He said, “The defence raised the issue of jurisdiction of the court as a result of the alleged extraordinary rendition of the defendant.

    “It must be known that no evidence of extraordinary rendition has been placed or given in this court.

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    “It is when such evidence relating to extraordinary rendition of the defendant is given on oath that the issue of jurisdiction relating to it can be considered by this court.

    “Laws are not based on evidence that is not placed before the court,” the judge said.

    Justice Omotosho held that the evidence and exhibits and the need for him to demonstrate and lead evidence on his allegations of an extraordinary rendition, require that the defendant be given the opportunity and afforded his fundamental rights to a fair hearing to be allowed to enter his defence.

    Kanu is being prosecuted by the Department of State Services (DSS) on a seven-count amended charge bordering on his alleged involvement in terrorist activities.

    Justice Omotosho said, “I have carefully gone through the evidence presented to the court by the prosecution with respect to this charge. The evidence all points to the establishment of a prima facie case against the defendant.

    “The evidence is such that the defendant must proffer some explanation or defence to the allegation made against him, especially considering the seriousness of the offence, as they are such that the life of the defendant is at stake.

    “This court will refrain from evaluating the evidence, but will limit itself to stating that, on the whole, a prima facie case of engaging in terrorist activities has been made out against the defendant.

    “This is not to say that the defendant is guilty as charged, but simply that he be afforded his right to a fair hearing and put in his defence before this court.

    “The evidence of the prosecution has founded sufficient ground for proceeding with this trial.

    “A connection of the defendant with the offence, no matter how slight, constitutes prima facie evidence and as such the Defendant would be required to enter his defence to the charge or a rebuttal of some sort.

    “I must say here that holding that a prima facie case has been established does not necessarily imply that the court finds the defendant guilty of the charge.

    “It is simply to allow the defendant to exhaust his options for his defence and to clear every unresolved issue which may weigh on the mind of the court in reaching a final decision.

    “The defendant is still presumed innocent until proven guilty, and the prosecution still has the duty to prove the charge beyond a reasonable doubt.

    “I must say here that, in determining a no case submission, no other issue, including credibility of witnesses, competence of charge, pre-trial detention, lack of fair hearing, etc., will be entertained.

    “It is only whether a prima facie case is made out that will be considered.

    “The right of a defendant to defend himself/herself is a fundamental right provided under section 36 of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 (as amended).

    “Such right cannot be taken from a defendant except where a Defendant expressly or by conduct waives the same.

    “This defendant, having not waived his right to defend himself either expressly or by conduct, and the no case submission made by him, having been overruled, he is hereby called upon to put in his defence to the charge against him.

    “The evidence by the prosecution witnesses, exhibits, and the need for the defendant to give evidence on how the extraordinary rendition took place and for the defendant to react to the evidence led by the prosecution through its five witnesses and the exhibits tendered, have occasioned a need for the defendant to put in his defence.

    “The address of counsel, no matter how beautifully constructed, cannot take the place of evidence.

    “Based on the fundamental right to fair hearing as contained in Section 36 of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 (as amended), which the defendant is entitled to, this court is inclined to give him the opportunity and afford him his fundamental right to fair hearing.

    “Consequently, the no-case submission is overruled and the defendant is hereby ordered to enter his defence and make some explanations relating to the prima facie case against him,” Justice Omotosho said.

    In an earlier ruling, the judge ordered the President of the Nigerian Medical Association (NMA) to set up a team of between eight to 10 members to determine whether Kanu’s health status makes him unfit to continue to stand trial.

    Justice Omotosho issued the order while ruling on an application by Kanu, seeking to be transferred to a private ward in the National Hospital for urgent medical attention for alleged life-threatening ailments.

    Justice Omotosho, who reviewed arguments by Kanu’s lawyer, Onyechi Ikpeazu (SAN) and that of the prosecution, Adegboyega Awomolo (SAN), ordered that the team, to be constituted by the NMA’s President, should assess the health facilities of the Department of State Services (DSS) to determine if they were adequate to effectively take care of Kanu’s ailments.

    According to the judge, the team is also to determine whether or not it was necessary to transfer Kanu to the National Hospital as he requested and whether Kanu’s medical status was such that it could make him unfit to continue to stand trial.

    The judge also ordered that the Chief Medical Director of the National Hospital or his representative should be a member of the team because the National Hospital is the hospital of choice of the defendant.

    Justice Omotosho ordered that the report of the team’s findings should be signed by both its Chairman and Secretary, and it should be filed in the court’s registry within eight days from today.

  • Alleged terrorism: ‘You have case to answer,’ Court tells Nnamdi Kanu 

    Alleged terrorism: ‘You have case to answer,’ Court tells Nnamdi Kanu 

    A Federal High Court in Abuja has rejected the no-case submission made by the detained self acclaimed leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), Nnamdi Kanu in his ongoing alleged terrorism trial.

    Justice James Omotosho, in a ruling on Friday, held that the prosecution has established a prima facie case against Kanu to warrant that he be ordered to enter his defence.

    The judge who overruled Kanu’s no-case submission, found that the evidence led by the prosecution and the exhibits it tendered have raised serious allegations of Kanu’s involvement in terrorism activities to warrant that he be given the opportunity to defend himself.

    READ ALSO: Army neutralises ISWAP fighters, foils terror attacks in Zamfara, Kwara

    Justice Omotosho said the evidence and exhibits and the need for him to demonstrate and lead evidence on his allegations of an extra ordinary rendition, requires that the defendant is given the opportunity and afforded his fundamental rights to fair hearing to be allowed to enter his defence.

    Kanu is being prosecuted by the DSS on a seven-count charge bordering of his alleged involvement in terrorism activities.

    Details shortly…

  • JUST IN: Court orders NMA’s President to determine whether Nnamdi Kanu is still fit to stand trial

    JUST IN: Court orders NMA’s President to determine whether Nnamdi Kanu is still fit to stand trial

    A Federal High Court in Abuja has ordered the President of the Nigerian Medical Association (NMA) to set up a team of between eight to 10 members to determine whether the health challenges claimed by the detained self acclaimed leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), Nnamdi Kanu were such that could prevent him from further standing trial.

    Justice James Omotosho issued the order on Friday while ruling on an application by Kanu, seeking to be transferred to a private ward in the National Hospital for urgent medical attention for alleged life threatening ailments.

    Justice Omotosho, who reviewed arguments by Kanu’s lawyer, Onyechi Ikpeazu (SAN) and that of the prosecution, Adegboyega Awomolo (SAN), ordered that the team, to be constituted by the NMA’s President, should assess the health facilities of the Department of State Services (DSS) to determine if they were adequate to effectively take care of Kanu’s ailments.

    READ ALSO: Army neutralises ISWAP fighters, foils terror attacks in Zamfara, Kwara

    According to the judge, the team is also to determine whether or not it was necessary to transfer Kanu to the National Hospital as he requested and whether Kanu’s medical status was such that could make him unfit to continue to stand trial.

    The judge also ordered that the Chief Medical Director of the National Hospital or his representative should be a member of the team.

    Justice Omotosho ordered that the report of the team’s findings should be signed by both its Chairman and Secretary and which should be filed in the court’s registry within eight days from today.

    Details shortly…

  • Use political solution to release Nnamdi Kanu today, Onoh begs Tinubu

    Use political solution to release Nnamdi Kanu today, Onoh begs Tinubu

    The former spokesman of President Bola Tinubu in the south east, Denge Josef Onoh, has urged his boss, to employ political solution other than legal fireworks in today’s arbitration in the case of the leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), Mazi Nnamdi Kanu.

    Kanu appears in court today where IPOB is advocating for rule of the law in the trial process.

    The group had in its reply to Onoh’s accusation on IPOB’s inflammatory speeches said that the problem in Kanu’s trial lied on the abuse of rule of law by the Federal Government.

    IPOB’s spokesman, Emma Powerful, told Onoh it was not obstructing justice but that the continued detention of Kanu is as a result of legal irregularities and procedural defects, calling for adherence to constitutional safeguards.

    Examining the defence, Onoh said that the IPOB position is a clear demonstration of readiness to embrace dialogue as the path forward, rather than the shadows of violence that has haunted the south east region.

    He said that IPOB’s tone signals that the door to constructive conversation is wide open—provided it is met with sincerity from leaders such as President Tinubu. Onoh urged President Tinubu to now formally pursue a diplomatic and political solution to secure the unconditional release of Mazi Nnamdi Kanu.

    “This is not only a moral imperative, but one squarely within the constitutional powers of the Attorney General of the Federation, who holds the authority to invoke Section 174 of the 1999 Constitution (as amended) for nolle prosequi or other discretionary remedies in the interest of justice and national peace. IPOB’s statement meticulously outlines the legal irregularities plaguing Kanu’s detention, which demand immediate rectification to uphold the sanctity of our judiciary.”

    READ ALSO: Army neutralises ISWAP fighters, foils terror attacks in Zamfara, Kwara

    Onoh further said that IPOB in response to him stated that Kanu was previously discharged and acquitted on the charges at issue, rendering any retrial a violation of the constitutional safeguard against double jeopardy under Section 36(9).

    “Furthermore, the prosecution’s reliance on the repealed Terrorism Prevention (Amended) Act 2013, superseded by subsequent legislation—renders the case constitutionally untenable.”

    Onoh further highlighted the reservations IPOB expressed in their reply to him stating the misuse of civil ex parte orders to underpin criminal liability which contravenes the right to a fair hearing enshrined in Section 36, and the absence of cross-border procedural approvals for Kanu’s rendition further invalidates the proceedings.

    “To underscore the urgency and viability of such a political solution, consider the recent global precedent that unfolded just yesterday at the United Nations General Assembly. Ahmed al-Sharaa—formerly known as Abu Mohammad al-Jolani, the once-most-wanted terrorist leader in Syria by the United States, with a $10 million bounty on his head for his role in al-Qaeda affiliates and the ousting of Bashar al-Assad’s regime in late 2024—was granted the platform to address the world body as Syria’s transitional president.

    “This extraordinary allowance, amid ongoing concerns over his past, exemplifies how pragmatic diplomacy can transcend persecution, fostering stability over endless retribution. If the international community can pivot from bounties to dialogue for Syria’s sake, surely Nigeria—under your visionary leadership—can extend the same olive branch to resolve the Southeast’s grievances without further bloodshed.”

    He told President Tinubu that his personal history with the Southeast speaks volumes about his readiness to heal the wounds.

    “You remain the first Nigerian politician in our democratic history to appoint a regional spokesman during your campaign, a bold gesture that signaled your intent to listen, engage, and address the marginalization felt by our people. That foresight has now borne fruit, as evidenced by this very moment of potential breakthrough with IPOB.

    “It is a validation of your inclusive vision and a call to action to build on this momentum. I implore you, Mr. President, to summon the same resolute spirit of political dialogue that enabled you to deftly resolve the protracted crises in Rivers State—crises that threatened our federation’s fabric. Apply that wisdom here: release Mazi Nnamdi Kanu unconditionally, paving the way for broader reconciliation in the Southeast.

    “The people of my region find it ultimately provoking and an affront to their collective intelligence that negotiations continue unabated with terrorist bandits in the North, even as olive branches are extended to them, while Kanu—a non-violent agitator—languish in detention under a cloud of legal infirmity. Such disparity fuels despair, your intervention can ignite hope.

    “I once again plead that Mazi Nnamdi Kanu be released to iyom Bianca Odumegwu-Ojukwu and Senator John Azuta-Mbata (President General Ohanaeze Ndigbo). I humbly plead that he be released today if not, the most important thing is that he spends Christmas with his family and visit the grave of his late father and offer his prayers,” Onoh pleaded.

  • BREAKING: NMA sets up team to ascertain Nnamdi Kanu’s health status – DSS

    BREAKING: NMA sets up team to ascertain Nnamdi Kanu’s health status – DSS

    The Nigerian Medical Association (NMA) has constituted a seven-member team of experts to ascertain the actual health status of the detained self acclaimed leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), Nnamdi Kanu.

    Lawyer to the Department of State Services (DSS) and prosecuting lawyer in Kanu’s ongoing terrorism trial, Adegboyega Awomolo (SAN) disclosed this at the resumed hearing in the case on Friday.

    Awomolo said the Federal Government chose to invite the NMA to intervene in the matter in view of conflicting information about Kanu’s actual state of health.

    He spoke while opposing the application by Kanu in which he (Kanu) is seeking to be taken to the National Hospital in Abuja for medical attention.

    READ ALSO: Army neutralises ISWAP fighters, foils terror attacks in Zamfara, Kwara

    Awomolo prayed the court to grant a week’s adjournment to enable the NMA team submit its report.

    As against claim by Kanu’s lawyer, Onyechi Ikpeazu (SAN) that his client’s health was seriously threatened, Awomolo argued otherwise, insisting that nothing was unusual about Kanu’s complaint in relation to his health.

    Justice James Omotosho has stood down proceedings to write a ruling on whether or not Kanu should be taken to the National Hospital as he requested in his application.

    Details shortly…

  • IPOB constituting clog to Nnamdi Kanu’s freedom – Onoh

    IPOB constituting clog to Nnamdi Kanu’s freedom – Onoh

    The former southeast spokesman for President Bola Tinubu, Denge Josef Onoh, has addressed the latest outburst from the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB). 

    Onoh in a statement in Abuja, reprimanded IPOB ‘s spokesperson’s statement, on Tuesday, for threatening “unimaginable consequences” and the outright “end of Nigeria” if anything happens to Mazi Nnamdi Kanu in DSS custody. 

    He warned that the statement was not just an inflammatory rhetoric but a dangerous provocation that serves no one but the enemies of the Igbo. 

    “It is the kind of bellicose posturing that has repeatedly sabotaged every glimmer of hope for Kanu’s release and poisoned the wall of constructive dialogue.

    “Let’s be unequivocal: IPOB’s threats are not the voice of a people seeking justice; they are the desperate cries of a movement that has lost its way, equating itself to the triggers of World War I, while ignoring the self-inflicted wounds it has inflicted on the Southeast. 

    “You warned of a ‘keg of gunpowder’ and accused the DSS of deliberate endangerment, yet you conveniently forget how your enforced sit-at-home directives, now a weekly ritual of economic sabotage, have already detonated that powder keg in our markets, schools, and homes. 

    “These are not acts of resistance. They are acts of collective punishment against the very Igbo whose cause you claim to champion. Your words do not rally align. They repel, turning potential mediators into hardened skeptics,” Onoh said.

    He noted that for many years, he has been at the forefront of advocating for Kanu’s release on compassionate and strategic grounds such as on September 20 when he publicly urged President Bola Tinubu to hand Kanu over to the custody of Amb. Bianca Odumegwu-Ojukwu and the President-General of Ohanaeze Ndigbo Worldwide, Senator John Azuta Mbata, as a humanitarian gesture to de-escalate tensions and restore investor confidence in the Southeast. 

    “This was not empty talk. It was a pathway rooted in equity, aligning with Tinubu’s Renewed Hope agenda of inclusive governance. I commended the President’s diplomatic triumphs, such as the conviction of the Finland-based criminal, Simon Ekpa, whose gang has masqueraded as IPOB to unleash terror. 

    “Yet, every time voices like mine, or those of our governors, Ohanaeze, and traditional rulers, gain traction for political solutions, IPOB unleashes a torrent of threats that drown out reason and embolden the hardliners in Abuja to dig in deeper.”

    Onoh  said that the consistent undermining of the efforts is not accidental but a pattern of self-sabotage, recalling that in 2023, he prioritised Kanu’s release over Senate Presidency for the Southeast.

    Onoh recalled also of him pleading for Kanu to attend trial from home to end the sit-at-home madness crippling our economy, but that what followed was more IPOB-enforced shutdowns, more violence cloaked as agitation, and zero progress toward freedom. 

    He added: “You lash out at some Igbo as collaborators and political jobbers, but who are the true betrayers here? Those of us building bridges, or you, who burn them with every hyperbolic warning? History will not vindicate a struggle that prioritizes apocalypse over atonement—that demands release without reckoning for the victims of IPOB-linked atrocities, from displaced families to the blood on the hands of criminals hiding in your shadow.

    “And now, this absurd saber-rattling about ending Nigeria? Under President Tinubu’s resolute leadership, such fantasies are not just impossible—they are laughable. Tinubu has stared down greater storms: from global economic headwinds to internal banditry, all while extending olive branches to the Southeast through appointments like the current Chief of Naval Staff for the Nigerian Navy Vice Admiral Emmanuel Ikechukwu Ogalla, whereas no individual from Igbo extraction held such in the previous administration.”

    “Your threats will not fracture the federation; they will fracture the Southeast further. Mark my words: this path leads only to isolation and impoverishment. The sit-at-home orders you once wielded as a weapon have already ravaged our markets—Onitsha’s trade volumes halved, Aba’s factories idled, Enugu’s streets ghost towns—driving away investors and youth to Lagos and Abuja. Our GDP contribution shrinks while our people bear the brunt: empty pockets, shuttered businesses, and a generation radicalized into despair. 

    “You speak of grave consequences for Nigeria and the wider region, but the real crisis is the one you’ve engineered at home—a self-imposed siege that starves the Southeast of the very prosperity needed to fuel any genuine agitation.”

    He urged IPOB to heed to his stern warning and desist from provocations that mock the intelligence of Ndigbo and doom Kanu to indefinite detention.

    “If you truly care for his health and freedom, join the chorus for dialogue, not division. Engage with Ohanaeze, apologize to the victims of the violence your name has been dragged into, and support the political channels we are forging. President Tinubu’s administration is open to equity—witness the pardons extended to northern agitators and the crackdown on Ekpa’s thugs. But threats? They only harden resolve and deepen our isolation.

    “The Igbo spirit is one of resilience and ingenuity, not ruinous ultimatums. Choose wisdom over wrath, or history will record IPOB not as liberators but as the architects of our needless suffering. Release Kanu through reason, not rupture. 

    “The keg of gunpowder is yours to defuse—if you have the courage – and if you fail to do so before the end of the year, then will you know the true meaning of late Gen. Mohammed Buhari’s statement when he said, “The southeast is a dot in a circle! Do not dare nor test the resolve and restraint of President Tinubu because i know the consequences. “Onoh advised IPOB.