Nnamdi Kanu, leader
of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) has been arrested, TheCable can
report
TheCable
understands that Kanu has been extradited to Nigeria to face trial.
The details were
still sketchy at the time of writing, with no information of when and where he
was arrested.
Emma Powerful, IPOB
spokesman, denied the news of the arrest while Frank Mba, police spokesman, is
yet to respond to TheCable's enquiry on whether the police was involved in the
development.
Kanu is facing
charges bordering on treasonable felony instituted against him at the federal
high court in Abuja in response to years of campaign for the independent
Republic of Biafra through IPOB.
He was granted bail
in April 2017 for health reasons but skipped bail after flouting some of the
conditions given to him by the court.
He has also been on
the run since then after soldiers raided his father's residence in Abia state.
IPOB was later
declared a terrorist group by the defence headquarters and court after the
south-east governors proscribed it.
Despite the court's
insistence on his appearance, the IPOB leader has remained abroad, and once
said he jumped bail to pursue the cause of Biafra.
"Their problem
is Nnamdi Kanu and the solution to their problem is referendum. They gave me
conditional bail to cage me and IPOB but I refused," he had said during a
broadcast.
Owing to his
absence in court, Binta Nyako, the judge who granted him bail, revoked it and
ordered that he should be arrested.
Kanu, however,
dismissed the arrest warrant issued against him and vowed to remain abroad to
continue agitating for Biafra.
"The bench
warrant against me is merely academic. It will surely be ignored by an
international legal and diplomatic order that has voiced its disapproval of
what is happening to IPOB in Nigeria," he had said in one of his
broadcasts.
In Kanu's absence,
IPOB went underground and mobilised resources to launch a militant named the
Eastern Security Network (ESN).
The emergence of
ESN coincided with a spike in attacks against security and government
infrastructure in the south-east.
TheCable found out
that killings in the south-east tripled after the security outfit was launched
— the group denies any wrongdoing.
The secessionist
group also forged an alliance with the Ambazonia Governing Council (AGovC), the
separatist movement in Southern Cameroon, to exchange weapons and personnel.
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