Nnamdi Kanu, 53, leader of the proscribed Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) group, which wants a separate state for the ethnic Igbo people in the southeast, was arrested abroad in June and brought back to Nigeria to face trial. (Photo by Kola Sulaimon / AFP)
This was contained in a communiqué issued at the end of their National Executive Council meeting in Bakassi Peninsula on January 12, 2022, and made available to newsmen in Calabar, Cross River State, yesterday.
The statement, which was signed by the National Leader, Princewill Chimezie Richards, Deputy Leader, Ebuta Akor Takon and General Admin Officer, God’stime Ntukidem, decried President Muhammadu Buhari for disrespecting Igbo elders, who visited him to request Kanu’s release, saying: “There will be more insecurity as a result of his stubbornness.”
BNL, which has become a big challenge in the Gulf of Guinea, particularly in Bakassi Peninsula, said the group would not disclose its plans to sanction the Nigerian government.
The group had three weeks ago issued a statement in which it gave the Federal Government up to January 23, 2022, to free all Biafran detainees, especially Kanu and Onwuka.
The group said most of the detained Biafran leaders like Onwuka have been in detention without trial and “is preparing its ground and all volunteers of our defence wing will apply force in executing any activity that will affect the economy of the Nigerian State, especially in Cameroon borders and on the sea.”