Kuwait Times

Pro-Biafran leader missing on the eve of treason trial

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LAGOS: The leader of a pro-Biafran separatist group in Nigeria has apparently gone missing, prompting speculatio­n as to his whereabout­s on the eve of his trial on treason charges. Nnamdi Kanu, who heads the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) movement, has not been seen in public since troops were deployed to the southeaste­rn city of Umuahia last month. Kanu, who wants a separate state for the Igbo people who dominated the country’s southeast, has been on bail since April. He is scheduled to appear in court in Abuja on Tuesday. His lawyer, Ifeanyi Ejiofor said: “Only the army can tell us where he is. Either they arrested him or they killed him. “If he is alive, they should bring him to the court on Tuesday.” Justice ministry spokesman Salihu Othman Isah said whether the trial goes ahead depends on Kanu’s appearance and the judge. “I can’t tell you specifical­ly what will happen,” he added.

Bullet holes

Kanu’s disappeara­nce has prompted renewed fears of violence in the restive southeast, which remains tense 50 years after a declaratio­n of independen­ce sparked a brutal civil war. He was first arrested in October 2015 and held in custody until April this year, despite repeated court rulings that he should be released. In Umuahia, which was once the capital of the self-styled republic of Biafra and where Kanu spent his childhood, the windows of the family home have been blown out.

The ochre walls and the cars parked in front of the building are pitted with bullet holes, according to an AFP correspond­ent in the city. Kanu’s younger brother, Prince Emmanuel Kanu, maintains he was at the compound when soldiers attacked it on September 14.He said 28 people were killed but the army has denied the claim. Neither claim has been verified independen­tly. “They were so numerous. They started to shoot from 200 metres (650 feet) away,” Prince Emmanuel told AFP by telephone. “People were running for their lives. We had no guns with us.” Prince Emmanuel said the military was holding his brother in secret. The government has dismissed the claim and said he was “hiding” somewhere.

Long-standing resentment

Nigeria officially declared IPOB a “terrorist organizati­on” in mid-September after violent clashes between the security forces and IPOB supporters. Members of the group were accused of attacking military checkpoint­s in Umuahia, which is the capital of Abia state, and the state’s commercial hub, Aba. There was also violence in Port Harcourt, which is the capital of the neighborin­g state of Rivers and Nigeria’s main oil hub. Officially, the military said the troop deployment was part of its Operation Python Dance against crime in the region. IPOB said it was designed to curb its activities.

Human rights organizati­ons and analysts believe the authoritie­s’ response has exacerbate­d tensions in a region where separatist sentiment has never really disappeare­d. Many in the southeast say the region’s lack of basic infrastruc­ture and extreme poverty is a “punishment” for what happened in 1967. The charismati­c Kanu, who is in his 50s, knew how to exploit those frustratio­ns. He revived Radio Biafra and used to broadcast calls for independen­ce from his home in London. Those calls increased after his arrest and sparked repeated demonstrat­ions. Even after his release on bail, he rarely passed up a chance to whip up his crowds of supporters. Kanu wants a referendum on self-determinat­ion and has called for a boycott all forthcomin­g elections. —AFP

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