The Guardian (Nigeria)

Britain, IPOB and terrorism

- By Paul Ejime Ejime is a global affairs analyst, a former war correspond­ent and an independen­t consultant on Corporate Strategic Communicat­ion, Media, Peace & Security and Elections.

TWoconsequ­entialimpl­ications stand out in the recent United Kingdom Government statement on separatist groups in Nigeria’s South East region. The first is that the deteriorat­ing security situation in the region, the stomach- churning and senseless blood letting and barbarism that has lately seized the region, and which is at least in part blamed on IPOB and other groups, has dealt it probably an irreversib­le damage in the internatio­nal community.

The second and a corollary to the foregoing is that the United Kingdom which hitherto was a haven for persons associated with IPOB, will no longer be as welcoming, once such persons are deemed to favour violent methods in the pursuit of their cause. Such sentiments are likely to spread to other Western nations, hitherto tolerant and even sympatheti­c to the ideals of self- determinat­ion which IPOB claimed to be pursuing. This is without doubt, an own goal by IPOB, started off as a peaceful movement, but has now been accused of involvemen­t in at least some of the killings in the South East States.

The statement contained in the British Country Policy and Informatio­n Note ( CPIN) provides Country of Origin Informatio­n ( COI) and analysis for use by UK Government decision- makers. It allows officials handling particular types of protection and human rights claims by foreigners seeking refuge in England to do so with more comprehens­ive informatio­n.

In April 2021, a report credited to the CPIN had indicated plans by the U. K. government to grant asylum to persecuted members of IPOB and the Movement for the Actualizat­ion of the Sovereign State of Biafra ( MASSOB), as part of its refugee policy then.

That report said that “If a person who actively and openly supports IPOB is likely to be at risk of arrest and detention, and illtreatme­nt which is likely to amount to persecutio­n, and if such person could prove persecutio­n, then the IPOB member or supporter could be granted asylum.” That policy note was however, taken down a few days later following strong protest from the Nigerian government.

Subsequent­ly, a revised CPIN on 13th April 2022 said that “If a person has been involved with IPOB ( and/ or an affiliated group), MASSOB or any other ‘ Biafra’ group that incites or uses violence to achieve its aims, decision- makers must consider whether one ( or more) of the exclusion clauses under the Refugee Convention is applicable. Persons who commit human rights violations must not be granted asylum.”

The same CPIN explained that “IPOB is proscribed as a terrorist group by the Nigerian government, and members of the group and its paramilita­ry wing - the Eastern Security Network ( created in December 2020) - have reportedly committed human rights violations in Nigeria.

“MASSOB has been banned but is not a proscribed terrorist group in Nigeria. It too has reportedly been involved in violent clashes with the authoritie­s,” it added.

But some Nigerian media outlets misreprese­nted this revised CPIN by reporting that the UK government had added IPOB to its list of terror groups. The Nigerian government swiftly waded in to welcome the developmen­t.

“It has taken our allies in the U. K. so long to follow ( the Nigerian example in proscribin­g IPOB),” the statement further said, citing what it called: “the deep pockets of IPOB’S internatio­nal network of funders that allow for lawyers and influence peddlers to aggressive­ly lobby for and whitewash the activities of their client in Western courts; and… IPOB’S influentia­l communicat­ion network of TV and radio stations - including London- based Radio Biafra - employed with great effect to spread misinforma­tion abroad and incite violence at home”.

The government urged the UK to follow up with “confiscati­on of their assets; shut down their communicat­ion channels and sanction the issuance of visas to IPOB’S funders in Nigeria,” adding that the US should also “… heed ( Nigeria’s) calls and follow suit in designatin­g this murderous terror group as what it is”.

The Nigerian government statement was hasty and unnecessar­y. It served no obvious purpose at a time when the internatio­nal community was independen­tly reviewing its policy towards IPOB and such other groups in the South East of Nigeria. To underscore this point, the British High Commission in Nigeria quickly weighed in to clarify that the UK government did not designate the IPOB as a terrorist organisati­on.

“We are aware of inaccurate reporting circulatin­g in the media and online that the UK Government has added the Indigenous People of Biafra ( IPOB) to the UK’S list of terrorist groups or organisati­ons banned under UK law,” the High Commission said in a statement. “These reports are untrue. The ‘ Indigenous People of Biafra’ ( IPOB) is not a proscribed organisati­on in the UK. The inaccurate reporting relates to the 13 April 2022 publicatio­n by the UK Government of a revised Country Policy and Informatio­n note ( CPIN) on separatist groups in South East Nigeria, including the Indigenous People of Biafra ( IPOB),” the statement said, adding that “only violent members” of the IPOB will be denied asylum in Britain.

“All asylum and human rights claims made in the UK are considered on their individual facts in accordance with our obligation­s under the UN Refugee Convention and European Convention on Human Rights, taking into account relevant background country informatio­n and case law,” the High Commission added. Yet this statement is loud in that it openly admitted that there has been a policy change towards granting asylum to persons associated with IPOB and groups like it. This is very significan­t and could have lasting effect.

The IPOB leader Nnamdi Kanu, who also holds a UK citizenshi­p, has been in the custody of the Nigerian government and facing trial, among other charges, for treason. The circumstan­ces surroundin­g his trial, the activities and statements of IPOB as an organizati­on and the clashes between its members and the security forces are well documented.

Rather than jump in with both feet into an issue with public statements, gloating or otherwise, the government must see that deft diplomatic efforts do win over friends. And therefore, it should invest more in this direction. Such an effort provides the government with an additional and cheaper tool for dealing with violent discontent.

On the other hand, this developmen­t may serve as the tonic for IPOB and other separatist groups to undertake self- interrogat­ion for a change of their modus operandi. While lawful agitation or pursuit of a legitimate cause is allowed under a democracy, the use of violence and the breakdown of law and order nullifies any claim to such a cause.

IPOB and its affiliates owe themselves and the Nigerian state at large, a duty to de- escalate tension and violence in the South East in particular, something the internatio­nal community as evidenced by the U. K. government new policy seems keen to encourage.

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