IPOB Leader Nnamdi Kanu, leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), has imposed strict new protocols for visitors at Sokoto Correctional Centre, where he is serving a life sentence.
Seeking to curb misinformation and exploitation, Kanu now bans public broadcasts of meetings and insists no fees are required for access.
According to rports, the directive, conveyed through IPOB Leader, Kanu’s lawyer Barrister Nnemeka Ejiofor, targets supporters, sympathizers, and media.
Kanu’s rules aim to streamline visits and protect sensitive discussions amid ongoing legal battles and tensions in Nigeria’s Southeast.
New Protocols: Privacy, No Paywalls, Strict Vetting
Ejiofor, in a video statement, outlined Kanu’s instructions:
- No Public Broadcasts: Visitors must not publicize meeting details or outcomes. Only Kanu’s lawyers or IPOB spokesman Emma Powerful are authorized to relay messages.
- No Fees: “Nobody has ever paid to see him,” Ejiofor stressed. Access is “not a money-making venture.”
- Facility Protocols: All visitors must present ID, passport photos, fill forms, undergo screening, and secure Kanu’s final approval via prison officials.
“These measures ensure order and prevent abuse,” Ejiofor explained.
The rules respond to reports of unauthorized leaks, fake videos, and alleged extortion by middlemen exploiting Kanu’s incarceration.
Kanu, arrested in 2021 after jumping bail, faces terrorism charges related to IPOB activities.
Sentenced to life in 2023 for treasonable felony, his appeals are ongoing.
His transfer to Sokoto, far from his Igbo base, sparked protests, with IPOB claiming punitive isolation.
Kanu’s Legal Ordeal and IPOB’s Evolution
Founded by Kanu in 2012, IPOB advocates Biafra’s secession through non-violent sit-at-home orders and radio broadcasts.
Labeled a terrorist group in 2017, a designation since overturned, IPOB has faced crackdowns and violence, including “unknown gunmen” attacks blamed on splinter factions.
Kanu’s journey, from his 2015 arrest, 2017 bail jump (allegedly to Israel), to his 2021 extraordinary rendition from Kenya, has come to symbolize Southeast grievances: infrastructure deficits, arrests without trial, and economic neglect.
For supporters, visits express solidarity; critics see propaganda.
Kanu’s new rules aim to professionalize visits and curb viral clips that distort messages or incite unrest.
Timeline: Biafra Agitation Clashes, 2025-2026
Date |
Location/Event |
Casualties/Arrests |
Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jan 2025 | Anambra sit-at-home enforcement; police clashes | 5 killed, 20 arrested | Schools shut; markets empty |
| Apr 2025 | Ebonyi, “unknown gunmen” checkpoint attack | 12 security personnel killed | Heightened military patrols |
| Jul 2025 | Imo IPOB rally dispersed; Kanu appeal hearing delayed | 8 arrested | #FreeNnamdiKanu trends (2M) |
| Oct 2025 | Enugu prison raid (IPOB-linked) | 10 inmates freed, 4 guards killed | Federal probe launched |
| Dec 2025 | Sokoto visit leak sparks fake Kanu video | 0 direct; 15 arrests in SE | Misinformation crackdown |
| Jan 2026 | Abia market attack during sit-at-home | 3 civilians killed | Kanu rules announced |
Sources: Police reports, media, IPOB statements. “Attacks” include clashes and raids linked to agitation.
Patterns show violence peaking around court dates or holidays.
Reactions: Support, Skepticism, and Security Concerns
IPOB praised the move: “Onyendu protects his message from distortion,” tweeted Emma Powerful.
Ohanaeze Ndigbo called it “wise,” urging compliance to avoid exploitation.
Critics, including APC chieftains, scoffed: “Terror suspect dictating terms from prison?” said Lagos analyst Bode George.
Security experts warn that lax visits could fuel radicalization, recommending tighter controls.
Supporters say it ends “fake pastors scamming for access.” Detractors argue: “Proof IPOB runs parallel government.”
Ejiofor denied extortion claims but admitted “bad elements” prey on devotees.
Sokoto prison officials confirmed standard vetting protocols, denying irregularities.
Broader Implications
Kanu’s rules signal strategic restraint as legal appeals continue.
For IPOB, struggling with splinter factions and “Monday sit-at-home” fatigue, unity is crucial.
The group claims 90% compliance in the Southeast, but recurring violence erodes public sympathy.
Nationally, the issue highlights prison reform debates: Should high-profile detainees control access?
Human rights advocates cite Kanu’s alleged health woes as grounds for bail.
Government sources hint at negotiations, which the FG denies. As 2027 elections appr
oach, Biafra agitation may intensify, testing President Tinubu’s unity push.
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