Radio biafar

Radio biafar In this platform here is for the restoration of BIAFRA
And also to restore the dignity of a black man or unmasking blacks from mental slavery

On This Day In 2017, This Happened:"Biafrans MUST observe a minute silence today in rememberance of our gallant youths w...
14/09/2025

On This Day In 2017, This Happened:
"Biafrans MUST observe a minute silence today in rememberance of our gallant youths who were killed during the Murderous Operation Python Dance...
During this event, the Nigeria Army killed over 300 Biafrans and also slaughtered 28 men at the home of Mazi Nnamdi Kanu..."
We must never
We must never ..
Time is 12:00pm today..

12/09/2025

You made a culinary masterpiece and you have the effrontery to deprive them their true indigenous names all in the name of trying to fit in?

A whole "Ofe Onugbu Nwanyị Idemmili" you dare reduce to merely "bitterleaf soup"?

The Almighty "Abacha/Mbacha" nwanyị Eziagụ you reduced to merely "African Salad"?

The irreplaceable "Ofe Nwanyị Owerre" you reduced to merely "Owerri Soup"

The Formidable "Ove Nsala nwanyị Omambala" is what you had the guts to render as simply "White Soup"?

Etc.

It simply leaves me to ask you: Ijikwa ahụ(in Owerri voice)?

Whereas the likes of Spaghetti, Pizza etc you left them to retain their indigenous names.......

Mtchew!

Should I say Kịtịkpa or ekịrikpakpa tagbue gị (in Nsukka Asadu voice)?

Onye ọ́bụna kwanyelu onwe ya ùgwù.


Maazi_Dibia
AkajiỌ́vọ́ ỤmụỌjị
Ìgwè Arọ́-Ovuonye Nando.
Nze Anụ k'ikpu ụtọ na Omambala.

12/09/2025

IPOB PRESS STATEMENT 12/09/2025

ONE NIGERIA IS A FRAUD: EL-RUFAI 'S SON DECLARES WHAT MAZI NNAMDI KANU IS JAILED FOR TRUTH.

The attention of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) under the leadership of our indefatigable leader, Mazi Nnamdi Kanu, has been drawn to the encouraging and revealing statement credited to the son of former Kaduna Governor, Nasir El-Rufai, boldly declaring that he does not believe in “One Nigeria.”

Ordinarily, IPOB would not waste its time on the deliberations of these individuals that claim exclusive ownership of Nigeria. But this open rejection of “One Nigeria” by El-Rufai’s son exposes in the clearest terms the monumental hypocrisy and double standard that define Nigeria.

When Mazi Nnamdi Kanu, a proud Biafran son of Igbo extraction, called for regional autonomy, he was kidnapped in Kenya, tortured, and illegally renditioned to Nigeria. He has since been held in DSS detention, facing trumped-up charges of terrorism.

But today, a Fulani man, the son of one of the architects of Nigeria’s present crisis, can openly declare the same belief—that “One Nigeria” is a lie—without fear of arrest, abduction, or prosecution. This is the clearest evidence yet that Nigeria is nothing but one law for the Fulani and another law for the Igbo.

Between 1955 and 1966, Nigeria’s regions experienced unprecedented economic growth under true federalism and regional autonomy before the British neo-colonialists, through their proxies in Nigeria, intervened to destroy it. Northern Nigeria was the hub of manufacturing in Nigeria with almost full employment, no banditry, no insecurity. Each region thrived through healthy competition—an arrangement destroyed by the very people now pretending to defend “One Nigeria.” Mazi Nnamdi Kanu has only demanded a return to justice, fairness, and economic dignity. For that, he is persecuted, while El-Rufai’s son is applauded.

Judicial Complicity
The same ethnic bias runs deep in Nigeria’s judiciary. Justice Mohammed Lawal Garba of the Supreme Court shamelessly overturned an unimpeachable Court of Appeal discharge and acquittal of Mazi Nnamdi Kanu, against the letter of the Constitution, simply because Kanu is Igbo. This is not justice; it is tribal prejudice dressed up as law.

If Nigeria were a fair country, the DSS and Attorney General would have by now proscribed El-Rufai’s son, branded him a terrorist, and thrown him into solitary confinement. But because he is Fulani, the state machinery looks the other way.

This is why IPOB insists that Nigeria is irredeemable. The hypocrisy of “One Nigeria” has collapsed under its own contradictions. You cannot jail Mazi Nnamdi Kanu for saying the same thing El-Rufai’s son is free to shout from the rooftops.

We declare again: One Nigeria is a fraud. The continued persecution of Mazi Nnamdi Kanu while protecting those who make the same calls in the North and West proves beyond doubt that Nigeria is a failed project built on injustice and selective persecution.

The world must take note: If justice cannot be equal in Nigeria, then Nigeria has no right to exist as “One.”

COMRADE EMMA POWERFUL SPOKESPERSON/MEDIA AND PUBLICITY SECRETARY FOR IPOB.

NNAMDI KANU VS. IMPUNITYWhy the Supreme Court’s Judgment in Federal Republic of Nigeria v. Nnamdi Kanu is a Catastrophic...
12/09/2025

NNAMDI KANU VS. IMPUNITY
Why the Supreme Court’s Judgment in Federal Republic of Nigeria v. Nnamdi Kanu is a Catastrophic Failure of Judicial Duty

Date: September 11, 2025
Subject: A call for justice and the upholding of the rule of law in the case of Mazi Nnamdi Kanu.

A CRISIS OF CONSTITUTIONALITY
The case of Mazi Nnamdi Kanu has become the ultimate test for Nigeria’s commitment, or lack of, to the Rule of Law and obedience to its Constitution. The Supreme Court’s judgment of December 15, 2023, which condoned the Federal Government’s kidnapping of Mazi Kanu from Kenya and allowed his trial to proceed, represents a dangerous departure from precedent and rule of law to the rule of judicial tyranny.

The Supreme Court judgment is a legal nullity—per incuriam (rendered in ignorance of binding law)—and therefore worthless. It sought to reduce the Constitution’s most sacred guarantees to mere suggestions. This is not about Mazi Nnamdi Kanu’s guilt or innocence; it is about whether the Supreme Court is allowed to use their position as the apex court to destroy the foundational law of Nigeria- which is the Constitution, for the sake of one man.

THE HEART OF THE MATTER: NULLITY, NOT TECHNICALITY
The government and some legal commentators have falsely framed the issue of Kanu’s kidnapping in Kenya and illegal rendition as a "technicality." This is a profound misrepresentation. The principle of nullity is the law’s strongest tool to punish state impunity and protect every citizen from tyranny.

- What is Nullity? It is a legal declaration that a proceeding is void from the very beginning. It is not a minor procedural slip; it is the consequence of a breach so fundamental that it robs the entire process of its legitimacy.

- Why Does it Apply Here? The government did not simply arrest Nnamdi Kanu illegally within Nigeria as it did in 2015. It orchestrated an international crime—an extraordinary rendition—involving torture, denial of fair hearing, access to lawyers, and a complete bypass of all extradition treaties and Kenyan courts. You cannot build a legitimate trial on such an illegitimate foundation. The doctrine of the "fruit of the poisonous tree" comes into play.

SETTLED LAW IGNORED: THE SUPREME COURT’S PER INCURIAM ERROR
The Supreme Court’s decision to allow the trial to continue ignored decades of its own binding rulings. This is the definition of a per incuriam judgment.

The Law Supreme Court Ignored:

1. Ariori v. Elemo (1983): The Supreme Court itself held that "any breach of the rules of natural justice renders the whole proceeding a nullity." The rendition was a gross breach of natural justice before the trial even began.

2. Adigun v. A.G. Oyo State (1987): The Court ruled that violating fair hearing is a "fundamental vice" that nullifies everything that follows.

3. The Constitution of Nigeria (S.36) & The African Charter (Arts. 6 & 7): These documents guarantee the right to fair hearing and due process. These rights are non-derogable—meaning they can never be suspended, not even in times of war. The government violated them. The Court’s role is to enforce them, not overlook them.

By choosing to treat this foundational violation as a mere "irregularity," the Supreme Court made a grave error that threatens the legal protections of every single person in Nigeria.

A TRIAL FOUNDED ON AN INTERNATIONAL CRIME
The recent landmark judgment from the High Court of Kenya (June 24, 2025) is not just a "new fact"; it is a powerful, independent judicial confirmation of the Nigerian Court of Appeal’s 2022 ruling. Both a Nigerian court and a Kenyan court have now found the same facts:

Abduction and torture. Denial of access to legal counsel. Flagrant violation of due process and extradition laws.

The Nigerian government has been found guilty of international law violations by a foreign court. For the Nigerian judiciary to now say that a trial founded on these crimes can still be "fair" is a catastrophic failure of justice and makes a mockery of our nation’s standing in the international community.

THE DANGEROUS PRECEDENT: WHAT THIS MEANS FOR EVERY NIGERIAN
If this judgment stands, it sets a terrifying precedent:

The State Can Kidnap Anyone: Any citizen critical of the government could be abducted from any country, without any legal process, and brought to Nigeria to face trial. Your passport and foreign travel will not protect you.

Rights Are For Sale: The government’s argument that its illegal acts can be "cured" by a fair trial or compensated with damages means that fundamental rights have a price tag. The state can violate your most sacred rights and simply pay a fine afterwards. This commercializes justice and destroys its very essence.

The Judiciary Sanctions Impunity: When the highest court in the land fails to draw a bright line against state-sponsored criminality, it signals that the executive branch is above the law. This erodes the very foundation of our democracy.

CALL TO ACTION: UPHOLDING THE RULE OF LAW
We therefore call on:

The Legal Community: The Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), senior advocates, and human rights lawyers must add their voices to condemn this judgment and support the legal steps to have it reviewed and set aside. The integrity of the entire legal system is at stake.

Civil Society & the Media: To educate the public on the grave implications of this case. This is not about sympathy for Mazi Nnamdi Kanu; it is about defending the Constitution that protects us all.

The International Community: To take note of this breach of international law and its ratification by the Nigerian judiciary. Peer review and diplomatic pressure are crucial to upholding global human rights standards.

JUSTICE MUST BE DONE, AND SEEN TO BE DONE
The path to justice is clear. The Supreme Court must review and overturn its own decision. The proceedings against Mazi Nnamdi Kanu must be declared a nullity, and he must be released. This is the only outcome that upholds the Constitution, respects international law, and sends an unequivocal message that in Nigeria, the rule of law is supreme—not the whims of the state.

This is our stand. For the sake of every Nigerian, we must defend the law.

This brief is issued by Onyedikachi Ifedi Esq., of Mazi Nnamdi Kanu Global Defence Consortium in defense of constitutionalism and the rule of law.




PLEASE READ THIS ARTICLE BY NATASHA H. AKPOTI AND TRY NOT TO BE DEPRESSED. WHAT DOES NIGERIA MEAN TO YOU? by Natasha H. ...
12/09/2025

PLEASE READ THIS ARTICLE BY NATASHA H. AKPOTI AND TRY NOT TO BE DEPRESSED.

WHAT DOES NIGERIA MEAN TO YOU? by Natasha H. Akpoti

Nigeria is simply a geographical expression of the imperialists’ greed and spite.


Recently, I was on a flight from Dallas to London when I struck an interesting conversation with an American professor of African history. We talked about the human race and countries.

America, he said was named after an Italian explorer called Amerigo Vespucci. Amerigo was known to denote his discovered land a “ New World”. So long after her independence, the New World appropriated quite well with the dream of all Americans.

“What about Nigeria”? He asked me.

“Flora Shaw Lugard coined Nigeria and her inspiration was the river Niger” I replied.

“Wrong”. The historian responded. “Republic of Niger was named after River Niger not Nigeria”. That’s what white historians want you to believe. I don’t understand the gullibility of blacks. You have so much information but chose not to research but dwell and believe all the white man says” he added.

Nigeria simply means “The Ni**er Area” or “Land of the Black slaves”. Ni**er was a common derogatory slang used for slaves” He bluntly said.

His words hit my heart sharply and I was grateful the cabin lights were dim so he couldn’t see the expression on my face. It was a night flight; we had 9 more hours to our destination so I had all the time to listen. Sipping slowly on my orange juice I beckoned on him to continue.

The West African Region identified as Nigeria today was known to have supplied more slaves than any other country. The quality of human “cargo” was supreme and priced much more than slaves from other West African countries.

The men were strongly built and were expert cotton farmers. Only wealthy plantation owners could afford slaves from “Nigeria”. Little wonder, slaves from your country were nicknamed “black gold” and the British slave ship named “White Lion” brought them into Virginia.

“I am still not convinced” I shot at the grey bearded historian.

“Very well, lets start this way” he continued…

What gave River Niger its name?

I looked blankly at him…

It’s the European Slave traders and done for easy mappings. That river was the longest cutting across many black lands. River Niger simply means the River of Ni**ers or Negroes as you wish to say.

Listen dear Natasha, you must have an open mind to first agree that most of what you were taught in Nigerian history is distorted and made to confuse the people.

I said nothing… and he kept on talking.

The imperialists were very brutal with no humane sentiments to Africa. Their business was simply to exploit and trade for their advantage. The Berlin Conference of 1885 legalized Africa as distant colonies to the imperialists.

Most African countries were named by what suited the “masters”.

Ghana was named Gold Coast because the abundance of gold Britain exploited.

Zimbabwe was named Rhodesia by Mr. Cecil Rhodes who treated the country like his company.

Oh, lastly he added… the oil colony of the Niger Delta part of Nigeria was called the Slave Coast.

It was so when Asaba was the capital of the Southern Protectorate under the ownership of Sir. George Goldie the founder of the Royal Niger Company which had its headquarters in Lokoja.

Natasha, I hope you know that Sir. Goldie sold the Southern Nigeria protectorate (land and people) to the British Government for £865,000 (eight hundred and sixty five thousand pounds) in the year 1899.

“Finally, finally” he added… “there was a debate on whether to name your country Negroland or Nigritia as you were the most populated black nation. However, those on Nigritia won and the word was added in the Century Dictionary in 1904 to mean a large territory of ni***rs/ negros”.

Thanks for your “lecture” I said.

Listen, I am sorry if I upset you but your country is greatly admired world wide for its great resources especially its people. What happened to them is distortion of facts to enable indirect rule function at the detrimental discord of its people.

All Nigerian people need do is reach out to their core and harness a common vision which can bring forth the missing patriotism. You guys will be a world power in no time with your fire and potentials. But first…

- reach your core
- find your truth
- build your nation

Hints: Ask for the Southern and Northern amalgamation contracts. These should be made public for all Nigerians to know. Get to know what terms Nigeria was married upon.

I know the Royal Niger Company was given some dubious rights to half of all mining revenue for 99 years from 1900.

These documents should be with the British government, United African Company and Leventis companies as there were parented from the Royal Nigeria Company. That’s if they are missing at your government’s administration.

That’s right… UAC and Leventis are owned by ex slave traders and still grow their empires in Britain.

“Thanks once again dear sir. I need to get to my seat for some sleep”. I appreciated.

Just as I got to my seat, we hit turbulence and the seatbelt sign came on.

The plane shook violently, my mind went to late Pius Adesanmi and I made a silent prayer for him.

I took a look at the live travel map that showed we were flying above the “Natashquan River” in Canada.

What? A river bearing a similarity with my name sounding like “ Natasha Can”.

Maybe this is some sort of a sign that I should not let this experience go but research more and share with you.

So I arrived Nigeria and began to research deeply; bearing in mind the professor warned that not all books are published online as some information are preserved for the “discerning” minds.

I searched up the Century Dictionary, the Slave ship named “White Lion”, Flora Shaw and the naming of Nigeria (what a story), the naming of the Republic of Niger; the Slave Coast of Niger Delta, Sir Goldie, Royal Niger Company, History of UAC & Leventis… the amalgamation contract.

Wait a second… I searched for the 1914 Nigeria Amalgamation contract and found no answer. We know the English men to be high on documentations and record keeping so where are the amalgamation papers?

Who signed on behalf of Nigeria?

- Awolowo was born in 1909 and was 5 years at 1914
- Azikiwe was born in 1904 and was 10 at 1914
- Balewa was born in 1912 and was 2 years old at 1914
- Ahmadu Bello was born in 1910 and was 4 at 1914

Moving on.

It’s clear that the formation and naming of our beloved country is shrewd in dubious inconsiderable dealings. Little wonder we have become strangers filled with ethnic bitterness hanging unto the foreign man’s religion, government and education.

We are lost… but we can find our bearing if we begin not only to have discussions about our existence but take proactive remedial steps.

Some would shove this off as “mere history”. However, remember the proverb “a river that forgets its source runs dry”.

2019 elections may have come and gone. A lot of cases hope for redemption at the tribunal. But I say this, its not over yet. We all can put voices demanding for disclosures of amalgamation and naming contents. However, legislative and executive power matters in quickening the processes.

The Kogi governorship election comes up later in the year. Going through history, you shall see the possibilities of a New World being born from Kogi state.

Its possible to get a governor who would begin discussions towards a willing coalition of regions.

Until then, Nigeria is just a name given to a lucrative land for colonial exploits … a land of strong black negros… a land which bears the poverty capital of the world… a land afraid to be great. A land which feels it doesn’t deserve to be industrialized, educated, healthy and wealthy.

What’s in a name they say?

EVERYTHING

At de end ALL MUST HAIL BIAFRA

12/09/2025

NB: The fact that our ancestors had never been ruled doesn't mean that we had never been led.

I'm reading so many comments affirming that the Igwe/Ezeship was never an Igbo system prior to colonial era and I just have to drop these few lines to expansiate this subject.

This narratives that had been flying around for far too long and I will try debunking it in few line sentences.

Firstly; The Ezeship of the ancient precolonial times had been the Kingdom of Priesthood (Dibias).

It is originally a Priest-King often the oldest of every setting that is there PriestKing.

In far Nsukka, it was called "Onye Ishi", in ancient Iduu-Eri, it was Ndị Nshi and so on in several regions of what is now called Igbo (as we were all not originally known as Igbos generally).

Secondly; The word "EZE" over the years had been synonymous to several equivalents depending on the context.

If hierarchy is to be established, the Word EZE becomes the Prefix to the main Noun. For Example: Eze-Mmuo, Eze-Ani/Ana/Ala.

EZE can also serve as well as a favourite synonym to the word "Di" which in this context means "Master of". So whence EZE becomes a Prefix to a Subject Nominator, know fully that it is in the context of proficiency/mastery of specific skillset. E.G: Eze-Ji, Eze-Ụzụ

Thirdly, the use of EZE also must be mentioned as the highest hierarchy a Dibia of a specific pantheon would attain if the person had been made the Scepter holder (AkajiỌ́vọ́) of a specific pantheon by the Divine as he commands the highest echelon of that Pantheon. Hence the EZE in this context could also take a synonym with Igwe depending on the choice of the denominator. EG. Igwe-Arọ/EZE Arọ, Igwe Ovuve/Eze Ovuve, Igwe Ogwugwu/Eze Ogwugwu etc.

Notice that the above use of Igwe or Eze was strictly for the AkajiỌ́vọ́ of a definite pantheon as the master Scepter holder (AkajiỌ́vọ́).

Another worthy point to note is that prior to colonial era, we also recognize the families who settled first in every region. Sometimes, the fact that they settled first means that they appeased the land first in that geo-location as that gives them a permanent authority to be custodians of that very settings. If in case of war that there hierarchy was upturned by chaos, they tend to maintain a certain privilege as not bending the knee to the conqueror even after peace treaty had been signed.
The Agbajas can attest to the above but I choose to leave it as such for times to come.

In the spiritual Tripod of Ndigbo(the Holiest "Akwụkwanaatọ ite esiri") we were made to respect the trilogy of 3 sectors namely:

1. Ezi/Agụ/ọbọhia/Ndiagụ
2. Ikenga
3. Ivite/ifite/ibite/okpụnọ/ụnọ

Prior to the colonial era, the Oldest of every Igbo Settlement is the Eze-Ani just as the Nsukka people salutes amongst the oldest and youngest by saying "Onye Ushi"(for the oldest) and "Ọhụnta"(for the youngest).

I respectfully beg to disagree that we don't originally have A set of Ezeship although it's a known fact that we are more of a Republican society with strict communal mindset who had never neglected hierarchy in all paraphernalia including the inclusivity of our Governance where the Nze na Ọzọ alongside the UMuada, Nne-Mmanwu, Nne-afia, Ume, Di-Ala, Nwadi and even the Inyom-di where all arms of government with the Mmonwu as the action tool of exacting authorities.

If your argument is that the ancient Gboo people "Ndị Mbụ na Ndị Egede" did not use Igwe/Eze as it is interpreted to be today, I would agree but saying the semantics Eze/Igwe is post colonial is a slap to our ancestors.

The present pattern of Igwe now is from the Warrant Chiefs imposed on us though few villages/Communities are still reverencing the hierarchical Eze/Igwe through the pattern we call "Eze-ọdịbeve/Eze-Ọdi-befa"(which means an Eze passed unto generations from time immemorial (kemgbe-Eshi/Nshi/Ehi/Eri)).

Other worthy synonyms to the word Eze includes: Igwe, Ọbá, Obi, Duru etc(depending on the context).

Many Igbos would even challenge the fact that we have Ọbá as a title which is equal to Eze in some community and lower than Eze in some community.

We must not allowed a western narrative to distort our history.

Be it Eze, Igwe, Ọbá, Duru, etc we must ensure that these offices are void of elected government as our independent autonomy of leadership where more inclusive, progressive and yet befitting.

QED!

"May we not loose ourselves in search of ourselves".


Maazi_Dibia
AkajiỌ́vọ́ ỤmụỌjị
Ígwé Arọ́-Ovuonye Nando.

10/09/2025

TAG THE GOVERNOR OF ANAMBRA STATE UNTIL THE DAY ENDS.

1,000 TAGS WILL HELP.

I'm of the Opinion that injustice should not be used to get Justice.

If Governor Charles Chukwuma Soludo chooses to be justified in all fronts, then Udogachi as mere civilian does not have any jurisdiction to hold any person without trial/sentence from the law court.

If the culprits are found guilty as alleged, then let the law take its turn but if not, set them free as that's the best way to uphold due process.

We cannot in the course of justice commit crime.

Inasmuch as I'm not a fan of Akwa Ọkụkọ, Ekehit or Even Onye Eze Jesus; it is also obvious that I'm the least fan of the Governor and that places me on a better pedestal to juxtapose what has transpired.

We must be constitutional as a state. The first constitutional error was labelling Anambra as a Christian State and which till now the Governor has not apologized.

Where is the due process?

Where is the Habeas corpus?

I'm of the Opinion that the law must be upheld at this juncture.

If the culprits committed a crime, let the court sentence them with plausible evidence and let them serve their time under the law but holding them in an unconstituted environment of the UDOGACHI operatives is an Error that must be tackled without fear or favor.

The law is the law.

The Governor must not in anyway ignore due process.

Do we even have any legal proceedings in Anambra State?

What has the law makers said on this matter?

What legal jurisdiction has the UDOGACHI operatives have to detain a person beyond 48 hours without trial or sentence?

What is even all this to start with!

How can we have a Professor as a Governor as we let our state be run as if we are living in bo***ge?

The Igbo clause "Ometalu bulu" is still sacrosanct.

Find them guilty and we all take a bow, if they are not guilty; then it means that the Governor has no plausible reasons to keep them.

Has they been proven guilty by any strong witnesses or evidences? Is there a strong alibi to corroborate the alleged claims? These are my questions and I need answers.

The court Proceedings in Nigeria is sickening. Everyone behaves as if the law is nothing. The cases are being adjourned till October which is few days to the Governorship election and it makes me to wonder whether this is politically motivated?

What is all these lawlessness?

From Ndị Aka-Odo to UDOGACHI and yet Anambra is not safe.

Since the alleged offenses entails obtaining by false pretense; how many Pastors, Priests, Prophets and even Bishops had been arrested as such since these boys copied the alleged acts from the grandmasters?

Is this arrest Religious extremism?

If there is evidence, let the law take its place on the culprits but if there is none, The Executive Governor should not rest until he reacts to this matter.

The Governor have children and I bet his child will not be held this long and he keeps quiet.

As a Traditional custodian, it is in my rights to ask: What's their offenses without sentiment.

They may not have been the best character to protest but as we criticize them, also ask the Governor how many meaningful jobs he has created since assuming office.

If there is none, then the Governor has defaulted as a Father and hence the Children which he is holding captive are the product of his failure as a Father (Principles of Causes and Effects).

Before we get it all wrong, I'm of the Opinion that Government must exercise due process in all affairs especially when it comes to issues that may be presumably tagged as RELIGIOUS JINGOISM.

We know that the Governor hates everything Traditional as he had been saying that since 2022 and this is enough reason for myself and every other well meaning Anambrarian to ask if the actions are motivated religiously to prove a point?

I'm not a Fan of any of the Culprits but it is obvious that I'm also the least Fan of the Governor as I have made it very obvious that once a Father becomes Bias with the Children, then the Children have every constitutional rights to be angry towards the Father.

The Governor defamed the Characters of every Indigenous Practitioner of Odinaanị in Anambra State even going to the extent of labelling us common Criminals "Holistically".

It gives us every right to reject him as a Father and that I'm steadfast about since till date he had not made any open apologies to that effects.

If the rights of Dibias and Natives Doctors are not protected(that does not entail condoning rubbish in the name of Dibias), then we are not safe in Anambra State.

Tomorrow it may be my turn and the UDOGACHI will troop to my Obi at Nando to arrest me, that would make a good headline actually but it will also set a good example hitherto.

The same Native Doctors you are arresting has also graduated to become one of your commandants and that enough is a good foul-play from you.

Is it not obvious that the case is obviously incompetent for any meaningful Trial.

How did some become Udogachi Commandants and some end up in detention?

Is there a personal beef in this matter Mr. Governor?

What will you be remembered for in Anambra State?

Is it Udogachi, Aka -Odo or what exactly?

Before we graduate to this state where lawlessness will thrive, you have an ample opportunity to clear the air on these boys.

What are their offenses?

Are they guilty?

If they are: Let the Law do justice.

If they are not; set them free.

Enough of this Oppression!

If only the people of Anambra State can be blunt, then they would have told you long ago that most of your actions are not justifiable but who would dare tell you? None.....

The igwés that would tell you are afraid of loosing their certificates.

The law makers are Afraid of indefinite suspension.

Are you sure this is not Dictatorship in disguise.

Eze Onye agwànam bụkwa ajọ́ ife.

Sọkwalụ Udo maka Odi-Ọra gị.

Onye Isi Ana: Nakwa e check i

Ka ọdi


Maazi_Dibia

10/09/2025

Are you following what’s happening in France ? This is type of country we’re seeking to build. A country where citizens rise up to hold their leaders accountable without waiting for anyone educate them on that.

In France, holding the leaders accountable for their failures is not something you need any lecturer to educate you on how and when to do it. Once you’re seen as a failure the masses will rise to chase you out of office. The youths over there are not dumb. They know their rights, and they don’t care what anyone thinks or does, they just want their rights to be respected and protected.

Sure, Fr@nce has fallen.

It doesn’t matter who goes in there as president, the statuquo has collapsed and cannot be replaced. Their economy only source of income is the gold in Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger .

Captain Ibrahim Traoré is a great hero that Africa will never forget. He came at the right time. I mean Africa has waken up, and nothing anyone can do about it. With the level of enlightenment broadcast done by Mazi Nnamdi Kanu on Radio Biafra, the eyes of Africans has open to reality. The strategy of which the west applied in k!||!ng Gadaffi & Thomas Sankra will never work again in African soil.

Biafrans, after seeing what’s happening in France, and how the W£st has affected with the changes in the Sahel region, you will then know the forces IPOB leadership is battling on a daily basis.

If captain Ibrahim Traoré who’s a president of a so called independent country, even with the help and support of almighty Russia, can be going through all this trouble from the W£ST€RN p0wers, imagine what an ordinary organisation like IPOB would be going through. Now you know why the W£ST have refused to talk about Mazi Nnamdi Kanu’s unlawful detention, and the Nigeria government violation of international laws and treaties.

Africa will rise, And when we do, the W£ST will eat themselves. They depend on African resources for survival, and what’s happening in France today is a clear sign of what awaits them. In short what’s happening now is an appetiser, the real dish is coming .

Written-By: Gozie Nwa Igwe
For TBRV | Biafra

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