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Saturday, 31 October 2015

At last Reuters and New York Times pick up Biafra Restoration Project news

At last Reuters and New York Times picks up Biafra Restoration Project news
Biafra Restoration Project (BRP) has become a global phenomenon! At last international media houses who had been mute about the BRP has finally picked up interest to write about the plight of Biafrans in Nigeria. 

The arrest and illegal detention of the leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), Nnamdi Kanu has continued to draw the attention of the world media on the plight of Biafrans and why they have continued to seek freedom and independence for their people. 

The action of the Nigerian GESTAPO, the Department of State Security (DSS) and the Nigerian government is turning out as a blessing in disguise for the Biafran movement by helping to internationalize their problem. 

The following report was published by the New York Times and Reuters News services. One can read a quiet and solemn account of the Biafran cause through the story presentation which seems to be narrated from a sympathetic angle to the plight of Biafran story including the fact that 1 million Biafrans died in the civil war largely due to hunger and famine, and the fact that the Biafra seekers are using peaceful means. The article also mentioned that General Buhari said his government had jammed radio Biafra which is still broadcasting today. (African Business World).

Nigerian Intelligence Arrests Biafran Separatist Leader

WARRI, Nigeria — Nigerian intelligence agents have arrested a broadcaster calling for the peaceful secession of the southeast from Nigeria, according to two Biafra separatist groups whose cause prompted a civil war in the 1960s that killed an estimated 1 million people.

Radio Biafra director Nnamdi Kanu was detained Saturday as he was about to fly to London from Lagos, Nigeria’s biggest city, said the Indigenous People of Biafra and the Movement for the Actualization of the Sovereign State of Biafra.

It was not immediately possible to get comment from the Department of State Security.

In July, President Muhammadu Buhari’s government said it had jammed Radio Biafra’s signal because it is unlicensed but the station is still able to broadcast, airing grievances of the Igbo people. The Igbos fought a civil war to form an independent nation called Biafra in the late 1960s that killed about 1 million people, mostly Igbos from conflict-induced famine.

Unresolved issues from the war including appropriated property that has not been returned remain sore points. Groups including Radio Biafra continue to claim the tribe is discriminated against and they agitate for independence. Many Igbos who fled into exile have not returned home.

Eleven pro-Biafra activists have been in detention since last year on charges of alleged treason, which is a capital offense in this West African nation.

Nigeria is fighting an Islamic uprising in the northeast that has killed 20,000 people in six years, resurging militancy in the southern oil-rich Niger Delta and the central Middle Belt is plagued by violent confrontations over land and water between mainly Muslim nomadic cattle herders and sedentary farmers who are mostly Christians.

- New York Times

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