

Ikechukwu Mmuo
51.5K posts

@iykefantasy
Freedom for humanity is my first priority in life, Biafra or death















Today, we go again! #FreeNnamdiKanuNow This day carries enormous significance for many reasons. The Federal High Court in Abuja, Nigeria, is on the verge of either rewriting or repeating its own tragic history or redrawing the very map of justice. It may also be a day the country meets its nemesis. Why? Because a Federal High Court judge is about to deliver a ruling on whether the leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), @MaziNnamdiKanu , is guilty of the terrorism-related offenses the Nigerian state has accused him of, charges rooted in his unrelenting agitation for a separate homeland for the people of the South East. By a twist of fate only destiny itself can explain, I am also in court today, facing a charge of “cybercrime” filed by the Nigeria Police Force @policeng since 2021 on behalf of one of Nigeria’s most notorious so-called billionaires, and ruling @OfficialAPCNg Senator @PrinceNedNwoko. This case traces back to a 2021 incident involving Ned Nwoko and an aphrodisiac vendor popularly known as Jaruma. Nwoko sought to jail her by any means necessary, but my intervention prevented that injustice. Instead of learning, he turned his sights on me, claiming that a @SaharaReporters story exposing fraudulent activities connected to his NGO amounted to “cyberbullying.” His favourite police enforcers at the @FCT_PoliceNG Command in Abuja arrested and briefly detained me and have repeatedly attempted to arraign me under a section of the 2015 Cybercrime Act that has since been removed from the law, one of the many absurdities of this persecution. But back to Nnamdi Kanu. I am pretty certain his case goes far beyond the expectation that a court in Abuja, presided over by one of its coconut-headed judges, will suddenly deliver justice. It cannot unless it bows to superior, natural forces of justice and applies conscience rather than federal might. Two weeks ago, I led a protest to highlight the futility and danger of this trial. I stand firm by that action. In fact, I spent three nights in Kuje Prison for daring to lead a protest demanding the release of one of Nigeria’s top hostages. And today, again, I insist that it is not too late. #FreeNnamdiKanuNow is inevitable.

























