RADIO Biafra director and Independent People of Biafra (Ipob) leader Nnamdi Kanu has written to the UK government to intervene in his case by asking President Muhammadu Buhari to release him from detention because he is a British citizen.
Since October last year, Mr Kanu has been in detention after been arrested by security agents when he arrived in Lagos and is facing several charges including treason and operating a pirate radio station. Following his detention, Ipob members and supporters have held numerous demonstrations and protests across Igboland calling for his unconditional release.
Mr Kanu, who is facing treason charges alongside two other pro-Biafra agitators Benjamin Madubugwu and David Nwawuisi, approached the British government through his lawyer, Ifeanyi Ejiofor. In a letter dated March 24 and addressed to the British high commissioner in Abuja, Mr Kanu described himself as a victim of a travesty of justice and gross human rights violations.
He insisted that the President Buhari-led administration has violently abused his fundamental human rights through his prolonged detention in prison custody. Even though Mr Kanu said he was ready to answer to the charges against him, he expressed doubt in the ability of the Nigerian government to accord him fair trial, saying he has so far been subjected to immense persecution.
Mr Ejiofor said: “It is repeating the obvious to state that our client is a full British citizen, by virtue of which position he is entitled to all rights, privileges and protection, guaranteed under British laws and conventions. We are therefore constrained in the circumstance, to formally notify the British government via this medium, of our well informed reservations and apprehension, that our client is undergoing persecution in the charge above referred and deliberate design by the persecutors to frustrate every effort of the defence team aimed at giving our client a fair trial."
According to Mr Ejiofor, Mr Kanu's detention since October 14, 2015 without any lawful order of court, was not only unlawful but was in flagrant disobedience of court orders which directed his unconditional release and discharge. He added that Mr Kanu was refused bail on January 29, 2016 after the court cited the facts of his possession of dual passports and named him as a flight risk.
“It is the position of our law, that dual citizenship is a constitutional right of the citizens of Nigeria, clearly provided for under section 28 of the 1999 constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria as amended in 2011. Dual citizenship is not a crime under our law," Mr Ejiofor added.
He pointed out that he believed Justice John Tsoho denied Mr Kanu bail in line with the pronouncement of President Buhari in his media chat on December 29, 2015 during which he referred to the matter of dual citizenship. In the interview, President Buhari said that Mr Kanu cannot be granted bail, alleging that he came into the country without a valid travelling passport.
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