A Nigerian court has found separatist leader Nnamdi Kanu guilty on multiple terrorism charges after a lengthy legal battle. The court determined that Kanu incited violence through broadcasts aimed at creating an independent state in southeastern Nigeria, Biafra. He was charged with treason and related offenses. Sentencing is expected soon, with prosecutors seeking the death penalty, although executions are rare in Nigeria.
Kanu, who previously denied the charges and challenged the court’s jurisdiction, rose to prominence in 2009 by launching Radio Biafra, advocating for Igbo independence. His movement, the Indigenous People of Biafra (Ipobu), was banned in 2017 due to violence associated with its armed group. Despite the verdict, reactions from his supporters in southeastern Nigeria have been subdued.
Kanu was first arrested in 2015 but left Nigeria after a military raid and faced multiple legal hurdles, including a brief successful appeal that was later overturned. The historical context includes a failed Biafran independence attempt following a civil war in the late 1960s that resulted in heavy casualties among the Igbo people.
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