Audio By Carbonatix
A court in Nigeria has found separatist leader Nnamdi Kanu guilty of terrorism 10 years after he was first arrested.
The court said it was satisfied that Kanu had made a series of broadcasts to incite violence and killings, as part of his campaign for a separate state in south-east Nigeria, known as Biafra.
Kanu has so far been convicted on six of the seven charges he faced, with the judge continuing to deliver his ruling.
Once a relatively obscure figure, Kanu's popularity surged in 2009 when he started Radio Biafra, a station that called for an independent state for the Igbo people broadcast to Nigeria from London.
Though he grew up in south-eastern Nigeria, where he attended the University of Nsukka, Kanu moved to the UK before graduating and acquired British nationality.
In 2014, he set up the Indigenous People Of Biafra (Ipob), a movement demanding independence.
Ipob was banned as a terrorist organisation in 2017. Its armed wing - the Eastern Security Network - has been accused of killings and other acts of violence in recent years.
Delivering his judgement, Judge James Omotosho said: "Mr Kanu knew what he was doing, he was bent on carrying out these threats without consideration to his own people.
"From the incontroverted evidence, it is clear that the defendant carried out preparatory act of terrorism.
"He had the duty to explain himself but failed to do so."
In court ahead of the verdict, Kanu insisted that proceedings could not continue because he had not yet filed his final written address, accusing the judge of bias and not understanding the law.
The judgement was delivered after Kanu had been forcibly removed from the courtroom for unruly behaviour.
He was first arrested in October 2015 but he jumped bail in 2017 and left the country after a military raid on his home. The court later revoked his bail in March 2019 and he was re-arrested in 2021 in Kenya.
The calls for Biafran independence date back many years.
In 1967 Igbo leaders declared a Biafran state, but after a brutal civil war, which led to the deaths of up to a million people, the secessionist rebellion was defeated.
Latest Stories
-
Bronze for Ghana as military medics shine at 2026 US Army Best Medic Competition in Italy
1 hour -
Father vows legal action after teacher ‘tortures’ 10-year-old son over low grades
2 hours -
No phones at inner polling zones: NPP warns delegates ahead of Saturday’s presidential polls
2 hours -
LaDMA set to rezone Kpeshie Lagoon enclave following mass demolition
3 hours -
Home Alone star Catherine O’Hara dies aged 71
3 hours -
NPP elects flagbearer today in high‑stakes presidential primaries
4 hours -
No space for lawlessness: Police deploy nationwide for NPP presidential primaries
5 hours -
Minister Elizabeth Ofosu-Adjare woos British investors with economic ‘reset’ success
5 hours -
A history of NPP flagbearer contests from 1992 to the January 31 primary
5 hours -
The elephant’s growing herd: How NPP delegates have surged in numbers since 1992
6 hours -
NPP race: Here is the regional distribution as 211,849 delegates prepare to vote on Saturday
7 hours -
Meet the Ghanaian model who wraps her prosthetic leg in African print on the runway
7 hours -
Discipline and professionalism key to Ghana’s security – Mahama to Armed Forces cadets
10 hours -
January salaries withheld for 2,563 public sector workers after headcount
10 hours -
President Mahama calls for collective action against terrorism and extremism in West Africa
11 hours
