Nigeria’s Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, Ambassador Bianca Odumegwu-Ojukwu, has expressed confidence that President Bola Tinubu will release the detained leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), Mazi Nnamdi Kanu.
Speaking during the 13th memorial anniversary of the late
Dim Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu in Owerri on Tuesday, Ambassador Ojukwu said
she believes President Tinubu understands the importance of Kanu’s release. She
argued that freeing Kanu would expose criminal elements who have used his
detention as a cover to perpetrate heinous crimes in the Southeast.
Delivering her remarks on the theme “Unifying the Igbo
Race,” Bianca Ojukwu called for an end to the violence plaguing the Southeast,
emphasizing that the Igbo people are not known for harming their own. She
stressed the need for collective action to reclaim the region from criminality
and insecurity.
“The release of Nnamdi Kanu is paramount to separating genuine freedom fighters from criminals causing mayhem in the Southeast. Our people face existential threats, and we must act to restore peace,” she said.
She lamented that, years after the passing of Dim Odumegwu
Ojukwu, the Southeast has become a region marked by violence and insecurity,
forcing many to flee their homes.
“Communities are empty. Our illustrious sons and daughters
have fled. Kidnappers now abduct their brothers for ransom. This is not what
Dim Ojukwu fought for,” she said.
Appeal for Nnamdi Kanu’s Release
Bianca Ojukwu underscored the need for President Tinubu to
release Nnamdi Kanu, asserting that his freedom would help identify those
criminals hiding under IPOB to wreak havoc.
“President Tinubu understands the importance of Kanu’s
release. It will expose the masqueraders behind the violence and help restore
order. I will do whatever it takes to ensure His Excellency grants this
request,” she stated.
She also decried the imposition of violent “sit-at-home”
orders in the Southeast, which she said contradict the ideals of
self-determination and have stifled economic activities in the region.
“Ndigbo are enterprising and their brother’s keepers. We
must reclaim our land and continue to propagate the ideals for which Dim
Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu stood.”
Bianca Ojukwu’s call adds to the growing clamor for the
release of Nnamdi Kanu as a means to address insecurity and foster unity in the
Southeast.