Skip to main content

BIAFRA : Suspected IPOB members hoist Biafra flag in Benue


 

John Charles, Makurdi

Some suspected members of the proscribed Indigenous People of Biafra have hoisted Biafra flag in Ekile community in the Ado Local Government Area of Benue State.

The flags were seen at strategic locations in the community which shares boundary with another community in Ebonyi State.

Our correspondent gathered that Ekile is a district which serves as a host community to the Ezza from Ebonyi State.

It was further learned that the hoisting of the flags took place in the early hours of Friday, prompting some members of Ekile community to raise the alarm.

A community leader and former chairman of Ado LGA, Otse Otukpa, told our correspondent on the telephone that the hoisting of the flags was the third time in the community.

Otokpa said, “This is about the third time it is happening. In 2014, 2015; apart from hoisting their flag, they also wrote on logs of wood, ‘Biafra Territory’.

“There was also a time we discovered a house that was allegedly used for scouting by IPOB members, but men of the Department of State Services dislodged them.”

The chairman of the council, James Oche, stated that he had been informed of the incident.

The chairman, who spoke through the supervisory councillor for education, information and social development, Mr Attah Ede, said there was no part of Ado that belonged to Ebonyi State.

“We have yet to ascertain their mission and why they think such thing should be done in Ado. Ado is part of Benue State and Benue is one of the states in the North-Central of Nigeria. We are not South-East. IPOB should keep its activities off Ado and Benue as a whole,” Oche said.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Nnamdi Kanu Sends Important Message To IPOB Members From Detention

    The detained leader of the proscribed Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), Mazi Nnamdi Kanu, has sent an important message to his followers over the Biafra movement. The embattled separatist according to one of his brothers, Prince Kanu Meme, has asked his disciples to trust and comply with directives from the Directorate of State (DOS). Boasting his belief in the separatist movement’s administrative structure, Kanu said “I’m DOS and DOS is me”.  Naija News understands that the DOS, headed by diaspora-based Chika Edoziem has been contending with authority issues since Kanu’s arrest in Kenya in June 2021. It has been observed that IPOB is in disintegration following Nnamdi Kanu’s rearrest and detention. The present situation of the Biafran movement can be likened to that of sheep without a shepherd. However, Kanu in a conversation with his sib...

BIAFRA NEWS : Justice Nyako Is Partisan, Must Step Down From Nnamdi Kanu’s Case – IPOB

  Justice Nyako Is Partisan, Must Step Down From Nnamdi Kanu’s Case – IPOB  IPOB, which made the demand in a statement issued by its Media and Publicity Secretary, Emma Powerful, condemned what it described as the Nigerian government's political and judicial persecution of Kanu using Justice Nyako.  The Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) has asked Justice Binta Nyako of the Federal High Court to step down from the case of its detained leader, Nnamdi Kanu.   Bnbpick.io - Earn Free BNB, Faucet, Multiply BNB game Bnbpick.io https://bnbpick.io Bnbpick.io is an Free BNB faucet that enables users the ability to earn free BNB every hour. You are able solve captchas in order to accrue these litecoins.      IPOB, which made the demand in a statement issued by its Media and Publicity Secretary, Emma Powerful, condemned what it described as the Nigerian government's political and judicial persecution of Kanu using Justice Nyako.  According to Powerfu...

IPOB: The Nigerian Civil War, commonly known as the Biafran War

  THE HISTORY OF BIAFRA AND NIGERIA WAR  Israel, Nigeria and the Biafra civil war    The Nigerian Civil War , commonly known as the Biafran War (6 July 1967 – 15 January 1970), was a war fought between the government of Nigeria and the secessionist state of Biafra. Biafra represented nationalist aspirations of the Igbo people, whose leadership felt they could no longer coexist with the Northern-dominated federal government. The conflict resulted from political, economic, ethnic, cultural and religious tensions which preceded Britain's formal decolonization of Nigeria from 1960 to 1963. Immediate causes of the war in 1966 included a military coup, a counter-coup and persecution of Igbo living in Northern Nigeria. Control over the lucrative oil production in the Niger Delta played a vital strategic role. Within a year, the Federal Government troops surrounded Biafra, capturing coastal oil facilities and the city of Port Harcourt. The blockade imp...