Biafra post
Non-Biafra regions that share common values and are genuinely interested in aligning with the sovereignty project of a Christian Republic of Biafra—such as Edo State and parts of the Middle Belt—should begin formal consultations and expressions of interest without delay.
The future of self-determination requires early engagement, clarity of purpose, and collective resolve among like-minded regions.
The proposed Republic of Biafra shall operate a confederational system of government, where each constituent region remains fully autonomous, exercising control over its internal affairs, laws, security structures, and governance systems. While politically independent, the regions shall cooperate economically through free trade, open markets, and mutual development agreements, ensuring shared prosperity and regional stability.
It is imperative that the Government of Nigeria and its parliamentary legislature initiate an open, honest, and structured dialogue on the peaceful separation of the Biafra region, along with any other components that freely choose to exit what many now perceive as an Islamist-dominated caliphate structure.
Such discussions must be conducted transparently and in good faith, guided by international principles of self-determination, human rights, and peaceful coexistence.
Early negotiation will allow all parties to reach mutually beneficial agreements on borders, trade, security cooperation, citizenship rights, and diplomatic relations.
Failure to act proactively risks external intervention, where foreign powers may impose solutions that do not reflect the will or interests of the affected peoples. History has repeatedly shown that delayed internal resolution often leads to externally dictated outcomes.
This is a sincere and honest appeal to all who are willing to listen and think beyond sentiment or fear. The question of Biafra and the ongoing issue of Christian persecution and genocide in Nigeria can no longer be dismissed, silenced, or reshaped by lobbyists or propaganda machinery. The narrative has irreversibly shifted.
In this era of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), the struggle is anchored on verifiable facts, documented evidence, and strategic international engagement. IPOB does not rely on assumptions or emotional rhetoric; it systematically gathers facts and presents them to relevant international authorities and institutions, which act based on evidence, not political convenience.
The global community responds to truth, data, and consistency. As such, no amount of lobbying can overturn factual realities or suppress legitimate demands for freedom and dignity. The movement for Biafra is no longer a regional agitation—it is a documented international case rooted in justice, survival, and the inalienable right of peoples to determine their own future.
Anyi Kings January 19, 2026
