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Biafra post


By Anyi Kings 
Published On The Biafra Post 
July 18, 2026 

The comment in the screenshot is attributed to Onuoha Chukwu Ebuka. I will respond to the claims made there on their own merits. But before addressing his long list of accusations against Arizona Tochukwu, one question must be answered:

Why did he completely abandon the central issue—the allegations surrounding Rachel Nwosu’s alleged involvement in previous asylum-related activities involving our people in Israel—and instead launch into personal insults and a bizarre demand for a random commenter to account for “five years of achievements”?

Arizona Tochukwu merely expressed surprise at a report he had read. He was not the author of the report, did not present himself as its source, and did not even make a substantive argument for or against it.

Yet, because he apparently appeared sympathetic to the DOS, he was called “foolish,” “an idiot,” and “dull.”

That is not intellectual engagement. That is the behaviour of someone who has run out of arguments and decided to attack the person who merely reacted to information.

If the allegations were false, the proper response was simple: produce facts, evidence, and a convincing rebuttal. Instead, the response was an emotional rant—exactly the kind of behaviour associated with the online recruits he claims to lead.

Now, let us examine the claims one after another.

1. “What has DOS achieved in five years?”

Let us begin with a major achievement that cannot be erased by Facebook propaganda.

In 2023, IPOB was associated with the Global Terrorism Index based on 2022 data. Following criticism and clarification, subsequent reporting distinguished the broader IPOB movement from the militant activities attributed to IPOB-ESN.

But let us also be honest about how IPOB got into that situation in the first place.

The allegations surrounding the activities of Simon Ekpa did not emerge from nowhere. There have been serious allegations that individuals within Nnamdi Kanu’s family circle and some of his legal representatives—including his siblings and lawyers—provided support, encouragement, or political cover for activities associated with Simon Ekpa and his violent campaign in the Southeast.

Those allegations have repeatedly been denied, but they cannot simply be erased from the historical record by pretending that the controversy never existed.

The result was that IPOB as an organisation risked being internationally associated with violence it officially disowned.

It was the institutional leadership of the DOS that had to fight to separate IPOB from those activities and defend the organisation's identity as a peaceful self-determination movement.

That distinction mattered.

While others were allegedly creating confusion, defending or politically shielding individuals associated with violent activities, the DOS was left to deal with the international consequences and protect the institutional identity of IPOB.

Following sustained legal, diplomatic, and institutional efforts, IPOB continued to defend its position as distinct from the criminal activities attributed to Simon Ekpa and his network.

That is an achievement.

And it is deeply hypocritical for people who helped create or worsen the crisis—whether directly or through political, legal, or familial support—to now ask what the institution that cleaned up the mess has achieved.

The question should instead be:

Who created the international crisis, who defended or enabled the controversial actors, and who ultimately worked to rescue IPOB from the consequences?

That is the history people should be debating—not throwing insults at a random commenter who merely expressed surprise over a report.

2. IPOB remains legally operational in Finland

Despite Simon Ekpa's terrorism-related conviction and the Nigerian government's diplomatic pressure, IPOB has remained legally operational in Finland.

That did not happen because of social-media photographs, airport poses, or diplomatic tourism.

It happened because of sustained institutional work, legal defence, diplomatic engagement, and the continuous effort to separate the IPOB organisation from the criminal activities of individuals acting outside its structure.

If the DOS had failed in that battle, IPOB could have faced deregistration and wider international consequences.

It did not.

That is another achievement.

3. “The US Congress is debating Kanu”

This claim is one of the most amusing.

The fact that an issue is raised, discussed, or introduced by a legislator does not automatically make it official United States foreign policy.

Congress debates numerous issues. Lobbyists and advocacy groups bring countless matters before lawmakers. But a congressional discussion is not the same thing as a change in US foreign policy.

The actual US policy framework toward Nigeria remains centred on security, economic relations, democratic governance, counterterrorism, human rights, and bilateral relations.

There is no established US foreign policy recognising Biafra or placing Nnamdi Kanu at the centre of American relations with Nigeria.

So, please, let us stop confusing lobbying, congressional discussion, advocacy, and foreign policy as if they are the same thing.

They are not.

4. The honorary citizenship claim

Honorary citizenship is symbolic.

It does not automatically confer legal citizenship, diplomatic protection, immigration rights, or recognition of a separatist state.

It is an honour—not a declaration of Biafran independence.

5. “What happened in Israel can never be achieved by DOS”

That statement is particularly ironic.

The DOS had already sent representatives to engage with the Israeli Knesset. The relevant video exists within our media archive. Its release was withheld because of diplomatic confidentiality.

That is precisely how serious diplomatic work often operates.

Diplomacy is not a concert. It is not a Facebook tour. It is not measured by the number of photographs taken outside government offices.

Israel's historical support for southern Sudanese movements was largely covert. Israel did not publicly parade its intelligence and military relationships with the Anyanya movement as a daily propaganda spectacle.

South Sudan's independence was ultimately achieved through decades of local resistance, international diplomacy, regional mediation, and political agreements. Israel played a role—but Israel did not single-handedly “liberate” South Sudan.

The same applies to Somaliland.

If the argument is that serious diplomatic engagement must always be publicly advertised with photographs and videos, then where is the evidence of a publicly advertised Israeli diplomatic campaign with Somaliland before Israel's formal recognition?

You cannot demand proof of secret diplomacy from others while celebrating public photo opportunities as if photographs themselves constitute diplomatic victories.

The difference is simple

Photo-op diplomacy says: “Look at where we went.”

Institutional diplomacy asks: “What did we achieve?”

In Brazil, the result was what mattered: the Brazilian Parliament enacted legislation recognising May 30 as Biafra Resistance Day.

The public celebrated the result—not the number of photographs taken while submitting letters.

That is why institutions matter.

A government office does not suddenly become unaware of IPOB because somebody arrives to submit another letter and records a short video outside the building. Serious diplomacy requires continuity, institutional memory, legal presence, relationships, and follow-up.

That is precisely why the institutionalisation of IPOB matters.

Within five years, multiple IPOB diplomatic offices have been established across different countries, with more developing. That is measurable institutional growth.

And here is the uncomfortable truth:

Since 2012, apart from creating awareness and the endless controversies surrounding the management of IPOB funds, what concrete institutional achievement did Nnamdi Kanu deliver between 2012 and his abduction and rendition in 2021 that compares with the diplomatic, legal, and institutional work being done today?

Awareness is important.

But awareness alone is not an institution.

You can insult Arizona Tochukwu for expressing surprise. You can call him foolish. You can question his intelligence.

But none of those insults will answer the central questions.

Where is the evidence refuting the allegations against Rachel Nwosu?

Where is the evidence proving that the Israeli photo-op tour produced any concrete diplomatic outcome?

Where is the evidence that congressional lobbying has become US foreign policy?

And where are the measurable results of the much-advertised diplomatic tourism?

Until those questions are answered, the insults are nothing more than a distraction from the original allegations.

Facts do not become false because a random commenter is insulted. And a photograph does not become diplomacy simply because it was taken in front of a government building.

Anyi Kings 

July 18, 2026
Biafra post

News Report by Anyi Kings 
Published On the Biafra Post 
July 16, 2026 

BIAFRA LAND — July 15, 2026: The leadership of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) has issued what it described as a “final, unequivocal warning” to Nnamdi Kanu and individuals allegedly aligning with him to cause violence and disorder within Biafra Land.

The warning was contained in a public statement signed by Mazi Expensive, IPOB Publicity Secretary, Biafra Land, and released on July 15, 2026.

According to the statement, the people of Biafra have endured what the leadership described as years of “severe torment, extortion, and violence” allegedly carried out by criminal elements claiming to be acting under orders from Kanu.

The IPOB leadership said it had previously exercised patience and defended Kanu under the assumption of institutional unity. However, it declared that such protection could no longer continue following his official suspension from the movement.

“That shield is gone,” the statement declared.
The leadership argued that Kanu, having previously enforced IPOB’s oath and code of conduct by removing individuals who allegedly violated organizational rules, must now respect the same principle of institutional discipline.
The statement further referenced the recent crisis in Abia State, where armed individuals allegedly invaded an official IPOB meeting.

 According to the document, the individuals reportedly claimed to be acting on orders received after visiting Kanu at the Sokoto detention facility.

The IPOB leadership alleged that the incident was an attempt to forcibly remove the Abia National Coordinator and “hijack the leadership” of the organization.

It therefore challenged Kanu to publicly and verifiably dissociate himself from the alleged perpetrators if he did not authorize the incident.

“If Nnamdi Kanu did not authorize this armed assault, he must immediately use his lawyers or next available visitors to issue a public, verifiable disclaimer,” the statement said.
The leadership warned that continued silence would be interpreted as confirmation that Kanu was working against the interests of the Biafran people, their freedom, and their wellbeing.

The statement also accused internal divisions of creating opportunities for the Nigerian government to further militarize and terrorize Biafra territories.

However, while reaffirming IPOB’s commitment to a peaceful struggle, the leadership declared that no individual or faction had a monopoly on violence.

“Nobody is bigger than the collective will of the Biafran people,” the statement warned.
The organization further stated that any future attempt to attack its leadership or disrupt its structures would be met with resistance from the people.

The statement concluded with a stern warning:
“Take heed immediately. The patience of the movement is entirely exhausted.”
The development is expected to further intensify the already deepening internal crisis within the Biafran separatist movement, particularly amid competing claims over leadership, discipline, authority, and the direction of the struggle.
The allegations contained in the statement are attributed to the IPOB leadership

 Anyi kings reporting
Biafra post


By Anyi Kings | The Biafra Post
July 16, 2026 

Social Media Fame, Alleged Rape and the Price of Blind Loyalty: Odogwu Asaba Arrested After 20-Year-Old Victim’s Death

A shocking case involving the alleged rape of a 20-year-old woman identified as Favour from Warri has sent waves of outrage across social media, following the circulation of a disturbing video in which the young woman reportedly spoke about her ordeal.

The suspect, popular boutique owner and content creator Ifeanyi Ogbonna, widely known as Odogwu Asaba, was reportedly arrested after the young woman allegedly took her own life following the incident.

According to the account circulating online, Favour had reportedly visited the content creator after he allegedly promised her a job opportunity. However, what was expected to be a meeting concerning employment allegedly turned into a horrifying encounter at a lodge.

In a video that went viral before her death, the young woman reportedly expressed deep distress over the alleged sexual assault, insisting that she had not consented to the act. She was also reported to have said that she was a virgin and had not agreed to engage in sexual activity with the suspect.

The development has triggered widespread anger, shock and debate across social media.

Odogwu Asaba, who is known for producing social media content featuring his sales girls and often presenting himself as a promoter of hard work, discipline and self-reliance among young women, has now found himself at the centre of a grave criminal allegation.

A video allegedly showing him inside a police station has also circulated online. In the footage, the content creator reportedly appeared remorseful and was heard assuring the victim’s family that he was prepared to do anything possible to resolve the situation.

However, the central question remains: can fame, money, influence or public popularity ever be allowed to overshadow the cry of an alleged victim?

Many social media users have expressed disbelief that a man widely admired for his public image could allegedly become involved in such a disturbing case. Others have questioned whether the tragedy would have received police attention if the victim had not taken the extreme step of ending her life.

That question has now opened a much wider conversation about the dangerous culture of blind loyalty to social media personalities and public figures.

A man may have millions of followers. He may be celebrated as a philanthropist, businessman, activist or leader. But popularity is not proof of innocence, and fame must never become a shield against accountability.

This is precisely why the case has also revived criticism of the manner in which supporters of powerful personalities often attack, silence or discredit those who raise allegations against them.

Critics have drawn parallels with the controversies surrounding Mazi Nnamdi Kanu, arguing that his enormous influence and loyal online following have, in their view, created an environment where allegations made against him—including claims involving the alleged exploitation of young women and alleged financial misconduct within the organization associated with his leadership—are often dismissed, attacked or buried by loyal supporters before they can be properly examined.

The comparison has once again raised an uncomfortable question:

When a powerful man has millions of followers willing to defend him blindly, who protects the alleged victim?

From Odogwu Asaba to Nnamdi Kanu, critics argue that the lesson is the same: no public figure should be considered too popular, too influential or too revered to face scrutiny.

A follower count is not a court judgment.

A loyal fan base is not a defence lawyer.

And social media popularity is certainly not a certificate of innocence.

The case involving Favour has therefore become more than a story about one content creator and one alleged victim. It has become another painful reminder of the dangers of placing public figures on pedestals so high that their followers begin to treat every accusation against them as an attack—and every alleged victim as an enemy.

As calls for justice continue to grow, Nigerians are now watching closely to see whether the law will be allowed to take its course.

Justice must not depend on how famous the accused is.

And the voice of an alleged victim must not require death before society decides to listen.

Anyi Kings reporting for The Biafra Post.