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Biafra post


Published On the Biafra Post
June 13,2025

Israel launched a series of strikes on Tehran on Friday morning, dealing a major blow to Iran’s chain of command by killing its top three generals, according to Iranian state media and officials.

The Israeli military confirmed the deaths of the three Iranian commanders.

Two scientists who played leading roles in Iran’s nuclear development were also assassinated on Friday, according to Iranian state media.

Iranian Military Generals 👇

(1) Maj. Gen. Mohammad Bagheri, chief of staff of the armed forces and the second-highest commander after Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

(2) Gen. Hossein Salami, commander in chief of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps, Iran’s primary military force.

(3) Gen. Gholamali Rashid, deputy commander in chief of the armed forces.

Nuclear Scientists 👇

(4) Fereydoun Abbasi, the former head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran.

(5) Mohammad Mehdi Tehranchi, a theoretical physicist and president of the Islamic Azad University in Tehran.

Biafra post


Published On the Biafra Post
June 9, 2025


Imagine a farmers’ organisation selling catfish worth N4.5 billion in 2024. This is what the central sales record of the IDIPR Eriwe Farm Village, Ijebu Ode, Ogun State, shows.

Although many people associate Ijebu Ode garri with its brand of Ijebu garri, it is home to 46 catfish clusters under the aegis of the Ijebu Development Initiative on Poverty Reduction (IDIPR) cooperative, producing about 2000 metric tonnes of fish annually.



The Eriwe Farm Village, which is located on 156 hectares of farmland acquired from the Ogun State Government, is considered as the biggest catfish farm cluster in West Africa.


It has 67 concrete fish tanks, 5,400 earthen ponds (dog-out) fish ponds, 2,720 boreholes, a modern fish processing centre with smoking kilns and several pumping machines, also powered by a solar energy system, and a modern feed mill.




It has over 600 farmers, down from 1327 due to COVID-19, inflation and production challenges.

Last year, the farmers produced 1,700 metric tonnes of catfish worth N4.5 billion. This is massive for a farmers’ organisation, which is now a model for other farmers’ organisations across the country.

The farm village witnessed accelerated growth and has continued to receive worldwide commendations, including from the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) and other international donor agencies.

Currently, the FAO is implementing the FISH4ACP project with funding from the European Union and the GIZ, building the capacity of the farmers, strengthening access to finance and facilitating research on black soldier fly with the University of Ibadan to come up with a cheap alternative feed for the farmers.


Dr Abubakar Usman, the FAO national project coordinator for FISH4ACP, said the black soldier fly research had shown good prospects and is currently at the farm trials level and may likely cut down feed cost by more than 20 per cent.

Marcus Adeniyi, the chief executive officer of IDIPR, told the Weekend Trust at the farm site in Ijebu Ode that the fish farmers’ cooperative societies operating at the Eriwe Farm Village had grown tremendously in assets and productivity.

He explained how the farm village was able to maintain a record system that allowed them to track the total volume of production and sales at every cluster by every farmer with the scale structure.


“We have a central sales account here. Whatever is sold in any of our farm villages goes to that central sales account,” he explained.

Adeniyi valued the current stock of fish at the farm village at N6 billion, adding that from their record, they have sold over 600 tonnes of fish in the first quarter of this year alone.

“If last year we only produced 1,700 metric tonnes and it was N4.5 billion, this year will surely exceed N5 billion or N6 billion,” he said, with production expected to hit over 2000 tonnes by the end of this year.


The farmers’ leader said the cooperative held training every quarter for newcomers, who pay N25,000 to enable them to join any of the cooperatives, where the farmer receives a plot of land at N15,000, which can accommodate two and half ponds.

After the farmer first stocks, he or she can obtain up to N2 million in loans from the cooperative at 18 per cent interest for a year, or 9 per cent interest rate for six months.

Oyinade Matthew Adeneye is a farmer with 12 ponds that have been producing catfish in the area since 2008.


He currently has over 30,000 fish at various stages. He told the Weekend Trust that the FISH4ACP project was able to strengthen the knowledge of fish management by addressing certain practices that eat deeper into their profit, particularly in the area of either ‘under’ or ‘over’ feeding.

Adeneye said the coming of the project had changed the dynamics of productions for him and increased his access to finance, which the FAO, through the project, helps to facilitate.

The FISH4ACP project is all about unlocking the sustainability of fisheries and agraculture value chains in Africa, the Caribbean and the Pacific. It is being sponsored by the European Union and the German Federal Department of Cooperation and Development.


The project is in 12 countries (9 countries in Africa, 2 countries in the Caribbean, and 1 in the Pacific) with 40 million euros, but with additional funding from the government of Germany.

In Nigeria, the focus is on catfish value chain, which is being implemented across the six geopolitical zones.

“In the South-West, we are in Ogun State, in the South-South, we are in Delta State, in the South-East, we are in Anambra, in the North-West, we are in Kano, in the North-Central, we are in Kwara, and in the North-East, we are in Gombe,” Dr Usman said.



Dr Usman said that in the upgrading strategy the project had developed, feed is the most burning issue in the industry.

“Next to it (feed) is the seed (fingerlings). So, what we did was come up with a feed credit scheme to see how we can intervene in that area to reduce the cost of the feed. Then, alternatively, we are working on Black Soldier Fly, which is an alternative protein ingredient.


“So for the Black Soldier Fly, it is a non-conventional protein ingredient that is less competitive with humans and livestock.  So, based on that, there is an ongoing trial here in Eriwe Cluster, where we have done the laboratory experiment at the University of Ibadan. Now, we are doing the field experiment here.

“So, once there is proof of concept; and we have seen that, there is going to be light at the end of the tunnel. The research is going on very well and is promising.  So we are going to advocate at the end of this production cycle,” he explained.


When the final result is certified, the project coordinator said it would “advocate and ask farmers to channel or use the alternative feed ingredient, which will reduce the cost of the feed.”

“We are going to do the economy of scale after the trial.  But based on the laboratory outcome we have, the Black Soldier’s Fly shows that it will reduce the cost of feed almost 20 per cent, based on the laboratory trial.  Because we did the laboratory trial in concrete ponds, we now want to do it in the earthen ponds. We are coming to the level of the farmers,” the coordinator said.


 

Addressing EU, US traceability concerns

The issue of the international market is one of the major challenges or setbacks Nigeria has in the catfish value chain.

The FAO said it had been working with the Federal Department of Fisheries and Aquaculture to see how the country would be able to meet the EU and the USA conditions and criteria.

Dr Abubakar said the project was strengthening the critical areas in terms of recordkeeping in order to address the concerns of Europeans and the United States so that fish from the area could have access to the international market.


 Although Nigeria can export fish harvested from its natural bodies of water, it cannot export cultured or farmed fish.

“They (EU, US) want to see all these records that have to do with the traceability of the entire production cycle for them to be able to know that there are no residues like antimicrobial resistance and so on.  They want to ensure that the use of antimicrobials in the production has been controlled or eliminated,” he said.

Mrs Opeyemi Adeyemi is one of the people who buy fish from the farm regularly. She said one kg cost between N2,700 and N3,100, depending on the combination of the sizes that make up the kilogram.


Adeyemi said sales were a daily activity on the farm, which is well organised and very effective.

The farm organisation is a model, from which other farms or cooperatives in the country could learn.

 

Biafra post

IPOB Press release 
Published On the Biafra Post 
June 9, 2025

The Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), under the leadership of our indomitable leader, Mazi Nnamdi Kanu, wishes to address the persistent misinformation and judicial travesty surrounding his unlawful detention and prosecution. We call on Nigerians, the international community, and all lovers of justice to heed this clarion call: Mazi Nnamdi Kanu has no case to answer. The continued persecution of our leader is not only a gross violation of his fundamental rights but also an indictment of Nigeria’s judiciary, which has descended into a cesspool of judicial terrorism and criminal dereliction of duty.

For too long, Nigerians have been misled by a false narrative propagated by the Nigerian state and its complicit media, claiming that Mazi Nnamdi Kanu faces charges of treason or terrorism. Let us set the record straight: the treasonable felony charges against our leader were struck out years ago when the former Attorney General, Abubakar Malami, realized the case was unwinnable. No treason was committed. The Nigerian state, in its desperation to silence the Biafran struggle, resorted to fabricating terrorism charges, despite the Federal High Court’s clear ruling that IPOB is a lawful organization. This ruling was brazenly overturned through forum shopping by Malami, who secured a proscription order from Justice Kafarati’s court without granting IPOB the fair hearing guaranteed under Section 36 of Nigeria’s Constitution. This act alone exposes the Nigerian judiciary as a tool of oppression rather than a bastion of justice.

Most egregious is the unprecedented abuse of judicial process by Justice Tsammani and his co-panelists at the Court of Appeal. In a move that defies the principles of law and justice, they employed a civil procedure—stay of execution—to overturn a valid judgment reached in a criminal trial, a ruling that had discharged and acquitted Mazi Nnamdi Kanu. This is a world-first in judicial history, a shameful act that stands as a testament to the corruption and moral bankruptcy of Nigeria’s judiciary. In any civilized society, Justice Tsammani, Justice Kafarati, and their collaborators would not only be disrobed but prosecuted for their criminal dereliction of the sacred oath of the bench. Their actions constitute judicial terrorism, as defined under Section 2(3)(f) of Nigeria’s Terrorism Prevention and Prohibition Act 2022, which explicitly states that attempts to convict individuals unjustly under terrorism charges are themselves acts of terrorism. We urge Nigerians and the global community to study this law and recognize the hypocrisy of those who claim to uphold it while violating its very tenets.

The Nigerian state’s obsession with persecuting Mazi Nnamdi Kanu has exposed its judiciary as a willing accomplice in a neo-colonial agenda to suppress the legitimate aspirations of the Biafran people. This persecution is not just an attack on one man but an assault on justice, truth, and the rule of law. Nigeria risks destroying whatever is left of its global reputation and reducing its judiciary to a laughingstock. Those encouraging the Tinubu regime to persist in this dangerous path do not wish Nigeria well. They underestimate the unyielding resolve and fanatical devotion of Mazi Nnamdi Kanu to the cause of Biafra. His courage, even in chains, as evidenced in videos of his interrogations by the DSS, stands as a testament to his unbreakable spirit and the righteousness of our cause.

We call on the Nigerian public, legal practitioners, and the international community to awaken to the truth: Mazi Nnamdi Kanu is a prisoner of conscience, detained for his unwavering commitment to the self-determination of the Biafran people. The Nigerian state has no case against him. Should he ever take the stand to defend himself, the world will witness the unraveling of Nigeria’s façade of justice. IPOB is not begging for mercy; we demand justice. God Almighty, the ultimate witness to truth, stands with us.

The Nigerian judiciary must reverse this travesty, release Mazi Nnamdi Kanu unconditionally, and restore the integrity of its courts. Failure to do so will only hasten the inevitable collapse of a system built on lies and oppression. The world is watching, and history will judge those who choose to perpetuate this injustice.

COMRADE EMMA POWERFUL MEDIA AND PUBLICITY SECRETARY FOR IPOB.