TRENDING NOW

Biafra post



“When loyalty to personalities replaces loyalty to principles, every movement begins to lose its soul.”

Anyi Kings

Published On the Biafra Post
April 19, 2026

For those unfamiliar with Benjamin Mmadubugwu, he was one of the detainees arrested alongside Nnamdi Kanu in October 2015. Before becoming involved with IPOB, Benjamin was reportedly a street hustler in the Russian Federation. His rise within the movement began after IPOB’s early mobilization efforts around 2012, when Kanu called on young Biafrans in the diaspora willing to return home and serve as volunteer operatives in support of the Biafra cause.

Benjamin Mmadubugwu was said to be among the many who responded to that call. At a critical point, he allegedly had custody of an IPOB radio transmitter imported from Europe into the Southeast.

When IPOB leadership reportedly received intelligence that Nigeria’s DSS had arrested Nnamdi Kanu in a Lagos hotel, panic spread across the ranks. Reports also claimed that laptops and communication devices linked to Kanu had been seized.

In response, IPOB leaders allegedly contacted Benjamin and instructed him to immediately move the radio transmitter from Kanu’s family residence to a safer location. However, instead of complying with the directive, Benjamin reportedly insisted on hearing directly from Kanu—who was already in detention—before taking any action.

That delay, according to this account, proved costly. Benjamin was allegedly traced and arrested by DSS operatives, and the location of the transmitter was exposed. Security agents then seized the equipment. Later, former President Muhammadu Buhari publicly referenced the recovery of a radio transmitter during a media chat.

The controversy did not end there. Benjamin was also accused of submitting a 64-page proposal seeking financial assistance from four Igbo governors for a private farming venture while allegedly presenting himself as a member of IPOB apex leadership body DOS. Critics claim that when the matter surfaced, Kanu defended him instead of taking disciplinary action, and later supported his inclusion in IPOB’s leadership structure which did not go well with the members of DOS .

This raises a deeper political question: why do individuals repeatedly accused of questionable conduct continue to enjoy privileged access and positions of trust around Kanu? Critics contend that Kanu’s continued association with such figures—including certain lawyers, family members, siblings, and allies such as Benjamin Mmadubugwu—suggests a deliberate network built not on competence, ideology, or discipline, but on mutual protection and personal loyalty.

According to this critical narrative, these relationships persist because they serve to shield alleged corrupt interests, suppress internal accountability, and preserve a system centered on personal control rather than the collective vision of Biafra restoration.

Thus, when Benjamin reportedly says Ndi Igbo are following Kanu and not IPOB, opponents interpret it as further evidence that some loyalties are tied more to personalities, private interests, and shared patronage than to the stated mission of the movement.

by Anyi Kings

“A cause that becomes the property of a few will eventually cease to belong to the people.”

Anyi kings April 19, 2026 

Biafra post



"A leader who seeks personal freedom above collective liberation risks becoming the prisoner of history."
Anyi Kings April 18, 2026 

Published On The Biafra Post 
April 18, 2026

The growing desperation with which Mazi Nnamdi Kanu seeks his release outside the established structure of IPOB and the shared vision of Biafra restoration has raised serious concerns. Many now fear that Kanu may have abandoned the larger cause and is no longer prepared to make the sacrifices required for the freedom of Biafra. Instead, he appears increasingly open to alliances focused solely on securing his personal freedom, even when such alliances undermine the principles and objectives of IPOB.

This prediction may sound unbelievable to some today, but the actions of Kanu’s close associates and siblings are steadily damaging the reputation he built over years of commitment to Biafra restoration.

At the same time, the leadership of IPOB continues to advocate for the institutional reform of the movement—anchoring it on clear principles, accountability, and a shared vision to which both leaders and members must be subject. Such reforms, if pursued in good faith, are necessary to prevent deviation from the collective goal.

As discussions on reform are opened to the public, one would expect all camps to contribute constructive ideas on the critical areas requiring change and the type of reforms that can strengthen the struggle. Unfortunately, despite obvious structural weaknesses that have contributed to stagnation, those benefiting from the old order remain determined to preserve the status quo.

This is a situation where monetary interests and the personal influence of one man threaten to overshadow the collective mission of the movement.

More troubling is the fact that some of Kanu’s close associates now openly sideline IPOB in matters concerning his release, while aligning themselves with Igbo politicians and groups that do not share IPOB’s vision.

 Their claim is that Ndigbo follow and recognize Mazi Nnamdi Kanu alone—not the organization he once led.

The implication is dangerous: the mission and vision of IPOB are pushed aside, while all bargaining power is redirected toward the freedom of one man.

 If Kanu regains freedom without any transparent political process tied to a Biafra referendum, then history may judge that he traded the struggle for personal liberty.

Unlike Nelson Mandela—who endured 27 years in prison and emerged with freedom for the black majority of South Africa—Kanu risks being remembered as the man who suffered imprisonment but returned without achieving the cause he claimed to represent.

If that happens, he may go down in history not as the Mandela of Biafra, but as the failed Mandela of Biafra.

"Mandela walked out of prison with a nation’s freedom; if Kanu walks out alone, history will remember the difference."

Anyi Kings  April 18, 2026
Biafra post


IPOB cannot Be A One-Man Decree: Time To End  "Supreme Leader,, Authority 

"A Freedom Fighter Cannot be Ruled Like A kingdom,"
Anyi kings


Published On the Biafra Post 
April 15, 2026 


Opinion: IPOB’s Evolution, Structural Failures, and the Urgent Need for Reform

As the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) undergoes a critical phase of restructuring, it is important to reflect on how the movement has evolved over the years and identify the key areas where reform must be prioritized.


There is a common adage: “Two heads are better than one.” A constitution written by one man becomes a decree, not a law—and decrees rarely serve the collective interest. More often, they protect the authority of the individual who issues them. This reality explains the growing call for urgent reforms within IPOB.


For years, IPOB has operated without a binding constitution that safeguards the collective will of its people. Instead, the organization has functioned largely on directives from higher authorities—directives that, in many cases, reflect personal interests rather than the shared vision of the movement. 


The absence of institutional checks created an environment where authority could be personalized and dissent suppressed.


The self-allocated title of “Supreme Leader” exemplifies this concern. Rather than serving as a symbolic or honorary role, it has increasingly been perceived as a tool of dominance—one that discourages accountability and concentrates power in a single office. This contradicts the foundational ethics of a liberation movement built on collective struggle.



However, credit must be given to the Directorate of State (DOS), the apex leadership body of IPOB, for its role in attempting to checkmate excesses and introduce institutional balance. Their efforts represent a shift toward aligning leadership with the broader interests of the people rather than individuals.


Reform, however, cannot succeed without historical reflection.


It is on record that the name Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) did not originate from Mazi Nnamdi Kanu alone. Rather, it was proposed by one Mr Emeka Emekasiri and was  adopted collectively by early board members. This underscores a fundamental truth: IPOB was never a one-man initiative—it was a collective project.


History offers similar lessons. Before the declaration of the Biafra Republic, deliberations were held within the Eastern Assembly on what the new nation should be called. It was Chief Francis Opigo who suggested the name “Biafra,” drawing from historical references such as the Bight of Biafra and early ecclesiastical records. The name was then collectively adopted


These examples reinforce a consistent principle: great movements are built on collective decisions, not individual imposition.


As IPOB expanded, a structured leadership system emerged. Mazi Nnamdi Kanu served as leader and Director of Radio Biafra, while Mazi Uche Mefor acted as deputy leader. Other principal roles included the Coordinator of All Coordinators (COC), held by Mazi Clifford Chukwuemeka Iruanya, alongside coordinators at unit, zonal, national, regional, and continental levels. From these layers, the Directorate of State (DOS) was formed, with Mazi Uchenna Asiegbu as its early Head.



However, structural ambiguities soon led to internal conflicts—particularly over hierarchy and authority. Disputes arose regarding who ranked next after the leader: the deputy leader, the Head of DOS, or the COC. These disagreements escalated into factionalism, including the establishment of rival communication platforms. (Radio 📻 Biafra International)


During this period, controversial decisions were made, including the dissolution of leadership structures through unilateral announcements. 

This pattern of centralized authority—often exercised through media channels rather than institutional processes—further exposed the dangers of operating without a constitution.



Subsequent reforms saw the abolition of certain offices, including the COC and spokesperson roles, while a new DOS leadership emerged under Mazi Chika Edoziem. Yet instability persisted, culminating in the eventual removal of the deputy leader position altogether.


These repeated structural disruptions reveal a deeper issue: a system driven by decrees rather than laws.


Even more concerning are allegations that key decisions—such as political engagements and negotiations—were conducted by Kanu himself or through proxies for his personal interest without the knowledge or consent of the DOS or broader leadership. Such actions, if true, undermine transparency, weaken institutional trust, and contradict the collective ethos of the struggle.


A liberation movement cannot afford to operate like a personal enterprise

For IPOB’s reform process to succeed, it must address these foundational flaws. This includes:
Establishing a clear and binding constitution
Defining roles, hierarchy, and limits of authority
Ensuring collective decision-making and accountability


Eliminating titles or structures that enable unchecked power


The struggle for Biafra is bigger than any individual. No title—whether self-allocated or inherited—should supersede the collective will of the people.


If IPOB must move forward, then the era of decree must end—and the era of law, structure, and accountability must begin.


Only then can the movement truly reflect the principles it claims to defend.

Biafra is not a throne - It's a struggle "

— Anyi Kings
April 15, 2026