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Biafra post


By Anyi Kings 
Published On the Biafra Post 
May 18, 2026 


As the 30th of May approaches—a day set aside by Biafrans across the world to remember the heroes, heroines, and countless martyrs who paid the ultimate price in defense of their homeland—we pause to honor one of the most controversial and courageous figures of this generation, Anayochukwu Nwokike, alongside every fallen member of the Eastern Security Network who has died since the formation of the outfit.


For some, they were militants. For others, they were defenders. But to many of us Biafrans who believed in the mission of protecting ancestral communities from violence of armed  Fulani herdsmen jihadist ,displacement, and insecurity, they were sons of the soil—men who chose the battlefield over silence.


Among them stood Commander Ikonso, a name that became both feared and revered across the region. Reports from security authorities stated that he died during an armed confrontation between ESN operatives and Nigerian security forces.


 However, members of his family presented a different and deeply emotional account of what transpired on that tragic night.


According to his elder brother, Anulika Nwokike, Ikonso had returned home simply to rest and spend the night with his family. In the early hours—around 1:45 a.m.—their compound was reportedly surrounded by a joint security operation involving soldiers and police officers.
What followed, according to the family’s testimony, remains etched in pain and controversy.



They claimed heavily armed operatives stormed the compound, broke through the main gate, and moved from house to house before locating Ikonso in his room. In the presence of his wife and three little children, he was allegedly dragged outside and shot multiple times until he died.


The family further alleged that the operation extended beyond his killing. Five buildings within the family compound were reportedly attacked, with two structures set ablaze and properties destroyed.


Whether viewed through the lens of conflict, politics, or resistance, one truth remains undeniable—lives were lost, families were shattered, and children were left with memories no child should ever carry.



This 30th of May, as candles are lit and flags are raised, we remember Commander Ikonso—not in the noise of propaganda, but in the silence of sacrifice.


We also remember every  ESN fighter who fell in forests, villages, highways, and hidden battlefields standing between their people and danger.


May history record their names.
May memory preserve their sacrifice.
May the fallen never be forgotten.

30th of May—We Remember.

Anyi Kings 

May 18, 2026 
Biafra post


By Anyi Kings 
Published On the Biafra Post
May17, 2026

On this sacred 30th of May, as Biafrans across the world bow their heads in remembrance of our fallen heroes and heroines, we also honour a special class of patriots—men who fought not only with guns, but with knowledge, innovation, and scientific brilliance.

Today we remember Professor Gordian Ezekwe, Sylvester Akalonu, Benjamin Nwosu, and the many unnamed intellectual warriors whose laboratories became battlefields in defense of a starving nation.

When the Nigerian blockade sought to choke Biafra into submission between 1967 and 1970, these extraordinary minds answered with invention.

Inside the grounds of University of Nigeria, Nsukka—then the intellectual heartbeat of Biafra—scientists, engineers, and students transformed classrooms into research bunkers and workshops into arsenals of survival.
Under the leadership of Professor Gordian Ezekwe, then a mechanical engineering lecturer at UNN, the famous Biafran Research and Production Unit (RAP) was formed. Historical records show Ezekwe later became one of Nigeria’s foremost engineers and served as head of the Biafran rocket group during the war.

Alongside Sylvester Akalonu, Benjamin Nwosu, Willy Achukwu, and others, this think-tank achieved what many believed impossible:
They designed rockets and defensive weapons.
They built communication systems under siege.
They improvised military technology from scrap materials.

They constructed local crude oil distillation systems that produced fuel, kerosene, and diesel for Biafran vehicles and war machines. �
UNION OF CAMPUS JOURNALISTS, UNN +1
These men proved to the world that Biafra was not merely fighting for territory—Biafra was fighting with intelligence, creativity, and the unbreakable spirit of a people determined to survive.

Even today, some stories surrounding post-war academic suppression remain debated.  That is  claims about a deliberate federal shutdown of a chemical engineering department at UNN for wartime reasons

But what cannot be disputed is this:

The genius of Biafra was real.

The innovation of Biafra was real.

The sacrifice of these men was real.

As we count down to May 30th, we remember not only those who died on the battlefield—but those who fought in laboratories, workshops, classrooms, and hidden bunkers.
Their weapons were knowledge.
Their ammunition was innovation.
Their legacy remains immortal.

**30th May — We Remember. We Honour. We Will Never Forget.

Anyi Kings 

May 17, 2026
Biafra post


By Any Kings 
May 16, 2026

As Biafrans across the world prepare to mark 30th May—Biafra Memorial Day, we remember not only those who died on the battlefields, in refugee camps, under bombardments, and through starvation… we also remember those who fought with words, courage, and truth.
Among those immortal names stands Okokon Ndem—the legendary voice of Radio Biafra.
Born in Ikoneto, Odukpani, in present-day Cross River State, Okokon Ndem was not armed with rifles, bombs, or artillery. His weapon was his voice… and that voice shook Nigeria, unsettled Britain, and inspired millions of starving yet defiant Biafrans.


During the Nigeria-Biafra War (1967–1970), while bombs fell from the skies and children died from kwashiorkor, Okokon Ndem kept hope alive through Radio Biafra—a station that became the heartbeat of a besieged nation.
To the Nigerian military government, he became one of the most wanted men in the war—second only to Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu himself.


His broadcasts were fearless. His words were explosive.
He told Biafrans:


“No force in Africa can defeat Biafra.”
He announced the devastating Biafran victory at Battle of Abagana, where Nigerian troops suffered heavy losses.


He told the world about starvation, blockade, and the humanitarian catastrophe unfolding in Biafra—claims that later humanitarian historians and the International Committee of the Red Cross also documented as a major civilian crisis during the war. 
ICRC


Even when Enugu had fallen to Nigerian forces, Radio Biafra continued announcing:
“This is Radio Biafra broadcasting from Enugu…”
It was psychological warfare. It was resistance. It was defiance.


Historians now recognize Radio Biafra as one of the most effective propaganda machines of the war, helping sustain morale, unity, and belief among civilians and soldiers alike. 

Former Cross River governor Donald Duke later recalled that Okokon Ndem handled Biafran propaganda so effectively that neither Nigeria nor the outside world was always certain of the true situation on the battlefield. That memory has been repeated in multiple retrospectives about his life. 



But behind the powerful voice was a deeper message:
Biafra was never sustained by guns alone.
It survived because men and women refused to surrender their spirit.


As we approach 30th May, we remember Okokon Ndem—the man whose voice became a nation’s shield.



**They may silence a people…
But they can never silence history.


May the heroes of Biafra never be forgotten.
30th May we remember 

Anyi Kings 
May 16, 2026