Judgment must begin at the house of God.” — 1 Peter 4:17
“For there is nothing hidden that will not be disclosed.” — Luke 8:17
If we cannot cleanse our own house, then the truth we claim to fight for will eventually expose us.
Anyi Kings Published On the Biafra post
March 31, 2026
IPOB Media has been entrusted with a sacred responsibility: to demand accountability within the Biafra struggle. This task is not convenient, and it is not meant to be. Many toes will be stepped on—but it is on those very toes that history will be written
Accountability must never be selective. If we are to stand before the world and demand justice, transparency, and good governance, then we must first apply those same standards within our own ranks.
At the center of this call is our own leader, Mazi Nnamdi Kanu.
We must be clear: silence in the face of serious allegations is not loyalty—it is complicity. And if we ignore questions within, we lose every moral right to question leaders outside.
It has been alleged that the supreme leader receives a monthly sum of £10,000, while the Head of Finance earns £5,000 monthly. These claims, if true, raise urgent and unavoidable questions:
Under what financial framework were these payments approved?
Who authorized them?
Why were they never disclosed to the general membership?
Transparency is not optional—it is the backbone of any credible movement.
IPOB Media is in possession of documents relating to financial transactions within the IPOB general account—documents that point toward possible misappropriation, financial misconduct, and abuse of trust. These documents will remain classified until a proper and transparent probe is initiated.
But one thing is already clear: the growing concern among members cannot be silenced. Attempts to suppress or erase evidence will only deepen suspicion and widen distrust.
We call on our people to remain calm, disciplined, and focused. Accountability is not betrayal—it is a necessary purification. A movement that cannot correct itself cannot lead others to freedom.
It is deeply troubling to consider that no Nigerian public official—from the President to the lowest ward councillor—earns up to £10,000 monthly, yet such figures are now associated with a liberation movement funded by the sacrifices of ordinary people.
If a leader fighting to build a better system is perceived to be benefiting excessively from the same people he claims to liberate, then something is fundamentally wrong.
Leadership must be defined by sacrifice—not privilege.
The individuals reportedly involved include:
Mazi Nnamdi Kanu — £10,000 monthly
Uche Okafor-Mefor — £4,000 monthly (prior to the abolition of his office)
Nnennaya Anya — £5,000 monthly (Head of Finance)
Why the probe?
Because these alleged payments have no known constitutional backing and were not disclosed to the Directorate of State or the general membership prior to their discovery.
We cannot build a just society on a foundation of secrecy.
We must not be cowed.
We must not be compromised.
We must demand answers.
Loyalty without truth is slavery. We choose truth—no matter whose name is on the line.
— Anyi Kings March 31, 2026

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