Author Anyi Kings
Published On the Biafra Post
March 11, 2026

“Biafra was not built by the sacrifice of one man or one family. It was built by the collective sacrifice of a people, and no one has the moral right to convert a national liberation struggle into a family enterprise.”

Recently, I have been hearing statements such as “If you are tired of IPOB, leave and go and form your own movement.” Statements like these are not only misguided but also reveal a deep misunderstanding of what the Biafra struggle represents.

Let me make this very clear from the onset: I am not tired of IPOB, and I am certainly not tired of the struggle for the restoration of Biafra. My commitment remains rooted in the belief that Biafra represents justice, dignity, and the collective aspiration of millions of people.

However, we must also face an important truth.
The growth and resilience of IPOB were not built on the sacrifice of one man alone, but on the collective sacrifices of countless Biafrans across the world. Men and women who invested their time, resources, reputations, and in many cases their personal safety, all in pursuit of the same dream.

Those who have laboured to build a house cannot simply be bamboozled into abandoning the very structure they helped erect. IPOB does not belong to an individual, a family, or a small circle of loyalists. It belongs to the Biafran people whose sacrifices sustain it.

History will certainly acknowledge Mazi Nnamdi Kanu as a catalyst of the modern Biafra restoration movement. Through the platform of Radio Biafra, his voice reignited a consciousness that had long been suppressed. For that, due recognition must always be given.

But while honour must be given where it is due, we must also be careful not to elevate any individual above the collective will of the people or above the divine purpose that guides the struggle.

Biafra, if it is ever restored, will not be the achievement of any single individual. It will be the result of the collective sacrifices of the Biafran people, and ultimately the glory belongs to Almighty God, Chukwu Okike Abiama.

This is precisely why the leadership structure of IPOB evolved into an institutional framework led by the Directorate of State (DOS). The intention behind this structure is simple: to ensure that the struggle is guided by collective responsibility, established principles, and accountability, rather than personal authority.

Those who believe that Nnamdi Kanu or any individual should run IPOB as a one-man enterprise without accountability are living in an illusion. The fact that certain excesses may have been tolerated during the early stages of the movement does not mean such mistakes should be repeated.

Movements that survive and mature are those that learn from their past and build stronger institutions that transcend personalities.

Today, many Biafrans have begun to ask serious questions—questions that for too long have remained unanswered. Recent developments have also raised concerns about the increasing influence of family interests within what should remain a people-driven liberation movement.

A liberation struggle must never be reduced to a family enterprise or personal inheritance. Once that happens, the credibility and moral strength of the struggle become compromised.

For this reason, the Biafra cause must remain above family interests, personal loyalties, and emotional attachments. The struggle belongs to the people, and its integrity must be protected at all costs.

Biafra must never be held hostage by individuals, and certainly not by family structures that were never part of the original collective mandate.

The cause of Biafra is bigger than any man, bigger than any family, and bigger than any  leadership.

It is a cause that must remain anchored in justice, accountability, and the collective will of the Biafra my topeople.

Only under such principles can the struggle retain its legitimacy and moral authority before history.

“A liberation struggle that becomes a family business loses its moral authority before history.”

— Anyi Kings March 11, 2026


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