News
BREAKING: IPOB Suspends Nnamdi Kanu Indefinitely, Removes Him as Radio Biafra Director
The Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) has announced the indefinite suspension of its detained leader, Nnamdi Kanu, and his removal as Director of Radio Biafra.
- The Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) has announced the indefinite suspension of its detained leader, Nnamdi Kanu, and his removal as Director of Radio Biafra.

The Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) has announced the indefinite suspension of its leader, Nnamdi Kanu, marking a significant development within the separatist movement amid ongoing legal and security challenges.
The group also disclosed that Kanu has been removed from his position as Director of Radio Biafra as part of efforts to reorganise and strengthen the movement’s internal structure.
The decision was contained in a statement issued on Thursday by Chikadibia Edoziem, Head of the Directorate of State (DOS), the highest decision-making body within IPOB.
According to the statement, the suspension followed a meeting of the Directorate of State held on June 17, during which members reviewed an intelligence report allegedly submitted by IPOB’s M-Branch concerning a meeting involving Kanu and officials of the Department of State Services (DSS) as well as the Nigerian Intelligence Agency (NIA) at a detention facility in Sokoto.
Edoziem stated that the leadership of IPOB became concerned over reports indicating that communications linked to Kanu’s detention had allegedly exposed members of the organisation to surveillance, arrests, and, in some cases, death.
The group maintained that IPOB was founded as a self-determination movement by Biafrans in the diaspora and was never intended to revolve around any single individual.
“IPOB was formed and nurtured by Biafrans in the diaspora for the restoration of a sovereign Biafra. No individual has the authority to dissolve its central leadership structure,” the statement said.
The DOS further claimed that there were emerging plans by external forces to establish a new militia that could trigger renewed violence in the South-East and undermine IPOB’s objectives.
According to Edoziem, the suspension was designed to prevent individuals or groups from committing crimes, engaging in violence, or carrying out unauthorised actions while claiming to act on behalf of Kanu or under the authority of his office.
He argued that the move would help prevent what he described as “reckless assumptions of authority” and “unguarded utterances” that could result in the arrest, torture, or death of young people in the region.
The statement also sought to distance IPOB from criminal activities allegedly committed by individuals or groups claiming affiliation with the movement.
It stressed that any future crimes or acts of violence carried out in the name of the suspended office of the leader would not be attributed to IPOB but solely to those responsible.
“Any such crime or criminal activity taken in the name of the suspended office of the leader shall not be attributed to IPOB but solely to the person or persons who may have instigated them,” the statement read.
The group added that the suspension would help curb attempts by unaffiliated persons or organisations to derive legitimacy from Kanu’s position in order to undertake actions that conflict with IPOB’s declared mission and principles.
IPOB further stated that it would no longer accept responsibility for the actions of individuals who do not hold active positions within the organisation or those who have not been expressly authorised by the Directorate of State to act on its behalf.
The announcement is expected to generate significant reactions among supporters of the movement and observers of the ongoing agitation for Biafra, particularly given Kanu’s longstanding role as the face of the organisation since its emergence on the national stage.


