News
Family raises alarm, rejects relocation of Nnamdi Kanu to Sokoto prison
The family of the detained leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra, IPoB, Mazi Nnamdi Kanu, has raised the alarm that he has been relocated to Sokoto prison.
Prince Emmanuel Kanu, who raised the alarm on Friday, said that when his legal team went to visit him at the Abuja headquarters of the Department of State Services, DSS, where he had been held all along, they were told he had been moved to Sokoto.
Rejecting the action, Kanu’s family expressed worry over the safety of the IPOB leader in a Sokoto prison.
Alleging that the relocation of the IPoB leader to Sokoto was a veiled plot to eliminate him, Prince Emmanuel vehemently rejected the move.
“They have secretly relocated Nnamdi Kanu to Sokoto prison with the intention to kill him by denying him access to his personal physicians.
” Kanu is on special medication, which a private doctor is managing after his failed health. Now they want to go back to the old order of administering drugs to him. This is a plan to finally kill him, and we are opposed to it.
“Nigeria should not kill Nnamdi Kanu for seeking justice for his people. He committed no crime to warrant this torture”.
Prince Emmanuel called on the international community to hold President Bola Tinubu and the federal government of Nigeria, responsible, should anything happen to the IPoB leader.
-
Sports10 hours agoMan City’s Rodri fined £80,000 for referee comments
-
Metro9 hours agoPolice ban covered number plates, unregistered vehicles in Lagos
-
Sports10 hours agoOnigbinde, Former Super Eagles Coach, Dies At 88
-
Business10 hours agoPetrol hits N1,300 per litre in Ibadan amid rising landing costs
-
News10 hours agoSuspended Cross River lawmaker apologises over alleged assault on wife
-
Metro9 hours agoPolice arrest four suspected kidnappers after N9m ransom operations in Rivers
-
World News9 hours agoUS says Iran ‘trying to hold world hostage’ with strikes
-
Business10 hours agoAbdul Samad Rabiu now third richest in Africa as wealth jumps 120% to $11bn
