Breaking News !
Jihadist Terrorists killed and beheaded not less than 10 Nigeria military personnels today in Borno State.
@real_IpobDOS@radiobiafralive
From Facebook to TikTok, both Instagram and X, including American Congress and Israeli parliament are all talking about him in his favour. That's grace.
Anytime I start going off on Ndi One Naijiria Igbo, I start getting mumu DMs, Peter Obi this, Peter Obi that 😒!
He is also my brother, but he is not the permanent solution to the general marginalization problems Igbo people are facing! You are looking at short-term relief for your pain; I am pointing you toward a lasting solution to our pain!
He has even shot himself in the leg by saying he will do only 4 years. Okay, who is coming next? A Fulani? A tribe bent on the Islamification of Nigeria? 🇳🇬 So after 4 to 10 years, you will again watch your kids and siblings start wailing about injustice towards their Igbo region?
Stop preaching to me. I am not spoiling Obi’s chances of becoming president; I am simply showing you a lasting solution, which is the total separation of the Eastern Region from Nigeria!
Biko nu hapum aka!!!
Referendum now!!!
@Chima_Obi1234 We're asking for a referendum to restore BIAFRA sovereignty and not for any politician including Peter Obi to repair Nigeria.
Nigeria is irredeemable whether you believe it or not.
Behold the True Prophet from the East!
Watching the Social media littered with Mazi Namdi Kanu old videos about Nigeria, shows that he was so underrated, but just like he said, people are now reposting those videos despite neglecting them in time past.
@Okey81457712@NKUMEH
The BBC has just released a biased documentary aimed at whitewashing the atrocities committed by Britain and its colony, Nigeria.
Setting the record straight once again, for posterity's sake.
First off.
A coup happened in January 1966, involving military officers from all three major ethnic groups.
The BBC then took to its station and branded it an "Igbo coup."
That narrative widened existing divisions within the military, and before long, a counter coup followed. Major General Johnson Aguiyi Ironsi was murdered, alongside several other officers.
The situation was spiralling out of control, so a solution was sought.
THE ABURI ACCORD.
Yakubu Gowon and Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu signed the agreement.
Its primary aim was to protect civilians who had nothing to do with the rift within the military and to create a regional structure that would encourage development and healthy competition.
Gowon signed because the agreement made sense to any thinking human being.
But upon returning to Nigeria, Gowon's handlers reminded him that the dream was never a better Nigeria, but a dwindling one. Gowon, being slow, failed to realise he was setting his own people up.
At that point, the only way Gowon and his British masters could deflect from the agreement was through violence.
Then came the pogrom against the Igbos, an automatic breach of the Aburi Accord.
The killings began at Kano Airport. Innocent blood was spilled. Thousands were slaughtered across Northern Nigeria while countless others fled home with nothing but the clothes on their backs.
Ojukwu was cornered. He could no longer guarantee the safety of his people in other parts of Nigeria as the country turned against the Igbos, many without even understanding the situation.
He consulted with his people in the South on the best response to the massacre of innocent civilians.
The verdict was unanimous.
A sovereign state.
BIAFRA was declared.
Weeks later, the Nigerian military launched what many regard as a genocidal campaign. Nigerian Federal troops crossed into Biafra through the Gakem Ogoja axis, firing the opening shots of the war.
When the British government realised the Biafrans were far more determined and resilient than expected, and that a war predicted to last weeks had dragged on for years, they changed tactics.
They introduced the starvation policy backed by Awolowo, (a war crime by any standard) aimed at wiping the Igbo race from the face of the earth.
When Ojukwu realised the objective was extermination, he laid down his office, departed for exile, and transferred authority to his second in command, Major General Philip Effiong, who formally announced Biafra's surrender.
But even surrender did not end the tragedy.
Asaba happened.
Men, women and children were instructed to gather for what they believed would be talks. They came dressed in white, waving peace and singing with trembling hearts.
The Nigerian military separated the men from the women.
Then they opened fire.
Over five hundred men were murdered in cold blood.
Similar atrocities were reported in other communities around the same period.
Post war, came the infamous £20 policy, designed to economically cripple a people already devastated by war and starvation.
The BBC documentary is simply Britain attempting to soften the horrors inflicted upon the innocent people of Biafra.
We remember.
Never to forget.
>> The Line in the Sand <<
I named my oldest son's middle name Travis. After Colonel William Barret Travis. The young commander who stood inside a Spanish mission in my hometown of San Antonio in 1836, surrounded by Santa Anna's army, and wrote a letter to "the People of Texas and All Americans in the World" that ended with two words.
Victory or Death.
Travis was twenty-six years old. He had 180 men. The Mexican army outside numbered in the thousands and was growing daily. He could have surrendered. He could have slipped out at night. He could have made any of the calculations the world calls reasonable.
Instead he drew a line in the sand with the tip of his sword. He told every man standing there that anyone who would stay and fight should step across. Almost every man stepped across. Travis died on March 6, less than two weeks after he wrote his letter. The Alamo fell. But the line he drew never moved.
Texas was free six weeks later.
There comes a moment in every fight worth fighting when there is no more room for excuses.
Nigeria is at that moment.
No one can deny the genocide anymore. The bodies are counted. The villages are named. The mass graves are photographed. The president of the United States posts the footage on his own social media. The bill names the names. The killers shout Allahu Akbar on camera as they swing the machete. The Fulani militias have been documented, named, sanctioned, and sued.
No one can deny the centuries-long jihad anymore. The Sokoto Caliphate was founded by jihad in 1804 and has not stopped since. It conquered the Hausa. It enslaved two million people at peak. It exported tens of thousands of slaves north across the Sahara for a hundred years. It was preserved intact by the British. It governs Nigeria's federal architecture today. The same throne, the same family, the same project, two hundred and twenty years.
No one can deny what they did to Biafra anymore. Three million human beings, mostly children, starved and shot and bombed and erased across thirty months in the late 1960s — because the oil was under their feet and they would not bow. The photographs of Biafran children with the distended bellies of slow starvation are not propaganda. They are evidence. Memories. Scars. Intentional starvation was the federal policy, supported by the British. Three million dead — and not one war crimes tribunal. Not one apology. Not one bowed head. The verdict stands until it is reversed.
No one can deny the looting anymore. $12.7 billion in no-bid contracts to one convicted money launderer. $9 million in foreign blood money paid to Washington lobbyists to deny the killings. $9 billion a year in minerals illegally raped from the lands cleared by massacre. Federal allocation funneled from Niger Delta oil wells into Sokoto palaces. An entire generation of Nigerian children robbed of schools, robbed of futures, robbed of fathers, while a small handful of Caliphate insiders and their foreign partners write themselves checks larger than the budgets of nations.
No one can deny the silencing anymore. Truth-tellers are jailed. Journalists beaten. Platforms suspended. Opposition leaders dragged into court for treason and held for years without trial while killers walk free. Nnamdi Kanu has been in chains for years for telling his people that they have the right to be free. The regime has not learned a single lesson since the 1960s about what happens when you starve a free people of their voice.
No one can deny the radicalization of the youth anymore. Almajiri boys turned into machetes. Universities turned into recruiting grounds for the next wave of jihad. Boko Haram graduates given federal amnesty and free vocational training while their surviving victims sleep next to sewage ditches. As many as 12 million displaced, with a 50% chance of radicalization in the next few years without intervention.
No one can claim ignorance anymore.
No one can claim it is not their job.
It is everyone's job.
This is the line in the sand.
Travis did not have the luxury of waiting to see what the other Texas towns would do. He did not get to outsource his courage. He did not get to assume someone else would write the letter, draw the line, hold the wall. The siege was at his doorstep. The army was at his gate. The hour was upon him. He stepped up because nobody else could.
The hour is upon every Nigerian of conscience now. Every Igbo who has been told to bow. Every Yoruba who has been told to mind his own business. Every Berom widow who has buried her sons. Every Tiv father waiting for the next raid. Every Middle Belt pastor pulling bodies out of his church. Every peaceful Northern Muslim who lives in terror of being called a traitor for telling the truth. Every diasporan watching from London and Houston and Atlanta and wondering whether they have the courage to lend their voice.
The line is drawn.
You are either standing on the side of the killers, the regime that protects them, the lobbyists that whitewash them, and the silence that enables them — or you are standing on the side of the children in the IDP camps, the widows in Bokkos, the girls in the caves, and the future that depends on whether enough free people finally choose to act.
There is no third position. The neutral chair was removed when the bodies started piling up.
If you are not in the fight today, there will be a day of reckoning very soon. Not because anyone is coming for you with a sword. But because history is the cruelest judge a man can face. God is keeping account. The grandchildren of every silent witness will ask: what did you do when you knew?
Travis did not have to win at the Alamo to win the war. He only had to draw the line, hold it as long as he could, and trust that other free people would see what he had done and finish what he started.
Six weeks later, Sam Houston accepted Santa Anna's unconditional surrender at San Jacinto. "Remember the Alamo" was the war cry. Texas was free.
Nigeria's Alamo is now. Bokkos is the wall. Plateau is the wall. Benue is the wall. The Christian Middle Belt is the wall. The hidden IDP camps inside Abuja are the wall. Every village burned and every child buried is a stone in that wall.
Step across the line.
Get on the right side of history.
Victory or death.
#EarthShaker
Expulsion memo.
The guy nicknamed 'Gosife', Chigozie OKEKENTA , who forged HOD signature to write to British Authority is hereby expelled and one Sopuruchi Ochiulo in Aba , Abia state who has become a security risk to IPOB members in Biafraland is hereby expelled from IPOB worldwide.
For others who are impersonating the names and signatures of HOD and other DOS members in writing fraudulent letters , legal actions and arrest are waiting for most of you.
@real_IpobDOS@radiobiafralive
@CitizenObs Bravo! Bravo!! Bravo to all the comrades in Brazil
You're doing a good job.
NB: Be weary of infiltrators and never fail to disgrace any who tries.
One again--Kudos.
The Legislative Assembly of São Paulo State, Brazil, has officially passed a law recognising May 30 each year as the Genocide Memorial Day for Biafrans living in Brazil.
This means that if you are an Igbo person working in Brazil, you are entitled to observe this day while still receiving your full salary without any deductions.
All our people living in Brazil should appreciate IPOB Brazil for this historic achievement. We are making progress gradually.
We also extend our gratitude to the IPOB leadership for their active communication, commitment, and efforts in making this recognition possible.
Thank you, IPOB Brazil and the leadership, for this remarkable milestone.
- Lionman Lioni (IPOB Deputy National Coordinator, Brazil
@EmekaOjadi This is our position as genuine IPOB members.
Anyone who disagrees is still entitled to his/her opinion.
But the struggle has gone beyond one individual.
Our leader MNK has opened our eyes and reasoning to know what we want.
And how to go about it is left for us to decide.
Who created Simon Ekpa against IPOB?
Who created Autopilot against IPOB?
Who created Ambassadors against IPOB?
Who created rising sun against IPOB?
Who created AVID against IPOB?
Who created 100 Men against IPOB?
Who created Biafra Radio against Radio Biafra London?
Who created the Biafran Vanguard against the Mighty IPOB Media?
Answer to these if you have answers, or you shut up and respect yourself, at least.
But you know ee, the shock many are cowardly afraid to accept at this stage is that IPOB is not interested anymore in a system controlled by a leader; a leadership is born to survive leaders, and unwavering place the national interest of Biafrans first.
There's nothing anyone can do about that than rant and rest afterwards, or even rant and perpetually fade away.
Biafra restoration movement failed at Ojukwu's hand because of the absence of well structured leadership. The quest failed at MASSOB's time.
But never shall the fire go down in our time because of 1 man's errors.
Family Writers Press International