Nnamdi Kanu’s brother Kingsley loses UK court case on IPOB leader’s detention

Mazi Nnamdi Kanu

Justice Jonathan Swift rejected the application of Kingsley that the UK foreign ministry should rule on whether Kanu was extraordinarily rendered and call for his release.

By Jeffrey Agbo

Kingsley Kanu, brother of IPOB leader Nnamdi Kanu, on Thursday lost a legal challenge against the British government about the separatist leader’s continued detention in Nigeria.

Kingsley brought a judicial review of London’s alleged refusal to officially acknowledge that Kanu was the victim of extraordinary rendition and unlawful detention.

Kanu, a British-Nigerian citizen, heads the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) which wants a separate state for the Igbo people in South-East Nigeria.

The Court of Appeal in Abuja ruled in October last year that he was abducted, ill-treated and “illegally moved” from Kenya to Nigeria to face treason and terrorism charges.

Nnamdi Kanu

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The judges dismissed the criminal case but Nigerian prosecutors have appealed and Kanu, who is in his mid-50s, remains in custody.

In London, Justice Jonathan Swift rejected the application of Kingsley that the UK foreign ministry should rule on whether Kanu was extraordinarily rendered and call for his release.

Swift rejected Kingsley’s argument that the foreign secretary had “acted irrationally” by not doing so, and said the minister had the right to determine what was in the UK’s diplomatic interests.

Kanu’s family lawyers argued that the case should lead to a reassessment of what official help is given to British nationals held abroad, particularly when there are suspected human rights violations.

Kanu, a former London estate agent who also runs Radio Biafra station, was first arrested in 2015 but jumped bail two years later, reappearing in the UK and Israel.

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