In a strategy designed to separate
himself from a controversial movement that parades two factions, the
leader of the Movement for the Actualization of the Sovereign State of
Biafra, MASSOB, Chief Ralph Uwazuruike, has announced a new name, Biafra
Independent Movement, BIM, for the group.
This came as former Governor of Abia State, Orji Uzor Kalu declared
that the Igbo have the full right to agitate for self-determination.
Chief Uwazuruike, who made the announcement, yesterday, while
addressing the press in Owerri, also said that he was irked by the bad
corporate image some dissidents of MASSOB, were attracting to the group.
“The change in name became absolutely necessary because of the sad
introduction of violence by the disgruntled dissidents and this is at
variance with the non-violence stance of MASSOB over the years,”
Uwazuruike said.
He said that real loyalists of MASSOB feel ashamed to be associated
with violence, promising that they will restructure MASSOB to make it
the youth wing of the Biafra Independent Movement.
While saying that there is vicarious liability in civil law, Chief
Uwazuruike equally recalled how he recruited Nnamdi Kanu in 1989, to
head Radio Biafra.
“I recruited Nnamdi Kanu in 1989, when I established Radio Biafra and
appointed him the director of the establishment. He started preaching
hatred and brainwashing the youths. MASSOB sacked him,” Uwazuruike
recalled.
Answering a question, Uwazuruike said he had been imprisoned 16 times
in the past and wondered why and how the heavens should fall because
Kanu was incarcerated for just one month.
He pleaded with the Federal Government to release Kanu and Benjamin
Onwuka, a former student of Emmanuel College, Owerri, and chieftain of
MASSOB, who had been in prison for years.
Uwazuruike reminded those preaching violence that Biafra could not be
achieved through violence, pointing out that, “the South East is
landlocked and there is no way we can win the battle for freedom through
violence.”
He reminded followers of Indigenous People of Biafra, IPOB, that if
they close the Niger Bridge for one month or more, it will not affect
activities in either Lagos or Abuja.
“Closing the Niger Bridge will only scuttle the business activities of Ndigbo. The protest in the South East, as arranged and implemented by IPOB, ended up unleashing a high degree of suffering on Ndigbo,” Uwazuruike said.
He, however, blamed the Directorate of State Services, DSS, for bungling the arrest, detention and prosecution of Mr. Kanu.
“The DSS is largely responsible for the protest. They arrested Kanu,
charged him for bailable offences and the court granted him bail, but
the DSS refused to release him. They later came up with treason charges
and asked the court to give them 90 days to conclude investigations.
This cannot hold in democracy,” Uwazuruike said.

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