Nigerian prosecutors have filed fresh charges against a Biafran
activist just days after a court ordered his release, court officials
said on Wednesday.
Nnamdi Kanu, leader of the outlawed Indigenous
Peoples of Biafra (IPOB), has been held by the Department of State
Services (DSS), the country's secret police, since his arrest in October
for operating pirate Radio Biafra and belonging to an unlawful
organisation.
A court in Abuja last week dropped the case after
the prosecution decided to discontinue the trial, but the DSS refused to
release him, saying he was under investigation for fresh charges of
terrorism and terrorism financing.
A senior court official told
AFP on Wednesday that fresh charges, including belonging to an unlawful
organisation, had been slapped against the Biafran campaigner and two
others before another Abuja high court.
"Kanu and two others are facing fresh charges. They were not in court on Tuesday when the case came up for hearing," he said. He said the judge then adjourned to a date to be communicated to both the defendants and prosecution.
Kanu
has emerged as the new face of the Biafra campaign for a separate state
for the Igbo people of southeast, who fought a brutal civil war with
Nigerian federal forces from 1967 to 1970.
The conflict, which
left some one million dead mainly from starvation and disease, was
sparked when Biafran leaders unilaterally declared independence from
Nigeria. Kanu's IPOB has held a series of protests across the
country, including the commercial city of Lagos, demanding his release
and Biafran independence.
A number of the protesters have been killed in clashes with the Nigerian security forces.

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