DSS Reportedly Arrested Radio Biafra Director, Nnamdi Kanu
Director of pirate radio, Radio Biafra, Nnamdi Kanu, was on Saturday, reportedly arrested by Nigeria secret police, the Department of State Services (DSS). Kanu, who is also acclaimed to be the Director of Biafra Television and the Leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), was said to have been arrested in Lagos, yesterday 17th october, 2015.
The Deputy Director of Radio Biafra, Uche Mefor, alongside other members of the group, in a marathon broadcast on the pirate radio, alleged that Kanu was arrested in Lagos by the security operatives, as he flew into Nigeria from his base in the UK.
The group in a tweet on Sunday, via its Twitter handle, confirmed the arrest.
In a statement published on its website, the separatist movement also confirmed that their Director has been arrested in Lagos by the Nigerian authorities, noting that Nigeria has through this arrest played into the grand strategy of Biafrans. However, at the time of filing this report, newsmen were yet to confirm the arrest, even as the DSS authorities were yet to publicly make any statement about the arrest.
IPOB is a separatist movement that call for the independence of Nigeria’s former Eastern Region – proclaimed the Republic of Biafra in 1967 and reannexed to Nigeria three years later, following a civil war that claimed between one and three million lives.
Meanwhile, the face-off between the Consumer Protection Council,CPC, and Multichoice got to a head, last week, when the CPC swooped on Lagos Island headquarters of the pay – TV firm to carry out an enforcement exercise. The enforcement exercise, led by the CPC Director of Legal Services, Mr. Emmanuel Ataguba, came on the heels of alleged attempts by Multichoice officials to obstruct the course of investigation into the company’s operations.
The raid saw the Council officials leaving with laptop computers and important documents about the company’s operations and subscribers. Multichoice, according to a source close to it, was mindful of the fact that it’s data could be leaked to competitors once it was available outside the safety of her system. It further stated that the insistence of the CPC that the pay-TV firm handover it’s exclusive contracts with its customers was baffling and wondered how such action of the CPC could aid consumer protection.
There are insinuations within and outside Multichoice that this may be the voice of CPC at work but certainly the hand of some powerful competitors directing it based on the kind of demands the regulatory body was making. One of such demands is that Multichoice should provide comprehensive data of its subscribers. Broadcast industry experts are at a loss on how this will help the CPC protect those consumers. There is a growing fear in the industry that some competing companies may be using the CPC to attack Multichoice dominance of the market, developed over 22 years, using government magic.
Another criticism trailing the CPC action was the raid on Multichoice office without legal backing. Analysts were curious as to why the CPC did not go to court to compel the pay-TV firm to produce the documents it wanted from Multichoice instead of using military era tactics which included harassment. Consumers who were at the Multichoice office were said to have been harassed during the raid. There were also fears that this kind of attack have a tendency to hurt Nigeria’s potentials to attract direct foreign investment.