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How Kenyan Operatives Ransacked Nnamdi Kanu’s Apartment To Take His UK Passport

When news broke last Thursday that Nnamdi Kanu, the leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra, had left his United Kingdom passport behind in Kenya, the Kenyan government dispatched security officers to ransack the apartment where he was staying, reliable sources told SaharaReporters.

The Kenyan agents broke into the residence and searched furiously for the UK passport, but it was never discovered, according to SaharaReporters.

The UK passport had been safely kept away from the Kenya apartment before the intelligence was revealed to “act as evidence that the Kenya government was complicit in the unusual abduction of Kanu to Nigeria,” according to the sources.

Barrister Ifeanyi Ejiofor, Kanu’s counsel, backed up this argument, saying it was too late for Kenya to ignore the “compelling evidence.”

Ejiofor said, “My happiness is that by that development (of the leaving over of Kanu’s UK passport in Kenya) the desperate denials of the Kenya government in the abduction of Kanu have been put to rest. Earlier, I had compelling evidence to show the world a conspiracy between Kenya and Nigerian governments to abduct Kanu through an unconventional process.

“Kenya became apprehensive that we had other compelling evidence. As soon as the fact of his passport still in Kenya was made public, they quickly went to the apartment where Kanu stayed in Kenya and ransacked the place. But it was too late for them. These are people who are telling us that they don’t know about what happened to Kanu.”

New proof that Kenyan authorities were guilty in the arrest and extradition of Nnamdi Kanu came on July 10 with his UK passport left behind in the nation, according to SaharaReporters.

In a report, The Guardian in the United Kingdom reported that Kanu had a Kenya visa that was set to expire in June and that he had been in the nation before his detention and extradition.

“Kanu entered Kenya this year on his British passport on a visa that expired in June, according to evidence obtained by the Guardian.” His British passport is still in Kenya. Kanu did not have a Nigerian passport, according to his relatives, and he had publicly rejected his Nigerian citizenship.

According to the UK media report, “the kidnapping of a person from a foreign country with the intention of rendition to justice is illegal under international law.”

Kanu told his lawyer, Ifeanyi Ejiofor, about his ordeal in Kenya, stating he was “mercilessly abused and tortured” in the East African country before being extradited to Nigeria, according to SaharaReporters.

During an interview, Ejiofor validated Kanu’s statements, saying Kanu told him about how he was incarcerated for roughly eight days before being extradited to Nigeria, not in Kenya’s official detention centers, but in a private apartment.

Despite Kenyan officials’ denials that they had anything to do with Kanu’s detention and extradition to Nigeria, this is the case.

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