My 3hrs Conversation With Nnamdi Kanu
In Kuje Prison-Fani Kayode
Permit me to begin this contribution
with an apology for my disappearance from the literary and political scene for
the last one month but this was due to circumstances beyond my control. On
October 21st, five days after my 56th birthday, I was arrested by the EFCC
without an arrest warrant at the premises of the Federal High Court in Lagos
where I had been earlier granted bail. Thereafter I was illegally detained by
them without any detention order for 21 days.
Kindly note that this was after I had been detained by them for a grueling 67 days 6 months ago (from 9th of May till July 15th), brought before the Federal High Court in Lagos, arraigned on spurious and politically-motivated charges and locked up in Ikoyi prison for a number of days whilst I attempted to perfect my court bail. After perfecting bail, on 21st October I was re-arrested and the whole nightmare began again: only this time it was far more insidious and worse.
Kindly note that this was after I had been detained by them for a grueling 67 days 6 months ago (from 9th of May till July 15th), brought before the Federal High Court in Lagos, arraigned on spurious and politically-motivated charges and locked up in Ikoyi prison for a number of days whilst I attempted to perfect my court bail. After perfecting bail, on 21st October I was re-arrested and the whole nightmare began again: only this time it was far more insidious and worse.
Throughout the time of the second detention
I was kept in a dingy underground cell at the EFCC headquarters in Abuja where
I met a number of other high profile opposition figures like Senator Bala
Mohammed, the former Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Senator Musiliu
Obanikoro, the former Minister of State for Defence and Mr. Reuben Abati, the
former spokesman to President Goodluck Jonathan. During the course of my 21
days incarceration, my abductors did not ask me any questions or say one word
to me other than to formally serve me with a new set of fresh criminal charges
the morning after I got there which I simply signed for.
After that I heard nothing from them
and I was told nothing though I had daily visits to the medical clinic at the
EFCC due to my deteriorating health. Three weeks later, on November 10th, I was
brought before the Federal High Court in Abuja and arraigned on yet another set
of spurious, baseless and politically-motivated charges. These ones were even
more ridiculous and far-fetched than the first set in Lagos.
I was falsely accused of receiving N26
million cash from the former National Security Adviser, Colonel Sambo Dasuki,
for media work for the Jonathan administration in 2014. Thankfully, I was
granted bail by the court and I was detained at Kuje prison for a further four
days whilst I attempted to perfect my bail. At Kuje I was kept in the terrorist
wing of the prison which was built by the British government specifically for
Boko Haram convicts and suspects.
There were 47 of them in the facility
and I was with them throughout. These were tough, disciplined, hardened,
surprisingly well-educated and intimidating men. The single cells and the
entire terrorist section of the prison was pervaded by an eerie silence
throughout the night and low tone whispers throughout the day. The only thing
that broke the monotony of silence was the regular and constant call to Muslim
prayers and the loud and regular cries of “Allahu Akbar”. This was a frightful
place and those that were locked up there were very dangerous and frightful
people yet thankfully the Lord went ahead of me.
The single cells, though small, were
clean, self-contained, well-ventilated, dry and very neat. The inmates were
surprisingly very kind and friendly towards me and turned out to be my best
friends and bodyguards whenever I toured the other parts of the prison. I was
very impressed with them and when I heard their stories and what some of them
had been subjected to by the security forces and the state tears came to my
eyes.
Most of those men were not Boko Haram
killers but had been falsely accused, tortured and just dumped into prison and
I felt nothing but pain and sorrow when I heard their stories. When I went to
visit the great and brilliant freedom fighter, Nnamdi Kanu, who is the leader
of IPOB and easily the most courageous, powerful and credible Igbo leader in
Nigeria today in his cell, we had a very instructive and long discussion.
I had never met Nnamdi before and I was
amazed at his depth of knowledge, his immense courage and his deep convictions.
There is no doubt in my mind that that man is going places and in him the Igbo
have an Ojukwu and a Nnamdi Azikiwe all rolled into one. He is destined for
greatness. My Boko Haram friends accompanied me to that meeting, drew a ten man
security cordon around me when we entered the general population of the prison
and waited outside as Nnamdi and I spoke for almost three hours.
They even accompanied me to Church on
Sunday and waited outside until we finished. Given what I have written about
Boko Haram in the past and given my total aversion to any form of violence,
terrorism and radical Islam, this was a classic case of God granting me favour
before my enemies. Everyone dreaded them in that prison but I am proud to say
that they were my friends and I will never forget their courage, kindness and
fellowship for the rest of my life.
The enemy had placed me in the lions
den but the lions and their prey became the best of friends. Not only were my
Boko Haram section mates very good to me but so were the other inmates in the
general prison population. Not only that, the head of the prison DCP Akilu
Abdullah, his Chief warden and his entire staff and team of prison wardens were
firm, courteous and professional not just to me but to all the other inmates.
This was the doing of the Lord and it was marvelous in my sight. Throughout my
travails I have never questioned God and I have been inspired and comforted by
His word which says that in all things we must give thanks to Him. I am
innocent of all the charges and allegations and as I have said elsewhere the
whole thing is an attempt by the Federal Government and an increasingly
desperate EFCC that is obsessed with my name and putting me away to discredit,
break and silence me. Yet, in all this I am not moved and neither can I ever be
broken or silenced because, like the biblical Job, “I know that my Redeemer
liveth”.
Like Shakespeare’s Macbeth, “my head is
bloodied but not bowed” and “I shall fight until the flesh is hacked from my
bones”. And as that fight and struggle unfolds and unwinds I take solace in the
powerful and beautiful words of the Victorian poet William Ernest Henley in my
favourite poem titled ‘Invictus’ which was written in 1875. He wrote, “Out of
the night that covers me, Black as the pit from pole to pole, I thank whatever
gods may be for my unconquerable soul. In the fell clutch of circumstance I
have not winced nor cried aloud. Under the bludgeonings of chance My head is
bloody, but unbowed. Beyond this place of wrath and tears Looms but the Horror
of the shade, And yet the menace of the years Finds and shall find me unafraid.
It matters not how strait the gate, How charged with punishments the scroll, I
am the master of my fate, I am the captain of my soul”.
Like Nelson Mandela did at Robben
Island prison every day for 26 years, I recited that poem three times a day on
each and every day of my total of 90 days detention this year. And if I am
arrested and detained again by the EFCC or any of President Buhari’s orders numerous
security or intelligence agencies, I will continue to recite it. I have no fear
of what men or Satan can do to me and I trust and have faith in the God that I
serve. Having explained my absence for the few weeks with this appetizer,
permit me get to the meat of it and now serve the main dish of this
contribution. (TO BE CONTINUED).
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