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.
Three weeks later, on November 10th, I was brought before the Federal High Court in Abuja and arraigned on yet another set of spurrious, 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 26 million naira cash from the former National Security Advisor, 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 4 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 th 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.
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