By Dr. Brian Vincent Ikejiaku
Introduction
The prosecution of Mazi Nnamdi Kanu, leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), remains one of the most complex intersections of law, politics, and international relations in contemporary Nigeria. His trial – originating from alleged acts of terrorism, secessionist agitation, and unlawful broadcasting – has become a crucible for testing Nigeria’s constitutional order, its commitment to the rule of law, and its approach to managing deep ethno-political divisions.
Beyond its domestic significance, the case engages fundamental questions of jurisdiction, extraterritoriality, and international due process: whether a State may lawfully prosecute a person abducted from a foreign country without formal extradition, and whether prosecutions under repealed statutes remain valid under new laws with saving clauses.
The issues raised mirror global tensions between State sovereignty and individual rights, resonating with precedents from the United States, United Kingdom, and India – all jurisdictions that have grappled with terrorism, unlawful rendition, and the reach of domestic law beyond borders.
1. Background: Timeline of Acts, Arrests, and Legal Context
Nnamdi Kanu’s legal odyssey began in October 2015, when he was first arrested and charged under the Terrorism (Prevention) (Amendment) Act 2013 and the Criminal Code Act. The counts included managing an unlawful society, importing radio transmitters, and committing acts amounting to treasonable felony.
He was granted bail in 2017 but fled the country after a military operation at his residence in Abia State, later resurfacing abroad to continue his pro-Biafra broadcasts.
In June 2021, Kanu was apprehended in Kenya and returned to Nigeria under circumstances widely described as extraordinary rendition – that is, an abduction and forcible return without following extradition procedures prescribed under the Extradition Act, Cap E25 LFN 2004.
In May 2022, while his case was pending, Nigeria enacted the Terrorism (Prevention and Prohibition) Act 2022 (TPPA 2022), repealing the earlier 2011 and 2013 Acts. The new law introduced broader definitions of terrorism and explicit extraterritorial jurisdiction under Section 2(1)(c), covering acts committed abroad that threaten Nigeria’s security.
The repeal raised a constitutional question: could Kanu’s ongoing trial, framed under the repealed 2013 law, validly continue under the new statute?
2. The Legal Framework: Repeal, Savings Clauses, and Jurisdiction
The TPPA 2022 addresses transitional issues in Sections 97 and 98, which expressly save ongoing prosecutions and subsisting charges under the repealed Acts. Section 98(3) provides that:
“Any proceeding, prosecution, sentence, judgment, charge or cause of action pending or existing immediately before the commencement of this Act under any of the repealed Acts may be continued or commenced … as if this Act had not been made.”
Thus, as of the repeal date – 12 May 2022 – Kanu’s prosecution was a “pending proceeding” within the meaning of the savings clause. The Federal High Court therefore retained jurisdiction to continue his trial, notwithstanding the repeal.
This mechanism echoes Section 6 of Nigeria’s Interpretation Act, Cap I23 LFN 2004, which presumes that repeal of a statute does not extinguish rights, liabilities, or proceedings existing under it unless the repealing law expressly provides otherwise.
3. Jurisdictional Challenges and Extraterritorial Reach
Kanu’s defence team has repeatedly argued that some alleged offences – particularly the radio broadcasts advocating Biafra – occurred outside Nigeria’s territory, thereby stripping Nigerian courts of jurisdiction.
However, both the repealed 2013 Act and the 2022 TPPA confer extraterritorial jurisdiction over terrorism offences. Section 2(1)(c) of the TPPA 2022 states that an offence may be tried in Nigeria where it is “committed partly in and partly outside Nigeria,” or where the offender is a Nigerian citizen abroad, or the act is directed at Nigerian interests.
Under this provision, the Federal High Court may exercise jurisdiction over Kanu’s broadcasts – even those transmitted from the United Kingdom or Kenya – since the alleged intent was to incite violence within Nigeria.
This model reflects global counter-terrorism statutes. The UK’s Terrorism Act 2006, the U.S. Patriot Act 2001, and India’s Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act 1967 all recognise extraterritorial competence for offences threatening national security.
4. The Extraordinary Rendition Controversy
The more profound constitutional issue, however, arises from how Kanu was brought to Nigeria. He was not extradited under treaty procedures but allegedly abducted by Nigerian agents from Kenya – a method known as extraordinary rendition.
Under Nigerian law, the Extradition Act requires a formal request, judicial hearing, and surrender order by the requested state. None of these steps occurred. Internationally, such conduct may breach the UN Charter (sovereignty of Kenya), the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights (Article 12 on liberty and movement), and customary international law.
The defence therefore contended that this unlawful rendition deprived the Federal High Court of jurisdiction to try him.
5. Judicial Responses: The 2022 Court of Appeal Decision
In October 2022, the Court of Appeal (CA/ABJ/CR/625/2022) agreed, holding that:
“The extraordinary rendition of the appellant from Kenya to Nigeria is a gross violation of international law and the procedure under the Extradition Act … The trial court therefore lacks jurisdiction to continue his trial.”
The court struck out the remaining counts and ordered Kanu’s release, declaring that the Federal Government could not “benefit from its own wrong.”
That judgment marked a rare victory for procedural human rights in Nigeria’s anti-terrorism jurisprudence.
6. The Supreme Court Reversal (December 2023)
The Supreme Court of Nigeria (SC/CR/1361/2022) reversed that decision in December 2023, holding that although Kanu’s rendition was “unlawful and condemnable,” it did not oust the jurisdiction of the Federal High Court.
The Court adopted the Ker–Frisbie doctrine, a principle from U.S. law (Ker v. Illinois (1886); Frisbie v. Collins (1952)) holding that the manner of a defendant’s capture does not preclude trial once he is physically before the court.
By this reasoning, the illegality of rendition is a diplomatic or political issue, not a bar to criminal prosecution. The Supreme Court thus reinstated the trial, remitting it to the Federal High Court for continuation.
7. The Nigerian Rule of Law Dilemma
This ruling underscores a recurring tension in Nigeria’s legal order: the struggle to balance state security against constitutional due process.
While the Court was doctrinally correct within common-law tradition, many critics argue it reflects an executive-centric conception of justice – one that prioritises state control over individual rights.
The judiciary’s endorsement of Ker–Frisbie suggests that, in Nigeria, ends may justify means when national security is invoked. Yet this stance risks undermining public confidence in due process and further eroding the credibility of Nigeria’s human-rights commitments under the African Charter.
8. Comparative Perspectives in Brief
a) United States
The Ker–Frisbie principle originates from U.S. jurisprudence. In Ker v. Illinois (1886) 119 U.S. 436, the Supreme Court held that a defendant abducted from Peru could still be tried in Illinois. Similarly, in Frisbie v. Collins (1952) 342 U.S. 519, the Court ruled that “due process of law is satisfied when one present in court is convicted of crime after being fairly apprised of the charges.”
However, in later cases like United States v. Toscanino (1974) 500 F.2d 267, some U.S. appellate courts suggested that extreme governmental misconduct (e.g., torture) could deprive courts of jurisdiction. The standard remains narrow but shows a recognition of limits.
b) United Kingdom
In contrast, UK courts have increasingly emphasised procedural propriety. In Bennett v. Horseferry Road Magistrates’ Court, Ex p Bennett [1994] 1 AC 42, the House of Lords held that English courts could stay proceedings if the accused was brought by “a deliberate abuse of process,” such as illegal rendition.
This approach aligns more closely with rule-of-law ideals, suggesting that unlawful conduct by the state can contaminate a prosecution.
c) India
India’s Supreme Court in D.K. Basu v. State of West Bengal (1997) 1 SCC 416 and Abu Salem v. Union of India (2011) emphasised that while extradition irregularities may not automatically vitiate trial, they can justify diplomatic intervention or limited judicial relief.
India thus sits between the U.S. and U.K. positions – recognising jurisdiction but condemning state misconduct.
d) Nigeria’s Position
Nigeria’s Supreme Court has now aligned squarely with the U.S. model, privileging jurisdictional continuity over the integrity of extradition procedures. While doctrinally defensible, it reveals a security-state bias that risks normalising executive lawlessness in future cases.
9. Repeal, Continuity, and the Saving Clause Debate
A second strand of argument in Kanu’s case concerns charging under a repealed statute. Defence lawyers contend that since the Terrorism (Prevention) (Amendment) Act 2013 was repealed by the 2022 Act, prosecution under the old law is void.
However, Sections 97–98 of the new Act create a robust saving clause preserving “ongoing cases in the courts.” This mirrors common-law interpretive presumptions (as codified in Section 6 of the Interpretation Act) that repeal does not extinguish vested proceedings unless the new statute clearly says so.
Therefore, as long as the alleged offences occurred before May 2022 and prosecution was pending at repeal, the Federal High Court’s jurisdiction survives.
This approach is consistent with decisions like A.G. Federation v. A.G. Abia State (2002) 6 NWLR (Pt. 764) 542, which affirmed that courts may not “breathe life into dead statutes” absent a saving clause – but where such a clause exists, it operates by legislative intent, not judicial invention.
10. The Political Dimensions
a) Ethno-Political Context
Kanu’s prosecution is inseparable from Nigeria’s fragile federal structure and the enduring grievances of the South-East. IPOB’s agitation for self-determination echoes the historic Biafran secession (1967–1970), and Kanu’s popularity among Igbo youth reflects disillusionment with federal governance, economic exclusion, and militarised policing.
Thus, the case is not merely about terrorism; it is a political crisis refracted through criminal law.
b) Security vs. Legitimacy
By insisting on prosecution despite procedural controversy, the Federal Government seeks to demonstrate state strength. Yet each procedural breach – unlawful rendition, indefinite detention, disregard of bail – undermines the very legitimacy the government seeks to assert.
The politics of fear and selective justice risk transforming Kanu from an agitator into a symbol of resistance.
c) International Implications
Kanu holds dual Nigerian British citizenship, and the United Kingdom’s muted response to his rendition raised questions about the limits of consular protection when national security is invoked.
Kenya’s government faced domestic backlash for alleged complicity in his transfer, highlighting how counter-terrorism cooperation in Africa can blur into violations of sovereignty and human rights.
11. The Broader Rule of Law Question
The essence of the matter lies in Nigeria’s constitutional self-image. The Supreme Court’s reliance on Ker–Frisbie may be doctrinally orthodox, but it also signals that executive illegality is tolerable if politically expedient.
This risks eroding the constitutional guarantees of fair hearing (Section 36) and liberty (Section 35) of the 1999 Constitution, and Nigeria’s obligations under the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights (domesticated by Cap A9 LFN 2004).
A state cannot credibly claim to fight terrorism while disregarding the rule of law. The jurisprudence emerging from Kanu’s case will therefore shape not only Nigeria’s counter-terrorism regime but its broader constitutional morality.
12. Table Illustration of Lessons from Comparative Jurisdictions
| Jurisdiction | Approach to Unlawful Rendition | Effect on Jurisdiction |
| U.S. | Ker “Frisbie: manner of arrest irrelevant | Trial proceeds |
| U.K. | Bennett doctrine: abuse of process may bar trial | Court may stay proceedings |
| India | Mixed: jurisdiction continues but state censured | Limited relief, no dismissal |
| Nigeria | Aligns with U.S.; rendition condemned but jurisdiction retained | Trial proceeds under savings clause |
This comparative lens reveals a philosophical divide: whether law or sovereign power ultimately anchors justice. The UK model prioritises legality; the U.S. (and now Nigeria) prioritise prosecution.
13) Political Reconciliation or Perpetual (Legal) Prosecution – ‘Similar Cases’?
The persistence of Kanu’s detention despite multiple judicial orders for his release reflects the politicisation of justice. The government’s reliance on prolonged trial and national-security rhetoric has polarised public opinion, reinforcing narratives of marginalisation in the South-East.
For sustainable peace, Nigeria may need to combine judicial accountability with political dialogue – a model seen in India’s handling of regional separatist movements, where amnesty and negotiation have at times been used in place of prolonged prosecution. This consideration is particularly relevant in light of the recent release of Sunday Adeniyi Adeyemo (aka Sunday Igboho) – another separatist figure (a Yoruba self-determination activist pushing for an independent ‘Yoruba Nation’ in Southwest Nigeria’) – and the President’s recent grant of amnesty to various offenders in Nigeria.
Even though the cases of Nnamdi Kanu and Sunday are legally different in many ways and took place in different countries, they are both prominent regional agitators, representing two major ethnic groups (Igbo and Yoruba), and involved in separatist or self-determination rhetoric. Because of this, the different outcomes naturally cause comparisons.
The contrasting cases of Nnamdi Kanu and Sunday Igboho highlight important legal and political tensions within the Nigeria’s federalism and democratic practice. Legally, Kanu’s prolonged detention and trial on charges including treasonable felony, alongside the government’s controversial handling of his extradition, raise questions about due process and the limits of federal power in confronting separatist movements. In contrast, Igboho’s release after detention in Benin Republic and the absence of ongoing prosecution in Nigeria illustrate a more restrained or inconsistent legal response to similar self-determination agitation. Politically, these divergent outcomes fuel perceptions of unequal treatment among ethnic groups, deepening debates about fairness, inclusivity, and trust in the Nigeria federation. They also expose the fragility of democratic governance when security concerns overshadow constitutional safeguard and when political considerations appear to influence the enforcement of law. Together, the two cases reveal how Nigeria’s multiethnic federal democracy continues to struggle with balancing national unity, regional grievances, and the rule of law.
Conclusion
Nnamdi Kanu’s case is a mirror held up to the Nigerian State: it reflects the contradictions between law and power, unity and federalism, nationalism and dissent. Legally, the 2022 Terrorism (Prevention and Prohibition) Act provides a saving clause validating ongoing prosecutions, and the Supreme Court has affirmed jurisdiction despite the illegality of rendition.
Politically, however, the case exposes the fragility of Nigeria’s rule of law and the enduring mistrust between state and citizen. The government’s victory in court may prove Pyrrhic if it deepens alienation and delegitimises judicial institutions.
In the end, the most important verdict will not be judicial but historical: whether Nigeria chooses to be a state governed by law, or a state that governs through law.
Dr. Brian Vincent Ikejiaku Writes From The United Kingdom.