The Royal Sovereign Kingdom Of Biafra

The Royal Sovereign Kingdom Of Biafra

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Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from The Royal Sovereign Kingdom Of Biafra, Public & Government Service, 100 M Street Southeast, Washington D.C., DC.

Establishing, declaring, proclaiming, and recognizing an already recognized ancient first-world country and a pluri-national sovereign legal entity known as Sovereign Kingdom of Biafra & Royal Biafra Government.

05/31/2025
05/31/2025

WELCOME TO THE OFFICIAL FACEBOOK PRESENCE OF 85 MILLION ETHNIC NATIONALITIES OF OUR ANCIENT KINGDOM

RE-DECLARED ON MAY 30, 2025, AS

SOVEREIGN KINGDOM OF BIAFRA.

AND

SOVEREIGN ROYAL KINGDOM OF BIAFRA GOVERNMENT

Biafra Royal Declaration 2025
SOVEREIGN KINGDOM DECLARATION DECREE 2025

BY THE POWER VESTED BY THE PEOPLE OF BIAFRA , THROUGH THE BIAFRA REFRENDUM CONDUCTED BY HON. SIMEON EKPA,

THE LORD -CHANCELLOR AND THE BIAFRA SANHEDRIN, HAVE NOW
REVIVED , DECLARED AND RE- ACTIVATED THE ETERNAL AND

SOVEREIGN KINGDOM AND GOVERNMENT OF THE NATION OF BIAFRA

WITH ALL POWERS , RIGHTS, SOVEREIGNITY AND IMMUNITIES THERETO. APERTAINED TO A NATION AND A SOVEREIGN LEGAL ENTITY.

GIVEN UNDER. OUR HANDS AND NATIONAL SEAL , THIS 30TH OF MAY, 2025 .

ALL DIPLOMATIC RELATIONS WITH ALL COUNTIRES ESTABLIED BY BIAFRA GOVERNMENT AND ALLIES SINCE 1967 , ARE HEREBY RE-ACTIVATED WITH IMMEDIATE EFFECT!

ALL RELEVANT BIAFRA MINISTRIES ARE HEREBY ACTIVATED TO START OFFERING SERVICE TO BIAFRAN PEOPLE .

WE NOW CALL UPON ALL
BIAFRANS- HOME AND ABROAD , TO COME HOME - LET`S UNITE AND
BUILD THE BIAFRA OF OUR DREAM!

BIAFRA LAND IS HEREBY DECLARED AN ''OCCUPIED TERRITORY'' BY BRITISH -SPONSORED NIGERIAN AND FULANI TERRORIST FORCES- AND WE DEMAND
THAT THE SADUANA OF SOKOTO CALIPHATE AND COLONIAL BRITIAN
WITHDRAW THEIR TERRORIST FORCES , DISMANTLE ALL CHECKING - POINTS, STOP ALL HOSTILITIES AND WITHDRAW FROM. BIAFRA TERRITORY WITH IMMEDIATE EFFECT.

NIGERIA AND FULANI. CONTINOUS OCCUPATION OF BIAFRA IS A VIOLATION OF. OUR NATIONAL SECURITY AND TERRITORIAL INTEGRITY.
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the Sovereign Kingdom of Biafra!
Long live , Sovereign Biafra Goverenment, Live the People of Biafra!
Long Live , Africa! Long Long Live all our friends and well- wishers! Biafra is here to stay!

THE LORD CHANCELLOR AND SENATE OF BIAFRA, MAY 30, 2025!
www.biafra- gov.us.
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected].

05/30/2025

______________________________________________

REMEMBERING OKOKON NDEM

By Emeka Obasi

The words of Okokon Ndem come in handy here as some continue the fight against injustice. We all abhor a system that marginalises individuals and groups. It is also true that while we cry for equity, there must be a touch of wisdom and diplomacy. With awareness created, bridges should be built and walls destroyed.

Okokon Ndem was the most popular voice within and outside Biafra. He was not the Head of Radio Biafra but Radio Biafra was on his head. There was the popular jingle: ‘Onye ndi iro gbara gburugburu, na eche ndu ya nche mgbe nile.’ Sasa Nwoke’s translation is: ‘The price of Liberty is eternal vigilance.’

This is the message from Okokon Ndem to IPOB. The broadcaster, dubbed Lord Haw Haw, by the General Yakubu Gowon Administration, used his voice to defeat Federal troops on air even if the battle was being lost on the ground. He also drew global attention to Biafra. Okokon Ndem was not Igbo. The journalist hailed from Ikoneto in Odukpani Local Government Area of Cross River State.

He died in August 2003 and was buried on Igbo Day, September 29, 2003. One prominent guest at the funeral was General Emeka Ojukwu, Head of State of Biafra. Burial ground was Calabar. Also in attendance were prominent politicians from the South East, including Chief Chekwas Okorie and Onwuka Kalu.

The lesson from this is that Biafra was never an Igbo movement.

The last President of Biafra, General Philip Effiong, Akangkang of Ibiono, though born in Aba was an Akwa Ibom son. Chief Frank Opigo, the man who named Biafra is from Bayelsa State and is today Dawai the Third, Amanaowei of Angiama. He was Administrator of Yenegoa Province. The most popular voice on Radio Biafra was a Cross Riverian.

The war started at 5.30am, July 6, 1967 in Garkem, Cross River State no thanks to Lt. Gado Nasko who fired the First Artillery shots. The last officer to leave Nigerian detention, was Col. Beneth Ochei, was from Delta State. One of the first ever hijackers, Captain Ibikari Allwell-Brown had Rivers blood in his veins. The trio seized a Nigeria Airways flight bound for Lagos from Benin. Allwell Brown flew the aircraft to Enugu.

Some top officers in Biafra were not from Igbo lands. Starting point should be Ibiono, home town of Gen. Effiong. It is also the place of Chief Ntienyong Akpan, Secretary to the Biafran government. The environment will shock all. There were civilians like Chiefs Ekukinam Bassey, J.E. Udoh-Affiah, Dr. Thompson Akpabio, and S.J. Edoho.

There were crack officers and soldiers from Akwa Ibom. Lt. Col Nsudoh, was described as ‘tough, courageous and iron willed,’ by General Alexander Madiebo, Biafra’s Army Chief. Col. Akpan Utuk was all bravado and was said to have committed su***de when news of the surrender got to him. There was one teenage Commando, Edet, who fought in Uzuakoli under Col. Emeka Ananaba.

From Cross River, there were civvies like Dr. Sam Imoke, Governor Liyel’s dad,from Itigidi, Abi.Chief Matthew Mbu, Professor Eyo Bassey Ndem, Justice Ndoma Egba, Senator Victor’s father and Frank Ugbut.

In the military, they had Lt. Col. Archibong, who according to Madiebo, was ‘one of the bravest officers I have ever met.’ The young man on wheels of the dreaded Corporal Nwafor armoured car, Daniel Lawrence, better known as ‘Pampas of Argentina’ was an Ikom boy, born to a British mother from Liverpool. And Clement Ebri of the Biafra Airforce.

There was one armourer, Arikpo, from Mpaghni, Ugep who was ready to die for Biafra while his kinsman Okoi Arikpo defected to Nigeria to be appointed Commissioner for External Affairs. Mention must be made of Lt. Peseke Ita Ikpeme and Sylvanus Eta, one of the crew of the Panhard armoured car, Oguta Boy.

Then the train moves to Port Harcourt to see the family of Emmanuel Agumah. Other sons of the soil, among them Ignatius Kogbara, S.N. Dikibo and Sylvanus Cookey. The warriors included Col. Joshua John (J.J) Brown, Capt. W***y Murray Bruce, Senator Ben’s brother and Victor Masi.

From the Garden City, next stop is Asaba. Col. Joe Achuzia who died recently. We all remember the Asaba massacre of 1967 and what followed in Isheagu and Igbodo. Delta is the land of Brigadiers Conrad Nwawo, Okonjo, Auntie Ngoo’s papa, and Mike Okwechime. And Navy Chief Wilfred Anuku who was also an Army Commander just like Ben Nwajei. Bini man Sam Loco Efe too.

Yenegoa should not be skipped, at least for the sake of Chief Frank Opigo and Major Okilo who led the 63 Brigade. He was as steeled as Captain Ebube who chose Nigeria while his brother-in-law, George Ozieh (NAE 232) flew Nigeria Army boss, Col. Joe Akahan to death. So was Capt. Chris Ogbolu, brother to Col. Gab Okonweze’s wife, Carol.

Onward to Ado Ekiti. The soil of Col. Adekunle Fajuyi and Ayo Fayose. No condemning the Yoruba. They gave Biafra Prof. Wole Soyinka and Tai Solarin. Col. Adebayo helped out after the war as much as Chief Adeniran Ogunsanya. Maj. Ganiyu Adeleke was on the same side with his course mates Majors T.I. Atumaka, Okonkwo and Ogbonna.

There was also Capt. David Brown, the American Red Cross pilot who was downed across Opobo on June, 5, 1968 alongside his crew of two Swedes and a Norwegian. Count Von Rosen was a hero, with his minicons. So were the Portuguese, Artur Alves, Manuel Reis and Gill Pinto de Sousa among many others.

May God grant Them Rest……Amen

05/30/2025

Royal Kingdom Of Biafra: The Ancient Kingdom You Never Heard Off!

05/30/2025

ROYAL KINGDOM OF BIAFRA:THE ANCIENT KINGDOM YOU NEVER HEARD OFF!

05/30/2025

https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=1051614507071105&id=100066676973079&mibextid=wwXIfr

Biafra Memorial: Know Your Route To The East

By Osita Chidoka 2021

My father is 93 years old and lived through Biafra as a middle aged man. He suffered loss of family members, abandoned properties as he lived in Port Harcourt. He never quite recovered from the War.

Whenever he visited me in Abuja, he gave me the same advice.
1. Always park your car facing the exit
2. Always buy fuel at half tank, in case you have to run back to the East. His friends all got stuck in Port Harcourt due to no fuel and many died from the shelling
3. Know your route to the East avoiding possible volatile areas. Igbos coming from the North lost their lives at certain communities on their way home.
4. Keep some cash at home. Banks did not work as Port Harcourt fell to the federal troops.

His advice always struck me as the effect of trauma, untreated. Interestingly, refusal to discuss Biafra and resolve the trauma has led to a generation who did not experience the war, taking the lead on the conversation. This generation leading the conversation has its implications for the nation.

Time to openly, truthfully and peacefully have the conversation is now, before those who experienced the war, all leave the stage. Please join the Centre For Memories for a discussion on Onye Aghala Nwanneya.

05/30/2025

While the Igbo, Yoruba, and Fulani continue to quarrel over political crumbs and tribal pride, a far more dangerous and silent conquest is taking place across Nigeria. It’s not waged with guns or tanks—but with pen strokes, bank loans, and real estate acquisitions. If nothing changes, in fifteen years, the real landlords of Nigeria may not be Nigerians—they’ll be Chinese.

Across the South-West, Chinese nationals are purchasing land at an alarming rate. In cities and towns, Chinese investors are sealing land deals with little to no resistance. The very soil our ancestors fought to defend is being traded in quiet transactions, buried in legal paperwork and political indifference. At this rate, the day is coming when our children will be forced to rent their futures from foreign landlords.

The Abuja-Kaduna railway gleams like a badge of progress, but few Nigerians know what lies beneath the steel and cement—a spider web of hidden loan agreements, sovereignty waivers, and debt traps. What was presented as development is looking more like a masterclass in quiet colonization. China has made itself indispensable to Nigeria’s infrastructure: roads, railways, power plants, airport terminals—all courtesy of Chinese financing. But what are we mortgaging in return?

Investigations reveal alarming clauses tucked inside loan agreements—clauses that allow China to take over key national assets in the event of default. One such clause, signed under the Jonathan administration, practically waives Nigeria’s sovereign immunity. In other words, if we default, China has legal grounds to claim what it finances.

The major problem with ourt indebtedness to the Chinese government is that most of the loans collected on behalf of Nigerians ended up in private pockets. Let me stir your thoughts with a particular contract that was bid for at the NNPC during the tenure of a former Group Managing Director. I remember clearly that the company that won the contract proposed $1.4 billion, yet, surprisingly, the contract was awarded to the second bidder, who proposed a lesser-quality solution. Even more shockingly, the contract was awarded at a cost of $2.9 billion. An additional $400,000 was paid as a consultancy fee to a non-existent consultant.

Most of the contracts awarded in Nigeria were given to companies operated by the directors and permanent secretaries in those same ministries. They opened many company offices all over Nigeria and awarded contracts to themselves by proxy. These were loans borrowed in the name of Nigerian citizens from China. And we must repay them—both capital and interest—for the next 35 years. This is evil perpetrated by a few wicked public servants against their fellow citizens.

And with our public debt now ballooning beyond ₦97 trillion, default is no longer unthinkable—it’s a looming inevitability. But it doesn’t end there. Step into any market—from Lagos to Enugu—and you’ll find shelves flooded with Chinese products: cheaper, mass-produced, and omnipresent. From electronics to kitchenware, phones to textiles, Nigerian businesses can’t compete. Our once-booming manufacturing hubs in Aba, Kano, and Nnewi are being choked out of existence. We’re no longer producers—we’re middlemen hawking Chinese goods in Nigerian markets.

In construction, Chinese contractors dominate the skyline. From roads to bridges, hospitals to high-rises, Chinese companies win the contracts, import the materials, and even fly in their own labor force. The jobs meant for Nigerians are handed over without a second thought. Our economy is being outsourced—and with it, our future.

So what does China want? Everything. Nigeria isn’t just another African country. It’s Africa’s largest market, its most oil-rich frontier, and its most strategic geopolitical prize. With each new loan, each real estate purchase, each project takeover, China is embedding itself deeper into our national fabric. This is not a partnership. It is a slow-motion capture.

The Nigerian political elite, meanwhile, is either complicit or completely clueless. Administration after administration has welcomed Chinese deals without transparency, accountability, or concern for long-term consequences. Loan terms are kept hidden. Oversight committees are neutered. Civil society is ignored. Nigeria is sleepwalking into servitude.

In 2008, I warned that Nigeria would become the Pakistan of Africa—torn apart by terrorism and lawlessness. That prediction was dismissed then, but today, it reads like prophecy. Mark my words again: if we continue on this path, Nigeria will not be governed by her tribes—it will be owned by her creditors. This is a battle for economic survival and national identity. We may repair roads and rebuild railways but lost sovereignty? That’s a wound that may take generations to heal—if it can be healed at all.

The writing is on the wall. The question is: Who among us is still willing to read it?

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