08/05/2026
BREAKING NEWS: JUBILATION AS MAZI NNAMDI KANU,MIKE ARNOLD SET FOR " SOKOTO DECLARATION" MAY 30
The coming release of the “Sokoto Declaration” by Nnamdi Kanu and American attorney Mike Arnold is already sending political shockwaves across Nigeria long before May 30 arrives. What makes this moment explosive is not just the document itself, but the symbolism, timing, and unmistakable defiance behind it.
From a prison cell in Sokoto, a man sentenced to life imprisonment on terrorism-related charges is attempting to reshape the conversation from criminalisation to self-determination, from suppression to political resistance. That alone changes the emotional temperature of the national debate.
The title “Sokoto Declaration” is not accidental. It is loaded with psychological and political meaning. Sokoto represents the very place where the Nigerian state believes it has silenced him. Yet from that same location emerges a declaration aimed at reigniting a global conversation on human rights, political identity, and the future of self-determination movements in Africa. That is audacious. That is deliberate. And it is impossible to ignore.
According to his Special Counsel, Aloy Ejimakor, the declaration is designed as “a statement of common cause” for people who believe in freedom, justice, and the principle that no population should be denied political voice through force or fear.
But beyond the language of advocacy lies a deeper confrontation with the Nigerian state itself.
The Federal Government insists that IPOB remains a proscribed terrorist organisation following the 2017 court order and gazette relied upon by Justice James Omotosho during Kanu’s conviction. Yet critics continue to point to the unresolved contradictions surrounding the 2023 Enugu High Court judgement that nullified the proscription. That legal conflict remains one of the most controversial fault lines in the entire case.
Now, while the appeal against Kanu’s conviction continues, the emergence of this de