Pope Francis extended a welcome to pro-Biafra activists at the Vatican on Sunday
Pro-Biafra activists wave flags in St. Peter's Square at the Vatican, February 28. Pope Francis greeted spoke of the activists as indigenous peoples of Biafra during his Angelus address.
Pope Francis greeted a group of activists from the
Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) group, who are campaigning for
secession from Nigeria, after they gathered at the Vatican on Sunday.
IPOB is led by Nnamdi Kanu,
a U.K.-Nigerian dual citizen who is currently detained in Nigeria,
facing trial for treasonable felony. Kanu is the director of Radio
Biafra, an underground media outlet that broadcasts material in favour
of an independent state of Biafra in southeast Nigeria.
Nigerian
military officer Odumegwu Ojukwu declared Biafran independence in 1967,
sparking a three-year civil war that resulted in more than one million
deaths and ended in 1970 with Biafra being reintegrated into Nigeria.
Agitation for a separate state of Biafra has been rejected by the Nigerian government, with President Muhammadu Buhari affirming that the West African country is “one indivisible entity.”During his weekly Angelus address—where the Pope addresses crowds of
pilgrims gathered in St. Peter’s Square from the balcony of the
Apostolic Palace—Francis extended a word of welcome to the indigenous
people of Biafra. The Pope’s statement was greeted with cheers and
celebration by the Biafran group, who were waving flags during the
address.
The Pope traditionally greets travelling groups of pilgrims during
his weekly addresses and the Vatican has not publicly commented on the
Pope’s position on Biafran agitation for secession. Nigeria opened an embassy to the Holy See in August 2012 but diplomatic relations go back to 1976 and were conducted through Nigeria’s embassy in Spain prior to 2012.
Kanu’s trial is due to commence
in the Nigerian capital Abuja on March 7. The charges against the
activist, who is based in London, carry a potential life sentence.
During its three-year existence,
the majority population of Biafra was made up of members of the Igbo
ethnic group. When Britain declared the united state of Nigeria in 1914,
Igbos in the east and southeast were joined together with members of
the Hausa and Yoruba ethnic groups in the north and west respectively.
Igbos are largely Christian while the Hausa are mainly Muslim.
Pope Francis extended a welcome to pro-Biafra activists at the Vatican on Sunday
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