Keep Up With Global Black News

Sign up to our newsletter to get the latest updates and events from the leading Afro-Diaspora publisher straight to your inbox.

BY Kofi Oppong Kyekyeku, 8:35pm September 01, 2025,

Nigerian separatist leader Simon Ekpa jailed in Finland for 6 years

by Kofi Oppong Kyekyeku, 8:35pm September 01, 2025,
Simon Ekpa, leader of the banned IPOB movement, was sentenced in Finland to six years for terrorism and fraud, deepening Nigeria’s separatist tensions.
A photo of Simon Ekpa in court. Photo credit: Emmi Korhonen/Lehtikuva

A Finnish court has handed down a six-year prison sentence to Simon Ekpa, a Nigerian separatist leader accused of backing terrorism and committing financial crimes.

Ekpa, who resides in Finland, leads the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), a movement long blamed by Nigerian authorities for violent attacks and kidnappings in the country’s southeast. Judges in Finland convicted him of participating in the activities of a terrorist organization, inciting crimes for terrorist purposes, aggravated tax fraud, and breaching the Lawyers Act.

According to the ruling, Ekpa sought to advance his separatist campaign for Nigeria’s southeast “through illegal means” and “equipped the groups with weapons, explosives, and ammunition through his contact network.”

READ ALSO: Military airstrikes in Nigeria rescue 76 hostages, children and women among them

Nigerian officials had previously declared him wanted in 2024 as part of a broader crackdown that listed nearly 100 individuals accused of terrorism. Following his arrest in Finland, the Nigerian government requested his extradition.

Watch a recent episode of The BreakDown podcast below and subscribe to our channel PanaGenius TV for latest episodes.

The IPOB’s push for secession draws from the memory of Biafra, a short-lived breakaway state that attempted to split from Nigeria in 1967. The ensuing civil war claimed an estimated three million lives before Biafra’s defeat in 1970. IPOB was officially banned in Nigeria in 2017.

Ekpa, according to AP’s report, assumed leadership after the detention of IPOB’s founder, Nnamdi Kanu, who was seized in Kenya in 2021 and extradited to Nigeria, where his trial remains ongoing. In the aftermath of Kanu’s arrest, the group enforced a weekly Monday shutdown across the southeast, halting commerce and daily life.

That “sit-at-home” order, still observed years later, has left a heavy toll. SBM Intelligence, a Lagos-based geopolitical risk firm, estimates at least 700 people have been killed since the protests began, while Nigeria’s economy has suffered losses of 7.6 trillion naira ($4.79 billion).

READ ALSO: UN sounds alarm over Nigeria’s deepening hunger crisis as funding for food aid runs dry across West and Central Africa

Last Edited by:Kofi Oppong Kyekyeku Updated: September 1, 2025

Conversations

Must Read

Connect with us

Join our Mailing List to Receive Updates

Face2face Africa | Afrobeatz+ | BlackStars

Keep Up With Global Black News and Events

Sign up to our newsletter to get the latest updates and events from the leading Afro-Diaspora publisher straight to your inbox, plus our curated weekly brief with top stories across our platforms.

No, Thank You