A Finnish court on Monday sentenced Nigerian separatist leader Simon Ekpa to six years in prison for terrorism-related offences tied to the Biafra independence movement.
The 40-year-old dual Finnish-Nigerian citizen was convicted by the Päijät-Häme District Court for participating in terrorist group activities, inciting crimes for terrorist purposes, and aggravated tax fraud.
According to the court, Ekpa played a central role in organising and equipping armed separatist groups in southeastern Nigeria, a region historically scarred by the 1967–1970 Biafra civil war that claimed hundreds of thousands of lives.
Between 2021 and 2024 in Lahti, Finland, Ekpa allegedly used social media platforms—particularly X (formerly Twitter)—to spread separatist propaganda and encourage violent acts in Nigeria.
The court found that he supplied armed factions with weapons, explosives, and ammunition through his international networks.
“He used social media to gain a politically influential position and took advantage of confusion within a separatist movement to assume a significant role in it,” the court ruling stated.
Ekpa denied the charges, claiming his actions were limited to sharing official communications and regional updates. Despite his defence, the judges ruled that his activities amounted to direct support for terrorism.
Before his arrest, Ekpa was a local politician in Finland, serving on a public transport committee as part of the conservative National Coalition Party. He has also been the subject of multiple fact-check investigations by AFP for spreading false or misleading claims in relation to the Biafran struggle.
Ekpa’s activities have drawn international attention, not least because of his collaboration with Ayaba Cho Lucas, the leader of the Ambazonia Governing Council, a separatist movement pushing for the independence of Cameroon’s English-speaking regions. Both men have publicly supported each other’s causes, seeing parallels between Biafra’s struggle and the Anglophone crisis in Cameroon.
However, Ayaba Cho Lucas himself has faced legal troubles abroad. Since September 24, 2024, he has been held in pretrial detention in Norway, awaiting trial over allegations linked to his activities and associations. His detention has raised questions among Cameroonian observers about the international community’s stance on separatist leaders who operate from Europe while influencing conflicts back home.
Ekpa’s conviction is likely to have ripple effects beyond Nigeria. Analysts note that his sentencing sends a strong message to diaspora-based separatist leaders, many of whom use European safe havens to broadcast and fund their movements.
For Cameroon, where separatist violence continues in the Northwest and Southwest regions, the case resonates deeply. The collaboration between Ekpa and Ayaba Cho Lucas highlights the cross-border dimensions of separatist networks in West and Central Africa.
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