Nigeria has reacted strongly to the conviction of controversial pro-Biafra agitator, Simon Ekpa, after a Finnish court sentenced him to six years in prison for terrorism-related offences and aggravated tax fraud.
The Päijät-Häme District Court in Finland ruled on Monday, September 1, that Ekpa had been an active member of a separatist movement that orchestrated violence in Nigeria’s South-east and South-south.
The court found that between August 2021 and November 2024, the 40-year-old used his large social media following to incite violence and supply separatist militias with weapons, ammunition, and explosives.
Ekpa, a Nigerian-Finnish citizen residing in Lahti, was arrested with four others in November 2024 but stood trial alone after the release of his co-suspects.
His offences, Finnish prosecutors said, included publicly inciting terrorist crimes and illegally fundraising in violation of Finland’s Money Collection Act. Although the judgment is subject to appeal, Finnish police argued their jurisdiction was clear since the offences were orchestrated from Finnish soil.
Nigeria’s federal government hailed the ruling as a “watershed moment.” Minister of Information and National Orientation, Mohammed Idris, said Ekpa’s activities had “shattered families, destroyed businesses, orphaned children, and forced entire communities to live under fear.”
“For years, his reckless incitement and orchestration of violence through IPOB terror activities unleashed unspeakable pain.
“The Finnish judiciary has vindicated Nigeria’s position and sent a clear signal to extremists everywhere that justice will catch up with those who destabilise societies through terror,” Idris stated.
Attorney General of the Federation, Prince Lateef Fagbemi, SAN, echoed this view, describing the conviction as proof of Ekpa’s role in “heinous crimes against the Nigerian people, especially in the South-east.”
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