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Why we blocked Nnamdi Kanu access to lawyers – DSS sources reveal

New details have surfaced regarding why the Department of State Services (DSS) continues to block lawyers from accessing Nnamdi Kanu, leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), who is facing terrorism charges in the Federal High Court in Abuja.

According to reports, Kanu has been in detention since June 2021, following his contentious repatriation from Kenya. His legal team has frequently claimed that the DSS is deliberately restricting their access to him. On October 17, the court warned DSS Director-General Adeola Ajayi, threatening potential jail time if this denial persisted.

Nnamdi Kanu

In a subsequent hearing, the court ordered the DSS Director-General to appear and explain this restriction, which is reportedly based on directives from the SSS leadership.

Judge Binta Nyako had previously mandated on May 20 that the IPOB leader be allowed visitors three days a week—Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays. This order specified that Nnamdi Kanu must be provided a secure and clean room to meet with up to five counsel members and prepare his defense.

A court document, obtained by Premium Times, detailed the requirements for the legal team’s access to him, allowing them adequate space and the ability to take notes as needed.

However, unnamed DSS officials argue that the court order only grants access to Kanu for trial preparation, which they claim is on hold.

According to one source familiar with the case, Nnamdi Kanu’s demand for Justice Nyako’s recusal had temporarily disrupted proceedings.

Although Justice Nyako has since resumed handling the case, no date has been set to restart the trial, leading the DSS to assert that access is only warranted once the trial is officially back underway.

Kanu’s lawyer, Nnaemeka Ejiofor, called the DSS’s stance “childish,” stating, “It’s so childish in the sense that an order of the court does not ordinarily elapse unless it is set aside by another order of court.” He contended that the DSS lacks the authority to limit visitation when a court order is in place, adding, “If they are saying we cannot see him until the trial has started. Is it when the trial resumes that we then start preparing our client (Kanu) for trial?”

Ejiofor further argued that if the DSS claims the court order allowing legal access expired with Justice Nyako’s temporary recusal, then Kanu’s detention should also be considered invalid.

It, therefore, means that Nnamdi Kanu has no business being in SSS detention. It also means that his further detention at the SSS facility is illegal because the order has expired according to the SSS,” he asserted.

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