Close Menu
Ikenga Online
    What's Hot

    CSOs accuse Tinubu, NASS of ‘fiscal rascality’ over budget re-enactments

    January 6, 2026

    Atiku’s aide slams presidency over Paris lunch, says Nigerians need leadership

    January 6, 2026

    ‘Do not take our support for President Tinubu for granted’ — Wike warns APC scribe

    January 5, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Ikenga Online
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    Donate
    • Home
      • Igboezue
      • Hall of Fame
      • Hall of Shame
    • News
      1. Other States
      2. National
      3. International
      4. Interviews
      5. Personalities
      6. View All

      Two foreign nationals killed in Anthony Joshua crash — Ogun govt

      December 29, 2025

      Bomb explosion kills several worshippers, others injured in Maiduguri

      December 25, 2025

      Ex-Sokoto gov denies link with bandits, blames political enemies

      December 15, 2025

      Breaking: 14 escape death as plane crash-lands at Kano airport

      December 14, 2025

      CSOs accuse Tinubu, NASS of ‘fiscal rascality’ over budget re-enactments

      January 6, 2026

      Atiku’s aide slams presidency over Paris lunch, says Nigerians need leadership

      January 6, 2026

      Presidency denies claims of AI-generated photo of Tinubu, Kagame

      January 5, 2026

      Nigeria cannot achieve prosperity by taxing the poor – Peter Obi 

      January 2, 2026

      Presidency denies claims of AI-generated photo of Tinubu, Kagame

      January 5, 2026

      Trump says Venezuela’s Maduro captured after strikes

      January 3, 2026

      PDP faults FG’s communication after U.S. airstrikes on bandits in Sokoto

      December 26, 2025

      US air strikes target ISIS as Nigeria rejects religious framing

      December 26, 2025

      Slash jumbo salaries to pay minimum wage, Bishop tells Tinubu

      June 19, 2024

      Nigeria remains a country in crisis that needs to heal – Chido Onumah

      January 24, 2024

      The Ekweremadus: Obasanjo writes UK court, seeks pardon for them

      April 5, 2023

      I’m coming with loads of experience to re-set Abia – Greg Ibe

      February 1, 2023

      Anambra-born Ugochi Nwizu shines as UNN best graduating doctor with multiple distinctions

      September 29, 2023

      Bulwark for women, girls: Meet Ikengaonline September town-hall guest speaker, Prof Joy Ezeilo

      September 27, 2023

      Rufai Oseni, the most dangerous man on Nigerian TV by Okey Ndibe

      February 13, 2023

      Stanley Macebuh: Unforgettable pathfinder of modern Nigerian journalism by Uzor Maxim Uzoatu

      February 7, 2023

      CSOs accuse Tinubu, NASS of ‘fiscal rascality’ over budget re-enactments

      January 6, 2026

      Atiku’s aide slams presidency over Paris lunch, says Nigerians need leadership

      January 6, 2026

      ‘Do not take our support for President Tinubu for granted’ — Wike warns APC scribe

      January 5, 2026

      MSL foundation awards scholarships to over 250 students from Ebonyi North

      January 5, 2026
    • Abia

      Uzodimma visits Otti, says South-East governors determined to develop region

      January 3, 2026

      Gov Otti’s wife welcomes Abia’s first baby of 2026

      January 2, 2026

      In complete takedown of Abia former govs, Odinkalu declares Alex Otti his person of the year

      January 1, 2026

      Otti explains adoption of electric buses, promises sustained devt in Abia

      January 1, 2026

      Gov Otti signs N1.016 trillion 2026 budget into law

      December 30, 2025
    • Anambra

      Ex-Anambra lawmaker sues Oraifite PG over alleged suspension of development approvals

      December 24, 2025

      Odu of Onitsha, Arthur Mbanefo dies at 95

      December 23, 2025

      Yuletide: POCACOV, police declare zero tolerance for cultism, crime in Anambra

      December 20, 2025

      Anambra community suspends festival over insecurity

      December 19, 2025

      Anambra’s 2024 budget records 70% performance, N750m unaccounted expenses exposed

      December 18, 2025
    • Ebonyi

      MSL foundation awards scholarships to over 250 students from Ebonyi North

      January 5, 2026

      New year tragedy: Two brothers killed in Ebonyi

      January 1, 2026

      Breaking: Ebonyi PDP 2023 guber candidate resigns from party

      January 1, 2026

      Ebonyi procures three new aircraft 

      January 1, 2026

      Christmas: Nwifuru urges prayers for peaceful, secure Nigeria

      December 25, 2025
    • Delta
    • Enugu

      Court jails ex-bankers for criminal diversion of pensioners’ N10.3m in Enugu

      December 24, 2025

      Chimamanda Adichie bags UNN appointment of visiting professor

      December 24, 2025

      Foundation partners UNTH to deepen mental healthcare access

      December 22, 2025

      Committee honours Igwe Asadu as food, nutrition ambassador

      December 21, 2025

      PRODA rewards best research team, hardworking staff for 2025

      December 21, 2025
    • Imo

      Rights advocates warn of threats over tiger base accountability campaign

      December 22, 2025

      Four cheat death as Port Harcourt-bound plane crashes at Owerri airport

      December 17, 2025

      RULAAC warns of renewed #EndSARS as police abuses persist, cites Imo ‘tiger base’

      December 16, 2025

      Sowore declares war on police impunity as report alleges 200 deaths at Imo ‘tiger base’

      December 15, 2025

      Tiger base: Report alleges 200 deaths, systematic torture, defiance of court 

      December 15, 2025
    • Rivers

      ‘Do not take our support for President Tinubu for granted’ — Wike warns APC scribe

      January 5, 2026

      Tinubu celebrates ‘shining star’ Wike at 58

      December 13, 2025

      Defection: PDP replies Fubara, says gov’s woes self inflicted 

      December 10, 2025

      BREAKING: Governor Fubara finally defects to APC

      December 9, 2025

      For the second time, Rivers speaker Amaewhule, 15 other lawmakers defect to APC

      December 5, 2025
    • Politics

      ‘Do not take our support for President Tinubu for granted’ — Wike warns APC scribe

      January 5, 2026

      PDP BoT chair, Wabara debunks alleged defection to ADC

      January 2, 2026

      We’ll resist any attempt to rig 2027 polls — Obi

      January 1, 2026

      Labour party endorses Peter Obi’s defection to ADC 

      January 1, 2026

      Breaking: Ebonyi PDP 2023 guber candidate resigns from party

      January 1, 2026
    • Opinion & Editorial
      • Editorial
      • Columnists
        • Osmund Agbo
        • Chido Onumah
        • Uche Ugboajah
        • Hassan Gimba
        • Edwin Madunagu
        • Rudolf Okonkwo
        • Azu Ishiekwene
        • Osita Chidoka
        • Owei Lakemfa
        • Chidi Odinkalu
      • Opinion
    • Special Reports
    • Art & Entertainment
      • Nollywood
      • Music
      • Ikengaonline Literary Series (ILS)
      • Life
      • Travels
    • Sports
    Ikenga Online
    Home » Sowore takes the fight where it belongs, By Osmund Agbo
    Osmund Agbo

    Sowore takes the fight where it belongs, By Osmund Agbo

    Osmond AgboBy Osmond AgboOctober 21, 2025Updated:October 21, 2025No Comments8 Mins Read

    What Sowore has done is to reframe the issue, stripping it of its ethnic garb and presenting it for what it is: a question of justice and equality before the law. His defiance is not for the Igbo cause alone but for the soul of a nation that has made selective justice its moral compass.

    At the crack of dawn on Monday, October 20, the usually bustling arteries of Abuja were transformed into a fortress. By 6:00 a.m., combined contingents of soldiers, police officers, and operatives of the Department of State Services had fanned out across the city center, sealing off access to the Three Arms Zone, the sanctum of Nigeria’s political power housing the Presidential Villa, the National Assembly, and the Supreme Court.

    Armored vehicles squatted menacingly at key intersections; Toyota Hilux trucks formed barricades across Yakubu Gowon Crescent in Asokoro, while grim-faced men in uniform stood guard, their presence a foreboding symbol of a government on edge.

    The tension was not misplaced. For the first time in the long and tortuous struggle to free Nnamdi Kanu, leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), the Nigerian government was being made to feel even a modicum of the pressure it had so callously imposed on others. At the heart of this new wave of agitation stood one man: Omoyele Sowore.

    You may scoff at him from the safety of your comfort zone, dismiss him as a rabble-rouser, or mock the image of him ducking live bullets. You may question his motives or ridicule his defiance. But what you cannot deny is that Sowore, through sheer audacity and persistence, has managed in just two weeks to shake the complacency of a government long accustomed to governing without consequence. He has succeeded where bishops, monarchs, politicians, and countless civil society actors couldn’t: he forced Aso Rock to take notice.

    For the first time in years, the agitation for Kanu’s release dominated national headlines and compelled both President Tinubu’s administration and the ruling All Progressives Congress to respond publicly. In the stagnant pool of Nigeria’s political inertia, that alone is a tremor worth celebrating.

    Before now, many of us had challenged the wisdom of the Monday “sit-at-home” orders that have become the Southeast’s recurring nightmare. We argued, rightly, that you cannot profess to fight for a people’s freedom while simultaneously strangling their livelihoods. The artisans, petty traders, transporters, and subsistence farmers who live from hand to mouth have borne the heaviest burden of this misbegotten strategy. Each Monday of paralysis is another wound in a region already bleeding from decades of neglect and over-militarization.

    What kind of liberation movement punishes its own? Instead of taking the fight to Abuja, the true theater of power, many have chosen to terrorize their kin, creating a siege mentality in their own homeland. The cruel irony is that the victims of the lockdowns are not government bureaucrats or politicians but ordinary men and women, already crushed by the weight of survival under a state that treats them as suspects.

    That is why Sowore’s intervention marks a turning point. He has redirected the struggle to its rightful arena; the seat of power where the architects of injustice reside and from where decisions of consequence emanate. His protest was not a regional tantrum but a national moral statement.

    Of course, there are whispers that some Igbos have worked against Kanu’s release. That may hold some truth, but it is disingenuous to ignore the relentless efforts of countless Igbo groups and indeed non-Igbo allies who have repeatedly journeyed to Abuja to plead for his freedom. From the Buhari years to the Tinubu administration, delegations of traditional rulers, clergy, and statesmen have made overtures to the powers that be, all in vain.

    What Sowore has done is to reframe the issue, stripping it of its ethnic garb and presenting it for what it is: a question of justice and equality before the law. His defiance is not for the Igbo cause alone but for the soul of a nation that has made selective justice its moral compass.

    Sowore is cut from the same cloth as Gani Fawehinmi, Fela Anikulapo-Kuti, the uncompromising lineage of Nigerian dissent. His is the voice that refuses to be tamed, the conscience that cannot be bought. I have long admired his courage, even if at times his tactlessness undermines his message. You cannot berate Peter Obi one day and expect his cooperation the next; politics, after all, is as much about persuasion as conviction. But flaws notwithstanding, Sowore’s relentless crusade against tyranny remains one of the few bright flames in the darkening Nigerian firmament.

    Some sneer that it took a Yoruba man to champion an Igbo struggle. That argument is as hollow as it is toxic. Sowore has never filtered justice through the lens of ethnicity. He understands, as every enlightened mind must, that injustice is an equal-opportunity destroyer. The moral obligation to resist oppression transcends geography and tribe. After all, many Igbos, the likes of Chuma Ubani, Arthur Nwankwo, and others risked imprisonment and death during the June 12 struggle for Moshood Abiola’s mandate. They did not fight for a Yoruba cause; they fought for a Nigerian ideal.

    Let us be clear: the call for Nnamdi Kanu’s release is no longer merely about one man. It is not an endorsement of IPOB’s excesses, which have rightly drawn criticism. It is about what his continued incarceration represents, the institutionalization of double standards, the perception that the Southeast is governed by a harsher, more punitive logic than any other region.

    His imprisonment has become the pretext for criminal opportunists to impose ruinous “sit-at-home” orders that have gutted the Southeast’s economy and psyche. His release would likely undercut this pretense, robbing these marauders of their excuse for terror. Yet the government’s obstinate refusal to act sustains a growing sense of alienation and fuels the dangerous conviction that the Nigerian state has no empathy for the Igbo plight.

    The larger issue, however, transcends Kanu himself. It speaks to the perception, borne of history and confirmed by policy that Nigeria operates two systems of justice: one lenient and conciliatory for some, the other harsh and vindictive for others. The same government that courted Niger Delta militants with cash and contracts has refused dialogue with Igbo agitators. The same state that quietly dropped charges against Sunday Igboho and rehabilitated thousands of “repentant” Boko Haram fighters sees no reason to temper justice with mercy for Nnamdi Kanu.

    When President Tinubu recently granted clemency to 175 convicts, among them kidnappers, drug traffickers, and fraudsters, the omission of Kanu’s name was neither an accident nor an oversight. It was a deliberate act, a message encoded in silence.

    Sowore’s march on Abuja is, therefore, not just a protest; it is a confrontation with the Nigerian conscience. It is a reminder that true courage lies not in online activism or regional bravado but in standing, physically and morally, in the line of fire. While others retreat behind hashtags, he has chosen to occupy the very space that power guards most jealously.

    His action should provoke reflection among those who claim to fight for justice yet choose tactics that harm their own. Real activism does not thrive on fear; it dismantles it. It does not terrorize the weak; it confronts the mighty.

    In an age where silence has become a survival strategy, Sowore’s voice, unrefined sometimes but fearless, echoes as a challenge to the rest of us. He reminds us that moral authority is earned not through rhetoric but through risk. His methods may offend sensibilities, his tone may be abrasive, but his purpose is unambiguous: to force power to reckon with its hypocrisy.

    And so, when the chronicle of this struggle is finally written, history will not remember those who paralyzed their own people in the name of resistance. It will remember the man who dared to confront power on its own sacred ground; the one who carried the fight from the dusty streets of despair to the fortified gates of tyranny, and made the mighty flinch, if only for a fleeting moment. For that audacity alone, Omoyele Sowore has earned not scorn, but our enduring respect.

    Osmund Agbo is a medical doctor and author. His works include, Black Grit, White Knuckles: The Philosophy of Black Renaissance and a fiction work titled The Velvet Court: Courtesan Chronicles. His latest works, Pray, Let the Shaman Die and Ma’am, I Do Not Come to You for Love, have just been released. He can be reached@ eagleosmund@yahoo.com

    Osmond Agbo

    Related Posts

    Maduro: Why America’s new doctrine puts Nigeria and West Africa at risk by Cheta Nwanze 

    January 5, 2026

    The US hawk swoops on Maduro, eyes oil as ransom by Owei Lakemfa

    January 4, 2026

    President Tinubu’s legal practitioners bill seeks capture and reprisal, by Chidi Anselm Odinkalu

    January 4, 2026
    Editors Picks

    CSOs accuse Tinubu, NASS of ‘fiscal rascality’ over budget re-enactments

    January 6, 2026

    Atiku’s aide slams presidency over Paris lunch, says Nigerians need leadership

    January 6, 2026

    ‘Do not take our support for President Tinubu for granted’ — Wike warns APC scribe

    January 5, 2026

    Maduro: Why America’s new doctrine puts Nigeria and West Africa at risk by Cheta Nwanze 

    January 5, 2026
    Latest Posts
    News

    CSOs accuse Tinubu, NASS of ‘fiscal rascality’ over budget re-enactments

    News

    Atiku’s aide slams presidency over Paris lunch, says Nigerians need leadership

    Rivers

    ‘Do not take our support for President Tinubu for granted’ — Wike warns APC scribe

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest news from Ikenga Online.

    Advertisement
    Demo

    IkengaOnline is a publication of the Ikenga Media & Cultural Awareness Initiative (IMCAI), a non-profit organisation with offices in Houston Texas and Abuja.

    We're social. Connect with us:

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn WhatsApp RSS
    • Home
      • Igboezue
      • Hall of Fame
      • Hall of Shame
    • News
      • Other States
      • National
      • International
      • Interviews
      • Personalities
    • Abia
    • Anambra
    • Ebonyi
    • Delta
    • Enugu
    • Imo
    • Rivers
    • Politics
    • Opinion & Editorial
      • Editorial
      • Columnists
        • Osmund Agbo
        • Chido Onumah
        • Uche Ugboajah
        • Hassan Gimba
        • Edwin Madunagu
        • Rudolf Okonkwo
        • Azu Ishiekwene
        • Osita Chidoka
        • Owei Lakemfa
        • Chidi Odinkalu
      • Opinion
    • Special Reports
    • Art & Entertainment
      • Nollywood
      • Music
      • Ikengaonline Literary Series (ILS)
      • Life
      • Travels
    • Sports

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest news from Ikenga Online.

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram LinkedIn WhatsApp RSS
    © 2026 Ikenga Online. Ikenga.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.