Tunji Wusu –

Nnamdi Kanu, the leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), has urged those responsible for the sit-at-home order in the Southeast to quit.
In a video clip, Kanu talked through his lead attorney Mike Ozekhome, SAN.

Kanu, according to Ozekhome, asserted that he does not support the sit-at-home strategy and insisted that he could not be fighting for his people while also crippling their economy.

He discussed how the sit-at-home campaign affected people’s social, economic, cultural, and political lives while bemoaning how it had placed the Igbo under psychological, psychical, and mental restraint.

“As his lead attorney and counsel, he has informed me that he does not support the sit-at-home movement; he cannot be defending his people while stifling their economy. What do they eat? How will they discipline their kids? He frequently sobbed to me in front of me, pleading for his release so he could address the Igbo, the Ala Igbo, and the entire world, urging them to go to work on Mondays and carry out their regular responsibilities because, according to the Bible, it is through the work of your hands that I will bless the fruits of your labor.

Nnamdi Kanu, speaking through Ozekhome, said: “So, I am now echoing again and again what Nnamdi Kanu has told me, “He does not believe in that sit-at-home on Mondays” which cripples the social, economic, cultural, and political life of the people by subjecting them to psychological, psychiatric, and mental torture.

However, due to their fear of the unknown, many Imo residents stayed inside on Monday.

Numerous institutions are still closed, according to our correspondent, who is keeping an eye on the situation, as there aren’t many people driving around.

A visit to the state secretariat found that several employees did not arrive for work as scheduled.

Owerri Metropolis’s streets were empty in several places since no businesses were open.

Some locals claim that the practice of staying in on Mondays has developed into a recurring problem that is harming people’s mental health.

 

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