- The Court of Appeal in Abuja has dismissed an appeal filed by Nnamdi Kanu, leader of the indigenous people of Biafra. The court ruled that the appeal lacked merit and had become an academic matter after Kanu was recently convicted of terrorism offenses by the Federal High Court on November 20. The ruling upheld the legal status of the lower court’s terrorism verdict.

The Court of Appeal in Abuja has dismissed an appeal filed by Nnamdi Kanu, leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), declaring that the appeal lacked merit and had become academic.
The decision came after Kanu was found guilty of terrorism offenses by the Federal High Court.
Basis for the court’s decision
The Court of Appeal held that the Federal High Court’s conviction of Kanu for terrorism offenses in its November 20 judgment rendered the appeal moot. Specific details of the appeal’s rejection were not immediately provided, but the ruling suggests that the core issues raised by Kanu in the appellate challenge are now secondary to his established conviction.
Legal analysts believe that once a lower court convicts on the main charge (in this case, terrorism), any pending interlocutory or related appeals on the proceedings or on the secondary charges tend to lose their practical validity and become merely academic in the eyes of the Court of Appeal.
The ruling reaffirms the legal status of the Federal High Court’s judgment on terrorism offences.
