Three Israelis In DSS Custody Over Alleged Links With IPOB

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(Last Updated On: 2021-07-19)

 

The Times of Israel, a newspaper in a Israel has confirmed the arrest of three Israelis in Nigeria by Nigeria’s Secret Service, Department of State Security. Adding that the Israelis were shooting a documentary in a separatist region in southeast Nigeria when they were arrested last week.

The newspapaer also quoted the Foreign Ministry to have confirmed this arrest on Tuesday.

According to media reports, Nigerian authorities arrested and interrogated the trio on suspicion that they had come into contact with Biafran separatists.

Family members of one of the men stressed to the Times of Israel that the allegations were entirely unfounded, and that separatist social media accounts took advantage of the Israelis’ trip to claim that the three were supporting Biafran separatist groups.

The Israeli Embassy in Abuja is following the case closely and is in contact with Nigerian authorities, according to the Foreign Ministry. One of the Israelis arrested is Rudy Rochman, a Zionist activist with almost 95,000 followers on Instagram.

Making the flight with him were filmmaker Noam Leibman and French-Israeli journalist E. David Benaym. The Israelis were in Nigeria to film: “We Were Never Lost,” a documentary exploring Jewish communities in African countries such as Kenya, Madagascar, Uganda, and Nigeria.

They took off from Ben Gurion Airport on July 5 and landed in Nigeria the next day. According to locals, the crew was detained at a synagogue during Friday night services in the Igbo village of Ogidi by Nigeria’s secret police (Department of State Services) and taken to Abuja.

The filmmakers were aware of the political sensitivity surrounding the filming of the Igbo community.

Last Thursday, the We Were Never Lost Facebook page stressed: “We do not take any position on political movements as we are not here as politicians nor as a part of any governmental delegations.”

The group met last week with Igbo leader Eze Chukwuemeka Eri and presented him with a framed Shiviti made in Jerusalem. Rochman also presented another Igbo community with a Torah scroll whose cover was designed by British-Israeli street artist Solomon Souza.

The Igbo consider themselves a lost tribe of Israel.

In 2018, fugitive pro-Biafran separatist leader Nnamdi Kanu gave a radio broadcast saying he was in Israel and indicating he owed his survival to the Jewish state. Kanu, a former London estate agent, heads IPOB and the outlawed pirate radio station Radio Biafra.

He maintains the Igbo people, who are the majority in southeast Nigeria, are a lost tribe of Israel and it is his mission to lead them to the promised land of Biafra.

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