Nigerian authorities have arrested three Israeli filmmakers over alleged ties with separatist group Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), Times of Israel reported on Tuesday.
Israeli Foreign Ministry on Tuesday confirmed the arrest of their citizens, who are being interrogated on suspicion that they had come into contact with IPOB members. The Israelis are Rudy Rochman, Noam Leibman and French-Israeli journalist E. David Benaym.
But family members of one of the Israelis told the Israeli daily 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 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 arrived in Nigeria Tuesday, July 6, a day after they departed Ben Gurion Airport in Isreal.
Eyewitnesses said the Israelis were arrested in Ogidi village, Anambra State, Southeast, Nigeria by security operatives and were later taken to Abuja.x
Their arrest occurred about two weeks after Nigerian authorities announced the rearrest of IPOB leader Nnamdi Kanu who jumped bail in 2017 after his first arrest in 2015.
Kanu is facing treasonable charges and many others which are connected to his call for the secession southeastern region of Nigeria.
In October 2018, Kanu gave a radio broadcast saying he was in Israel and indicating he owed his survival to the Jewish state. “I will be here (Isreal) until I return,” Kanu said in his first video broadcast in Isreal.
The filmmakers were aware of the political sensitivity surrounding the filming of the Igbo community. A Facebook page dedicated to We Were Never Lost movie on Thursday, July 1 said, “We do not take any position on political movements as we are not here as politicians nor as a part of any governmental delegations.”
Israel’s Foreign Ministry said the Israeli Embassy in Abuja is following the case closely and is in contact with Nigerian authorities.