 Now, the Kenyan government has dismissed claims that it was involved in the arrest and extradition of Nandikano, a leader of the indigenous people of Biafra, Aipop, to Nigeria. Kenyan authorities said they could not ascertain whether the arrest of Nandikano took place in the East African nation. The Nigerian authorities had hinted they seized Kano in London, United Kingdom, before extraditing him to Nigeria. However, the British High Commission in Nigeria had denied the Aipop leader was arrested or extradited from the UK. And now, the Director General of the Kenyan Immigration Services, Alexander Muteschi, dismissed the claims of his country's complicity, arguing that it was not possible to tell whether the separatist leader had entered Kenyan territory. Now, spokesperson for the Kenyan government, Cyrus Oguna, refused to discuss the matter. Kano was arrested last Sunday by what sources say was a combined operation of Nigerian and foreign security officers, but the exact location of his arrest remains contentious.