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Media Group Trains Journalists On Reporting Indigenous Issues

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Media Training

By Akinwale Kasali

Journalists from the Print, Online and Electronic Media gathered in Lagos recently for a Training Programme aimed at promoting coverage of indigenous issues.

Over 35 Media Practitioners attended the One Day Training on how Journalists can Report Indigenous Issues.

The event empowered Participants’ knowledge and greater understanding of the travails of indigenous peoples, especially the Abuja Original Inhabitants, AOIs, whose fears and aspirations demand urgent redress.

In his opening remarks,  Adewale Adeoye, former Head of Investigation Desk of The Punch said the aim of the training was for journalists to help shape peace building and conflict prevention in Nigeria.

He stated that Abuja was created in 1976 through a decree.

Sadly, over three million indigenous people whose generations had lived in the FCT for centuries were displaced, many of them without compensation.

In recent years, their ancestral land has been taken over thus forcing millions of them to relocate, and, sometimes, living as refugees in their homeland.

The training was organised by Network of Journalists on Indigenous Issues, (NEJII) with the support of MacArthur Foundation and Resource Centre for Human Rights and Civic Education, (CHRICED) drew journalists from mainstream and online media.

Adeoye said the Abuja Original Inhabitants, (AOIs) are a critical stakeholder in nation building.

He argued that they are currently being pushed to the wall by a political economy that excludes and marginalises them adding that the country needs to listen to their demands for peace and stability of the Federal Capital Territory, (FCT).

“We should not wait for a repeat of the Niger-Delta uprising to happen in Abuja before we listen to their demands”, he said.

According to him, AOIs, are of strategic importance to nation-building because the Nigerian Federal Capital Territory is their ancestral home.

He said effective media coverage of their demands would promote dialogue, bridge the gap between them and the National Assembly towards national stability.

“As Journalists, we need to promote the voices of indigenous peoples in Abuja and elsewhere, appreciate their desire and amplify their demands within the constitutional framework in line with global standards”, Adewale Busari of the Silverbird Television said.

He added that he was a young man when the capital was moved from Lagos to Abuja in 1976 saying that the military government took the fiat decision without consideration for the far reaching consequences of millions of people that would be dispossessed of their heritage.

He said democracy has offered the country a unique opportunity to address all forms of historical injustices.

“The media has a critical role in setting agenda for peace building and stability of democracy.

Given the challenges faced by countries in West Africa which is home to millions of indigenous peoples, the media has the responsibility to echo the voices of vulnerable people, their social, cultural and economic needs.

“It is the only way they can be heard. It is the only way their fears can be turned into hope for sustainable growth and development”, Francis Banji Abayomi, Editorial Board member of The Guardian said in his presentation.

He said the scramble for land and resources has continued to aid conflict and violence in indigenous communities leading to deaths and displacement of millions of people, including women and children.

He said conflict is becoming a recurrent issue in Nigerian political discourse and that lack of property attention to the hues and cries of indigenous peoples is partly responsible for violence that cap almost every little conflict in Nigeria.

Some expectations of Abuja Original inhabitants, (AOIs) listed by participants were:

  • Recognition of the rights of Abuja indigenous people.
  • The creation of Abuja State to advance the political and economic rights of Abuja Original Inhabitants, (AOIs)

Free, prior and informed consent of Abuja indigenous people regarding the exploitation and exploration of the resources in their ancestral land.

  • Special considerations to ensure job opportunities for AOIs in the Federal Capital Territory, (FCT

Domestication of the International Labour Convention, (ILO) 169 and the United Nations, (UN) Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, (UNDRIP) adopted by the United Nations General Assembly in 2007.

Part of the resolutions at the end of the One Day Event was that the Presidency should kindly set up a Special Panel to investigate cases of unpaid compensation, displacement, destruction and seizure of ancestral land, sacred spiritual temples belonging to the Abuja Original Inhabitants, (AOIs).

A National compensation project for the Indigenous people in Abuja taking into consideration the cases of displacement and dispossession since 1976.

“I Am Focused On Repositioning PDP, Not Defection” –  Gov Bala Mohammad

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Bala Mohammed

By Suleiman Anyalewechi

The Bauchi State Governor, Bala Mohammad, has denied his rumoured plans to dump the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP ,for another political platform. He insisted that such speculations are false and misleading.

The Source reports that there have been widespread speculations linking the Chairman of the PDP Governors Forum to a defection to other parties , particularly the Peoples Redemption Party, PRP, of late .

Earlier, on Wednesday, December 10, 2025, the leadership of the PRP in Bauchi State in a statement from its Secretary, Wada Abdullahi, while affirming rumours concerning the plan by the Governor to defect, insisted that he is not welcome into the party .

“The Party’s attention has been drawn to circulating reports suggesting that Governor Bala Mohammad might seek refuge in the PRP following the alleged disintegration of the Peoples Democratic party, PDP, nationwide.

“However, even if the rumours were true, the Governor will not be welcomed to PRP.

“Governor Bala Mohammad’s tenure has been marked by poor performance which is disappointing and unacceptable to our party”, the PRP stated.

But in a statement late on Wednesday by Mukhtar Gidado, his media aide, Governor Muhammad  described insinuations about his defection as mischievous.

According to the statement, Governor Muhammad has never, for once, contemplated abandoning the PDP, or initiated any move to defect to another platform even in the face of the challenges facing the PDP .

Gidado rather noted that the Governor has been preoccupied with how to deliver on his mandate ,as well as how to retrieve the PDP from political undertakers.

Specifically, the Governor denied ever making any overtures to the PRP as an alternative platform to the PDP, and has no plans to do so in the future.

“Our attention has been drawn to a mischievous statement credited to the Publicity Secretary of the Peoples Redemption Party, PRP, in Bauchi State, alleging that Governor Bala Mohammad is not welcome to join the party.

“Ordinarily, such a baseless remark would have been dismissed as the ramblings of an attention-seeker desperate for relevance.

“However, experience has shown that silence in the face of falsehood can be misconstrued as acquiescence.

“The statement attributed to the PRP State Secretary is no not only false but a figment of the author’s imagination. We state unequivocally that at no time has Governor Bala Mohammad contemplated leaving the PDP let alone initiating any move to defect to another party or making overtures to the PRP in Bauchi State.

“It must be placed on record that in line with his inalienable right to freely associate in pursuit of a stable and prosperous polity, Governor Muhammad, like any other citizen, reserves the right to determine his future political alignments.

“Should that time ever arise, such a decision will not be dictated by the dubious machinations of political turncoats who thrive on falsehood and malice”, Gidado stated .

This is as the Governor’s spokesman, emphasized his commitment towards ensuring the repositioning of the PDP, in the face of what he described as a contrived crisis.

According to the statement, Governor Muhammad has been at the forefront of the battle to reclaim the PDP from political buccaneers and betrayers , with a view to regaining it’s lost fortunes.

The Governor, therefore, appealed to the people , especially the PDP supporters “to remain calm and focused, and disregard the antics of political detractors.”

Dan Agbese’s Legacy: A Great Gain

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Dan Agbese

By Ray Ekpu

While I was away from this country – and this page – three woes waltzed into my life in a whopping fashion. My step mother died. My sister passed on. My friend also went away. Dan Agbese, my friend, colleague and brother who has just said a permanent goodbye to me would have described these three incidents as a “whopper” if he had lived beyond his 81 years of age.

Dan and I were classmates at the Department of Mass Communication of the University of Lagos (1970-73). We both graduated in 1973. We both look slightly alike: darkly painted, built like track stars, no beer belly even though we touched the bottle in those days but we did not touch it limitlessly. We are both tall by Nigerian standard but Dan is a six-footer. I am not. He could have been a basketballer like Michael Jordan but sports was not his forte. When our classmates at the University borrowed a book from him they would return it to me. And when they borrowed a book from me they would take it to him. We both have oblong faces but we do not look strikingly alike, not like Siamese twins. We have this pet name Mkpori for each other. I can’t locate its etymology. It is not an Annang name or an Idoma name, the tribes to which we both belong. It is lost in antiquity but we call each other that till today. Who will inherit the pet name? Nobody. It belonged to two of us. Now that Dan is dead, the name is dead too, dead like a dodo, stone dead.

Even when we left school we were constantly in touch. He worked at the Nigerian Standard in Jos while I toiled at the Nigerian Chronicle in Calabar. The distance between Jos and Calabar is gaping but we did not allow distance to be the roadblock, the hurdle, to friendship. The then Minister of Communications, David Mark had said that telephones were only for the rich but we strenuously utilised the equipment even though we were not rich. We bridged the distance with regular phone calls until 1984 when we co-founded Newswatch with two other friends Dele Giwa and Yakubu Mohammed. That was the point where we made the timely transition from friends to founders because we thought that we had what was needed to break into the media scene as entrepreneurs and break the monopoly of governments and the rich in that sector.

Ray Ekpu

Dan was older than all of us in Newswatch both in age and in journalism but he was a decent man who did not wear his longevity as a badge of suzerainty and did not display any superiority complex. He did not ride on a high horse or stay on Mount Sinai. He did not boast like a rainless thunder. That is why we were able to sing from the same hymn book. He did not have the short temper of a drill sergeant; he was always calm, ice calm and respectful to all, young and old. So for those who have respect for decency you have lost a beacon in Dan’s death.

Dan’s journalism was admirable, very admirable. The way his life was so was his journalism. He did not go out looking for the synthetic significance of fame. Fame came to him through the mastery of his craft, not through his craving for it. He did not write to impress; he wrote to express. He believed in simplicity, clarity, one word sentences and no grandiloquence. But in writing to express, he impressed admirably because his writing was understood by those who read him.

Journalism is not Easy Street in Nigeria. It may not be the equivalent of Rocket Science but it is something akin to it because some corrupt and irresponsible leaders had tried to turn the profession on its head by tormenting journalists for their private gains. This happened largely during the days of military rule but the vice has not gone away even during our democratic dispensation. He was thrown into detention a few times but he survived the mental torture and illegal harassment because his journalism practice was wholesome and free of frivolous frills.

He was the master of graceful writing, a wordsmith whose words were full of wisdom, wit, humour and something to remember. His writing was a definition of integrity, patriotism, inclusivity, professional and ethical correctness. He was a firm believer in the fairness doctrine and had no interest whatsoever in sensationalism, that reckless adventure into unguarded extremism and “gra-gra-ness.” His writing did not display either ethnic or religious bigotry, the twin evils that have threatened to drive Nigeria into the ground. His writing had no iota of brazenness, or theatrics or nihilism because he was not one of the perpetual preachers of pessimism. It was obvious that he loved Nigeria and wanted it to become a country loved by its citizens for the right reasons other than the fact that God planted them here.

Even when Dan wrote an article on a subject that was esoteric, he always made it less than esoteric, less than pedantic, less than pedagogic by cutting it down to bite sizes for the sake of clarity and easy digestion.

He was not an apostle of guerilla journalism because he knew that guerilla journalism is fraudulent propaganda, not fit to be touched by any self-respecting journalist. Yes, guerilla journalism is propaganda, vile propaganda. Journalism is not. Journalism is the noble art of truth-telling, of fact-finding. What he practised was just that: journalism, and he practised it with missionary determination. In his journalism practice he was not scared of the sting and clash of battle but he performed even in such situations with an overriding sense of decency because of who he was: a decent man.

At Newswatch we adopted the prevailing trend in the journalism world then by pursuing what was then known as the New Journalism, a blend of investigative and interpretative journalism written in the seductive format of fiction writing. This was how we inserted ourselves in the task of agenda setting and the shaping of public conversation. Dan was an important part of that movement.

After many years of military rule Nigerians were desirous of a return to democracy. It wasn’t an easy task because the boys in khaki who had been feasting on Nigeria’s honey pot were not ready to return to their trenches. They wanted to turn the feast into a festival of limitless “chopping”. That was a challenge for the media, civil society and the people but the larger burden of the problem lay with the media. Dan and other media personnel were in the thick of it, how to help bring democracy to Nigeria. And also the problem of how to keep the democratic government accountable to the people. That job remains unfinished because democracy and governance are not a day’s job. Our governance is still wobbling. Our politicians are still buying votes. Corruption is walking on four legs. Partisan politicians are engaging in endless litigation, moving from inferior courts to superior courts and from inferior courts to inferior courts in search of where justice can be converted to injustice. So our democracy and governance are an unfinished business. To respect Dan’s legacy we must all keep our eyes on the ball so that our democracy, governance and country can be better, much better, than what it is now.

There is a royal road to royalty. Dan comes from a royal family in Agila, Benue State but there is no royal road to journalism. Dan started as a sophomore at the New Nigerian, became Editor of the Nigerian Standard and rose to the pinnacle of the profession as the Editor in Chief of the trail-blazing Newswatch.

Dan’s death, like all deaths, is like scrambled eggs. You cannot unscramble it otherwise we would have loved to do so for the sake of his family, the media family and the family of humanity for he was truly a great man. While his death is a great loss, the legacy he is leaving behind is a great gain. His admirable writing style has been the subject of study in some tertiary institutions in Nigeria. His columns were enthusiastically read by millions of Nigerians. His books are available for consumption by book lovers. His credible practice of journalism is a source of inspiration for young journalists.

Dan was a great journalist and writer. That is putting it simply. Meekly. Casually. My condolences to his adorable wife, Rose, his six children, seven grandchildren and the entire Agbese clan. May his soul rest in peace. Amen.


Culled from The Nation

Recruitment Of 50,000 Constables Into Nigeria Police Force Begins

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Nigerian Police

The Police Service Commission (PSC), in collaboration with the Nigeria Police Force (NPF) has announced the commencement of 50,000 Police Constables into the Nigeria Police Force, as directed by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

A statement signed by Torty Njoku Kalu, Head, Protocol and Public Affairs, said:

“Following this Presidential directive aimed at strengthening community policing, enhancing internal security and expanding the manpower base of the Nigeria Police Force, the Commission has approved the opening of the recruitment portal for applications from eligible Nigerians.

  • “Qualifications:

General Duty cadre applicants must be holders of GCE Ordinary Level, SSCE/NECO or their equivalents with

a minimum of five (5) credits (including

English Language and Mathematics) in not

more than two sittings.

  • “Specialists cadre applicants must be holders of GCE Ordinary Level, SSCE/NECO or their equivalents with a minimum of four (4) credits (including English Language and Mathematics) in not

more than two sittings. A minimum of three (3) years’ experience and Trade Tests in relevant fields/areas is required.

  • “Eligibility:

Interested candidates must:

✓ Be Nigerian citizens by birth

✓ Be aged between 18 and 25 years for General Duty; 18 to 28 years for Specialists

✓ Be medically, physically and psychologically fit

✓ Not be less than 1.67m (male) and 1.64m (female) in height (for General Duty only)

✓ Meet other requirements as shall be specified on the recruitment portal

  • “Application Period:

The recruitment portal will be open from Monday, 15 December 2025 to Sunday, 25 January 2026.

  • “All applications must be submitted ONLINE through the official recruitment portal: www.npfapplication.psc.gov.ng.
  • “The Commission wishes to emphasize that the recruitment exercise will be conducted in the most transparent, merit-based and credible manner. Application is FREE as there will be NO PAYMENT required at any stage of the process, and applicants are warned to be wary of fraudstars.
  • “Detailed guidelines, requirements and the application link will be made available on the official recruitment portal: www.npfapplication.psc.gov.ng (to be activated on 15th December 2025) and on the official websites and social media handles of the Police Service Commission and the Nigeria Police Force.
  • “The Police Service Commission urges all qualified and patriotic Nigerians to seize this opportunity to serve the nation.”

Tinubu Asks Ministers To Use NSCDC As   Escorts, Insists On Withdrawal Of Police

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President Bola Ahmed Tinubu
President Bola Ahmed Tinubu

By Ayodele Oni

President Bola Tinubu on Wednesday told members of the Federal Executive Council, (FEC) and other Very Important Personnel (VIP) that were jolted by the withdrawal of Police escorts to make use of the personnel of the National Security and Civil Defence Corps, (NSCDC).

The President  reaffirmed his order to pull police officers off VIPs and return them to core policing.

He stated this minutes before presiding over the Federal Executive Council at the State House, Abuja.

“I honestly believe in what I said. It should be effected. If you have any problem because of the nature of your assignment, contact the IGP and get my clearance,” Tinubu told Ministers at the Federal Executive Council meeting.

He directed the Minister of Interior, Dr Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo, to liaise with the Inspector-General of Police, Kayode Egbetokun, and the National Security and Civil Defence Corps to immediately replace withdrawn escorts so “you don’t leave people exposed.”

“The Minister of Interior should liaise with the IG and the Civil Defence structure to replace those police officers who are on special security duties. So that you don’t leave people exposed,” he insisted.

He asked the National Security Adviser, Nuhu Ribadu, and the Department of State Services to issue further guidance and ensure the directive is effected.

Tinubu said: “NSA and DSS will provide further information and form the committee and review the structure.”

Framing the move as a response to a spike in abductions, the President said, “We are facing challenges of kidnapping. We need all the forces we have on the ground, fully utilised.”

He added that while some officials remain vulnerable, civil defence personnel should step in for VIP protection where necessary.

“I know some of our people are exposed and I understand that. We have to make exceptional provision for them. And Civil Defence is equally armed.

Tinubu also disclosed that forest guards will be armed. “I have directed the NSA to arm our forest guards, too. Take it seriously,” the President stated.

The President also tasked Vice-President Kashim Shettima to use the National Economic Council to identify and rehabilitate grazing reserves into ranches, aiming to defuse farmer-herder flashpoints and formalise the livestock economy.

He directed: “Again, especially livestock reform, I think the Vice President should get the NEC first of all to see which villages or grazing reserves can be salvaged or rehabilitated into Ranches, Livestock settlements.

“We must eliminate the possibility of conflicts and turn the Livestock reform into economically viable development. The opportunity is there. Let’s utilise it.

“And it is in NEC, if we exercise the constitutional requirement which states that the land belongs to the states, whichever one they can salvage convert to a Livestock village, let us stop this conflict area and turn it into economic opportunities and prosperity.”

Wednesday’s charge came nearly three weeks after an earlier presidential directive to withdraw police details from VIPs and redeploy them to communities and highways, freeing manpower for investigations, patrols and school protection.

The November 23 directive was issued after a security meeting at the State House, Abuja. It followed a series of attacks that saw the kidnapping of 370 people, mostly schoolchildren, across Kebbi, Kwara and Niger States.

Chris Ngige, Fmr. Minister, Arrested By EFCC

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Chris Ngige

By Suleiman Anyalewechi

 

The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, Wednesday night, arrested a former Minister for Labour and Employment Chris Ngige.

 

The circumstance surrounding his arrest was hazy at the time of writing this report, but the former Senator, who was, also, a former Governor of Anambra State, was, reportedly, arrested by EFCC Operatives at his Abuja residence.

 

Even though the Commission has not issued an official statement to confirm the arrest of the former Minister, his former Media Assistant, Fred Chukwuelobe, confirmed that he is in the custody of the EFCC.

 

According to Chukwuelobe, “Former Governor of Anambra State and immediate past Minister of Labour and Employment, Dr Chris Ngige, is with the EFCC. More details later.”

 

Chukwuelobe’s clarification eased      mounting tension and anxiety as it debunked the earlier speculation that he had been kidnapped. Being in the custody of the EFCC, they reasoned, is better than being in the hands of blood-thirsty kidnappers.

 

Ngige’s arrest by the EFCC came a couple of weeks after his convoy was attacked by gunmen in his home State, Anambra State.

 

Ngige, 73, a Medical Doctor-turned politician was sworn-in as Governor of Anambra State on  May 29, 2003, but  was sacked by the Court in March 2006 and replaced by Peter Obi as the duly elected Governor of the State. He was elected Senator for Anambra Central Constituency in 2011, and appointed the Minister for Labour and Employment by the late President Muhammadu Buhari in November 2015, a  position he retained till May 2023. He has not been politically active since he left office in May 2023

“Governor Bala Mohammad Not Wanted In Our Party” – PRP Declares

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Bala Mohammed - Governor of Bauchi State
Governor Bala Mohammad

By Suleiman Anyalewechi

The Peoples Redemption Party, PRP, has said that it will not, under any circumstances, accept the Chairman of the Peoples Democratic party PDP Governors Forum who is, also, Bauchi State Governor, Bala Mohammad, into its fold.

This is as the party insisted that Muhammad’s abysmal performance and his well documented baggages will make him more of a liability than asset.

The Source reports that speculations have been rife of late suggesting that Governor Mohammad in the face of the unending leadership and internal crises bedeviling the PDP, may be seeking political pasture elsewhere.

At the last count, the PDP owing to its seemingly irredeemable affliction has lost  all but three of its  13 Governors post 2023 general elections, with the latest exits being the Rivers and Osun state Governors ,Sir Siminalayi Fubara and Senator Ademola Adeleke respectively.

There have been growing insinuations that Governor Muhammad despite his position as the PDP Governors Forum Chairman and the crucial role he played towards the conduct of the Ibadan National Convention, is still alive to the fact that the party in its present form cannot guarantee the political future of its members.

He is believed to be presently shopping for  a secure platform to realize his ambition of returning to the Senate if his dream of becoming a presidential running mate does not sail through.

But in a statement on Wednesday, December 10, 2025, by its Secretary Wada Abdullahi, the Bauchi State chapter of the PRP, said there is no room in its fold to accommodate the Governor.

According to Abdullahi, even if the rumours of his intending plan to defect to the PRP turns out to be true, Governor Muhammad remains a persona non-grata as far as the party is concerned.

“The party’s attention has been drawn to circulating reports suggesting that Governor Bala Mohammad might seek refuge in the PRP following the “alleged disintegration of the Peoples Democratic party, PDP, nationwide.

“However, even if the rumours were true, the Governor will not be welcomed”.

“Governor Bala Mohammad’s tenure has been marked by poor performance which is disappointing and unacceptable to our party”, the PRP stated.

The Party further alluded to what it described  as a shameful  confrontation between the supporters of the two PDP factions led by Governor Muhammad and the FCT Minister Nyesom Wike at the Wadata Plaza National  Headquarters of the party as part of the reasons it will not accept the Governor into its fold.

The PRP in the State also warned that it will not hesitate to probe the administration of Governor Muhammad should it emerge victorious in the gubernatorial election in 2027.

Particularly, the Party said it will reverse all decisions taken by Muhammad’s administration which are considered to be inimical to the State’s progress, including the creation of a First Class Emirate ,and the appointment of the Governor’s elder brother as the Emir.

However, despite its rejection of the Governor, the PRP expressed its readiness to open its doors to individuals  who genuinely align with its vision for a better Bauchi

Terrorism: NCTC Seeks Collaboration With Media, Telecom Operators

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Major General Adamu Laka

By Ayodele Oni

The National Counter Terrorism Centre (NCTC) is strengthening a model that relies not just on armed forces and intelligence agencies, but on a wider network of actors—including telecom operators, the media, and social media platforms—whose roles are increasingly pivotal in both preventing and resolving abductions.

The centre noted that Nigeria’s struggle with kidnapping has evolved into one of the nation’s most persistent and complex security challenges.

This new direction formed the core of discussions at a High-Level Stakeholders’ Workshop on the Multi-Agency Anti-Kidnap Fusion Cell (MAAKFC), held on Wednesday in Abuja.

The National Coordinator of the NCTC, Major General Adamu Laka, called for deeper, structured collaboration across sectors.

Kidnapping, he said, remains the “common trend” underpinning criminality and terrorism across the country, serving as a major revenue stream for criminal and extremist organizations.

According to him,  ransom payments enable these groups to purchase logistics, sustain operations, and in some cases exert territorial influence, the threat has become more entrenched and more sophisticated.

“The Multi-Agency Anti-Kidnap Fusion Cell, established in December 2024 through Nigeria–United Kingdom collaboration, has begun to reshape how the country responds to kidnapping.

“It brings together analysts from the military, intelligence agencies, and law enforcement to share information and rapidly generate actionable intelligence.”

Laka, pointed out that this framework has already contributed to multiple successful rescues and the disruption of kidnapping networks nationwide.

Laka noted that operational gaps remain—particularly the absence of critical civilian stakeholders such as media organisations, telecom operators, and social media platforms.

“These actors often hold information keys: from communication patterns that could assist investigations to the ability to shape public narratives, counter falsehoods, and mobilise communities.

“This workshop therefore provides a timely opportunity to deliberate on how these stakeholders can be effectively integrated into the Kidnap Fusion Cell architecture.”

By establishing this expanded ecosystem, he added, Nigeria could significantly improve national coordination and response speed—two factors that often determine whether victims are safely rescued.

“To strengthen the link between national and state responses, the NCTC had earlier conducted a state expansion programme for Anti-Kidnap Commanders from the Nigeria Police Force and the Department of State Services across the 36 states and the FCT.”

The initiative, Laka said, is already helping to eliminate communication barriers that previously stalled rescue operations.

At the workshop, the Acting High Commissioner of the British High Commission, Gill Lever, described the MAAKFC as a “commendable model” and affirmed the UK government’s continued commitment to strengthening Nigeria’s counterterrorism and anti-kidnapping efforts.

Similarly, Chris Gibson, Head of the UK’s National Crime Agency, emphasised that the success of the fusion cell lies in sustained collaboration, communication, and community participation. For Gibson, every Nigerian—beyond law enforcement—plays a role in reducing the burden of kidnapping.

Uzodimma, Iranian Ambassador Meet, Share Partnership Insights

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Governor Hope Uzodimma and Gholamreza Mandavi Raja
Governor Hope Uzodimma and Gholamreza Mandavi Raja

Governor Hope Uzodimma of Imo State has met with the Ambassador of the Islamic Republic of Iran, Gholamreza Mandavi Raja on how the sub national State of Nigeria can benefit from the many years of her bilateral relationship with Iran.

The meeting which took place at the Imo State Governor’s Lodge, Asokoro in Abuja was coming on the heels of the successful Imo State Economic Summit which attracted global political and business leaders to Owerri, the State capital last week Thursday, December 4, 2025.

At the Asokoro meeting, Uzodimma and his guest shared insights on how their relationship can foster development in Imo State in particular and Nigeria at large.

Governor Uzodimma noted that “the engagement was constructive and focused on exploring how Imo State can benefit from the long-standing bilateral relationship between Nigeria and Iran, with a view to attracting investment, enhancing capacity, and fostering sustainable growth.”

“I am confident that the insights shared will support our ongoing efforts to strengthen partnerships that advance the development of our dear Imo State,” the Governor added.

Ambassador Raja commended Governor Uzodimma for his pan-Nigeria approach to governance in Imo State which has attracted the attention of the global community, including Iran.

He assured the Governor that Iran does not  for granted the long-standing bilateral relationship she enjoys with Nigeria, noting that it is the desire of both countries to sustain it.

Osun Guber: Omisore Shuns Tinubu’s Parley With APC Aspirants

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Iyiola Omisore

A former national Secretary of the ruling All progressives Congress, APC Iyiola Omisore, analysts say, appears to have doubled down on his protest over the party’s recent decision to disqualify him from the upcoming governorship primary in Osun state, as he failed to attend Wednesday’s reconciliation meeting President Bola Ahmed Tinubu held with all APC aspirants in Aso Rock, Presidential Villa.

Omisore, a former Deputy Governor of the state was disqualified alongside six others by the APC Screening Committee, which only cleared Bola Oyebamji and Mulikat Abiola Jimoh to contest the party’s sole ticket for next year’s governorship election.

The Committee claimed that Omisore and other disqualified candidates failed to meet some criteria to contest the primary election, even though the former APC scribe has bitterly reacted by describing the committee’s action as ‘a huge joke’.

To douse the tension created by the issue, President Tinubu today met with some aggrieved aspirants, who have now agreed to step down for  Oyebamji as the consensus candidate, with the exception of Omisore who shunned the meeting, even though sources close to him informed the magazine that he was invited to the parley.

The aspirants who stepped down include former Deputy Governor Benedict Olugboyega Alabi, Dotun Babayemi, Akin Ogunbiyi, Mulikat Abiola Jimoh, Senator Babajide Omoworare, Kunle Adegoke (SAN), and Babatunde Haketer Oralusi.

Expressing his anger after his disqualification four days ago, the former Deputy Governor said the party made a big mistake by stopping “veterans” like him from contesting the primary, calling for serious caution.

Omisore: “Well, that panel report is the jokiest report of the year. It is quite unfortunate that people have taken partisanship beyond politics.

“We know the panel produced multiple reports, and the one submitted to the secretariat was not the original. As we speak, none of us has been shown the report or told why we were disqualified.

“I am the only one who has met them. But we have the same reservations. So far, so good. All of us will meet the appeal panel individually. But I asked them, ‘What are the allegations, because we haven’t seen any.

“We haven’t been written to. So, what are the bases of the disqualification? You said we didn’t have nominators, five per local government. But the law says, he who alleges must prove. They should have used another method to disqualify us.

“But you can know from our pedigree that the disqualification wasn’t the right word to use for us because we are germane in this thing. We are the veterans! You can see for yourself that where you have disqualified people like us in any contest, where do we go from there?” he stated.

Not a few Nigerians watching what is going on in the state of the Living Spring, as Osun is well know insist there’s a big trouble ahead for the party if it failed to reconcile all the aspirants, as it prepares to face the incumbent Governor Adeleke, who on Tuesday picked the Accord party sole ticket for the election.

The APC will need to put its house in order to be able to dislodge Adeleke aka the Dancing Governor, because of his reported popularity among the people of the state, analysts warn.