Category: News

  • Q3: NDLEA Has Seized N80m Worth Of Drugs, Arrested 134 Suspects -Commander

    Q3: NDLEA Has Seized N80m Worth Of Drugs, Arrested 134 Suspects -Commander

    The National Drug Law, Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) FCT command has seized 3,988.74 kilograms of assorted drugs with a monetary value of N80milion.

    The FCT Commander of Narcotics, (CN) Mr Kabir Tsakuwa disclosed this in Abuja.

    Tsakuwa however, said that a total of 134 suspected drug traffickers, peddlers and abusers were also arrested in the same period.

    He named the assorted drugs as cannabis Sativa, Cocaine, Methamphetamine, Tramadol, Rohypnol and Diazepam.

    He added that the major drug seized by the Operatives of the NDLEA was cannabis sativa adding that many suspects were prosecuted and convicted in the same period.

    According to him, cannabis sativa seized within the same period are 3,861.789kg while cocaine intercepted were 0.038Kg

    “Others includes diazepam which weighs 13.63Kg, Tramadol weighs 105.136Kg while Methamphetamine weighs 3.024Kg, Ectasy weighs 0.009kg with Pentazocine weighing 1.070Kg.

    “134 suspected drugs users and traffickers were arrested in third quarter in which 128 are males and six are females.

    “The total street value of drugs seized within the same period is about Eighty Million Naira (N80m).

    “One hundred and four (104) suspects were prosecuted, out of which 27 were convicted,” he said.

    Speaking on what the command had been doing to ensure reduction of usage and trafficking of illicit drugs in the FCT, the NDLEA boss said that the Command had a balanced approach in drug control strategy.

    This, he said was via drug demand reduction and drug supply reduction as they both complemented each other.

    He said the demand reduction was aimed at preventive measures while the supply reduction strategy was about enforcement duties.

    He said “under the preventive strategy, we have a sustainable intensive sensitisation and public enlightenment programme using the platform of “War Against Drug Abuse” (WADA).

    Tsakuwa said that WADA was a social advocacy campaign designed to get every Nigerian involved in the task of ridding the country of illicit substance.

    “We organised programmes in schools, corporate organisations, religious places of worship (Mosques and Churches), etc. to ensure involvement of all stakeholders.

    “We collaborate with quite a number of Non-Governmental Organisations (NGOs) and other stakeholders to carry out sensitisation.

    “We also provide support systems for drug dependent individuals through counseling at our rehabilitation centre that is manned by well learned counseling experts.

    “Clients are counseled for a period of three, six and 12 months depending on the level of addiction of the individual.

    “Under Supply reduction, we embark on arrest of drug offenders, investigation and prosecution,” he said.

  • Economy, Social Issues Top Agenda As Tinubu Presides Over 2nd FEC Meeting

    Economy, Social Issues Top Agenda As Tinubu Presides Over 2nd FEC Meeting

    The Federal Executive Council meeting is scheduled for today, Monday.

    Ajuri Ngelale, the Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, announced this to State House Correspondents.

    President Bola Tinubu will chair the meeting, with the attendance of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Chief of Staff to the President, and various Ministers. Other high-ranking government officials, such as the Head of Service of the Federation and Special Advisers, will also be present.

    Ngelale highlighted that this second edition of the meeting during this administration will address matters related to the president’s approvals concerning economic and social issues.

    The inaugural meeting took place in August, where new ministers received their initial briefings on their roles and responsibilities in the Renewed Hope Agenda.

    The Federal Executive Council (FEC) is a constitutional institution where government policies are deliberated and endorsed by Ministers.

    The President serves as the Chairman, while the Vice President serves as the Vice Chairman.

  • Troops Conduct Clearance Operations in Imo, Anambra, Arrest Suspected Terrorist

    Troops Conduct Clearance Operations in Imo, Anambra, Arrest Suspected Terrorist

    Over the weekend, troops from “Operation UDO KA II” launched clearance operations in Imo and Anambra, resulting in the arrest of a suspected terrorist and the recovery of materials for making Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs), motorcycles, stored provisions, and other logistical items within the terrorists’ camps. The operations were carried out in Lilu community and Orsumoghu Forest in Orsu Local Government Area of Imo, as well as in Ihiala Local Government Area of Anambra.

    During these clearance operations, the troops encountered various obstacles and successfully detonated numerous IEDs. They also engaged with terrorists who fled into nearby forests with gunshot wounds due to the troops’ superior firepower. Several terrorist camps and shrines were destroyed during these operations.

    The Acting Deputy Director of Army Public Relations for the 82 Division in Enugu, Lt.-Col. Jonah Unuakhalu, urged law-abiding citizens in the Southeast region to continue providing timely, credible, and reliable information to security agencies, particularly to “Operation UDO KA II.” Such information could lead to the apprehension of individuals who escaped with gunshot wounds.

    Unuakhalu also called on the people of the Southeast region to disregard deceptive tweets from self-proclaimed Biafra leader Simon Ekpa. He assured law-abiding residents that the region will be rid of criminal activities, as “Operation UDO KA II” remains committed to combating crime and criminality in accordance with established rules and regulations.

  • FX Policy: LCCI Tasks CBN On Creative Financing Options

    FX Policy: LCCI Tasks CBN On Creative Financing Options

    The Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI) have urged the CBN to adopt creative financing options for clearing the short to medium-term backlog of foreign exchange.


    LCCI noted that the new FX policy of the CBN unbanning the 43 items that were excluded from accessing FX at the official market is a market-friendly step towards unifying the exchange rates and is expected to curtail inflationary pressures in the short term.


    The body also said the policy change was expected to reduce the demand pressure on the parallel market and ensure there is a gradual convergence in FX market rates.


    The President/Chairman of Council, LCCI, Asiwaju Michael Olawale-Cole, said this in a statement at the weekend, adding that the policy would promote orderliness and professional conduct by all market participants to ensure market forces determine exchange rates on a willing buyer- willing seller principle.


    “The Chamber recommends that the CBN adopt creative financing options for clearing the short to medium-term backlog and establish a mechanism to address forex unification under the current system.

    “The Chamber believes the authorities must pursue the right monetary policy reforms to improve the investment climate and boost investor confidence. We call on the CBN to ensure transparency and accountability in banks’ foreign exchange dealings at the Investors & Exporters window”.


    Recall that the CBN recently lifted the forex ban on 43 items and also promised to intervene in the FX market from “time to time”.

    The apex bank had in 2015 restricted the items from accessing FX from the I&E window, saying they were “not valid for foreign exchange and could be produced in the country. Items affected include rice, cement, palm kernel, meat and processed meat products, poultry, soap, and cosmetics among others.


    But in a statement, the bank’s Director of Corporate Communications Isa AbdulMumin said the ban has been lifted.

    “As part of its responsibility to ensure price stability, the CBN will boost liquidity in the Nigerian Foreign Exchange Market by interventions from time to time. As market liquidity improves, these CBN interventions will gradually decrease,” the Thursday statement read.


    “As part of its responsibility to ensure price stability, the CBN will boost liquidity in the Nigerian Foreign Exchange Market by interventions from time to time. As market liquidity improves, these CBN interventions will gradually decrease.”


    “The CBN has set as one of its goals the attainment of a single FX market. Consultation is ongoing with market participants to achieve this goal,” CBN added.

  • World Food Day: HOMEF Calls For Ban On Nigeria’s GMOs

    World Food Day: HOMEF Calls For Ban On Nigeria’s GMOs

    As Nigeria joins the rest of the World to mark the 2023 World Food Day, the Executive Director Health of Mother Earth Foundation, Nnimmo Bassey, has called on the Federal Government to remove all Genetically Modified Foods from the country’s shelves.

    World Food Day is an essential international observance held every year to raise awareness about food security and hunger while promoting action to ensure everyone has access to safe, nutritious, and affordable food.

    Bassey in a statement on Sunday, said one big challenge the country is faced with protecting its food, including water, from the new wave of colonialism that is systematically taking hold of food systems across the globe.

    According to him, the transnational corporations leverage the current food crises to advance an atrocious agenda to gain control over the world’s food systems.

    “GMOs are being pushed into our food system without stringent government regulations. People do not know the implications of growing or eating GM foods because the population is not given information on the risks related to the technology.

    “In Nigeria, approvals for importing GMOs are granted without adequate public notice and proper and independent health and environmental impact assessments. It is improper for our farmers to be given seeds to grow without telling them what they are planting or what eventually will end up on the consumer’s plate.”

    HOMEF states that marking World Food Day should encourage people, organizations, and governments to unravel the root of hunger and malnutrition, address food injustice, and abuse of farmers’ rights. The day is a reminder of the avoidable fate of millions worldwide who suffer from hunger despite abundant natural and human resources.

    Bassey, noted that modern agricultural biotechnology directly undermines our pursuit of food sovereignty, posing a threat to our dignity and our fundamental right to refuse foods laden with uncertain health consequences and an agriculture system that stresses our ecosystems. 

    He further charged Nigerians to be intentional about what is on their plates. “We must not fail as individuals to ensure that what goes into our stomachs is safe. We must demand accountability from regulatory agencies to ensure that food products approved for import are wholesome, meet the dietary requirements of the people, and support the local economy.”

    HOMEF’s Director of Programme, Joyce Brown, echoed that agroecology can feed the world, cool the planet, and help local farmers adapt to climate change impacts.

    “Governments worldwide who want to address food insecurity and take meaningful climate action must invest in agroecology – the foundation for a positive transformation of food systems. Agroecology ensures optimum water and other resources use, revives soils and the ability to hold in carbon, uses renewable energy, and promotes shorter food supply chains while making healthy and nutritionally diverse food available to all”.

    Mariann Bassey-Orovwuje, the Deputy Director of Environmental Rights Action/ Friends of the Earth Nigeria, noted, “Food is a central and integral part of any society, and it creates a connection between our beliefs, ethnicity, and cultural heritage. Food is not just a part of culture; it defines culture.  What we eat and how we eat provides much information about specific cultures. Food, water, and soil are all interconnected and are not commodities. They are a sacred, life-affirming, and central composite of every existing society”.

    Orovwuje stressed that food and producers must be treated with respect and dignity.

    She called for policies that celebrate the smallholder farmers who produce over 70% of the food consumed globally. “We need deep-rooted changes in how agriculture is practiced and how the food system is organised and regulated. We need to wean our food system from corporate control and concentration and keep seeds in the hands of small-scale farmers.”

  • Let’s Support Tinubu, NNPCL – Civil Rights Group

    Let’s Support Tinubu, NNPCL – Civil Rights Group

    A conference of civil society groups for good governance (CSGGG) is calling for collective support for the progress and growth of NNPC Limited under the capable leadership of Mele Kyari.

    They have expressed concerns about the negative efforts to discredit Mallam Kyari, the Group Chief Executive Officer of NNPC Limited, aimed at removing him from office to gain unrestricted access to state resources for personal gain.

    The group, represented by its President, Comrade Dominic Ogakwu, is responding to an unwarranted smear campaign against the remarkable achievements and ongoing progress of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPC) in certain sections of the media.

    He refuted the claim that there is a secret award of control of Nigeria’s pipelines to a Northern oil cabal, calling it not only baseless and a product of the imagination but also a cowardly assertion.

    According to Ogakwu, the spreading of gross misinformation and unsupported allegations regarding oil pipeline rehabilitation and surveillance contracts has become a weapon of choice for these unpatriotic elements. He emphasized that these recent attempts lack substance and are mere distractions.

    He issued a warning to those determined to undermine President Bola Tinubu’s transformative leadership, urging them to reconsider their actions and cease their meaningless agitations and threats.

    Ogakwu further explained, “To award such a contract, a transparent tendering process is required, involving public notices and invitations for qualified companies to bid. The contracts have been awarded following rigorous procedures consistent with industry norms, and each bidding company underwent a competitive tender selection process, overseen by regulatory institutions such as the Bureau of Public Procurement (BPP), Infrastructure Concession Regulatory Commission, transaction advisors, Nigeria Extractive Industry Transparency Initiative (NEITI), and the Ministry of Justice.”

  • NDLEA Seizes $4.8m, CFA57m Fake Currencies On Lokoja-Abuja Highway

    NDLEA Seizes $4.8m, CFA57m Fake Currencies On Lokoja-Abuja Highway

    The National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) has seized 4.9 million dollars and 57 million CFA suspected to be counterfeits on the Abuja-Lokoja Highway.

    The CFA, backed by the French treasury, is the legal tender in Francophone West and Central Africa and accepted in 14 countries.

    The Director, Media and Advocacy at the NDLEA, Mr Femi Babafemi stated on Sunday in Abuja that the suspected counterfeit notes were seized from a commercial bus travelling from Lagos to Kano.

    “A search of the bus led to the seizure of the 4.8 million dollars and 57 million CFA suspected to be counterfeits,’’ he stated.

    Babafemi also celebrated the jailing of an acting district head in Sokoto, Alhaji Umar Mohammed (aka Dan Bala) for five-and-a-half years for dealing in drugs.

    A Federal High Court in Sokoto presided over by Justice Ahmad Mahmud sentenced the acting district head after the NDLEA preferred a four-count charge of drug dealing against him in October 2022.

    The NDLEA told the court that Mohammed was in possession of and dealing in 436.38kg of Indian hemp and 7kg of other psychotropic drugs.

    The court sentenced Mohammed to two years on each of the first two counts with an option of N1 million fine, and eight months on each of the third and fourth counts without an option of fine.

    On Oct. 11, NDLEA operatives stormed Orue Forest in Owan West Local Government Area of Edo where they arrested one Happy Akashili (37) and Solomon Uwesue (40) in a hut located inside an Indian hemp farm.

    Babafemi stated that the farm measured 2.4 hectares and was destroyed, adding that 92kg already processed skunk were also recovered there.

    He added that 49kg of skunk was also seized at Ogbeturu camp in the area.

    The NDLEA spokesman stated also that the agency had been advancing its advocacy on drug supply reduction with the War against Drug Abuse (WADA) in campaigns in schools, markets, worship centres and communities.

    Babafemi added that one of the flagship programmes of the advocacy was the WADA sensitisation lecture on drug use and mental Health for students of 15 secondary schools at the University of Ibadan.

    The sensitisation lecture was also delivered in schools in Badagry, Lagos State; in Udi Local Government Area of Enugu State; in Awka; in Gombe; in Benue, Zamfara and in Kano.

  • Bayelsa Teachers Threaten Indefinite Strike Over N30,000 Minimum Wage

    Bayelsa Teachers Threaten Indefinite Strike Over N30,000 Minimum Wage

    The Nigeria Union of Teachers (NUT) has threatened to commence indefinite strike in public primary and secondary schools in Bayelsa over the N30,000 minimum wage and promotion arrears.

    The union took the decision at an executive meeting on October 12, after an earlier three-day warning strike failed to compel the Bayelsa Government to act.

    The teachers had given a 14-day ultimatum to the government and local councils to address the plight of teachers across the state or face industrial action. 

    The grievances, according to the NUT, include inability of both state and local governments to implement the N30,000 minimum wage and effect promotion of primary school teachers in the state.   

    The union said teachers were meted with untold hardships due to the non payment of promotion arrears to the teachers.

    NUT expressed dissatisfaction with government’s continuous negligence of the plight of teachers who played critical role in the state, in spite of engaging them at different fora in futility.

    The union said the attitude of government had brought nothing but humiliation and frustration to primary and secondary school teachers in the state.  

    It said the 14-day ultimatum took effect from, October 13 after failure to address the issues within the limit of the ultimatum would force teachers in the state to go on strike.

    The strike notice was ratified by the constituent eight local government branches of NUT in Bayelsa. 

    Signatories to the communique after the meeting included chairmen of LG branches of the union.

    Meanwhile, Dr Gentle Emelah, Bayelsa Commissioner for Education, declined comments when contacted as he did not respond to telephone calls and messages requesting for government’s clarification.

    Schools in Bayelsa had vacated on August 29 due to expected flood and are slated to resume on November 13.

  • FG reinstates NIPOST Postmaster General, Sunday Adepoju

    FG reinstates NIPOST Postmaster General, Sunday Adepoju

    The Federal Government has reinstated Mr Sunday Adepoju as the Postmaster General (PMG) and CEO of the Nigerian Postal Service (NIPOST).

    NIPOST took to its official X handle to make this announcement in a statement.

    The statement reads, “Mr Sunday Adepoju conveys his appreciation to President Bola Tinubu and other key supporters.

    “He pledged to redouble his efforts to elevate NIPOST into a world-class digital postal service and align his vision with that of the Federal Ministry of Communication, Innovation & Digital Economy in contributing significantly to Nigeria’s socio-economic development.

    Adepoju was first appointed by former President Muhammadu Buhari in October 2022.

    According to the post, the reinstatement is a testament to Adepoju’s leadership skills and unwavering commitment to service.

    It urged Nigerians to anticipate enhanced value & quality services from NIPOST.

    The post listed some of Adepoju’s achievements in the last one year to include; development of modern digital postcode system and the integration of the Address Verification System (AVS).

    Others include; procurement of 20 operational vehicles and 100 motorbikes to enhance last-mile delivery, remodeling of several post offices for e-government and financial services.

  • Troops Rescue 4 kidnapped Federal Varsity Gusau Students

    Troops Rescue 4 kidnapped Federal Varsity Gusau Students

    Troops of the Operation Hadarin Daji of the Nigerian Army, in collaboration with operatives of the Zamfara Police Command have rescued the four kidnapped students of the Federal University Gusau (FUGUS).

    This is contained in a statement issued by the Information Officer, Operation Hadarin Daji, Capt. Yahaya Ibrahim in Gusau on Sunday.

    “The combined troops of Operation Hadarin Daji in conjunction with state police command have rescued the four kidnapped students of the Federal University Gusau (FUGUS), who were abducted at their off-campus hostels by the terrorists in Sabongida Community on Saturday.

    “The rescue was successfully achieved after the troops responded to the distress call on the incident.

    “The troops immediately mobilized and formed a blocking position at a possible withdrawal route which led to a heavy gun duel with the terrorists.

    “During the encounter with our superiority force, the terrorists abandoned the victims around 12 midnight and they later were rescued by the troops,” Yahaya explained.

    The gunmen had recently kidnapped 25 students of the same institution and nine construction workers at the same community.

    The security operatives had so far rescued 13 students and three construction workers while the remaining victims were still in the bandits’ captivity.