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Man k!lls son during fight with wife in Ogun

A heated argument between a couple in the Elega area of Abeokuta on Saturday night turned tragic when the husband, identified as Olamide, mistakenly struck his one-year-old son with an iron rod intended for his wife, leading to the child’s death.

PUNCH Metro learnt in a video from the scene of the incident obtained on Monday that Olamide had fled the area after the incident.Residents of the community had narrated in the video that they were alerted to the incident after they heard noise from the couple’s apartment.A co-tenant who identified as Mrs Bolatito, narrated that she was alerted by the wife that her husband had killed her son and when she got to the scene, she learnt that the couple had engaged in a fight.Bolatito narrated that the husband had reportedly picked an iron rod attached to the weight he often lifted and attempted to smash it on his wife but the rod hit the son on the head.She said, “At about midnight (on Saturday), I heard the lady calling out to me that I should come to her aid and that Ola (husband) had killed Ayinde (son). I was surprised, and I asked what happened. She said they had gone to Tyre and I should help them get a vehicle.“I went outside and I couldn’t see anybody, so while I was returning home, I saw some people with a vehicle, so I said that we should take the child to Trinity because it is the nearby hospital in the area. When we got to Trinity, we were informed that the child was dead.“

Upon returning home, we realised that the child was making sounds, so we decided to take him to the hospital again, where we were told that he had died the second time.“What I learnt was that the husband took an iron rod from a weight he often carried and attempted to smash it on the wife, but instead hit the baby on the head. He has always beaten his wife, as the previous pregnancy the wife had was lost due to the beaten from the husband.”The chairman of the community, Ramoni Adegbola, narrated that he was alerted by neighbours about a fighting incident between the duo and upon getting there, he saw them with the child who was feeling restless.He added that when the child was taken to the hospital, he was returned home dead, adding that the husband had been in the habit of taking illicit drugs.“I heard the noise of help, help, they have started fighting, and I ran to the scene.

On getting there, I saw them with the child, and I was informed that the child had been hit with an iron rod on the head. I called out to other residents to assist in taking the child to the hospital, and when they returned from the hospital, I was informed that the child was dead.The couple engaged in a fight frequently, and I feel it’s because the husband often takes illicit drugs.

There was a day he took something that he fainted, and I had to call on neighbours to assist in taking care of him.“He has absconded since yesterday, but I was informed not too long ago that he reported to a police station,” Adegbola said.When contacted on Monday for a reaction, the spokesperson for the Ogun State Police Command, Omolola Odutola, confirmed the incident to our correspondent.

If I Regain Freedom Today, I Will Donate Half Of My Wealth To Charity” – Hushpuppi Declares

In the darkest times of my life, i have seen people who used to flock around me distance themselves by calling me names, that popular albino i used to fly on a business class to Dubai to come enjoy life with me was calling me a stingy person the other day.

During these moments i have realised a good name is better than wealth. If i get my freedom today, i will give half of everything to charity”.

The President Is My Brother, I Shall Not Talk…

BY LASISI OLAGUNJU

I found myself inventing the above verse as today’s headline. The verse came sounding like “The Lord is my shepherd/ I Shall not want…” The twenty-third Psalm. Yesterday was Easter Sunday; today is Easter Monday. All Judases are shamed.Life here is bitter as brine. The green pastures are withered. The still waters are poisoned. More and more, victims fall in undeclared wars in Benue and Plateau. Terrorists rebrand and relaunch in Borno and Niger and Zamfara. The Commander-in-Chief is absent in flesh, in body and soul. But I must be quiet, because the president is my brother.Some twenty-something years ago, one of us (I can’t remember who the person was) blurted out a question:“The name of your governor, ‘Alamiyeseigha’, reads like a tongue-twisting clause. What does it mean?”

Our guest was the Bayelsa State Commissioner for Information.The guest sat up, grinned and looked round the Tribune boardroom. She then smiled out the answer.“It means God is never wrong. Just like my name, ‘Benamaisia’, means brother is never wrong.”I thought that was deep. I quickly got it stored in the depth of my brain. True. God is never wrong. But brother? An argument would have ensued but that commissioner, Mrs Ruth Benamaisia Opia, went into an intelligent analysis of how and when a brother is deemed not wrong: She said a brother is never wrong in the presence of outsiders. She might be right. Among her audience were a people whose own culture instructs them to first deal with the fox before spanking the cock. They also say you don’t sell your brother cheap; if you do, you won’t be able to buy him back expensive.

“Kin-blood is not spoiled by water.” That is how 12th-century German poet, Heinrich der Glîchezære, couches it in his epic, Reinhart Fuchs (Reynard the Fox). I am supposed to love and be loyal to the king because he is my brother. Is my brother, the king, supposed to love and be loyal to me? Christian scholar, T. L. Westow, in his ‘Who is my Brother?’ published in May 1964, declares that “nobody can eat for somebody else.” That may be true in biology; it is not true in politics. What do you think my brother, the president, is doing on my behalf in Europe? He has been there for the past two weeks.Because my brother is the president, he can do anything and get away with it. And he has been doing it. The president is the law. He keeps a very good company in the US President Donald Trump. Last week, Trump complained about his country’s Federal Reserves chair, Jerome Powell. “I’m not happy with him. I don’t think Powell is doing the job. He will leave if I ask him to.” An American reacted: “Why have anybody but Trump run anything? Just get rid of congress, senate, Supreme Court, etc. He’s so smart; he can run everything.” It is too late to recommend the same here. President Bola Tinubu is the smartest somebody ever created. He had been the law long before he became president. Presidential powers have only enlarged his coast, and we are happy and grateful for the answered prayers.

I have no problem with Tinubu staying put abroad. The only issue I have with it is that in his absence, Muhammadu Buhari’s eunuch is having an erection again. I don’t like that. It is risky. While I agonise over the resurgent eunuchs, I will not stop stopping critics from hampering my president with the constitution and all its provisions. Scrap the law, scrap the courts, the legislature, everything; sack the governors, give the president their functions and budgets. Make him President and Governor General of the federation. Trash all the scrapped. Scrap Abuja and let the super man reign from wherever he finds comfort. Why not?My brother, the president, is in Europe, running the country effectively unseen like an unseen poem. It is my duty as a brother to expose the ignorance of critics who say the president residing abroad is immoral and illegal. I should tell such critics that the people who created Nigeria started Nigeria with that arrangement. When the two Nigerias were brought together in 1914, the first ‘president’ (nicknamed Governor General) reigned six months in Nigeria; four and a half months in London; one and half months cruising on the high seas. Lord Lugard gave his employers that condition and he got it, he maintained and enjoyed it for several years. A befitting office with full complement of competent staff was even provided for him right inside the colonial office in London. That is our history.

Shakespeare says there is no darkness but ignorance. Ignorant critics say my brother does not delegate as the constitution dictates. They should read history. Our president’s ancestor, Lord Lugard had two deputies called Assistant Governors. From 1914 when he took charge till he left in 1919, he delegated neither power nor responsibility to any of them. There were complaints and grumblings, home and abroad; the Governor-General ignored them all. Nothing happened. Nothing will happen if President Tinubu keeps that foundational tradition alive. He has a duty to run his government undisturbed from the Moon, even from inside the Sun.If my brother is not ready for home, it is my duty to beg him to stay back wherever he is. It is also my duty to attack his attackers here. He should not rush home after these Easter holidays simply because sibling rivalry is pushing some of our bad brothers to demand his immediate homecoming. The president should work harder in London – or cross the English Channel back to Paris, and continue where he stopped.

Last week, from wherever he was, the president set up an eight-man committee on his pet census project, five out of the eight members are from his sitting room. Because he is my brother, I am not supposed to mention this and say he was wrong to use his household to rule the whole world.For those who are not happy that five brothers out of eight make the list of Tinubu’s census committee, I recommend, in the spirit of this Easter season, ‘The Parable of the Workers in the Vineyard’. It is a Bible passage:“Then the mother of Zebedee’s sons came to Him with her sons, kneeling down and asking something from Him.“And He said to her, ‘What do you wish?’”“She said to Him, ‘Grant that these two sons of mine may sit, one on Your right hand and the other on the left, in Your kingdom.’” (Mathew 20:20,21).What you just read is a brother to the right; his blood brother to the left. The Master was number one. The brothers would be numbers two and three. And there were twelve disciples. The two brothers were John and James. Whose cousins or nephews were they? Find out whose sister their mother, Salome, was.

Some neighbours are already saying that without them in 2027 my brother will be sent back home empty-handed. They should shut up, and go and listen to Juju music Commander Ebenezer Obey. He warns that no one should vow that without them their friend won’t find food to eat. They should not say that again Sustenance is God’s. He is the only provider. If they want war in 2027, my brother will give them. I will watch the bull fight; my popcorn is ordered.So, those who are not happy with my brother’s nepotism should go drink iced water. They should wait for their own time. Nigeria is a tripod. Every good and every bad must get entered in the country’s balance sheet. Muhammadu Buhari had his own fill. We shouted, but Bayajidda II pointed us to his kurmo (deaf) ears. Goodluck Jonathan had aides who helped him do his own so well that he became Azikiwe.

I read Keith Ferrazzi’s ‘Never Eat Alone: And Other Secrets to Success.’ But I will not join outsiders to quote that book and warn the solo man that he “can’t get there alone” and “in fact, can’t get very far at all.” I will also refrain from reading ‘What do you think of eating alone?’, a recent piece written by The Korea Times’ senior advisor, Park Moo-jong. There is a spice in that piece. It is from Desmond Morris, English zoologist, ethologist and author of ‘The Naked Ape’: “One may eat alone in the privacy of one’s own home, but to eat alone in a public place is to invite suspicion of personal failure at best and deviancy at worst.” If the president were not my brother, I would have expanded that verdict to accommodate what critics say of him here. I would have said that Nigeria is a public, multi-regional, multi ethnic entity and that no group, no matter how smart, or wise or vicious can kidnap Nigeria and hold it hostage for long. But the president is Yoruba and Muslim like me, so I won’t undermine my brother. I won’t join those who say that even the British who created the country did not succeed in putting it in purdah for as long as they wished.

President Bola Tinubu is a brother to some because he is a Muslim. To some others he is a brother because of the language he speaks – his mother tongue – Yoruba. Still, to some others, he is a brother because of the fraternity of politics he leads. Common to these concentric circle of brotherhoods is the charge that his wrong must not be said from any mouth there. Scores killed in Plateau, 56 murdered in Benue, the Commander-in-Chief is rocking the cities of Paris and London. He must not be accused of playing Nero while his Rome burns. Our brother must never be said to be wrong.This president campaigned and pledged to renew our hopes in a better Nigeria. Where are the promised “sparkling springs” and the “babbling brooks”? A brother has no right to question his brother, the president. If he is your brother, tell him not that he lives in an illusory world where failure is praiseworthy success and poverty is wealth. The people’s suffering notwithstanding, rejoice with your brother.

A brother is never wrong. Like the anonymous American army major said in the Vietnam war, there is nothing bad to have my brother destroy the town in order to save it. The king can invent his own reality and call us to project it for the world to admire and applaud. We will obey him; he is our brother.Poverty unravels homes; policies upend businesses. But what is real is unreal because the president is my brother. We hear politicians of various ailments hail the president for making Nigeria great again. Even some opposition governors are rushing into his Noah’s Ark. Reality has different versions. When it is bad as we have it, regime washers create a positive one and command me to praise it. They say we must celebrate their reality because it is done everywhere, even in America where we borrowed this system that sells the freeborn into slavery. If that sounds interesting to you, read ‘Bad for Democracy: How the Presidency Undermines the Power of the People’ by Dana D. Nelson. It was published in 2008 long before Donald Trump came with his ideology of alternative truth.

You see them on TV boasting of unprecedented achievements and daring you to contradict them. They did and do it where we copied our constitution. Towards the 2004 presidential election in the US, a Bush administration official with the swag of a conquistador told a New York Times reporter, Ron Suskind: “We’re an empire now, and when we act, we create our own reality. And while you’re studying that reality judiciously, as you will, we’ll act again, creating other new realities, which you can study too, and that’s how things will sort out. We’re history’s actors . . . and you, all of you, will be left to just study what we do.” This sounds like what my brother’s government can say in Nigeria. The government is a pack of confidence men. We – you and I – exist to only study, write and talk about what they do.

My brother is dining alone somewhere across the Mediterranean Sea. Some people say he is in Paris, France; some say he is in London, United Kingdom. I am supposed to thank him for eating on my behalf abroad while I yawn at home. As I do that, I should also ask what will end anyone’s ‘eat alone’ regime if they do not change? An Arabian proverb speaks on the consequences of fencing off others from a communal feast. They say he who eats alone vomits alone. They also say he who eats alone chokes alone. The Tigrigna of Eritrea and northern Ethiopia say: He who eats alone dies alone. The NURTW has a more radical version. Its members shout: “Eat alone, Go away!”

As the world awaits a new Pope, spotlight turns to Vatican’s secretive conclave

… With the death of a pope, attention shifts to the most secretive democratic process on Earth—one cloaked in centuries-old ritual and global intrigueAs the Roman Catholic Church prepares to elect a new pope, the world enters a period of solemn anticipation marked by ritual, secrecy, and centuries of tradition.While modern media dramatisations—such as the Oscar-winning film Conclave—have captured public imagination, the real-life process remains one of the most cloistered decision-making events in global religion and politics.

The conclave—from the Latin cum clave, meaning “with key”—will convene at least 15 days after the Pope’s death to allow time for the College of Cardinals, the Church’s highest-ranking prelates under 80 years of age, to assemble from around the world.The 120 cardinal-electors will live within the Vatican at the Domus Sanctae Marthae (St Martha’s House) during the election, strictly cut off from the outside world.They will walk in solemn procession each day to the Sistine Chapel, where the voting takes place under Michelangelo’s frescoed ceiling.As per centuries-old protocol, cardinals are forbidden from communicating externally, accessing media, or forming alliances—a rule that, if broken, carries the penalty of excommunication.A Tradition Rooted in Ceremony and Global RelevanceThe process begins with the Camerlengo, or Chamberlain of the Holy Roman Church, officially confirming the Pope’s death in the presence of senior Vatican officials. What follows is nine days of mourning and ceremonial rites, during which the deceased pontiff lies in state in St Peter’s Basilica.In contrast to Hollywood fiction, no priests or nuns are allowed to swarm over the Pope’s body, and he is certainly not laid out in pyjamas.

These dramatisations exaggerate for effect, but in reality, every stage of the papal transition is meticulously choreographed, reflecting a balance between religious symbolism and institutional continuity.Once the conclave begins, the cardinals cast their votes in secrecy. If a two-thirds majority is reached, a new pontiff is declared. If not, repeated rounds of voting occur—potentially over several days—until consensus is achieved.The process is so cloaked in confidentiality that even the traditional white smoke from the Sistine Chapel chimney, indicating a successful vote, is not a canonical requirement, though it remains a cherished symbol.

Modern Challenges to an Ancient Election

While the 2013 election of Pope Francis (Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio) took only two days and five ballots, the Church’s past tells of lengthier deliberations. The longest conclave in history lasted 34 months—from 1268 to 1271—underscoring how difficult consensus can be in a global institution with vast cultural, ideological, and geopolitical dimensions.In today’s context, the choice of a new pope carries far-reaching implications beyond spiritual leadership. The Catholic Church commands influence across global development, financial institutions, diplomatic relations, and moral discourse on issues such as climate change, migration, social justice, and economic inequality.

As the world faces increasing religious polarisation, declining church attendance in the West, and rapid Catholic growth in the Global South, many observers expect the cardinals to elect a pontiff who reflects a broader demographic and theological representation of the global Church.Africa and Asia, home to the Church’s fastest-growing congregations, are emerging as key regions in the strategic outlook of the Vatican.

Who Will Be the Next Pope?

While technically the cardinals can elect any baptised male Catholic, tradition has kept the decision within their own ranks. Names from Africa, Latin America, and Asia are said to be under quiet consideration, but no frontrunner has emerged publicly, as expected in a process where silence is not only revered but enforced.Regardless of the outcome, the election will be a moment of deep significance not only for the 1.3 billion Catholics worldwide but also for global leaders tracking the Church’s geopolitical role. Whether the next pope steers toward tradition or reform, the economic, political, and diplomatic ripple effects will extend far beyond Vatican City.

NDLEA intercepts cocaine in Saudi-bound religious books, arrests bandits’ supplier with drugs in private part. Recovers 563kg skunk, meth, heroin in Bayelsa warehouse, arrests 4; destroys cannabis farms in Edo forest

By Ebinum Samuel

Operatives of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) have intercepted a shipment of cocaine concealed in 20 sets of religious books going to Saudi Arabia.The cocaine consignment consisting of 20 parcels with a total weight of 500grams and buried in the pages of the religious books was uncovered at a courier company in Lagos on Tuesday 15th April 2025 when NDLEA officers of the Directorate of Operations and General Investigation (DOGI) were searching through export cargos going to Saudi Arabia at the logistics firm.

At another courier company same day, NDLEA officers intercepted five parcels of Loud, a strong strain of cannabis weighing 2.8 kilograms hidden in a carton coming from the United States of America.In Kano, a 22-year-old supplier of illicit substances to bandits, Muhammad Mohammed, has been arrested by NDLEA operatives on patrol along Bichi – Kano road while heading to Katsina with 277 ampoules of pentazocine injection tied to his thigh and private part with Sellotape.

He was intercepted on Sunday 13th April, while another suspect, Mohammed Abdulrahman Abdulaziz, 43, was nabbed same day at Research Rimin Kebe area of Nasarawa, Kano with 68 blocks of skunk, a strain of cannabis, weighing 30kg.Not less than 557.2kg of skunk, 5.6kg of methamphetamine and 29.8grams of heroin were recovered from a house along Major General Isaiah Alllison Street, Opolo, Yenagoa, Bayelsa state where four suspects were arrested when NDLEA operatives raided the premises on Wednesday 16th April.

The four suspects arrested during the raid include: Sarimiye Suwa Kurtis, 46; Roland Prosper, 34; Sarimiye Tare Paul, 45; and Fidelis Ugbesla, 46.While a total of 1,100 kilograms of skunk were recovered from a delivery van with the driver, Ismail Abdullahi arrested in Surulere area of Lagos on Thursday 17th April, NDLEA operatives in Kaduna on Friday 18th April raided the hideout of a suspect, Ike Ani, 30, in Zaria, where no fewer than 31,950 pills of tramadol 225mg and diazepam were recovered. In Kebbi, NDLEA operatives on patrol along Bagudo road on Friday 18th April intercepted a vehicle loaded with bags of charcoal coming from Malabil, Benin Republic. A search of the vehicle led to the recovery of 97kg skunk concealed in the sacks of charcoal.

Three suspects: Abubakar Ibrahim, 50; Mustapha Aliyu, 32; and Bashar Lawali, 28, were arrested in connection with the seizure.A 48-year-old Okafor Marcel was nabbed with 11.5kg skunk at Abatete, Anambra state while NDLEA operatives in Osogbo, Osun state on Tuesday 15th April arrested Ajala Mercy, 27, with 43 litres of skushi, a mixture of black currant, cannabis and opioids recovered from her room at Dada estate, Halleluyah area of the state capital.Two cannabis farms in Egbeta forest, Ovia North East LGA, Edo state were raided by NDLEA operatives who destroyed 3,717.8625kg of the psychoactive plant on 1.487145 hectares and recovered 136.5kg of processed cannabis.

At the Tincan seaport in Lagos, a suspect Basorun Usman Kayode, 40, who has been at large for two years was arrested by NDLEA officers in connection with the seizure of 107kg Loud imported from Cannada in 2023, while another suspect, Dauda Yakubu who distributes illicit drugs within the seaport community was arrested by a team of operatives on Monday 14th April.The War Against Drug Abuse, WADA, social advocacy activities by NDLEA Commands equally continued across the country in the past week. Some of them include: WADA sensitization lecture delivered to students and staff of St. Michael Anglican Primary School, Epe, Lagos; Community Grammar School, Ipoti Ekiti, Ekiti state; College of Education, Minna, Niger state; traders at Igbona market, Osogbo, Osun state; traders at Marian Market, Calabar, Cross River; drivers and others at Peace Mass Transit park, Upper Iweka, Onitsha, Anambra state, among others.While commending the officers and men of DOGI, Kano, Lagos, Kaduna, Kebbi, Osun, Zone 13, Edo and Tincan Commands of the Agency for the arrests and seizures of the past week, Chairman/Chief Executive Officer of NDLEA, Brig. Gen. Mohamed Buba Marwa (Rtd) equally praised their counterparts in all the commands across the country for ensuring a fair balance between their drug supply reduction and drug demand reduction efforts.

PSC CHAIR GREETS CHRISTIANS AT EASTER, prays that the death and resurrection of Christ should bring renewed faith in our collective pursuit of peace, security and national unity

By Ebinum Samuel

The Chairman of the Police Service Commission, DIG Hashimu Argungu rtd mni, has on behalf of the Board, Management, and Staff of the Police Service Commission, extended warm Easter greetings to all Nigerians, particularly Staff of the Commission and members of the Nigeria Police Force and their families.

According to Ikechukwu Ani, the Commission’s spokesman, Easter, Argungu noted, is a season that embodies the values of sacrifice, renewal, hope, and peace—”values that align closely with our commitment to fostering a disciplined, professional, and people-focused police force”.”As we commemorate this period of reflection and resurrection, I urge all police officers to continue to uphold the principles of integrity, fairness, and justice in the discharge of their duties” adding that the Commission remains steadfast in its constitutional mandate of ensuring merit-based appointments, timely promotions, and accountability in discipline, all aimed at strengthening public trust in our police institutions.”

To all Nigerians, may this Easter bring renewed faith in our collective pursuit of peace, security, and national unity. Let us continue to support the ongoing reforms in the Nigeria Police Force and work together for a better and safer Nigeria.”Wishing you and your loved ones a joyful and blessed Easter celebration”

JUST IN : Nigerian police extradite Killaboi from Qatar over alleged murder of university’s student

‎The Nigeria Police Force says it has successfully completed the extradition of Benjamin Nnayereugo, male, widely known as “Killaboi,” from Doha, Qatar to Nigeria.A statement signed by Force Public Relations Officer, Olumuyiwa Adejobi, said the suspect, who had allegedly been on the run for the murder of Miss Augusta Oseodion Onuwabhagbe, was returned to the country in the early hours of today, Saturday, 19th April 2025, through the coordinated efforts with the Ministry of Justice, INTERPOL National Central Bureau (NCB), Force Headquarters Abuja and the Qatari Judicial Authorities.

“The extradition followed a petition from the family of the deceased, submitted through their legal representatives dated 29th September 2024. The matter was assigned to INTERPOL NCB Abuja for investigation.“Investigations revealed that the suspect, Benjamin Best Nnayereugo, murdered Miss Onuwabhagbe, a 21-year-old first-class student of Lead City University, Ibadan, at his residence located at No. 24A Abiola Apooyi Street, Oral Estate, Ajah, Lagos, on 13th July 2023. After committing the crime, he fled Nigeria and later released an online video purporting to confess to the act, a deceptive strategy to derail investigative efforts.

“Following his declaration as wanted by the NPF Lagos State Criminal Investigation Department (SCID) on 13th October 2023, an INTERPOL Red Notice was issued for his global apprehension. He was initially arrested in Freetown, Sierra Leone, on 20th October 2023 under the false identity “KANU PRINCETON SAMUEL,” but escaped custody during a prison break on 26th November 2023 in Feeetown.‎“‎Further intelligence gathering revealed that the suspect continued to evade law enforcement, traversing multiple regions including West Africa, East Asia and the Middle East, under forged identities before eventually relocating to Doha, Qatar on 24th January, 2025. Operating under the alias “TOURE ABDOULAYE” with a fraudulent Guinean passport, he secured illegal employment and concealed his identity.

“Through robust international cooperation and the use of advanced biometrics, INTERPOL NCB Abuja, in collaboration with INTERPOL NCB Doha, confirmed his identity, leading to his arrest by Qatari authorities in February 2025. An official extradition request, processed via the Federal Ministry of Justice, Abuja, was subsequently approved by the Qatari judicial authorities, resulting in his repatriation to Nigeria.‎“‎The Inspector-General of Police, IGP Kayode Adeolu Egbetokun, Ph.D., NPM, while recognising the strength in the synergy amongst nations to curb trans-border crimes, commended the diligence of INTERPOL NCB Abuja and extended sincere appreciation to the Honorable Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, the Government of Qatar, INTERPOL NCB Doha, and the Nigerian Embassy in Qatar for their invaluable collaboration in securing the fugitive’s return.

“‎The Inspector-General of Police further assured the general public of the Nigeria Police Force’s commitment to ensuring that the suspect faces diligent prosecution, as part of the NPF’s dedication to justice and the safety of all Nigerians.”

Police Rescue 10 Kidnapped Adventist Students In Edo

Operatives of Edo State Police Command have rescued 10 Adventist students who were abducted by suspected kidnappers, at a location bordering Edo and Ondo States.247nextnews.com reports that the students were kidnapped on Wednesday, April 16, 2025, while on their way from Rivers State to Babcock University, for Annual GYC Africa Conference.The Command’s spokesman, CSP Moses Yamu, announced the cheering news in a statement Friday night.He disclosed that upon receipt of the news, the State Commissioner of Police, Monday Agbonika, immediately deployed operatives of the Ohosu Division, IRT, tactical teams alongside vigilantes and hunters into the bushes for possible rescue of the victims and arrest of suspects.“During the operation, operatives engaged in a gun duel with these kidnappers. In the process, one of the kidnappers was neutralised, while others escaped with bullet wounds.“

The operatives were cautious to avoid collateral damages as the kidnappers used the victims as human shield. Unfortunately, an Inspector of Police sustained gunshot injury and is currently responding to treatment.“This rescue effort eventually paid off as the ten (10) kidnapped students comprising eight (8) male and (2) female were released due to intense pressure mounted on them,” Yamu said.In a related development, two robbery suspects, namely, Binigolo Ebimene (25) and Mathew Denwei (27), have been arrested by operatives of the Command.

Yamu in a statement disclosed that he suspects robbed thier victim of his motorcycle and cell phones at Malim Camp Gbelebu community in Ovia South West LGA of the state.“Preliminary investigation revealed that these suspects who were arrested with a locally fabricated pistol and two (2) headlamps as well as the motorcycle earlier robbed, have been terrorising farmers and commuters in that axis of the State.“The suspects have confessed to the crime and would be charged to court as soon as investigation is concluded,” Yamu disclosed.Meanwhile, the State Commissioner of Police, Monday Agbonika, has issued a stern warning to all miscreants in the State to either repent, relocate from his area of responsibility, or face the consequences.

He, however, urged the good people of the State to shun crime and report suspicious persons, movement, or objects to the police.

Abuja raid attack: 3 NDLEA officers sustain gunshot injuries, hospitalized

By Ebinum Samuel

Three officers of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency, NDLEA, have been hospitalized for gunshot injuries sustained after they came under attack from some armed men during a raid operation in Jahi area of the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja on Thursday night.

The incident occurred when a team of NDLEA operatives acting on intelligence and surveillance report raided an uncompleted building at NNPC area of Jahi where 74 bottles of codeine, 10 litres of codeine syrup, 48grams of tramadol 225mg and 4.9kilograms of skunk, a strain of cannabis, as well as five android phones were recovered.As the NDLEA team made their way out of the location, they came under gun attack.Three of the NDLEA personnel involved in the raid sustained gunshot injuries: one in the rib and two others on their back and leg. The wounded officers were initially stabilized at the Police Clinic in Garki Area 1 before they were transferred to the National Hospital Abuja for further medical attention.Chairman/Chief Executive Officer of NDLEA, Brig Gen Mohamed Buba Marwa (Rtd) expressed appreciation to the staff of the Police Clinic for their prompt support. He also thanked the Chief Medical Director of the National Hospital who was personally reached by him for overseeing the treatment of the wounded officers.

The NDLEA boss who is in Kano on official engagements also spoke on phone with the injured officers to wish them quick recovery. He assured them that the Agency will deploy every means at its disposal and work in collaboration with other security agencies to fish out those responsible for the attack on them.

AIG Zone 5 Harps on Professionalism, proactive and intelligence led policing .. felicitates with Christians on Easter Celebration

By Ebinum Samuel

The Assistant Inspector-General of Police, Zone 5 Headquarters, Benin City, comprising Delta and Edo State Police Command, AIG Salman-Dogo Garba, held a security conference on 15th April, 2025 with Commissioners of Police, Delta and Edo State Police Command, also in attendance were the Deputy Commissioners of Police, Operations and Criminal Investigations Department from both Commands, and the Zonal Management Team.

The meeting was to brainstorm and re-strategize on how to successfully reduce crime rate to the barest minimum. According the zone spokesman, SP Momoh Tijani at the meeting, the AIG commended the efforts of the senior officers for their moves and initiatives in curbing crime and criminality in their areas of responsibility. He further charged them to continue to improve and enhance their anti-crime strategies to see crime reduced significantly. In the same vein, Tijani said that on 17th April, 2025, the AIG met with Area Commanders, Squadron Commanders and Intelligence Officers from both Delta and Edo State Command.

He charged them to be on top the situation at their respective AORs, and to mobilize their DPOs to respond promptly, efficiently and effectively to all incidents that occur within their jurisdiction. Additionally, AIG Salman-Dogo Garba, further directed the senior officers to be proactive in their respective commands, and to persistently encourage their personnel to maintain the highest level of professionalism, discipline including self and official discipline, and loyalty to the Nigeria Police Force, while performing their duties in maintaining law and order and upholding public peace.

The AIG equally used the opportunity to extend warmest felicitations to all Christian faithfuls on the occasion of the Easter celebration, marking the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. He enjoined them to use this occasion to pray for peace, unity, love, progress and prosperity in the zone and county at large. He further assured them that in line with the directives of the Inspector-General of Police, *IGP Kayode Adeolu Egbetokun, Ph.D., NPM,* adequate security measures have been emplaced across the zone to ensure a hitch-free, peaceful and crime free Easter celebration. He urged members of the public to be vigilant, and report any suspicious person(s) to the nearest Police station.