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Comfort Emmanson vs Ibom Air: details of how mid-flight dispute spiralled into violence

A ROUTINE Ibom Air flight from Uyo to Lagos on Sunday, August 10, 2025, turned chaotic after a passenger, Comfort Emmanson, allegedly refused to comply with crew instructions, leading to a violent confrontation and removal from the plane.

During the process, her cloth was torn, exposing her upper body, wig removed and she was visibly bruised. Video circulating showed her top naked as she was being dragged away from the cabin down to the ground by four people believed to be security personnel.

The airline said the passenger assaulted the purser — the lead flight attendant — as well as airport officials, and has therefore been permanently banned. The passenger was later charged and remanded. 

But subsequent social media footage, bystander posts and competing accounts leave gaps and contradictions in the public record. 

Refusal to switch off phone before take-off

According to videos seen by The ICIR, the trouble began before take-off in Uyo when the cabin crew asked Emmanson to turn off her mobile phone as required by aviation safety regulations.

The airline in a statement said she refused to comply, which prompted another passenger to turn off the phone. This reportedly angered Emmanson, who began verbally confronting those involved.

The statement added that the captain had to make annoucement to ensure compliance, the sitauation became calmed and they departed. 

However, post circulatiing on social media  purportedly from eyewitnesses alleged that the passenger had told the crew her phone was already in flight mode and accused staff of overreacting. 

Others, who said they had experienced the same issue with the airline in the past, suggested that the situation might have been escalated due to the crew’s tone and handling of the matter.

Screenshot of passenger Comfort Emmanson caught in drama with Ibom Air and Lagos Airport workers
Screenshot of passenger Comfort Emmanson caught in drama with Ibom Air and Lagos Airport workers

The confrontation

Upon arrival in Lagos, after other passengers had disembarked, a video showed Emmanson  approaching the purser — the lead cabin crew member who had earlier instructed her to turn off her phone. She asked to be allowed to leave, but the attendant blocked her path.

“Madam, abeg comot for road make I pass,” she said in Pidgin in a video seen by The ICIR.

According to the airline, Emmanson was restrained until security personnel arrived because she had stepped on the purser’s foot, forcibly removed her wig and glasses, flung the glasses to the floor, and struck the crew member several times with her shoe. A video seen by The ICIR shows Emmanson repeatedly asking the purser to let her pass before assaulting her when she refused.

Another clip shows Emmanson being dragged off the plane. She also struck another staff member who tried to intervene.

Several videos circulating online capture different parts of the altercation, both inside the cabin and later on the tarmac.

The pilot had already alerted airport security, and personnel from Ibom Air and the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) arrived at the scene. She was uncooperative.

Police officers who responded to the scene attempted to de-escalate the situation, but Emmanson remained uncooperative, at one point asking to call her lawyer and questioning if the police station had surveillance cameras.

Eyewitness videos showed a chaotic scene on the tarmac and near an airport bus, with Emmanson eventually being bundled into the vehicle before being taken to the nearest police station.

 Varying accounts and trends of unprofessionalism allegations

A screenshot of a social media comment, attributed to a user named Tunde A. Ibrahim, who identified himself as one of the passengers, claimed the crew blocked the Emmanson from disembarking after landing and pushed her back into her seat while waiting for airport security. The ICIR attempted to contact Ibrahim to verify this account, but his Facebook profile was locked and he had not responded to messages sent via Facebook Messenger as of press time.

Also, an Instagram user, under the name Churchgirlsgag, on Monday, shared a series of videos alleging unprofessional conduct by the same purser, during a November 20, 2024, trip from Nigeria to Accra, Ghana.

The user, claimed the purser also instructed passengers to switch off their phones in a “rude and disdainful” tone.

The situation reportedly escalated when the attendant told a man seated behind the passenger to “do it now” after he acknowledged her request to turn off his phone. The man objected to the manner in which she spoke to him, leading to a verbal exchange between them.

The passenger stated that the videos in circulation were originally posted on the day of the incident, adding that ‘injustice to one is injustice to all’ and that they decided to share their account now to provide context to viewers.

Similarly, a Facebook user, Stanley Kotey Pepple, recalled his experience with the airline on August 9, adding that the same hostess made derogatory comments after he had informed them of the possibility of something burning. 

He noted that “while boarding, I noticed something burning and asked a junior crew member. She replied it was from the microwave. Moments later, I overheard this same lady who was slapped (so called purser), asking the junior crew what I had said, before remarking – “All these over-sabi passengers, he won’t mind his business, I too sabi”

“I called that same Junior crew member to let her know I heard the comment of her purser.

“In my view, such remarks show rudeness, lack of training, and a poor attitude toward passengers. So when I later heard she had a bad encounter a day after and was dealt serious slaps, I couldn’t help but think and thank God for how swiftly her karma came.”

The ICIR reached out to Pepple to ascertain his claims, but he has yet to respond to our inquiry on facebook as of the time of filing this report.

NCAA asks witnesses to come forward

Meanwhile, the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA) has said that it is seeking testimonies from passengers who were onboard the Ibom Air Uyo-Lagos flight (IAN513) during a recent incident that escalated into a fracas between a traveler and airline staff.

In a statement on X, Michael Achimugu, NCAA’s Director of Public Affairs and Consumer Protection, called on any passenger with firsthand knowledge of the events to come forward.

“Any person who was a passenger on that Ibom Air Uyo-Lagos flight (IAN513) and witnessed the events that led to the fracas should, as a matter of urgency and fairness, reach out to me via DM or michael.achimugu@ncaa.gov.ng Once verified that you were actually a passenger on that flight, we can discuss and try to understand other perspectives to this issue,” he said.

He revealed that NCAA officers in Lagos would embark on a fact-finding mission, engaging the police and other security personnel who were part of the chain of events.

According to Achimugu, the incident serves as “a test for the system,” highlighting that even with strong regulations, human behaviour can be unpredictable. “When these events occur, we are able to see the gaps and pluck loopholes,” he said.

However, his post drew criticism from those who argued he could have reached the passengers using the flight manifest.

Airline ban and allegation of selective justice

Ibom Air condemned the assault and announced a ban on Emmanson from all its flights, citing its zero-tolerance policy toward violence against staff.

The Airline Operators of Nigeria (AON), the umbrella body for Nigerian airlines, also placed her on an indefinite no-fly list across all member carriers. Shared with domestic and some international airlines, the list effectively bars her from flying with any airline in the group.

The incident sparked heated debate online, with many Nigerians drawing comparisons to a similar episode involving Fuji musician Wasiu Ayinde, also known as K1 De Ultimate or KWAM 1. Just days earlier, he had allegedly attempted to physically prevent a plane from taking off and was reported to have assaulted the captain by pouring a “liquid” on her.

As of press time, Ayinde had not been detained or charged, a disparity that some critics argued underscored Nigeria’s two-tier justice system.

An X user, Comrade Phills reacted to the incident argued that the two cases highlighted what he described as Nigeria’s entrenched inequality before the law. Using Ayinde’s case as an example, he noted that the musician had blocked an aircraft from taking off, an act he said endangered hundreds of passengers and disrupted operations on the tarmac, yet was neither arrested nor detained. Instead, according to him, KWAM 1 was only banned from flying for six months after which he issued an apology days later.

By contrast, Phills said, Emmanson, the passenger at the centre of the Ibom Air fracas, faced immediate arrest and was allegedly remanded in prison shortly after the incident. 

He suggested that while both incidents were violations, the disparity in response reflected a system that was, in his words, “rigged against the ordinary citizens.” He maintained that in Nigeria, connections often determined how the law treated individuals, with the wealthy or influential enjoying leniency while ordinary citizens bore the full weight of the law.

Human rights activist, Aisha Yesufu also posted, “Adams Oshiomole was not remanded! King Wasiu Ayinde Marshal KWAM1 was not remanded! No Nigerian Is More Nigerian Than Any Nigerian! Selective justice is injustice. What is good for the goose is good for the gander!”

The 2023 Labour Party’s presidential candidate Peter Obi described the public stripping of Emmanson as “unnecessary” and “the height of rascality and abuse.”

Obi further questioned why Emmanson was swiftly prosecuted while the other offender ‘has neither been arrested nor arraigned.’

He urged the Minister of Aviation and relevant authorities to explain the disparity in how both cases were handled, stressing that justice must be “fair, equal, and not selective, especially against women.”

Social media user Balogun Saheed also pointed to the disparity in sanctions between the Ibom Air passenger and KWAM 1.

“Someone with a lesser degree of similar offence has been hurriedly remanded in prison. Double justice ruin a nation,” he wrote.

Kingsley, another X user, said “Under APC, one constitution has two interpretations. One for the rich and connected. One for the poor.”

Court arraignment and public reactions

Following her arrest, Emmanson was arraigned at an Ikeja Magistrate’s Court in Lagos on multiple counts, including unruly conduct on an aircraft, assault on two women — one identified as the flight purser, Juliana Edward  and willful damage to airline property and personal items. 

The charges also alleged she struck a second victim, Lokpame Sagun, with her slippers, damaged an aircraft divider valued at $2,500, and tore a wig worth ₦110,000.

According to the charge sheet, the alleged offences contravene sections of the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) Bye-Law 2005 and the Lagos State Criminal Law, carrying punishments ranging from fines to prison terms.

She was consequently remanded to the Kirikiri Correctional Centre after failing to meet bail conditions.

Human rights lawyer Chidi Odinkalu, questioned the legality of the committal warrant issued against her, calling it post-dated and therefore unlawful as the warrant warrant is dated October 11 instead of August 11, 2025. 

Meanwhile, the viral video showing her chest exposed during her removal from the aircraft drew widespread condemnation with some Nigerians urging her to sue the airline for the violation of her human right.

Minister of Aviation and Aerospace Development Festus Keyamo described the leak as “deplorable” and “totall unacceptable.”

He stressed that while evidence of unruly behaviour should be used for prosecution, the circulation of explicit footage was unacceptable. 

He added, “I have also directed that the airlines must continue to train and retrain their staff in public relations and how to deal with potentially explosive situations in order to diffuse them promptly or nip them in the bud, except when it becomes inevitable. I have also directed a joint security meeting between relevant agencies next week for better coordination of security measures in situations like this or similar ones we witnessed recently.”

Also, another human rights lawyer Festus Ogun questioned why Fuji musician Wasiu Ayinde Marshal (KWAM 1), accused last week of holding up a flight, was not similarly prosecuted.

“You can read the riot act to Comfort but the entire aviation industry is deaf and dumb when it got to the President’s kinsman,” Ogun said in another post.

Some lawyers also noted the speed with which the case has progressed, contrasting it with what they described as a slower response in cases involving politically connected individuals.

Ridwan Oke stated that “you will be amazed at how quickly the Justice system can move when the ordinary citizens are at the receiving end. The lady involved in the Ibom Air sage has been arraigned and remanded in prison custody.”

He recalled how EndSARS protesters were arraigned within hours. 

“During the EndSARS, they actually brought in a Magistrate and arraigned people on a Saturday evening within Panti. The saving grace was that I was well prepared on suit and tie. Can the Justice system work like this all the time and not just at random?

Bauchi Poly shuts down indefinitely after robbery attack sparked violent protest

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THE Federal Polytechnic Bauchi has been shut down indefinitely following a violent protest triggered by a robbery attack on the school’s male students’ hostel. 

The unrest began in the early hours of Tuesday, August 12, when armed robbers reportedly invaded the hostel, injuring several students and carting away valuables including laptops, mobile phones, and cash. 

Reports noted that the assailants, armed with weapons, attacked students who resisted them before fleeing the scene.

The robbery sparked outrage among students, who by morning took to the streets to protest what they described as a persistent lack of adequate security on campus.

The students protested on the Bauchi–Dass road. They reportedly mounted a blockade to prevent human and vehicular movements around the institution’s main entrance.

The protest, which was initially peaceful, escalated when suspected hoodlums, believed to be outsiders, joined the demonstrators, vandalising school property and further blocking highway near the institutions.

The management said efforts by the authority and staff to pacify the protesters were unsuccessful as the situation spiraled out of control.

Reports further indicated that police fired tear gas to disperse the crowd, which sparked retaliation from some students who hurled stones before they were eventually overpowered.

In a statement on Tuesday, the Registrar, Kasimu Salihu, announced the immediate and indefinite closure of the institution.

He ordered all students to vacate the campus within two hours. 

“Upon this sad development, students came out of the polytechnic main gate to express their justifiable frustration, calling on the management to act.

“While the management acted immediately, with all principal officers and management staff showing up to address the students and the situation, it has been established that hoodlums who do not mean well to the students and the institution had taken over what was meant to be a peaceful protest, “the registrar said.

“Against the background of this ugly situation, the management hereby orders the immediate closure of academic activities. By this order, students are given two hours within which to vacate the polytechnic campus, until further notice,” he added.

When The ICIR reached out to the Bauchi Police Command spokesperson, Mohammed Ahmed Wakil, he confirmed the incident, adding that he would release a press statement containing the full details.

Tinubu using EFCC as political tool to decimate opposition – Atiku

FORMER Vice President Atiku Abubakar has alleged that the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has become a political tool in the hands of President Bola Tinubu’s government for intimidating and decimating opposition parties.

Abubakar said this while reacting to the detention of former Sokoto State Governor and current senator, Aminu Waziri Tambuwal by the anti-graft agency.

The ICIR reported that the EFCC arrested Tambuwal over alleged fraudulent cash withdrawals totaling N189 billion.

The withdrawals were said to violate the Money Laundering (Prevention & Prohibition) Act, 2022.

Tambuwal reportedly arrived at the EFCC headquarters in Abuja around 11:30 a.m. on Monday, August 11, to be interrogated by investigators.

The EFCC spokesperson, Dele Oyewale, when contacted, refused to confirm his arrest. 

However, a top official of the anti-graft agency who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to speak told The ICIR that the former governor was in the commission’s custody for alleged N189 billion fraud.

Tambuwal, a member of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), served as governor from 2015 to 2023 and was previously the Speaker of the House of Representatives.

Recall that Tambuwal stepped down for Abubakar during PDP presidential primary in 2022, paving the way for the Adamawa-born politician to clinch the party’s ticket and defeating heavyweights, including the current Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Nyesom Wike.

On Monday, a major opposition party, the African Democratic Congress (ADC), in a statement signed by its National Publicity Secretary, Bolaji Abdullahi, alleged that EFCC was carrying out selective investigations targeting opposition politicians.

The party declared that recent EFCC summons to senior members of the opposition coalition were politically motivated and connected to their political affiliations.

According to ADC, some of the cases being pursued were not based on new findings but involved reopening files from past years.

Abubakar, while reacting to Tambuwal’s arrest on his X handle, claimed the move was part of a bigger agenda toharass, intimidate, and decimatemembers of the opposition coalition.

“The only reason the EFCC has detained the former Governor of Sokoto State, Senator Aminu Waziri Tambuwal, is because he is a member of the opposition coalition,” Abubakar said.

“It is a continuation of the Tinubu-led administration’s agenda to intimidate the opposition,” he added.

He further claimed that the EFCC had become a political tool to coerce opposition members into the ruling party, stressing that those who resisted were targeted with corruption allegations.”

“Today, anyone who associates with the opposition is a target for phantom corruption allegations. As soon as they are coerced into the political agenda of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, theirsinsare forgiven,he said.

He argued that such practices were eroding institutional integrity and creating fertile ground for corruption to flourish.

He called on civil society, Nigerians, and the international community to reject what he described as attempts to undermine democracy and promote a one-party state.

“We will never succumb to these tactics. The use of anti-corruption agencies as a political agenda must be roundly condemned.

“We have in recent times witnessed the use of anti-corruption agencies in coercing political leaders into the ruling party. Our assurance to Nigerians is that we would never succumb to these anti-democratic machinations of railroading our people into a one-party dictatorship,he stated.

Obi faults government handling of Ibom Air passenger, KWAM 1’s airport misconducts

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FORMER Anambra State Governor Peter Obi has faulted the handling of the recent incident involving an Ibom Air passenger, Comfort Emmanson, the airline’s crew member and security officials at the Murtala Mohammed International Airport, Lagos State.

Obi compared the handling of the case with that of a popular musician, Wasiu Ayinde, and accused the government of “double standard.” 

On Monday, August 11, The ICIR reported that Emmanson who allegedly assaulted Ibom Air’s crew on a flight from Uyo to Lagos, was arraigned and later remanded at the Kirikiri Correctional Facility.

However, days after a separate airport obstruction incident involving Wasiu Ayinde, also known as KWAM 1, no charges has been filed against him.

Ayinde, an influential musician widely believed to have strong links with the Nigerian government, has been walking freely on the street one week after he was seen in viral videos blocking a ValueJet aircraft from taxiing at the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja, because he was not allowed to board.

The musician was holding a flask suspected of containing alcohol. Consequently, he was requested to drop the flask for officials to check, but he declined.

Peeved by the boarding denial, Ayinde, also called KI De Ultimate, repeatedly attempted to stop the aircraft from taking off, and he was lucky to have escaped being severed by one of the flight’s wings when the pilot angrily left the tarmac with the aircraft without clearance.

KWAM 1 eventually apologised to Nigerians and the government following widespread condemnations of his conduct.

Despite calls by Nigerians that he must face the law for his action, he has yet to be arrested or dragged to court like Emmanson.

Meanwhile, while Nigerians also strongly condemned Emmanson’s conduct, it did not take the authorities 24 hours to charge her in court and remand her.

The ICIR reported that Emmanson was recorded attacking flight attendants and airport security officials at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Lagos State.

Hours after videos of her attacking the crew members filtered into the public space and eventually went viral, another video emerged showing how a flight attendant blocked her from disembarking while other passengers had exited the aircraft.

Reacting to the cases in a statement on Monday, August 11, via his official X handle, Obi, the presidential candidate of the Labour Party in the 2023 election, apologised to the Ibom Air crew allegedly assaulted by the passenger, stressing the need for Nigerians to uphold good conduct asa true measure of success and decent living.”

However, he condemned what he termed thedehumanising treatmentof Emmanson, who was stripped while forced out of the aircraft before her trial and detention hours later. 

Obi noted that while the lady had been kept in custody, KWAM 1 who “held a plane from taking off and put hundreds of lives at riskremained at large, with some government officials advocating for his pardon.

According to Obi, it is about the double standards that have poisoned Nigeria’s justice system.

He said justice in Nigeria must never be about who is poor or powerless versus who has influence or access to government officials.

“While Ms. Comfort Emmanson is in jail, the other offender who committed a more severe offence has not been held to the same standard. He has neither been arrested nor arraigned in any court.

“We must build a country where justice is fair, equal, and not selective, especially against women who are seen to be weaker. This young lady’s offence does not compare to the crimes committed daily by those parading themselves asexcellencies’ while looting public funds without consequence, and yet they have not been stripped or dehumanised in the name of justice,Obi stated.

He stressed that the incidents at the airport showed a broader pattern where the poor and less privileged are punished swiftly, while politically connected offenders evade accountability.

He maintained that the Minister of Aviation, Festus Keyamo, and other relevant authorities owed the public an explanation for the double standards in their adjudication.

“Justice must be just, or it is nothing at all. The rule of law based on justice for all must remain the guidepost of our democracy,he stressed.

Old video of Nigerian senator criticising IGP, AGF shared as recent

A video showing a Nigerian senator lambasting the Inspector-General of Police (IGP) and the Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF) is circulating on social media with claims that it is recent.

An X user, @TENBEGILOJU202, posted the footage with the caption:

 “INTERESTING DAYS AHEAD AS THEIR CENTRE CAN NO LONGER HOLD!!! The senators are extremely angry with the IGP and the attorney general for disrespecting and daring them. It is now the ‘Clash of Titans’ in Abuja. Retweet till it gets to the Jagabandits.”

The post, uploaded on August 10, 2025, has garnered over 15,000 views, more than 1,000 reposts and likes.

CLAIM

The video shows a recent incident where Nigerian senators expressed anger at the IGP and Attorney-General.

screenshot of the viral post

THE FINDINGS

Findings by The FactCheckHub show that the claim is MISLEADING.

A Google Lens search of a keyframe from the video identified the man as Isah Misau, who represented Bauchi Central Senatorial District from 2015 to 2019.

Further keyword searches show that the video was first published in  January 2018.At the time, Misau criticised then-Attorney-General Abubakar Malami over his role in the controversial recall of Abdulrasheed Maina, former Chairman of the Pension Reform Task Team, and for taking legal steps to block the Senate’s investigation.

“This attorney-general (Abubakar Malami) is becoming a nuisance, going to court to stop Maina’s and we are still here,” he said.

“The IG came here with a lawyer that he is not going to answer any questions from the senate and after that he went to institute an order in court restraining the senate from investigating him,” he said.

In the same session, Misau also questioned why Babachir Lawal, former Secretary to the Government of the Federation, had not been charged months after his indictment by a committee led by then Vice President Yemi Osinbajo.

The video has nothing to do with the current administration.

THE VERDICT

The claim that the video is recent is MISLEADING. The footage is from 2018 and shows a senator, Isah Misau criticising the then AGF Abubakar Malami over the Maina recall saga, not a current incident.

Republished from the FactCheckHub.

Relief as FG disburses N5.12bn pension arrears to over 90,000 retirees

THERE is a huge relief for pensioners as the Federal Government has disbursed ₦5.12 billion in pension arrears to 90,689 retirees under the defined benefit scheme (DBS).

The Pension Transitional Arrangement Directorate (PTAD) disclosed that it had finalised the disbursement of the funds to the pensioners across the four pension departments.

The Head of Corporate Communications Unit, PTAD, Olugbenga Ajayi, said in a statement on Monday, August 11, that the move was in line with the government’s commitment to clear outstanding pension liabilities.

“In keeping with its assurance to clear outstanding pension liabilities as funds are disbursed by the Federal Government, the Pension Transitional Arrangement Directorate (PTAD) has finalised the disbursement of ₦5,119,328,000 to 90,689 pensioners across the four pension departments, re-affirming its continued dedication and unwavering commitment to pensioners’ welfare,” PTAD said.

A breakdown in the statement showed that  8,626 pensioners in the Customs, Immigration, and Prisons Pension Department (CIPPD) received ₦276,032,000, while 9,681 pensioners under the Police Pension Department received ₦619,584,000.

PTAD also stated that while 12,773 retirees in the Civil Service Pension Department received ₦408,736,000, 59,609 retirees in the Parastatals Pension Department received ₦3,814,976,000

The agency stated that the payment re-affirmed the administration’s ongoing commitment to “ensuring that pensioners receive their due entitlements in line with the Renewed Hope Agenda of President Bola Tinubu”.

The announcement by PTAD came as retirees under the auspices of the Nigerian Union of Pensioners on Monday protested over their unpaid entitlements, allegedly running up to 35 months of pension arrears, and non-payment of ₦35,000 palliative.

The protesters were said to be retirees from various agencies, including the defunct Nigeria Telecommunications Limited (Nitel), Federal Radio Corporation of Nigeria (FRCN), and the Nigerian Railway Corporation (NRC).

On August 9, 2025, President Tinubu approved measures aimed at improving the welfare of pensioners under the Defined Benefit Scheme (DBS).

An earlier statement issued by PTAD’s spokesperson, Olugbenga Ajayi, which confirmed the approval, stated that the development marked a significant milestone in Nigeria’s pension reform efforts.

Ajayi further noted that PTAD had previously settled arrears related to the first pension increment of 20 per cent to 28 per cent, which came into effect in January 2024.

The agency said the approvals, which aligned with Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda, contained the immediate implementation of an extra budgetary allocation to enforce new pension rates for DBS pensioners.

The president also endorsed the adoption of a proposed pension harmonisation policy, which will be incorporated into the 2026 pension budget, while health insurance coverage for all DBS pensioners was approved, ensuring access to essential healthcare services, the agency said.

The president’s directive included unpaid liabilities owed to NITEL/MTEL pensioners and other retirees from defunct parastatals in the 2026 budget proposal.

The approvals followed a formal request submitted by Odunaiya, who had urged the Presidency to authorise emergency budgetary allocations to implement critical pension reforms.

The proposed reforms include a new pension rate of N32,000 and incremental increases of 10.66 per cent and 12.95 per cent for pensioners from defunct and privatised agencies.

The ICIR reported in February that the government has approved a N758 billion pension bond to settle all outstanding liabilities under the contributory pension scheme.

Bond issuance is a way a company or a nation raises money as a loan repayable on agreed interest terms to sort out some budgetary or financial burden.

The government also said the bond would be released within three months to fully settle all outstanding pension liabilities under the contributory pension scheme (CPS).

 

EFCC arrests ex-Sokoto governor Tambuwal over alleged N189bn fraud

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THE Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has arrested a former Sokoto State governor, Aminu Tambuwal, over alleged fraudulent cash withdrawals totalling N189 billion.

The withdrawals are said to violate the Money Laundering (Prevention & Prohibition) Act, 2022.

According to reports, Tambuwal reportedly arrived at the EFCC headquarters in Abuja around 11:30 a.m. on Monday, August 11, to be interrogated by EFCC investigators.

A source told Punch Newspaper that Tambuwal is facing questions over suspicious dealings during his tenure, involving alleged unauthorised withdrawals of public funds.

The source added that the investigation has been ongoing for months.

EFCC spokesperson Dele Oyewale, when contacted, refused to confirm  Tambuwal’s arrest. However, a top official of the anti-graft agency who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not permitted to speak told The ICIR that the former governor is in their custody for alleged N189bn fraud.

Tambuwal, a member of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), served as governor from 2015 to 2023 and was previously Speaker of the House of Representatives.

On Monday, a major opposition party, the African Democratic Congress (ADC), in a statement signed by its National Publicity Secretary, Bolaji Abdullahi, alleged that EFCC was carrying out selective investigations targeting opposition politicians.

The party declared that recent EFCC summons to senior members of the opposition coalition were politically motivated and connected to their political affiliations.

According to ADC, some of the cases being pursued are not based on new proof but involve reopening files from past years.

Recall that on July 5, as part of its strategies to dislodge the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) in the 2027 elections, leading opposition figures, including former Vice President Atiku Abubakar, Labour Party presidential candidate in the 2023 poll Peter Obi, former Rivers State governor Rotimi Amaechi, and Nasir El-Rufai, launched a coalition in Abuja on March 20.

After months of speculation over which platform the coalition would pursue its agenda, the ADC now appears as a key opposition party that will challenge President Bola Tinubu’s APC in the 2027 elections.

El-Rufai confirmed the decision in a post on his X handle.

Many people believe that Tambuwal, even though still a PDP member, is a key part of the coalition.

UPDATED: Court remands ‘unruly’ Ibom Air passenger in Kirikiri as KWAM 1 walks freely one week after

COMFORT Emmanson, the passenger who allegedly assaulted airline officials on an Ibom Air flight from Uyo to Lagos, has been arraigned and remanded at the Kirikiri Correctional Facility.

However, days after a separate airport obstruction incident involving Fuji musician, Wasiu Ayinde, no charges have been filed against him.

Ayinde, an influential musician widely believed to have strong links with the Nigerian government, has been walking freely on the street one week after he was seen in viral videos blocking a ValueJet aircraft from taxiing at the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja because he was not allowed to board.

The musician was holding a flask suspected to contain alcohol. Consequently, he was requested to drop the flask for officials to check but he declined.

Peeved by the boarding denial, Ayinde, also called KI De Ultimate and KWAM 1, severally attempted to stop the aircraft from taking off, and he was lucky to have escaped being severed by one of the flight’s wings when the pilot angrily left the tarmac with the aircraft without clearance.

KWAM 1 said in a statement by his media aide hours after the news filtered into the public that the airport authorities apologised to him and flew him to his destination in a private jet.

Reacting to the musician’s behaviour, the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA) and the Minister of Aviation and Aerospace Development, Festus Keyamo, blacklisted him from boarding any aircraft for six months.

The minister described his action, and that of the pilot an act of insanity.

Keyamo specifically vowed that any aircraft that flies the musician within six months would be sanctioned. This was besides the probe he ordered into the matter.

Recall that the NCAA had shortly after the incident withdrawn the pilot and the co-pilot’s licences.

KWAM 1 eventually apologised to Nigerians and the government following widespread condemnations his conduct attracted.

Despite calls by Nigerians that he must face the law for his action, he has yet to be arrested or dragged to court like Comfort Emmanson.

Meanwhile, while Nigerians also strongly condemned Emmanson’s conduct, it did not take the authorities 24 hours to charge her in court and remanded her.

While the government vowed to investigate the musician’s conduct at the airport, no information is yet in the public domain about what action the government has taken against him.

In a post on X on Monday, April 11, Tunde Moshood, Special Adviser on Media and Communications to the Minister of Aviation and Aerospace Development, confirmed that Emmanson had been charged and taken to court.

His statement came shortly after the Nigeria Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA) warned that enforcement action against unruly conduct at airports would become more frequent.

“The more reason the flying public should be more careful the unruly passenger on Uyo, Lagos bound Ibom Air, Miss Comfort Emmanson, has been charged to court and she’s now cooling off in Kirikiri,” Moshood wrote.

The ICIR reported that Emmanson was recorded attacking flight attendants and airport security officials at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Lagos State.

Ibom Air explained that the incident began before take-off in Uyo when Emmanson refused to comply with safety protocols requiring her to switch off her mobile phone. A fellow passenger eventually switched off the device, sparking a verbal tirade, the airline said.

Upon arrival in Lagos, the airline said Emmanson confronted the purser who had earlier instructed her to switch off her phone and physically assaulted her. The airline described her behaviour as a serious threat to the safety of crew, passengers, and the aircraft.

Ibom Air has since imposed a permanent travel ban on Emmanson, prohibiting her from flying on any of its aircraft in the future.

Sabrina exits Big Brother Naija Season 10 on medical issues

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ONE of the housemates in the Big Brother Naija (BBN) 10, Sabrina has exited the House on medical grounds.

According to a statement from MultiChoice, the organiser of the reality show, prior to her exit, Sabrina consulted Big Brother and the on-site medical team, where it was decided that she had to leave the house for a more thorough medical investigation.

The organisers and the show producers said they were committed to ensuring the safety and well-being of all housemates in the Big Brother house at all times.

The ICIR reports that BBNaija has caught the attention of most Nigerian youths for years.

Two weeks into the show, the Big Brother Naija Season 10 house is already boiling over with suspense, romance, and high-stakes dramas.

Last week, all 29 housemates were told they faced possible eviction. This sparked frantic alliances, late-night heart-to-hearts, and even bolder romantic moves.

But in a dramatic reveal during Sunday’s live show, host Ebuka Obi-Uchendu confirmed it had all been a ruse. There were no votes, no evictions, just Biggie “in his menace era.”

He also revealed that the ₦80 million grand prize wasn’t guaranteed. Starting at ₦10 million, the pot will grow by ₦7.5 million each week, but only if housemates succeed in their weekly tasks. Failure could see the prize shrink.

Social media erupted, with fans praising the twist while others said it only cranked up the pressure.

The Head of House (HoH) games took the centre stage last week when Thelma Lawson made history as the first female HoH of the season, winning immunity.

The HoH lounge and the power to select a guest, a decision that raised eyebrows after a suggestive moment with Isabella.

Her reign, however, was short-lived. Less than 24 hours later, Victory Okokon dethroned her in the Monday Challenger round, beating both Thelma and Ivatar in a contest of speed and precision. Victory chose Joanna as his deputy, a surprise move given his visible chemistry with Gigi Jasmine – a move that left Gigi in tears.

In a shocking diary session, Zita confessed to stirring drama, from rubbing toothpaste on Kayikunmi’s bed to scattering clothes, proudly calling herself a ‘chameleon’. Viewers were split between admiration for her honesty and criticism of her antics.

Eviction on Sunday night brought the season’s first real eviction, with Danboskid exiting the house.

His departure drew mixed reactions online, while some viewers were stunned, and others felt his gameplay made it inevitable.

The next big shock came with the eviction of housemate Ibifubara, making her the second to leave after Danboskid’s earlier exit.

The drama unfolded after a tense search for an envelope containing an immunity card left 27 housemates vulnerable. Despite their best efforts to secure safety, Ibifubara’s journey ended abruptly, sending ripples of anxiety through the house.

Head of House Victory, immune from eviction this week, used his veto power to save Kayikunmi, a move that has already sparked conversations about potential alliances and strategies brewing beneath the surface.

With N150 million up for grabs and Biggie’s unpredictable twists in play, Week Three promises even more rivalries, romance, and surprises. In BBNaija Season 10, no crown or connection is safe.

Ivorians protest Quattara’s 4th term bid, exclusion of opposition leaders from poll

THOUSANDS of people in Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire’s capital, have taken to the streets to protest the exclusion of opposition leaders from the forthcoming presidential election.

The protesters converged in Yopougon, a densely populated suburb of Abidjan, carrying banners with inscriptions namely, “Enough is enough!”, “No true democracy without true justice,” and “We are millions saying YES to Gbagbo and Thiam.” 

The ICIR reports that the protest stemmed from the decision of the Independent Electoral Commission to bar four key opposition figures, including former President Laurent Gbagbo and former Credit Suisse CEO, Tidjane Thiam, from contesting in the October 25 presidential race.

Thiam, who leads the Democratic Party of Côte d’Ivoire, secured his party’s nomination in an uncontested primary, and is widely regarded as the leading challenger to President Alassane Ouattara.

He was controversially removed from the voter roll in April after a court declared him ineligible to run due to his dual Ivorian-French nationality. 

Gbagbo and his close ally, Charles Blé Goudé, were removed in relation to charges of crimes against humanity linked to the country’s civil war.

“My elimination from the electoral list by the Independent Electoral Commission [CEI] is a sad but eloquent example of Ivory Coast’s drift towards a total absence of democracy,” Tidjane Thiam, leader of the main opposition Democratic Party of Ivory Coast (PDCI), said in a statement.

Earlier this year, Gbagbo and Thiam formed an alliance to challenge incumbent President Alassane Ouattara.

Eighty-three-year-old Ouattara, who has led the country since 2011, is included on the electoral register and he announced in July that he would seek a fourth term. 

Ouattara defended his decision to run, citing unprecedented security, economic, and monetary challenges facing Côte d’Ivoire that he said required experienced leadership to address effectively.

Ouattara’s candidacy faced opposition after he amended the constitution in 2016 to abolish presidential term limits.

He won the 2015 and 2020 elections with more than 80 percent of the vote. During the October 2020 presidential election, Ouattara revised the electoral roll.

The final voters’ register for this year’s election contains 8.7 million people who will decide the country’s next leader.

The ICIR reports that elections in Côte d’Ivoire have often been marked by tension and violence. When Ouattara declared his bid for a third term, election-related unrest left several people dead.

Ouattara joins a growing list of West African leaders who have extended their stay in power by amending constitutional term limits.

In the region, poor democratic leadership had led to coups, with putschists citing corruption public office holders and need for electoral reforms as justification for seizing power.

This has deepened divisions within the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) of which Cote D’Ivoire is a member.