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The Renewed Dystopia of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu (II)

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By Chidi Anselm Odinkalu

When he was inaugurated as Nigeria’s elected president on 29 May 2015, Muhammadu Buhari identified three priority issues for his immediate attention. In the order in which he itemised them, these were: insecurity, persistent corruption and energy. President Buhari asserted that he would tackle these “head on” and, switching mental gears into his role as the leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC), promised that “Nigerians will not regret that they have entrusted national responsibility to us.” He got that wrong but let’s not get ahead of the story.

A mere 200 kilometres away, on the same day, at a similar event in Kaduna, at his inauguration as the elected governor of Kaduna State, one of Buhari’s acolytes in the same party, Nasir el-Rufai, identified insecurity as “an obstacle to progress” and promised to “work with law enforcement officials to drastically reduce violent crime” and  “insure safety of life and limb.”

By the time both men left office eight years later – one as president and the other as state governor – they had each and together managed to achieve the exact opposite. What occurred was more than mere abdication on insecurity; it felt like active conspiracy in perpetrating and perpetuating it.

Few communities felt the consequences of this like the Adara. The Adara are found in Munya and Paikoro Local Government Areas (LGAs) of Niger State as well as in Kachia (Kaduna South Senatorial Zone). In Kaduna Central, the Adara are in Chikun and Kajuru LGAs. The experience of the Adara across these state boundaries advertise the failures of government on insecurity, especially since 2015.

As Nigeria prepared for general elections in 2019, Nasir el-Rufai, as governor of Kaduna State, decided to abolish the Adara Chiefdom and turn it into an Emirate. The Districts and Villages Restructuring (Amendment) Order ostensibly executed by the governor on the third anniversary of his inauguration in May 2019 – with no notice to the affected populations – abolished the stool of the Adara, occupied at the time by the Agwam Adara, Dr. Raphael Maiwada Galadima. In its place, Governor el-Rufai proposed to create a Kachia Chiefdom and a Kajuru Emirate respectively. The order was not gazetted until three months later in August 2018.

Rumours of this development unsettled coexistence among ethnically diverse communities in the Adara Chiefdom. Upon learning about it, the Agwam Adara was reported to have “resisted the change due to the fact that the Adara Chiefdom is dominated by an indigenous Christian population and therefore could not be described as an emirate or appointed an Emir.”

Around 18 October 2019, murderous violence broke out in Kasuwan Magani within the Chiefdom. Over 55 persons were reportedly killed. The state governor visited the following day ostensibly to assess the situation and provide reassurance to a febrile community. The Agwam Adara was also present at the assessment by the governor, accompanied by his wife. Later in the evening, on his way back to his palace from the events of the day along the Kaduna-Kachia Road, some “armed men intercepted the convoy of the traditional ruler and opened fire, forcing them to stop.” This happened in Maikyali village.

The attackers murdered four persons, including close-protection assets from the Nigerian Police Force attached to the Agwam Adara. They then abducted the traditional ruler with his wife. One week later, the abductors killed the Agwam Adara and “his corpse was moved to Katari, about 85 kilometres between Abuja and Kaduna, before the kidnappers contacted the family of the late chief, informing them where to pick the corpse.” The state governor was absent from his funeral.

The affected communities were not natural strongholds of the governor or his party. In what was projected to be a close contest for the control of the state, marginal shifts in voting or turnout were likely to be dispositive. What looked like a design to create maximum violence in time for the elections of 2019 became a self-fulling prophecy. As the country prepared to head to the polls, Adara-land in Kaduna Central Senatorial Zone descended into an orgy of mass atrocities.

The first reported attacks were in Anguwan Barde in the Maro Ward around 10 February 2019, resulting in the reported killing of 11 persons. The attack on Karamai village about one week later reportedly killed over 40, with many more wounded. A contemporaneous incident in ⁠Banono village in Anguwan Aku reportedly killed at least another 26.

Around the same time, Nasir el-Rufai as governor claimed publicly that “66 Fulanis” had been massacred in Kajuru. Both the Police and the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) were unable to confirm this and independent fact checkers accused the governor of peddling “misleading narratives”.

One month after the first attack, Unguwan Barde would witness another attack around 11 March 2019, which killed a reported 33 persons. Around the same day, a separate incident in Dogon Noma killed over 72 persons.

In one month, between February and March 2019, the Adara Development Association, (ADA), reported over 148 community members killed or massacred with at least 545 houses destroyed in multiple incidents. The Fulani community put the casualty count among their own community at 131. In what looked like a statistical duel in human tragedy, the government was actively complicit.

In the period from the first reported attack on Anguwan Barde in February 2019 to the second week of April 2026, over 300 documented attacks or atrocity incidents occurred in the Adara communities of Kachia and Kajuru LGAs of Kaduna State, resulting in hundreds of human casualties and billions in destruction. Over 50 villages and settlements have been emptied into internal displacement.

Rather than find the perpetrators and bring them to book, the response of the government was to round up the leadership of the Adara community and lock them away in indefinite pre-trial detention for 112 days. As the Federal High Court would later find, they were consistently refused bail and were only released after the Director of Public Prosecutions found no grounds for their detention or prosecution.

The truth was to manifest five years later after the Adara leaders through the secretary-general of the ADA, Awemi Dio Maisamari, sued for civil remedies in 2024. In defence of the claim, government claimed that “the Adara Chiefdom and surrounding areas had become centres of violent crimes such as terrorism, banditry, kidnapping, armed robbery and murder, resulting in severe breakdown of law and order.” It further asserted that the scale of these atrocities “required immediate and extraordinary measures to restore peace and security.”

However, the government did not accuse the Adara leadership of having committed any of these crimes. Instead, it said, their mere existence was “prejudicial to peace” and a “significant threat to the stability of Kaduna State as a whole.”

When she eventually decided the case in May 2025, Hauwau Buhari, a judge of the Federal high Court, found as a fact that the arrest and detention of the Adara leaders was “not the result of an impartial, independent police investigation based on credible evidence of a crime, but rather stemmed from a politically motivated complaint.”

On Easter Sunday 2026, brave holdouts among the Adara in Ariko village in Kachia LGA went to church. While there, they were attacked in two different houses of worship by assailants who killed at least five and abducted over 38. Rather than deploy to rescue the victims, the government put out a false claim that they had been rescued. This reprised a similar script from January 2026 when the authorities similarly denied a deadly attack on Kurmin Wali community in which over 177 were abducted.

This past week, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has publicly claimed that in taking over from President Muhammadu Buhari in 2023, he essentially succeeded himself. It was a proud assertion of both policy and political continuity. In saying so, he asserted clear ownership of more than one decade of complicity by Nigeria’s ruling party in the use of atrocity violence for political purposes. That is not the renewed hope he promised. For the Adara people, it has been dystopia on a vampire scale.

A lawyer and a teacher, Odinkalu can be reached at chidi.odinkalu@tufts.edu

 

 

Iran to close Hormuz again, one day after reopening

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COMMERCIAL shipping sources have reported renewed Iranian military restrictions and fresh insecurity in the Strait of Hormuz, just a day after indications that limited shipping movement had resumed.

Shipping industry sources revealed this on Saturday, April 18, noting that vessels transiting the corridor received direct radio messages from Iran’s navy declaring the Strait closed again to commercial traffic. While no ships were officially blocked, maritime operators described the situation as highly unstable.

According to Reuters three maritime security and shipping sources said that at least two merchant vessels were also reportedly struck by gunfire while attempting to cross the waterway, marking a sharp escalation in risk for one of the world’s most critical energy corridors, through which roughly one-fifth of global oil and liquefied natural gas flows.

The latest disruption comes only hours after maritime tracking data showed a convoy of eight tankers entering the Strait, the first significant movement since the outbreak of the US-Israeli conflict with Iran seven weeks ago. 

That brief easing followed Iran’s earlier announcement that the Strait had been reopened under a temporary ceasefire arrangement linked to broader regional diplomacy.

However, the situation reversed on Saturday after Iranian authorities said they were reinstating strict military control over the waterway, citing continued US naval actions and what Tehran described as violations of a blockade on Iranian ports.

Iran’s armed forces reportedly justified the move as a response to what it called “piracy under the guise of enforcement,” arguing that an earlier agreement allowing limited passage of commercial vessels had been undermined.

A message attributed to Iran’s Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei, posted on a Telegram channel, said the navy was prepared to inflict “new bitter defeats” on its adversaries, signalling continued hardline positioning despite diplomatic efforts.

The developments contrast with remarks earlier from Donald Trump, who hinted at “pretty good news” regarding Iran but warned that fighting could resume if no agreement is reached before a ceasefire deadline next week.

The renewed uncertainty follows a fragile sequence of diplomatic shifts, just a day earlier, Iran had signalled that the Strait would remain open under a 10-day US-brokered ceasefire tied to de-escalation efforts involving Israel and Lebanon. 

The United States government has not yet issued a formal response to Saturday’s developments.

Offa robbery politically motivated trial, says ex-Kwara Governor

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Former Kwara State Governor, Abdulfatah Ahmed, has rejected a reported 20-count charge allegedly filed against him and others over the 2018 Offa robbery, describing the move as a politically driven attempt to persecute opposition figures.

In a statement on Saturday, April 18, Ahmed said the charges reportedly initiated under the administration of AbdulRahman AbdulRazaq are “false, baseless, and a desperate attempt to weaponise the instruments of the state.”

“My attention has been drawn to the so-called 20-count charge reportedly filed by the administration of AbdulRahman AbdulRazaq against my person, alongside that of Bukola Saraki and others, over the tragic 2018 Offa robbery. Let me state clearly and unequivocally: these allegations are false, baseless, and a desperate attempt to weaponise the instruments of the state for political persecution.

“Let me state clearly and unequivocally: these allegations are false, baseless, and a desperate attempt to weaponise the instruments of the state for political persecution,” Ahmed said.

Ahmed’s statement followed the 20-count charge suit the Kwara State Government filed against the former senate president Bukola Saraki and Abdulfatah Ahmed over allegations that they were armed suspects convicted in connection with the Offa robbery.

In charges  filed on April 9, 2026, at the Kwara State High Court in Ilorin, also listed as defendants Yusuf Abdulwahab, a former Chief of Staff to Ahmed, and Alabi Olalekan, another aide.

The former governor, who was named alongside former Senate President Saraki, insisted he has no connection, “direct or indirect,” to the deadly robbery attack that shook Offa in 2018 and left dozens dead.

“The Offa robbery remains one of the most painful chapters in the history of our dear state. Like every well-meaning Kwaran, I mourned the victims and stood firmly for justice. It is therefore both shocking and deeply troubling that years after thorough investigations and judicial processes at the federal level, this administration has chosen to resurrect a matter already settled for purely political ends,” he explained.

Ahmed argued that the Offa robbery case had already undergone extensive investigation and judicial review at the federal level, making the current charges suspicious.

“Let it also be known that during my tenure, I upheld the rule of law and never interfered with security agencies or judicial processes. I have nothing to hide and absolutely no link, direct or indirect, to any criminal activity, including the unfortunate Offa incident. The attempt to rely on recycled testimonies and discredited claims only reinforces what this trial truly represents; a political script, not a pursuit of justice.

“I have full confidence in the judiciary and trust that the courts will not allow themselves to be used as tools for political manipulation. Truth remains constant, and no amount of propaganda can overturn it,” he added.

He accused the Kwara State Government of pursuing a political agenda ahead of the 2027 elections, alleging that the case is intended to silence perceived opponents and shift public attention away from governance challenges.

“This latest move by the Kwara State Government is not about justice. It is about vendetta. It is about silencing perceived political opponents and rewriting narratives ahead of 2027. It is about distracting the good people of Kwara from the pressing issues of governance, including economic hardship, rising insecurity, and the visible decline in infrastructure and public services across the state.

“There are serious security situations with over 400 deaths, over 200 in captivity , all left with reckless abandonment. The best we could do in this circumstance is a political mockery…no Kwarans deserve more. With no new evidences, case has gone to the highest court where the hopes of the common lies. Yet rather than accept incapacity, the gov has chosen a path of mockery for the innocent and peace loving people of Offa. Time for Kwarans to recalibrate and avoid the kind of mistake that brought characters like this to lead us,” Ahmed said.

Ahmed decried what he termed a “mockery of the dead,” arguing that revisiting the case without new evidence undermines justice for victims of the Offa robbery, as he urged residents of Kwara State to remain calm and law-abiding, warning against what he described as attempts to create division and distraction.

“To the good people of Kwara State, I urge you to remain calm, law-abiding, and focused. Do not be distracted by this calculated attempt to divide us or derail our collective aspirations for a better Kwara. History will judge all actions, and justice, true justice, will prevail. Kwarans should not allow this kind of judicial rascality and political weaponization of sad events to create diversionary attention. This is a clear mockery of the dead.

Background

The April 2018 Offa robbery was one of Nigeria’s most notorious armed attacks in recent years, involving coordinated assaults on  five commercial banks and security personnel, and resulting in multiple fatalities of at least 33  killed 33 persons, including a pregnant woman and 12 police officers.

The robbers attacked First Bank, Guaranty Trust Bank, Ecobank, Zenith, Union Bank and Ibolo Micro-Finance Bank, all in Offa.

The case drew national attention and led to a series of arrests, prosecutions, and political controversy as two of the suspects involved in the armed robbery were arrested by the police in May.

In June, the police invited Ahmed and Saraki over the bank robberies and to report to the Force Intelligence Response Team Office at Guzape, Abuja to answer to the allegations reportedly levelled against them by five alleged gang leaders involved in the robberies.

However, both Saraki and Ahmed denied association with the armed robbers. In September 2024, a high court in Kwara found the five defendants guilty of illegal possession of firearms, armed robbery, and culpable homicide. In January, the court of appeal upheld the conviction and sentence of the five convicts.

Ahmed’s latest remarks are likely to further intensify debate over the case, especially as political activities gradually build toward the 2027 general elections.

Saraki governed Kwara between 2003 and 2011. He served as the senate president from 2015 to 2019, and Ahmed became Kwara governor after the tenure of Saraki in 2011 and served till 2019.

NBC reads riot act to broadcasters over bias, bullying ahead 2027

THE National Broadcasting Commission (NBC) has issued a formal notice to all broadcasters and stakeholders following what it describes as a sustained increase in breaches of the 6th edition of the Nigeria Broadcasting Code.

In a statement issued on Friday, April 17, via its Facebook page, the commission expressed concern over news, current affairs, and political programmes that depart from the core obligations of accuracy, balance, and professionalism.

As Nigeria begins its move toward the 2027 general elections, the Commission noted it will enforce strict and uncompromised compliance with every provision of the Code. Particular focus is being placed on regulations relating to fairness, accuracy, hate speech, incitement, and respect for constitutional bodies, the regulatory body says.

The statement addresses a disturbing departure from ethical standards by programme presenters and anchors. Citing Section 1.10.3 of the code, the commission reminded stations that the broadcaster shall ensure its presenter does not express his or her opinion in the programme as a matter of professional standard.

“Specific areas where presenters are currently failing to meet these standards include expressing personal opinions as facts, bullying or intimidating guests, and denying a fair hearing to opposing views or otherwise compromising neutrality,” the statement says.    The regulatory body warned that such conduct now carries a specific classification for sanctions:

“Any anchor found to have expressed personal opinion as fact, bullied or intimidated a guest, or denied fair hearing to opposing views would be deemed to have committed a Class B breach.”

The NBC emphasised that editorial responsibility remains the sole burden of the broadcaster and cannot be transferred to guests, even during live unscripted broadcasts.

The commission highlighted the misuse of broadcast platforms by political actors to disseminate inflammatory content and information capable of undermining national unity.

“Inflammatory, divisive, or unsubstantiated broadcasts will attract regulatory sanctions,” the NBC noted, stressing that compliance with the broadcast code is mandatory, not discretionary.

The commission further observed that instead of fulfilling their obligation to inform the public accurately, some platforms are being used to amplify social tensions and propagate misinformation.

Consequently, the NBC urged media houses to ensure that their airwaves remain platforms for credible information and national cohesion rather than tools for disorder.

Congo‑Brazzaville election: boycotts, blackouts, growing dissent but Denis Sassou Nguesso returns for fifth consecutive term

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By Ngodi Etanislas, Université Marien Ngouabi

The 2026 presidential election in Congo-Brazzaville (the Republic of the Congo) returned Denis Sassou Nguesso for a fifth consecutive term, with a definitive 94.90 per cent of the vote.

We asked Ngodi Etanislas, a political scientist who focuses on the central African country, to sum up what happened and why it matters, now that the dust has settled.


What political factors shaped the result?

Denis Sassou Nguesso’s huge victory is not the result of an open electoral race. It is, rather, the culmination of a political system built on decades of power consolidation since the end of the 1997 civil war. It was a “Soviet-style” outcome (overwhelming and predetermined) that can be explained by a few key political factors.

First, there is the political longevity of Nguesso, in power since 1979 (with an interruption from 1992 to 1997). This four-decade dominance gives him total control over the country’s political, institutional, and security apparatus. It makes political change not only difficult but structurally unlikely.

Furthermore, the rigged electoral process – especially through control of the state apparatus and election management bodies – contributed to this victory.

Electoral campaigning was also deeply unequal. Nguesso’s campaign looked like a “national tour”. It was built on a show of strength designed to project the image of a leader close to the people.

Did a divided opposition influence the result?

The fragmentation of the political opposition was arguably the most decisive factor behind the landslide. The opposition entered the election divided. They could not agree on a single candidate, which significantly reduced the chances of a democratic transition.

The election was marked by the absence of certain figures in Congolese politics. Some remain imprisoned (Jean-Marie Michel Mokoko and André Okombi Salissa). Others chose to boycott the poll, believing the conditions for a free and transparent election were not met. This stripped the contest of any real stakes. It helped secure a first-round victory for Nguesso. In 2016, he won 60.4 per cent of the vote against a strong opposition.

For many observers, the six candidates in the race were largely unknown or lacked any real political base. Some appeared to be using the election to gain some visibility, or better yet, political legitimacy ahead of future contests. They were no match for Nguesso. They lacked the financial resources to campaign nationwide and build local support to defend their platforms.

Finally, the digital blackout – including a countrywide shutdown of phone networks and internet on election day – added another layer of opacity of the process. It created an unprecedented information blackout.

This reduced the opposition’s ability to organise collectively and deploy its delegates. It also aimed to limit the spread, on social media, of rumours about ballot stuffing, vote buying, and other politically sensitive content. The president was clearly worried about low turnout figures leaking out.

What was the mood among voters?

Voting was marked by deep disaffection, fuelled by the opposition’s boycott and a sense among many young people that voting was pointless. It also took place in a climate of fear perpetuated by the repressive environment. This included operations carried out early in the year by the General Directorate of Presidential Security, as well as intimidation and crackdowns targeting activists and political opponents.

The issue of voter turnout lies at the heart of the controversy surrounding this election.

Two scenarios can be considered.

The first is turnout orchestrated by the government through political and patronage networks. The goal is to boost participation in order to legitimise the electoral process and bolster the credibility of the results.

The second scenario involves a boycott of the election encouraged by the opposition, aimed at achieving low turnout, which could spark challenges over the election’s legitimacy.

Reports highlight a clear gap between official figures and field observations, suggesting a more complex picture of voter turnout than is apparent. The official turnout rate reportedly jumped by nearly 17 per cent – from about 67.57 per cent in 2016, when there were more opposition figures, to 84.65 per cent in 2026, despite a widespread boycott. Yet polling stations across 6,620 booths in 4,011 centres appeared largely empty.

What challenges lie ahead?

To escape political and social stagnation, several democratic reforms are urgent:

  • Restoring electoral credibility and the independence of institutions is one of the most sensitive issues. The election exposed serious shortcomings in electoral governance – lack of transparency, inclusiveness and fairness.
  • The reliability of voter rolls, the impartiality of the Independent National Electoral Commission and unequal access to the media pose ongoing problems. All this happened without effective independent oversight. Without sweeping reforms of the electoral system, abstention and disengagement will continue to grow, particularly among young people.
  • Building a pluralistic political space and a viable opposition is essential for reshaping the Congolese political landscape. Releasing political prisoners and guaranteeing an effective right to opposition would be essential prerequisites for any national reconciliation.
  • Protecting fundamental freedoms and civic space. Human rights violations have been on the rise and there is no political dialogue between the government, the opposition, and civil society.
  • Succession and transition. The questions of what comes after Nguessou, whether power remains within the presidential majority, or ensuring continuity for a new term in 2031. This may include scenarios of dynastic succession within the presidential family.
  • Turning oil wealth into human development. Nearly half the population lives below the poverty line. The challenge is to convert oil revenues into public services (health, education) and opportunities for young people.
  • Reconnecting citizen participation, particularly young people, to politics. Young Congolese and civil society need to be brought back into the political process. Citizen participation remains crucial to the legitimacy of the electoral process.

What implications could the election have on political stability?

Stability rests on fragile foundations. A large part of the population sees the government as lacking legitimacy. Distrust in the electoral system runs deep.

Youth frustration is a particularly worrying indicator.
A 2024 survey indicates that young people have little confidence in the political system. Many feel that voting is pointless. Chronic unemployment and lack of economic prospects deepen their frustrations.

The internal struggle within the ruling party over who comes after Sassou Nguessou could become the main source of instability. The risk grows if no clear widely accepted successor emerges. Internal divisions seen during the party’s congress in 2025 show how central succession is. They also show ongoing shifts in power and elite positioning.

The March 2026 presidential election did not resolve any key issues.The Conversation

Ngodi Etanislas, enseignant-chercheur, Université Marien Ngouabi

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

NSCDC bust baby factory in Lagos, rescue 10 children, 18 pregnant women

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OPERATIVES of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC), Lagos State Command, have uncovered an illegal baby factory in the Okuju area of Ilado, Badagry, Lagos.

The State Commandant, Adedotun Keshinro, disclosed this on Friday while victims aged between 18 and 30 were presented at the NSCDC office in Ibereko, Badagry. He noted that during an operation conducted from Wednesday night into the early hours of Thursday, officers rescued 18 pregnant women and 10 children, as two suspected operators of the facility, Joy Okeke and Raphael Agwu, were also arrested.

“Operatives swooped on the big flat containing many rooms that house the victims following actionable intelligence that lasted three weeks. Some of the pregnant women had come to the centre with children and infants for sale to willing buyers,” Keshinro said.

The victims were reportedly lured to the facility through an offer advertised on Facebook.

After giving birth, the women’s babies were sold, with the mothers receiving payments ranging from N500,000 to N1.8 million.

“The suspects entice the victims who are pregnant to come and negotiate with them that when they deliver the babies, they  will be taken from them and they’ll be paid off. The babies will then be taken from them to be sold to their customers, and the victims will be paid off.

“There are 18 victims who are fully pregnant, but one of them had a miscarriage. So, 17 of them are currently carrying pregnancies. There are other babies there who are grown, and they are also here on negotiation to be sold to interested buyers,” Keshinro added.

Describing the situation as a “grievous crime against humanity,” the NSCDC Commandant said the suspects would be handed over to the police for prosecution, while the victims would be transferred to the National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons for care and rehabilitation.

Items recovered from the facility included a pumping machine, generator, standing fans, gas cylinders, a burner, cooking pots, mobile phones, mats, toiletries, baby skincare products, tableware, and assorted food items.

“We will hand over the place to the state government. The state government may decide to demolish the place so that they will not be able to continue to use it for that activity,” he said.

Okeke, the alleged operator of the facility, said she relocated to the Badagry site from Ikorodu in January in search of a larger apartment.

She claimed her role was to help secure children for individuals who were unable to have any.

“We are adopting children to give to those who don’t have children. I have been doing this for some months. I moved here from Ikorodu in search of a bigger apartment. We were in Ikorodu before. We are two operating this place,” she said.

She refused to disclose how much the children were sold for or how they were brought to the facility, stating, “I can speak further when my lawyer is present. I don’t want to say anything more. If you are interrogating me, my lawyer should be present.”

Some of the victims said they were drawn to the centre after negotiating online with the operator, agreeing to hand over their babies after delivery in exchange for payment.

One of the women said she was to receive N1 million under the arrangement, while another claimed she had been promised N1.8 million.

Another victim identified as Joy said she chose the facility after becoming pregnant by what she described as an “irresponsible man,” noting that she has two children who were being cared for by her mum in the village.

The women said they were provided with regular meals, allowed to use their phones, and could request medical care when needed, but were not free to leave the facility at will.

One of them added that while they were permitted to leave before giving birth, doing so meant forfeiting any payment.

According to Raphael Agwu, who was arrested alongside the facility’s operator, the women arrived already pregnant and entered into agreements to deliver their babies, after which the children would be sold and the mothers paid.

Agwu claimed the centre provided an alternative for women considering terminating their pregnancies and also assisted couples who were unable to have children.

“There are agents on an online group who propose that instead of aborting it, you can come to us, and we will take care of you. And when you deliver the child, we’ll take the baby for ourselves. There are groups for adoption, abortion and unwanted pregnancies on Facebook. They are open groups. These people post that they want to give up their child for adoption, and negotiation begins.

“They were already pregnant on their own and decided to give birth for adoption. So, in order for us to be safe, because of that agreement, they gave their consent and everything,” he said.

Agwu, who described himself as a housekeeper, said the women were drawn to the facility by the promise of compensation of at least N1 million after giving birth and handing over their babies. 

“They came on their own. Some of them were referred to us by agents. Most of them came with their children. All those children you saw are people who came with their kids. Some childless couples come to us seeking to adopt children. I didn’t see it as a big crime because my thinking is they are helping some childless couples,” he said.

Video does NOT show renewed hope billboard inside INEC office

A VIRAL video circulating on social media claims that a “Renewed Hope” billboard associated with President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s campaign is located inside an office of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) in Rivers State.

The poster expressed concern that INEC, a body expected to remain neutral and unbiased, was hosting partisan campaign materials.

A verified x user, @AsakyGRN made the post on April 16, 2026. The audio in the video says:

“Inside INEC and you’re seeing renewed hope. This is INEC in River State with motors packed inside. ADC and PDP own no dey, only Tinubu own dey. What is this telling you?”

As of April 16, the post has garnered over 100,000 views, 3,000 likes and 2,000 reposts with comments doubting the integrity of INEC ahead of the presidential election.

CLAIM

video shows a “Renewed Hope” billboard inside an INEC office in Rivers State.

Screenshot of the viral post on X.
Screenshot of the viral post on X.

FINDINGS

Findings by The FactCheckHub show that the claim is FALSE.

The building featured in the video is not an INEC office. Instead, it is the Renewed Hope Ambassadors Secretariat located at 246 Aba Road, Port Harcourt.

Analysis by The FactCheckHub of public records and media archives confirms that this building was donated by the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Nyesom Wike, to serve as a campaign secretariat for President Tinubu’s renewed hope movement.

Channels Television documented the official commissioning of the secretariat in Port Harcourt by Wike on Friday, January 30, 2026. Months before this claim surfaced.

VERDICT

The claim that a renewed hope billboard is inside an INEC office is FALSE. The building shown in the video is the Renewed Hope Ambassadors Secretariat in Port Harcourt, which was donated by Nyesom Wike for campaign purposes and inaugurated on January 30, 2026.

This report is republished from the FactCheckHub. You can read the original here.

Video does NOT show federal lawmaker assaulted over defection in Zamfara

A video circulating on social media claims to show a federal lawmaker in Zamfara State being assaulted by a mob after defecting from the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to the All Progressives Congress (APC).

The 56-second clip shows a crowd physically attacking a man, with some dragging and beating him.

An X account, @ADCVanguard_, shared the video with the caption:

“BREAKING: This is what happens after a PDP federal Lawmaker has recently defected to the APC and declared his total support for the reelection of President Tinubu in Zamfara, when he visits his Constituency…”

As of the time of review, the post had generated over 53,000 views and more than 1,400 engagements.

CLAIM

The video shows a federal lawmaker being assaulted in Zamfara after defecting from PDP to APC.

THE FINDINGS

Findings by The FactCheckHub show that the claim is FALSE.

The claim surfaced amid ongoing political realignments and defections ahead of the 2027 elections, a period often marked by heightened tensions and misinformation online.

A reverse image search conducted on keyframes from the video shows that the footage is not recent. It was first shared online on December 17, 2025.

Reports from that period confirm that the incident involved Kabiru Mikailu, a member of the Zamfara State House of Assembly representing Maru South Constituency, not a federal lawmaker as claimed.

The incident occurred in Dansadau, Maru Local Government Area, where Mikailu was attacked by residents during a visit to his constituency. He was reportedly slapped, dragged, and manhandled before security operatives intervened.

Residents accused the lawmaker of poor performance, alleging that he had neglected the constituency, failed to engage with constituents, and delivered no visible development projects.

Further checks show that Mikailu remains a member of the PDP and was not among the lawmakers who defected from the party.

VERDICT

The claim that a federal lawmaker was assaulted in Zamfara for defecting from PDP to APC is FALSE. The video shows a December 2025 incident involving a state lawmaker who was attacked by constituents over alleged poor performance, not defection.

This report is republished from The FactCheckHub. You can read the original here

NMDPRA assures of aviation fuel sufficiency, counters domestic airlines’ price claim

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THE Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA) has countered the aviation airline price hike claim.

It affirmed that there is sufficient aviation fuel supply in the country, amid concerns over rising prices.

The regulatory authority’s position came on the heels of domestic airlines’ threat to suspend operations from April 20 over the rising cost of Jet A1, also known as aviation fuel.

The Airline Operators of Nigeria (AON) on April 15, had said the price of Jet A1 increased from N900 per litre as of February 28 to N3,300 per litre — representing a rise of over 300 per cent.

However, the Director of the Public Affairs Department at NMDPRA, George Ene-Ita, in a statement on Friday, April 17, said Nigeria had 74 days’ sufficiency of aviation fuel, comprising inland and refinery stocks.

“The NMDPRA wishes to assure the public that there is a robust supply of aviation fuel in the country with the inland stock sufficiency of 12 days, and the refinery stock sufficiency of 62 days — making a total of 74 days of national sufficiency.

“It is imperative to note that, like other petroleum products, aviation fuel has been fully deregulated, and the price is driven by market dynamics,” the oil industry regulator said.

According to NMDPRA, the ex-gantry price at the Dangote Petroleum Refinery and Petrochemical Company stood at N1,879 per litre as of April 16, slightly below the international indicative price of N1,900 per litre.

The regulator added that its nationwide survey showed retail prices ranged between N1,960 and N2,800 per litre.

“Therefore, the speculated N3,300 per litre price of aviation fuel being peddled in the media does not reflect current market reality,” the agency said.

NMDPRA said it would continue to monitor supply and pricing to prevent disruptions and profiteering across the country.

The authority also reaffirmed its commitment to ensuring energy security, while commending stakeholders in the aviation fuel supply chain for maintaining steady distribution of the product.

 

No, Tems and Justin Bieber were not hospitalised after Coachella 2026

A VIRAL post circulating on social media claims that Temilade Openiyi, known professionally as Tems and American pop star Justin Bieber were rushed to the hospital following an accident after their performance at Coachella, a music festival in California.

The post alleges the accident was caused by excess intake of alcohol and over speeding by Bieber and claims both artists remain hospitalised.

A verified x user, @worldwide176481 made the post on April 13, 2026, with the caption:

JUST IN: The popular Nigerian singer, TEMS and American singer JUSTIN BIEBER were allegedly rushed and admitted to the hospital after their show in California, United States. 

According to witnesses, the accident was caused by an excessive intake of alcohol and over speeding by Justin Bieber. According to sources, both are still in hospital and will be discharged soon.”

As of April 15, the post has garnered over 110, 000 views, 700 likes and 60 reposts.

CLAIM

Tems and Justin Bieber were hospitalised in California following a car accident after their Coachella 2026 performance.

screenshot of the viral post on x

FINDINGS

Findings by The FactCheckHub show that the claim is FALSE.

There are no reports from any credible local or international media outlets regarding a car accident or the hospitalisation of either artist in April 2026. Typically, an incident involving high-profile global stars like Tems and Justin Bieber would receive immediate and widespread news coverage.

A reverse image search conducted by The FactCheckHub reveals that the video first surfaced online four years ago under the handle @Carhoots on Pinterest.

Furthermore, evidence from the artists’ official social media platforms contradicts the claim. Tems and Justin Bieber have remained active on their Instagram pages following their Coachella performance, sharing updates and interacting with fans, which would be unlikely if they were currently hospitalised for a serious accident.

Coachella is one of the world’s most famous annual music and arts festivals, held in California to showcase talent across various genres. In 2026, Justin Bieber invited Tems and Wizkid to perform their chart-topping song “Essence”.

VERDICT

The claim that Tems and Justin Bieber were hospitalised after an accident in California is FALSE. The video in circulation is old, and no credible news sources have reported such an event. The artists remain active on social media as of the time of filing this report.

This report is republished from the FactCHeckHub. You can read the original here.