Home Blog Page 57

Kwankwaso to join ADC on Monday – Kwankwasiyya

0

THE Kwankwasiyya Movement has directed its members nationwide to register with the African Democratic Congress following plans by its leader, Rabiu Kwankwaso, to join the party.

In a statement on Saturday by its spokesperson, Habibu Mohammed, the group said Kwankwaso had concluded arrangements to align with a coalition seeking to unseat President Bola Tinubu.

“The Kwankwasiyya Movement wishes to formally inform all its members across Nigeria and the general public that our Supreme Leader, Senator Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso, has concluded all necessary arrangements to join the African Democratic Congress (ADC),” the statement read.

The movement said the former Kano State governor would formally register with the party on Monday in Kano.

“In furtherance of this decision, he will officially register with the party on Monday, 30th March 2026, at his residence, Gidan Kwankwasiyya, Miller Road, Kano, by 12pm.

“Consequently, all members of the Kwankwasiyya Movement are hereby directed to proceed and register with the African Democratic Congress (ADC) in their respective wards, local government areas, and states immediately thereafter. Members are also encouraged to fully engage in all party activities and contribute actively toward the growth, development, and success of the party at all levels.”

The group described the move as being in the interest of its members and the country.

“This strategic decision, as always, has been taken in the best interest of the movement, our state, and the nation at large. It reflects our unwavering commitment to the advancement of democratic values, good governance, and the collective aspirations of the people.

“We emphasise that democracy must be protected, and the will of the people must always be respected. The Kwankwasiyya Movement remains resolute, united, and committed to building a better and more inclusive Nigeria.”

Kwankwaso’s planned defection is unfolding amid growing political realignments ahead of the 2027 general elections, with opposition leaders exploring a common platform to challenge the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC)

Reports indicate that the former Kano State governor has held consultations with key figures across party lines as part of efforts to build a broader coalition.

The move is also coming against the backdrop of shifting loyalties within Kano politics, particularly following the defection of Governor Abba Kabir Yusuf from the New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP) to the APC earlier in 2026.

Yusuf, a close ally and political protégé of Rabiu Kwankwaso, had risen to power on the back of the Kwankwasiyya structure, making the divergence in their political paths a significant development in the state’s political landscape.

Tension mounts around Kuje Prison as soldiers surround facility, nearby communities

0

THE Kuje Custodial Centre, popularly known as Kuje Prison, and its surrounding communities in Abuja, Nigeria’s capital, are currently gripped by fear, The ICIR reports.

This follows a heavy deployment of security personnel and restrictions on movement in parts of the area.

Scores of soldiers and other security officers from the Nigeria Police Force (NPF) and Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) have taken over the area since the evening of Friday, March 27.  However, the Nigerian Correctional Service (NCoS) has insisted that the Kuje Custodial Centre remains safe, adding that the presence of soldiers around the facility is not unusual.

Although the exact reason for the heavy security presence could not be confirmed, the correctional centre was previously attacked in 2022, leading to its fortification and remodeling by the Federal Government.

During that incident, the Nigerian Correctional Service reported that 879 inmates escaped, while five people, including an officer of the NSCDC and four inmates, lost their lives. The attackers, suspected to be members of Boko Haram, reportedly freed 64 of their members held at the facility.

Since the 2022 attack on the facility in Kuje, alongside several others across the nation under the late President Muhammadu Buhari administration, military has been deployed to protect correctional centres in the country.

Unusual military presence in Kuje Prison since Friday, March 27, 2026

On Saturday morning, heavily armed soldiers, accompanied by sniffer dogs, were seen combing the Shetuko community located behind the facility. The soldiers and other security operatives formed strategic perimeters across parts of the community and conducted searches in several uncompleted buildings.

On Friday night, military personnel armed with whips and weapons were observed preventing motorists from parking along the Pasali/Shedadi Junction opposite the Prison Road.

By Saturday morning, both motorcycles and vehicle were not allowed to drive through the Prison Road which leads to Shetuko community and surrounding areas around the correctional centre.

Shetuko residents have since been going through the Freedom Estate, a burden that adds about two kilometres to their journey if they are heading to the centre of Kuje, or going out of the town. Soldiers in trucks, were seen around the junction.

Some residents who spoke with The ICIR said commercial motorcyclists had doubled their fares in response to the situation. Others, who previously opted to walk due to rising petrol prices and increased transport costs, said the new restrictions had made movement significantly more difficult.

The ICIR contacted the spokesperson for the NCoS, Jane Osuji, over the development. She said soldiers had been protecting the facility and their presence was normal.

“Security agencies, if you have been covering them, you don’t expect them to give you information about their operations. It is for your protection. It’s not everything that’s supposed to be out there, for the benefit of the people. Because of the current insecurity around the country, we just need to trust and believe that they have our interest at heart. They are working for us; it is for our benefit.

“Kuje Custodial Centre is safe. There is nothing that is unusual about soldiers being in and around the custodial centre. They have been there with us. As far as I am concerned, as I am speaking with you, there is no emergency or security concerns other than the fact that the custodial centre has to be protected as required.”

Transatlantic slave trade is the gravest crime against humanity – why the UN declaration matters

0

By Kwasi Konadu, Colgate University

THE resolution passed by United Nations General Assembly on 25 March 2026 seeking recognition of the transatlantic slave trade as the “gravest crime against humanity” potentially creates a broader definition of crimes against humanity in international law and allows for restitution claims against perpetrators. The resolution could elevate the legal and moral standard for what counts as the worst crimes against humanity, and compel more people to legally pursue reparations or compensation cases and thus deter such crimes.

Proposed by Ghana, it was adopted with 123 votes. The United States, Israel and Argentina voted against it. Fifty-two countries abstained, among them the UK and European states.

There has never been a single “gravest crime” designation applied to one human event or condition. Instead, international law defines categories of crimes considered the most serious. Examples are genocide, war crimes, crimes of aggression, and crimes against humanity. Being classified under these categories triggers severe legal consequences. These include global prosecution, lifelong accountability, international sanctions, and reparation claims.

Ghana’s declaration views transatlantic slavery and its system of forced African labour as the worst crime ever committed. It explains how millions of Africans were abducted, treated like property, and abused because of their race.

The declaration points out that the effects of slavery still influence inequality and racism today. It calls on all nations to recognise what happened, teach its history honestly, and remember the victims. It also works towards fixing the lasting damage, including institutional and monetary reparations.

I am a professor of history who has researched and written extensively on the slave trade and its impact. I argue that Ghana’s resolution represents more than a moral or diplomatic statement. It marks a decisive step in an ongoing effort of historical reclamation and political transformation. It asserts that the histories of enslavement, displacement and organised theft are foundational to the modern world.

More importantly, it insists that recognition must lead to action. For contemporary Africa, this moment is about leveraging historical truth to reshape present conditions and future possibilities within a global system still marked by the legacies of transatlantic slaving.

Slavery shaped the modern world

Transatlantic slaving was not an isolated historical episode but a foundational process that made the modern world. Between the 15th and 19th centuries, over 12 million Africans were forcibly removed from their homelands. It was a massive, organised system of theft that left African societies dealing with long-term demographic, political and economic disruptions.

During the 1800s slavery changed form. It became tied to European imperialism. Powerful nations such as Britain and France took over land in Africa and other regions. The countries that had been major slave traders became the leading imperial powers in Africa. For example, French forces in the late 1800s still captured people and forced them into service. Laws in French west Africa didn’t truly end slavery. They simply allowed colonial governments to take over land.

The colonising countries often claimed they were bringing “civilisation”. Similarly, European colonisers in central Africa – especially under Belgian rule in the Congo Free State (1885-1908) – caused massive suffering and death. Around 10 million people died over about 40 years.

The creation of diaspora communities

Over the course of transatlantic slaving, Africans participated, resisted, adapted, and preserved cultural and intellectual systems that would later shape diaspora communities and their bonds with Africa. Those bonds included shared historical experiences, cultural practices, religious systems, political ideas and intellectual traditions that travelled and transformed across the ocean.

Recent calls for reparatory justice emerge from this long-standing network of connections.

Ghana’s resolution comes out of a convergence of continental and diaspora political efforts. African states and Caribbean nations have increasingly coordinated their positions on historical injustice and reparations.

Ghana’s resolution was built on earlier declarations:

The Ghana declaration sets a precedent. It seeks to redefine the moral language of the international order. Elevating it as the gravest crime underscores slavery’s scale and duration. Its systemic nature establishes it as the fundamental architect of global capitalism, racial hierarchies and modern state formation.

Why it matters

The Ghana declaration recognises the centrality of transatlantic slavery and compels a reassessment of how modern inequalities are explained and addressed.

For contemporary Africa, this recognition carries material implications. The aftermath of transatlantic slaving are evident in patterns of underdevelopment, external dependency and unequal integration into global markets. A formal recognition at the highest level of international governance strengthens the basis for claims to reparatory justice.

Such claims may take multiple forms. These may include investment in infrastructure, education and health systems. There could also be reforms to global financial institutions that boost mobilising resources within African borders.

Equally significant is the resolution’s role in consolidating pan-African and diasporic solidarity. By aligning African states with Caribbean nations and broader diaspora communities, it reactivates a political consciousness rooted in shared histories and strategic alignments.

A unified transatlantic African bloc possesses greater leverage within – and outside – international institutions and can more effectively advocate for systemic transformation.

The Ghana resolution also functions as a global educational intervention. Public understanding of transatlantic slaving often remains fragmented or minimised. This is true particularly in regions where some groups or historical individuals benefited from it.

By placing this issue before the United Nations General Assembly, Ghana compels a broader confrontation with the scale and consequences of transatlantic slaving. This is essential for historical accuracy as well as for shaping near future policies and coordinated actions.

Resistance lies ahead

The resolution will face resistance. Some nations such as the United States and Great Britain remain wary of the legal and financial implications of a “gravest crime” recognition. The subject of reparations for them is contentious and untenable. These tensions reveal enduring asymmetries in global power and the difficulty of translating moral or historical claims into enforceable outcomes.

Yet resistance itself underscores the resolution’s significance. It exposes the extent to which historical injustices remain embedded in contemporary political and economic power arrangements.The Conversation

Kwasi Konadu, Professor in Africana & Latin American Studies, Colgate University

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

El-Rufai’s release for mother’s burial sparks legal debate

0

FORMER Kaduna State governor, Nasir El-Rufai, was released from detention by the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) on Friday following the death of his mother, Hajiya Umma El-Rufai.

The late matriarch reportedly passed away in Cairo, Egypt, after a brief illness.

The former governor was released on administrative bail to allow him to bury his mother.

However, the ICPC’s decision has been questioned by prominent Nigerians, including lawyer Inibehe Effiong and senior journalist Richard Akinola.

In a post on Facebook, Effiong queried: “A person who’s remanded by an order of a court cannot be released legally without recourse to the court. ICPC Nigeria, can you clarify the procedure adopted in this case? El-Rufai’s motion for bail is slated for Tuesday, March 31, 2026.

“How was his release processed? Is this another government magic that the legendary Fela sang about?”

Similarly, while sympathising with El-Rufai for losing his mum, Akinola wrote, “Mallam Nasir El-Rufai, unfortunately lost his mother yesterday while on court remand in ICPC custody.

“El-Rufai’s bail application has not yet been heard. The court ordered that he be remanded in the ICPC custody pending the hearing of his bail application next week. So, under which order did the ICPC release him for his mum’s burial? I don’t get it.

“It would have been a different thing if he had not been charged to court, hence, ICPC could have released him on compassionate grounds, even though he was being illegally held. But since the court is seized of the matter, the agency cannot whimsically release him.”
An impeccable source at the ICPC, who pleaded anonymity for the “sensitivity of the matter” told The ICIR Saturday morning that the embattled governor “was granted temporary leave to go and bury his mother on compassionate ground.”
When asked if the court granted the leave, the source declined to comment further but said, “it’s the burial of a mother we are talking about.”

The ICIR reported that the ICPC arraigned El-Rufai, and one Joel Adoga before the Federal High Court in Kaduna over alleged money laundering and corruption-related offences earlier this week.

The 10-count charge, marked FHC/KD/73/2026, was filed on behalf of the Federal Republic of Nigeria at the Kaduna Judicial Division.

According to the charge sheet dated March 18, 2026, the ICPC accused El-Rufai of unlawfully taking possession of N289.8 million as severance allowance on two occasions in September 2020 and January 2023, bringing the total to about N579 million, far above the legally entitled sum of about N20 million.

Among others, the commission alleged that the former governor reasonably ought to have known that the funds formed part of the proceeds of unlawful acts, including corruption, thereby violating provisions of the Money Laundering (Prevention and Prohibition) Act, 2022.

El-Rufai’s arrest, detention, mounting allegations

El-Rufai’s arrest followed an earlier invitation by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), where he reportedly presented himself on February 16 over alleged financial improprieties during his tenure between 2015 and 2023.

In 2024, the Kaduna State House of Assembly indicted him over the alleged diversion of N423 billion in public funds and recommended investigation by anti-corruption agencies.

El-Rufai, who was initially granted bail after spending two nights in EFCC custody, was subsequently re-arrested by security operatives. A Federal High Court in Abuja later declined to entertain his bail application, ruling that it was premature until he is formally arraigned.

Some Nigerians, including his allies in the African Democratic Congress (ADC), namely former vice president Atiku Abubakar and former Anambra State governor Peter Obi had urged the EFCC to charge him in court after describing his arrest and detention as politically motivated.

Tinubu, others mourn former governor’s mother’s passing

In a statement by his Special Adviser on Information and Strategy, Bayo Onanuga, President Bola Tinubu condoled with the family.

He said, “I commiserate with Mallam Nasir El-Rufai on the passing of his beloved mother,” adding that “the loss of a mother is a deeply painful experience.

“As someone who has also lost a mother, I share your grief and understand the depth of your loss.”

The National Security Adviser, Nuhu Ribadu, Kaduna State Governor Uba Sani are among other influential Nigerians who have commiserated with the embattled governor.

“I have fond memories of shared moments with her and her motherly care. At a time like this, words can offer little comfort for such a profound loss.

“My heartfelt condolences to Mallam Nasir El-Rufai and the entire family. May Almighty Allah forgive her shortcomings, grant her eternal rest in Aljannah Firdaus, and give the family the strength to bear this loss,” he wrote on his Facebook page.

 

 

APC convention: Tinubu admits electricity woes, rejects one-party state claims

1

PRESIDENT Bola Tinubu has said his administration is tackling Nigeria’s persistent electricity crisis while dismissing claims that his party – the All Progressives Congress (APC) – is pushing the country towards a one-party state.

Speaking on Friday at the fourth Elective National Convention of the APC in Abuja, Tinubu acknowledged ongoing problems in the power sector, including debts and outdated infrastructure.

“We continue to face legacy issues such as electricity supply, debts to GENCOs and gas suppliers, and antiquated transmission infrastructure,” he said.

The president disclosed that the government had unveiled plans to improve electricity supply through structural reforms.

“Recently, we announced plans to address this by establishing the Grid Asset Management Company, which will inject approximately 1,600 megawatts into a new grid corridor,” Tinubu stated.

On concerns about Nigeria drifting into a one-party system, the president said the APC did not support such an arrangement, stressing the importance of opposition in a democracy.

“Let me reiterate, especially to those who often lament and misunderstand us: we do not seek a one-party state,” he said.

Tinubu’s claim came amid the fact that 32 of Nigeria’s 36 governors are his party members.

He added that democratic growth depends on active political competition and constructive criticism.

“Democracy thrives on vibrant and healthy competition. As a statesman and political leader, I believe in a credible opposition—one that can challenge, question and help refine policies. That is how statecraft improves, and good governance is achieved. That is how nations advance,” he said.

The president, however, criticised opposition parties over their stance on the Electoral Act 2026, describing their attacks as unhelpful.

“While we welcome criticism, the constant attacks by opposition groups on the Electoral Act 2026 are a disservice to the Nigerian people,” Tinubu said.

He maintained that the law followed due processes, including public hearings, and reflects efforts to strengthen Nigeria’s electoral system.

Tinubu said his administration remained committed to upholding the rule of law, ensuring credible elections, and building a “stronger, secure, and united nation.”

The ICIR reported that Tinubu had staked his re-election bid on constant electricity supply. The president is currently overwhelmed with myriad problems in the electricity sector, with electorates calling him out on the failed promise.

The president had said during the presidential campaign in 2023, “If I do not provide steady electricity in my first four years, do not vote for me in the second term…”

His promise has put him on the spot and has elicited reactions from Nigerians, including opposition party stalwarts especially as Nigerians continue to suffer erratic power supply.

Similarly, political developments in recent months have triggered debates over the strength of opposition parties, following defections of some opposition heavyweights, especially governors into the ruling APC.

The trend has raised concerns among critics about the possibility of weakening opposition voices, a key element in a functioning democracy.

Kano deputy governor resigns

KANO State Deputy Governor, Aminu Gwarzo, has resigned.

His resignation followed ongoing impeachment proceedings initiated against him by the state House of Assembly.

His resignation was announced on Friday, March 27, in a statement issued by the spokesperson of the Kwankwasiyya Movement,  Habibu Mohammed.

“The Kwankwasiyya Movement wishes to formally inform the general public, the good people of Kano State, and the entire nation that the Deputy Governor of Kano State has tendered his resignation from office,” the statement said.

The ICIR reports that the development came weeks after the state House of Assembly began moves to impeach him, while a Federal High Court sitting in Kano declined his request to halt the process.

The Kwankwasiyya Movement said Gwarzo’s decision to step down was taken in the interest of stability and to allow governance in the state to function without disruption.

It added that prevailing circumstances had limited his ability to fully carry out the responsibilities of his office.

However, the statement stressed that the resignation did not amount to an admission of the allegations levelled against him, maintaining that he remained confident of his records in public service.

“For the avoidance of doubt, this resignation does not in any way constitute an admission of the allegations raised against him by the Kano State House of Assembly. The deputy governor maintains his innocence and firmly believes that his records in office and public service remain a testament to his integrity and commitment to the people,” the movement added.

According to the group, Gwarzo has also resolved to dedicate more time and energy to the Kwankwasiyya Movement, particularly in strengthening its structures, rebuilding strategies, and engaging in critical political realignments ahead of the 2027 general elections.

The impeachment process against Gwarzo was initiated earlier in March after he was accused of gross misconduct, abuse of office, and breach of public trust.

Lawmakers accused him of diverting funds during his tenure as Commissioner for Local Government, alleging that he received monthly payments from the state’s 44 local government councils between 2023 and 2024, amounting to hundreds of millions of naira.

Additional claims included the alleged collection of further funds under the guise of special assignments, as well as authorising payments running into hundreds of millions of naira to a pharmaceutical company, actions the assembly said violated procurement and fiscal regulations.

The impeachment notice, reportedly backed by a significant number of lawmakers, met the constitutional threshold required to commence the process.

The crisis followed heightened tensions in the state after Governor Abba Yusuf’s defection from the New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP), largely controlled by Kwankwasiyya’s leaders, to the All Progressives Congress (APC). The move, The ICIR reported, triggered divisions within the state’s leadership.

Wike allocates land, waives title fees for FCT traditional rulers

0

THE Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Nyesom Wike, has approved land allocation to members of the FCT Council of Traditional Rulers.

He also granted a waiver on all statutory fees tied to the titles.

Speaking at a ceremony in Abuja on Friday, Wike said the decision followed directives from President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, stressing the need to recognise and honour indigenous communities in the nation’s capital.

“We cannot deny the fact that there are indigenous people who were here before the creation of the FCT. The President said we must extend a hand of fellowship to you. We must give honour to whom honour is due. If those who make peace cannot be appreciated with land, who should be?” Wike said.

He said it would be unjust to require traditional rulers to pay for land their communities have occupied for generations.

“The president has also said I should waive the payment of statutory fees. We cannot give you the task to go and look for money to pay,” the minister said.

He also pledged to provide utility vehicles to traditional rulers across the territory to enhance their effectiveness in community leadership, as part of efforts to support their functions.

He further highlighted ongoing infrastructure development in satellite towns, including the dualisation of the Airport–Kuje road, the Bwari–Zuba link road, and projects in Apo/Karshi and Gwagwalada, as well as the completion of the Arab Road network.

The FCTA under Wike has been tough with people who have allegedly breached laws relating to land use in the nation’s capital.

The ICIR reported that the FCTA recently released the names of 1,095 individuals and organisations whose properties’ titles were revoked over their failure to settle statutory land charges.

The FCTA said in a notice that enforcement actions would begin after the 14-day final grace period ended on November 25.

Most of the affected properties listed in the properties were mostly in highbrow neighborhoods such as Asokoro, Maitama, Garki, and Wuse area of the nation’s capital.

According to the administration, of the revoked titles, 835 properties defaulted on ground rent payments while 260 failed to pay violation and land use conversion fees.

Among those affected were former governor of Kano, Abdullahi Ganduje; former governor of Cross River, Donald Duke; wife of former President Goodluck Jonathan, Patience Jonathan; former Senate President, David Mark; and former deputy governor of Osun State, Iyiola Omisore.

The ICIR also reported in February that Wike approved the nullification of 485 land documents in the nation’s capital due to failed verification. 

He said the affected land titles had been removed from the regularisation database, after an extensive review conducted by the Department of Land Administration in collaboration with the Abuja Geographic Information Systems.

The cancelled documents cover various area councils and layouts, including Ushafa Village Expansion Scheme, Ushafa Extension, and Dawaki Extension 1 in Bwari Area Council; Kurudu-Jikwoyi Relocation, Kurudu Commercial, Karu Village Extension, Nyanya Phase IV Extension, Jikwoyi Residential, Sabon Lugbe, and Lugbe I Extension in Abuja Municipal Area Council; and Kuchiyako One layout in Kuje Area Council.

Less than 33% of students meet WAEC benchmark

THE West African Examinations Council (WAEC) has released the 2026 Computer-Based WASSCE First Series for Private Candidates, showing that just 32.72 per cent of candidates secured the minimum requirement of five credits, including English Language and Mathematics.

WAEC private candidates are individuals who register independently to take the WASSCE, commonly known as the General Certificate Examination (GCE) or WAEC designed for those who are not enrolled in regular secondary schools or who wish to retake the WASSCE.

The examination was conducted between October 25 and December 20, 2024. It introduced a new computer-based hybrid mode alongside the traditional paper and pen option.

WAEC announced a new initiative in January 2025, allowing students to resit their WASSCE papers quickly instead of waiting for nearly a year to resit for the examination.

Announcing the result, the council said out of 10,480 candidates who sat for the examination conducted between January 28 and February 14 nationwide, only 3,429 met the benchmark, highlighting persistent performance gaps despite marginal improvement.

“The performance improvement is the result of better preparation by candidates and our continued efforts to enhance the conduct of examinations. We remain committed to promoting academic excellence and maintaining the integrity of our processes,” WAEC said.

A breakdown of candidates who did well in the examination shows 1,847 males and 1,582 females, representing 53.86 per cent and 46.14 per cent, respectively.

Although WAEC described the outcome as encouraging, the data reflects a system still grappling with low success rates. It noted that the result marked a 5.76 percentage point increase from 26.96 per cent recorded in 2025, suggesting incremental progress rather than a significant turnaround.

WAEC attributed the improvement to better candidate preparation and reforms in examination conduct, reiterating its commitment to maintaining credibility and academic standards across the region.

“Our goal is to ensure that all candidates, whether private or school-based, are provided with fair and credible examinations that uphold regional standards. We congratulate the candidates who met the benchmark and encourage those who did not to continue striving for success,” the exam body added.

WAEC disclosed that it withheld the results of 75 candidates over alleged malpractice, noting that the cases were under investigation, with final decisions to be taken by the council’s relevant committee.

The examination body said affected candidates would be notified once due process is completed.

The ICIR reported that the council withheld the results of 2,577 in the 2024 Second Series results for private candidates over alleged examination malpractice.

Embattled former governor El-Rufai loses mother

0

FORMER Kaduna State governor, Nasir El-Rufai, has lost his mother, Hajiya Umma El-Rufai.

The death was announced by his son, Mohammed Bello El-Rufai, who described the loss as a painful moment for the family.

In a statement on his X handle, the younger El-Rufai said the family was grateful for the life the deceased lived and prayed for Allah to grant her soul eternal rest.

“I would like to inform the public of the demise of my grandmother, Hajiya Umma El-Rufai, who passed away a few hours ago. She is the biological mother of our father, Mallam Nasir @elrufai.

“We are grateful for the life she lived and may Allah SWT bless her gentle soul. May He bless the soul of the parents we have lost. On behalf of our family, we seek your prayers,” he wrote.

The latest development came a week after El-Rufai’s sister-in-law, Safiya Ali Rufai, died after a brief illness on the day of the Sallah celebration.

Safiya, who was married to the former governor’s elder brother, the late Ali Rufai, a retired air vice marshal, was described by family members as a devoted and disciplined woman who played a significant role within the family.

Her death was earlier announced by Bello El-Rufai, who represents Kaduna North Federal Constituency in the House of Representatives.

The deaths came on the heel of the legal tussle between the former governor and the federal government.

The ICIR reports that the Federal High Court sitting in Kaduna had on March 24, adjourned the hearing of  the former governor’s bail application to March 31, 2026, following arguments from both defence and prosecution.

This mean that El-rufai is expected to be in custoddy of the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) at least until March 31.

The former governor is being prosecuted by the ICPC over allegations bordering on corruption, abuse of office, and money laundering.

According to court documents, prosecutors alleged that he unlawfully received about N579 million as severance allowance and additional foreign currency payments, which they claimed were proceeds of unlawful activities. The charges were said to contravene the Money Laundering (Prevention and Prohibition) Act, 2022.

The case also followed earlier scrutiny by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and an indictment by the Kaduna State House of Assembly over alleged diversion of public funds.

Abuja hosts thousands for APC national convention

THE All Progressives Congress (APC) national convention is set to begin in Abuja, bringing together governors, party leaders, and thousands of delegates from across Nigeria.

The convention, taking place at the Eagle Square from Friday, March 27 to Saturday, March 28, has 32 governors attending, alongside over 8,000 delegates from the 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT)

The APC national convention is one of the party’s most important statutory gatherings, allowing members to review leadership structures and make decisions that will guide the party’s direction as it prepares for the 2027 polls.

The ICIR reports that security was beefed up at the Eagle Square and its sorroundings since Thursday as all roads leading to the venue was cordoned off Friday morning for only accredited persons to access.

The Federal Government had on Thursday directed workers within the Federal Secretariat to work from home on Friday.

Several hotels in the nation’s capital have since become a beehive of activities as delegates and other party stalwarts converge on the city.

The APC, which has recently enjoyed a huge swell in its membership, will be strategising to confront opposition parties, including the African Democratic Congress (ADC) and Peoples’ Democratic Party (PDP) in the 2027 elections.

The ICIR reported that as of March 2026, nine sitting governors had defected from the PDP to the APC since the 2023 general elections. This wave of defections has increased number of APC-controlled states to 32 out of 36.

The governors officially switched allegiances, citing internal PDP crises and the need to align with the federal government. They are Zamfara State Governor Dauda Lawal, who defected in March 2026, and Adamawa State Governor Ahmadu Fintiri, who followed early this year.

In October 2025, Bayelsa State Governor Douye Diri and Enugu State Governor Peter Mbah joined the ruling party, while Akwa Ibom State Governor Umo Eno defected June 2025.

Similarly, Delta State Governor Sheriff Oborevwori dumped the PDP in April 2025. Later in 2025, Rivers State Governor Siminalayi Fubara jumped ship following a leadership rift, alongside Taraba State Governor Agbu Kefas, and Plateau State Governor Caleb Mutfwang.