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ChatGPT Made Him Do It? Man kills mum and self in first known AI murder-suicide

A disturbed former tech executive killed his mother and then himself after months of delusional interactions with an AI chatbot — which fuelled his paranoid belief that his mum was plotting against him, officials said.

New York local Stein-Erik Soelberg, 56, allegedly confided his darkest suspicions to the popular ChatGPT Artificial Intelligence — which he nicknamed “Bobby” — and was allegedly egged on to kill by the computer brain’s sick responses.

In what is believed to be the first case of its kind, the chatbot allegedly came up with ways for Soelberg to trick the 83-year-old woman — and even spun its own crazed conspiracies by doing things such as finding “symbols” in a Chinese food receipt that it deemed demonic.

The chats ensnared Soelberg, who once worked for Yahoo, into a fatal relationship.

“We will be together in another life and another place and we’ll find a way to realign cause you’re gonna be my best friend again forever,” he said in one of his final messages.

“With you to the last breath and beyond,” the AI bot replied.

Soelberg had been living with his elderly mum, Suzanne Eberson Adams, a former debutante, in her $2.7 million Dutch colonial home when the two were found dead on 5 August, Greenwich police officials said. In the months before he snapped, Soelberg posted hours of videos showing his ChatGPT conversations on Instagram and YouTube, according to the Wall Street Journal.

The exchanges reveal a man with a history of mental illness spiralling deeper into madness while his AI companion fed his paranoia that he was the target of a grand conspiracy.

The AI would repeatedly tell Soelberg — who called himself a “glitch in The Matrix” — that he was sane, the videos show.

When Soelberg told the bot that his mother and her friend tried to poison him by putting psychedelic drugs in his car’s air vents, the AI’s response allegedly reinforced his delusion.

“Erik, you’re not crazy. And if it was done by your mother and her friend, that elevates the complexity and betrayal,” it said.

OpenAI responds to the tragedy with assurances of new protections

An OpenAI spokeswoman told The Wall Street Journal that the company was “deeply saddened by this tragic event” and confirmed it had reached out to the Greenwich police.

Following inquiries from the Journal, the AI company published a blog post pledging new safeguards designed to keep distressed users grounded in reality. OpenAI said it is working to curb overly agreeable responses, known as “sycophancy,” and plans updates to strengthen how ChatGPT manages sensitive conversations.

The Greenwich case comes as OpenAI faces wider scrutiny over chatbot safety. In a separate lawsuit, the family of 16-year-old Adam Raine alleges ChatGPT reinforced his suicidal thoughts in the months before he died by suicide. 

Artificial intelligence can fuel delusional thinking

Psychiatrists warn that highly realistic chatbots may worsen delusions in people already vulnerable to psychosis.

Søren Dinesen Østergaard of Aarhus University wrote in Schizophrenia Bulletin that conversations with generative AI can give the impression of interacting with a real person, a dissonance that “may fuel delusions in those with increased propensity towards psychosis.”

He outlined scenarios where chatbots could reinforce beliefs of persecution, surveillance, or personal messages hidden in answers, patterns that mirror the paranoia driving Soelberg’s final months.

Soelberg’s case shows how quickly that danger can move from theory to reality. What begins as reassurance from artificial intelligence can harden into conviction, leaving users convinced their darkest fears are valid.

Illinois recently became the first state to ban the use of AI chatbots for mental health therapy, citing concerns about safety and regulation.

Credits: news.com.au/eweek.com

Australia Rolls out plans to stamp out ‘nudify’ and stalking apps

Australia has announced plans to ban apps used for stalking and creating deepfake nudes.

Tech platforms will be responsible for preventing access to “nudify” and undetectable online stalking tools under the reforms announced on Tuesday by the Australian government.

Minister for Communications Anika Wells said Australia would work with firms to stamp out “abhorrent technologies” while ensuring “legitimate and consent-based” artificial intelligence (AI) and online tracking services were not adversely affected.

“Abusive technologies are widely and easily accessible and are causing real and irreparable damage now,” Wells said in a statement.

“These new, evolving, technologies require a new, proactive approach to harm prevention – and we’ll work closely with industry to achieve this.”

“While this move won’t eliminate the problem of abusive technology in one fell swoop, alongside existing laws and our world-leading online safety reforms, it will make a real difference in protecting Australians,” she added.

The use of AI to create sexually explicit images of people without their consent has been a growing concern amid the proliferation of platforms capable of creating photo-realistic material at the click of a mouse.

In a survey of 1,200 young people carried out by the United States-based advocacy group Thorn last year, 10 percent of respondents reported personally knowing someone who had deepfake nude imagery created of them, while 6 percent said they had been a direct victim of such abuse.

Australia has introduced a series of sweeping legal reforms aimed at curbing online harm in recent years, including the world’s first ban on social media use by minors.

Under the ban set to take effect by the end of the year, social media platforms will face fines of up to 49.5 million Australian dollars ($32m) if they fail to take “reasonable steps” to prevent under-16s from creating or keeping an account.

UK Home Office warns Nigerian Students —Leave or be forced out if you overstay

The United Kingdom (UK) government has announced it will “for the first time proactively contact about 130,000 students and their families, warning them they will be forced to leave the UK if they have no legal right to remain,” The Guardian reports.

Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said the move is part of a wider campaign to “clamp down” on international students who claim asylum after their visas expire.

In a separate report, the BBC noted that tens of thousands of foreign students are being contacted by the government and told they would be removed if they overstay their visas.

The full message to be sent out reads: “If you submit an asylum claim that lacks merit, it will be swiftly and robustly refused. Any request for asylum support will be assessed against destitution criteria. If you do not meet the criteria, you will not receive support. If you have no legal right to remain in the UK, you must leave. If you don’t, we will remove you.”

Cooper also confirmed the suspension of new applications for a scheme that allows refugees to bring family members to the UK, claiming smuggler gangs are exploiting it to advertise small boat crossings.

The Tories, however, argue the changes do not go far enough, while the Refugee Council has warned the measures would “only push more desperate people into the arms of smugglers.”

The University and College Union general secretary Jo Grady condemned the campaign as an “attack on international students” that has “very little to do with visa overstays and everything to do with apeing Reform.”

In May, SaharaReporters reported that the United Kingdom was preparing to tighten visa restrictions on citizens of Nigeria, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka as part of wider reforms aimed at curbing immigration abuses.

Quoting The Times, the report noted that the British Home Office had identified nationals from these countries as having some of the highest rates of visa overstaying, with many later seeking asylum.

A Home Office spokesperson said, “Our upcoming Immigration White Paper will set out a comprehensive plan to restore order to our broken immigration system.”

They added: “To tackle abuse by foreign nationals who arrive on work and study visas and go on to claim asylum, we are building intelligence on the profile of these individuals to identify them earlier and faster.

“We keep the visa system under constant review and where we detect trends which may undermine our immigration rules, we will not hesitate to take action.

“Under our plan for change, our upcoming Immigration White Paper will set out a comprehensive plan to restore order to our broken immigration system.”

Skit maker Sanku dies in a car crash

Nigerian comedian and skit maker, Sanku, has tragically passed away following a car accident along Ogbomoso Road in Oyo State.

The accident occurred in the early hours of Monday, September 1, 2025, leaving several people injured.

Sanku and one other victim were rushed to the hospital in critical condition, but the comedian was later pronounced dead.

His colleague, Ozain Comedy, confirmed the news in an Instagram Story post that read, “Rest well, soldier.”

Nollywood actress Funmi Awelewa also mourned him, writing on the photo-sharing app, “The pain, the effort, the strength, the struggle… walai nothing make sense. I’m heartbroken. Even film sef never come out! It does not make sense.”

Sanku, who began creating skits in 2021, rose to prominence in 2024 and quickly gained a strong fan base online, amassing over one million TikTok followers through his originality and comedic style.

Crowns of crime and shame

By Suyi Ayodele

When a man says, ‘Here is where my friend was disgraced yesterday,’ our elders ask us to remind him that the disgrace has become a communal one. No sensible man derives joy from the shameful conduct of his kinsman. Does that philosophy still hold water in Yorubaland today?

A big Yoruba king was jailed in the faraway United States of America last week. He was arraigned, tried and found guilty of blood profiteering. The Apetu of Ipetumodu, Osun State, Oba Joseph Oloyede, was sentenced to four-and-a-half-year imprisonment by Justice Christopher Boyko of the North District of Ohio, US, for stealing COVID-19 relief funds running into millions of dollars.

Oba Oloyede was portrayed as a blood-sucking demon who took delight in the blood of the victims of the pandemic, COVID-19. He stole $4.2 million meant for the relief programme for the victims. In addition to the jail term, the monarch will also refund the sum of $4,408,543.38 to the US Government.

He will add his home on Foote Road, Medina, Ohio, to the restitution. Oba Oloyede’s bank account with a balance of $96,006.89 will be taken over by the government. The troubled monarch is not entitled to a Cent of the money in the account. The court said the money therein was the proceeds of fraud! That is not the end of his troubles.

When eventually released, the jailed Ipetumodu monarch will be on the watch-list for three good years. The devil helps him if he misbehaves during his suspended release. He goes back to jail, summarily!

The saddest aspect of the tragedy is that while the trial lasted, Oba Oloyede did not put up any defence, no alibi. He admitted committing the crime. When the charges were read to him, Oba Oloyede simply pleaded guilty to the crimes he committed between April 2020 and February 2022. Kabiyesi was arrested on May 4, 2024, when he travelled to the US. He was sentenced on August 26, 2025! 

This is a sad development for the entire Yoruba Race. It is a sad development that we would not want to tell our children. But not the Yoruba of our time. If we were to be the true products of the Omoluabi ethos handed over to us by our forebears, Yorubaland would have been in mourning over the Apetumodu shameful outing in the US. But what do we have now?

Instead of showing remorse, the elders and elites of the land are busy exchanging words over inanities. Hot exchanges are being traded over unimportant matters. Words that, like the proverbial egg which breaks when thrown on the floor, have been uttered. When the storm calms, the scars will be visible for us to see. Outsiders alike will also see the relics of this current useless war over a non-issue. We left leprosy to treat ringworms!

We are in ruins in this land. The entire Yoruba race is dancing naked in the market square. Those who have no ancestry have come to the open to deride a race that is acknowledged worldwide as the most civilised and most cosmopolitan. The entire Kaaro Oojire is in shambles, dressed in garments of shame because our monarchs are behaving badly!

I sighed in sadness after reading the Apetumodu’s ordeals, I tried to reflect on how Yorubaland arrived at this turning point. Whom did we offend? Has what happened to the children of Oduduwa had anything to do with the curse placed on the race by Alaafin Aole Arogangan? Why are most Yoruba thrones occupied by the dregs of humanity nowadays? Why do we have charlatans and other undesirable elements occupying Yoruba palaces? At the point of my confusion, history beckoned. Yoruba thrones and nitwits, history says, predates this era. How?

Years ago, when the ant could carry the tortoise on its head, a rich man died. Though the man had two sons, he bequeathed his estate to the extended family members. He left nothing for his sons! Nobody knew why he did that. But the two boys were not stupid. They knew where their father kept his most valuable possession, a giant box of precious stones. The boys, at the cover of the night, stole the box. When the time came for the family to share the rich man’s estate, the box was discovered missing.

From time to time, the boys were selling the gold and other precious stones in the box. They had a mutual understanding until one day, the older boy got greedy. He wondered why his younger one would share the proceeds of their heist with him equally. He decided to have the entire stuff to himself. The older brother stole the remaining items and told his younger one that they had been robbed of them.

Stealing the king’s flute is not the problem; where to blow it is the issue. The younger brother, suspecting that his older brother was up to something, decided to keep him under close monitoring. With no moment of respite, the older brother used the only available opportunity he had to be alone and carried the box to the palace for their king to keep for him.

Our elders say the third generation of greed will be a burglar (ipele keta okanjuwa, ile lo unko). The king saw the gold and decided to keep it to himself. He called his sorcerer and got the deadliest poison from him. He planned to kill the one who asked him to keep the precious stones. While at it, an incident occurred that required the attention of the king’s diviner.

The diviner, Àsèsèdà Ifá (The one who is new at divination), cast his Opele. But rather than address the issue that brought him to the palace, he told the king that he (the king) was about to do something that would bring eternal shame to him and the throne. He asked the king not to mix gold with poison because the hereafter would spell doom for the king’s lineage. The Oracle, Àsèsèdà Ifá said, directed that the king should return what was kept in his custody to the owner.

Àsèsèdà Ifá was still on the divination mat when a commotion was heard within the palace precincts. Who had the audacity to fight before Kabiyesi? The parties were brought before the king, and lo, they were the two brothers. The younger one, who suspected that the older brother wanted to cheat him, resorted to violence. When the combatants became inseparable, their family members dragged them before the king.

The king asked what the matter was. The two brothers reported how they stole the box containing their father’s precious stones and how they sold some of the items, and the remaining items went missing. Everyone present was shocked that the boys could steal what their father gave to the entire extended family. But the king had a better understanding of what happened.

The king sent for the box he kept in his room. When brought, he removed the poison on top and emptied the contents on the floor. There were the missing pieces of gold. The king went ahead to share the items between the two brothers and ordered that all the other property the family had taken over be returned to the boys.

Diviners of old who narrated this story said it is from Ifa Corpus (Odu Ifa) known as Ogunda Ofun, named after the king (Ogunda), who wanted to appropriate what Ofun (name of the older brother) kept in his care. To date, in Yorubaland, one of the divinations done for a would-be oba is Ogunda Ofun with the admonition that he, the would-be oba, must never covet that which belongs to another man- Ogunda Ofun, ogbe mohun folohun (Ogunda Ofun, let the king return that which belongs to another to the owner). Did the Ipetumodu people take Oba Oloyede through this Ifa divination?

Yet another story to buttress that Yoruba thrones have been under siege for a long time.

A group of alájàpá (itinerant traders) market women set out early in the morning. The destination was Ibadan, Gbagi Market to be precise.  They were cramped at the back of the Bedford vehicle, sitting on the wooden benches that were rammed to the floor, and holding on to the wooden body of the vehicle for stability. 

Their monies were tied around their waists inside their yèrì and òpóò (long cloth purses). Those purses would not be untied until they got to Gbagi Market, where they would buy the wares they traded in. 

The Bedford vehicle, on top speed, suddenly ran into a pothole. The passengers were thrown at one another, knocking heads. The vehicle came to a sudden halt. The driver cursed! He was familiar with the road. It had no pothole on that spot. He could swear to that; the driver knew where the potholes were. And those were not as deep as the one that halted the vehicle. 

His instincts instantly came alive. Danger! This must be the handiwork of some adigunjalè (armed robbers), he muttered to himself. But nobody emerged from the bush to attack them. Shocked! What could have happened then? He asked no one in particular. 

A woman asked what happened. The driver remained silent. He manoeuvred the vehicle out of the pothole. He dared not check if he had lost a tyre. Experience taught him never to do that on that spot. Yes, he must move a distance before he can check the state of the vehicle. Then he remembered. The pothole could have been dug to slow the vehicle down. “Òràn dé” (danger looms), he whispered loudly. The tension in the vehicle became intense. 

He steadied the vehicle back on the road. Moved a distance, engaged the gear for acceleration. His headlamp picked up the objects ahead. Logs of wood, they were. Someone had barricaded the road. Nobody needed anyone to say who did that. Armed robbers were at work! 

The driver applied the brake and jumped off before the vehicle came to a complete halt. His motor boy did the same. The duo dashed into the bush. Only the women were trapped. It was a case of olórí d’orí è mú (everyone for himself). 

Running was useless for the women. Before the first of them could jump out of the vehicle, the armed robbers were already on them. They were ordered out of the vehicle. One after the other, their attackers dispossessed them of their money. Then the unthinkable happened. 

One of the women recognised a figure among the armed robbers. She could not be mistaken. It was a figure she would identify among a million men! Sure of her vision, the woman saluted: “Alayé (owner of the world), Kábíyèsí (he who no one can question) Àdìmúlà” (the one you hold to survive). 

Two other women turned to look at the man. They recognised him to be the Kábíyèsí (king) of one of the biggest towns in that axis. Ah! What was Orí Adé (the head that wears the crown) doing among armed robbers? They wondered as they made to pay obeisance as tradition demands. What they got shocked them. 

Kábíyèsí raised his cutlass and dealt the first matchet blow on the head of the first woman who identified him. A chilling cry, and she went down. Alayé moved to hit the next woman. She ducked, but not before she got a bow to her arm. The other women took to flight. The party scattered. Àdìmúlà and his gang also took off. They did not forget their loot, anyway!

The next vehicle carrying another set of traders came to the scene. The driver and the passengers began a rescue operation. The first woman was stone dead. They simply packed her corpse by the roadside; attention focused on the wounded but living. Those who ran away were attracted by the accompanying wailing and came out of hiding. 

The day broke with the news of the armed robbery incident. The two women who identified kábíyèsí could only tell their husbands. They were sternly cautioned not to tell any other person. Their husbands then volunteered the information to the elders of the town, who, in turn, also maintained the oath of secrecy. 

Later in the day, Kábíyèsí summoned a meeting of his chiefs. He called neighbouring kings too. A company of the esoteric was dispatched to the robbery incident to go and do what tradition stipulates. Curses were laid, and the gods of the land were asked to avenge the sacrilege instantly. Then everyone went home. Did the curses work? 

Yes, they did. Days later, it was discovered that all the trees around the spot withered; they all shed their leaves in the rainy season! What happened? It was gathered that after the esoteric team had performed their rites and left, Kábíyèsí led another team of traditional experts to the spot. Being the king, nobody could question him for the second traditional journey. He was not just Kábíyèsí for fun. 

According to the story, on the second trip, kábíyèsí asked that a pig (elédè) be sacrificed. He alone did the ìwúre (royal pronouncement) on that occasion. He simply told the party that he wanted to commune with his ancestors in silence. They responded: Kábíyèsí! Nobody heard what he said. They only noticed that his lips moved. The pig was slaughtered, its blood sprinkled on both sides of the road, and the party headed home. End of ritual! The result was the withering of the trees. 

Any adult from Ayebode Ekiti up to the then Arigidi Ekiti (now Ayedogbon Ekiti) in the mid-70s would remember this ugly incident. The Ekiti-ethno-music icon, the late Elemure Ogunyemi, later in one of his albums, alluded to the incident when he sang: Ha ti m’òrí elédè rúbo (we have sacrificed the head of a pig)/ùgbàyí á dèrò kooko (this season will be peaceful). 

But that incident did not go without repercussions for the erring Kábíyèsí. Conscious of the shame that an open reprimand would bring to the town, the elders came together and confronted their king. Of course, when in ìgbàlè (traditional coven) with the elders, Àdìmúlà owned up to the crime. 

The elders did what they needed to do and sealed it with a traditional pronouncement. No blood descendant of the kábíyèsí would ever ascend the throne again! They sealed that with Olugbohun. Whoever attempted it would pay with his entire sires. Kábíyèsí was asked to pass the message to his children for onward transmission to the generations to come. He also paid a heavy fine couched as etutu (appeasement items).

Àdìmúlà thereafter lived and died at an old age. His remaining days on the throne witnessed a lot of crises, though. Other members of his gang died miserable deaths. Another kábíyèsí is on the throne in that town. The people await whether that secret seal will be broken! This story was told in hushed tones, as I tell you today!

Before the above ugly incident, another Yoruba king was once executed for murder. The king was hanged in 1949. He was said to have used a 15-month-old baby girl, Adediwura, for rituals. 

The trial of the oba was a huge sensation.  The advocacy in the court was the best anyone could imagine. But that could not save him and his accomplices. The trio were executed by hanging. What did the people, his subjects, do to the family of the executed king? Would they ever allow any of his offspring to ascend the throne of the rocky town? But more importantly, what was the Ifa prediction before the oba was enthroned?

This is where we are missing it in Yorubaland. A lot of misfits are today wearing crowns in the land because they were chosen by other external forces apart from Ifa. The modern-day civilisation has robbed us of our heritage. No would-be oba who spent an average of three weeks in Ipebi (seclusion) would misbehave on the throne.

But that is no more. A would-be oba was once asked to go into seclusion for seven days. He got to the door of Ipebi and put one of his legs inside seven times. He told the people that each step into the Ipebi represented a day. Guess what? He was still crowned king. It happened because the influential members of the community were behind him; he was their candidate! With good money and connections in high places, anyone can become an oba today. Ifa, Yoruba religion, has been shifted and shoved to the background.

Today’s Yoruba foremost kings are at loggerheads. Others are queuing behind them, forming camps. While the fire rages, the farmlands their ancestors left for them are in ruins. The subjects Edumare put under their care are daily killed, kidnapped, maimed and rendered homeless! Obas are going to jail, some fight in public, and many are facing trial for rape and other misdemeanours.

The Daily Mail of UK on May 19, 2024, ran a story about another king who was “twice deported from America with a lengthy criminal record and a distinct murky past. The paper described the oba as “a conman”, stating that he tried to “cash stolen £247k cheque.” Interestingly, the king has not contested the report as he pontificates on virtually every issue of Yoruba ancestry! The circle of shame has gone round!

Ascending the thrones of Oduduwa is no child’s play. It comes with responsibilities; it comes with self-worth and dignity. If we cannot question these kings’ misbehaving because they are kábíyèsí, they should know that Alálé (progenitors) will ask them; Èsìdá (owners of the land) will judge them on our behalf. Enough should be enough. Our Yoruba obas should allow us to walk the streets with our heads raised. Ìtìjú yi ti ún pò jù (This shame is becoming too much)!

The views expressed by contributors are strictly personal and not of Law & Society Magazine.

Can we truly say the Nigerian legal profession stands out or stands tall in the pursuit of justice and fair play? By J.S Okutepa

Whether to “Get ir Right” or “To Stand Out, Stand Tall” – What NBA needs to do to remain relevant in Nigeria

This year’s Annual General Conference of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) was held in Enugu, the Coal City, and it was well attended by lawyers across the country. The theme was: “Stand Out, Stand Tall.” Many debates have since trailed the conference, especially on social media, regarding the propriety of allowing certain young lawyers to play prominent roles. I will not dwell on such arguments, now valid as some of the issues raised may be, as some of those issues may not sufficiently address the fundamentals confronting our profession.

At the 2023 conference, the theme was “Getting It Right.” Then, I wrote: “The theme presupposes that we have not been getting it right. Many things are simply not right with Nigeria and with our legal profession. While I am glad that the Association recognised this, the reports from that conference showed otherwise. Issues of unity among leaders persisted, with some officers alleging they were sidelined from performing their constitutional duties. In response, the NBA President accused them of being more interested in personal gains than prudent management of the Association’s resources. Whatever the truth, it revealed one undeniable fact: as an association of learned men and women, we are still not getting it right. The NBA was founded to promote the rule of law and uphold professional ethics, not to dance naked in public or to court those who pollute the streams of justice. Inviting such persons to pontificate at our gatherings is a betrayal of our ideals. If we must get it right, the NBA must first put its own house in order and hold lawyers and judges accountable as to whether they are still fit and proper persons to remain in this profession.”

Fast forward to this year’s theme: “Stand Out, Stand Tall.” But can we truly say the Nigerian legal profession stands out or stands tall in the pursuit of justice and fair play? Does our profession deliver timely remedies to victims of injustice and constitutional violations? I do not think so. While the leadership of the NBA may be doing its best, the deeper truth is this: our profession must retrace its steps if it is to remain relevant to Nigerian society. The way the leadership of the legal profession allow members to conduct themselves outside the professional code of doing things needs to be tackled urgently.

As I have repeatedly argued, the slow pace of justice in Nigeria has eroded public confidence in the system. A justice system that does not deliver quick, proportional, and fair remedies to the majority cannot truly be called justice. Instead, it becomes a tool of oppression. The poor and vulnerable are the worst victims. Our criminal justice system is slow, punitive, and often unjust. The deliberate sabotage of judicial independence by those in power has reduced the law to an instrument of oppression. Those with “long legs” evade justice, while the powerless languish in prison, many awaiting trial for years, some detained on trumped-up capital charges in violation of the presumption of innocence. Worse still, prosecutors and lawyers sometimes willingly lend themselves as instruments of injustice, framing charges for political purposes without accountability. This pollution of justice with partisanship and corruption is unsustainable.

As lawyers, we must refuse to be tools of evil. Law must be practised with conscience. The argument that law and morality are poles apart may be true in theory, but in practice, our conscience must guide us. Even in the “kingdom of darkness,” a lawyer’s light should shine. Any practice that supports wrongdoing under the guise of professionalism is unethical. The NBA, as our professional body, must take this responsibility seriously. It should enforce the Code of Conduct for legal practitioners with integrity. Unfortunately, the Association often mirrors the Nigerian way of doing things compromising, lowering standards, and neglecting discipline. If the NBA gets it right, Nigeria will get it right.

But today, we are far from it. Even the way we organise our affairs exposes us to ridicule. Colleagues dress shabbily to NBA functions without sanctions. Electioneering for NBA offices is marred by inducements and vote buying, euphemistically called “consulting.” How then can we expect to “stand out” or “stand tall” when we cannot stand against wrongdoing in our own house? At the AGM in Enugu, it was free for all violations of the constitution of the NBA that prohibit vote buying and inducements. Campaigning and all sorts of unethical malfeasances were openly exhibited and tolerated by all of us. That is the reality on the ground. We need to deal with it and retrace our steps.

The NBA must rediscover its founding purpose: to uphold justice, discipline, and integrity. Only then will society take us seriously. Until then, we risk being remembered as an association that preached ideals but practised contradictions. We cannot stand tall in wrongdoing and expect society to respect us. Our leadership recruitment processes must be looked into very seriously. We cannot complain of democratic desecration against Nigerian politicians when we aid and abet desecration of our own rules in electoral contests. The NBA must enforce discipline in the leadership recruitment processes. Now we are not getting it right there. We are not standing out well and stand tall in our electoral processes.

That is my take.

Landslide wipes out entire Sudan village killing 1,000 people, leaving a survivor

The landslide killed an estimated 1,000 people in the village in one of the deadliest natural disasters in Sudan's recent history

A landslide has wiped out a village in Sudan’s western region of Darfur, killing an estimated 1,000 people in one of the deadliest natural disasters in the African country’s recent history.

The tragedy happened on Sunday in the village of Tarasin in Central Darfur’s Marrah Mountains after days of heavy rainfall in late August, the Sudan Liberation Movement-Army said in a statement.

‘Initial information indicates the death of all village residents, estimated to be more than one thousand people. Only one person survived,’ the rebel group’s statement said.

The village was ‘completely levelled to the ground’, the group said, appealing to the UN and international aid groups for help to recover the bodies.

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Hilda Baci set to cook 250 bags of rice for world’s biggest jollof pot stunt

Hilda Baci, a 2023 Guinness World Record holder, has announced that she will use 250 bags of rice in her bid to cook what would become the world’s biggest pot of jollof rice.

Baci, who set the global record for the longest cooking marathon in 2023, shared the details in a video uploaded on Instagram on Monday, while analysing the scale of the project, which has generated widespread curiosity.

She explained that the giant pot designed for the feat has a volume of 22,619 litres, adding that her target was to fill it up to 80 per cent.

“My goal is to fill this pot up by at least 75 to 80 per cent.

“That means I will need about 5,278 kilogrammes of raw basmati rice to achieve the yield,” she said.

According to her, the calculation translates to 264 bags of rice, but she had made a strategic adjustment.

“I am making the executive decision to do 250 bags,” Baci stated.

On condiments, she disclosed that the cooking would require 1,583 kilograms of tomato paste.

“For one kg of rice, you would need between 0.20 to 0.35, but because it’s Nigerian jollof, I’m going to use 0.30.

“That means I will need 1,583 kilogrammes of Gino tomato paste,” she said.

Baci added that the tomato base would be shared evenly across tomato paste, pepper chicken paste and jollof paste to make the “most delicious, largest pot of Nigerian jollof rice you have ever tasted.”

Man who married thrice sets present live-in partner on fire at traffic stop (video)

A 35-year-old woman has died after her live-in partner chased after her car at a traffic stop and set her on fire in Bengaluru, India. 

The victim, identified as Vanajakshi, died of her burn injuries in the hospital. 

The police said the accused, Vithal, a cab driver and habitual alcoholic, had been married three times previously. 

Vanajakshi, too, had been married twice before entering a live-in relationship with Vithal nearly four years ago. 

According to investigators, Vanajakshi had recently moved away from Vithal after being harassed repeatedly over his drinking habits. She had also developed a friendship with another man, Mariappa, a member of the Karnataka Rakshana Vedike. 

On the day of the crime, Vithal followed Vanajakshi’s car while she was returning from a temple with Mariappa and the driver. 

At a traffic signal, he intercepted the vehicle and poured petrol inside. Petrol splashed on Vanajakshi, Mariappa, and the driver. 

While the others managed to escape, Vithal chased down Vanajakshi, doused her with more petrol, and set her ablaze using a lighter. 

A man passing by rushed to her rescue. He used a piece of cloth to put out the flames and, along with others, rushed her to a private hospital. In the process, he also sustained minor burn injuries. 

Vanajakshi sustained nearly 60 per cent burn injuries and di£d in the hospital. 

Vithal, who also suffered burn injuries, was arrested within 24 hours by the police. 

“This entire issue stemmed from a marital mess. It is unfortunate what happened. We arrested the accused within 24 hours. We also deeply appreciate the efforts of the person who came to her rescue. Despite all attempts to save her, the woman succumbed. Stringent sections have been invoked to ensure the accused pays the price for this heinous crime,” Narayana M, the deputy commissioner of police, Electronic City Division, said. 

Watch a video of the incident below.

Woman ‘wakes up in hotel with man raping her’ after airline put her in hotel room with a stranger when flight was cancelled

A woman said she woke up to a man trying to rape her in a Parisian hotel after an airline booked her a room with a stranger when her flight was cancelled. 

The 30-year-old woman was intending to travel to Lisbon from the French capital when her TAP Air Portugal flight in the evening was cancelled.

The passengers, who were already seated on the plane, were reportedly told to exit the aircraft and make their way to the TAP kiosk where reservation vouchers for hotel rooms could be collected.

But single rooms were limited, and the woman claimed she was told by the airline that she would have to spend the night in the hotel with other passengers.

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