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VIDEO: Niger Gov. Bago blows hot, ‘Even if I sell Niger State to fund projects, it’s not your business; they say I’m borrowing but I’ve not started yet’

The governor of Niger State, Mohammed Umaru Bago, has said that even if he decides to sell the state to raise funds for development projects, it is not the public’s business.

Residents have been expressing concern over the state’s financial management, with debates circulating on social media about whether loans are being taken.

In a video obtained by SaharaReporters, Bago said, “If I were to sell Niger State to raise funds for the state projects, what is your business?

“People should wait till after my eight-year tenure in office to question my worth, as I will be leaving the state with zero debt after eight years. I will also show you that this is what I met on the ground and this is what I’m leaving the state with.”

He made the remark on August 11, 2025, during a stakeholders’ engagement meeting for his second-term endorsement with Tafa, Gurara, and Suleja local governments.

Bago also addressed concerns about borrowing, stating, “People are worried I’m collecting loans, but I haven’t started acquiring loans yet.

“This is just the beginning, and for the past administrations that collected loans, what did they do with them?

“Why are people taking medication for my headache?”

Bago defended his administration against criticisms over infrastructure, saying, “They said schools, hospitals, and roads have gone bad. Is it my administration’s responsibility for it, or aren’t we just repairing what we met?

“People are posting and saying that just two years of my tenure, I have damaged schools, hospitals, and roads. We will not castigate one another because we belong to the same party; we are not fools.”

Watch the video below.

NBA AGC 2025: Ozekhome insists national security protects only those in power

Life Bencher and Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Mike Ozekhome, SAN, has called on lawyers to break free from inaction, stand up for their rights and those of citizens against mounting impunity and excess of political office holders.

In an animated address presented at the ongoing Annual General Conference (AGC) of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) in Enugu, Ozekhome questioned the notion of national security as promoted since the 1914 amalgamation, asserting that it has consistently protected governments in power rather than ordinary citizens.

Drawing attention to the heavy security presence for delegates in Enugu, he stressed that true security should safeguard everyone, not just the political elite.

Recalling his past struggle with the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), which seized N75 million in legal fees paid to him, Ozekhome disclosed that despite counsel from colleagues to let the matter go, he went to court and won.

The judiciary, he remarked, upheld his right, affirming that lawyers are not required to trace the source of their professional fees unless they have knowledge of illegality.

The Senior Advocate reminded delegates that rights are not granted by government but are inherent, referencing international frameworks such as the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights. He lamented that many Nigerians cannot access these rights due to governance failures and a lack of basic services.

Beyond physical protection, he called for attention to emotional, mental, economic, and educational security, stressing that the harsh realities of governance have taken a heavy toll on citizens’ well-being.

He warned lawyers against reducing the NBA Annual General Conference to a routine ritual or a platform for politicking. Too many, he said, have abandoned legal practice in pursuit of personal or political interests. He urged the profession to interrogate society, confront abuse of power, and keep government accountable.

Concluding, he challenged lawyers to stand up and stand out, not merely chasing bread-and-butter lawyering but using their calling to defend justice and protect citizens’ rights.

NBA President says Port Harcourt might host 2026 Annual General Conference

The President of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), Mazi Afam Osigwe, SAN, has disclosed that its 2026 Annual General Conference (AGC) will be hosted in Port Harcourt, the Rivers State capital, if a democratically elected governor is in office at the time of the event.

Osigwe made the disclosure during his address to the over thirty thousand lawyers that gathered in the capital city of Enugu for the 2025 Annual General Meeting.

The Association he restated, remains committed to upholding democracy, constitutionalism, and good governance, hence the choice of Port Harcourt is tied to the assurance that the state will be under democratic leadership.

It would be recalled that the NBA-AGC 2025 was earlier scheduled to be held in Port Harcourt but was relocated to Enugu in response to the unconstitutional removal of the legitimately elected government in Rivers State and the imposition of a sole administrator, in violation of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

JUST IN: Immigration ups passport fees to N100,000, N200,000

The Nigeria Immigration Service has announced an upward review of the cost of obtaining the Nigerian Standard Passport, effective September 1, 2025.

According to a statement signed by the Service Public Relations Officer, ACI AS Akinlabi, on Thursday, the new fees will apply only to applications made within Nigeria.

“The review which only affect Passport Application fees made in Nigeria, now set a new fee thresholds for 32-page with 5-year validity at N100,000 and 64-page with 10-year validity at N200,000,” the statement read.

However, the statement clarified that application fees for Nigerians in the diaspora remain unchanged at $150 for the 32-page, five-year passport and $230 for the 64-page, 10-year passport.

The service said the adjustment was aimed at maintaining the quality and integrity of the Nigerian passport while ensuring accessibility for citizens.

This latest review comes barely a year after the Federal Government approved an earlier upward adjustment in August 2024, which took effect from September 1, 2024.

At the time, the 32-page, five-year passport booklet was increased from N35,000 to N50,000, while the 64-page, 10-year booklet went from N70,000 to N100,000.

The Immigration Service then explained that the increment was necessary to sustain the quality of the Nigerian passport and enhance service delivery.

PUNCH

Ex-VC reveals 239 first-class lecturers quit UNILAG over poor pay

Did you know that within the last seven years, not less than 239 first-class graduates of the University of Lagos, employed as lecturers, left the institution?

Immediate past Vice-Chancellor of UNILAG, Prof. Oluwatoyin Ogundipe, disclosed this on Tuesday while speaking as guest lecturer at The PUNCH Forum, themed: “Innovative Funding of Functional Education in the Digital Age,” held at The PUNCH Place, Lagos-Ibadan Expressway.

Reeling out statistics, Ogundipe said UNILAG retained 256 first-class graduates as lecturers between 2015 and 2022, but only 17 remained in the institution’s employ as of October 2023.

He attributed the mass exodus to poor remuneration, unconducive working conditions, and low motivation among lecturers.

Ogundipe said, “At UNILAG, we decided that those with first-class honours should be employed. What is remaining is not up to 10 per cent. All of them have gone. One day, I asked the man in charge to give me this information.

“In 2015, 86 were employed; in 2016, 82; during my time, that is, 2017 to 2022, 88 were employed. As of October 2023, only 17 were on the ground. They have gone. Very soon, in the next 10 years, you will have only females in the universities if something is not done.”

He noted that unless the government adequately funds the sector, universities would, in the next decade, be dominated by women, while poorly prepared candidates would gain entry into postgraduate programmes.

“Many of us are tired. By the time you get home, there is no light, and the Federal Government is saying they are giving us N10m to access as loans. You can see how our lives have been devalued. Can I use N10m to build a security post?

“How do you encourage them? Many of our colleagues, especially the young ones, are tired. The unfortunate thing is that two things will happen in the universities soon. Women will be the ones to occupy universities, like we have in secondary schools. Second, the calibre of people who will come for postgraduate studies will be people who are not supposed to come,” he added.

Ogundipe lamented chronic underfunding of the education sector, noting that both federal and state allocations had consistently remained below 10 per cent, far short of UNESCO’s recommended 15 to 26 per cent.

He urged legislators to enact a law mandating that each first-generation university receive at least N1bn annually to address decayed infrastructure.

According to him, many universities are forced to rely on Internally Generated Revenue, which ought to be channelled into research.

Ogundipe, who is also Pro-Chancellor of Redeemer’s University, Ede, Osun State, lamented that infrastructure, technology, teachers’ remuneration, research support, and digital facilities in universities were either overstretched or completely absent.

“In the period from 2015 to 2025, Nigeria’s education sector has faced tremendous fiscal restraint. Federal budget allocations — even after headline increases in absolute naira terms — have consistently remained below 10 per cent, and most years hover between 4.5 and 7.5 per cent.

“The consequences of chronic underfunding are immediate and profound: Nigeria has the highest number of out-of-school children worldwide, estimated at between 10 and 22 million. Over 60 per cent of primary education funding is absorbed by teacher salaries, often with little left for capital expenditure or innovation,” he said.

Ogundipe advocated innovative funding strategies beyond government allocations, including public-private partnerships, alumni endowments, philanthropy, education bonds, optimising digital platforms, and linking funding to measurable outcomes.

He said, “UNESCO positions innovative financing as a critical tool for bridging the nearly $100bn annual financing gap impeding educational attainment in low- and lower-middle-income countries.

“Innovative mechanisms for education include shared risk/reward models for infrastructure, investors repaid only if outcomes are achieved, risk capital to support EdTech and innovative schools, leveraging the Nigerian diaspora for targeted investments, debt swaps for education, education technology grants, corporate donations, and capacity-building linked to business and reputation.”

While urging state and Federal Governments to raise allocations, he also identified critical roles for the private sector, alumni, civil society, faith-based organisations, and donor agencies.

“The private sector should see education support not just as social responsibility but as enlightened self-interest in building the workforce, the talent, and the markets of tomorrow. Invest not only in infrastructure, but in people, curricula, and research that advance national development.

“To alumni, home and abroad, remember that the institutions that made you now need you. Give, mentor, endow, advise, and advocate for your alma mater and the next generation.

“To civil society and faith-based groups, continue to be the vanguards of inclusion, equity, and grassroots school transformation. To the Nigerian media, lead the narrative, demand reforms, report boldly and analytically, and make education funding a national priority.

“To international and donor agencies, partner with us, but let us increasingly build our domestic resource mobilisation and institutional resilience. Above all, to every Nigerian, let us see education as the most sacred trust we must pass to our children. Our fingerprints, our footprints, our names should be found in the library buildings, the digital labs, the scholarships, and the lives changed,” Ogundipe said.

PUNCH management staff at the forum included Executive Director, Business Development and Innovation, Mrs Valerie Omowunmi Tunde-Obe; Chairman, Editorial Board, Mr Obafemi Obadare; General Manager, Production, Mr Olayinka Popoola; and Manager, Advertisement, Mrs Mary Ubani.

Also in attendance were the Editor, PUNCH Digital, Mr Lekan Adetayo; Deputy Editor, The PUNCH, Mr Tana Aiyejina; Associate Editor, News, Dr Ramon Oladimeji; and Head of Training, PUNCH Media Foundation, Mr Dele Aina.

Report reveals how Nigerians paid N2.57bn ransom to kidnappers in one year, 4,722 abductions recorded

  • Zamfara, Kaduna, and Katsina had the highest numbers of incidents and victims

A geopolitical research firm, SB Morgen (SBM) Intelligence, has revealed that kidnappers demanded over N48 billion from victims and their families between July 2024 and June 2025.

The research firm, in its latest report, titled ‘Economics of Nigeria’s Kidnap Industry,’ said out of the total amount of N48 billion demanded as ransom, only N2.57 billion was received.

According to SBM, no fewer than 4722 people were kidnapped in at least 997 incidents, in which at least 762 people were killed in the same period.

“Nigeria’s kidnapping crisis has evolved into a lucrative criminal enterprise, with N2.56 billion ($1.66 million) confirmed in ransom payments and 4,722 civilians abducted in just one year,” the report reads.

“The Northwest remains the most violent, while the Southeast and South-South face targeted religious abductions and financial extortion.

“Unless security forces dismantle these networks and address root causes—poverty, unemployment, and weak law enforcement—the cycle of kidnappings, ransoms, and deaths will continue unchecked, leaving ordinary Nigerians in perpetual fear.”

The firm explained that while the amount of naira paid in ransom has dramatically increased, the dollar equivalent has not kept pace.

For example, the report highlighted that in the 2022 report, a total of N653.7 million was paid, which equated to approximately $1.13 million.

The following year, the amount paid dropped to N302 million ($387,179).

“Although the NGN amount paid rose sharply to N1.05 billion in 2024, the USD equivalent was only around $655,000,” the report reads.

“The latest figures show a new high, with N2.56 billion paid, which amounts to approximately $1.66 million.

“This significant divergence between the NGN and USD amounts reflects the ongoing devaluation of the Nigerian currency.

“As the cost of living soars and legitimate livelihood opportunities dwindle, kidnapping has become a highly organised and pervasive criminal industry.”

The firm noted that the perpetrators are demanding increasingly higher sums in naira to compensate for the currency’s weakening purchasing power, thus transforming the crimes from a symptom of a weak security apparatus to a self-sustaining business model.

ZAMFARA, KADUNA RECORDED THE HIGHEST NUMBER OF PEOPLE KIDNAPPED

Giving a state analysis, the research firm said that of the 4,722 reported kidnapping cases, Zamfara, Kaduna, and Katsina had the highest numbers of incidents and victims.

“In the period under review, Katsina led in the number of kidnap-related incidents with 131, accounting for 13.1% of the national total,” the report reads.

“However, this does not correspond with the total number of people kidnapped. That record belongs to Zamfara, whose 1203 kidnapped residents account for 25.4% of the total.

“Of the top five states in the number of incidents, four-fifths are northern, with Katsina (131), Kaduna (123), Zamfara (113) and Niger (40) representing two northern geopolitical zones (Northwest and Northcentral).

“In comparison, Delta completes the five states with 49 incidents.

“This means that the most kidnap-infested state in the South accounts for a little less than 5% of the whole, making the kidnap crisis a predominantly northern issue.”

SBM noted that the kidnappers became bolder this year, with eye-watering sums requested for ransom.

According to the report, of the N48 billion demanded as payment, the highest amount demanded came from the abduction of Chidimma and Precious Enuma, as well as their aunt Anwuri Oko Ye in Ebedei Ukwuole community of Ukwuani local government area of Delta State on March 15, 2025.

The kidnappers requested N30 billion as ransom; this singular incident represents 62.5 percent of all ransom demanded.

SBM advised that breaking the cycle of abductions requires urgent and systemic action, stressing that the government must act with dedication and strategy to end the crisis.

According to the firm, disrupting financial networks through advanced tracing technologies could starve kidnappers of profits, while economic stabilisation might reduce recruitment pools.

“But without coordinated strategies targeting both the crime’s profitability and its socioeconomic drivers, Nigeria risks entrenching kidnapping as a grim national industry, one that perpetuates poverty, undermines recovery, and leaves citizens hostage to a failing system,” the firm warned.

SBM said the time for half-measures has passed, adding that only through dismantling the ransom economy can Nigeria begin reclaiming its security and future.

Evils of Colonialism: France returns skull of beheaded king to Madagascar after 128 years

France on Tuesday returned three colonial-era skulls to Madagascar, including one believed to be that of a Malagasy king decapitated by French troops during a 19th-century massacre.

The skull, believed to belong to King Toera, was handed over in the first restitution of human remains since France passed a law facilitating their return in 2023, along with those of two other members of the Sakalava ethnic group.

France returns skull of beheaded king to Madagascar after 128 years

French troops beheaded King Toera in 1897, with his skull then taken as a trophy to France.

It was placed in Paris’s national history museum alongside hundreds of other remains from the Indian Ocean island.

“These skulls entered the national collections in circumstances that clearly violated human dignity and in a context of colonial violence,” said French Culture Minister Rachida Dati.

Her Madagascar counterpart, Volamiranty Donna Mara, praised the handover as “an immensely significant gesture” that marked “a new era of cooperation” between the two countries.

“Their absence has been, for more than a century, 128 years, an open wound in the heart of our island,” she said.

A joint scientific committee confirmed the skulls were from the Sakalava people but said it could only “presume” that one belonged to King Toera, Dati said.

Couple charged with sexual abuse, child neglect after 11-year-old impregnated by step-dad gives birth

An Oklahoma couple is facing neglect and abuse charges after officials say a man impregnated his stepdaughter, he and the child’s mother failed to get her prenatal care, and the child gave birth this month.

The stepfather, age 34, has been charged with one felony count of child sexual abuse, as well as six counts of felony child neglect, according to court documents obtained by USA TODAY.

The mother, age 33, has been charged with one felony count of enabling child sexual abuse, and six counts of felony child neglect, per the documents.

The child neglect charges stem from “deplorable conditions” in which the 11-year-old and five other children, ranging in age from 2 to 9 years old, were living, according to court documents.

USA TODAY is not publishing the names of the stepfather and mother to protect the identity of all of the children involved.

Children in home were ‘living in dog feces,’ court documents show

The morning of Tuesday, Aug. 19, police and the Muskogee County Department of Human Services (DHS) removed six children from the home.

The family lives in Muskogee County, about 58 miles southeast of Tulsa. While living there, the stepfather allegedly sexually abused the girl between Jan. 1, 2025 and August 2025, prosecutors said in court documents.

The mother is charged with enabling sexual abuse after her daughter gave birth in the family’s home on Aug. 16, having received no medical care for over a year, according to police reports.

In the documents, officials said both parents claimed they didn’t know the child was pregnant, and she had not been to the doctor in over a year.

The pair is also facing neglect charges due to the conditions the children were living in. Altogether in the home were six children ages 11, 9, 7, 6, 4, and 2, per court documents. Officials found the children “living in dog faeces,” and some of them had no clothing on, per the documents. 

The district attorney based the couple’s charges on allegations that they failed to provide the children with adequate supervision, adequate medical care, and adequate shelter.

Stepfather and mother charged, both remain in custody

Both the stepfather and mother were charged in Muskogee County District Court. As of Tuesday, Aug. 26, both defendants have requested court-appointed lawyers, the Muskogee County District Attorney’s Office confirmed to USA TODAY.

Both are still in custody as of Aug. 26, the Muskogee County Sheriff’s Office confirmed to USA TODAY. Bond has been set at $100,000 for each of them, court documents show.

A Fourth Path: Malaysia’s quiet AI revolution

The Future of AI: Transforming Humanity | guptadeepak.com

By Cornelia C. Walther

The recently concluded ASEAN AI Malaysia Summit 2025 was more than a conference. It was a deliberate assertion of technological self-determination, designed to resonate beyond Southeast Asia. Sovereignty of artificial intelligence as cultural preservation – another AI revolution in the making?

The Incomplete Triangle Of AI Supremacy

The main story people tell about AI has boiled down to a narrow view that treats it mostly as a geopolitical competition: Washington versus Beijing versus Europe, capitalism versus authoritarian control versus consumer orientation. In this dynamic the so-called Global South is often relegated to passive consumption of technologies designed in Western boardrooms, deployed from US-based corporations, trained on English language and culture. This thinking — amplified by extensive 24/7 hybrid media coverage and heated venture capital echo chambers — obscures a more nuanced transformation occurring at the periphery of traditional power structures.

Malaysia is participating in the accelerating AI discourse, and it is beginning to rewrite the terms of engagement.

What emerges from Kuala Lumpur is neither imitation nor opposition, but a coherent alternative – which challenges the foundational assumptions of AI development itself. This is not about catching up with existing paradigms, but about creating new ones — a post-colonial reimagining of what artificial intelligence can become if it can be freed from the extractive logic of platform capitalism and rather be guided by a deliberate intent to maximise values and social benefits.

Digital Sovereignty As Epistemic Independence

Launched yesterday Malaysia’s National Cloud Computing Policy is a prime example of this approach. More than mere infrastructure policy, it represents what postcolonial theorists might call epistemic disobedience — the rejection of technological dependence as natural or inevitable. By mandating data sovereignty and creating indigenous cloud infrastructure, Malaysia is operationalizing technology designed by and for specific cultural contexts, not imposed from above.

The projected US$26.18 billion (RM110 billion) in economic impact by 2028 is significant, but the strategic implications are revolutionary: it is proof that economic development need not require digital colonization.

The Ilmu Paradigm: Language As Liberation Technology

The unveiling of Ilmu on August 12th — Malaysia’s first indigenous multimodal AI model embodies a challenge to AI universalism. Developed through the partnership between YTL AI Labs and Universiti Malaya, Ilmu demonstrates that linguistic diversity is not a market inefficiency to be optimized away, but a source of algorithmic advantage.

This matters because language models encode worldviews. When AI systems are trained exclusively on English-dominant datasets, they embed particular ways of understanding reality, hence a coloniality of knowledge weaves past mindsets and values into future algorithms. Ilmu’s focus on Bahasa Melayu (Malaysian language) and local dialects is thus both an act of cognitive sovereignty, ensuring that Malaysian AI reflects Malaysian “ways of knowing”. At the same time it is a pragmatic path to ensure that Ilmu is configured to give the best possible answers to its proprietary customers: Malaysian individuals and institutions.

The collaboration with DeepSeek’s open-source LLM amplifies this. By becoming the first nation to deploy open-source LLMs at scale, Malaysia has chosen interoperability over dependency, commons over enclosure. The resulting innovations — including NurAI, the world’s first Shariah-compliant AI chatbot — demonstrate how technological sovereignty enables cultural specificity rather than constraining it.

Malaysia’s approach crystallizes the logic of prosocial AI — AI systems that are tailored, trained, tested, and targeted to bring out the best in and for people and planet. This is not a pretense of corporate social responsibility nor algorithmic greenwashing, but a deliberate reorientation of technological purpose. Beyond Silicon Valley’s “move fast and break things” moto, and Sam Altman’s belief that “technology happens because it it possible” – the 4T framework of prosocial AI offers a more maturation and meaningful roadmap to not only navigate, but shape the hybrid future.

The underpinning logic addresses the core challenge of our time: operating within planetary boundaries while meeting human needs. Prosocial AI offers a pathway beyond the false choice between growth and sustainability by recognizing that long-term value creation requires embedding social and environmental considerations into the very architecture of technological systems.

Prosocial AI: Economics of Post-Extractivism

Rather than treating ethical considerations as constraints, Malaysia has begun to find ways to harness them as competitive advantages. Trust becomes a strategic asset, cultural relevance generates market differentiation and environmental consciousness to open new revenue streams. This is capitalism with different parameters — a form of diverse economies 4.0.

Climate-Conscious AI: Technology As A Tipping Element

Malaysia’s emerging AI strategy comes at a painful juncture in planetary history. Scientists have flagged several ecological tipping points – critical thresholds in the Earth’s climate system where a small change can trigger a significant and often irreversible shift in the system’s state. Coming on top and potentially influencing all of them comes technology as a catalyst that is capable of cascading large-scale transformation for good or very bad.

The urgency cannot be overstated. Current trajectories point toward multiple simultaneous crises: climate breakdown, biodiversity collapse, and social fragmentation. In this context, AI represents both risk and opportunity. Deployed carelessly, AI systems will trigger an ABCD of AI-issues – degrading human agency, fragilizing interpersonal bonds, amplifying resource consumption and accelerating social stratification. Deployed consciously, they offer the opportunity to empower humans as agents of change, optimize resource flows, accelerate renewable energy transitions and help coordinate collective action at previously impossible scales.

Malaysia’s take on developing an AI framework suggests that technology could become a positive element in the planetary health equation – if regenerative intent were to be embedded into its algorithmic architecture. Future AI systems could be designed not merely to minimize environmental harm, but to actively contribute to ecological restoration.

Because a climate-conscious AI approach not only acknowledges that technological transition must occur but acts on it. It’s a smart choice.

As climate breakdown accelerates and social inequality deepens, the question is not whether AI will reshape society, but whether that reshaping will kill or cultivate human flourishing within planetary boundaries. A true AI revolution is not about more powered technology, but the regenerative human intent that drives it.

This article, written by Cornelia C. Waltherwas originally published on August 14, 2025 by Forbes.

Exam Malpractice Allegations: Drama as Lecturer and female student trade blows in lecture hall

A dramatic scene unfolded at Niger Delta University, Bayelsa State, after a female student and a lecturer engaged in a physical fight inside an examination hall.

The clash reportedly began when the lecturer caught the student involved in malpractice and ordered her to leave the hall; but she refused, insisting her seized phone be returned first.

Witnesses said the confrontation escalated when the student allegedly smashed the lecturer’s phone, sparking a heated exchange of blows.

In a video of the incident, another official was heard urging the student to exit the hall, but she stood her ground until her phone was released.

Attempts to get the university’s reaction were unsuccessful as management has yet to comment on the incident.

TIPS