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Man jumps into runway, dies after getting ‘sucked into jet engine’ as plane prepared for take-off

An Italian international airport has been closed after a person reportedly died in an accident on a taxiway.

According to Corriere della Sera, the victim, who was not a passenger or airport staff member at Milan Bergamo Airport, died after being ‘sucked into the plane engine’.

The man is believed to have run onto the tarmac and into the path of an aircraft that was preparing for takeoff.

Flightradar24 data shows flight V73511 from Milan to Austurias was on the move for only one minute and 55 seconds before the accident occurred.

Flights scheduled to arrive at the airport, which is one of Italy‘s biggest – have now been diverted this morning following the ‘fatal accident’. 

At 11:50 a.m., one flight was diverted to Bologna, two were redirected to Verona, and six were sent to Milan Malpensa. 

Eight departing flights were cancelled after operations at the airport were suspended at 10:20 a.m., according to local reports. 

Sacbo, the operator of the Bergamo airport, said: ‘An incident that occurred on the taxiway, the causes of which are being investigated by law enforcement.’ 

In an update posted to X, the Lombardy Airports Association wrote: ‘Traffic to and from #orio #Bgy is suspended due to a serious issue on the apron. 

‘Possible delays, diversions, and cancellations throughout the morning. Updates will follow.’

According to FlightRadar information, so far, 19 cancellations have been recorded from Milan Bergamo Airport.

This is a breaking news story. More to follow. 

Source: Daily Mail

APC’s leprosy versus ADC’s scabies

By Suyi Ayodele

When an elderly supporter of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu tried to start a conversation about the opposition coalition party, African Democratic Congress (ADC), its membership and the ‘betrayal’ by the Acting National Secretary of the party, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, I politely turned down the conversation. Rather, I referred him to one of the lessons we learnt in our days about Ikú (Death) and how he lost the power to kill all princes.

The short story is clear in my head. I cannot remember the exact Ifa verse that speaks to the story, but I know it is derived from Òyèkú Méjì, the second biggest Odù, one of the 16 corpus of Ifá. The story is about the wife of Ikú called Olójòùngbodo and how she sold out her husband.

Worried about how Ikú was going about killing other people’s children, the elders of the community sat down to find a solution to the problem. Ikú had killed all the princes in the land leaving only Ayùnré. Should Ayùnré die, there would be no prince to be crowned Oba, and the kingdom would go into extinction. So, the elders took counsel and concluded that the woman’s pant is the closest item to her way of life, and decided that they would entice Olójòùngbodo, Ikú’s wife.

Early in the morning, the time of the morning my people call ìjímùjí (when one can barely see the lines on one’s palm), they sent some elders to meet Olójòùngbodo with gifts. The woman crawled out of her husband’s bed and met with the elders. She accepted the precious gifts and asked them what they wanted. The elders said they needed to know those food items that were forbidden to Ikú.

Without wasting time, Olójòùngbodo told them that her husband, Ikú, must not eat eku (rat), eja (fish), and a kind of vegetable known as ebòlò (very green with sweet aroma). The elders added more gifts and went away.

A few days later, the community called for a feast. All the elders were invited. Ikú was given a special table. He felt good by the special treatment. Two beautiful virgins were asked to serve him. Ikú savoured the delicacies given to him in the best carved calabashes. He ate, drank enough palm wine, belched and gave the closing remarks. Then he departed. The elders waited.

When the day for Ikú to kill Ayùnré came, the entire town was on edge. Morning came, and afternoon followed. It was dusk and the sun set. Yet nothing happened. The night crept in and there was no wailing from the palace. Prince Ayùnré was hale and hearty. Then another day broke, and the elders rejoiced, the people rolled out the drums; it was celebration galore. The people rescued their kingdom from the grips of Death. They sustained the throne and the kingship lineage as Ikú could no longer kill the crown prince.

Permit me for reliving my childhood countryside years here. There were many lessons learnt; many of them learnt on the streets. The elders of those years were full of wisdom. They used parables, folktales and proverbs; all elements that combined to sharpen our sense of hermeneutics, to teach us the basic truth about life. The overall effect is that most ‘village boys’ of my era turned out to be streetwise.

Being an ará oko (yokel) -a derogatory term to describe someone from the interior- has its own advantages. In fact, one should be proud to be called an ará ìlú òkè (someone from the countryside). Those from the countryside have an edge over the ‘happening’ boys of the urban centres. One of such is that the storm that will fling the urban man is the one the countryside guy will savour as refreshing wind from the excruciating heat!

I draw inspiration from my native background today to counsel President Bola Ahmed Tinubu on the recent happenings in the nation’s political scene. Lasisi Olagunju, while doing a forensic analysis of Zainab Buba Galadima’s interview with Seun Okinbaloye on Saturday, called it a ‘storm’ (see Olagunju’s “From the North, ‘a storm is coming’”, published in the Nigerian Tribune on Monday, July 7, 2025). I see what is coming as being more serious than a storm.

Earlier on Sunday, July 6, 2025, two prolific columnists with the Tribune Titles, Festus Adedayo and Taiwo Adisa (both wrote in Sunday Tribune) dwelt on the same topic using different routes to get to the market of the socio-political commentaries. I read Adedayo’s “ADC: Death, Onikoyi and hunter’s pouch”. I juxtaposed it with Adisa’s “APC, ADC, and some unhelpful narratives”, and I added Olagunju’s piece referenced above. Done, I came to Zainab’s conclusion that they “are not good reviews. It is bad; it is really bad.”

Adedayo alluded to ‘Death’ in his headline. I got scared by that name. Death (Ikú), in one of the stories I heard early in life as stated above, was once human, and he is more than the phenomenon that takes people away from the planet earth. Death does more than that; he ends plans, he eclipses people’s visions and aspirations. He is powerful, deadly, vicious, and mean!

But as powerful as Ikú is, he has his flaws, his weaknesses. Death, like most men of power or men in power, is also vulnerable. Ancient tradition teaches us that the greatest flaw of Death is his belief that everyone around him loves him and will die for, and with him. How wrong, how shallow Death could be to assume that he cannot be defeated.

Make no mistake about it. The only Death in Nigeria’s political firmament today is President Tinubu. He is the rallying point for all those who aim to gain political power. He is equally the one-man squad that visits the homes of his enemies with deadly portions. He visited the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and planted seeds of internal destruction there. He went after the Labour Party (LP) and gave them eternal discord. For every seed of wahala Tinubu planted in the opposition, he left enough fertilizer to nourish it. The President has demonstrated, in the last two years, that he has all it takes to ruin the farms of those who share boundaries with him.

But in the last one week, it appears that the owners of the political IOUs are back to collect not only their invested capital but the accruing interests or capital interests. The formation, or rather, the consolidation of the opposition coalition against the re-election bid of Tinubu in 2027 with the coming on board of the ADC last Wednesday appears to be the greatest challenge the Tinubu political dynasty has ever faced in its political odyssey.

The reactions from the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) and members of the Tinubu’s government to the ADC coalition remind me of the old man and the leftover pounded yam. The old man, the saying goes, says he is not pained that someone else ate the leftover pounded yam, but he keeps removing his clothes ready for a fight over the same food he calls useless (kòdùn mí, kòdùn mí, àgbàlagbà únbó èwù ní èèmefà nítorí iyán àná). Many of Tinubu’s ‘friends’ who have spoken against the ADC coalition said that the party would amount to nothing. Ironically, they refuse to rest, eat popcorn and lick ice cream! If the coalition is useless, why bother about it?

One of the narratives against the coalition is the aspersions cast on the person of the Acting National Secretary of the ADC, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola. Today, Aregbesola is regarded as a betrayer and a Yoruba outcast. In all honesty, no one in his right mind will lift a finger in defence of Aregbesola. He is not alone. I find it appalling that any common man would want to defend any politician given what these locusts have done to our collective wellbeing as a people!

I shared the Ikú story above with the elderly Tinubu man. I told him that Aregbesola should be one of their least worries. Rather, Tinubu and his men should look inward. How many Aregbesola are in the house? How many Olójòùngbodo are sharing the same bed with the Jagaban? If indeed Aregbesola is a betrayer, can we ask Ikú (Tinubu) what he was doing, and where he was, when his wife crawled out of his bed to meet with the enemies?

Ikú, in Yoruba cosmology, is a very rich deity. This is why they say a kìí wá orí tì nílé Ikú (heads are not in short supply in Ikú’s abode). If that is so, what did Tinubu deny Aregbesola such that the enemies could entice him with gifts to join the coalition? The Ikú fable teaches us that every strongman must pay attention to his household. This is what Tinubu should do instead of listening to the clappers telling him that the coalition is nothing.

Again, Tinubu should also know that it is not every prince that Death can kill. When Tinubu, like Ikú, went after the opposition and decimated them with governors being compelled to join the APC, what did he expect? That the people would sit by and allow him to run Nigeria to a one-party State? What type of strategy is that; one that will leave nothing even for the fowls of the air to glean and eat? When APC was displaying that sense of rapacity for power, did it not expect a reaction from the people? What Tinubu is getting today from the ADC is exactly what the people of yore did when Ikú killed all the princes of the land but one! Our elders are right when they posit that the owner of the hut will not allow it to be pulled down by hostile neighbours.

And if we may go down a bit, what is ADC doing today or going to do tomorrow that the APC did not do in the past? Before Tinubu became the sole proprietor of the APC, did he not betray a whole clan? Where is Afenifere today? Where are the founding fathers of the defunct Alliance for Democracy (AD)? How did AD die, or who pierced the heart of the party with the long poisonous knife of betrayal? How many former loyalists of President Tinubu are in some nondescript corners today licking their wounds?

It is rather unfortunate that Nigeria is at a stage when the likes of Aregbesola, Rotimi Amaechi, Atiku Abubakar, Nasir el-Rufai and other hawks are the topics of discourse in our political system. That itself is a big shame! But when you have two terrible items to choose from, is it not true that the people will look for the lesser of the evils?

Ask me a million times. I will tell you that the APC and its twin evil brother, the ADC, are leprosy and scabies. And this again, reminds me of one of the songs by the hunters during rites of passage for a departed hunter (Eré ìsípa ode) about leprosy and scabies.

During those dirge possessions, especially when it got dark, the lead chanter would warn that the non-initiates should retire home as the hunters’ masquerade had nothing good to offer. Once the chief chanter raised the song: Èté òhun èyi, abiyamo yàn kàn h’ómo rè (between leprosy and scabies, let mothers choose one for their children), we knew that the time to go home had come.

This is the exact song the political class is singing for Nigerians today. The choices before us as represented by the ruling APC and the coalition ADC, are leprosy and scabies. My elders say the gun births no good child because just as the pellet kills, the bullet kills also. Either APC or ADC, it is the same skin of the cobra; it cannot be used to sew waist amulets (awo oká ni, kò seé rán ìbànté)!

However, one beautiful thing about the ADC to me is the way the David Mark group has left the moribund PDP for the former governor of Rivers State and current Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Nyesom Wike. Like my former boss is wont to say the thing sweet my belle!

Now, Wike has the entire PDP to play with. The coalition has solved the problem of the despicable promise to remain in the PDP and work for Tinubu in 2027 for him! What a man, what a character! Since the ADC unveiled its plan on Wednesday last week, Wike has been running here and there like Sisyphus in Hades, bashing, castigating and insulting every leader of the group. Wike, like the proverbial dog with skin rashes, has spoken against the coalition more than the APC Itself. There are no names he has not called those behind the coalition. Yet he says the coalition will fail! Shouldn’t Wike be happy that he has succeeded in taking over the PDP; why is he whining by the nanosecond like a common egbére (goblin)?

This is one of the problems I think President Tinubu should address as he navigates the political terrain ahead of 2027. My late mother, God repose her soul, had a saying: “Ajá tó je omo è, a kìí té òkú tìí (you don’t ask a dog that eats its puppy to guard a corpse). If Tinubu and his supporters are looking for betrayers, let them look inwards. A man who could bring the political party that gave him life to its knees would not blink twice before doing-in a mere generous benefactor like Tinubu. As an elder, the President should know that the house built with spittle will be wrecked by dew!

I recommend that Tinubu should watch the Zainab interview. He should listen to the lady speak directly. The president should not rely on any executive summary of the interview by any of his aides. He has a lot to benefit from it. The material is not the usual stuff from the Villa’s lying band; it is different from what any of the bootlickers around him in Aso Rock can offer

Zainab Buba Galadima warned that 2027 “is going to be the toughest battle he (Tinubu) will ever see. It is going to be the toughest.” I have no point to counter that. The only addition here is that it should not be lost on us that neither the coalition nor the APC is fighting for the welfare of the common man. Looking at the characters in both the APC and the ADC, one will easily conclude that the only unifying factor here is intrigue (rìkísí pa wón pò, wón di òré).

The opera season has opened. Nigerians should just locate the nearest popcorn sellers and ice cream joints, buy bagful and watch the unfolding season films. Then they can decide which one they prefer: the current leprosy or the coming scabies.

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

On The Wings of The Wind! The birthing of ‘Enugu Air’

The inaugural flight of the Enugu state-owned airline took off on Monday, marking what Governor Peter Mbah called a historic moment for ‘Ndi Enugu’.

Mbah at the launch said the achievement aligned with his administration’s vision of transforming Enugu into a premier destination for investment, living, and tourism in Nigeria.

“It is an honour to stand before you today, not only as a governor but as a fellow believer in the power of vision,” he declared.

Although the launch came weeks after his administration’s second anniversary, Mbah described it as “a fitting gift to Ndi Enugu”.

He stressed that Enugu Air represented more than just an airline as it symbolised a bold step in creating the right enablers for enterprise and opening up sectors that once felt out of reach.

“We began this journey with no empty promises. Among the key objectives we outlined upon assuming office was the pledge to make Enugu the premier destination for investments, living, and tourism in Nigeria. Today, we are witnessing a clear pathway to that goal,” the governor said.

The launch of Enugu Air, according to Mbah, also signified the possibilities that could emerge when strategic public-private collaborations were nurtured.

He added, “With our airline, we are opening doors to a sector that once felt out of reach. Enugu Air has given more wings to our dreams, and today we take that first flight together.”

Indeed, the arrival of a dark green and white-coloured aircraft for the first time at Akanu Ibiam International Airport, Enugu, with passengers on board at 12:25 pm on Monday, July 2025, marked the beginning of a new commercial airline in Nigeria, established by the Enugu State government.

It was a dream come true as thousands of people, including the Enugu state Governor, Dr Peter Mbah, who crowded the airport to witness the historic event.

The aircraft with tail number 5N-ENU has two of its kind parked within the Akanu Ibiam airport tarmac, an indication that ‘EnuguAir’ is ready for business.

‘EnuguAir’ flight schedules at the moment capture three major cities, Enugu, Abuja and Lagos.

It was announced that tickets for the return flight to Abuja are already booked. It is an indication that ‘EnuguAir’ automatically introduced online booking before its maiden flight from Abuja to Enugu on Monday, July 7, 2025.

Speaking more about the airliner, Mbah said: “We are starting off with three Embraer aircraft, efficient, elegant birds made for our terrain. Our routes begin with a powerful golden triangle, Enugu to Abuja to Lagos. From there, we stretch our wings to Port Harcourt, Owerri, Benin, Kano, and across various other cities.

“But we are not stopping there. In the next phase, we will fly beyond Nigeria, into other African countries, China, Europe, UK, US, and other global business hubs,” Mbah said.

He said that Enugu Air was established to create jobs and career paths for the young people; a faster and more reliable access to markets, clients, and capital by business people; a simpler and more dignified access to home for the diaspora, and a ready gateway to collaboration and opportunity for investors interested in Enugu.

Governor Mbah expressed gratitude to President Bola Tinubu, the Minister of Aviation, Festus Keyamo, and various agencies under the Ministry of Aviation and Aerospace Development, the management of Fidelity Bank, among others, for their support towards the realisation of the project.

In his speech, the Minister of Aviation and Aerospace Development, Mr Festus Keyamo, SAN, commended Governor Mbah for turning the vision of ‘Enugu Air’ into reality, describing him as “an incredible, performing governor”.

Keyamo said that Governor Peter Mbah visited his office frequently after he was sworn in as Minister of Aviation over his vision to establish Enugu airline.

His words, “It was incredible. He was not even waiting for us to come to him. Dr. Peter Mbah was coming to Abuja almost every week to press the button to make sure that a couple of things happen, and this (launch of Enugu Air) is just one of them,” he said.

He commended the state’s choice of XEJet as partner and operator of Enugu Air, describing XEJet as a highly competent and 100 per cent Nigeria-owned key player in the nation’s and Africa’s aviation industry.

“XEJet is not only supporting Enugu Air, it is running the Sierra Leonean National Airline. That is what the Renewed Hope Agenda is all about,” he stated.

The minister dismissed the misgivings over the Federal Government’s plan to concession the Akanu Ibiam International Airport, AIIA, and lauded Mbah’s strenuous effort to ensure the imminent completion and operationalisation of the airport.

“He also came back to us and said, ‘Look, I want to attract private sector investment into Enugu Airport. I will not wait for bureaucracy to run this airport for the good of Enugu people. The pace of development is too slow.’ “

Keyamo cautioned that the state government should be careful with the management of ‘EnuguAir’ so it won’t die as Nigeria Airways because the federal government lacks the initiative..He commended private sector involvement in the airport business.

The minister stated, “We are running the airport at a loss because we don’t have the drive of the private sector. But Enugu will be a bigger international hub now and we are going to approve regional operations from here to African States. Bring your letter tomorrow, and we will approve it.”

He added that despite being of a different political party from the governor, he could not hide the fact that the governor had performed and would be difficult to defeat in any election.

“Dr. Peter Mbah, you are a PDP, but we are afraid of you. The way you are going, we don’t know what will happen. We don’t know how to draw a scheme to defeat you, but we will be planning.

“It is an incredible vision you have here. Mr. President has said it himself. I am only reflecting what the president said.

“Beyond party lines, we should not be afraid to say it. You have a progressive spirit, and you have done well for Enugu State. You are one of the best performing governors,” Kenyamo said.

The Enugu State Commissioner for Transportation, Dr Obi Ozor, assured that Enugu Air would live up to its dream.

The Managing Director of Fidelity Bank PLC, Dr. Nneka Onyeali-Ikpe, remarked that the harmonious partnership between Enugu state government and the bank contributed to the success of establishing Enugu Air.

On his part, the CEO of XEJet, Engr. Ayuba Emmanuel described Mbah as a visionary and courageous leader and assured the state of their continued partnership to actualise his dreams for the state.

Dignitaries who graced the launch cut across the religious leaders, including the Catholic Bishop of Enugu, Bishop Callistus Onaga, traditional rulers, politicians and businessmen.

Hon.Engr. Anayo Onwuegbu, representing Aninri/Awgu/Oji River Federal Constituency and Hon.Dennis Agbo, representing Udenu/Igbo Eze South, witnessed the launch. A former President General, Ohanaeze Ndigbo worldwide, Dr. Nnia Nwodo and his brother, Dr Okwy Nwodo, a former Governor of Enugu State and an ex-National chairman of PDP, graced the occasion.

The Chairman of Enugu State Traditional Rulers Council, HRH Igwe Samuel Ikechukwu Asadu, the Chairman of Enugu West Traditional Rulers Council, HRH Igwe Godwin Madu and a host of other traditional rulers in the state, identified with the launch.

Various women groups, members of the Enugu State Executive Council, the Speaker of the Enugu State House of Assembly, Hon.Uche Ugwu and the state legislators equally registered their presence. The serving 17 local government chairman in Enugu State also attended. Ex-deputy Governors Hon.Mrs Cecelia Ezeilo, Dr Nwoye and many other political stalwarts in Enugu State, among others, were in attendance.

Nigerian man Chukwuebuka Enekwechi becomes first African to hit 22m mark in shot put

A Nigerian athlete, Chukwuebuka Enekwechi, has made history as the first African to throw over 22 meters in the men’s shot put.

At the Eugene Diamond League in the United States last weekend, Enekwechi clinched third place with a record-breaking throw of 22.10 meters, smashing his previous personal best of 21.91m set at the same event last year.

The impressive feat came in a highly competitive event, where Joe Kovacs took first place with a world-leading throw of 22.48m, while Roger Steen edged past Enekwechi for second, throwing 22.11m on his fifth attempt.

Enekwechi gave his all in a final attempt to surpass Steen but finished with 21.68m.

Still, his performance not only secured a podium finish but also wrote his name into the African athletics history books.

My Story: Why the Guild of Editors suspended me

By Steve Osuji

I DIDN’T KNOW I WAS ATTENDING A SECURITY BRIEFING: The Nigerian Guild of Editors (NGE), held her Biennial National Convention in Enugu from June 26th – 29th, 2025.

The theme of the occasion was, Building A Secure And Cohesive Nigeria: The Role of Dialogue, Inclusion and The Media.

The Keynote speaker was DG of the Department of State Service, (DSS), Mr. Adeola Oluwatosin Ajayi. All of this information was in the public space (see see event pamphlet).

On Friday, 27th of June, at the point of the keynote address, the entire hall was suddenly garrisoned by operatives of the DSS; all our reporters and photographers covering the event were cleared from the hall!

The compere then announced that the DG, DSS didn’t want the keynote address reported, that it was to be a confidential briefing of sorts. Talk of an external body brazenly setting agenda for editors!

It was a full hall of about 400 editors. Many of them were aghast at this development, many could only murmur impotently as this was uncharacteristic of the NGE and more so, it was never discussed at any fora prior to the event.

The speaker, gave his talk, which was rather brief and without depth nor much substance; not to mention any release of high-level security information.

As I mentioned in my column, the address was anticlimactic considering the hype and gag preceding it. To make matters worse, many editors couldn’t get in questions as the speaker closed the session after answering the first few questions!

QUESTIONS NOT ASKED: It was this scenario that prompted
my article in my column, EXPRESSO_Umbrage: GUILD OF EDITORS’ MEET: Questions DG, DSS missed.

Here, I asked (and discussed) three questions I could have asked at the convention if I had the opportunity.
The questions are as follows:

Why are many LGAs in Nigeria currently under the control of bandits and terrorists who levy taxes on farmers and hapless citizens?

MY FIRST ALLEGIANCE IS TO NIGERIA AND NIGERIANS, NOT TO THE DSS: These questions were the crux of my article which I published online on Friday July 3rd.

On the evening of same day, I was contacted on phone by an executive of the Guild over this article. I was asked to join an online meeting. I declined since I had no prior information about the meeting. I was told by the caller (someone I respect a lot) that my article breached the confidentiality notice of the Convention and therefore, I was requested to pull it down by the meeting.

I told the caller that if that was the issue, there was no point joining the impromptu meeting because I wouldn’t pull down my article.

I told him I wasn’t thinking of the DG DSS or the GUILD while I wrote, I was more concerned about the insecurity in Nigeria, the daily bloodshed and the currently besieged people of Benue and Nigerians sequestered and wasting away in IDP camps for over a decade.

I told him I was more concerned about these issues than the embargo by the DSS. Not at a period over 200 compatriot were massacred in Benue about a week earlier. We were supposed to be interrogating the DG DSS over this senseless killings and not him giving us orders at our conference! That’s our duty as editors!

I DIDN’T KNOW THE EDITORS’ CONVENTION HAD BEEN ‘SOLD’ OUT TO THE DSS: I would never have taken the trouble (and wasted scarce resources) travelling to Enugu If I had an inkling that this year’s NGE convention had been hijacked by the DSS.

Considering the fresh and recent massacre of Nigerians in Benue by non-state actors,we rejoiced at the theme of the convention and we were quite happy at the choice of the speaker.

But alas, we didn’t know that Nigeria Editors conference has been suborned to become DSS security briefing. Nobody prepared our minds for this. Some of us would have stayed away.

If the DSS wished to brief editors, it must organise its own conference. Not at a professional media conference where we paid our conference fees.

It’s disrespectful enough and indeed uncouth for the DSS to garrison the hall where the cream of editors in Nigeria were meeting. To now embargo editors from reporting and discussing the THEME of their once-in-two-years convention is unheard of in the annals of the Guild!

But the truth is that I wasn’t thinking about the issue of confidentiality while I wrote my column because in my wildest dreams, I didn’t think any guest would insist that editors should not interrogate the theme of their conference. It’s unheard of.

EXACTLY 30 YEARS AGO I BECAME EDITOR OF THISDAY(Saturday edition): I started my journalism career in The Guardian in 1987 (38 years earlier) after graduation and mandatory NYSC. I became Editor of THISDAY (Saturday Edition) in 1995; exactly 30 years ago today.

I joined the Guild 2003, (22 years ago) as pioneer editor of NewAge.

I reported the turbulent eras of the military juntas of Babangida, Abacha, in the thick of June 12 and the struggle for return of democracy. Up till the eventual retreat of soldiers back to their barracks and the transition from military till date. I never experienced this manner of brazen gagging!

I joined in presidential interviews and was invited to security briefings several times in the Presidential Villa.

I have attended over a dozen NGE conventions and conferences, never have our functions been converted to security briefings.

DISRESPECT AND GRIEVOUS DAMAGE TO THE MEDIA: I find it as a mark of utter disrespect bordering on impunity for the DG DSS to even think of converting the Guild’s Convention to a confidential briefing. It suggests a lack of understanding and regard for the media and its highest practitioners in the country.

I make bold to ask: where was the DG of the DSS 30 years ago when I became an editor? It’s very poor of him to think I don’t have an understanding of what constitutes a national security breach. And there were far older editors and members seated at this conference and I find it utterly insulting for the DG to think we are too stupid to understand what constitutes a security breach.

How in the world do I attend a conference of editors and someone from a government establishment instructs me NOT TO INTERROGATE THE THEME of my conference?!
Besides, the confidentiality of the source is a discretionary thing. It is incumbent on the concerned journalist to use such information as he deems fit. It’s not a blanket proposition to see-no-evil…!

This is happening because the Guild has degraded so much in recent times. I wrote my first column in The Guardian in 1984 as an undergraduate.

Today, as a senior citizen, I am being ordered to pull down an article I wrote! A report of a public conference! Who are we protecting? To whom is our allegiance as journalists; the DG DSS?

The temerity of it! Some of these people who served their internship under me now order me to pulldown my article! They don’t care about woes of insecurity in the land and Nigerians dying like chickens daily.

Since my article, Guma and Logo communities in Benue have been attacked with some policemen killed. The IGP had to hurriedly post a DIG to Benue. For how long shall we continue to be reactive? Where’s intel in all this? This is the question we must not ask!

I AM NOT INFALLIBLE: I do not suggest for a moment that I know it all or that I can’t make mistakes. I actually told them that if my article is flawed in any detail whatsoever, if I breached any security code, if my article is independently analysed and it is shown to me that I didn’t write in good faith if I didn’t write in the utmost interest of Nigeria and Nigerians. I will be the first to beg and apologise profusely to the DSS and to the NGE.

Until then, I think the DSS actually owes members of the NGE an apology for trying to muzzle the press and set an agenda for them. I want to believe he wasn’t properly briefed!

And the Exco of the NGE needs to be given a refresher course on the duties, ethics and privileges of the media as the Fourth Estate of the Realm. I imagine many of them are not well tutored on the essential codes of journalism practice and especially, our raison d’etre.

WHERE ARE THE ELDERS AND FELLOWS OF THE GUILD?: One hopes that the obvious faux Pas of the DSS garrisoning our conference hall and chasing out our reporters will NEVER happen again.

And NEVER AGAIN must the Guild’s conference or convention be converted to a confidential security briefing. The NGE represents the GOLDEN GATE of the media and if some ‘small boy’ can muzzle Editors in this manner, then it means the Nigerian media has been completely CAPTURED like the other arms of government.

The other day, a weird STATE OF EMERGENCY RULE was invoked on Rivers State and an elected governor was dubiously yanked out of office. The GUILD was mum in spite of my protestations and promptings!

Our elders and Fellows feigned numbness!

THIS IS NOT THE GUILD WE BUILT! If the Guild is so captured, degraded and overawed in this manner, the politicians will enjoy a free reign of impunity. That’s what we are faced with today.

Nigeria has become a signpost for corruption, terrorism and sundry maladies because the media has continued to wane and fail woefully in its constitutional role as WATCHDOGS.

The Guild must wake up and reimagine itself.

FINALLY: It’s okay for the Exco to suspend me, throw me under the bus and even make me seem like a villain to the DSS. I am not moved! My conscience is clear…

I would rather be SUSPENDED, I would even denounce my membership first, instead of being a member of an EFULEFU GUILD.

Osuji was Editor at The Guardian, Thisday, NewAge and Member, Editorial Board, The Nation.
Feedback: [email protected]

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

Female students make sextortion claims against governor’s aide 

  • Student Union leaders urged to lead fight against SGBV in Niger

On account of claims by some female students accusing Dr. Mkor Aondona, the Special Adviser to the Governor of Benue State on Documentation, Research, and Planning, of unethical and criminal behaviour involving sexual exploitation, cyber bullying and blackmail, he has been arrested by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, (EFCC).

The anti-graft agency announced the arrest of the governor’s aide in a statement by Dele Oyewale, its spokesperson on Saturday.

The anti-graft agency said the petitioners alleged that Aondona was routinely recruiting slim and attractive girls for ushering jobs and insisted on sexual favours as a condition for selection.

“Based on this, they became vulnerable to having sexual affairs with him but unknown to them, he had videos of every sexual act without their consent and was always threatening to leak the videos if they refused to continue having sex with him.

“Aondona was also alleged to be involved in blackmail—sending explicit videos of the girls allegedly recorded without their knowledge or consent through several messaging platforms. Some of the videos are said to be in circulation,” EFCC said in the statement.

EFCC said the suspect will soon be charged to court.

In the meantime, leaders of Student Union Governments (SUGs) across various tertiary institutions in Niger State have been charged to work closely with their school authorities to address the growing challenge of sexual and Gender-Based Violence (SGBV) in the state.

This appeal was made by Hafsat Kusherki, the Gender-Based Violence Desk Officer at the Ministry of Women Affairs and Social Development, during a one-day training session organised in Minna by the Global Promoters for Community Initiative (GPCI) for selected SUG executives.

Kusherki stressed the importance of sensitising students to speak up and report any form of violence, noting that the objective is to amplify the voices of women and students, promote women’s rights, and eradicate violence against women and girls in Niger State.

Also speaking, GPCI Project Coordinator, Olasukanmi Kalejaiye, called on the National Assembly to expedite the passage of the bill on s3xual harassment, which seeks to prevent, prohibit, and provide redress for s3xual harassment in tertiary institutions. He further urged the Niger State Government to enact the Gender Equal Opportunity Law and establish a commission to protect the rights of persons with disabilities.

On her part, Hajara Achibi, GPCI’s Monitoring and Evaluation Officer, explained that the training aimed to raise awareness about the dangers of harmful behaviours, stereotypes, and the impacts of GBV on survivors and communities, while emphasising the role individuals and societies play in prevention.

Meanwhile, student leaders drawn from institutions such as the Federal University of Technology (FUT), Minna, and Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida University (IBBU), Lapai, among others, advocated for similar training sessions to be organised on their campuses. They noted that such initiatives would empower students and survivors of SGBV to speak out and seek redress through the appropriate channels.

No Seat is Safe When You Sit Alone: A wake-up call to Nigerian professionals in corporate spaces

Nigerian professionals

By Chioma Amaryllis Ahaghotu

Let’s talk plainly.

In the tech world and many corporate spaces
Indians and other Asian communities dominate not just because they’re smart, but because they’re strategic. From the ground up, they prioritize collective advancement. One gets in, and they send the elevator down. They don’t just build résumés they build pipelines.

You see it in Silicon Valley. In big tech firms. In consulting. In engineering. From entry-level QA testers to executive leadership, Indians didn’t sneak in quietly. They walked in together. The recruiter is Indian, the hiring manager is Indian. You better believe the next five interviews are going to people with names that sound familiar to them. And that’s not nepotism, it’s community optimization.

Now compare that to many Nigerians in similar positions in Corporate America. . The moment we get a seat at the table, we start auditioning for comfort in and proximity to whi teness. Performing gratitude instead of positioning power. Saying things like:

“I don’t see color.”

“I just worked hard, and anyone else can too.”

“I don’t want to mix friendship with work.”

What we’re really saying is: “I like being the only one.”
Why? Because being the exception makes you feel safe. Special. Validated. Until you realize: no seat is safe when you sit alone.

Let’s take an example.

A Nigerian woman becomes a senior PM at a top tech company. She’s brilliant, no doubt. But when the opportunity comes to recommend someone, she’s quiet. She wants to stay “neutral.” Meanwhile, her Indian colleague has already forwarded five résumés to HR three of them from her old university WhatsApp group. Guess who builds an internal army, and guess who stays isolated?

Another example: a Nigerian software engineer finally lands at Google. Instead of plugging in junior devs from the diaspora, he isolates. Doesn’t want to be “too ethnic” or “play the race card.” Meanwhile, entire Slack channels and lunch groups are working overtime to ensure cousins, friends, and classmates land interviews. That’s not favoritism. That’s how power maintains itself.

We need to unlearn the performance of exceptionalism. You don’t become more valuable by being the only Black immigrant in the room. You become more vulnerable. Because when you fall (and every corporate star has a fall), there’s no safety net. No buffer. No one to say, “She was solid, I’ve worked with her kind before.” Because you made sure they never met your kind.

Indians have understood this for decades. Asians too. Latinos are catching on. Meanwhile, Nigerians are still caught up in the image of being the lone success story. The unicorn. The miracle immigrant.

But there’s nothing miraculous about being alone.
The real flex is community.
The real power move is representation that multiplies.
The legacy isn’t “I made it.” It’s “We’re here, and we’re not going anywhere.”

So next time you get a seat at the table, ask yourself:
Who am I bringing with me?
Because the only thing more dangerous than being excluded is thinking your inclusion means safety.

Chioma Amaryllis Ahagiotu on Facebook

NSPPD 14-day midyear fasting and prayer 2025 (Day 8 prayer points)

7 days down! 7 TO GO!!! DAY 8 IS FOR “HEALTH AND HEALING”. Study: Mark 5:21-43, John 5:1-14, 11:38-44, Luke 13:10-17, Malachi 4:2, 1 Peter 2:24, Hebrew 4:14-16

Declare with us:
July to December: This is still my year of El-Roi; I have indeed seen the God that sees me! He sees to help, to heal, to turn things around! Therefore, DISEASES, SICKNESSES, INFIRMITIES, FIRE!!! (Jeremiah 29:11)

EL-ROI! Make a name for yourself in my life, I refuse to journey through the second half with Old identities/Labels! By your unfailing mercies, give me a change of name! (Luke 18:38-41)

By my identity in Christ Jesus and my connection to the covenants at work on The Altar of Fire, sicknesses and diseases cannot be used to describe me/my family members this second half! Whatever planting that is not of our God, break! (Luke 17:21, 2 Corinthians 5:20)

July to December: I arise with Speed! I cover lost grounds! I move from where I am to where I ought to be! As I journey, No sickness, No disease, No infirmity is permitted to slow me down! I move by Fire! I am unstoppable! (Judges 6:14)

July to December: For Every work of God that has been done in my health in the first half, let there be a manifestation! By the Finished Works of Christ, by whose stripes I am healed, Divine Healing and Health is my portion and that of those connected to me! (Isaiah 53:5, John 9:3)

Every covenant of sicknesses/diseases/afflictions/ill health I may have accepted unknowingly in my thoughts or with my words is wiped out by the blood! I am delivered by Mercy! I break out by Fire! (John 8:36)

Fire Has cleared the way! Therefore, No Divination, No Enchantment against the family of _, from the crown of our heads to the soles of our feet, sicknesses/diseases/infirmities, I shake you off by Fire! (Acts 28:5)

As I journey from July to December, I prophesy perfect Health In my finances/business/career/ministry/academics! Powers of Hell that sponsor decline, exchange, reduction and retrogression, Fire! (Philippians 1:6)

I will not be absent on any day of my celebration/coronation, Any man or woman that shall arise to project arrows of sickness or infirmity to hinder me or anyone connected to me, fire of God, both the arrow and archer, scatter! (Proverbs 26:27)

Enough of Weeping! Enough of suffering! July to December: This far, No further! Years of running around in circles, servicing negativity in my Health, End by Fire! Every fountain of ill health in me or any one connected to me, dry up by Fire! My testimony shall be, Help arrived Suddenly! Speedily! Instantly! (Mark 5:25-34)

July to December: I AM IN MY GOSHEN! By the Blood of Jesus, Sicknesses and diseases of Egyptians, NOT me! NOT my Family! We are exempted by Fire! (Genesis 45:10, Deuteronomy 7:15)

I am fashioned in Christ ONLY unto Good Health of Mind, soul, and body! Every lie from the pit of Hell, be cancelled by Fire! (Ephesians 2:10)

I redeem every day of my second half by the blood and I declare Affliction shall not arise! That same spirit that raised Jesus from the dead is at work in me, it quickens, revitalizes and renews my health daily! (Ephesians 5:16; Romans 8:11)

July to December: Because I have waited upon the Lord, my health will not fail me, my strength is renewed like the eagle. Where others stumble and fall, grow faint and weary, I soar Higher, I move with greater speed, Hallelujah! (Isaiah 40:31)

July to December: whatever I bind in you is bound in Heaven! Whatever I loose, will be loosed in Heaven! Therefore I declare Contrary reports are torn by fire! I see healing coming, I see strong men bowing, I see an outburst of the Supernatural! I carry my evidence! I testify that WHAT GOD CANNOT DO, DOES NOT EXIST! (Matthew 18:18-20)

July to December: I AM ALREADY BLESSED!
I am already blessed, I cannot be cursed!
I am already healed, I cannot be afflicted!
I am already delivered, I cannot be bound!
Let this be my reality for What my God Cannot Do Does not exist!

By the Manifold Mercies of El-Roi, I declare my family SAVED TO THE UTTERMOST! By this, July to December, I decree and declare: NO DISEASE, NO SICKNESS, NO INFIRMITY… HALLELUJAH!

#NSPPD

#14DaysMidyearFast

#whatGodcannotdodoesnotexist

See Also: NSPPD 14-day midyear fasting and prayer 2025 (Day 7 prayer points)

See Also: NSPPD 14-day midyear fasting and prayer 2025 (Day 6 prayer points)

See Also: NSPPD 14-day midyear fasting and prayer 2025 (Day 5 prayer points)

See Also: NSPPD 14-day midyear fasting and prayer 2025 (Day 4 prayer points)

See Also: NSPPD 14-day midyear fasting and prayer 2025 (Day 3 prayer points)

See Also: NSPPD 14-day midyear fasting and prayer 2025 (Day 2 prayer points)

See Also: NSPPD 14-day midyear fasting and prayer, 30 June 2025 -13 July 2025 (Day 1 prayer points)

Paul Daudu says he didn’t write letter warning Senator Natasha to desist from ‘forcing her way into the Senate Chamber on Tuesday’

A Senior Advocate of Nigeria and a counsel to the Nigerian Senate, Paul daudu, SAN, has denied a letter making the rounds on social media, which issued an advisory that Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan should, “refrain from attempting to resume legislative duties until the enrolled order is released and properly reviewed by all parties.”

Daudu, in a short post made on his Facebook page, said:

Dear Members of the Public, please ignore the purported open letter written to J.S. Okutepa SAN making the rounds on social media. It is unsigned and not issued by me. I do not know the source of that letter.

I hold Learned Senior Advocate of Nigeria J.S. Okutepa, SAN, in such high regard as a Father and mentor in the Profession, and as such, could not have written him an open letter when I have unfettered access to him.

As has been my training, I have always restricted my arguments, rightly or wrongly, to the Courtroom.

Thank you, God Bless

Paul Babatunde Daudu SAN .

What you need to know about ex-Gov Rashidi Ladoja, the next Olubadan-in -waiting

A former Governor of Oyo State, Oba Rashidi Adewolu Ladoja, is poised to become the next Olubadan of Ibadanland, following the passing of Oba Owolabi Olakulehin on July 7, 2025.

As the Otun Olubadan, the highest-ranking chief in the civil line, Ladoja is positioned first in line for the throne under the unique rotational system that governs the city’s traditional leadership.

Born on September 25, 1944, in Gambari village near Ibadan, Ladoja’s educational journey took him through Ibadan Boys High School and Olivet Baptist High School, culminating in a degree in chemical engineering from the University of Liège in Belgium.

Upon returning to Nigeria, he started his career at Total before delving into business and politics.

Ladoja first took office as Governor of Oyo State in May 2003 on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), serving until his controversial impeachment in January 2006.

He was later reinstated by a Supreme Court ruling in December 2006 and completed his term in May 2007.

Since then, he has remained an active political figure, contesting elections with various parties before joining the Zenith Labour Party in 2018.

In August 2024, Ladoja embraced his role as Otun Olubadan by accepting the ceremonial beaded crown, a requirement for ascending to the Olubadan title under the revised chieftaincy declaration.

He stated on a private radio station in Ibadan then: “By the grace of God, I will become Olubadan. My blood pressure has been stable; anyone God destined to become Olubadan will become Olubadan.”

The updated chieftaincy law mandated that only Beaded Crown Obas are eligible for the throne, a change some perceived as politically motivated by Governor Seyi Makinde.

The state government, however, insisted that the amendment aligned with recommendations from the late Oba Balogun’s review committee, framing it as a necessary cultural reform.

The amendment sparked controversies, as Ladoja initially resisted accepting the crown, unlike his peers.

Critics argued that this clause could jeopardise his claim, while Ladoja and his supporters viewed it as a political manoeuvre by Governor Makinde in retaliation for Ladoja’s opposition to his 2023 re-election bid.

Ibadan’s succession has traditionally alternated between civil (Baale/Otun) and military (Balogun) lines for over 170 years.

As the leading civilian contender, Ladoja is next in line for the throne following the passing of the current Olubadan.

With the throne now vacant, the Olubadan-in-Council and kingmakers are set to formally propose the next Olubadan, a decision that will shape the future of Ibadanland.

Source: Tribune

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