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Florida to open criminal investigation into OpenAI over ChatGPT’s influence on alleged mass shooter

Students hold a vigil near the scene of a shooting on the Florida State University campus on 17 April 2025 in Tallahassee. Photograph: Miguel J Rodriguez Carrillo/Getty Images

Florida’s top prosecutor is to launch a criminal investigation into how the tech company OpenAI and its software tool ChatGPT may influence users’ threats of harm to themselves or others, including whether it “offered significant advice” to a gunman accused of conducting a mass shooting in the state last year.

State attorney general James Uthmeier said at a news conference on Tuesday that his office is expanding an examination of OpenAI, saying a “criminal investigation is necessary” and the state had issued subpoenas to the $852bn California-based tech firm.

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California man arrested for allegedly swapping in pasta for Lego pieces then returning them

California man pilfered thousands of dollars in Lego toy sets from the retailer Target in a return-based scam, sometimes swapping valuable figurines with dried pasta pieces and before returning the construction-centric toys, authorities recently alleged.

The alleged plot ended with the arrest of 28-year-old Jarrelle Augustine, accused of grand theft for allegedly stealing the Lego sets, whose manufacturer is known for the interlocking miniature bricks and figurines, according to Irvine, California, police.

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Fresh legal fireworks set to mar NUPENG’s national delegates conference as union risks contempt of court

The Nigeria Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers’s (NUPENG) slow-motion disintegration has reached critical mass, with stakeholders warning that inordinate ambition of some selected few, compromised judicial interventions and a “pull down the house” syndrome orchestrated by the Secretariat of the Union have subjected the Union’s planned 6th Quadrennial National Delegates Conference to a possible stillbirth and ruining its prospects of electing fresh national executives in a matter of hours.

This fresh twist of fate becomes evident in a letter dated 22nd April 2026, from the Chambers of Dr. Ogwu J. Onoja, SAN and Associates, referencing Suit NO: NICN/ABJ/140/2026, between Comrade Lucky Etuokwu Vs. NUPENG and ANOR duly acknowledged by the office of The Registrar of Trade Unions, Federal Ministry of Labour, Abuja on the subject of notification of pendency of Court action/applications with reference to the National Delegates Conference and National Administrative Council Election of NUPENG fixed for the 23rd and 24th of April, 2026.

The Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN) was asking the office of the Registrar of Trade Unions to distance itself from the planned election by NUPENG on the 23rd and 24th of April, 2026 or any other day pending the determination of the suit before the Court.

The Learned Silk pointed out NUPENG’S flagrant disobedience to the judgment of the Federal High Court sitting at Port Harcourt, delivered on the 11th October 2024 which ordered to reinstate his client Comrade Lucky Etuokwu a duly elected, serving National Vice President of the Port-Harcourt Zone of NUPENG who was unlawfully suspended.

“The effect of this judgment is that Comrade Lucky Etuokwu is still a valid member and officer of NUPENG. However, the General Secretary of NUPENG Mr Afolabi Olawale has issued and signed a notice of 6th Quadrennial National Delegates Conference with the clear intention of excluding Comrade Lucky Etuokwu and other perceived enemies from that election and its processes whereas he is eligible to contest by virtue of Rule 7 (b) of the NUPENG Constitution,” the Learned silk stated.

The SAN who obviously put his years of meritorious service and integrity in the legal practice to bear clearly emphasised that any action taken by NUPENG leadership or the office of the Registrar of Trade Unions will be to undermine the authority and sanctity of the Court of competent jurisdiction.

He further stated that it is a clear principle of law that where any issue of controversy between parties is subject of litigation, the parties are to exercise restraint, as not to do so will be counterproductive. “The court in such a situation will not hesitate to wield its big stick and sanction such conduct accordingly with severe punitive measures including setting aside such steps taken in contravention of the doctrine of ‘lis pendis” as expressed in OJUKWU v. GOVERNOR OF LAGOS STATE (1986) 1 NWLR (Pt. 18) @ 621,” he said.

Many stakeholders who have been following the unfortunate developments in NUPENG found it crucial to bring to the knowledge of the general public that there are several other cases pending at the Court of Appeal Port-Harcourt filed by NUPENG leadership against Comrade Lucky Etuokwu; another case filled by Comrade Alex Ikechi Agwanwor against NUPENG in the Court of Appeal Abuja, seeking redress for his unlawful suspension and expulsion from the Union are yet to be determined at the Court of Appeal.

Still pending also is the case of Comrade Lucky Osesua against NUPENG leadership at the Court of Appeal Port-Harcourt; and the trumped-up criminal charges against Comrade Lucky Osesua and 19 others at the FCT High Court Maitama since November 2023.

The crisis in the Union has continued to deepen as parallel leaderships emerged, with ongoing suspensions, counter-suspensions, and duplicated structures plunging the oil and has put the Union into greater confusion and a state of disorientation.

With multiple court orders, parallel executives, and continuing fierce legal fireworks; prospects for a credible, transparent, peaceful, free and fair, non discriminatory, all-inclusive and unifying Delegates Conference appear dim and unrealistic as the Union is presently constituted.

Stakeholders and many trade union observers in Nigeria and outside the shores of Africa are lending their voices and warning that unless the Union restores internal discipline, respect for due process, rule of law and as well call its General Secretary, Afolabi Olawale to order or terminate his appointment, the scheduled National Delegates Conference meant to hold in Lagos, even if it eventually holds, will amount to contempt of Court and may become yet another flashpoint in NUPENG’s long struggle for survival and legitimacy.

​Sundiata Post operationalises ‘The Insecurity Triad’ framework with launch of Specialist Intelligence Unit (SPIU)

​ABUJA, NIGERIA (23 April 2026) – In a strategic move to transition from traditional reportage to high-level security analysis, Sundiata Post Media Ltd today announced the formal operationalisation of The Insecurity Triad framework through the establishment of the Sundiata Post Intelligence Unit (SPIU).

​The Unit is designed to provide actionable intelligence and deep-tier synthesis on the interlocking systems of kidnapping, banditry, and terrorism that define the current security landscape in Nigeria and the Lake Chad Basin.

This move marks the official transition of The Insecurity Triad from an analytical framework—developed by Dr. Max Amuchie through his syndicated column, The Sunday Stew—into a fully operational intelligence engine.

​The framework is gaining rapid and wide acceptance among policy experts and security analysts as a definitive tool for reporting and decoding the complexities of insecurity in Nigeria.

Speaking on the launch, Dr. Amuchie, CEO of Sundiata Post and the framework’s Theorist-in-Chief, emphasised that the SPIU represents a “moral and intellectual contract” with a nation in search of clarity.

​”For too long, our response to insecurity has been reactive and fragmented because we viewed kidnapping, banditry, and terrorism as isolated symptoms,” Dr. Amuchie stated. “The Insecurity Triad framework proves they are a unified ecosystem. By launching the SPIU, we are moving beyond the ‘what’ of daily headlines to the ‘why’ and ‘how’ of the architecture of violence.”

​Core Mandate of the SPIU

The Sundiata Post Intelligence Unit is strategically mandated to:
•​Detect Emerging Threat Signals: Systematically track and identify early indicators of insecurity across regions before they escalate into major incidents.
•​Decode Insecurity Patterns: Apply the Insecurity Triad framework to analyse the interplay of actors, enabling conditions, and societal impacts driving insecurity.
•​Produce Actionable Intelligence: Generate structured outputs—including Triad Briefings, Situation Reports, and Early Warning Alerts—that go beyond headlines to explain “why” and “what next.”
​Anticipate Risk Trajectories: Provide forward-looking assessments that help readers, policymakers, and stakeholders understand likely developments.
•​Strengthen Public Understanding: Bridge the gap between complex security dynamics and public comprehension through clear, evidence-based reporting.
•​Drive Accountability Through Insight: Highlight systemic failures and governance gaps sustaining insecurity, enabling informed public discourse and institutional response.

​Flagship Product: The SPIU Security Review

The immediate flagship product of the Unit is the SPIU Security Review, a high-impact intelligence brief to be published every Friday. The Review will debut on Friday, 24th April 2026, offering readers a sophisticated breakdown of the week’s security indicators.

​Strategic Partnerships and Data Collaboration

Recognising that robust intelligence is built on the strength of diverse data ecosystems, the SPIU is open to institutional partnerships and cross-sector collaborations. The Unit welcomes engagement with national and international agencies, research organizations, and technology firms, particularly in the areas of geospatial data sharing, predictive analytics, and open-source intelligence (OSINT).

​A New Frontier in Journalism
Dr. Amuchie clarified that the SPIU is not designed to replicate state intelligence structures but to innovate within the media space.

​“We are not a security agency, and we are not trying to be one. We are building something arguably more important—a public intelligence system that is transparent, disciplined, and accountable. Insecurity thrives in confusion. When people cannot see patterns, they mistake persistence for inevitability. Our job is to restore visibility.”

​He further noted that the Unit will prioritise clarity over sensationalism: “Fear is not intelligence. Noise is not insight. SPIU will be judged by its ability to make sense—consistently, calmly, and credibly. We are moving from reporting events to interpreting trajectories; from describing violence to understanding its architecture. SPIU is the operational arm of that transition.”

​The Sundiata Post Intelligence Unit becomes effective immediately, with its analytical outputs integrated into daily reporting and special intelligence features.

​Major Theory Release: “The Trinity of State Decay”

Coinciding with the unit’s launch, Dr. Amuchie is set to release his highly anticipated theoretical exposé, “The Trinity of State Decay.”

This definitive analysis of Nigeria’s security crisis will be published as a two-part series in his syndicated column, The Sunday Stew. The first installment debuts this Sunday, 26th April 2026, with the concluding part scheduled for Sunday, 3rd May 2026.

Are we back to Abacha’s dark years again?

By Richard Odusanya

General Sani Abacha’s regime was one of the darkest in Nigeria’s history as it was characterised by widespread human rights abuses, gagging of the press, and so many undemocratic tendencies. And, as we gradually approach the 2027 general election. Concern mounts as Nigeria’s democracy shows signs of return to ‘Abacha era’.

In the recent past days concerns about Nigeria returning to the “dark years” of General Sani Abacha (1993–1998) have been raised by many of our citizens including the civil society organizations (CSOs), observers, and the intelligence community as political tensions rise ahead of the 2027 general election.

While observers warn of troubling parallels in democratic manipulation and political control, the current situation is framed within a civilian context rather than a direct military dictatorship. Below are some questions agitating the minds of millions of our citizens:

A noticeable parallel with the Abacha Era Weakening of Opposition: Nigerians and other observers warn of deliberate attempts to weaken opposition political parties and shrink the democratic space ahead of 2027, creating an environment similar to the “consensus candidate” strategies of the Abacha era.

Undemocratic One-Party Dominance: The ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) has gained control of a significant majority of states, raising fears of a return to one-party dominance reminiscent of the 1995-1998 political landscape.

Unimaginable Level of Insecurity and Human Rights: Concerns are frequently raised regarding the state of insecurity, with some citizens citing that the current administration’s security actions have worsened or led to a feeling of being unsafe.

Hostility and Restriction of Freedom: Critics have alleged that current government responses to criticism show “paranoia” or “state of governance psychosis” similar to that of the Abacha regime, including alleged restrictions on public protests and media.

Excruciating Pain and Economic Distress: The current economic hardship, including high fuel prices and inflation, has led some to question if the country is facing a deeper crisis than previous, including the Abacha era, even though the structural causes differ.

In the light of the above misgivings and based on preceding information. Also, taking into account the connection and  evidence-based activities of the electoral umpire infidelity. Sadly, Nigeria has had electoral umpires accused of partisanship before. … infidelity, neglect of their responsibilities and biased.

In conclusion, I wish to place this on record and plead with our policy makers to change the name of Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), to party in government electoral commission, because if it is independence she will not be manipulated and party members will not be nominated to mend the commission.

Finally, Nigerians are not going to accept another WURUWURU elections a return to the Maurice Iwu era. Because in a sane countries where the law actually works. What the INEC did on the instructions of Amupitan constitutes serious PERJURY and lawyers get disbarred and go to jail for this.

@richardODUSANYA

[email protected]

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

Trivialising terrorism

By Punch Editorial Board

Islamic terrorism is deadly, very deadly and genetically stubborn. It is a double-faced scourge, mutating in conformity with its ecosystem. In Nigeria, public officers pretend they do not understand Salafism. So, the citizens are paying a heavy price for this.

In this context, the Senate President—the No.3 citizen—whose voice should reflect the gravity of Nigeria’s challenges, underestimated the scourge during the inauguration of the Nigeria Revenue Service headquarters in Abuja on April 14.

In essence, Godswill Akpabio demonstrated a troubling tendency to reduce national trauma to political theatre. This is ludicrous.

In his homily, he claimed that Nigeria’s worsening insecurity is merely the handiwork of political enemies and that attacks and bombings would cease once President Bola Tinubu secures victory in the 2027 elections. This is profoundly insensitive. It trivialises a pandemic that continues to consume lives and livelihoods nationwide.

Nigeria has been under the siege of Islamic terrorism since Boko Haram launched its deadly offensive in 2009 in the North-East.

According to Kashim Shettima, the Vice-President, at least 100,000 Nigerians have been killed due to it.

These are not abstract numbers; they represent fathers, mothers, children—entire families erased.

In the same period, over 2.2 million Nigerians were kidnapped, with more than N2 trillion paid in ransom between 2024 and 2025. These figures expose a country under siege. There was no election when terrorists carried out these atrocities. To suggest otherwise is to distort reality and insult the memory of the dead.

Apart from that, Boko Haram’s cardinal aim is “to establish a caliphate.” The extremists do not believe in Nigeria’s sovereignty. Under Goodluck Jonathan, they seized 27 LGAs in Adamawa, Borno and Yobe states. They have spread to the North-West and North-Central, seizing communities and collecting levies and tributes.

This is not a matter for jokes or flippant commentary. Entire communities have been wiped out, leaving behind ghost towns and mass graves.

The toll on the country’s security forces has also been severe. More than 116 soldiers have reportedly been killed in terror attacks since 2023—a conservative estimate given the frequency of unreported casualties.

Senior officers are not spared. The killing of a brigadier-general, Oseni Braimah, on April 9 and the slaughter of Musa Uba (also a brigadier-general), four months earlier, underscore the boldness of insurgents and the vulnerability of even the most protected.

Schools have been forced to shut down in many regions, denying children their right to education and dimming hopes for the future.

The horrors of mass abductions remain fresh. The kidnappings in Chibok in April 2014 and Dapchi in February 2018 shocked the world, yet similar incidents persist. Communities in Kaduna, Kebbi, Niger, and lately, Kwara states have endured their own ordeals.

In February, nearly 200 people were massacred in Kwara, with many others still languishing in captivity. Across Plateau, Benue, and Taraba, mass graves have become grim markers of a nation at war with itself.

At the weekend, Boko Haram threatened to relocate over 400 captives held in its den if its brazen demand of N5 billion ransom is not met.

Against this backdrop, Akpabio’s remarks are inappropriate. They signal a leadership disconnected from the lived realities of ordinary Nigerians. While citizens navigate insecurity without protection, the political elite move around in convoys and armed escorts, insulated from the chaos that engulfs the rest of the country.

Akpabio’s unguarded statement reflects a pattern.

In 2023, he casually mentioned at plenary that a “token” had been sent to senators’ bank accounts, only to hastily retract when he realised cameras were rolling.

During nationwide protests against hunger and poor governance in 2024, he reportedly told demonstrators to continue protesting “while we are here eating.”

Such remarks betray a mindset that trivialises public hardship and elevates privilege above accountability.

The consequences of this attitude are profound. When leaders fail to acknowledge the severity of a crisis, they undermine efforts to address it.

Human Rights Watch has consistently linked Nigeria’s worsening insecurity to the government’s failure to protect its citizens.

Transparency International identifies corruption as a key driver of the violence, eroding institutions and enabling impunity.

The Global Terrorism Index ranks Nigeria as the fourth most terrorised country in the world—a damning indictment of the state’s capacity to safeguard its people.

Reports from Kwara now suggest that armed groups are embedding themselves in rural areas and advancing southward, threatening neighbouring states like Oyo. This pattern indicates a dangerous expansion, not a politically induced anomaly. The implications are clear: without decisive and sincere action, the crisis will deepen.

Leadership demands empathy. It requires recognising the pain of citizens and addressing it with urgency, not dismissing it with political rhetoric. Akpabio’s comments fail this basic test.

Nigeria is bleeding. Its people are weary, anxious, and increasingly disillusioned. At such a time, the Senate President should be rallying the nation toward solutions, not trivialising its suffering. Words matter, especially from those in power. When they are used carelessly, they deepen wounds that are already far too deep.

Re: The Shadow of Justice: Why Nigeria’s de-radicalisation programme is a breach of the social contract… By Soga Bisuga Esq

Radicalisation is not a switch that can be flicked off through vocational training and classroom lectures. It is a deep psychological and ideological transformation, often reinforced over years. To claim it can be reversed in 24 weeks requires a leap of faith that would be questionable even in the most controlled conditions. Yet here, the process is shrouded in secrecy. There is no public accounting for crimes and addressing offending behaviour, no transparent criteria for release, no visible mechanism for long-term monitoring to prevent recidivism. Kachi Okezie

In response to Kachi Okezie’s article, The Shadow of Justice: Why Nigeria’s de-radicalisation programme is a breach of the social contract and the quiet construction of a parallel judicial system, I find it necessary to interrogate a troubling premise at the heart of the argument: that a system which appears to elevate the rehabilitation of perpetrators while the voices of victims remain marginalised can be justified within any rational or moral framework.

To ignore those who have suffered the gravest harms, while extending recognition and structured reintegration to those responsible, is not only a distortion of justice—it is a position that defies both logic and the foundational principles of any credible legal order.

It sickens to the stomach. Only in the backwaters of Apocalypto should this kind of dystopia flourish with such vigour.. it beats every sane logic or sense…

If retribution is tied to every “sin” or immorality, or in mundane terms, every wrong, why does the system that ought to ensure that balance of “reward for action” get caught up in a frenzy to achieving the very opposite of this empirical truism?

In the same Nigerian state, a random thief in Oyo state gets 3 months for assaulting his victim in order to steal; in Borno state however, an equally young lad who has killed more than a dozen humans in the Boko-Haram professed religion-fueled and crazed holocaust killings, is rewarded with a reintegration into society it had torn its sane fabric!!

From the victims’ angle, it is much more odious to rational thinking: it is reprehensible and mind-less!!

‘Soga Bisuga Esq.

The Bisuga Partners,
47, Agege Motor Road,
Surulere, Lagos.

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

Telcos lose grip on ₦400bn airtime credit market as FCCPC hands control to five lenders

Nigerian telecom operators are losing direct control of a lucrative revenue stream estimated at over N400 billion annually, as regulators move to restructure the fast-growing airtime and data lending market.

The shift follows a directive by the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC), which has approved five independent lenders to take over the service, forcing major operators to step back from direct lending.

Under the new framework, companies such as MTN, Airtel, Globacom, and 9mobile will no longer run ‘borrow now, pay later’ services themselves, marking a significant reset of a business long seen as a quiet cash cow. Instead, licensed third-party lenders will now manage credit issuance, repayments, and risk, effectively ending telcos’ dominance over one of Nigeria’s most widely used micro-credit products.

Nigeria’s popular airtime and data lending services have now entered a new phase.

For years, these quick loans helped millions of Nigerians stay connected when their airtime or data ran out. Users simply dialed a code, borrowed a small amount, and repaid automatically with their next recharge plus a 10 percent to 15 percent fee, a system that proved especially useful in a tough economy where cash is often scarce at the end of the month. But regulators now classify the service as a form of consumer lending that requires stricter oversight.

Analysts estimate that Nigerian telcos collectively earned over N400 billion annually from airtime and data lending through service fees. MTN Nigeria’s Xtratime alone generated N131.62 billion in the first nine months of 2025, accounting for the bulk of its fintech revenue, while core fintech activities contributed just N6.8 billion.

For the full year, MTN’s fintech segment reached N191.3 billion, with lending driving most of the growth. Airtel Nigeria reported $113 million (about N156 billion) in other mobile services revenue over nine months, much of it linked to similar credit products.

This quiet goldmine was built on Nigeria’s vast prepaid market of over 150 million mobile subscribers. Telcos used customer usage data to determine borrowing limits with minimal credit checks, while defaults remained low, often below 5 percent, because repayments were deducted from subsequent recharges.

The model proved both low-risk and high-margin, generating billions in fees with little additional infrastructure cost. MTN alone disbursed over N5.6 trillion in airtime and data loans between 2019 and 2023, while the industry issued 46 billion advances worth N1.4 trillion in 2023.

The FCCPC stepped in with Digital Lending Regulations introduced in 2025, aiming to improve transparency and accountability in the rapidly expanding digital credit space. Airtime lending was reclassified as a financial product rather than a telecom add-on, with new requirements around pricing clarity, fair debt recovery, licensing, and consumer protection.

After multiple deadlines, the commission approved five specialist lenders: Total Tim Nigeria Limited, Rane Interactive Medien CLS Limited, Mode NG Applications Limited, Cloud Interactive Associate Limited, and Coverage Broadband Limited, to take over operations. These firms will handle customer onboarding, credit assessment, loan approvals, and collections.

Under the new arrangement, telecom operators will continue to supply airtime and data to the lenders, who will then extend credit to subscribers. Revenue will now be shared through partnerships, shifting the model from telco-led lending to a more competitive, lender-driven structure.

The transition is already affecting users. Services such as MTN Xtratime, Airtel’s credit advance, and similar offerings from Glo and 9mobile have been temporarily suspended. For many low-income users, students, and small traders, borrowing small amounts, like N100 or N500, was often essential for staying connected, especially in emergencies.

Telcos are also adjusting to a potential revenue shift. Analysts say operators could lose direct earnings exceeding N300 billion if new partnerships prove less profitable, though companies insist the impact is not material relative to overall revenues. MTN, for instance, reported N5.2 trillion in total revenue in 2025 and is expected to offset losses through data growth and other digital services.

The reset highlights a broader tension between convenience and consumer protection. Airtime lending thrived because it addressed a real gap in Nigeria’s largely prepaid and underbanked market, where traditional financial institutions rarely offer such small, instant loans. Telcos leveraged their billing systems and customer data to create a seamless micro-credit ecosystem.

However, rapid expansion raised concerns. The 10 percent to 15 percent flat fee can translate into high effective interest rates, particularly for short-term borrowing, while repeated usage risks trapping low-income users in cycles of debt. Regulators have also flagged issues around transparency, data privacy, and the dual role of telcos as both service providers and lenders.

Separating lending from telecom services could introduce stronger governance, clearer terms, and more competition. Licensed lenders may bring improved risk management and customer protection, while also creating room for innovation beyond basic airtime credit.

Still, the transition carries risks. Nigeria’s telecom and financial sectors are already subject to multiple regulators, including the NCC and the Central Bank, and adding another layer could slow execution. New entrants will need time to scale, build trust, and replicate the simplicity of existing USSD-based services.

In the broader context, the shift reflects Nigeria’s evolving digital economy, where fintech growth is forcing clearer boundaries between technology platforms and financial services. Airtime credit, once a simple add-on, has effectively matured into a regulated micro-lending industry.

For telecom operators, the change signals a need to deepen other revenue streams, particularly in data services, mobile money, and enterprise solutions. For the newly approved lenders, success will depend on delivering seamless access, competitive pricing, and reliable service at scale.

The FCCPC maintains that the reforms will promote fair competition and align Nigeria with global standards for digital credit. As the new system takes shape, the key question remains whether consumers will experience better value or greater friction, in accessing one of the country’s most widely used financial lifelines.

What is certain is that the era of telcos directly controlling this multibillion-naira lending market is coming to an end. The business itself is not disappearing; it is being reshaped under tighter regulation, with implications for millions of Nigerians who rely on it to stay connected.

Business Day

46-year-old C’River man bags life jail for raping daughter

A High Court of Justice in Calabar has sentenced a 46-year-old man, Imeh Sunday, to life imprisonment for raping his daughter.

The prosecution of the case was led by the Basic Rights Counsel Initiative, a non-governmental organisation focused on protecting the rights of children and vulnerable persons.

The judgment, delivered on Wednesday by Justice Blessing Egwu of the Family Court 2 in Cross River State, followed the convict’s trial on charges bordering on incestuous rape.

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The court held that the prosecution proved its case beyond a reasonable doubt, relying on what it described as overwhelming evidence against the defendant.

Justice Egwu subsequently handed down the maximum sentence prescribed by law.

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Reacting to the judgment, the principal counsel of the organisation, James Ibor, commended the survivor for her courage and resilience throughout the trial.

He also praised the roles played by the survivor’s guardians, the state Ministry of Justice, and the police in securing the conviction.

“I wish to commend the survivor, her grandparents, the Honourable Attorney-General, the Commissioner of Police, and the judiciary, as well as the staff and volunteers of BRCI, for their commitment and support toward the survivor and her recovery,” he said.

The group disclosed that the latest conviction brings to four the number of rape-related convictions it has secured in the state within the past four months.

In 2025, the Nigeria Police Force, Bauchi State Police Command, arrested a 28-year-old man for criminal intimidation, assault and raping his 8-year-old biological daughter.

The command’s Police Public Relations Officer, Nafiu Habib, stated, “On 31/12/2025, one Baffa’ji Muhammed ‘m’ reported at the Divisional Police Headquarters, Alkaleri, that on 30/12/2025 at about 1830hrs, one Baffa’ji Abba ‘m’ aged 28yrs (same address as the complainant), lured his biological daughter (name withheld), aged 8yrs, into a bathroom and forcefully had carnal knowledge of her through both her vagina and anus about five times in a single day against her will.”

Abuja Public Schools Shut Down Indefinitely: Teachers’ strike sparks education crisis in Nigeria’s capital

A fresh education crisis is unfolding in Nigeria’s capital, where public primary schools across the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) have been shut indefinitely by a sweeping teachers’ strike, disrupting learning for thousands.

The Save Public Education Campaign (SPEC) has issued a blistering condemnation of authorities, calling the shutdown a “damning indictment” of the government’s chronic neglect of education and teachers’ welfare.

The strike, declared by the Nigeria Union of Teachers (NUT) FCT wing, began on Monday, April 20, 2026, and has brought academic activities in public primary and secondary schools across all six area councils to a standstill. Classrooms remain locked, leaving students stranded at a critical point in the academic calendar.

While the NUT directive covers both primary and secondary schools, the Academic Staff Union of Secondary Schools (ASUSS) has distanced itself from the action, creating a fragmented response within the education sector and raising concerns about coordination among teaching bodies.

At the heart of the dispute are long-standing grievances: the government’s failure to implement a 2025 committee report on teachers’ entitlements, unresolved salary adjustments of 25% and 35%, and a disputed 40% peculiar allowance. Union leaders insist these demands are not new—but represent commitments authorities have repeatedly failed to honor.

In a statement signed by its Co-Conveners, Vivian Bellown and Dimeji Macaulay, SPEC warned that the fallout is already severe.

“Thousands of children have been forced out of classrooms with no immediate solution in sight,” the group said, adding that the situation exposes a “persistent pattern of poor attention to education and teacher welfare.”

The group also linked the crisis to Nigeria’s broader education emergency, cautioning that prolonged school closures could worsen the country’s already staggering out-of-school children population—estimated at over 33 million, the highest globally.

“The continued shutdown of public schools will deepen inequality and undermine the future of the next generation,” the statement read. “Education is a fundamental right, and its disruption carries far-reaching consequences for society.”

Teachers, backed by SPEC, argue that deteriorating working conditions and unpaid entitlements have made effective teaching nearly impossible.

“Teachers cannot be expected to give their best under poor conditions while their basic rights are ignored,” the group stated.

The FCT Administration has urged striking teachers to return to classrooms, warning that the disruption could trigger mass failure among students preparing for the West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WAEC). But union leaders appear unmoved, escalating pressure with planned احتجاج protests at the FCT Secretariat.

Parents have been advised to keep children at home until further notice, as uncertainty deepens over when schools will reopen.

SPEC has called for urgent government intervention, demanding immediate implementation of agreements and a shift away from what it describes as a cycle of empty promises.

“The government must move beyond rhetoric and take concrete action,” the group said. “Enough is enough—fund public education, respect teachers’ rights, and reopen schools now.”

The current crisis echoes a similar shutdown in 2025, when primary school teachers embarked on a strike that lasted more than three months over unpaid wages and unimplemented minimum wage adjustments, raising fears that history may be repeating itself.

With no resolution in sight, Nigeria’s capital faces a growing education emergency, one that could have lasting consequences for a generation already on the brink.

TIPS