
Why Rivers Gov. Wike declared that Nigeria lacks proper Commander-in-Chief.
Why Rivers Gov. Wike declared that Nigeria lacks proper Commander-in-Chief.
The Nigerian Railway Corporation (NRC) has confirmed the safety of 14 more passengers on board the attacked Abuja-Kaduna train of March 28, bringing the total safe passengers to 186.
According to the commissioners, the CPG will be supporting the state security operatives to confront the bandits in their enclaves, with a view to curtailing their menace. This underscores the argument for the policing of the community to be local, and not federal.
The Nigerian Chief of Army Staff, Lt. Gen. Faruk Yahaya has attributed the country’s drop on the Global Terrorism Index to the global recognition of the operational successes recorded by the Nigerian Army troops in the Northeast and across other theatres of operations.
SGF Boss Mustapha gave an update on what the Federal Government was doing to end banditry in the Northwest. However, the FG should make sure those terrorists are flushed out of all forests across Nigeria from where they terrorize innocent Nigerians.
Finally, Information and Culture Minister Lai Mohammed said the Nigerian Financial Intelligence Unit (NFIU) identified 96 financiers of terrorism in Nigeria and 424 associates/supporters of the financiers in 2020 and 2021.
Rivers State Governor Nyesom Wike has highlighted the role Sultan Muhammad Sa’ad Abubakar plays in stabilizing the nation, while deploring bandits attack in Sokoto State and commiserating with the government and him over the unwarranted killing of innocent citizens by bandits.
Insecurity: Terrorists attack UniAbuja, kidnap lecturers, families… PDP calls out Buhari.
In its first official response to the viral Economist’s article, “A crime scene in the heart of Africa: Insurgency, secessionism and banditry threaten Nigeria,” the Nigerian Presidency has admitted that the international magazine was correct in a number of ways, but claimed that they got a lot of points wrong.
The Nigerian Army has been rattled by a recent article published by The Economist, a London based magazine, titled “The Crime Scene at the Heart of Africa: Insurgency, Secessionism and Banditry Threaten Nigeria.”