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The Chief of Army Staff, Lt.-Gen. Tukur Buratai, has directed the Theatre Commander, Operation Lafiya Dole, Maiduguri, Maj.-Gen. Ibrahim Attahiru, to capture Abubakar Shekau, self-styled leader of the Boko Haram sect, “dead or alive”.

And Attahiru has 40 days to accomplish the task.

Buratai issued the order at the weekend, according to the Director, Army Public Relations, Brig.-Gen. Sani Usman.

He quoted the Chief of Army Staff as directing Attahiru to “employ all arsenals at the disposal of the Theatre Command to smoke out Shekau wherever he is hiding in Nigeria.

“The general public is please requested to also assist and volunteer information that would lead to the accomplishment of this task,” Usman said.

Shekau assumed leadership of Boko Haram following the death, in 2009, of the founder of the sect, Mohammed Yusuf.

He had been reported killed several times in the past only for him to appear in recorded video messages debunking such reports.

On August 23, 2016, Sani himself had issued a statement saying Shekau was inflicted with “fatal injury” in a major air strike on Boko Haram’s location in Sambisa Forest.

The bombardment was said to have been carried out while Shekau was leading his group in performing the Friday prayers at a secret location called Tayye in the heart of the vast forest.

On March 28 this year, Defence Minister Mansur Dan-Ali, emerging from a closed-door meeting with President Muhammadu Buhari in Abuja, assured Nigerians that the army would soon apprehend Shekau.

He said: “If you have had the opportunity to go to Sambisa (forest in Borno), you will know that Boko Haram has been defeated, go and see what is happening in Sambisa.

“We have dominated the whole stronghold where they used to be, there is where we call ‘camp zairo’ where their spiritual and their strong headquarters that they were using as communication base was destroyed and as at the same time occupied by our men of the armed forces.

“So, I believe it’s just a matter of time, it took America about seven to 10 years to get Bin Laden so we will get Shekau as soon as possible.

“I told you before now, the spiritual headquarters has been ransacked and vandalized. He (Shekau) is on the run, so he may be hiding in one of the enclaves of Sambisa forest that we are dominating.

“We have opened up the place; we are using it as a training area whereby the army engineers will open roads. We shall be patrolling and be ransacking that forest for the whereabouts of Shekau,’’ he said.

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Qatar Denies Visa Restrictions On Nigerians

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The Qatari Ministry of Interior has dismissed claims that it introduced new visa restrictions on Nigerian passport holders.

A ministry official told BBC Pidgin on Wednesday that there are no such restrictions, contrary to viral social media reports.

The reports had alleged that Qatari authorities barred male applicants from entering the country unless they were travelling with family, while women and families were allegedly required to show proof of a five-star hotel booking and a return flight ticket before applying for a visa.

According to the BBC, Hayya, Qatar’s digital platform for e-visa services, clarified that the visa process remains unchanged.

“There has been no suspension or changes to the current procedures. If any updates are to be made, they will be announced on our official platforms,” Hayya said.

Qatar has witnessed a rise in Nigerian visitors in recent years, partly due to the visa restrictions and flight suspensions imposed by the United Arab Emirates during a diplomatic row with Nigeria between 2021 and 2024.

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Court Denies Bail To Owo Church Massacre Suspects, Orders Accelerated Trial

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A federal high court in Abuja has refused bail to five suspects accused of killing more than 40 worshippers at St Francis Catholic Church, Owo, Ondo state.

Delivering ruling on Wednesday, Emeka Nwite, the presiding judge, held that the charges are capital offences and therefore not bailable.

Nwite agreed with the Department of State Services (DSS) that the defendants belong to a terrorist organisation capable of intimidating witnesses and obstructing trial.

The judge said the weight of evidence against the suspects, coupled with the absence of credible sureties, reinforced the DSS’s argument that they posed a flight risk.

He ruled that granting bail would amount to “judicial risk” and ordered accelerated hearing, fixing October 19 for the next sitting.

The suspects — Idris Omeiza, Al Qasim Idris, Jamiu Abdulmalik, Abdulhaleem Idris and Momoh Otuho Abubakar — were arraigned on August 11 on a nine-count charge filed by the attorney-general of the federation.

They are accused of joining the Al-Shabaab terrorist group, plotting the June 2022 Owo attack, and detonating improvised explosive devices (IEDs) inside the church, killing at least 40 people and injuring over 100.

The federal government also alleged that the group held meetings in Kogi and Ondo to plan the assault, carried out with IEDs and AK-47 rifles.

The offences, according to prosecutors, contravene sections 25(1) and 42(a)(ii) of the Terrorism (Prevention and Prohibition) Act, 2022.

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Electoral Law Constrains INEC From Punishing Politicians For Early Campaigns — Mahmood Yakubu

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The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) says it cannot penalise politicians who have already begun campaigning ahead of the 2027 elections.

Mahmood Yakubu, INEC chairman, made the remark on Wednesday in Abuja at a stakeholders’ roundtable on premature campaigns.

Yakubu explained that while section 94(1) of the Electoral Act 2022 prohibits campaigns earlier than 150 days before polling, the law prescribes no punishment for violators.

“Quite correctly, Nigerians expect INEC, as registrar and regulator of political parties, to act in the face of the brazen breach of the law. However, the major challenge for the commission is the law itself,” he said.

He noted that section 94(2) only sets a fine of up to ₦500,000 for campaigns held within 24 hours of election day, leaving a legal gap that politicians have exploited.

Yakubu said aspirants and their supporters have been holding rallies, unveiling billboards, and running media adverts across the country in breach of the law — acts that also undermine INEC’s monitoring of campaign finance.

The commission, he added, has invited lawmakers, party leaders, civil society groups and regulators to the forum to explore remedies.

“As the national assembly is currently reviewing our electoral laws, the leadership of the senate and house committees on electoral matters have been invited. I am confident they will give due consideration to actionable recommendations,” he said.

Abdullahi Zuru, INEC national commissioner and chairman of the Electoral Institute, described early campaigning as one of the most worrying trends in Nigeria’s democracy.

He said aspirants often use cultural festivals, religious gatherings, billboards, branded vehicles and even influencers on social media as cover for premature campaigns.

“When aspirants or parties compete to dominate visibility long before the official campaign period, it distorts fairness and inflates the cost of political competition,” Zuru said.

He warned that the practice distracts elected officials from governance, undermines public trust in elections, and weakens respect for the rule of law.

“We must refine the regulatory framework so that what constitutes premature campaigning is more clearly defined in today’s digital age,” he added.

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