Connect with us


BIG STORY

Court Threatens To Jail DSS DG Ajayi For Disobeying Order On Access To Nnamdi Kanu

Published

on

A federal high court in Abuja has cautioned Adeola Ajayi, the director-general (DG) of the Department of State Services (DSS), against defying the court’s order for Nnamdi Kanu’s visitation rights.

Kanu, the leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), has been held in DSS custody since his re-arrest in Kenya and extradition to Nigeria in 2021.

He is facing trial on a seven-count charge, including treasonable felony.

Kanu’s legal team has repeatedly accused the DSS of denying its members access to their client.

The court had directed the DSS to allow Kanu’s legal team, with a maximum of five people, to visit him on designated days.

On Friday, the registrar of the federal high court in Abuja issued “form 48 notice of consequences of disobedience to the order of court” against DSS director-general.

The notice warned the DSS boss that he would be guilty of contempt of court and would be liable to imprisonment if he disobeyed the court-ordered visitations.

“Take notice that unless you obey the directions contained in this order (see overleaf), by allowing the applicant’s counsel to conduct the court-ordered visitations with the applicant on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, you will be guilty of contempt of court and will be liable to be committed to prison,” the notice reads.

  • Kanu’s Lawyers Threaten To Sue Ajayi

In a statement on Friday, Aloy Ejimakor, counsel to the IPOB leader, said if Ajayi disobeyed the court order, the defence team would file contempt charges against him.

“This notice is necessitated by the repeated disobedience of the court-ordered visitation of Mazi Kanu by the newly appointed Director-General of the State Security Services (Mr. Adeola Oluwatosin Ajayi), who has, for almost a month, not allowed Mazi Kanu’s lawyers to visit him,” the statement reads.

“To be clear, this notice is a quasi-criminal judicial process that forewarns any person disobeying a court order of the penal consequences of such misconduct.

“Therefore, if the Director-General of DSS persists on this ignoble path, he will leave us with no other option than to commence vigorous contempt proceedings against him.”

BIG STORY

Senate Orders NAFDAC To Enforce Ban On Alcohol In Sachets By December 31

Published

on

The Nigerian Senate has ordered the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) not to extend the December 31, 2025 deadline for the production of alcohol in sachets.

The resolution followed a motion of urgent national importance sponsored by Senator Asuquo Ekpenyong (Cross River South) during Tuesday’s plenary session.

Presenting the motion, Ekpenyong said the directive was in line with global regulatory standards and international best practices aimed at reducing alcohol-related harm among Nigerians.

He recalled that in 2018, the Federal Ministry of Health, Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC), NAFDAC, and industry bodies including the Association of Food, Beverage and Tobacco Employers (AFBTE) voluntarily signed a five-year Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to gradually phase out sachet and small-bottle alcoholic drinks.

Ekpenyong explained that the Federal Government, upon appeals from manufacturers, had already granted a one-year moratorium in 2024 to enable producers to exhaust existing stock and transition to compliant packaging alternatives.

However, the lawmaker expressed concern that some manufacturers were lobbying for another extension, which he said would undermine regulatory authority, endanger public health, and perpetuate the circulation of harmful alcoholic products in the market.

“As the December 2025 deadline approaches, certain manufacturers are lobbying for another extension, thereby undermining the regulatory process and jeopardizing public health,” Ekpenyong said.

“We cannot continue to expose our youths to cheap, easily accessible alcohol that destroys lives and endangers public safety.”

He warned that the continued availability of high-strength alcoholic beverages in sachet form has contributed to addiction, impaired cognitive development, school dropouts, domestic violence, and increased road accidents, particularly among commercial drivers and young people.

Ekpenyong further noted that manufacturers who had complied in good faith were now at a disadvantage against those who continued to produce non-compliant products, creating an uneven market.

Following extensive deliberation, lawmakers who contributed to the motion commended Ekpenyong for raising the issue, stressing the need for stricter enforcement and public sensitization.

Senator Anthony Ani (Ebonyi South) backed the call, describing the easy availability of cheap alcohol as a growing social menace.

“The easy availability of cheap alcohol is fueling social vices. We must act now to save our young generation from self-destruction,” he said.

In his ruling, Senate President Godswill Akpabio described the resolution as a timely step toward safeguarding public health and youth welfare.

He urged NAFDAC to ensure full enforcement of the ban by December 2025, warning that any further extension would undermine Nigeria’s anti-substance abuse efforts.

“This is a matter of urgency,” Akpabio said. “The agency must act decisively to protect Nigerians, especially our young people, from the dangers of unregulated alcohol consumption.”

Continue Reading

BIG STORY

Political Headwinds Won’t Stop Our Resolve To Defeat Terrorism — Tinubu

Published

on

President Bola Tinubu has reaffirmed his administration’s determination to defeat terrorism and ensure a secure and prosperous Nigeria despite what he described as “political headwinds.”

Tinubu made the remark on Thursday after receiving an update on the state of the economy from Wale Edun, the coordinating minister of the economy.

The president said Nigeria would continue to engage with global partners diplomatically, emphasizing that his government remains focused on national security and stability.

“Despite the political headwinds and the fear of our people, we continue to engage our partners,” Tinubu said.

“We are engaging the world diplomatically. I assure you all that we will defeat terrorism.

“The task ahead is to move forward with clarity of purpose guided by the Renewed Hope agenda to build a prosperous Nigeria.”

Tinubu’s statement comes in the wake of recent comments by US President Donald Trump, who threatened possible military action in Nigeria over alleged killings of Christians.

Over the weekend, Trump instructed the US Department of War to “prepare for possible action” in Nigeria, while designating the country as a “country of particular concern” for what he called the systematic persecution of Christians.

Before Trump’s remarks, some US lawmakers had called on Secretary of State Marco Rubio to take firm diplomatic measures against the Nigerian government over alleged “systematic persecution and slaughter of Christians.”

However, the federal government has dismissed these claims, insisting that there are no targeted religious killings in Nigeria.

Continue Reading

BIG STORY

We’re Going To Do Things Nigeria Won’t Be Happy About — Trump [VIDEO]

Published

on

United States President Donald Trump has reiterated his warning of potential military action in Nigeria over the alleged targeted killing of Christians by extremist groups in the country.

In a video broadcast on Wednesday, Trump, speaking behind a lectern adorned with the seal of his office, condemned the attacks said to be perpetrated by radical Islamist factions. He cautioned that there would be “immediate consequences” if Nigerian authorities failed to take decisive steps to stop the violence.

The US President restated that Washington would cut off all forms of aid to Nigeria if the killings persist, warning that “there would be hell to pay.”

Trump disclosed that he had directed the US Department of War to prepare for possible intervention, adding that any military action would be “vicious and sweet.”

He described the situation as an “existential threat” to Christianity in Nigeria.

Quoting him, Trump said: “If the Nigerian government continues to allow the killing of Christians, the USA will immediately stop all aid assistance to Nigeria.

“We are going to do things to Nigerians that Nigeria is not going to be happy about and may very well go into that now disgraced country, guns-a-blazing to completely wipe out the Islamic terrorists who are committing these horrible atrocities.

“I am hereby instructing the Department of War to prepare for possible actions. If we attack, it is going to be vicious and sweet just as the terrorist thugs attack our cherished Christians. The Nigerian government had better move fast before it is too late.

“Christianity is facing an existential threat in Nigeria. Thousands and thousands of Christians are being killed. Radical Islamists are responsible for this mass slaughter.”

Trump also directed Riley Moore, a member of the US House of Representatives, and Tom Cole, chairman of the House Appropriations Committee, to investigate the killings and provide an immediate report.

He emphasised that the United States “cannot stand by” while such acts continue, stressing America’s commitment to protecting Christian communities not only in Nigeria but around the world.

Video credit: Theeagleonline

Continue Reading


 

 


 

 

 

 

Join Us On Facebook

Most Popular