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Fuel Sells For N400/litre In Abuja, Others, Scarcity Persists In Lagos

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Residents of Abuja and the neighbouring states of Niger and Nasarawa are still having difficulty obtaining Premium Motor Spirit, also known as gasoline, with black market prices as high as N400 a litre.

The development happened about a week after the importation of millions of dirty PMS from Europe into Nigeria interrupted the country’s fuel supply infrastructure, causing long lines across the country.

The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited has ordered the recall of the tainted fuel, but oil marketers have been dealing with a variety of issues, including a lack of PMS supplies and consumer complaints that the defective product has harmed their vehicles.

However, finding the show on Sunday that black marketers who sell petrol in jerry-cans are now the easily accessible suppliers of PMS in Abuja and neighbouring states.

A significant percentage of filling stations in Nigeria’s capital city does not currently have petrol to dispense.

Oil marketers told our correspondent that a few other outlets that had products were still trying to return the adulterated petrol supplied to them since last week.

This, they said, had prevented the affected stations from taking in uncontaminated products, as they currently lacked space to store new consignments.

Heavy queues greeted the limited number of filling stations that dispensed petrol on Sunday. Motorists spent several hours under the scorchy sun waiting to be served petrol.

The NNPC filling station on Arab Road in Kubwa, Abuja had hundreds of motorists who formed long queues that blocked the road and caused severe traffic in the area.

The Nipco filling station on the Kubwa end of the Abuja-Zuba Expressway also had a large number of PMS seekers. In Zuba, Niger State, it was observed that several outlets were closed.

It was gathered that many filling stations in Nyanya, Mararaba in Nasarawa State were closed on Sunday.

This led to a worrisome level of scarcity in Abuja, Nasarawa and Niger, a situation that had kept dragging for weeks, even before the advent of the contaminated fuel imports.

The scarcity of petrol in filling stations created a business for black marketers, as they surfaced on major roads in Abuja displaying and selling their wares.

While some of them priced their petrol for as high as N6,000 for a 10-litre jerry-can, others sold theirs at N4,000 for 10 litres of PMS, translating to N400/litre.

The high cost of petrol by black marketers forced motorists to stay in lengthy queues, while those who could not wait in the queues had to part with the costly sum for petrol.

Providing an explanation as to why many filling stations were still not selling petrol, the National Public Relations Officer, Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria, Chief Ukadike Chinedu, said some retailers who purchased the adulterated products were still struggling to return them.

He explained that the contaminated products were still occupying spaces in the underground tanks of the affected filling stations, adding that this had prevented the outlets from accessing new stocks.

“Where will you discharge your new stock when your underground tanks still have contaminated products that have not been returned? Many of those who bought the contaminated products are still struggling to have them returned to NNPC,” the marketer stated.

He added, “I told you that a marketer currently has about 100,000 litres still in his tanks underground and as we speak, it will take him close to N700,000 to evacuate it. And not just that, the product is occupying space.”

Ukadike had earlier called on the government to provide a clear directive on how marketers would return the contaminated products, as this would create space for new uncontaminated stock.

“We also want the government to come out with clear cut directives and procedures on how products that are contaminated should be returned,” the IPMAN official had stated.

He added, “Some marketers are still having the contaminated products in their stations and are not selling because of this. The products have not been returned yet due to a lack of clear cut directives on how they should be returned.

“Also, you need documents to enable you to move the tankers from your filling station back to the place where the product is to be returned because if the police get you without the necessary accompanying documents, they will say you are involved in bunkering.”

BIG STORY

BREAKING: Islamic Cleric Sentenced To Death For Killing Final-Year Female Student In Kwara

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A High Court in Kwara State has found Islamic cleric Abdulrahman Mohad, also known as Mohammed A. Bello, guilty and sentenced him to death.
He was convicted for the murder of Lawal Hafsoh Yetunde, a final-year student at Kwara State College of Education, in a ritual killing.

Justice Hannah Ajayi delivered the judgment on Thursday at the Kwara State High Court in Ilorin.
Four others—41-year-old Islamic scholar Ahmed Abulwasiu from Adualere, Ilorin; 28-year-old Neo Life business operator Sulaiman Muhydeen from Amilegbe, Ilorin; 29-year-old phone technician Jamiu Uthman from Adualere, Ilorin; and 31-year-old farmer AbdulRahman Jamiu from Elemere, Malete—were acquitted and released.

The crime happened on Monday, February 10, 2025, after Hafsoh received a call while attending a naming ceremony and then went missing.
Her disappearance led to an urgent search by loved ones and a police report filed the next day at Oja Oba Station in Ilorin.

Police investigators used her call records to track the last contact, which led to the arrest of Abdulrahman Mohad.
According to the police First Information Report, the suspects admitted they were part of the same occult group and confessed to robbing and killing Hafsoh for ritual reasons.

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ADC Chieftain Nafi’u Bala Declares Self Party Chairman, Vows To Challenge David Mark’s Leadership

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Nafi’u Bala, who previously ran for governor under the African Democratic Congress (ADC) in Gombe, has proclaimed himself as the national chairman of the party.

During a press conference held Wednesday night in Abuja, the former national deputy chairman of the ADC accused the leadership under David Mark of seizing control of the party unlawfully and violating its constitution.

BACKGROUND

In the previous month, several opposition figures and ADC leaders selected the party to serve as the coalition platform for the 2027 general elections.

Among those involved in the coalition are former Vice-President Atiku Abubakar, ex-senate president David Mark, former PDP national chairman Uche Secondus, ex-Niger governor Babangida Aliyu, former Ebonyi governor Sam Egwu, ex-governor of Sokoto Aminu Tambuwal, and former Cross River governor Liyel Imoke.

Additional members include ex-Kaduna governor Nasir el-Rufai, 2023 Labour Party presidential candidate Peter Obi, former interior minister Rauf Aregbesola, ex-transportation minister Rotimi Amaechi, former sports minister Solomon Dalung, ex-APC chairman Odigie Oyegun, and former sports minister Bolaji Abdullahi, among others.

On July 2, the party’s founder and former national chairman Ralph Nwosu announced the resignation of the national working committee (NWC) and endorsed an interim leadership headed by Mark.

Later, on July 29, Nwosu claimed he was offered three ministerial slots as an incentive to abandon plans of turning the party into an opposition coalition platform.

A faction within the ADC expressed opposition to this move, insisting the party should not be treated as a “private coalition platform” controlled by a select elite.

The party’s 2023 presidential candidate, Dumebi Kachikwu, also voiced disapproval over the opposition alliance’s adoption of the ADC.

‘I’LL CHALLENGE TAKEOVER IN COURT’

Bala stated that “bonafide” members of the party intend to take legal action over what he described as an illegal takeover.

“We wish to draw the attention of all members of our great party and Nigerians at large, to the ongoing acts of political hooliganism being perpetrated by some individuals who were hitherto entrusted with the leadership of the party,” he said.

“We are all living witnesses to the show of shame and acts of lawlessness being displayed by these unscrupulous leaders, who, without any qualm or sense of moral restraint, plunged our party into a needless crisis and leadership uncertainty.

“The idea of mortgaging the future of our great party, by abdicating the constitutional duties and responsibilities of all elected officers of the party, to some powerful outsiders who never belong to the party, is condemnable.

“Recently, the nation woke up only to be greeted by a shoddily rehearsed political melodrama, in which elected roles were switched with certain groups of political strangers in order to facilitate the complete takeover of the party structures and their political appurtenances.

“This total surrender and capitulation is without any known precedent in our democratic journey to constitutional order. We are therefore strongly resolved and collectively determined to challenge this affront and ensure that the party’s laid down rules and stipulated provisions are respected and strictly adhered to by all those who belong to it.

“In case these individuals choose to ignore our urgent calls to obey our constitutional guidelines and thus remain very obdurate and recalcitrant in their aberrant behaviour, we shall proceed with gusto to challenge these gross acts of impunity in the courts and bring them to justice.

“It gives us enormous pain to inundate you with these scandalous happenings in our party, but we have been left with no other option to take in defence of our inalienable constitutional rights, as evident by the prevailing situation we now find ourselves in the party.

“In the history of democracy all over the world, no party leader or any group of leaders have the power to arbitrarily transfer elected mandate or political authority to non-members who never belonged or contested for political office.”

He explained that the ADC constitution clearly outlines the process for succession and how to fill any leadership vacancies.

Following those guidelines, Bala announced that he has taken on the position of interim national chairman of the party.

He called on the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to “urgently” recognise him as the party’s legitimate chairman.

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BIG STORY

Insecurity: Tinubu Should Stop Listening To Governors, Visit Streets — ADC

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The African Democratic Congress (ADC) says President Bola Tinubu is being misled by state governors about the true extent of insecurity in the country and urged him to engage directly with citizens to understand their realities.

The party, which has been adopted by the opposition coalition ahead of the 2027 elections, argued that insecurity continues to plague many areas despite claims by the Tinubu administration.

“I actually think President Tinubu needs to leave the Villa and go on the streets and talk to people and stop listening to this kind of narrative [that insecurity has been degraded] and stop listening to state governors who are just saying what they think they need to say to endear themselves to power rather than tell him the true feelings of the people,” said Bolaji Abdullahi, the ADC spokesman, on Channels Television’s Politics Today on Wednesday.

Abdullahi’s remarks were in response to statements made by presidential spokesman Daniel Bwala, who had said that insecurity had declined under President Tinubu’s leadership.

Bwala, also appearing on the same programme, argued that the security situation had improved since Tinubu assumed office.

He said, “Recently, we’ve been having a series of problems in Benue. Has it not gone down? We have had in Plateau. Has it not gone down? Look at the IPOB issue, unknown gunmen. You know, 2022, 2023, the case of murder there. You know how they were kidnapping people coming to people’s houses in the heart of the town.”

The presidential aide added, “Insecurity has been degraded to a large extent. What we are seeing in Nigeria is criminal tendencies that have no core relationship with whether somebody is governing well or not, because it exists in every part of this world.”

In contrast, Abdullahi criticised Bwala’s assessment, calling it a distortion of the country’s security situation.

“I feel sorry for President Tinubu because if this is the kind of narrative that he gets to hear all the time, then it is natural and obvious that he lives in a bubble,” he stated.

The ADC expressed concern over worsening insecurity nationwide, claiming that numerous communities remain under threat from criminal elements.

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