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JUST IN: Police Arrest Yahaya Bello’s ADC, Security Details

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The Nigeria Police Force has detained a female police officer who was the aide-de-camp to embattled former Kogi State Governor, Yahaya Bello, Saturday PUNCH is reporting.

The ADC was arrested alongside other police officers attached to 48-year-old Bello and is being detained at the State Criminal Investigation Department, Federal Capital Territory, Abuja.

Their arrests and detention followed a Thursday night order by the Inspector General of Police, Olukayode Egbetokun, directing their immediate withdrawal from the former governor.

Senior police sources, who spoke to our correspondent on the condition of anonymity because they did not have authorization to comment publicly on the matter, noted that the officers were arrested on the suspicion that they aided and abetted Bello’s escape from operatives of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, who had gone to effect his arrest at his Abuja home on Wednesday.

“The ADC and the other police details attached to Yahaya Bello have been arrested and detained.

“They were arrested on the order of the IG, on the suspicion that they aided and abetted the former governor’s escape from the EFCC on Wednesday,” one of the sources told our correspondent in a telephone conversation on Friday.

Another source said, “Yahaya Bello’s female ADC and other police officers attached to him were brought to the command this morning, and they’ve been detained for aiding and abetting (the governor’s escape).”

Egbetokun had, on Thursday night, ordered the withdrawal of all police officers attached to Bello.

The order for the withdrawal was contained in a police wireless message sighted by our correspondent on Friday morning.

The document read, “CB:4001/DOPS/PMF/FHQ/ABJ/VOL.48/ 34 X ORDER AND DIRECTIVES X FOLLOWING MESSAGE RECEIVED FROM NIGPOL.

“DOPS ABUJA X BEGINS X CB:4001/DOPS/FHQ/ABJ/VOL.21/462 DTO:180955/04/2024 X ORDER AND DIRECTIVES X REF MYLET NO CB:3412/DOPS/FHQ/ABJ/VOL.1/36 DATED 15/04/2024 X AND MY EARLIER LET NO CB:3412/DOPS/FHQ/ABJ/VOL.1/30 DATED 24/01/2024 X Nigeria police have ordered the withdrawal of all men.

“Police attached to His Excellency and former Executive Governor of Kogi State, Alhaji Yahaya Bello, should acknowledge compliance and treat with utmost importance. Please above for your information and strict compliance.”

Also, the Federal Government had on Thursday night placed Bello on a watch list.

In a document exclusively obtained by our correspondent on Thursday night, the Comptroller General of the Nigeria Immigration Service, revealed that Bello was placed on a watchlist for conspiracy, breach of trust, and money laundering.

The Assistant Comptroller General signed the document and copied the Nigeria Customs Service, the Inspector General of Police, the Director General of the Department of State Services, and the Director of the National Internet Agency.

The document read, “I am directed to inform you that the above-named person has been placed on a watch list. Suffice to mention that the subject is being prosecuted before the Federal High Court Abuja for Conspiracy, Breach of Trust and Money Laundering vide letter Ref; CR; 3000/EFCC/LS/EGCS.1/TE/V 1/279 dated April 18, 2024.

“If seen at any entry or exit point, he should be arrested and referred to the Director of Investigation, or contact 08036226329/07039617304 for further action.

“Please, accept as always the Comptroller-General’s warmest regards and esteem.”

The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission had earlier declared Bello wanted for laundering the sum of N80,246,470,088.88.

The development was contained in a notice posted on the commission’s official Facebook page on Thursday, with a snapshot of the embattled ex-governor attached.

The notice read, “The public is hereby notified that Yahaya Adoza Bello (former Governor of Kogi State), whose photograph appears above is wanted by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission in connection with an alleged case of Money Laundering to the tune of N80,246,470,089.88 (Eighty Billion, Two Hundred and Forty Six Million, Four Hundred and Seventy Thousand and Eighty Nine Naira, Eighty Eight Kobo).

“Bello, a 48-year-old Ebira man, is a native of Okenne Local Government of Kogi State. His last known address is: 9, Benghazi Street, Wuse Zone 4, Abuja. Anybody with useful information as to his whereabouts should please contact the Commission.”

Bello had, on Thursday, failed to appear before Justice Emeka Nwite of the Federal High Court sitting in Abuja following his arraignment by the EFCC.

The embattled former governor was arraigned in absentia before Justice Emeka Nwite alongside three other suspects, Ali Bello, Dauda Suleiman and Abdulsalam Hudu on 19-count charges bordering on money laundering.

BIG STORY

Nigerian Businessman Arrested At Enugu Airport For Ingesting 90 Wraps Of Cocaine ‘To Save Failing Business’

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Operatives of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) have arrested a 50-year-old businessman, Iheanacho Osuoha, at Akanu Ibiam International Airport, Enugu, for ingesting 90 wraps of cocaine.

Osuoha was intercepted on Wednesday at the arrival hall of the Enugu airport during the inbound screening of passengers arriving from Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, on an Ethiopian Airlines flight.

The anti-drug agency also reported dismantling a drug syndicate in the country led by a Chinese national, Tianzhen Yen, aka Jackie, for aiding and possessing 4.3 grams of cocaine, along with other substances.

A statement by the agency’s spokesperson, Femi Babafemi, on Sunday explained that Osuoha’s arrest followed months of intelligence gathering and surveillance.

“He was subsequently placed on excretion observation during which he egested 90 pellets of cocaine weighing 2.019 kilograms in seven excretions. Investigation reveals that the suspect, who operates a phone and accessories business in Lagos and Gabon, Central Africa, travelled by road from Gabon to Douala, Cameroon, from where he took a flight to Addis Ababa, where he swallowed the pellets of cocaine while in transit and thereafter continued his journey to Enugu with Lagos as his final destination,” Babafemi added.

The NDLEA PRO noted that Osuoha deliberately complicated his movement to obscure traces of his travel history, unaware that he had been on the agency’s watchlist for the past three months.

“In his statement, Osuoha said he desperately needed the money from the criminal drug trade to boost his declining phone and accessories business,” Babafemi continued.

In a related operation, Babafemi noted that Jackie was arrested after NDLEA operatives intercepted a bus driven by Yakubu Mark, which was en route to Ghana, and found 750 grams of cocaine in the vehicle.

He said, “Another drug syndicate operated by a Chinese man, 58-year-old Tianzhen Yen (alias Jackie), has been dismantled by NDLEA operatives following his arrest at his hotel in the Ikeja area of Lagos.

“Officers of the Seme Special Area Command of the agency had on Thursday, November 21, intercepted a 40-year-old suspect, Yakubu Emmanuel Mark, in a commercial bus going to Ghana at the Gbaji checkpoint along the Badagry-Seme Expressway based on credible intelligence.

“When he was searched, a total of 750 grams of cocaine were found in his bag. A swift follow-up operation was organised to trace and arrest the kingpin behind the trans-border drug trafficking syndicate, who turned out to be a Chinese citizen, Tianzhen Yen.

“He was eventually traced to the MC Hotel behind Alade Market, Allen Avenue, Ikeja, Lagos. When his hotel room was searched, 4.3 grams of cocaine, a gram of methamphetamine, two electronic weighing scales, and a Chinese National Identification Number Card, among other exhibits, were recovered while he was arrested in the vicinity of the hotel.”

Babafemi also reported that in another well-coordinated operation by the NDLEA’s Special Operations Unit on Thursday, 42-year-old Ndive Obinna, the head of a cocaine distribution cartel, was arrested along with five associates at Ago Palace Way in Okota, Isolo, Lagos.

He noted that 2.412 kilograms of cocaine were recovered from the group.

“Other members of the drug trafficking organisation arrested along with Obinna include: Okeke Gloria Ifeoma, who is the syndicate’s stash keeper; Ikechebelu Emmanuel Chibuzor; Okorie Onyedikachi; Okonkwo Nnabugo Prince; and Okafor Blessing Anita,” Babafemi said.

At the Tin Can Seaport in Lagos, NDLEA operatives on Friday, November 22, intercepted 92 parcels of Loud, a synthetic strain of cannabis, weighing a total of 23.25 kilograms. The drugs were concealed in two vehicles imported from Canada—a Nissan car and a GMC bus.

Babafemi added that the discovery was made during a joint examination of a container from Canada, carried out by NDLEA officers, men of the Nigeria Customs Service, and other stakeholders.

In Rivers State, Babafemi stated that NDLEA operatives at the Port Harcourt Port complex, Onne, intercepted two containers of imported opioids during a joint examination with the Nigeria Customs Service and other security agencies on November 21.

“A total of 168,000 bottles of codeine-based syrup worth N1,176,000,000 only in street value were recovered from one of the containers, while the second one contained 4,500,000 pills of super royal tramadol 225mg, valued at N3,150,000,000 only, bringing the combined value of both the codeine and tramadol consignments to N4,326,000,000 only,” the statement added.

In Ekiti State, Babafemi reported the arrest of a 50-year-old woman with a disability who was caught with 286 grams of drugs.

He said, “In Ekiti State, the NDLEA operatives on Sunday, November 17, arrested a 50-year-old physically challenged woman, Mustapha Boja, with 286 grams of Colorado and Loud strains of cannabis at Araromi Street, Ikere-Ekiti, while 64 kilograms of cannabis sativa were recovered at Akinyele motor park, Ibadan, Oyo State on Thursday.”

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British Court Orders Hundeyin To Pay N200,000,000 As Damages To BBC Journalist For Libel

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The Royal Courts of Justice in the UK has found David Hundeyin, a self-styled Nigerian investigative journalist, guilty of libel and ordered him to pay £95,000 in damages to Charles Northcott, a BBC journalist whom Hundeyin made serious allegations against in his article titled “Journalism Career Graveyard.”

Hundeyin had accused Northcott of using his position as the director of the documentary Sex for Grades to obtain sexual favours from Kiki Mordi, the Nigerian Emmy-nominated journalist who appeared as the on-screen reporter for the BBC’s investigation into sexual exploitation in Nigerian universities.

“I accept C’s evidence that D’s libel has had a very serious impact on him both professionally and personally and caused him serious harm and distress. His witness statement adopts and develops the particulars of harm pleaded in the PoC, and I accept both in their entirety.

“The court awards C £95,000 damages, including aggravated damages. This is an appropriate sum to compensate C for the damage to his reputation caused by D and to vindicate his good name; and it takes appropriate account of the distress, hurt and humiliation which D’s false and defamatory publication has caused him, as well as D’s aggravating conduct,” the court document read in part.

The court also instructed that the relevant part of Hundeyin’s article be removed by the website operators, as it was deemed offensive. The judgment was passed on October 8, 2024. Northcott, the complainant, was represented by Ms. Wilson, while Hundeyin was neither present nor represented in court. The court noted that the judgment was issued in Hundeyin’s absence.

In 2019, Mordi, a freelance journalist, worked with the BBC to produce a 54-minute documentary Sex for Grades, which exposed how some lecturers at Nigerian universities exploited female students by demanding sexual favours in exchange for academic advantages. Mordi collaborated with Northcott and other journalists on the project.

Three years after the documentary’s release, Hundeyin published his article, Journalism Career Graveyard, in which he accused Northcott of having an inappropriate sexual relationship with Mordi and of favouring her to work on the documentary, while sidelining and deceiving Oge Obi, whom Hundeyin claimed was the true mastermind behind the BBC documentary.

In September 2022, Hundeyin shared the article on X (formerly Twitter), which quickly went viral. The article and associated tweets garnered substantial traction. Northcott reported that the post received over 40 million online impressions between September 27 and October 31, 2022.

“I worked with a colleague to run an analysis of the defamatory Article, and its associated hashtags and tweets by Mr Hundeyin, to see how far it had spread between 27 September and 31 October 2022. This analysis suggested the content had received more than 40 million online impressions during this period (which are calculated by tracking the total number of times the content was displayed across Twitter on users’ feeds and on search results). A large percentage of these would have been abroad, but a very significant proportion of Mr Hundeyin’s followers are in England and Wales. He was educated here, has been invited to speak publicly here … and he’s launched two books here – which are sold in British bookstores,” Northcott stated.

Following the article’s publication, Hundeyin posted further comments on X, tagging Mordi and daring her and others to sue him if they took issue with his expose. One of his posts read: “Then why don’t you sue me for categorically stating that you had sex multiple times with @CNorthcott1 in the course of producing that documentary and that this formed the sole basis of your fraudulent ‘career’?”

In another post, he wrote, “As for the people who are constantly threatening ‘legal steps’ because my stories have exposed their true nature to their international donors, NGOs and state actors, here is @WestAfricaWeek’s address. If you don’t sue me, you are all bastards. I double dare you…”

Hundeyin also shared a video of Northcott and Mordi climbing onto a statue at Trafalgar Square, captioning it: “Hi @kikimordi. I’m sure you never thought this video of you and @CNorthcott1 would ever surface, but that is why real journalism will never die when people like me are around. Your ‘career’ is over, you glory hunting, honey trapping fraud!”

Northcott sued Hundeyin for libel, arguing that his actions had severely impacted his career and caused significant harm. The court ordered Hundeyin to remove the article, but he ignored the order.

The court noted that the video shared by Hundeyin did not provide any evidence to support his allegations of an inappropriate sexual relationship. It also highlighted that Hundeyin’s conduct after publishing the article, which included trolling and persecution, was aggravating and had caused significant distress to both Northcott and Mordi.

“All of D’s behaviour post-publication comfortably falls within the principles in relation to aggravated damages that I outlined earlier. D, having seriously libelled C, then embarked upon a campaign of trolling and persecution in a manner calculated to cause C and Ms. Mordi maximum distress and damage. Moreover, he has failed to take down the Article as ordered by this court in July,” the court’s statement concluded.

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Donors Supporting Simon Ekpa Guilty Of Terrorism — Lawyers

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Legal experts have warned that individuals donating funds to Simon Ekpa could face charges of terrorism.

Despite the Finnish police’s detention of the separatist leader, some members of the banned Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) are still urging people to contribute money.

In a video shared on X, titled “Biafra Freedom. Vote, Donate, Support BRGIE,” the group’s purported Minister of Information, @Akparawasunny, on Saturday featured a woman identified as Ada Biafra, who claimed Ekpa would return next week. She said, “A flier is there our supporters (a flier that contains the information about the donation). We are buying groundnuts (bullets) for the gallant men, because no groundnut that goes out comes back in. We need to refill,” she explained.

On X, @kingchuks01 declared, “Whether they like or not we must talk about Biafra and we must achieve Biafra.”

In response, @Chrismo80164240 commented, “You shouldn’t be talking about donation if truly you guys are serious about December 2nd declaration. I only see it as scam. By the way let me ask you, donate to do what with the money?”

Meanwhile, @realdonpri wrote, “Let him stay there so he can feel the same pain those poor people in SE has been feeling every Monday. It’s easy to stay at the comfort of yout home and insight violence. I have zero sympathy for him. He’s very arrogant & can neva b the face of Biafra.”

Another user, @nwaEleberi, posted, “@simon_ekpa is ordained fraudster & a known terrorist! All his foolish followers must demand accountability from him! He has been busy drinking expensive champagne & living large!”

Kunle Edun, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), stated that anyone funding terrorism is guilty of an offense. He explained, “Sections 2, 21 and 22 of the Act are clear that terrorism and financing of terrorism are prohibited in Nigeria. Any person that financially supports or makes his resources, services or facilities available to persons knowingly engaged in terrorist activities is equally liable and offense under the Terrorism Act can attract up to the maximum life imprisonment but if death occurs while committing the act, death penalty will apply. An attempt to do any of the foregoing is equally an offense under the Act. It is critical that the intent of the suspects must be proved to commit or support acts of terrorism.”

He continued, “It is in this wise, that the alleged crowdfunding organised by Simon Ekpa whereby donors were said to have made funds available to him, becomes very concerning. If it is established either by direct or circumstantial evidence that the donors were aware or ought to have been aware of the purpose of the crowdfunding and the activities of Simon Ekpa they could be charged for financing terrorism. Therefore, a thorough investigation will be required to gather these evidence, as the burden is on the Prosecution to prove the charge.”

Ayo Ademiluyi, a legal practitioner, emphasized that donations to Ekpa’s cause could be considered evidence of terrorism, as IPOB has been designated a terrorist organization.

“By virtue of the declaration of IPOB and any other secessionist groups as terrorist organisations, any funding to it constitutes evidence of that crime. So, in this case, crowdfunding is an accessory to the fact. This is because the organisation has been labelled as a terrorist organisation,” he said.

Eze Onyekpere, another legal practitioner, compared the funding of Ekpa’s cause to supporting other terrorist groups, saying, “This is just like somebody funding Boko Haram or the terrorists in the northwest.”

Additionally, Okechukwu Nwanguma, Executive Director of the Rule of Law and Accountability Advocacy Centre, called on the federal government to engage in constructive dialogue with community and youth leaders in the Southeast to promote peace.

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