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Alleged ‘RUGA’: Enugu farmer petitions police over false alarm on Agric PPP with govt

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IGP Kayode Egbetokun
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…Shareholders my wives and children, not northerners

• Says land for crop production, not ranching

An Enugu-born commercial farmer, Ahmad Sani Ibrahim, formerly known as Friday Nnaji, has petitioned the Assistant Inspector-General of Police, Zone 13, raising the alarm over alleged criminal defamation and attempts by some persons to misrepresent his farming partnership with the Enugu State Government, calling on the law enforcement agency to investigate the matter to avert breach of peace.

Mr. Ibrahim accused two indigenes of Isi-Uzo LGA, Mr. Simon Ede and Engr. Samuel Ugwuede of falsely relying on a purported search at the Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC) to present the agricultural venture with the state government as a front by some northern elements to acquire vast lands in Isi-Uzo for sinister purposes.

The big farmer, who said that he converted to Islam in 1998, also clarified that shareholders and directors of the company, who bear Muslim names were not northerners as published by Samuel Ugwuede and Simon Ede, but his wives and children.

He equally explained that the venture was for crop production, not ranching and further accused the duo of Ugwuede and Ede of cyberstalking, racist and xenophobic publications against his person, and Ugwu Anama Farms, as well a deliberate attempt to cause a breach of peace in Isi-Uzo and the state in general.

In the petition dated April 11, 2024, and accompanied with an old affidavit of change of name and the newspaper publication to that effect, the petitioner wrote: “I am a Muslim by faith and religion. I am an indigene of Ugwu Anama, Mbu in Isi-Uzo LGA of Enugu State. My native name is Friday Nnaji. After I converted to the Islamic religion and faith in 1998, I started bearing Ahmed Sani Ibrahim as my Islamic name.

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“I am the promoter and majority shareholder of Ugwu Anama Farm Ltd. The other shareholders of the company are: Ibrahim Hassan, my Islamic adopted son, and also a director of the company; Layusat Shehu Jibril, one of my wives and a director of the company; Zainab Sani Ahmad, one of my wives; Mariyam Said, my Islamic adopted daughter, and Ahmad Sani Ibrahim, my biological son.

“While Engr. Samuel Chimaobi Ugwuede is from the same Mbu community as I, Mr Ede Simon Onyema is from Eha-Amufu, another community in my Isi-Uzo LGA. Both of them know me very well.

“In a bid to unlock the economic and social potentials of the state, the company and Enugu State Government, in March, 2024, entered into a Public Private Partnership Agreement (PPPA) wherein it was agreed, among other things, that the state will provide the company with 15,000 hectares of farmlands in Isi-Uzo Local Government Area of the State for the cultivation of cassava, rice, maize, high-yielding premium banana and yam.

“Having learnt about the above relationship between the state and the company, the duo of Engr. Samuel Chimaobi Ugwuede and Mr. Ede Simon Onyema maliciously, between March and April, 2024, made defamatory, offensive, ethnocentric, racist and xenophobic publications against the petitioners (shareholders and directors) on the WhatsApp group chat called “Isi Uzo News”, with intent to deliberately provoke breach of peace by offensive publication; cause criminal defamation, cyber stalking; and cause racist and xenophobic disaffection against the petitioners, by portraying the shareholders and directors of the company as Northern elements who are hiding under the cover of the company to acquire large expanse of Igbo land belonging to the Eha-Amufu people of Isi-Uzo LGA of Enugu State for sinister purposes.”

Attaching copies of the alleged offensive publications entitled “Unmasking those Behind Ugwu Anama Farm Ltd” and “Eha-Amufu Land: Hand of Esau and Voice of Jacob,” the farmer wrote, “Under the laws of Nigeria, every Nigerian has the right to acquire moveable and immovable properties, reside in and do legitimate business in any part of Nigeria, irrespective of religious or ethnic background and affiliation.

“Therefore, one being of another faith is not a barrier to acquiring land or doing business of any nature in Enugu State.

“Moreover, the duo of Engr. Samuel Chimaobi Ugwuede and Mr Ede Simon Onyema are enlightened and well aware of this fact, but deliberately and maliciously chose to make the said offensive publications against us with the ultimate intent of spreading hate and ultimately undermining the said project between the Enugu State Government and the company.

“The offensive publications are clearly intended to spread ethnic hatred against the shareholders and directors and endanger our lives, safety, properties and business interests in Eha-Amufu, Isi-Uzo LGA and Enugu State at large.”

The company, therefore, requested the Police AIG to use his “good office to investigate this complaint and bring the culprits to book if found culpable.”

Meanwhile, Ibrahim-Nnaji is a commercial farmer involved in large’scale crop production in Isi-Uzo and other parts of the country over the years.

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El-Rufai’s wife seeks International Community’s intervention as former Governor spends 150 days in detention

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…Says husband’s 150-day detention threatens Rule of Law

Asia Ahmad El-Rufai, a lawyer and wife of former Kaduna State Governor, Nasir El-Rufai, has appealed to the international community to intervene over what she described as her husband’s prolonged detention.

She argued that his continued incarceration represents “punishment before trial” and poses a threat to Nigeria’s democratic institutions.

In a public statement issued to mark what she described as the 150th day of El-Rufai’s detention and published on the African Report, Asia said she was speaking “not as a politician, lawyer or diplomat, but as a wife, a mother and a Nigerian woman asking that the country my husband served for so many years remember its own conscience.”

Reflecting on the length of her husband’s detention, she wrote: “On the 150th day of Mallam Nasir El-Rufai’s detention, I ask readers outside Nigeria to pause over what that number means. One hundred and fifty days is not a legal phrase. It is five months of missed meals, missed prayers, missed proper mourning of his deceased mother, missed family conversations, interrupted medical care and moments we can never recover.”

She acknowledged that her husband had long been a controversial political figure, having served as head of the Bureau of Public Enterprises, Minister of the Federal Capital Territory and Governor of Kaduna State.

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“My husband is no stranger to controversy or public scrutiny. He has spent more than two decades in public life – as head of the Bureau of Public Enterprises, minister of the Federal Capital Territory and governor of Kaduna State. He has been praised, criticised, loved and opposed. That is democracy. But what is happening to him today is not democracy, and it is not accountability. It is punishment before trial,” she said.

Asia alleged that her husband’s ordeal began with “the attempted airport interception, when security officials seized his passport without a warrant and assaulted his aide in public view.”

According to her, El-Rufai voluntarily honoured an invitation from authorities after being summoned but was subsequently detained despite what she described as promises of bail.

“There was the sudden invitation, his voluntary appearance before the authorities, and the promise of bail that existed on paper but not in freedom. There was the night he was moved between locations without warning and without the dignity of allowing his family to know where he was being taken,” she stated.

She also claimed that the former governor became seriously ill while in custody.

“I still remember the helplessness of hearing that he had fallen gravely ill in custody, bleeding from his nose and mouth, while those responsible for his welfare were reluctant to provide the care any person deserves. I remember the anxiety of trying to get his medication to him and wondering whether officials would accept it.”

Describing the emotional toll on the family, she said: “These are not abstract violations. They are the moments that chip away at a family’s resolve and hope. Behind every headline about ‘charges’ and ‘investigations’, there is a family waiting, praying and trying not to imagine the worst.”

While insisting that no public official should be above the law, she argued that the legal process should be conducted fairly and transpaently.

“Let me be clear: I do not ask that my husband be placed above the law. No public official should be immune from scrutiny. If the state believes it has evidence, let it be presented before an impartial court, openly and fairly. But justice cannot be selective. It cannot be pursued through overlapping charges, repeated detention, impossible bail conditions, and public humiliation designed to persuade the nation of guilt before a judge has heard the case.”

She further argued that recent public discussions had raised concerns that Nigeria, alongside some other African countries, was “drifting from accountability into lawfare – the use of legal processes, judicial procedures and state institutions as political weapons.”

“The concern is not whether former officials may be investigated; they can and should be. The concern is whether the law is being applied neutrally or deployed against those who have fallen out of political favour,” she said.

According to Asia, her husband’s disagreement with President Bola Tinubu’s administration and his departure from the ruling All Progressives Congress should not justify what she described as prolonged persecution.

“My husband’s case has become a test of that distinction. His political rupture with President Bola Tinubu’s ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) and his refusal to surrender his independent voice should not make him a target for indefinite punishment or detention disguised as prosecution.”

She also criticised what she described as the complexity of the legal proceedings against El-Rufai.

“The legal architecture surrounding him is bewildering even to trained observers: multiple charges in different courts, overlapping allegations, shifting statutory theories and duplicated claims arising from the same alleged events. If one application for bail is made and the conditions are met, another accusation can be filed the next day. If one judge must consider freedom, another process can be used to delay it.

“This is how judicial procedure becomes premeditated punishment. This is how we have arrived at 150 days of unjust detention.”

Asia argued that the treatment was not limited to her husband, citing the cases of Joel Adoga, Jimi Lawal and Professor Abubakar Bello.

She said Joel Adoga, whom she described as a former public servant and family breadwinner, had endured prolonged detention, including a month in solitary confinement, while Jimi Lawal had reportedly suffered severe health deterioration during custody.

She also referred to “the 7 July arrest and detention of Professor Abubakar Bello, Mallam’s personal physician, with similar impossible bail conditions.”

“These men are beloved family members and Nigerian citizens. These men are not case files. Their families are not collateral damage to be ignored in the pursuit of a political vendetta,” she said.

Appealing to Nigeria’s diplomatic and development partners, Asia urged foreign governments, multilateral organisations and international human rights groups not to ignore the situation.

“This is why I am appealing to Nigeria’s diplomatic and development partners: do not look away. Those who invest in Nigeria’s democracy, security cooperation, anti-corruption institutions, health systems and development programmes have a legitimate interest in whether those institutions respect due process and human dignity.”

She added: “A country cannot receive international support while using ostensibly democratic institutions to annihilate opposition political voices.”

She called on foreign missions, multilateral organisations, human rights groups and democracy advocates to “monitor this case closely; insist on transparent proceedings before competent and impartial courts; demand humane detention conditions and timely medical access; and make it clear that anti-corruption enforcement must never become a cover for political payback.”

Addressing President Tinubu directly, Asia urged him to allow the judicial process to proceed fairly.

“To President Tinubu, I say this with respect and sorrow: history is rarely kind to leaders who allow power to wound the innocent in order to silence the inconvenient. A strong government does not fear a strong critic.”

She added: “If my husband is credibly accused, let him face the accusations with access to his legal team, his doctors and his family. Let the evidence speak in court, not through orchestrated leaks of falsehood.”

Concluding her appeal, Asia argued that the case extends beyond her husband’s personal circumstances.

“Nigeria’s friends must understand that this case is larger than Nasir El-Rufai. It is about whether a citizen can fall out with power and still be protected by law. It is about whether courts will be places of justice or theatres of intimidation.”

She concluded by saying: “I do not ask the world to decide my husband’s innocence. I ask only that it stand for the principles Nigeria and its constitution have promised to uphold. Fairness, due process, humane treatment, judicial independence and equal protection before the law are not partisan demands. They are the bare conditions of any democratic society.”

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Kidnapped victim narrates how drone, helicopter made kidnappers flee

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A cattle dealer, Peter Balogun, popularly known as ‘Oga Peter’, who spent eight days with kidnappers, has narrated how deployment of drones and helicopter made his abductors to abandon him and others.

Balogun was abducted on July 7 along the Igarra-Auchi Expressway.

He said the kidnappers insisted on N15 million ransom payment while he offered to pay N10 million.

Speaking after he was released, Balogun said the kidnappers took him and four other victims to different parts of the Imoga Forest.

He said fear and panic crept in among the kidnappers when they saw drone and helicopter hovering in the sky.

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Balogun praised operatives of the Edo Police Command for the successful rescue operation.

Edo police spokesman, Eno Ikoedem, in a statement, said the rescue operation was led by the Assistant Commissioner of Police in charge of Operations, Innocent Nkeamatara.

Ikoedem said the Inspector-General of Police, Olatunji Rilwan Disu, deployed police helicopter from Abuja, fully equipped with heavy assault capabilities, to provide aerial surveillance and operational support throughout the rescue mission.

She said the kidnappers abandoned their victims after they were unable to withstand pressure mounted by the advancing police teams, continuous drone surveillance and the persistent aerial patrol of the police helicopter.

“During preliminary debriefing, the rescued hostage recounted that the overwhelming presence of security personnel and the repeated helicopter patrols created panic among his captors, compelling them to hastily abandon him and escape.

The victim has since been taken to the hospital for medical attention and reunited with his family

“Although the safe rescue of the victim represents a significant operational success, CP Agbonika has directed that the ongoing clearance operation be expanded to cover all identified forests and criminal hideouts across State.

“The objective is to flush out all criminal elements, dismantle kidnapping camps, recover arms where possible, and ensure that every member of kidnapping gangs is brought to justice.” (THE NATION)

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Court sentences Onye Eze Jesus to six years in Prison, imposes ₦20m fine

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A High Court in Anambra State has sentenced controversial spiritual leader and self-acclaimed prophet, Onyebuchi Okocha, popularly known as Onye Eze Jesus, to six years imprisonment and imposed a ₦20 million fine after finding him guilty under the Anambra Homeland Security Law.

The judgment forms part of the Anambra State Government’s ongoing crackdown on alleged ritual practices, fraudulent spiritual activities, and the preparation of charms believed to aid criminal activities, including kidnapping and internet fraud.

The case stemmed from the state’s prosecution of several high-profile native doctors arrested during the security operation launched in February 2025.

Delivering judgment, the trial judge held that individuals who claim supernatural powers capable of making people wealthy through prohibited practices or preparing charms outlawed by the Anambra Homeland Security Law are liable to imprisonment and financial penalties.

According to the court: “Any person who practices prohibited spiritual activities or claims to possess powers capable of producing wealth through illegal means is liable to the penalties prescribed under the law.”

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The conviction is widely viewed as another major milestone in Governor Chukwuma Soludo’s campaign against criminality and ritual-related practices in the state.

Authorities insist the enforcement exercise is aimed at dismantling networks allegedly encouraging criminal activities under the guise of spiritual services, while supporters of the affected clerics and native doctors have continued to question the government’s approach.

The case has generated widespread public attention and is expected to spark further debate over the balance between public security, religious freedom, and traditional spiritual practices in Nigeria.

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