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Gunmen ambush police officers returning from duty, kill two in Anambra
A group of gunmen has attacked police officers along the Amansea–Ndiora–Ndiukwuenu–Awa–Ufuma Road, located around Orumba South Local Area of Anambra State, killing two police officers instantly.
Our correspondent gathered that police men were ambushed and attacked on Sunday night while returning from an assignment.
According to eyewitnesses in the area, the assailants who had laid siege in a nearby bush opened fire on the officers as soon as they approached, with the gunshots sending panic across the communities along the road.
One of the eyewitnesses, a tricycle rider, who plies the road speaking on the condition of anonymity, said he was returning from Ezira in Orumba South Local Government Area when he suddenly heard gunshots and immediately turned back to seek safety.
He said, “The incident happened last night. I was coming from a journey when I suddenly heard gunshots. I left my tricycle and went back for safety.
“After the shooting subsided, I resumed my journey and got to the point where the shooting happened and discovered that two police officers had already been gunned down and were lying lifelessly on the road.”

In a video circulating online, the two policemen were seen lying on the road beside their patrol van in a pool of blood, with the voice in the video calling for the attention of relevant authorities.
When contacted on Monday about the development, the Commissioner of Police in Anambra, CP Ikioye Orutugu, confirmed the incident.
Orutugu said the command had already commenced investigations and was taking necessary action.
He said, “A team of police officers was returning from an assignment when they were ambushed by armed men who opened fire on them. In the process, we lost two officers.
“The police had been working on the matter since Sunday night and had intensified efforts to track down those responsible for the attack.”
The commissioner further stated that he would visit the scene of the incident to assess the situation and strategise with security personnel on measures to prevent similar attacks in the state.
He also warned motorists and members of the public to be cautious and avoid approaching unauthorised checkpoints that are not manned by identifiable police personnel and official police vehicles.
“Whenever you approach a checkpoint without police vehicles or clear police identification, you should exercise caution. Either turn back and alert the nearest police formation or immediately contact the police for assistance,” the CP alerted.
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Three Years of Transformation: Governor Peter Mbah’s Scorecard in Enugu
By Maxwell M. Ngene
Three years ago, when Peter Ndubuisi Mbah assumed office as Executive Governor of Enugu State, expectations were as high as they were cautious. The state was grappling with the triple burden of economic stagnation, deepening insecurity, and infrastructural neglect — challenges that had accumulated across successive administrations and had come to define the people’s weary relationship with government. Few dared to hope for swift transformation. Many had grown accustomed to grand make-believe promises dissolving into the familiar disappointments of Nigerian governance. Yet, three years on, Governor Mbah’s administration has rewritten the narrative in ways that are difficult to dismiss.
From his inaugural address to the people of Enugu State, Mbah declared with characteristic conviction that “Tomorrow is Here”, a phrase that might easily have been dismissed as the rhetorical flourish of a freshly sworn-in politician. Instead, it has proven to be a governing philosophy, a lens through which every policy initiative, every capital project, and every social intervention has been conceived and executed. It is not a slogan posted on billboards alone; it is a commitment carved into the institutions, industries, and communities that his administration has touched.
Industrial Revival: Breathing Life into Enugu’s Economic Soul
Perhaps no dimension of Mbah’s governance has been as symbolically powerful as the revival of industries that had long been consigned to decay. Niger Gas, Hotel Presidential, and Sunrise Flour Mills, once proud emblems of Enugu’s industrial ambition, later reduced to rusting monuments of neglect, now hum with renewed commercial activity. Their resuscitation is not merely an economic statistic; it is a statement of political will and a source of renewed pride for a people who had watched the state’s industrial heritage abandoned and allowed to crumble before their very eyes.
More strategically significant is the commissioning of the Haier Factory, a $20 million assembly plant for the manufacturing of laptops, smartphones and their repair spare parts. In a state historically associated with coal mining and civil service, this huge transformative facility marks a decisive pivot toward the knowledge economy. Enugu is repositioning itself not simply as a rehabilitation story but as a forward-looking technology hub, a destination for innovation-driven investment that speaks to the aspirations of its youthful population.

Education Reimagined: Classrooms for a Digital Generation
If industry speaks to economic survival, education speaks to civilisational ambition. Mbah’s administration has undertaken one of the most sweeping educational reforms in Enugu’s recent history through the Smart Green Schools initiative, now operational across most of the 260 wards of the state.
These are not merely refurbished classrooms; they are brand-new laboratories of the future, a place where children engage with robotics, artificial intelligence, and digital technologies. Each pupil is equipped with a personal tablet, and daily school meals address the nutritional dimension of learning that too often goes ignored in policy discourse.
The implications are generational. Children in rural wards who might never have seen or used a computer are now exploring coding platforms and digital problem-solving tools. This bold initiative bridges the digital divide not as a future aspiration but as a present reality preparing Enugu’s next generation for the demands of a global economy that will not wait for stragglers.
Mobility and Connectivity: A State on the Move
Transport infrastructure has long been both a metaphor and a measure of governance quality in Nigeria. On this front, the Mbah administration has invested with visible commitment. The introduction of compressed natural gas (CNG)-powered buses, equipped with Wi-Fi connectivity, has eased commuting between Nsukka and Enugu, offering passengers a glimpse of the modern, liveable city that the governor envisions.
Architecturally impressive bus terminals at Abakpa, Nsukka, and Garki further anchor this vision in physical form, turning transit points into civic landmarks.
Most ambitious of all is Enugu Air, the state-owned airline that has launched with an initial fleet of six aircraft. A state airline is an audacious proposition at any time, but in a Nigerian political environment habitually sceptical of government-run commercial enterprises, Enugu Air carries the weight of both symbolism and strategic intent. Its success will be watched closely, both as a transport solution and as a test of the administration’s capacity to manage complex ventures beyond the political arena.
Healthcare for All: From the Ward to the Specialist Theatre
Governor Mbah’s healthcare vision operates on two complementary axes: breadth and depth. The establishment of Primary Health Centres in every ward ensures that the most basic healthcare is no longer the exclusive preserve of the rich in urban areas. Communities that once relied on patent medicine stores as their first port of medical call now have functional health facilities within reach. Simultaneously, the construction of a 300-bed Super Specialist Hospital signals an ambition that extends beyond basic care into medical excellence. This is an institution designed not only to serve Enugu’s residents but to attract medical tourism and reduce the costly haemorrhage of Nigerians seeking specialist treatment abroad.
Security Restored: Reclaiming the Night
No governance achievement carries greater weight in the daily lives of ordinary citizens than security. Enugu, like much of the South-East, had suffered a period of debilitating insecurity, a situation that severely curtailed economic activities, dampened investor confidence, inflicted fear of untimely deaths into the spines of ordinary citizens and cast a pall over civic life. The establishment of a state-of-the-art Command and Control Centre in the premises of the Enugu State Government House, enabling real-time surveillance and coordinated security response, has been central to the administration’s counteroffensive against criminal networks.
The results have been visible, tangible, and felt. Night markets, once abandoned as too dangerous to patronise, now thrive again. Residents move with a freedom they had almost forgotten. This restoration of public safety is not a rhetorical claim; it is attested by the renewed commercial energy visible in the state’s markets and streets. Security, in this administration, has been treated not as a luxury but as the prerequisite upon which all other development rests.
Agriculture and Rural Development:
Connecting the Farm to the Market
In a state where significant portions of the population derive their livelihoods from farming, the Mbah administration’s investment in agricultural modernisation carries profound economic implications. The introduction of a tractor assembly plant signals a commitment to mechanised, large-scale agriculture, a departure from the subsistence-level farming that has historically characterised rural Enugu. Complementing this, new road construction projects are steadily linking rural farming communities to urban markets, addressing the perennial problem of produce spoilage and the chronic inability of smallholder farmers to access buyers at fair prices.
Assessment: A Record Defined by Ambition and Accountability
A balanced assessment of Governor Mbah’s three years on the saddle cannot ignore the challenges that persist. Infrastructure projects of this scale inevitably carry implementation risks; promises of industrial revival require sustained private sector confidence to bear lasting fruit; and managing a state airline, specialist hospital, and a digital education revolution simultaneously demands institutional depth that must be continually cultivated and resourced. Critics who point to gaps and unmet targets are not wrong to do so; that is the function of democratic accountability.
Yet the overall arc of this administration is undeniable. In sector after sector – education, health, industry, transport, security, and agriculture – Enugu is making the desired progress. The pace may be contested; the direction should not be. Governor Peter Mbah has chosen to govern as though tomorrow genuinely matters, deploying the instruments of state not as patronage tools but as levers of structural transformation. For a state that had grown accustomed to inertia dressed up as governance, that choice is in itself truly historic.
Three years on, the mantra “Tomorrow is Here” has earned its credibility. Tomorrow, for Enugu, is no longer a consolation deferred to some indefinite future. Under Mbah’s watch, it is arriving – imperfect, contested, and still incomplete, as all genuine transformation must be, but arriving, nonetheless.
• Maxwell M. Ngene, PhD is a Senior Lecturer and Postgraduate Programmes Coordinator in the Department of Mass Communication, Enugu State University of Science and Technology (ESUT), and a media analyst and public affairs commentator based in Enugu.
News
Chimaroke Nnamani: Progenitor of Ebeano, Misunderstood Leader, Vindicated at 66.
By Paul Mumeh
Senator Chimaroke Nnamani, former Governor of Enugu State, stands tall as one of the most intriguing, visionary, and intellectually gifted political figures of Nigeria’s Fourth Republic. Physician, philosopher, statesman, motivational speaker, and political strategist, the man fondly called “Ebeano” remains a phenomenon whose impact on politics, governance, and public discourse continues to resonate far beyond Enugu State.
Born on May 30, 1960 in Port Harcourt, Rivers state with an uncommon blend of intellect and courage, Senator Nnamani first distinguished himself in medicine as a specialist doctor before venturing into politics. Yet even in politics, he never abandoned the analytical depth and precision of a medical professional. His approach to governance reflected diagnosis, treatment, and long-term planning — qualities that made him one of the frontline members of Nigeria’s celebrated 1999 class of governors.
As Governor of Enugu State from 1999 to 2007, he redefined governance and political organisation in the state. At a time when democracy was still fragile and experimental in Nigeria, Chimaroke Nnamani emerged as one of the loudest advocates of people-oriented governance.
He coined and popularised the now-famous phrase, “Dividends of Democracy,” a concept that has since become a permanent part of Nigeria’s political vocabulary. What many now repeat casually was, for him, a philosophical conviction — that democracy must translate into visible benefits for ordinary citizens.
Beyond governance, Nnamani transformed the political landscape of Enugu State through the establishment of the Ebeano political family — a structure that evolved from a movement into a political dynasty.


Ex-Enugu Governor, Dr Chimaroke Nnamani
Since 1999, regardless of changing political parties and shifting alliances, the Ebeano philosophy has consistently produced political office holders; councillors, local government chairmen, state and national assembly legislators, ministers, and governors — while nurturing influential leaders across the state. That enduring relevance remains a testament to the strategic depth and organisational genius of its founder.
As Senator representing Enugu East in two different eras — from 2007 to 2011 and again from 2019 to 2023 — Nnamani remained a powerful voice of reason, intellect, and candour. Highly cerebral and unapologetically frank, he earned respect as a politician who never shied away from difficult truths. He called a spade a spade, regardless of whose interests were affected. In an environment where political correctness often overshadows honesty, Chimaroke Nnamani chose courage over convenience.
His Ebeano Lecture Series further revealed the depth of his intellect and foresight. Through those lectures, he dissected local and global issues with philosophical clarity and uncommon eloquence. Time and again, many dismissed or misunderstood his positions, only for subsequent events to vindicate his predictions and perspectives. Like a thinker ahead of his era, he often saw tomorrow before others fully recognised today.
Perhaps nowhere was this more evident than during the political turbulence of 2023. Against prevailing sentiments within the Peoples Democratic Party, Senator Nnamani openly supported Bola Ahmed Tinubu of the All Progressives Congress. To many of his political associates and constituents, the move appeared controversial, even unacceptable. They rose against him politically, interpreting his action as betrayal or political aberration. Yet, in his characteristic manner, Nnamani insisted on what he believed was the pathway forward.
Ironically, not long after the 2023 elections, many within the same political establishment and among the voices that opposed him began embracing the Tinubu administration with enthusiasm. Those who once condemned his position gradually became apostles of the same political direction he had earlier championed, with several eventually aligning with the APC. Once again, Chimaroke Nnamani’s foresight appeared vindicated.
Yet politics, especially in Nigeria, can be frustrating to the well-intentioned. Despite the sacrifices and political risks he took, Senator Nnamani found himself isolated and unrewarded. Even the political structure he supported did not reciprocate his loyalty in the manner many expected. Left in the political cold, he chose dignity over bitterness and returned to his first calling — medicine — resuming professional practice in the United States, where he is reputed for his work in foetal medicine, the specialised care of unborn babies.
There is profound symbolism in that journey. After years of helping to birth political ideas, institutions, and leaders, the doctor returned to the science of preserving life itself. It reflects the essence of the man: resilient, purposeful, and deeply committed to service regardless of circumstance.
At 66, Senator Chimaroke Nnamani’s story is not merely one of political victories and setbacks. It is the story of conviction. It is the story of a man who often walked ahead of the crowd — misunderstood in the moment but vindicated by history. It is the story of a statesman whose ideas outlived controversies and whose political philosophy continues to shape generations.
As he celebrates this milestone, this should not be a moment of discouragement over the fickleness of politics or the contradictions of human nature. Rather, it is a moment of reflection, renewal, and reaffirmation of purpose. Nigeria still needs voices of courage, intellect, and foresight. The nation still needs statesmen willing to chart difficult but necessary paths toward unity, justice, and development.
For Senator Chimaroke Nnamani, aka Ebeano, the journey at 66 is not an ending but the continuation of a legacy built on vision, resilience, and uncommon courage.
Happy 66th Birthday to a physician of bodies, a diagnostician of society, and a philosopher of politics. May the years ahead bring renewed strength, greater fulfilment, and the satisfaction of knowing that history often remembers pioneers more kindly than contemporaries do.
• Paul Mumeh wrote from Abuja.
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Terrorists kidnap 10, raid police station, raze Kwara emir’s palace
Fear gripped residents of the Yashikira community in the Kiama council area in Kwara state in the early hours of Monday as terrorists launched fresh attacks, kidnapping several people, including members of an emir’s family.
The attack happened hours after bandits stormed a prayer ground in Ekiti LGA, killed three worshippers and kidnapped 15 others.
Several people were wounded in the attack. There was no record of any fatality at the time of filing this report.
Residents said that the attack began around 12:40 a.m. on Monday.
“It was a terrible attack. I stayed very close to the palace and heard gunshots echo for several hours. As it is now, over ten people close to the emir were taken to an unknown location,” a resident, who did not want his name published because of security risks, told reporters.
During the attack, a police divisional headquarters and the emir’s palace were invaded, but the terrorists were reportedly repelled after several hours of a gun duel.

“The armed criminals, in a coordinated and desperate assault at about 0200hrs, simultaneously attacked the Yashikira Police Divisional Headquarters and the Palace of the Emir of Yashikira,” police spokesperson Adetoun Ejire-Adeyemi said in a statement on Monday.
Ms Ejire-Adeyemi explained that part of the palace was set ablaze, and 10 people were kidnapped.
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