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Nollywood star Zubby Michael has taken a step into active politics by joining the African Democratic Congress (ADC). The actor made this known via his Instagram page, where he posted a video capturing the moment he officially registered and received his membership card in Ozubulu, Anambra State. His move signals a shift from online commentary to direct political engagement at the grassroots level. In his post, Zubby emphasised his intention to move beyond social media discussions and contribute actively to his community. Writing in a mix of English and Pidgin, he declared that he was done with mere talk and ready to be involved in real action. READ MORE 👇🏻https://ibrandtv.com/2026/04/12/zubby-michael-enters-politics-as-adc-member/
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Islamic cleric Sheikh Ahmad Gumi has asserted that Nigeria’s security authorities are fully aware of the identities and whereabouts of individuals involved in terrorism across the country. The prominent scholar made the statement during a recent interview on DRTV, while responding to long-standing accusations that he maintains close contact with bandits and other armed groups operating in northern Nigeria. Gumi dismissed the allegations, explaining that his visits to bandit camps were not carried out independently but with the knowledge and presence of government security agencies. According to him, negotiations with armed groups were conducted alongside officials from the police, military, and other relevant security bodies. “The government knows every terrorist by name and location,” he said during the interview. “Whenever I go to meet them, I don’t go alone. I go with security personnel.” CONTINUE READING👇🏻https://ibrandtv.com/2026/03/10/sheikh-ahmad-gumi-nigerian-government-knows-every-terrorist-by-name-and-location/
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Assistant Commissioner of Police Benjamin Hundeyin has been relieved of his duties as the Force Public Relations Officer of the Nigeria Police Force, just six months after assuming the role. According to reports, the decision was approved on Thursday, March 5, 2026, although officials have not yet disclosed the reason for the development. The move comes in the wake of a leadership transition within the police hierarchy. CONTINUE READING 👇🏻https://ibrandtv.com/2026/03/05/barely-six-months-in-office-igp-tunji-disu-removes-benjamin-hundeyin-as-force-pro/
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When Bola Ahmed Tinubu personally affixed the rank insignia of Acting Inspector-General of Police on Tunji Disu inside the State House, Abuja, it was more than ceremonial pageantry. It marked a pivotal moment in Nigeria’s security architecture — and reignited public curiosity about a question often asked but rarely unpacked: How exactly is an Inspector-General of Police selected in Nigeria? Disu’s elevation, following the resignation of Kayode Egbetokun, offers a timely lens through which to examine the institutional, political, and procedural pathways that produce the nation’s top cop. Behind the symbolism of uniforms and salutes lies a structured — though sometimes controversial — process shaped by law, tradition, and executive discretion. Here are five known processes that shape the emergence of an Inspector-General of Police (IGP) in Nigeria. CONTINUE READING 👇🏻https://ibrandtv.com/2026/02/25/tunji-disu-how-exactly-is-an-inspector-general-of-police-selected-in-nigeria/
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When Aliko Dangote speaks, Nigeria listens. And when he announces that ordinary Nigerians will soon be allowed to buy shares in the colossal Dangote Refinery, the reaction is predictable: excitement, pride, patriotic adrenaline — and a rush to get in before the door “closes.” On the surface, it sounds like a golden ticket. Africa’s largest refinery. A multi-billion-dollar industrial giant. Dividends paid in naira or dollars. Backed by a 7.25% stake from the state-owned Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited. For many Nigerians battered by inflation, currency depreciation, and shrinking purchasing power, this feels like more than an investment. It feels like participation in history. It feels patriotic. Strategic. Smart. But here’s the uncomfortable question no one wants to ask loudly: Is this a once-in-a-generation opportunity — or could it quietly become one of the most misunderstood investment waves in modern Nigerian history? Before you call your broker. Before you move your savings. Before you convert your dollars. Pause. Because every mega-project carries mega-risk — especially when emotion, nationalism, and celebrity influence mix with billions of dollars. Here are five red flags smart investors must examine — not emotionally, but ruthlessly — before buying a single share. CONTINUE READING 👇🏻https://ibrandtv.com/2026/02/22/dangote-refinery-shares-offer-5-red-flags-investors-must-look-out-for-before-investing/
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When a rape allegation goes viral, emotions explode. Social media becomes a courtroom. Hashtags replace judges. Public outrage moves faster than evidence. That was exactly what happened when a TikTok user, Mirabel, claimed she had been attacked and raped by a stranger who allegedly forced his way into her apartment in Ogijo, Ogun State. The story ignited anger, sympathy, and calls for swift justice. Then came the twist. An audio recording shared by social media commentator VeryDarkMan allegedly captured Mirabel admitting the claim was false, blaming drugs and mental health struggles for her actions. Soon after, reports emerged that the Ogun State Police Command was preparing to arrest and prosecute her once she is discharged from the hospital. Reality star Natacha Akide (Tacha) didn’t mince words. She demanded that authorities ensure Mirabel faces severe punishment, arguing that false accusations empower real offenders and weaken genuine cases. Now the big question: What exactly could Mirabel be facing under Nigerian law? If proven that the allegation was deliberately fabricated, the legal consequences could be explosive. Here are five major legal consequences she could face: CONTINUE READING👇🏻https://ibrandtv.com/2026/02/20/false-rape-allegation-5-legal-consequences-mirabel-could-face/
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A State High Court in Uyo, Akwa Ibom State, has sentenced a 29-year-old resident pastor of Living Faith Church (Winners Chapel), Ifa Ikot Ubo–Ifa Ikot Okpon branch, Emmanuel Umoh, to death by hanging for the murder of his landlord, Gabriel Edward.https://www.premiumtimesng.com/news/headlines/858230-court-sentences-winners-chapel-pastor-to-death-for-murder.html
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Nigeria woke up to yet another political thunderclap when former Kaduna State governor, Nasir El-Rufai, openly admitted during an interview on ARISE Television that he and his associates listened to the phone conversations of the National Security Adviser, Nuhu Ribadu. Not whispered in a private meeting. Not leaked in a secret memo. But declared on live television. He called it “technically illegal.” Then shrugged it off with a claim that governments “do it all the time.” That single statement detonated a national debate. If a former governor can admit to tapping the phone of Nigeria’s top security official on live TV, what does that say about privacy, power, and the rule of law in Africa’s largest democracy? Are wiretaps now political tools? Is national security a justification — or a convenient cover? Shortly after the explosive interview, the presidency, under Bola Tinubu, responded through his Special Adviser on Information and Strategy, Bayo Onanuga, calling for a thorough investigation and warning that no one is above the law. But beyond the political fireworks lies a deeper, more dangerous question: What exactly does Nigerian law prescribe for tapping another person’s phone? Here are five constitutional and statutory consequences that could follow such an admission. CONTINUE READING👇🏻https://ibrandtv.com/2026/02/14/phone-tapping-in-nigeria-5-constitutional-penalties-that-could-face-el-rufai/
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The arrivals hall at Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport is usually predictable. Suitcases roll. Phones light up. Relatives wave. Politicians glide past cameras with controlled smiles. But on that tense afternoon in Abuja, the air reportedly shifted. Whispers started. A few men in plain clothes moved with unusual urgency. No sirens. No formal announcement. Just quiet steps and hardened faces. Then the word began to spread like airport wildfire: They want to pick him up. The “him” was Nasir El-Rufai — former governor, political gladiator, and one of the most controversial figures in Nigeria’s recent history. According to accounts from his aides and multiple media reports, security operatives approached him shortly after he arrived from abroad. They allegedly attempted to detain him. But there was a problem — a big one. No warrant. No formal arrest document. No clear legal instrument presented. Just authority — or what looked like it. And in that moment, something unusual happened in Nigeria’s political theatre: the script didn’t go as planned. El-Rufai reportedly refused to go quietly. His camp insists there was no lawful basis for the attempted arrest. The operatives, facing resistance and public attention, did not complete the mission. Whether you love him or loathe him, the scene itself tells a deeper story — not about one man, but about power, procedure, and the fragile line between authority and abuse. And here’s where it gets uncomfortable. CONTINUE READING👇🏻https://ibrandtv.com/2026/02/13/el-rufai-vs-fg-3-real-life-lessons-nigerians-must-learn-from-the-failed-airport-arrest/
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When the lights go out across Nigeria, they don’t just flicker — they disappear.https://ibrandtv.com/2026/02/12/aso-rock-solar-project-is-the-nigerian-government-betraying-nigerians/
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When Aliko Dangote’s refinery launched ramped-up petrol production, it was pitched as Nigeria’s end to half a century of petrol scarcity and crippling import bills. Built at a staggering $20 billion cost with a capacity of 650,000 barrels per day, the refinery was meant to replace imported Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) and make Nigeria energy self-sufficient. Dangote himself boasted of ending 50 years of fuel crisis, stating the refinery had slashed pump prices from nearly ₦1,100 to around ₦841 in key regions and had exported over 1.1 billion litres of petrol within a few months of operation. He also projected expanding capacity to 700,000 barrels per day and making Nigeria a major export hub. CONTINUE READING👇🏻https://ibrandtv.com/2026/02/10/dangote-refinerys-promise-to-end-nigerias-petrol-crisis-the-story-so-far/
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Every February 14, Nigerian men pretend they don’t care. They’ll say things like “Babe, anything you buy is fine”or “Don’t stress yourself.” But let’s not deceive ourselves. Deep down, many of these men already know what’s coming: boxers, singlets, socks, and maybe one perfume that smells like every other perfume they own. And don’t get me wrong—undies are useful. Essential, even. But Valentine’s Day is not “restock your wardrobe” day. It’s not Christmas. It’s not Sallah. It’s not “manage what I bought.” Valentine’s Day is emotional. It’s symbolic. It’s about saying: “I see you. I get you. I chose this for YOU.” Now let’s be sincere for a second Most Nigerian women buy undies for their men not because the man loves undies—but because it’s safe, predictable, and stress-free. But if we’re being honest? A lot of men would rather receive nothing than another Valentine’s Day boxer pack with love emojis. This article is not for women who want to “do the bare minimum.” This is for women who want their man to pause, look at the gift, smile stupidly, and think: “Damn… this woman actually understands me.” So if you’re ready to upgrade from “Thanks, babe” to “You really tried for me,” Let’s talk about 10 Valentine’s gifts your Nigerian man would appreciate more than undies. CONTINUE READING 👇🏻https://ibrandtv.com/2026/02/09/february-14-10-gift-ideas-your-man-would-appreciate-more-than-undies/
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Woro did not vote in America’s elections. Woro did not bomb any foreign land. Woro does not know Donald Trump. Yet, on a quiet Tuesday evening in Kwara State, Woro paid in blood. The village went to sleep Nigerian and woke up collateral damage in a global war it never consented to. At dusk, mothers stirred soup over firewood, farmers wiped sweat from their brows, children chased one another through narrow paths between mud houses. Nothing in the air suggested that by sunrise, those same paths would be lined with corpses, ashes, and shallow mass graves. By dawn, Woro was no longer a community. It was a message. What happened there was not random. It was not impulsive. It was not madness. It was deliberate, methodical, theatrical violence—violence designed to punish, to warn, and to communicate something far larger than the village itself. And the question Nigeria is too afraid to ask is this: Was Woro slaughtered as retaliation for a war fought thousands of miles away? CONTINUE READING 👇🏻https://ibrandtv.com/2026/02/07/retaliation-how-bandits-are-punishing-nigerians-for-trumps-military-attacks-the-woro-massacre/
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Tiwa Savage has spoken candidly about the lingering emotions she feels toward her former partner and longtime collaborator, Wizkid, admitting that sharing a stage with him still stirs deep feelings. The award-winning singer made the revelation in a video that has since gone viral. Tiwa explained that performing alongside Wizkid is far from easy for her, as it reawakens memories from their past and makes the experience intensely emotional. She reflected on their surprise reunion at the Great Lagos Countdown 2025, one of Lagos’ biggest annual music events. CONTINUE READING 👇🏻https://ibrandtv.com/2026/02/06/tiwa-savage-admits-shes-still-in-love-with-wizkid/
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On February 3, 2026, villages in Nigeria’s Kwara State—Woro and Nuku—were turned into killing fields. At least 162 people were slaughtered in one of the deadliest assaults in recent memory, bodies lying in charred compounds, hands bound, homes razed, and survivors fleeing into surrounding bushland. Amnesty International and Red Cross teams have described the massacre as a brazen manifestation of Nigeria’s spiraling insecurity. But beyond the immediate horror lies a deeper, far more unsettling geopolitical question: Did recent U.S. military actions in Nigeria contribute to this bloody backlash? CONTINUE READING👇🏻 https://ibrandtv.com/2026/02/05/kwara-killings-did-the-us-strike-anger-terrorists-in-nigeria/
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In the grand theatre of global recognition, few stages are as glittering—and as unforgiving—as the Grammy Awards. For Nigerian superstar David Adeleke, aka Davido, the Grammys have increasingly begun to feel less like a dream destination and more like a familiar heartbreak hotel. Each nomination arrives wrapped in hope, national pride, and loud predictions. Each loss, however, lands with a thud that echoes across timelines, blogs, and barbershop debates. This year was no different. Once again, Davido showed up. Once again, Nigeria showed up in numbers. And once again, the Grammy trophy went home with someone else. CONTINUE READING👇🏻https://ibrandtv.com/2026/02/03/grammy-awards-how-davido-is-slowly-becoming-the-atiku-of-nigerias-entertainment-industry/
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For years, Nigerians endured long queues and slow processes just to update their pension records. Many contributors struggled with incomplete data, delayed benefits, and overcrowded pension offices. CONTINUE…… 👉 https://ibrandtv.com/2026/02/02/pencom-launches-platform-for-direct-pension-data-updates/
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Former presidential candidate Peter Obi has firmly dismissed speculation that he could accept a vice-presidential role ahead of the 2027 general election, insisting instead that he remains focused on leading the race as a presidential contender. Reports have circulated in recent weeks suggesting that some political groups were exploring the possibility of Obi running as a running mate, especially amid renewed calls from supporters of former Vice President Atiku Abubakar for a repeat of the 2019 alliance. CONTINUE READING👇🏻https://ibrandtv.com/2026/02/02/2027-i-am-contesting-as-number-one-peter-obi-rejects-vp-role/
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Nigeria’s security and intelligence agencies have reportedly concluded investigations into an alleged plot to violently remove President Bola Ahmed Tinubu from office, uncovering a network of 40 suspects drawn from the military, police, and civilian population. According to multiple reports, those implicated range from senior serving and retired military officers to a police officer and civilians accused of handling logistics, intelligence gathering, funding, and propaganda. Authorities have released a list of 40 individuals, including serving and retired military officers, police personnel, and civilians, along with their purported units and addresses. The list features officers from the Army, Navy, and Air Force, as well as civilians allegedly linked to logistics, intelligence gathering, and media operations. Investigations remain ongoing, with security agencies insisting that all suspects will be afforded due process as the case moves toward military tribunals and civilian courts. Below is the full list of the 40 suspects and their supposed units and addresses. CONTINUE READING 👇🏻https://ibrandtv.com/2026/02/01/coup-plot-against-tinubu-40-suspects-identified-as-security-probe-ends-see-full-list/
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Coups do not always begin with gunfire. Sometimes, they begin with a story. A rumour whispered at a beer parlour. Maybe viral video that feels too real. A film scene that suddenly looks like prophecy. A joke that lands too close to home. Even before tanks roll, minds must shift. Before soldiers mutiny, legitimacy must rot. Before a president is removed, belief must be destabilised. So when news emerged that Stanley Amandi—a Nollywood filmmaker, actor, and former Actors Guild chairman—had been arrested in connection with an alleged plot to violently overthrow President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, Nigeria did not just hear about a disrupted military conspiracy. Nigeria heard something colder. Something far more dangerous. It heard that cinema itself may have been dragged into the mechanics of regime change. If the allegations are even partially true, then this was not a crude, old-school putsch. This was not soldiers drunk on ambition. This was not merely treason with boots and bullets. It was narrative warfare. A coup rehearsed in imagination. A takeover auditioned through emotion. Perhaps, a regime collapse scored, scripted, and softened long before any order was given. And suddenly, a terrifying question confronts the country: CONTINUE READING 👇🏻https://ibrandtv.com/2026/01/30/president-tinubu-5-things-about-the-coup-nigerians-dont-know/
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Lagos, the city of dreams—or, increasingly, the city of despair—stands at a crossroads. Its skyline gleams with skyscrapers, shopping malls, and luxury high-rises, yet beneath the glittering towers, a humanitarian disaster quietly unfolds. Makoko, the so-called “Venice of Africa,” has become the epicenter of this crisis: a waterfront community of stilt houses, bustling markets, and generations of human ingenuity, now reduced to splintered wood, floating debris, and broken lives. Families who have lived in Makoko, Owode Onirin, and Oworonshoki for decades are being uprooted in the name of “urban renewal,” forced to trade their homes for the uncertainty of bridges, canoes, and open streets. And if you think Makoko is a tragedy in isolation, think again. Lagos is on the verge of a mass displacement crisis, and the next few months are likely to push thousands more residents into homelessness. CONTINUE READING 👇🏻https://ibrandtv.com/2026/01/28/makoko-demolition-why-you-should-expect-more-displaced-people-on-the-streets-of-lagos-in-the-coming-months/
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When a lawyer walks away from a high-profile client, it is never just about paperwork. It is a signal. A warning. Sometimes, a verdict before the verdict. The recent withdrawal of Nnamdi Kanu’s court-appointed lawyer from his case is not an isolated legal incident—it is part of a troubling and growing pattern that raises deeper questions about power, control, trust, and the fragile relationship between activism and the rule of law. Why are lawyers—especially those assigned to defend him—stepping back? And what does this say about Kanu’s legal strategy, his leadership style, and the future of his long-running legal battle? CONTINUE READING👇🏻https://ibrandtv.com/2026/01/27/the-real-reason-lawyers-keep-walking-away-from-nnamdi-kanu/
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Nigeria’s electricity system has plunged the country into darkness once again, as the national grid collapsed on Tuesday, marking the second major outage in under a week. Real-time data from the Nigerian Independent System Operator (NISO) showed that power supply to all 11 distribution companies (DisCos) dropped to zero megawatts by 11 a.m., leaving millions of homes and businesses without electricity. CONTINUE READING 👇🏻https://ibrandtv.com/2026/01/27/second-major-power-outage-in-nigeria-within-a-week/
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Dangote Petroleum Refinery has announced an upward review of petrol prices nationwide, bringing an end to the temporary price relief enjoyed during the festive season. The refinery disclosed on Monday that the ex-depot (gantry) price of Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) has been increased from ₦699 per litre to ₦799 per litre. With the adjustment, petrol is now expected to sell for about ₦839 per litre at MRS filling stations across the country. CONTINUE READING 👇🏻https://ibrandtv.com/2026/01/27/dangote-refinery-raises-petrol-price-to-₦839-litre-after-festive-relief/
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Nigeria is witnessing one of the most dramatic political migrations since the return to democracy. Politicians are not merely defecting — they are fleeing. Governors, lawmakers, party chieftains, and entire political structures are abandoning their platforms and sprinting into the All Progressives Congress (APC), as if political survival itself has been outsourced to one party. To many observers, the message is clear: APC has won 2027 already. But history has a cruel habit of humiliating political certainty. The real, uncomfortable question is this: what happens if APC loses in 2027 — after absorbing almost everyone? That question is not hypothetical. It is explosive. And it exposes the deepest contradictions in Nigeria’s political culture. CONTINUE READING 👇🏻https://ibrandtv.com/2026/01/24/mass-defection-what-happens-when-apc-loses-2027-after-everyone-runs-to-them/
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If you are still paying last year’s rent and feeling relieved that your landlord has not called yet, enjoy the peace while it lasts. That silence may not be kindness — it may simply be preparation. Across Nigeria, a quiet but dangerous chain reaction has begun, and it starts with a bag of cement. Not fuel. Not dollar. Not electricity tariffs. Cement. The same grey powder that quietly holds your walls together is now threatening to pull your rent apart. In markets across the country, the price of a single 50kg bag of cement has crept past ₦10,000, climbing as high as ₦10,500 in some areas. That figure may look like just another number in Nigeria’s long list of economic shocks, but make no mistake — this one is different. This one walks directly into your bedroom, your sitting room, and your landlord’s heart. Because when cement sneezes, rent catches pneumonia. And here’s the bizarre part: this is happening in a country sitting on massive limestone deposits, with cement factories scattered across states like Kogi, Edo, and Ogun. CONTINUE READING 👇🏻https://ibrandtv.com/2026/01/20/new-cement-price-why-your-house-rent-may-increase-soon/
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A new international initiative spearheaded by former United States President Donald Trump, known as the Board of Peace, is steadily gaining momentum as more countries formally sign on. According to reports, the proposed body is designed to function as a multinational platform aimed at coordinating efforts to resolve major global conflicts and promote diplomatic stability. A senior White House official disclosed that approximately 35 world leaders have already committed to joining the initiative. The current list features a mix of long-standing U.S. allies and a number of more controversial participants. Countries that have formally accepted Trump’s invitation so far include: CONTINUE READING 👇🏻https://ibrandtv.com/2026/01/23/full-list-of-countries-that-have-joined-donald-trumps-board-of-peace/
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For decades, the Third Mainland Bridge has been more than concrete and steel. It is Lagos in motion — chaotic, relentless, unpredictable. Every morning and night, hundreds of thousands of lives pass through it, often at terrifying speeds, with little oversight and even less accountability. CONTINUE READING 👉https://ibrandtv.com/2026/01/12/third-mainland-bridge-cctv-5-benefits-that-await-lagosians/
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Less than two years into President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s administration, one thing has become unmistakably clear: Nigeria has not been quiet. From the moment the fuel subsidy was removed, the streets have refused to stay calm. Markets, campuses, highways, labour halls, and even the gates of government ministries have all turned into theatres of anger, frustration, and raw public dissent. Nigerians—long known for endurance—have increasingly chosen protest over patience. CONTINUE READING: https://ibrandtv.com/2026/01/19/from-fuel-to-hunger-5-major-protests-that-has-rocked-tinubus-regime/
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Human Rights lawyer, Femi Falana, SAN, has slammed the Federal Government’s claim that loot recoveered from convicted former governor of Delta State, James Ibori, belongs to the FG and not the state. Read more: https://ibrandtv.com/ibori-loot-falana-blasts-fg-use-funds/
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A civil society organization, The International Alliance for Justice and Peace, has slammed the Oyo State Police Command for arresting operatives of Oodua Peoples Congress (OPC) after they arrested notorious Fulani warlord, Iskilu Wakili in Ayete area of Ibarapaland. Read more: https://ibrandtv.com/group-condemns-arrest-opc-operatives-capturing-alleged-fulani-terrorist/
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