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179 ASPs disqualified as police promote 952 officers

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The Police Service Commission has withheld the promotion of 179 Assistant Superintendents of Police.

The commission added that 176 of the affected officers had already retired while the remaining three were dead.

In a statement on Wednesday by its spokesman, Ikechuckwu Ani, the PSC said the affected officers were unfit for the promotion exercise.

Ani also said 952 ASPs were elevated to the next rank of Deputy Superintendents.

“The Police Service Commission has approved the promotion of 952 Assistant Superintendents of Police to the next rank of Deputy Superintendents of Police.

“The Commission also declined the promotion of 176 ASPs found to have retired from Service and another 3 suspected to have died.

“Some of the newly promoted Officers include Maidawa Yakubu, Edwin Thomas, Chagga Yakubu, Sabo Hassan, Omini Dickson, Bassey Alobo, Enyinnaya Ejimadu, Grace Okon, Rose Bassey, Fidelis Offorbuike, Adamu Isa Audu and Ofem Uket.

“Others are Elvina Ochia Chukwu, FCID special fraud unit, Ikoyi Lagos; Kyrian Igwe, Enugu State Command; Ndidiamaka Onwude, O/C JWC, B Division, Kpirikpri, Abakaliki, Ebonyi State Command, Rosemary Obianuju Egbo, Area Command, Warri, Delta State; Tabitha Gotan, Uya Bassey Johnson, Abia state Command, Elizabeth Ajik, NPF-NCC, FCID; Sunday Prince Ajaegbu, 44 PMF Force Headquarters Abuja and Deborah Danjuma, SPU BASE 7 Abuja.

“Olowu Yetunde Olatunde, Ogun state Command, Felix Okpaleke, 32 PMF, Abakaliki Zakka Bulus, FCT Command Abuja, Kudirat Elegba, SPU Base 2, Lagos, Isioma Omodion, Delta State Command, Ukpabio Ayi Akiba, Rivers state Command and Edna Emeh Bassey were also some of the ASPs elevated to the new rank of Deputy Superintendents of Police., ‘’ the statement partly read.

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The PSC Chairman, retired Deputy Inspector-General of Police Hashimu Argungu, explained that the promotion of officers who are no longer in active service would undermine due process.

He added that the PSC was determined to uphold professionalism, discipline, and fairness in its handling of officers’ career progression.

“The commission will no longer tolerate diversionary or unauthorised actions by serving officers. We have established channels for complaints, and we will ensure promotions are based strictly on merit and eligibility,” Argungu stated.

He noted that the PSC had already conveyed its decision to the Inspector-General of Police for implementation.

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Alleged N5bn fraud: Ex-minister Stella Oduah arraigned, barred from foreign trips

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The Federal Government on Wednesday arraigned former Minister of Aviation, Senator Stella Oduah, over an alleged N5bn fraud allegedly committed in 2014.

Oduah, who was aviation minister under former President Goodluck Jonathan between 2011 and 2014 appeared before the High Court of the Federal Capital Territory in Maitama on five counts, including conspiracy and obtaining money by false pretences.

She was arraigned by the office of the Attorney General of the Federation.

In one of the counts, Oduah was accused of fraudulently obtaining N2.4bn through Broad Waters Resources from the Federal Ministry of Aviation, falsely claiming the funds were meant for technical supervision.

The alleged fraud is said to have occurred in January 2014.

Other counts allege that she similarly obtained N1.6bn  and another N839m through false pretences, contrary to the provisions of the Advance Fee Fraud and Other Fraud-Related Offences Act.

Oduah was arraigned alongside a co-defendant, Gloria Odita.

Both pleaded not guilty to all the charges. Oduah was represented by Onyechi Ikpeazu (SAN), while Wale Balogun (SAN) appeared for Odita.

Justice Hamza Muazu granted Oduah bail on self-recognisance but ordered her to deposit her passport with the court.

The judge also directed that she must not leave the country without the court’s permission.

This marks the second time the Federal Government has prosecuted Oduah over this matter. An earlier case filed by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission at the Federal High Court, Abuja, was withdrawn.

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Senate screens more ambassadorial nominees

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A routine screening exercise took an unexpected turn on Wednesday as the Senate continued vetting President Bola Tinubu’s ambassadorial nominees, including career and non-career diplomats from across the country.

The session briefly shifted into drama when Emmanuel Adeyemi, a career nominee from Ekiti State, failed to name all three senators representing his state. Adeyemi—currently a deputy director in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs—had impressed the Senate Committee on Foreign Affairs with his international experience in Hong Kong and France, where he earned a PhD.

But while paying tribute to lawmakers from his home state, he mentioned only Senate Leader Opeyemi Bamidele and Senator Yemi Adaramodu, prompting the panel to ask for the third name. Caught off guard, Adeyemi hesitated as a member of his delegation attempted to search online for Senator Cyril Fasuyi’s name, drawing disapproval from the committee.

Senator Asuquo Ekpenyong (Cross River South) described the lapse as worrying, saying nominees expected to represent Nigeria abroad must demonstrate competence and awareness. Senators Adams Oshiomhole and Seriake Dickson also joined in the criticism, while Senator Yunus Akintunde—standing in for Bamidele—pleaded that the committee overlook the mistake.

Adeyemi is one of three ambassadorial nominees from Ekiti, alongside Erelu Angela Adebayo and Olumilua Oluwayemika.

Beyond the Ekiti incident, the committee screened several other career diplomats, including Ahmed Sulu Gambari, Maimuna Besto, Monica Enebechi, Ahmed Monguno, Kingsley Onaga, Magaji Umar and Aminu Nasir.

A surprise appearance came from former Ondo governorship aspirant Senator Jimoh Ibrahim, who was invited to “take a bow and go,” despite not being initially slated for the day’s session.

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The screenings follow President Tinubu’s request last week for Senate confirmation of 65 ambassadorial nominees, made pursuant to Section 171 (1), (2) and (4) of the 1999 Constitution. The list includes experienced envoys such as Sulu-Gambari Olatunji Ahmed (Kwara), Ahmed Mohammed Monguno (Borno) and Maimuna Ibrahim (Adamawa), as well as political appointees like former presidential aide Ita Enang, ex–Chief of Naval Staff Vice Admiral Ibok-Ete Ibas (retd.) and former Army Chief Lt. Gen. Abdulrahman Dambazzau (retd.).

Senate President Godswill Akpabio has given the Foreign Affairs Committee one week to conclude the exercise and present its report.

Wednesday’s session formed part of the second phase of the screening. Earlier in the day, Kayode Are (Ogun), Aminu Dalhatu (Jigawa) and Ayodele Oke (Oyo) had appeared before the committee, with Oke addressing longstanding allegations during his turn.

The staggered screenings, insiders say, reflect ongoing efforts to restructure Nigeria’s foreign service ahead of anticipated changes in diplomatic missions worldwide.

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Tinubu tackles VIP police escort abuse, Soyinka faults Seyi’s entourage

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President Bola Tinubu on Wednesday reaffirmed his order to pull police officers off VIPs and return them to core policing, minutes before presiding over the Federal Executive Council at the State House, Abuja.

“I honestly believe in what I said. It should be effected. If you have any problem because of the nature of your assignment, contact the IGP and get my clearance,” Tinubu said, sounding fed up with the slow pace of compliance.

His statement comes a day after the Nobel laureate,Prof. Wole Soyinka, publicly called out Tinubu’s son, Seyi, for going about with a large retinue of security details.

Soyinka, speaking on Tuesday in Lagos, narrated how he encountered the President’s son with “an excessively large security battalion sufficient to take over a small country.”

“I was so astonished that I started looking for the National Security Adviser. I said track him down for me. I think they got him somewhere in Paris. But he was with the President; he was in a meeting.

“Then, I said, ‘ I’ve just seen something I can’t believe, I don’t understand,’ and I described the scene to him. I said, ‘Do you mean that a child of the Head of State goes around with an army for his protection or whatever?’

“I couldn’t believe it. Later on, I did some investigative journalism, and I found that apparently this is how this young man goes around with his battalion, his heavy armed soldiers.”

“I was astonished,” Soyinka said, adding that “children must understand their place. They are not elected leaders, and they must not inherit the architecture of state power simply by proximity.”

Soyinka is seen as one of Tinubu’s major supporters and he had not criticised the President in public until Tuesday.

Speaking at the beginning of Wednesday’s FEC meeting,  Tinubnu directed the National Security Adviser, Nuhu Ribadu, and the Department of State Services to issue further guidance and ensure the directive was effected.

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Tinubu said, “The NSA and DSS will provide further information and form themselves the committee and review the structure.”

Furthermore,the President directed the Minister of Interior, Dr Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo, to liaise with the Inspector-General of Police, Kayode Egbetokun, and the Nigerian National Security and Civil Defence Corps to immediately replace withdrawn escorts so “you don’t leave people exposed.”

“The Minister of Interior should liase with the IGP and the Civil Defence structure to replace those police officers, who are on special security duties.So that you don’t leave people exposed,” he insisted.

Framing the move as a response to a spike in abductions, the President said, “We are facing challenges of kidnapping. We need all the forces we have on ground, fully utilised.”

He added that while some officials remain vulnerable, civil defence personnel should step in for VIP protection where necessary.

“I know some of our people are exposed and I understand that we have to make exceptional provision for them and civil defence are equally armed and I want to know that from NSA to arm our forest guards too, take it very seriously,” the President stated.

Tinubu also disclosed that forest guards will be armed, saying, “I have directed the NSA to arm our forest guards too. Take it seriously.”

The President also tasked Vice-President Kashim Shettima to use the National Economic Council to identify and rehabilitate grasing reserves into ranches, aiming to defuse farmer-herder flashpoints and formalise the livestock economy.

He directed, “Again, especially livestock reform, I think the Vice President should get the NEC first of all to see which villages or grazing reserves that can be salvaged or rehabilitated into ranches, livestock settlement.

“We must eliminate the possibility of conflicts and turn the livestock reform into economically viable development. The opportunity is there. Let’s utilise it.

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“And it is in NEC, if we exercise the constitutional requirement which states that the land belong to the states, which ever one they can salvage convert to livestock village, let us stop this conflict area and turn it to economic opportunities and prosperity.”

Wednesday’s charge came nearly three weeks after an earlier presidential directive to withdraw police details from VIPs and redeploy them to communities and highways, freeing manpower for investigations, patrols and school protection.

The November 23 directive was issued after a security meeting at the State House, Abuja. It followed series of attacks that saw the kidnap of at least 300 people, mostly schoolchildren, across Kebbi, Kwara and Niger states.

“Henceforth, police authorities will deploy them to concentrate on their core police duties,” read a statement signed by the President’s Special Adviser on Information and Strategy, Bayo Onanuga.

According to Onanuga, Tinubu instructed that “VIPs who want police protection will now request well-armed personnel from the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps.”

Meanwhile, the senator representing Bauchi Central, Abdul Ningi, on Wednesday, protested the withdrawal of his only police orderly.

Speaking on the floor of the Senate, the aggrieved senator insisted that the measure must be implemented uniformly across all privileged Nigerians.

Ningi told his colleagues that while his security aide was withdrawn in compliance with the directive issued by the Presidency and the Inspector General of Police, several high-profile individuals—including top political actors, business moguls, and entertainers—still moved around with full police escorts.

“It should be done across the board. Let us see what happens from the office of the President to the Vice President, the Senate President, the Speaker of the House, ministers, governors, business concerns, and even the sons and daughters of political office holders.

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“I have seen singers and foreign business owners with police escorts. But a senator has his only orderly withdrawn? It is unfair,” he protested.

Ningi urged the Senate leadership to mandate its Committee on Police Affairs to investigate what he called “selective enforcement,” stressing that the National Assembly should not be targeted while other influential Nigerians continue to enjoy unrestricted police protection.

Responding, the Deputy Senate President, Barau Jibrin, who presided over the plenary, acknowledged the concerns and disclosed that the issue had already been tabled at a Senate leadership meeting held on Tuesday.

He assured senators that steps had been initiated to engage the relevant authorities.

He directed the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Police Affairs to look into the matter and report back, adding that President Tinubu’s directive was issued to strengthen internal security, not to expose lawmakers.

“The issue you raised is taken seriously. The leadership has agreed that the necessary action should be taken to restore your police orderliness because it aligns with international practice.

“We also believe Mr President will listen, as the directive was not meant to deprive lawmakers unfairly,” Senator Barau said.

Barau reiterated the Senate’s support for the administration’s ongoing security reforms, noting that while the directive was well-intentioned, any signs of selective enforcement must be promptly addressed to maintain public confidence.

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