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Kwara APC, PDP spar as DPP report clears Bukola Saraki from Offa robbery case

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A fresh war of words has erupted between the Kwara State chapters of the All Progressives Congress and the Peoples Democratic Party over allegations linking former Senate President, Dr Bukola Saraki, with individuals convicted in the 2018 Offa bank robbery.

The situation has further heightened political tension ahead of the 2027 general elections in the state.

The APC had, on Saturday, accused Saraki of maintaining longstanding ties with some of the convicted offenders, describing the alleged relationship as widely known and politically motivated.

However, the PDP, in a statement on Sunday, swiftly dismissed the claims as baseless, politically driven, and a calculated attempt to blackmail its leader.

New facts have, however, emerged indicating that the Office of the Attorney-General of the Federation cleared Saraki of any link to the 2018 Offa bank robbery, despite new charges recently filed against him by the Kwara State Government.

The government, on Thursday, filed criminal charges against Saraki and his successor in office, Abdulfatah Ahmed, over the Offa robbery incident.

It filed a 20-count charge before the Kwara State High Court in Ilorin, accusing Saraki, Ahmed and two others of criminal conspiracy and culpable homicide in connection with the deadly incident.

The charge, filed under case number KWS/114C/26, alleged that the defendants were armed suspects involved in the robbery and played roles in the criminal conspiracy.

Also listed in the charge are Yusuf Abdulwahab and a former aide, Alabi Olalekan.

They are expected to be arraigned before Justice Haleemah Salman of the Kwara State High Court on June 4.

The April 5, 2018, robbery was a highly coordinated attack on several commercial banks and a police station in Offa, Kwara State, Nigeria, resulting in the deaths of over 30 persons, including police officers.

Speaking with journalists in Ilorin, the APC State Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Abdulwaheed Babatunde, alleged that testimonies by key individuals during investigations pointed to a connection between Saraki and members of the gang responsible for the deadly robbery.

“The attention of the Kwara State chapter of the APC has been drawn to the melodramatic press statement by the PDP and Senator Bukola Saraki, accusing Governor AbdulRahman AbdulRazaq of a ‘surreptitious plot’ over the charges rightly instituted against him and three others in connection with the tragic 2018 Offa robbery incident,” Babatunde said.

He insisted that the former Senate President had no reason to be alarmed if he had nothing to hide, noting that the matter was now before a competent court.

“Neither Saraki nor the PDP needs to lose sleep if their hands are clean. But they must come to terms with the fact that courts deal with evidence and facts, not dramatic press statements designed to rewrite history,” he added.

Babatunde further alleged that testimonies from a former Chief of Staff to the Kwara State Government, Yusuf Abdulwahab, and Ayo Akinnibosun, one of the convicted suspects, suggested a relationship between Saraki and the group.

According to him, Akinnibosun, who allegedly led a political group funded by Saraki, made disclosures during interrogation that contradicted the former Senate President’s denials.

“Senator Saraki’s denial of any link with the convicted offenders is not only laughable but also characteristically deceptive, given the volume of evidence already in the public domain.

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“The testimonies of Yusuf Abdulwahab and Ayo Akinnibosun clearly do not support Saraki’s claims. However, we leave the court to do its work when the trial commences in June,” Babatunde said.

The APC spokesman also criticised what he described as Saraki’s reliance on media narratives, urging him to submit himself fully to the judicial process.

“Law does not answer to press statements. Now that the state government has rightly said Saraki and others have questions to answer, the proper place to provide explanations is in court, not on Facebook or through sponsored media narratives,” he stated.

He maintained that the prosecution was a lawful exercise and should not be misconstrued as political persecution.

“It is a sacred and lawful duty of the state government to pursue justice in this matter.

“The court will determine guilt or innocence, but no one should attempt to whip up sentiments to shield anyone from facing the law. No one is above the law,” he added.

The APC further linked the controversy to broader concerns about insecurity, alleging that political actors had historically enabled criminal elements in the state.

“This is a time when Nigerians are demanding that sponsors of criminality, whether banditry, terrorism, or armed robbery, be exposed and held accountable.

“The Offa robbery remains a painful memory for many families, and justice must be served without fear or favour,” Babatunde said.

He also took a swipe at Saraki’s political standing, claiming the former governor no longer commands widespread trust due to what he described as a “poor record of integrity.”

He said, “While the PDP is busy re-litigating the past, Governor AbdulRahman AbdulRazaq is focused on delivering dividends of democracy—building schools, constructing roads, upgrading healthcare facilities, and ensuring prompt payment of salaries and pensions.”

But in a swift rebuttal, the PDP described the APC’s allegations as “watery and pedestrian,” accusing the ruling party of attempting to resurrect a previously resolved matter for political gain.

In a statement signed by its State Publicity Secretary, Olusegun Adewara, the PDP said the APC’s reliance on threats and accusations reflected intellectual bankruptcy.

“The Kwara State chapter of the PDP has taken note of the watery and pedestrian response issued by the APC following our recent press conference, as well as our leader’s sharp and timely reaction to the unintelligent attempt by the Abdulrahman-led government to resurrect the Offa robbery case as an instrument of blackmail,” the statement read.

The opposition party insisted that Saraki had already been cleared of any wrongdoing by relevant authorities, including the Office of the Attorney-General of the Federation.

“For the sake of emphasis, we hereby state that there is absolutely nothing new in the documents that Governor AbdulRahman and his cohorts are currently parading in this renewed court process.

“These same claims have been previously investigated by the security agencies,” the PDP stated.

It added, “It is instructive to remind the public that on two separate occasions, the Director of Public Prosecution in the Office of the Attorney-General of the Federation, after thorough review of the police reports, not only absolved Dr Saraki of all allegations but explicitly stated that there was no link—direct or indirect—between him and the crime or the suspects involved in the Offa robbery.”

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The PDP challenged the APC-led government to explain why the case was being revisited years after the original prosecution of the convicted offenders.

“If this matter is genuinely about justice, why was this so-called trial not initiated alongside the original prosecution of the convicted offenders?” the party queried.

It also referenced claims by the convicts that their initial confessional statements implicating Saraki were made under duress.

“It is equally important to recall that the convicts, who initially made televised confessional statements, later told the court that they were coerced by police officials handling the case to implicate Dr Saraki.

“According to them, they were promised a visa to leave the country, money, removal from the trial list, and other rewards if they implicated Dr Saraki,” the statement added.

The PDP further accused the state government of using the case as a distraction from governance challenges, warning that such tactics would not sway public opinion.

“Rather than his obsession with bringing Saraki down and making the PDP the scapegoat for his failure, the governor would do well to engage in honest self-assessment and corrective action if it is not already too late,” the party said.

“No amount of propaganda against Dr Saraki or the poor laundering of the governor’s image can alter the inevitable verdict that awaits AbdulRahman in 2027,” the PDP declared.

Meanwhile, two separate legal opinions issued in 2018 by the Office of the Attorney-General of the Federation concluded that there was no evidence linking Saraki to the Offa robbery.

The legal advice, dated June 22 and August 23, 2018, and signed by the Director of Public Prosecutions of the Federation, Mohammed U.E., on behalf of the then Attorney-General and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami, stated that available evidence did not establish any connection between Saraki and the crime.

The legal advice followed a detailed review of a 16-page police report prepared by the Intelligence Response Team of the Nigeria Police Force, led at the time by Deputy Commissioner of Police Abba Kyari, which investigated the April 5, 2018, multiple bank robbery in Offa, Kwara State.

In a letter addressed to the Inspector-General of Police, the DPP stated that there was no nexus between Saraki and the alleged offences based on available evidence.

In the first legal advice dated June 22, 2018, and signed on behalf of the then Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami, the DPP stated, “For the Senate President (Saraki) and the Kwara State Governor (Ahmed), this office is unable to establish from the evidence in the interim report a nexus between the alleged offence and the suspects. Hence, it is our advice that further and thorough investigation in this regard be carried out.”

Following the submission of a second police report on July 27, 2018, the DPP issued another legal opinion dated August 23, 2018, reaffirming the earlier conclusion.

The three-page document noted, “With regards to the Senate President, Senator Bukola Saraki, since there is no departure from the earlier findings in the interim report, this office is still unable to establish any prima facie case against him for any offences of criminal conspiracy, armed robbery, and culpable homicide punishable with death.”

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The legal advice recommended the prosecution of six individuals directly linked to the robbery.

They included Ayoade Akinnibosun, Ibikunle Ogunleye, Adeola Ibrahim, Salawudeen Azeez, Niyi Ogundiran, and Michael Adiukwu.

While Adiukwu later died in police custody, the remaining suspects were tried before the Kwara State High Court in Ilorin.

During the trial, the defendants reportedly recanted earlier confessional statements implicating Saraki, alleging that they were coerced by investigators.

According to court records, the suspects claimed they were offered inducements, including money and promises of foreign travel visas, in exchange for implicating the former Senate President.

The trial eventually led to the conviction of five defendants, who were sentenced to death by the Kwara State High Court in September 2024.

The verdict was subsequently upheld by the Court of Appeal sitting in Ilorin in January 2026.

The appellate panel, led by Justice Ridwan Abdullahi, alongside Justices Gabriel Kolawole and Abdul Dogo, ruled that the prosecution had proven its case beyond a reasonable doubt, affirming the convictions of Ayoade Akinnibosun, Niyi Ogundiran, Ibikunle Ogunleye, Adeola Abraham, and Salawu Azeez for armed robbery, illegal possession of firearms, and culpable homicide.

The case is currently pending before the Supreme Court.

Despite the earlier legal opinions and court rulings, the Kwara State Government has now instituted fresh charges against Saraki and others.

According to the state government, weapons and other exhibits linked to the robbery were recovered from the Government House and a state ministry in 2018 and were tendered during the trial of the principal suspects.

Prosecutors are also relying on confessional statements attributed to Akinnibosun, who allegedly claimed he led a group of armed operatives connected to political figures and received financial and logistical support.

The fresh charges have reignited debate over the Offa robbery case, which remains one of the most high-profile criminal incidents in Kwara State.

An Ilorin-based legal practitioner, Musa Andulraheem, said the new prosecution raised questions about the interplay between earlier federal legal advice and the powers of state governments to initiate criminal proceedings.

He noted that while the Attorney-General of the Federation’s opinion cleared Saraki based on available evidence at the time, the emergence of new evidence, if substantiated, could justify further legal action.

“Although the office of the Attorney General had cleared Saraki in 2018, if there are new facts, new charges can be filed,” he said.

Another legal practitioner, Saheed Imama, argued that the move risked being perceived as politically motivated, especially in the context of growing political realignments ahead of the 2027 elections.

“I don’t understand why the state government is bringing up this case again despite the advice of the DPP exonerating Saraki and the court convicting the suspects,” he said.

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Step-by-step guide for contactless passport renewal for Nigerians abroad

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The Nigeria Immigration Service has released an updated step-by-step guide for Nigerians living abroad to renew their passports through its Contactless Passport Application System.

The Service announced the update in a post on its official X handle on Tuesday, encouraging Nigerians in the diaspora to take advantage of the digital platform.

According to the Service, the application process involves the following steps:

1. Visit the official NIS Passport Application portal.
2. Select Continue from the pop-up window.
3. Click Apply for Renewal/Re-issue.
4. Create an account and verify your identity using your National Identification Number and date of birth.
5. Complete the application form and choose your preferred processing embassy or high commission.
6. Upload the required documents.
7. Pay the passport fee for your selected booklet.
8. Obtain your Application ID and Reference Number.
9. Select the Contactless option under the Application Status/Book Appointment section.
10. Review the contactless instructions and click “I Understand and Opt In.”
11. Download the NIS Mobile App.
12. Log in or create a profile on the app.
13. Select Passport Application Services.
14. Click Passport Biometrics Enrolment, enter your Application ID and Reference Number, and check your eligibility.
15. Capture your facial image and fingerprints.
16. Complete the liveness verification.
17. Pay the contactless service fee.
18. Submit your biometrics.

The Service, however, noted that not all applicants would qualify for the contactless process.

“If response is INELIGIBLE, then it means applicant should return to the landing page of the portal to book physical appointment at the Embassy/High Commission,” it stated.

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For applicants who successfully complete the contactless biometric enrolment, the NIS said additional documents must be forwarded to the selected processing mission.

“Upon successful completion of biometrics via Contactless App, applicant should print-out the Application form, passport booklet payment, biometric payment, current Passport and enclose all in a self-addressed return envelope to the processing embassy selected during the application process,” the Service said.

It added that applicants would be able to monitor the progress of their applications after submission.

“Applicant may track successful application two weeks after submission via https://track.immigration.gov.ng or on the NIS Mobile App,” the Service added.

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PFIPC scandal: Ex-SGF Babachir Lawal suspects ‘big racket’ behind ‘fake’ agency’s budget code

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A former Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Babachir Lawal, has called for a judicial inquiry into the controversy surrounding the alleged fake Presidential Fiscal and Infrastructure Projects Council (PFIPC), arguing that the scandal points to deep institutional failures rather than a simple administrative error.

Speaking in an interview with ARISE NEWS on Monday, Lawal said the circumstances surrounding the alleged agency suggested the existence of a wider network that enabled it to function within government processes despite questions over its legal status.

He insisted that an administrative investigation alone would be insufficient. “I don’t think it should even be administrative alone; it should be a judicial inquiry”, the former SGF clearly stated.

Lawal questioned claims surrounding an alleged ₦27.5bn take-off grant reportedly linked to the agency, asking how such funds could have been approved and released if the organisation had no legal basis.

“Nigerians are talking about how N1.3bn was inserted into the budget. The man himself first said the quarrel came about because he refused to part with 48% of the 27-point-something billion Naira take-off grant. That money has been spent before this budget office was looking for the budget.

“Who gave him the money? It was not appropriated for; it’s not in any budget, that N27.5bn Naira for which he says somebody demanded 48%. Who gave him the money? How did the process of generating the request for the release come up? How did it go through?

“We are just talking about the tip of the iceberg here. Down there, before we got to here, N27.5bn had already been disbursed, according to him, as a take-off grant. How did that money get to him? It was not in the budget. So this is what should frighten us. If such money can go to a fictitious organisation, we only now begin to see it when we are quarrelling about how it got into the budget. How did that money get to them?”, Babachir queried.

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The former SGF argued that the controversy only became public because of disagreements over the sharing of funds rather than because government oversight mechanisms functioned effectively.

He continued,… “So you see, that’s how we got to know this to start with. That is the reason why we got to know this on his side of the coin. It’s about the sharing of the N27.5bn. That’s why the thing came up. So it didn’t work. It should have worked before that money left the government coffers into the account of the agency.”

Lawal also alleged that the scandal reflected broader institutional weaknesses within the current administration, arguing that the Office of the SGF should have detected any irregularities before the matter progressed through official channels.

He maintained that the SGF’s office bears responsibility for identifying and flagging agencies without legal backing before their requests or budgets proceed through government.

He said, “It’s institutional compromise, because in this, I sense there’s quite a big racket going on somewhere along the line. If the agency was created by maybe one big man alone, and then he wants to go through the budget process, the budget office assigns the budget code according to the chart of accounts in GIFMIS. So, how did they manage to assign the budget code for this agency that does not exist? Who inserted it?

“Because first of all, the budget office issues a budget call circular to MDAs, and everybody starts to prepare his budget according to the budget line. They give you ceilings, and you prepare your budget and forward it to the budget office as an agency or ministry. Now, the Ministry of Budget and Planning would, in our time, call every MDA to come and defend its budget. Now, if you don’t exist, how did they recognise that you are a genuine entity? Who gave out the budget code and allowed their budget to pass?

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“That’s what oversight is. The SGF should be able to know, because before it gets to the National Assembly, that budget goes through the SGF. Unless there’s a dereliction of duty by the SGF’s office, the responsibility to flag that this is a fake agency would have come from them.”

Lawal further criticised the National Assembly, accusing lawmakers of failing to thoroughly scrutinise budget proposals.

“It is a legislative oversight. This government—this National Assembly—has no interest in scrutinising the budget that comes before them. Most of the legislators just go in there to earn their salaries and collect allowances and go. They don’t scrutinise the budget line by line. We all know how this particular government works. There are some people that when they talk, nobody else has the authority to contravene.”

He also suggested that public attention should focus not only on the agency’s legal status but on the individuals who allegedly enabled its operations.

“Why are you interested in N27.5bn that had already been collected and spent? We are talking about an agency that we are claiming doesn’t exist. Maybe it exists, but it doesn’t have a legal framework for its existence. But it exists. And there are a lot of powerful people that make sure it exists in that form.

“Those are the people we need to expose. The Chief of Staff, in particular, is so powerful. The SGF is there, just reneging on his responsibilities. And nothing has happened now”, he concluded.

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Fake Agency Scandal: Gbajabiamila threatens Adeyemi with N10bn defamation suit

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Chief of Staff to the President, Femi Gbajabiamila, ha threatened to initiate legal steps against Prince Adeniyi Adeyemi, and demand N10 billion in damages over allegations linking him to murder, bribery and other criminal activities.

The move was conveyed in a letter dated July 6, 2026, signed by Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Kemi Pinheiro, on behalf of Pinheiro LP, the Chief of Staff’s legal representatives.

The dispute stems from a press conference held by Adeyemi on June 25, during which he accused Gbajabiamila of seeking a share of the alleged take-off funds of the Presidential Foreign Intervention Promotion Council (PFIPC), receiving money through intermediaries, abusing his office and participating in efforts to conceal wrongdoing.Death & Tragedy

During the briefing, Adeyemi also referred to the Chief of Staff as “a murderer” and “an assassin”.

The Presidency has consistently maintained that the PFIPC is a fictitious organisation, despite its appearance in the 2026 Appropriation Act.

Gbajabiamila’s lawyers dismissed all the allegations as entirely false and defamatory, saying they were intended to damage his reputation.

The letter stated: “not only false but gravely defamatory,” adding that the allegations were “designed to portray our client as corrupt, dishonest, criminally culpable, morally bankrupt, administratively incompetent, a murderer and unfit to occupy public office.”

According to the legal team, Adeyemi is already standing trial before the Federal High Court in Abuja in Charge No. FHC/ABJ/CR/652/2026, FRN v. Prince Adeniyi Adeyemi Matthew & Ors, over allegations including forgery of an appointment letter bearing Gbajabiamila’s purported signature and the alleged counterfeiting of Presidential letter-headed papers to present himself as a government official.Nigeria Investment Guide

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The lawyers further rejected Adeyemi’s claims that Gbajabiamila demanded 48 per cent of a purported N27.4 billion take-off grant for the council, amounting to about N12.5 billion, or that he received N400 million through proxies connected to appointments within the organisation.

Other allegations dismissed in the letter included claims that the Chief of Staff intimidated individuals and media organisations, manipulated budget processes, attempted to misuse security agencies and performed official duties while under the influence of intoxicating substances.Trending News Feed

Gbajabiamila also denied ever having any relationship with Adeyemi.

“You have never at any time met, interacted with, communicated with, or had any form of personal or official dealing whatsoever with him,” the lawyers wrote, adding that the decision to “fabricate and publish allegations against a person with whom you have had absolutely no relationship or interaction underscores the reckless, baseless and malicious nature of your publication.”

The legal team also criticised the timing of the allegations, noting that they were made after criminal proceedings had already been instituted against Adeyemi.

“It is even more disturbing to our client that you resorted to defaming him through your press statements after a criminal Charge had been filed against you,” the letter stated.

It added, “Trial by media remains unknown to Nigerian law and cannot be a substitute for due process.”Nigeria Investment Guide

Gbajabiamila’s lawyers demanded that Adeyemi immediately stop making further defamatory statements, remove all related videos, recordings and transcripts from every platform, issue a full retraction and apology in at least five national newspapers and across all social media platforms used to circulate the claims, and provide a written undertaking that he would refrain from making further allegations.

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The letter warned that failure to comply would result in both criminal defamation proceedings under the laws of the Federal Capital Territory and a civil lawsuit seeking N10 billion in aggravated and exemplary damages. The damages, it said, would be donated to a charity chosen by Gbajabiamila. The legal action would also seek a perpetual injunction and a court order compelling the publication of an apology.

The controversy centres on the PFIPC, which was listed in the 2026 Appropriation Act under the title Presidential Economic Advisory Council/Presidential Foreign Intervention Promotion Council and received more than N1.3 billion in budgetary allocations, including about N803 million for personnel, N200 million for overhead and N300 million for capital expenditure.

Adeyemi had argued during his June 25 press conference that an agency included in a budget signed by the President could not be regarded as non-existent.

However, the Presidency insists the council is fraudulent and has no legal existence.

Meanwhile, human rights lawyer Femi Falana has argued that the Presidency lacks the constitutional authority to clear anyone involved in the dispute and has called for an independent investigation into the allegations against both Gbajabiamila and Adeyemi.

Adeyemi is scheduled to appear before the Federal High Court on July 27, 2026.

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