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26 Nigerians deported from Germany

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A total of 26 Nigerians were again deported to Nigeria from Germany.

The deportees arrived Murtala Muhammed International Airport on Wednesday at about 12noon  a chartered deportation flight.

The deportees comprised 25 adult males and one aged female.

No government agency working in the area of migration was on hand to receive the deportees, as was seen in the case of Nigerians brought back from South Africa.

Governor Hope Uzodimma of Imo State had approved a cash grant of N1 million each for all Imo indigenes evacuated from South Africa, while telecommunications company MTN announced a support package of N100,000 and N50,000 worth of airtime for every Nigerian repatriated in the first batch of the Federal Government’s evacuation exercise.

Officials of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Nigerians in Diaspora Commission (NiDCOM) and other government agencies received the evacuees at the airport, but all that was lacking in the case of the deportees. Rejected abroad, they returned to a more inhuman reception in their fatherland.  They appear more like pariahs at home than they were in the foreign country they had travelled to for greener pastures. This has been the pattern for more than seven years that our correspondent started monitoring and reporting deportation exercises.

The deportees were dumped in front of the Cargo area of the airport without any support to reach their families.

Some of them scrambled around to get mobile SIM cards but couldn’t obtain one because they had no NIN number.

Many of them were seen looking sombre and at a loss over how to reach their loved ones. They were left to their own fate in the midst of ravenous airport hustlers desperate to fleece them of whatever little they had on them.

Aside from  the psychological and emotional devastation they had suffered, the returnees also had a running battle with the scorching weather conditions that never considered they were just coming back to the country after many years of being  abroad for greener pastures.

Many of them were seen sweating profusely, with some pulling their clothes, and pouring water on their heads because of the intensity of the heat.

“Am I going to survive in this kind of environment?” one of the deportees asked rhetorically.

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Edo cracks down on cultists, kidnappers

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Monday Okpebholo

Edo State Government has established a Special Criminal Court to expedite the prosecution of cultists, kidnappers and other criminal offenders as part of efforts to tackle rising insecurity in the state.

The Chief Registrar of the Edo State Judiciary, Benson Osawaru, disclosed on Friday that the court was established at the request of Governor Monday Okpebholo.

According to Osawaru, the Special Criminal Court will handle cases relating to cultism, kidnapping and other matters that may be assigned by the Chief Judge of the state, Justice Daniel Okungbowa.

He said the initiative was aimed at ensuring speedy dispensation of justice and curbing the growing wave of cult-related violence and abductions across the state.

“The move is expected to address the rising cases of cult-related violence and kidnappings by ensuring quick prosecution of offenders and serving as a deterrent to criminal elements,” Osawaru stated.

Edo State has in recent months witnessed a surge in violent crimes, particularly incidents of kidnapping and cult clashes in several communities.
Meanwhile, Governor Okpebholo has reiterated his administration’s commitment to eliminating kidnapping, banditry and other forms of criminality from the state.

Speaking at the flag-off of the All Progressives Congress (APC) local government election campaign for the Edo Central Senatorial District at the Uromi Town Hall in the Esan North-East Local Government Area, the governor assured residents that decisive measures were being taken to restore security and public confidence.

He said efforts were underway to create a safe environment that would enable farmers displaced by insecurity to return to their farmlands without fear.

The governor stressed that criminal elements terrorising communities would be made to face the full weight of the law.
“Governors are ready to fight insecurity across the nation. The perpetrators will be exposed, and they will run away from the country. In Edo State, there will be security, and our farmers will be able to return to their farms,” he said.
Okpebholo added that his administration would not allow kidnappers and bandits to find refuge in the state.

“I am determined to ensure that kidnappers and bandits do not find a haven in Edo State. Our decisive action against criminals will serve as a deterrent to others,” he said.

The governor further declared that tough measures against convicted criminals would discourage others from engaging in crime.

“I am serious about the fight against insecurity. By the time we execute one, two, three and more of these criminals, others will run away from Edo State,” he stated.

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Why insecurity persists in the north, by Nasarawa governor

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Nasarawa State Governor Abdullahi Sule has identified some of the reasons for the incidences of insecurity and out-of-school crisis in the northern part of Nigeria.

Speaking at a Summit on enhancing human capital development in Northern Nigeria in Abuja, Sule said the Almajiri system is “the single largest structural contributor” to Nigeria’s education emergency.

The Almajiri is a traditional system of Islamic education prevalent in northern Nigeria, where young boys leave their families to study the Quran under the guidance of religious teachers (Mallams). Originally a respected scholarship tradition, it has devolved into a socio-economic crisis, leaving millions of out-of-school children vulnerable to destitution and exploitation.

The country has an estimated 18.3 million out-of-school children, and recent data shows Almajiri children make up roughly 72% to 81% of that total, concentrated in the North.

He, therefore, urged the National Assembly to permanently outlaw the Almajiri system.
“Many minors recruited into banditry graduated from the Almajiri system,” Sule said.

Nasarawa accounts for about 430,000 out-of-school children.

At the event, the governor recalled the 2020 mass repatriation of Almajiri children by Nasarawa and Kaduna states but said enforcement alone isn’t enough without alternatives.

He is proposing a total ban on the Almajiri system, replaced with mandatory formal education and skills acquisition.
Sule is seeking total collaboration of the Northern intelligentsia, the political class, and the traditional system.

He urged Northern leaders to turn summit discussions into actionable draft bills, arguing that “policy changes are the only way to defeat regional poverty.”

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Baby girl, seven others die in Lagos building collapse

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