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UNIMAID To Elect New Registrar Today

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University of Maiduguri Borno, State, is set to elect a new academic registrar today.

The institution is in the process to appoint a replacement for Tijani Bukar, who left the office January 2022 after the expiration of his tenure, after Bukar’s handing over, the office has remained under the supervision of Mal. Ali Madagwa.

According to YEN four people are contesting for the office of the registrar but only Ahmed Lawan, who is a deputy registrar in the institution and who had contested for the office in the past was confirmed.

The identities of the remaining three are not yet clear to this publication.

Also the proceedings for the selection out of the four contestants by the university’s governing council, to determine a winner, is currently ongoing and is expected to be concluded any time soon.

7,000 Terrorists Surrender In One Week, Says Army

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7,000 Boko Haram/Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) terrorists have surrendered to the Nigerian Army in the past one week.

The Theatre Commander, Operation Hadin Kai (OPHK) ‘cooperation’ in the North East Joint Operation, Maj. General Christopher Musa made this known in Maiduguri, on Wednesday.

Musa said that the military onslaught against the ISWAP and Boko Haram terrorists in the North-East Region has continued to record significant successes.

He said: “This is evident as thousands of the insurgents comprising of combatants, non-combatants, foot soldiers alongside their families, continued to lay down their arms in different parts of Borno to accept peace.”

Musa explained that the surrendered terrorists and their families are expected to be carefully profiled by the Nigerian army and other stakeholders before they undergo rehabilitation processes.

The Theatre Commander said that the Nigerian Military and other security agencies will continue to devise and implement effective strategies to bring Boko Haram terrorism to a speedy end.

10 Reasons Osinbajo Will Ignite a Religious Civil War — Farooq Kperogi

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A Yemi Osinbajo presidency would, without a doubt, plunge Nigeria into the depths of a smoldering religious volcano that will hasten its self-immolation. This isn’t some idly churlish oracular indulgence. It’s based on an intimate familiarity with Osinbajo’s trajectory of religious bigotry, overpowering anti-Muslim prejudice, and irrevocable devotion to the materialization of a Pentecostal, specifically RCCG, capture of the Nigerian state. Here’re 10 reasons for my fears:

1. The RCCG memo that asked churches to actively support its members vying for political offices was inspired by Osinbajo and is consistent with his history of exclusivist religious politics. In 2013, for example, he formed the Christian Conscience Group—along with Enoch Ajiboso, Dele Sobowale, and Most Reverend Joseph Ajayi—to champion the cause of a Christian governor of Lagos State.

According to a September 27, 2013, Daily Post news report titled “It’s time for a Christian to govern Lagos – Group,” the group was led by “former Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice in Lagos, who is also a pastor of the Redeemed Christian Church of God, RCCG, Professor Yemi Osibajo.”

Just like he has masterminded the religionization of the politics of 2023, in 2013, Osinbajo delivered a lecture titled “Christianity, Politics, Now and Beyond” that instigated Christians to deploy Christian religious blackmail to force Tinubu to endorse a Christian governor for Lagos in 2015—in a part of Nigeria that deafens the rest of the country with the tiresomely sterile mantra that “religion doesn’t matter in Yorubaland.”

2. Osinbajo’s advocacy for a Christian governor in Lagos wasn’t inspired by any desire for religious pluralism. A Muslim has never been elected governor of Ondo and Ekiti states. In Ogun State, his natal state, Ibikunle Amosun is the only Muslim governor the state has ever elected since 1979, even though Muslims are at least 50 percent of the state’s population. Osinbajo is fine with that.

3. The strategy Osinbajo used to incite religious fervor in Lagos prior to 2015 is the precise strategy he’s using now. The RCCG memo is just a small part of a bigger religious incitement strategy.

On Nov. 5, 2021, for example, the Guardian reported Bishop Wale Oke, President Pentecostal Fellowship of Nigeria (PFN), of which Osinbajo is a pivotal member, to have said, “We do not want another Muslim president come 2023.”

In another Feb. 12, 2022, interview with the Guardian, Oke said, “Not only should the South produce the next President, the next president ought to be a Christian, not a Muslim. This is very important.”

And in a Feb. 20, 2022, lecture in Jos, according to the Sun, CAN president Rev. Samson Ayokunle said Christians must unite to elect a Christian president. He said this during a lecture disturbingly titled “Defeating Your Enemies through the Power of Unity,” which creates the impression in the minds of his Christian audience that Muslims are “enemies” of Christians who must be defeated in 2023.

“In the last election, [Buhari] had about 14 million votes and that is not more than a population of two denominations in Nigeria talk more of [sic] the entire Christian body,” the CAN president said during the lecture. “If we are united, I can see rightly in the spirit, God knows the person and we by the mind of the spirit, we can know the person God want [sic] to use. We have leadership in CAN, and if we listen to the leadership, it will be well with us.”

4. Osinbajo is a suave, charming but toxic Islamophobic bigot who clothes his bigotry with oratory. He is only associating with Muslims because of his political agenda. He visits mosques (with his shoes on— in a betrayal of his ice-cold disdain for the religion) and awkwardly utters salaams only as a stoop-to-conquer strategy.

Osinbajo’s overt Christianization of the 2023 election has already caused the normally secular Bola Tinubu to, on March 19, appeal to the Supreme Council for Shari’ah in Nigeria in Osogbo to create a political wing to support Muslims running for political offices because “Other religious groups have commenced political sensitisation by creating political departments or directorate among themselves to promote their own.”

You see what I’m talking about? That’s a first in the Southwest. The stigma of being labeled a “Muslim fundamentalist,” a favorite, overused rhetorical cudgel often deployed to silence Yoruba Muslims, used impel Yoruba Muslims to grin and bear their suppression.

Osinbajo’s overt bigotry is blunting that. Imagine what will happen in the Muslim North should Osinbajo by any chance become president.

5. Osinbajo sees Muslims not as fellow citizens who practice a different faith but as lost souls in need of salvation. If they can’t be salvaged, they should be inferiorized, victimized, and excluded.

For instance, on Feb. 22, 2020, according to the Sunshine Truth, an Ondo State newspaper, during the funeral of the mother of former Ondo State governor Olusegun Mimiko, Osinbajo intentionally went out of his way to hurt the sensibilities of Yoruba Muslims when he gloated that the woman, identified as Mama Muinat Mosekonla Mimiko, left Islam for Christianity toward the end of her life.

This was a touchy subject because although Mama Muinat’s two children—former Gov. Olusegun Rahman Mimiko and Prof. Femi Nazheem Mimiko— converted to Christianity, she’d resisted pressures to leave Islam. She had been sustained in her Muslim faith by her US-based third son, Abbas Mimiko.

Many Yoruba Muslims who’d hoped that she’d continue to be steadfast in her Muslim faith in spite of immense pressure to leave it felt gratuitously mocked by Osinbajo when he crowed with perverse joy over her late-life conversion to Christianity.

If Osinbajo was just a pastor, that wouldn’t be out of line. In fact, it would be perfectly legitimate. But when you’re president or vice president, you wield enormous symbolic and cultural power. When you use that power in the service of divisive religious politics, you inflame raw passions that can provoke communal convulsions.

Imagine Atiku Abubakar attending the funeral of a late-life Muslim convert in Adamawa State (which has a vast indigenous Christian population) and gloating over the person’s conversion from Christianity to Islam.

6. Yoruba Muslims say there’s a “standing rule” in Osinbajo’s law firm, Simmons Cooper Partners, that the employment of Muslims there must be regulated, which has ensured that “99%” of people who work there are Christians.

In fact, someone confided in me that Osinbajo once asked an employee at his law firm with a Muslim last name, who’s actually a Christian, if he thought about how his name might “work against” him, subtly encouraging him to change it.

7. Political Pentecostals want Osinbajo to be president so they can say that the prophecy of Pastor Enoch Adeboye– that one of them would become a president in his lifetime– has come to pass, which would then be used as a recruiting tool, particularly in Yorubaland.

But this is a dangerous game because it will inspire a sustained pushback from other Christian sects and from the Muslim North. When Saudi-trained Muslim clerics start to run for elective offices as a strategy to counter political Pentecostals and to also swell their ranks, a religious civil war would be a question of “when,” not “if.”

8. Osinbajo’s religious bigotry and Pentecostal Christian particularism aren’t anything we have ever seen in Nigeria before. Most politicians exploit religion to gain political power, but Osinbajo wants to exploit political power to advance a narrow, divisive religious agenda. That’s a big difference, and it’s a potentially destabilizing difference.

Osinbajo isn’t the only religious bigot in high office in Nigeria. I spent the last seven years calling out the religious bigotry of fellow northern Muslims, including calling out the northern Nigerian Muslim clerical establishment for being in bed with the Buhari regime, at the expense of my ostracism not just in my region but even in my hometown where Imams recited maledictions against me, but Osinbajo’s is in a world of its own.

9. In a previous article, I called Osinbajo a “matchbox” that a collision with a Muslim matchstick would cause to ignite a religious conflagration. He’s actually worse than that. He’s a flame. Like flames, he is rhetorically attractive, and the politically naïve like to hover around him like moths to flames, which end up burning them alive.

In a Nov. 10, 2019, column titled “The trials of Brother Osinbajo,” Nigerian Tribune columnist Festus Adedayo revealed that while Buhari was sick and away in London, Osinbajo attended a Redeemed Christian Church of God prayer session in his home state of Ogun where the pastor prayed for Buhari to die so that Osinbajo would take over as president “with the VP shouting [a] thunderous ‘Amen’.”

Osinbajo was so rattled by this revelation that he urged his media aide to frantically issue an incoherent, unconvincing denial. Otto von Bismarck is often credited with saying, “Never believe anything in politics until it has been officially denied.” Incidentally, just last week, a Southwest friend confirmed to me the authenticity of this incident.

10. Although he is married to Chief Obafemi Awolowo’s granddaughter and even shares the same hometown as him, Osinbajo doesn’t share the late sage’s wisdom that politics and religion shouldn’t be merged.

In a perceptive January 27, 1961, lecture titled “Politics and Religion,” Chief Awolowo advised against the religionization of politics and the politicization of religion. “A religious organization should never allow itself to be regarded as the mouthpiece and instrument of the powers-that-be,” he said. “If it did, it would sink or swim with the government concerned…and would no longer be well-placed to tell the truth as it knows it.”

After 2023, let Osinbajo retire to the church. He has no business being the president of a complex, multi-religious, and multi-ethnic country like Nigeria.

Osinbajo’s anti-Muslim bigotry is surprising because, politically, he rode on the coattails of Muslims to get to where he is today. Prince Bola Ajibola, a devout Muslim who established one of Nigeria’s first Islamic universities, gave him his first political break when he appointed him as his Legal Adviser when he was Minister of Justice and Attorney General of the Federation during the IBB regime. He again took Osinbajo along to the International Court of Justice.

Osinbajo’s next major consequential appointment was his choice as Lagos State’s Commissioner of Justice and Attorney General. He was given that job by Bola Ahmed Tinubu whom he is now fighting using Christianity as a dagger.

Tinubu introduced Osinbajo to Buhari whose opportunistic love for pastors to help dim his image as a Muslim fanatic caused him to pick him as Vice President.

So, beneath his harmless, debonair, smooth-talking exterior, Osinbajo is a vile, hateful, intolerant, inveterate, and treacherous religious bigot who will incite a religious civil war if he becomes president.

Religious civil wars are messy and dangerous. Few countries survive them. Don’t say I didn’t warn you!

APC CRISIS: CALL A SPADE A SPADE

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It is about time the APC realizes that she is towing the path of self destruction.

Party Conventions and Primaries are merely mini battles before the general elections which is the real WAR.

Our Party the APC has not done superlatively well in office over the last 7 years. We have not clearly distinguished ourselves from those we vanquished in 2015 and 2019. In fact, to the average Nigerian today, the nation is worse off after 7 years of APC than it ever was after 16 years of the PDP.

This is not news to any of us. What is different is that after seeing how these same conditions led to a groundswell of animosity that helped us to unceremoniously boot the PDP out of Office in 2015, we appear not to have learned our lessons. Either that or we are assailed by a false sense of security that it cannot happen to us.

The real question we need to ask ourselves is this: How do we prove to Nigerians that we can manage Nigeria if we are showing by our current utterances and actions that we are abysmally incapable of managing our home and platform, the APC?

When it’s time for WAR (The general elections) would these days of public show of shame come back to hurt and haunt us? Do we imagine that by any stretch of imagination these inglorious episodes will somehow be deleted from all online platforms and erased from the memories of Nigerians?

May God help us to manage our family battles before we go to WAR.

Comr Ben Abdul writes from Karu, Abuja.

Why Shouldn’t Voters Accept Politicians’ Money — Farooq Kperogi

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I’ve never understood the logic behind the moral shaming of poor voters who accept money from politicians during elections.

Politicians who bribe voters, those who don’t, and those who ask for donations from voters (such as Buhari) are indistinguishable. They all oppress and alienate the poor when they get to power.

In fact, Buhari, who collected hundreds of millions in donations from poor people (which included the N1m life savings of a Kosai/akara-selling Kebbi woman who died in penury a few years later) that he didn’t use for campaigns and that he hasn’t accounted for up to now has turned out to be worse than the politicians who bribed voters.

That’s why Dele Momodu’s crowdfunding initiative to finance his presidential run is receiving such a massive backlash online. People haven’t recovered from Buhari’s crowdfunding fraud.

For many voters writhing in unspeakable existential turmoil, election time is the only opportunity they have to get anything from people in power.

Troops Killed Boko Haram/ISWAP Fighters, Rescued 30 Abducted Borno Women And Children

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The Nigerian Army troops of Operation Desert Sanity have killed an unspecified number of Boko Haram (BH) and Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) terrorists in Borno State.

The soldiers recovered weapons, destroyed various camps of the terrorists and rescued 30 kidnapped local residents around Ndufu and Musiri villages in the state.

“Ongoing offensive onslaught by troops of Operation Desert Sanity records another feat as troops neutralized several ISWAP/BokoHaram terrorists around Ndufu and Musiri villages in Borno State.

“Also, troops recovered weapons and rescued 30 kidnapped local residents. Additionally, troops also destroyed various camps of the terrorists.”

Since the death of JAS leader, Abubakar Shekau, ISWAP has been consolidating its grip in locations around Lake Chad.

In 2021, it appointed Wali Sani Shuwaram, a 45-year-old as the new Leader (Wali) of ISWAP in Lake Chad.

The sect’s membership has swollen with the defection of hundreds of Boko Haram fighters under Shekau.

The terror group has caused the death of over 300,000 persons and displaced millions of individuals mainly in Adamawa, Borno, and Yobe states.

West ham knock out Six times UEL winner,Sevilla to advance into the Last Eight

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West Ham knocked Sevilla out of the Uefa Europa League to advance into the quarter-finals of the competition after a 2-0 victory and 2-1 win on aggregate.

Suffering a 1-0 defeat from the first leg, Tomas Soucek’s first-half header brought West Ham level in the tie and while the Hammers controlled much of the second leg at the London Stadium,but have failed to find the decisive goal trailing the game into extra time.

The decisive moment eventually came in the second half of extra time as Yarmolenko, who came on as an 87th-minute substitute, reacted quickest to a rebounce from Pablo Fornals’ strike to tap home the goal and send David Moyes men into the Last 8 of the UEL.

The Hammers knocked out the six-time winners to book their place in Friday’s draw for the last eight as their European fairytale continues.

Alex Iwobi saves 10-men Everton

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Alex Iwobi struck in the ninth minute of stoppage time as 10-man Everton ended a four-game losing streak with a dramatic 1-0 victory over Newcastle.

The Toofees had Allan sent off in the 83rd minute after an initial booking for a foul on Allan Saint-Maximin was upgraded to a red card by referee Craig Pawson following a VAR review.

But after holding on to Newcastle pressure, the hosts stole possession in midfield, which sees Iwobi carry the ball forward, while exchanging passes with Dominic Calvert-Lewin, and slide home a cool finish to seal an improbable victory.

There were still five further minutes of stoppage time to play after that due to a bizarre delay early in the second half,where protester had to interrupt the game before he was freed by stewards,after using bolt-cutters after attaching himself to the goal using a cable tie around his neck.

The win sees Frank Lampard’s side get a win after loosing 4 matches in a row,while Newcastle suffered another 1-0 defeat following their loose to Chelsea at Stamford Bridge.

Barcelona advance into the Last Eight of Europa League

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Barcelona advanced to the Europa League quarter-finals as they came from behind to secure a 2-1 victory over Galatasaray in Istanbul.

Galatasaray took the lead after 28 minutes, from an outswinging corner which was powered home by Marcoa’s header.

The Spanish levelled the score nine minutes later courtesy of a stunning Pedri strike,coming from Ferran Torres delightful reverse pass, and the 19 year-old sidestepped two slide tackles before brilliantly slotting home the goal.

The Blaugrana took the lead four minutes after the start of the second half, as the ball found it’s way to De Jong in the box, who nodded the ball to Aubameyang to tap home from a close range.

Xavi Hernandez’s side had deliver a blistering performance and will be in the Friday’s draw for the of the Europa League last eight.

Governor Buni Returns From Medical Trip, Takes Over APC

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The governor of Yobe and chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC) caretaker committee, Mai Mala Buni has returned to Nigeria following a medical trip abroad.

Buni returned to the country on Thursday and takes over the affairs of the party.

Mamman Mohammed, director general of press and media relations, announced the governor’s return.

The Yobe governor charged APC members to support the party ahead of its March 26 national convention, while encouraging them to shun issues capable of preventing the party from success.

“Put the recent events in the party behind you and work towards a successful convention,” Buni was quoted as saying.

“The success of the party remains paramount and needs the support of every member.

“As we head towards the national convention, the party needs the support of every stakeholder and member to succeed.

As democrats and committed party members, we should avoid issues that are capable of diverting our attention from the path of success.”
On March 7, Abubakar Sani Bello, governor of Niger, took over as the acting chairman of the APC.

Afterwards, reports flow out that the Buni-led caretaker committee was working to scuttle the APC national convention.

Days later, Bello reorganised the sub-committees for the convention set up by Buni and reduced the number to 107, saying they were too many.