NEWS
First lady welcomes rescued Chibok girl
The First Lady, Sen. Oluremi Tinubu, on Friday in the presidential villa, Abuja, received Rebecca Kabu, one of the 277 Chibok schoolgirls who were kidnapped by Boko Haram in 2014.
The first lady, in company of the Wife of the Vice President, Hajia Nana Shettima, promised to ensure that Rebecca is well taken care of medically and fit to return to school willingly.
Mrs Tinubu, amidst emotional trauma, appreciated the office of the National Security Adviser (NSA), National Intelligence Agency (NIA) and other security agencies and people who were involved in Rebecca’s rescue.
“Our dear daughter, Rebecca, I welcome you, I’ve been praying for you all night, it is well with you, what has happened to her is much traumatised; words are inadequate for me to describe it.
“Cases of amnesia should be treated; it is difficult to get by, but since you are still here, God has plans for you. I thank the office of the NSA and NIA for not relenting and everyone that is assisting in her rehabilitation.
“Rebecca will be our first comeback story and returnee, she is our first fruit; she is a case I am quite interested in to see that she can go back to school at her own pace.’’
The first lady said her NGO, Renewed Hope Initiative, is strongly working on how matured girls who are forced out of school can return to school for quality education.
She promised that Rebecca will be one of the first recipients of her free education benevolence.
Tinubu said the younger ones, if well educated, would be able to fit into the society and inherit the good legacies the older ones are leaving behind.
“Earlier, I talked to the NSA representative about cases of alternative high school where girls like Rebecca can go back and learn at their pace, because education is important for her and others.
“They need education as tool for the market place, to be able to understand and manage the inheritance and legacies that shall be handed to them.
“We pray and continue to pray that all our children that are still with Boko Haram will come back home, we are waiting in earnest, we have not given up hope, I am sure that by the time she is reunited with her parents, she will be glad.
“With the governor waiting for her, she is in good hands,’’ the first lady said.
Responding, Rebecca, in her low voice, told the first lady that she could barely understand English Language, but the first lady condoled her, saying that she would overcome it.
Earlier, Rear Admiral Yaminu Musa, the Coordinator, Counter Terrorism Centre, NSA, said Rebecca, kidnapped at age 13 in 2014 and now 22 years old, was rescued by the government security agencies on July 17.
He said the returnee has been certified medically and mentally fit to be reunited with her parents in Zana village in Borno state.
He said subsequently, the NSA office would follow up and present her case alongside the 15 other rehabilitated girls that were also rescued for Federal Government education support.
“I’m here to present to you one of those our young ones that were kidnapped in 2014, we are lucky to have one of them back in our midst. Rebecca was kidnapped and abducted from her school in Chibok in 2014 by late Shekarau-led Boko Haram.
“She was rescued and repatriated from Cameroon on July 17, and has completed intensive medical screening and physiological evaluation over the past two weeks by a team of medical and psychological experts between the office of NSA and the National Intelligent Agency.
“Rebecca has been found to be in good health and is psychologically stable; the next step is to hand her over to the Borno state Governor for onward reuniting with her family in Zana.
Foreign News
Trump Expands US Travel Ban to Five More Countries
President Donald Trump has expanded a US travel ban, barring nationals of five additional countries and people travelling on Palestinian Authority-issued documents from entering the US.
The White House said the restrictions were intended “to protect the security of the United States” and will come into force on 1 January.
Full-entry restrictions will be imposed on people from Burkina Faso, Mali, Niger, South Sudan and Syria as well as Palestinian Authority passport holders.
The administration also moved Laos and Sierra Leone, which were previously subject to partial restrictions, to the full ban list and put partial restrictions on 15 other countries, including Nigeria, Tanzania and Zimbabwe.
Trump, who has tightened immigration controls since returning to the White House in January, said the expanded travel ban was necessary because of what his administration described as failures in screening and vetting systems overseas.
Officials cited high visa overstay rates, unreliable civil records, corruption, terrorist activity and a lack of cooperation in accepting deported nationals.
The announcement followed the arrest of an Afghan national suspected of shooting two National Guard troops over the Thanksgiving weekend, an incident the White House pointed to in highlighting its security concerns.
This is the third time Trump has imposed a travel ban.
During his first term, he introduced a similar order in 2017, which sparked protests and legal challenges at home and abroad. The policy was later upheld by the US Supreme Court.
The White House said the restrictions would remain in place until affected countries show “credible improvements” in identity management, information-sharing and cooperation with US immigration authorities.
A number of exceptions apply and the ban will not affect lawful permanent residents, many existing visa holders, diplomats, or athletes travelling for major sporting events. Officials said case-by-case waivers would also be available where travel is deemed to be in the national interest.
Countries with full restrictions:
Afghanistan, Burkina Faso, Burma, Chad, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Haiti, Iran, Laos, Libya, Mali, Niger, Republic of the Congo, Sierra Leone, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan, Syria, Yemen
Individuals travelling on Palestinian Authority issued or endorsed travel documents are also subject to a full suspension of entry
Partial restrictions:
Angola, Antigua and Barbuda, Benin, Burundi, Côte d’Ivoire, Cuba, Dominica, Gabon, Gambia, Malawi, Mauritania, Nigeria, Senegal, Tanzania, Togo, Tonga, Venezuela, Zambia, Zimbabwe
Special case:
Turkmenistan (restrictions remain for immigrants but have been lifted for non-immigrant visas).
NEWS
Farouk Ahmed, Gbenga Komolafe Resign after Dangote Petition
By Eze Okechukwu, Abuja
President Bola Tinubu has nominated new chief executives for Nigeria’s two foremost petroleum regulatory agencies following the resignation of their heads, Engineers Farouk Ahmed and Gbenga Komolafe.
In separate letters to the Senate yesterday, the President requested the confirmation of Oritsemeyiwa Amanorisewo Eyesan as Chief Executive Officer of the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) and Engineer Saidu Aliyu Mohammed as Chief Executive Officer of the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA).
The nominations followed the voluntary exit of Ahmed, who headed the NMDPRA, and Komolafe, the pioneer CEO of the NUPRC.
Both men were appointed in 2021 by former President Muhammadu Buhari after the enactment of the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA), which created the two regulatory bodies to oversee reforms in Nigeria’s oil and gas industry.According to a State House press release by the Special Adviser to the President on Information and Strategy, Bayo Onanuga, Tinubu urged the Senate to expedite the confirmation process to ensure continuity and stability in the regulation of the petroleum sector.
Eyesan, a seasoned industry professional, is an Economics graduate of the University of Benin and spent nearly 33 years with the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPC) and its subsidiaries. She retired as Executive Vice President, Upstream, in 2024, and previously served as Group General Manager, Corporate Planning and Strategy, from 2019 to 2023.
Engineer Saidu Aliyu Mohammed, born in 1957 in Gombe State, is a Chemical Engineering graduate of Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria. He has held several strategic positions in the oil and gas industry, including Managing Director of the Kaduna Refining and Petrochemical Company and the Nigerian Gas Company. He also served as Group Executive Director and Chief Operating Officer, Gas and Power Directorate at NNPC.
Mohammed has chaired the boards of the West African Gas Pipeline Company, Nigeria LNG subsidiaries and NNPC Retail, and played key roles in major national projects such as the Escravos–Lagos Pipeline Expansion, the Ajaokuta–Kaduna–Kano (AKK) Gas Pipeline and Nigeria LNG Train developments.
The President expressed confidence that the nominees’ experience and expertise would strengthen the implementation of the Petroleum Industry Act and advance reforms across Nigeria’s oil and gas value chain.
NEWS
NLC Stages Nationwide Strike over Insecurity
Labour Takes Nationwide Protest to Streets over Insecurity
The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) yesterday led a nationwide protest across major cities, including Abuja, Calabar and Osogbo, to draw attention to Nigeria’s worsening insecurity and economic hardship, insisting that governments at all levels must urgently reclaim communities, protect citizens and restore public confidence.
In Abuja, the NLC President, Joe Ajaero described the heavy deployment of security personnel around the protest as “normal,” arguing that whether security agencies were sent to protect or stop workers, it showed the impact of labour’s action.
However, he faulted the practice of deploying security chiefs to interface with labour during industrial disputes, stressing that labour matters were not security issues.“Industrial relations issues are the responsibility of the Ministry of Labour and the Office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, not heads of security institutions,” he said, warning against intimidation of workers under the guise of security.
Addressing workers after a brief procession, the NLC Deputy General Secretary, Comrade Ismail Bello, said the protest was not partisan but a struggle for the survival of all Nigerians. He lamented the devastation caused by insecurity, noting that communities had been destroyed, livelihoods lost and essential services disrupted.
“We have paid a heavy price. Healthcare workers, teachers, transport workers and many others have been affected. The damage is enormous and it has to stop,” Bello said, adding that the constitution guaranteed the right to peaceful protest and freedom of association.
He called for decisive action against kidnappers and criminal elements, arguing that failure to punish perpetrators had emboldened insecurity. “Children must return to school. Communities must return to normalcy. Government must deploy the full machinery of governance to recover all spaces taken over by criminals,” he added.
The NLC Head of International Department, Comrade Uche Ekwe, said the protest was meant to strengthen the government’s resolve to confront insecurity, insisting that those funding criminal activities must be arrested and prosecuted.
Labour disclosed grim statistics to underscore its concerns, revealing that since 2009, over 2,295 teachers had been killed by insurgents and bandits, more than 19,000 displaced in the North-East, and over 910 schools destroyed. In the health sector, about 35 per cent of facilities were destroyed by terrorism, while 50 per cent became inaccessible, worsening the shortage of medical personnel.
In Cross River State, organised labour staged a peaceful rally in Calabar, where the NLC Chairman, Comrade Greg Olayi, warned that Nigerians could no longer live or work in safety. He cited attacks on farmers, kidnappings of schoolchildren and insecurity on highways as evidence of a failure of governance.
Similarly, the Joint Negotiating Council Chairman, Comrade Raymond Afu, described the rally as a call to conscience for government at all levels, stressing that the essence of governance was the protection of life and property.
In Osun State, labour leaders and civil society voices also joined the protest, calling on the state government to strengthen local security networks, including Amotekun and other community-based outfits, rather than shutting them down. They warned that insecurity must not be allowed to take root in the state.
The Osun State Chairman of the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ), Wasiu Ajadosu, said organised labour could no longer remain silent while citizens faced daily threats, emphasising that security was the foundation for development and social justice.

