Author: Daily Post Nigeria

  • Transfer: Beşiktaş line up move for Super Eagles striker

    Transfer: Beşiktaş line up move for Super Eagles striker

    Wolves striker, Tolu Arokodare has emerged as a transfer target for Turkish Super Lig giants Beşiktaş, DAILY POST reports.

    The Black Eagles have keen interest in the Nigeria international, and would seek to sign him in the summer to bolster their attacking options, according to Turkish website, SporX.

    Arokodare joined Wolves from Belgian Pro League outfit, KRC Genk last summer.

    The forward is however reportedly open to leaving the Old Gold, with the club set to be relegated from the Premier League.

    Rob Edwards sit in last position on the Premier League table.

    The 25-year-old has registered three goals and one assist in 28 league appearances for Wolves.

    Transfer: Beşiktaş line up move for Super Eagles striker

  • Iran delegation meets Pakistan PM ahead of negotiations with US

    Iran delegation meets Pakistan PM ahead of negotiations with US

    An Iranian government delegation met Pakistan’s prime minister on Saturday to discuss the terms of planned “make or break” negotiations to end the Middle East war with a US party led by Vice President JD Vance.

    With the first talks underway at Islamabad’s Serena Hotel, Iranian media reported that the Iranian side would decide at the end of the meeting with Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif whether to go ahead with negotiations with the Americans.

    Iran has previously said that any agreement on a permanent end to fighting must include the unfreezing of sanctioned Iranian assets and include an end to Israel’s war on Hezbollah in Lebanon, which Vance has said will not be up for discussion in Islamabad.

    But both parties had arrived at the talks venue when the Iranian delegation led by parliamentary speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf met Sharif, having arrived overnight at an air base near the capital and disembarked to embrace Pakistan’s powerful army chief Asim Munir.

    Munir, who shares a personal rapport with US President Donald Trump, also greeted Vance, escorting him down a red carpet at the Nur Khan air base, where US special envoy Steve Witkoff and Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner were waiting.

    The warring parties still appeared to be far apart on key issues — including sanctions, Lebanon and the opening of the strategic Strait of Hormuz — and made no attempt to hide their mutual suspicion.

    “Our experience in negotiating with the Americans has always been met with failure and broken promises,” Ghalibaf said shortly after landing, according to Iran’s state broadcaster.

    Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, who is also part of the delegation, told his German counterpart in a call on Saturday that “Iran enters negotiations with complete distrust due to repeated breaches of commitments and betrayals by the United States”, the Tasnim news agency reported.

    Vance said before leaving the US that if the other side was “willing to negotiate in good faith, we’re certainly willing to extend the open hand”.

    – ‘Make or break’ –

    But “if they’re going to try to play us, then they’re going to find the negotiating team is not that receptive”, he added.

    The ceasefire is already under strain, notably from Israel’s continued strikes in Lebanon, which Iran and Pakistan insist is covered under the current truce.

    Prime Minister Sharif, whose country’s down-to-the-wire mediation got both sides to the negotiating table this week, said talks would not be easy.

    “An even more difficult stage lies ahead,” he said, referring to efforts to permanently end fighting that began with US-Israeli strikes on Iran on February 28, sparking Iranian retaliation against Israel and across the Gulf.

    “This is that stage which, in English, is called the equivalent of ‘make or break.’”

    – Islamabad plays host –

    Iran — which brought a more than 70-member delegation to Pakistan — has insisted on the truce covering Lebanon and on the unfreezing of its assets for the Islamabad talks to go ahead, neither of which has materialised so far.

    On the US side, Trump demanded the opening of the Strait of Hormuz as a condition for the two-week ceasefire.

    The strait, through which one-fifth of the world’s crude passes, has not reopened to normal traffic, however, and Trump vowed on Friday to have it open soon “with or without” Iran’s cooperation.

    He added that his top priority at the Islamabad talks was to ensure the Islamic republic had “no nuclear weapon. That’s 99 percent of it.”

    Security was tight in the Pakistani capital on Saturday, with a heavy police and paramilitary presence on the streets and road diversions around the “red zone” where government and diplomatic buildings are located.

    Pakistan has formulated a team of subject matter specialists to facilitate the two sides in negotiations on navigation, nuclear and other key matters, a diplomatic source familiar with the matter told AFP.

    The negotiations will be closely watched by other key regional players, with Egypt and Turkey having helped with mediation, along with China, all of which Pakistan was still coordinating closely with for the talks, the source said.

    Beijing has been sought as a possible guarantor of any lasting agreement, official sources have said, with Trump confirming to AFP that China helped get Tehran to the negotiating table.

    – Violence in Lebanon –

    Complicating the path to a permanent ceasefire was Israel’s assertion that the current truce does not cover Lebanon.

    Israeli air strikes continued in Lebanon on Friday against Iran-backed Hezbollah despite the Iranian demand that they be halted.

    Israel’s ambassador to the United States, Yechiel Leiter, said his country would hold discussions with Lebanon’s government in Washington next week but would not discuss a ceasefire with Hezbollah.

    The militant group said overnight that it had carried out drone and rocket attacks on northern Israel, as well as on Israeli forces in southern Lebanon.

    In Tehran, a 30-year-old resident told AFP he was sceptical negotiations would be successful, describing most of what Trump says as “pure noise and nonsense.”

    AFP

    The post Iran delegation meets Pakistan PM ahead of negotiations with US appeared first on Vanguard News.

  • U.S. Begins Visa Ban On Religious Freedom Violators In Nigeria, Others

    U.S. Begins Visa Ban On Religious Freedom Violators In Nigeria, Others

    The United States has confirmed that it has already begun implementing visa restrictions targeting individuals and entities accused of violating religious freedom in Nigeria and other countries.

    Mark Walker, the U.S. Principal Adviser for Global Religious Freedom, disclosed this development in a post on X on Friday.

    “We have already executed on this policy, and we will continue to subject perpetrators to additional scrutiny,” Walker stated. “If you engage in persecution, you are not welcome in America. The United States is safer when we keep those responsible for religious persecution from entering our homeland.”

    The policy, announced in December 2025 by U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, allows the State Department to restrict visas for individuals who knowingly direct, authorise, fund, support, or carry out violations of religious freedom. Where appropriate, immediate family members may also face restrictions.

    Rubio had described the measure as a decisive response to “atrocities and violence against Christians” in Nigeria, particularly attacks linked to radical Islamic terrorists, Fulani ethnic militias, and other actors.

    The move aligns with Section 212(a)(3)(C) of the U.S. Immigration and Nationality Act and builds on earlier congressional actions.

    In November 2025, Rep. Chris Smith, Chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Africa Subcommittee, introduced a resolution urging visa bans and asset freezes on perpetrators of severe religious freedom violations in Nigeria.

    The resolution specifically highlighted groups such as the Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association of Nigeria (MACBAN) and Miyetti Allah Kautal Hore.

    In February 2026, U.S. lawmakers further proposed targeted sanctions, including visa bans, against figures like former Kano State Governor Rabiu Kwankwaso, citing alleged complicity in religious freedom violations.

    Nigeria has faced repeated international scrutiny over reported attacks on Christian communities, particularly in the Middle Belt and northern regions. The country was previously designated a Country of Particular Concern (CPC) for religious freedom issues.

    No specific names of individuals or entities affected by the current visa restrictions have been publicly released by the U.S. State Department.

    The Nigerian government has in the past rejected accusations of complicity in religious persecution, describing some of the claims as exaggerated or politically motivated.

    This latest enforcement signals continued US focus on global religious freedom under the current administration.

    U.S. Begins Visa Ban On Religious Freedom Violators In Nigeria, Others is first published on The Whistler Newspaper

  • Many Capital Projects In States Lack Growth Impact—NESG

    Many Capital Projects In States Lack Growth Impact—NESG

    The Nigerian Economic Summit Group (NESG) has called for targeted and inclusive interventions to address challenges facing Nigeria’s informal sector as part of ongoing economic reforms.

    The Chief Economist and Director of Research and Development, NESG, Dr Olusegun Omisakin, made the call during a virtual media interactive session.

    He said the informal segment, which accounts for a significant share of economic activity, remained largely outside the reach of government policies and support programmes.

    Omisakin noted that while policy implementation within the formal sector was relatively straightforward, engaging informal operators required more deliberate, data-driven and inclusive strategies.

    “One of the major challenges the government faces is the informal economy. It is not just about production, but also about how interventions reach those whose activities are not directly captured.

    “It is easy to reduce taxes or implement policies within the formal system, but when it comes to the informal segment, where operations are not directly tracked, it becomes more difficult,” he said.

    He stressed the need for stronger coordination between fiscal and monetary authorities to ensure that economic policies deliver desired outcomes.

    According to him, inflation remains a major concern, with significant implications for household welfare and business sustainability.

    “We have consistently advocated policy coordination so that fiscal and monetary measures work towards a common goal.

    “Inflation is extremely high, and the priority is to bring it down through well-aligned and sustained policy actions,” he said.

    Omisakin also highlighted the importance of social protection programmes, efficient public spending and critical infrastructure investment in easing economic pressures.

    He noted that improved infrastructure, particularly rail transport, could significantly reduce logistics costs and enhance productivity across sectors.

    The economist further called for improved transparency and accountability in public finance management at the sub-national level.

    He urged state governments to adopt more strategic approaches to capital expenditure, noting that while personnel costs remain obligatory, capital investments should be geared towards stimulating growth and generating returns.

    “States must be intentional in utilising capital expenditure to deliver sustainable economic outcomes.

    “Regular publication of budget implementation reports and financial statements will also enhance transparency and public trust,” he said.

    Omisakin acknowledged recent improvements in capital spending by some states, citing supporting evidence from international assessments.

    He, however, maintained that Nigeria’s economic recovery would depend on sustained reforms, inclusive policies and long-term planning.

    He reaffirmed the commitment of the ground to providing independent, evidence-based policy advice, emphasising that its role is to support the government with practical solutions rather than offer blanket criticism.

    Many Capital Projects In States Lack Growth Impact—NESG is first published on The Whistler Newspaper

  • ‘Obidients’ More Loyal To Obi Than Nigeria—Bwala

    ‘Obidients’ More Loyal To Obi Than Nigeria—Bwala

    Thr Special Adviser to President Bola Tinubu on Policy Communication, Daniel Bwala, has accused a segment of social media users, known as “Obidients,” of prioritizing political loyalty over national interest.

    The Obidients are a group of supporters and followers of Peter Obi, a Nigerian politician who ran for president in 2023 on the Labour Party platform.

    The Obidient Movement, as it’s called, is a nationwide coalition of individuals and groups who believe in Peter Obi’s leadership and policies.

    They have been actively mobilizing support for Obi’s presidential bid and have organised several rallies and events across the country.

    Bwala who was speaking during an appearance on News Central’s programme, 60 Minutes with Mr Kay, aired on Friday, while addressing reactions to his recent interview with Al Jazeera’s Mehdi Hasan, also revealed undergoing throat surgery eight days after the interview.

    “Eight days after the interview with Mehdi Hasan, I underwent surgery on my throat. I don’t know whether it is the ‘Obidient’ people that threw that African thing, but in any case, I’m back and strong,” he said.

    Bwala criticized the “Obidients” for allegedly putting their loyalty to their leader, Peter Obi, above the country’s security and well-being.

    “I know the environment I come from; it’s an environment where there exists a species of ‘Trojans’ of social media called the ‘Obidient,’ who do not care about the national interest or the security of Nigeria and will do everything possible to achieve the aim of their hero, no matter the cost,” he stated.

    He defended his performance in the interview, describing Hasan’s approach as adversarial and stating that he was able to withstand the questioning .

    “What Mehdi Hasan did was what we call opposition-style journalism, where you play the role of the opposition. In that interview, Mehdi sought to elicit information from me to discredit the government, but he could not,” he said.

    The controversy stems from Bwala’s past comments criticizing President Tinubu, which he acknowledged during the interview but sought to move past.

    “In the first 15 minutes, he started by asking me to answer questions relating to things I said about President Tinubu when I was in the opposition.

    “Repeatedly, I admitted to them — I even said I had said more than what he mentioned — but I asked that we move on to the purpose of the interview,” he said.

    He added that he cautioned the interviewer against persisting on the same line of questioning.

    “He continued doing it, and at a point, I warned him that if he kept going in that direction, I would deny it. He continued, and that was why I kept denying,” Bwala said.

    ‘Obidients’ More Loyal To Obi Than Nigeria—Bwala is first published on The Whistler Newspaper

  • Nyanya, Maraba Residents Face Seven-Hour Power Outage Over TCN Maintenance

    Nyanya, Maraba Residents Face Seven-Hour Power Outage Over TCN Maintenance

    Residents in parts of the Federal Capital Territory and neighbouring communities are set to experience a seven-hour power outage during this weekend, a statement by the Transmission Company of Nigeria, has said.

    In a statement issued by the company’s General Manager of Public Affairs, Ndidi Mbah, the blackout in the affected communities is expected to follow the TCN’s scheduled maintenance on critical infrastructure.

    According to the statement, the planned disruption would affect the electricity supply on Saturday and Sunday, with different locations impacted on each day.

    It explained that, today, (on Saturday), April 11, 2026, that power supply to Karu, Nyanya, Jikwoyi, Orozo, Karshi, and surrounding areas would be interrupted for seven hours, as the Abuja Electricity Distribution Company (AEDC) would be unable to off-take electricity during the maintenance period.

    It stated further that on Sunday (tomorrow), April 12, 2026, residents in Gwagwalada, Maraba, Ado, New Nyanya, Old Karu Road, MTN Estate, Ruga Jule and nearby communities would also experience a seven-hour outage.

    According to TCN, power supply would be restored immediately after the completion of the maintenance work each day.

    The company, however, apologised for the inconvenience, noting that the exercise is essential to ensure a reliable bulk electricity supply.

    It added that the maintenance is part of TCN’s annual preventive schedule on the 100/110MVA and 60MVA 132/33kV transformers at the Karu Transmission Substation.

    Nyanya, Maraba Residents Face Seven-Hour Power Outage Over TCN Maintenance is first published on The Whistler Newspaper

  • INEC Chair Amupitan’s Past Tweets Expose An APC Sympathiser

    INEC Chair Amupitan’s Past Tweets Expose An APC Sympathiser

    Several verifiable past tweets by INEC chairman Professor Joash Ojo Amupitan from his time as a professor at the University of Jos unmistakably reveal partisan sympathies for the APC and, more specifically, for President Bola Ahmed Tinubu. If he has any regard for institutional integrity, he should own up to them, acknowledge the moral burden they place on his office, and resign. I will return to this.

    Amupitan’s neutrality has long hovered under a cloud of suspicion, but I deliberately gave him the benefit of the doubt, to the irritation of many who urged me to call him out earlier and who falsely thought my reluctance to criticize him was the result of my having a relationship with him.

    When it surfaced that he had written a tendentious memo alleging a “Christian genocide” without acknowledging equally horrific Muslim deaths in the recurring communal violence in central Nigeria, I attributed it to what I call epistemic closure, a condition where a person’s informational environment is so internally reinforcing that outside evidence is dismissed or never encountered. In that state, complex issues get reduced to narrow, self-confirming interpretations because the person is effectively sealed inside a filter bubble.

    For a professor and Senior Advocate of Nigeria, that kind of intellectual insularity is disappointing. It runs against the grain of scholarly training, which stresses self-criticism and transcendence. Still, I did not think it was sufficient to establish bias.

    When he was criticized for fixing the 2027 election during Ramadan, I again resisted the rush to judgment. Islam does not prohibit work during Ramadan, and several Muslim-majority countries have conducted elections in that period. Besides, with figures like Malam Mohammed Haruna on the commission, it would be simplistic to assign sole responsibility to him. So, even at the cost of being suspected of unduly shielding him, I held my fire.

    But two developments began to strain my charitable reading of his actions. His push to revalidate permanent voter cards, which carried the risk of disenfranchising millions, gave me pause. Then his interventions in the ADC’s internal crisis revealed a m1an who struggled unsuccessfully to conceal partisan impulses aligned with Tinubu’s apparent determination to fracture the opposition and stall the emergence of a viable challenger.

    Even these, troubling as they were, pale beside what emerged on Friday. Evidence now shows that in 2023, about two years before his appointment as INEC chairman, Amupitan used an X account bearing his name to engage in openly partisan commentary.

    On March 18, 2023, Dayo Israel, the APC’s National Youth Leader, whom Amupitan followed, boasted that he had flipped his “nearby,” “Igbo-dominated” polling unit from the opposition to the APC. Amupitan replied: “Victory is sure.”

    Pause on that for a moment. This was a direct affirmation of a partisan boast couched in ethnically coded language. The reference to an “Igbo-dominated” polling unit invokes the ethnic polarization that defined much of the 2023 election cycle. To respond to such a claim with “Victory is sure” is to align oneself not just with a party, but with a particular narrative of electoral conquest over an implicitly defined “other.”

    A day earlier, March 17, 2023, one Okodoro Oro circulated a claim that Peter Obi supporters had repurposed an old photograph of a bloodied man to malign Lagos State legislator Desmond Elliot. Amupitan’s response was: “They are evil in the 24th [sic] century.”

    This is not the language of a detached observer. It is the language of moral condemnation directed at a clearly identified political camp. To be fair, future electoral umpires are not expected to be devoid of private opinions, but when those opinions are expressed in such stark, emotionally charged terms in the heat of a contested election, they take on a different significance.

    Then came April 25, 2023. A Tinubu support account celebrated the reception Tinubu received at the Abuja airport. Amupitan responded with a single word: “Asiwaju.”

    To the uninitiated, this may appear harmless, even innocuous. It isn’t. “Asiwaju” is a political identity marker. In Yoruba, it means “leader” or “one who leads from the front,” much like “jagaba,” his other prominent title from Borgu, but in the context of Nigerian politics, particularly the 2023 election, it functioned as a rallying cry, a badge of allegiance, and a shorthand for loyalty to Bola Ahmed Tinubu. It is the word chanted at rallies, emblazoned on campaign materials, and deployed in digital spaces to signal belonging to a political movement.

    When a supporter says “Asiwaju,” it is an affirmation of fealty. So, when a man who would later become the chairman of the electoral commission uses that word in direct response to a celebratory message about Tinubu, he is participating in a community of praise. He is, in that moment, not an observer of politics, but a participant in its partisan theater, in a patterned expressions of alignment.

    After these tweets resurfaced, the account in question underwent a series of transformations. The handle changed from @joashamupitan to @Sundayvibe00, rebranded as a “parody” account and then locked from public view. But digital traces are stubborn. Archival indexing still ties the earlier posts to the original identity.

    So, the sequence is straightforward. An account using Amupitan’s name made partisan interventions during the 2023 election cycle. That same account later changed identity multiple times, adopted a parody label, and restricted access. The timing of these changes invites obvious questions about transparency and accountability, particularly for someone who now occupies the most sensitive electoral office in the country.

    What makes this especially unsettling for me is that I publicly defended him in the past. In my October 11, 2025, column, “New INEC Boss and Tinubu’s Visibilization of Northern Yorubas,” I described him as “an accomplished professor of law and a revered Senior Advocate of Nigeria who has no known record of partisan political affiliations.” That judgment was based on the evidence available at the time. We now know better.

    The issue is not that Amupitan, as a private citizen, held political opinions. Every citizen is entitled to that. The issue is that those opinions were expressed in ways that align distinctly with one party, in the very period that defined Nigeria’s most contentious recent election, and that he now presides over an institution that demands not just neutrality, but the appearance of neutrality.

    Electoral legitimacy is not sustained by legal technicalities alone. It rests on public trust. Once that trust is eroded, even the most procedurally sound election becomes suspect in the eyes of citizens. That is why electoral umpires are held to a higher standard than ordinary public officials. They must be above reproach not only in conduct but in perception. Amupitan’s past tweets compromise that perception.

    He has compounded the problem by failing to confront the matter directly. He should address the public, acknowledge the tweets, and reckon with their implications. The moral weight of his current office is incompatible with unresolved questions about partisan loyalty.

    Yes, the law makes his removal cumbersome. The president must initiate the process, and the Senate must approve it with a two-thirds majority. In practice, that threshold is hardly insurmountable for a president who commands legislative loyalty, who gets bills debated and passed in a matter of hours. But it is unrealistic to expect President Tinubu to initiate the removal of a man whose perceived partisan alignment may well have recommended him for the position in the first place.

    Which leaves only one honorable path: resignation, which Nigerian public officers loathe. If he has any ounce of integrity left, he should resign because if he chooses to remain, every election he conducts in which the APC prevails will be shadowed by credible allegations of premeditated bias. No serious observer will dismiss such claims out of hand. In trying to protect his position, he would end up damaging both the institution he leads and, ironically, the party he is presumed to favor.

    Nigeria has had electoral umpires accused of partisanship before. But rarely has the evidence been this direct, this traceable, and this difficult to explain away.

    If he stays, Amupitan risks inscribing his name in history not merely as a controversial INEC chairman, but as one whose tenure deepened, or completely eroded, public distrust in the electoral process.

    Postscript:

    As I was about to file this column, my editor drew my attention to a news release by INEC’s Chief Press Secretary, Adedayo Oketola, claiming that the Twitter account associated with Amupitan, created in 2022, is “fake.”

    That claim does not withstand basic scrutiny. In 2022, Amupitan was an obscure professor. There was no incentive to impersonate him. The tweets now in contention were posted in 2023, before he became INEC chairman.

    Fake accounts do not typically maintain a coherent history, then change handles, rebrand as parody, and lock themselves the moment their past becomes inconvenient. That pattern suggests an attempt to obscure prior activity, not random impersonation.

    The statement is notably silent on the disappearance of the original handle, the shift to a new identity, the sudden “parody” label, and the decision to restrict public access.

    INEC Chair Amupitan’s Past Tweets Expose An APC Sympathiser is first published on The Whistler Newspaper

  • I had throat surgery 8 days after Al Jazeera interview – Bwala

    I had throat surgery 8 days after Al Jazeera interview – Bwala

    Daniel Bwala, Special Adviser to President Bola Tinubu on Policy Communication, has disclosed that he underwent throat surgery shortly after his much-talked-about interview with Al Jazeera journalist Mehdi Hasan.

    He made the revelation during an appearance on News Central’s programme, 60 Minutes with Mr Kay, which aired on Friday. During the interview, Bwala also addressed the public reaction to his Al Jazeera appearance and criticism from social media users.

    “Eight days after the interview with Mehdi Hasan, I underwent surgery on my throat. I don’t know whether it is the ‘Obidient’ people that threw that African thing, but in any case, I’m back and strong,” he said.

    Bwala aimed at Peter Obi’s supporters referred to as “Obidients,” accusing them of placing political allegiance above Nigeria’s broader interests.

    “I know the environment I come from; it’s an environment where there exists a species of ‘Trojans’ of social media called the ‘Obidient,’ who do not care about the national interest or the security of Nigeria and will do everything possible to achieve the aim of their hero, no matter the cost,” Bwala stated.

    He also defended his conduct during the Al Jazeera interview, describing Mehdi Hasan’s questioning style as confrontational and aligned with opposition tactics.

    “What Mehdi Hasan did was what we call opposition-style journalism, where you play the role of the opposition. In that interview, Mehdi sought to elicit information from me to discredit the government, but he could not,” he said.

    According to Bwala, a significant portion of the discussion focused on remarks he made about President Tinubu while he was in the opposition, which he acknowledged but tried to move past.

    “In the first 15 minutes, he started by asking me to answer questions relating to things I said about President Tinubu when I was in the opposition.

    “Repeatedly, I admitted to them — I even said I had said more than what he mentioned — but I asked that we move on to the purpose of the interview,” he said.

    He added that he eventually cautioned Hasan against continuing along the same line of questioning.

    “He continued doing it, and at a point, I warned him that if he kept going in that direction, I would deny it. He continued, and that was why I kept denying,” Bwala said.

    The post I had throat surgery 8 days after Al Jazeera interview – Bwala appeared first on Vanguard News.

  • Nigerian govt moves to revoke passports of citizens who renounced nationality

    Nigerian govt moves to revoke passports of citizens who renounced nationality

    The Federal Government has directed the Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS) to withdraw and deactivate passports belonging to individuals who have officially renounced their Nigerian citizenship.

    The directive was issued by the Minister of Interior, Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo, who stated that the move applies strictly to persons whose renunciation had been formally approved by the President.

    “The Honourable Minister of Interior, Dr. Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo, has directed the Nigeria Immigration Service to immediately withdraw and deactivate passports of Nigerians who have renounced their citizenship but still retain the documents.

    “This directive applies strictly to individuals whose renunciation requests have been formally approved by the President.

    “The Minister emphasized that the Ministry of Interior, entrusted with safeguarding the integrity of citizenship, derives its authority from the provisions of Section 29, subsections (1) and (2) of the 1999 Constitution (as amended), which state:

    Any citizen of Nigeria of full age who wishes to renounce his Nigerian citizenship shall make a declaration in the prescribed manner for the renunciation.

    “The President shall cause the declaration made under subsection (1) of this section to be registered and upon such registration, the person who made the declaration shall cease to be a citizen of Nigeria.

    “He further noted that once a person ceases to be a citizen of Nigeria, such an individual is no longer entitled to possess any sovereign document of the country, including the Nigerian passport.

    “The Minister added that this directive aligns with ongoing passport and visa reforms initiated by the Ministry in recent years.

    “We will continue to strengthen systems that secure Nigeria’s borders, prevent identity fraud, preserve the sanctity of Nigerian citizenship, and facilitate legitimate travel while preventing unauthorized or ineligible access,” it concluded.

    Nigerian govt moves to revoke passports of citizens who renounced nationality

  • United States impose visa ban over religious violence in Nigeria

    United States impose visa ban over religious violence in Nigeria

    The United States has announced a new policy targeting individuals involved in violations of religious freedom, including those linked to violence in Nigeria.

    Mark Walker, the US Principal Advisor for Global Religious Freedom, made this known in a post on X on Friday.

    The statement reads “The United States is taking decisive action in response to the mass killings and violence against Christians by radical Islamic terrorists, Fulani ethnic militias, and other violent actors in Nigeria and beyond.

    “A new policy under Section 212(a)(3)(C) of the Immigration and Nationality Act will allow the State Department to restrict visa issuance to individuals who have directed, authorized, significantly supported, participated in, or carried out violations of religious freedom and, where appropriate, their immediate family members.

    “As President Trump made clear, the “United States cannot stand by while such atrocities are happening in Nigeria, and numerous other countries.”

    “This policy will apply to Nigeria and any other governments or individuals engaged in violations of religious freedom” it said.

    United States impose visa ban over religious violence in Nigeria