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  • Attack On Nun Renews Concerns Over Christian Safety In Israel

    Attack On Nun Renews Concerns Over Christian Safety In Israel

    A French Catholic nun was violently assaulted near one of Jerusalem’s most sacred Christian sites last week, drawing condemnation from France, Christian leaders, and the Israeli government, and reigniting a broader debate about the safety of Christians in Israel.

    Israeli police arrested a 36-year-old Jewish man in connection with the assault, which occurred Tuesday near David’s Tomb outside Zion’s Gate on the southern edge of the Old City.

    Surveillance footage released by police shows the suspect approaching the nun from behind, shoving her forcefully onto a rock, then returning to kick her as she lay on the ground. A passerby intervened to stop the attack.

    The victim, a 48-year-old researcher at the French Biblical and Archaeological School in Jerusalem, sustained a severe graze to her head and facial injuries.

    The institute’s director, Fr. Olivier Poquillon, condemned the “unprovoked assault” as an “act of sectarian violence” and called on authorities to act swiftly.

    Israeli police described the assault as “racially motivated.” The Israeli Foreign Ministry called the attack a “shameful act” that contradicts Israel’s values of respect, coexistence, and religious freedom.

    The French Consulate in Jerusalem strongly condemned the attack and demanded justice. France has called for accountability over what it describes as rising “anti-Christian” violence in Israel.

    The Hebrew University’s Faculty of Comparative Religion called the incident a “heinous hate crime” and described it as part of a “deeply disturbing rise in Christianophobia” across Jerusalem and Israel.

    The data supports that concern. According to the Religious Freedom Data Center, a Jerusalem-based group monitoring incidents affecting religious freedom, an estimated 181 incidents of harassment targeting Christians, Christian symbols, and Christian institutions were recorded in Israel in 2025, with an additional 44 incidents documented between January and March 2026.

    The assault is the latest in a series of incidents straining relations between Christian communities and Israeli authorities. Last month, two Israeli soldiers were removed from combat duty after a photo emerged showing one apparently taking an axe or sledgehammer to a statue of Jesus in a Christian village in southern Lebanon, an incident separate from but related to the broader pattern, drawing rare condemnation from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

    Jerusalem police also briefly blocked senior Catholic clergy from entering the Church of the Holy Sepulchre on Palm Sunday before granting access for Easter ceremonies.

    According to reports, the attack occurred amid a broader pattern in which extremist individuals regularly insult and spit at clergy in religious attire, a trend Christian leaders say reflects a culture of impunity that authorities have been slow to address.

    The Latin Patriarchate and Christian leaders in Jerusalem have called on Israeli authorities to take concrete action through legislation, education, and enforcement to address what they describe as a dangerous and growing trend against Christians in the Holy Land.

    Attack On Nun Renews Concerns Over Christian Safety In Israel is first published on The Whistler Newspaper

  • ‘Madam Koi Koi’: Nollywood actress Oby Kechere is dead

    ‘Madam Koi Koi’: Nollywood actress Oby Kechere is dead

    Nigerian actress and film director, Oby Kechere, known for her role as Ms Koi Koi in the 2002 comedy classic, Aki na Ukwa, is dead.

    National President of Directors Guild of Nigeria (DGN), Uche Agbo, announced the development on Saturday.

    Agbo said the actress died on 27th April, 2026, after prolonged illness.

    The statement read: “It is with deep sorrow and a heavy heart that we announce the passing of Madam Cecilia Oby Kechere, Vice Chairman of the DGN Abuja Chapter.

    “We were informed yesterday that she passed on Monday, 27th April 2026, after a prolonged illness.

    “Madam Cecilia was a graduate of Theatre Arts, University of Ibadan, a committed professional and a valued member of our guild. Her contributions to the growth and unity of the DGN, particularly within the Abuja Chapter, will never be forgotten.

    “On behalf of the National Executive Council and the entire DGN family, I extend my deepest condolences to her family, loved ones, and all members of the Abuja Chapter in this difficult time.

    “May her gentle soul rest in perfect peace.”

    She hails from Mbaise in Imo State, Nigeria. Kechere joined the Nigerian film industry, otherwise called Nollywood, in 2001, first-starring in the popular August-Meeting films.

    ‘Madam Koi Koi’: Nollywood actress Oby Kechere is dead

  • 2027: Wike’s ally picks PDP presidential nomination form

    2027: Wike’s ally picks PDP presidential nomination form

    Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, governorship candidate in Cross River State in the 2023 election, Sandy Onor, has officially purchased the party’s presidential nomination forms.

    Onor, an ally of Federal Capital Territory, FCT, Minister Nyesom Wike, made the purchase at the party’s National Secretariat in Abuja.

    He is believed to be the first aspirant to obtain the presidential nomination forms under the PDP for the 2027 election.

    Onor served as the senator representing Cross River Central Senatorial District from 2019 to 2023.

    2027: Wike’s ally picks PDP presidential nomination form

  • Any ADC presidential aspirant who leaves after failing to get ticket is working for Tinubu – Kenneth Okonkwo

    Any ADC presidential aspirant who leaves after failing to get ticket is working for Tinubu – Kenneth Okonkwo

    A chieftain of the African Democratic Congress, ADC, Kenneth Okonkwo, says any presidential aspirant who leaves the party because he failed to get the ticket is compromised.

    Okonkwo stated this on Saturday on Channels Television’s ‘Sunrise Daily’, adding that such a person is working for President Bola Tinubu.

    His remark is coming amid speculations that former Anambra State governor, Peter Obi, is planning to defect from the party to the Nigerian Democratic Congress, NDC

    Okonkwo said, “Well, if he leaves, will he now be a mobile squatter? If anyone who doesn’t get the ADC presidential ticket leaves the party for another platform, he is compromised and working for Tinubu.”

    DAILY POST recalls that the Kwankwasiyya Movement had said that former presidential candidate of the New Nigeria Peoples Party, NNPP, Rabi’u Kwankwaso, and Peter Obi were is set to defect from the ADC to the NDC by next week.

    Any ADC presidential aspirant who leaves after failing to get ticket is working for Tinubu – Kenneth Okonkwo

  • Russia’s Treacherous Withdrawal And Mercenary Logic In Mali

    Russia’s Treacherous Withdrawal And Mercenary Logic In Mali

    On April 26, 2026, the desert winds carried more than dust across the ancient city of Kidal. They carried betrayal. In the dead of night, the Africa Corps—Russia’s expeditionary force in Mali—slipped away after secret negotiations with the Azawad Liberation Front (FLA). The withdrawal left the Malian Armed Forces (FAMa) exposed and bewildered, watching as rebels reclaimed the city. A senior Malian official, his voice heavy with disbelief, called it “treason.” The word hung in the air like a curse, a reminder that alliances forged in desperation often end in humiliation.

    Kidal has long been a contested space, a symbol of fragility in Mali’s sovereignty. For years, foreign powers have treated it as a chessboard square, moving pieces with little regard for the human lives caught in the crossfire. The Africa Corps’ withdrawal was not a tactical redeployment—it was a calculated abandonment. Negotiated directly with the FLA, it bypassed Mali’s own government, stripping the FAMa of agency and dignity.

    The rebels, emboldened, marched back into Kidal with the confidence of men who had been handed victory on a platter. For the Malian soldiers, the retreat was more than a military setback; it was much more: betrayal. They had been told they were fighting alongside a powerful ally. Instead, they discovered that their ally’s loyalty was conditional, its commitment mercenary, its promises hollow.

    In the aftermath, Russian media wasted no time in shaping the story. Outlets like RYBAR AFRICA painted the FAMa as incompetent, plagued by “command failures, low morale, and lack of coordination.” The message was clear: Mali’s army was the problem, not Russia’s withdrawal. But what they denied is what it is.

    This propaganda served two purposes. First, it deflected blame from Moscow, presenting the Africa Corps as disciplined professionals forced to operate alongside inept partners. Second, it reinforced Mali’s dependence. By portraying the FAMa as incapable, Russia positioned itself as indispensable—even as it humiliated its supposed ally.

    The irony is bitter. Mali, isolated from Western partners and estranged from regional allies, has tethered its security to Moscow. Each humiliation deepens the dependency; each insult tightens the chain. The partnership, advertised as “win-win,” has proven to be a trap: Mali provides legitimacy and access, Russia provides conditional support and relentless propaganda, and Kidal has shown exactly that.

    The withdrawal from Kidal confirmed what many suspected: Russia’s Africa Corps operates with a mercenary mindset. Its priorities are not Mali’s sovereignty or stability, but Russia’s own geopolitical and economic interests.

    The evacuation was carefully staged to secure Russian personnel and equipment, not Malian positions. The negotiations with the FLA ensured safe passage for the Africa Corps, while leaving the FAMa exposed. In the propaganda war, Russia emphasised its own professionalism while denigrating its ally.

    This pattern is not new. Across Africa, Russia has marketed itself as a partner offering security without lectures, weapons without conditions. But beneath the rhetoric lies a transactional logic. Moscow’s forces fight where it suits them, withdraw when it benefits them, and spin narratives to protect their image. Allies are tools, not partners; their suffering is collateral, not concern.

    The events in Kidal shattered the illusion of mutual benefit. Mali’s leaders, like those of Niger and Burkina Faso, had embraced Russia as an alternative to Western partners, hoping for respect and solidarity. What they received was contempt disguised as cooperation.

    The “win-win” slogan was always a mirage. For Russia, the wins are geopolitical influence, access to resources, and propaganda victories. For Mali, the supposed win is survival—but survival under constant humiliation, survival without sovereignty, survival dependent on a partner who abandons cities in the night.

    The desert remembers betrayals. Kidal now stands as a monument to the dangers of mistaking mercenaries for allies, of confusing propaganda for partnership. Will those in Niger and Burkina Faso learn from this?

    Beyond the geopolitics lies the human cost. Malian soldiers, already stretched thin, faced the rebels without the support they had been promised. Their morale, already fragile, collapsed further under the weight of abandonment. Citizens of Kidal, caught between armies and insurgents, saw once again that their fate is decided in distant capitals, not in their own streets.

    The Africa Corps’ withdrawal was not just a military manoeuvre—it was a message. It told Malians that their lives are secondary, their sovereignty negotiable, their sacrifices expendable. It told the rebels that foreign powers would deal with them directly, bypassing the state. It told the world that Russia’s commitment is conditional, its loyalty mercenary, its rhetoric hollow.

    April 26, 2026, will be remembered as the day Mali’s illusions about its partnership with Russia dissolved in the desert air. The treacherous withdrawal, the propaganda campaign, and the mercenary logic revealed the true nature of the alliance. For Mali, the lesson is painful but necessary: dependence on a partner who prioritises its own interests leads to perpetual humiliation. For Africa, the warning is clear: foreign powers may promise solidarity, but their actions reveal contempt.

    In the words of the Malian official who called the withdrawal “treason,” the betrayal was not just of a city, but of trust itself. Kidal is lost, but the deeper loss is the belief that Mali’s sovereignty could be safeguarded by those who see it only as a bargaining chip.

    If anything, the time for the African Union to show its face is now. The Constitutive Act gives the AU the right to intervene in a Member-State in grave circumstances, namely war crimes, genocide and crimes against humanity. The situation in Mali is grave. Kidal is a witness to this. The question is: Where is the African Standby Force (ASF)? Article 13 of the Protocol Relating to the Establishment of the Peace and Security Council of the African Union, the ASF is based on standby arrangements with Africa’s five sub-regions. If Moscow has shown its hand as it is wont to do, what of the AU?

    Amajama, a social commentator, writes from Abuja and can be reached via amajamaip@gmail.com

    Russia’s Treacherous Withdrawal And Mercenary Logic In Mali is first published on The Whistler Newspaper

  • Few Weeks After Joining ADC , Kwankwaso Set To Join NDC

    Few Weeks After Joining ADC , Kwankwaso Set To Join NDC

    Former Kano State governor, Rabiu Kwankwaso is set to defect from the African Democratic Congress (ADC) to the Nigeria Democratic Congress (NDC) next week, according to the Kwankwasiyya movement.

    Habibu Mohammed, spokesperson for the movement, told TheCable on Friday night that the decision followed a unanimous endorsement by key stakeholders.

    Mohammed said talks with the NDC were now at an advanced stage, with only minor details left to be resolved.

    He added that Kwankwaso, alongside Peter Obi, the 2023 presidential candidate of the Labour Party (LP), is expected to join the NDC on Monday or Tuesday.

    “I believe him, Peter Obi, and some others will be joining the NDC,” Mohammed said.

    He further disclosed that representatives of stakeholders from all 44 local government areas of Kano State met at Kwankwaso’s residence on Friday at about 3:30 p.m. to consider the available options.

    According to him, the meeting ended with a unanimous decision in support of the move.

    “The stakeholders have unanimously given him the go-ahead to move to the NDC,” he said.

    Mohammed also said Kwankwaso is currently in Kano and is expected back in Abuja by Sunday ahead of the planned defection.

  • ‘In Nigeria, you’re your own government’ – Korra Obidi

    ‘In Nigeria, you’re your own government’ – Korra Obidi

    United States-based Nigerian dancer and singer, Korra Obidi, has reflected on her time in Nigeria, claiming that citizens function as their own governments.

    Speaking in a recent episode of the One 54 podcast, the dancer said Nigeria has a lot of potentials but was being held back by bad governance.

    She explained that citizens provide basic social amenities for themselves due to the failure of the government to perform its duties.

    “Nigeria is blessed. It has no natural disasters. They have been predicting that the sea would flood Lagos but instead the sea is constantly being pushed back and people are building on the reclaimed land. Lagos is growing at astronomical rate.

    “There are about 300 million people in Nigeria, majority of which are youths. There is so much potentials in Nigeria. Tech is going crazy there. It is the government that is hindering a lot. Most people no longer care about the government.

    “In Nigeria, you’re your own government. You make your own water, dig well and purify water for your and your people. You get your own electricity, you have your own solar or generator. You basically have your own ministry. Everybody have their own kingdoms and just trying to survive,” she stated.

    ‘In Nigeria, you’re your own government’ – Korra Obidi

  • Army Sanctions Soldier Over Poor Feeding Claim

    Army Sanctions Soldier Over Poor Feeding Claim

     

     The Nigerian Army has sanctioned a personnel serving under Operation Hadin Kai for disseminating what it described as misleading information alleging poor feeding of troops in the North-East theatre.

    The Media Information Officer, Joint Task Force North-East, Lt. Col. Sanni Uba, disclosed this in a statement on Saturday, noting that the action followed an internal investigation into a viral social media post.

    According to him, findings showed that the image circulated by the soldier did not reflect the full ration issued.

    “The Headquarters Theatre Command Joint Task Force (North East), Operation HADIN KAI (OPHK), has noted with concern recent social media publications alleging poor feeding of troops within the Theatre of Operation.

    “Following a detailed internal review conducted in line with established procedures, the Theatre Command wishes to categorically state that the images and narratives being circulated are misleading and do not reflect the actual feeding arrangements or welfare standards of troops in the North East Theatre,” the statement read.

    Uba maintained that troops deployed across formations under Operation Hadin Kai are fed in line with approved standards.

    “These provisions are consistently implemented and, where operational conditions permit, are further enhanced during special periods such as Sallah and Easter celebrations to boost morale and welfare,” he said.

    He added that the feeding system is monitored through structured internal mechanisms.

    “It is managed through established Food Committees comprising personnel across various ranks, and presided over by senior non-commissioned officers. This arrangement ensures transparency, participation, and continuous oversight in menu planning, preparation, and distribution of meals, within available logistical resources,” he explained.

    The Army spokesman said the investigation identified a specific case of misconduct involving deliberate misrepresentation.

    “Investigations confirmed that the image did not represent the complete ration issued to the individual at the time.

    “Accordingly, the matter was addressed through appropriate disciplinary measures in line with the provisions of the Armed Forces Act (Cap A20 Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 2004).

    “Sanctions were duly applied to the personnel involved, to uphold discipline and preserve the integrity of the Armed Forces,” he said.

    He reassured all that troop welfare remains a priority despite operational challenges.

    “While operations in the North East present significant logistical and environmental challenges, consistent efforts are made to ensure that personnel are adequately catered for, even under demanding field conditions.

    “Troops are further encouraged to utilise established internal channels for the timely resolution of grievances, rather than resorting to actions capable of misrepresenting operational realities or undermining unit cohesion and morale,” Uba added.

    He urged the public to rely on verified information.

    “The spread of misinformation by individuals or groups seeking attention or financial gain undermines ongoing military operations and the collective national security effort,” he said

  • Germany reacts to withdrawal of US troops

    Germany reacts to withdrawal of US troops

    Germany says it has long anticipated the United States’ withdrawal of its troops from from the country.

    German Defense Minister Boris Pistorius said this in a statement on Saturday.

    Recall that the United States announced on Friday that it will be withdrawing roughly 5,000 troops from Germany over the next year.

    “The presence of American troops in Europe, particularly in Germany, serves the interests of both the US and ourselves,” Pistorius said.

    According to him, Europe should take greater responsibility for its own security, stressing that Germany was on the right track security wise.

    The withdrawal of US troops came after German Chancellor Friedrich Merz earlier said the US was being humiliated by Iran.

    In response, the US President Donald Trump said his German counterpart does not know what he was talking about concerning the Iran war.

    The following day, the US announced the withdrawal of it troops in Germany.

    Germany reacts to withdrawal of US troops

  • Championship: Ipswich promoted to EPL, four teams for play-offs confirmed

    Championship: Ipswich promoted to EPL, four teams for play-offs confirmed

    Ipswich have gained promotion back to the Premier League at the first time of asking.

    The Tractors thrashed Queens Park Rangers 3-0 on the last day of the campaign on Saturday.

    They will now join Coventry as the teams that took the automatic promotion spots.

    Four clubs will battle it out for the third spot in the play-offs. They are Millwall, Hull City, Southampton and Middlesbrough.

    Championship play-off schedule

    Play-off semi-final first legs
    Hull vs Millwall – Friday May 8, kick-off 8pm
    Middlesbrough vs Southampton – Saturday May 9, kick-off 12.30pm

    Play-off semi-final second legs
    Milwall vs Hull – Monday May 11, 8pm
    Southampton vs Middlesbrough – Tuesday May 12, 8pm

    Play-off final
    Saturday May 23, Wembley Stadium

    Championship: Ipswich promoted to EPL, four teams for play-offs confirmed