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  • Nigeria Deploys Digital Learner IDs To Build Central Education Database

    Nigeria Deploys Digital Learner IDs To Build Central Education Database

    The Federal Government has launched the Learner Identification Number (LIN), a digital system designed to assign every student a permanent and traceable academic identity.

    The initiative, introduced by the Federal Ministry of Education, is aimed at improving education planning, ensuring learning continuity, and enabling timely interventions across the sector.

    The Minister of Education, Maruf Alausa, in a statement by the ministry’s Director of Press and Public Relations, Boriowo Folasade, on Friday, described the move as a major milestone aligned with the Renewed Hope Agenda of President Bola Tinubu.

    “This initiative marks a turning point in our education system. By assigning every learner a unique number, we are building a structure that supports each child’s journey from classroom to career,” the minister said in the statement.

    The ministry said over 1.9 million candidates who registered for the 2026 examinations conducted by the West African Examinations Council and the National Examinations Council have already been issued LINs in the first phase of the rollout.

    The system is expected to provide each learner with a unique and permanent identity, and enable seamless tracking of academic progression across all levels, even when students change schools or relocate.

    According to the ministry, the initiative builds on the Digitised National Education Management Information System (DNEMIS), which has created a comprehensive national register of schools. Each school has been assigned with a unique ten-digit identification number, that provides a reliable foundation for a fully integrated national education database

    It added that linking learners to verified identities and schools would strengthen examination processes, curb impersonation, and enhance the credibility of public examinations nationwide.

    The Ministry further stated that beyond examination integrity, the LIN is expected to help track out-of-school children, monitor student progression, identify dropouts, and address learning gaps through targeted interventions.

    It also stated that the next phase of the programme would extend coverage to all learners in public and private schools nationwide, using national data platforms and the Annual School Census.

    It urged stakeholders, including schools, examination bodies, parents, and students, to support the initiative and comply with its processes.

    Nigeria Deploys Digital Learner IDs To Build Central Education Database is first published on The Whistler Newspaper

  • Dabiri-Erewa Raises Alarm Over Hacked Email Account

    Dabiri-Erewa Raises Alarm Over Hacked Email Account

    The Chairman/CEO of the Nigerians in Diaspora Commission (NiDCOM), Abike Dabiri-Erewa, has raised an alarm over the compromise of her personal email account by hackers, warning members of the public to disregard any messages sent from the address.

    The disclosure was made in a statement shared via her official X (formerly Twitter) handle.

    Dabiri-Erewa revealed that her email account, aodabiri@yahoo.com, had been breached by unknown cyber actors, prompting concerns over potential misuse.

    She cautioned that any correspondence purportedly originating from her email or any other address should be ignored pending the restoration of full control of the account.

    In her tweet, she said: “Please be informed that my email account (aodabiri@yahoo.com) has been compromised by hackers.

    “Kindly ignore any emails purportedly sent from me using this or any other address until I regain full control of the account. I will unfortunately not be able to respond to the thousands of emails that must have accumulated during this period.”

    The NiDCOM boss also appealed for patience and understanding from associates, noting that the breach has disrupted her ability to attend to official and personal communications.

    She assured that efforts are underway to secure the account and restore normal operations.

    Dabiri-Erewa Raises Alarm Over Hacked Email Account is first published on The Whistler Newspaper

  • Kamala Harris teases comeback as Democrats eye 2028 US election

    Kamala Harris teases comeback as Democrats eye 2028 US election

    Former US vice president Kamala Harris on Friday delivered her clearest signal yet that she may mount another bid for the White House, telling a Democratic audience she is thinking about running in 2028.

    Speaking at a convention hosted by civil rights leader Al Sharpton’s National Action Network, the 61-year-old stopped short of a formal declaration but left little doubt she is weighing a third campaign.

    The Democrat — defeated in 2024 by Donald Trump in a tumultuous presidential election — was asked if she would run again in 2028 and electrified the crowd of party activists in New York when she replied: “I might, I might — I’m thinking about it.”

    Having served four years a “heartbeat away” from the presidency under Joe Biden, Harris said she understands the demands of the job — and argued that the current political and economic landscape is failing many Americans.

    “I spent countless hours in my West Wing office, footsteps away from the Oval Office. I spent countless hours in the Oval Office, in the Situation Room. I know what the job is. And I know what it requires,” she said.

    Harris has maintained a relatively low profile since her 2024 defeat, but has been easing back into the spotlight with a series of appearances and trips across southern states.

    Allies say she remains undecided but is taking steps to preserve the option of a campaign.

    The National Action Network event has emerged as an early proving ground for 2028 hopefuls, with Black voters — a cornerstone of the Democratic base — expected to play a decisive role in choosing the party’s nominee.

    Harris used the platform to launch a broad critique of Trump’s leadership, telling the crowd: “The status quo is not working, and hasn’t been working for a lot of people for a long time.”

    Early polling suggests that she begins the shadow 2028 race with a significant advantage in name recognition. But with several prominent Democrats testing the waters, her path to the nomination — if she runs — is far from guaranteed.

    “The American people have right to expect that anyone who wants to run for office and be a leader, that it can’t be about themselves and what they want for themselves,” Harris added.

    “It’s got to be about the American people, and that’s how I think of it.”

    The post Kamala Harris teases comeback as Democrats eye 2028 US election appeared first on Vanguard News.

  • ‘One Dangote not enough’ – Sujimoto’s open letter to President Tinubu

    ‘One Dangote not enough’ – Sujimoto’s open letter to President Tinubu

    In 1961, the government of South Korea, led by the disciplined and strategic leadership of Park Chung-hee, took control of its economic destiny and made a deliberate decision to create new billionaires. A small group of competent, ambitious local businessmen, the vanguard of visionaries, were handpicked, shielded from foreign competition, and given cheap credit within a system structured for scale. The state concentrated capital, reduced external pressure, and aligned policy with production, ensuring these firms were not constrained by the limits that prevent most businesses from scaling.

    The state did not wait for wealth to trickle down. It engineered it upward. It concentrated national credit in a narrow cadre of roughly seven industrial families and protected them until they could compete globally. This was not favoritism; it was deliberate economic design that intentionally created billionaires. From that system emerged firms that would come to define industrial power, including LG, Hyundai, SK Group, and Kia, names now recognized across the world. One of those early state-backed enterprises, a modest trading firm once obsessed with dried fish and noodles, was pushed through that system until it became the global institution now known as Samsung.

    The “Chaebol” Strategy: Targeted Incubation

    South Korea’s stellar performance is widely praised as a model for emulation, but what is often admired is rarely understood. It was built on discipline, structure, and a culture of entrepreneurship that relies on audacity, improvisation, and experimentation.

    History, when examined without sentiment, reveals this pattern again and again. In China, under Deng Xiaoping, the state did not simply open markets; it engineered outcomes. Since the turning point of 1979, millions have been lifted out of poverty, and alongside that transformation emerged a class of billionaires, not by accident, but by design.

    China did not stop at creation; it sustains its enterprises through intentional investment and consistently favorable policy frameworks.

    The state understands that when its companies succeed, the returns multiply—through employment, industrial depth, and significantly higher tax revenues.

    Your Excellency, the lesson for Nigeria’s salvation is written in the steel of Seoul and the silicon of Suwon. This approach is not new to Nigeria.

    In 2000, President Olusegun Obasanjo recognized the necessity of a “National Champion” strategy. He understood that if Nigeria was to reduce its dependence on imported cement and fuel, the state had to deliberately develop industrialists. He cleared the path for a select few, creating the policy conditions that enabled the rise of Aliko Dangote and others.

    Today, a single entity like the Dangote Group pays over N900 billion in taxes annually, employs tens of thousands, and has become a critical anchor for Nigeria’s industrial stability. It is not far-fetched to say that, without the Dangote Refinery, Nigerians would likely be buying diesel at nearly N3,000 per litre Today.

    The tragedy is not that we lack capacity; it is that we stopped at one. No single industrial anchor, no matter how powerful, can carry the weight of a nation.

    One Dangote can stabilize a sector; ten can stabilize an economy.

    Who says the price of rice cannot move from N80,000 to N40,000? Who says the price of cement cannot fall drastically? When you deliberately develop industrial leaders and align them with national priorities, scale begins to work in the interest of the people, driving down costs, expanding access, and strengthening the economy.

    What we have is proof of concept. What we lack is replication at scale.
    Proof of Untapped Capacity
    I will not quickly forget when Sunday Dare brought me to you in 2015. I spoke then of a gigantic vision, the Lorenzo by Sujimoto, conceived as the tallest residential building in Lagos and a monument of architectural ambition envisioned for 16 Bourdillon Road.

    Since then, my ambitions have extended far beyond luxury real estate, from 50,000 hectares of rice cultivation to the production of 500,000 tonnes of vegetable oil annually.

    At Sujimoto, 2025 has been a gift to us. Over the past five years, we have evolved beyond luxury real estate, recognizing that while we have mastered the sector, luxury alone cannot deliver the level of impact required for a nation of over 240 million resilient and enterprising people.

    Today, that evolution is being translated into execution at scale through large-scale, middle-income housing, industrial production, and agriculture. Through our proposed Sujimoto Smart City model, we aim to deliver over 5,000 homes annually across Nigeria’s six geopolitical zones.

    In agriculture, it is our ambition to build from an initial 50,000 hectares, with a clear path to scale to one million hectares of production within the next decade. Beyond this, we bring proven capacity in cost-efficient infrastructure development, including road construction, with the advantage of not being dependent on the dollar.

    Nigeria does not lack capable builders; it lacks a system that deliberately identifies, supports, and scales them into national champions.

    When Hamid Joda, a renowned banker, set out to establish TAJBank, he moved from investor to investor, knocking on countless doors; many said “NO,” yet a decisive few said yes to his bold vision, and in that minority decision now sits one of Nigeria’s fastest-growing banks, employing over 5,000 people. What would have happened if the bank was never set up or never succeeded? Today, those jobs would not exist, and for many, the stability those opportunities created, the households they sustained, and the futures they quietly enabled would simply never have materialised.

    Yet, Nigeria remains a nation of brilliant but fragmented entrepreneurs, each fighting a lone battle against high interest rates, erratic power, and a volatile currency.

    Nigerians have talent, but they do not have the resources to scale it. Nigerians are great entrepreneurs, but they do not have access to capital.

    Nigerians have the capacity to build, but they do not have the financial backing required to sustain and expand it.

    Across Today’s economic climate, even high-capacity entrepreneurs face constrained access to capital and limited institutional support.

    Like many businesses operating in Today’s environment, we have faced significant financial strain. At one point, our debts exceeded N40 billion, of which we have successfully cleared over 80 percent. Our workforce, once over 1,000 strong, has had to adjust to fewer than 500 employees, an outcome shaped by crunching economic shifts, currency unification, and tightening financial conditions that constrained cash flow.

    Despite these challenges, we have not stepped back from Nigeria. We remain committed because we believe in this country, its leadership, and its greatest asset, its people.
    This reflects a structural gap within our financial system.

    Banks are typically positioned to fund short-term ventures, often within one to two years, while building sustainable industries requires patient capital over five to ten years.

    We have the raw material, Mr. President; we have the ambition. What we lack is the deliberate policy instrument. Building on that logic, Your Excellency, if your administration were to deliberately identify and support ten to twenty such industrial leaders, amongst whom I count myself, Dr. Sijibomi Ogundele, across manufacturing, food production, energy including refining, fintech and financial services, the deep-sea economy, semiconductor assembly, large-scale mechanized agriculture, pharmaceuticals, cement, and scalable housing for middle- and low-income households, Nigeria would not only expand its productive base but fundamentally transform its economic capacity.

    South Korea understood a fundamental law of economic development: you cannot redistribute wealth if you have not first mastered the art of creating it at scale. You cannot feed a nation of over 200 million people on the output of our most hardworking SMEs alone; you need industrial capacity capable of feeding a continent.

    The implication is clear: we cannot fight free-market wars with a stick while our neighbors use state-backed cannons. We must use targeted tariffs and strategic protection to shield our manufacturers from dumping, just as China has done in building and defending firms like Huawei.

    From China’s explosive growth to South Korea’s industrial miracle, and even in the early development of the United States, states have deliberately nurtured national champions: firms supported through targeted policies to dominate local markets and compete globally.

    But a million “SMEs” cannot build a deep-sea port or anchor a continental trade currency. To lead the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), Nigeria must move from being a referee to being the ultimate Venture Capitalist.

    The “10 Industrialists” Strategy:
    This is not about favoritism; it is about strategic concentration in service of the collective. When the state deliberately develops industrial leaders in key sectors, it is not gifting wealth—it is creating national anchors.

    Your Excellency, it is time to identify ten to twenty industrial leaders and bring us into a room to debate and define how Nigeria will build its next generation of economic power. This is not a call for selective support; it is a call for “Value-Chain Capitalism.”

    The principle is simple.
    It is often said that a good tailor must use the fabric at hand to design a masterpiece. You have the entrepreneurs, Mr. President. You have the raw material. What is required is a deliberate policy instrument that says: “We will back you, but you must produce, employ, compete, and deliver affordable value to the economy.”

    The “ten to twenty billionaires” are not the goal; they are the tailors. They are the engine of wealth that will employ millions, pay trillions in taxes, and stabilize our currency through massive export revenue.

    The “Billionaire-Enabling Government”

    Your Excellency, your “Renewed Hope” agenda must now enter its most decisive phase. You must bring together the innovators, the industrialists, and the builders who have already demonstrated capacity, and define how Nigeria will produce its next generation of economic pillars.

    To catapult Nigeria into a $1 trillion economy, the Federal Government must pivot from being a regulator to becoming an active architect of domestic industrial power.

    This requires the deliberate development of national champions across strategic sectors.

    My dear President, you have done this before. The record of Lagos is clear: where deliberate policy met capable entrepreneurs, real outcomes followed. What was achieved between 1999 and 2007 was not accidental; it was the result of intentional choices, identifying builders and backing them to scale. That same clarity of execution can now be applied on a national scale, with far greater consequence.

    The lesson is consistent across every serious economy: nations that rise do not wait for wealth; they create it. They identify their strongest builders, back them deliberately, and hold them to results. That is how industrial power is built. That is how billionaires emerge, not by chance, but by design.

    Nigeria has already seen what one can do. The task now is to do it again, this time at scale.

    On a personal note, as I mark my birthday Today, I consider it an honour to present these reflections to the Presidency at such a defining moment for our dear nation.

    Thank you, Your Distinguished Excellency.

    God bless the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

    Dr. Sijibomi Ogundele is the Group Managing Director of Sujimoto, the Czar of Luxury Real Estate Development, and the mastermind developer behind the renowned Giuliano.

    Our other audacious projects, such as the most sophisticated building in Banana Island, LucreziaBySujimoto, the grandiose Sujimoto Twin Tower, the tallest twin towers in Africa; the regal Queen Amina by Sujimoto, a monument to royal affluence; the magnificent high-rise LeonardoBySujimoto; the Sujimoto Farm; an advanced farm estate system that incorporates housing, farm hospitals, hotels, and markets within an ecosystem, creating opportunities for agro-tourism and affordable housing, among other projects that have etched an indelible imprint on Nigeria’s _skylines, a testament to Sujimoto’s unrivalled mastery of modern-day engineering.

    ‘One Dangote not enough’ – Sujimoto’s open letter to President Tinubu

  • Tinubu Felicitates Dangote On Birthday

    Tinubu Felicitates Dangote On Birthday

    President Bola Tinubu has extended warm felicitations to Africa’s leading industrialist, and chairman of Dangote Group, Aliko Dangote, on his birthday on Friday.

    In a statement by presidential spokesperson, Bayo Onanuga, Tinubu praised Dangote’s contributions to Nigeria and Africa’s economic growth and industrial development.

    Tinubu commended the businessman’s entrepreneurial vision, resilience, and commitment to excellence, noting that his investments have transformed key sectors of the economy. He identified the Dangote Refinery, Petrochemical Company and cement factories across Africa as milestones that have positioned Nigeria as a major hub for petrochemical and cement production.

    He also lauded Dangote’s role in job creation, infrastructure development, and his sustained confidence in the Nigerian economy.

    “Aliko’s entrepreneurial vision, resilience, innovation, and commitment to excellence have transformed industries and positioned Nigeria as a hub for large-scale petrochemical and cement production through his establishment of the multi-billion-dollar Dangote Refinery and Petrochemical Company and cement factories across Africa.

    “I salute Aliko for his conglomerate’s role in job creation, infrastructure development, and unwavering belief in the Nigerian economy and its potential. Dangote remains a shining example of African enterprise, whose achievements continue to inspire a new generation of entrepreneurs across the continent,” the president said.

    He further commended the industrialist’s philanthropic interventions through the Dangote Foundation, particularly in the areas of health, education, and poverty alleviation.

    “I also applaud Aliko’s philanthropic efforts, particularly through the Dangote Foundation, which have significantly impacted lives in health, education, and poverty alleviation,” Tinubu said.

    He prayed for continued good health, wisdom, and greater accomplishments for the business mogul in the years ahead.

    Tinubu Felicitates Dangote On Birthday is first published on The Whistler Newspaper

  • Video: BBNaija star Phyna shares new look three days post-BBL surgery

    Video: BBNaija star Phyna shares new look three days post-BBL surgery

    Winner of Big Brother Naija Season 7, Phyna Otabor, has added a new chapter to her public image after revealing she has undergone cosmetic surgery.

    The reality star, who is also known as an actress, model, filmmaker and fashion enthusiast, shared her experience on social media, posting clips and comments after her first post-surgery massage.

    Her decision comes just weeks after the death of socialite Elena Jessica, who reportedly died from complications following a second Brazilian Butt Lift (BBL) procedure. The incident had sparked fresh conversations about the risks of cosmetic surgery in Nigeria.

    In her post, Phyna said she had no regrets about the procedure and described her experience with excitement, noting changes in her body after surgery.

    “First massage. Now I understand why people don’t shut up about it… Finally did it. No regrets,” she wrote.

    She also reacted to her new appearance, saying her body felt more “snatched” and joking about her flat stomach transformation.

    @unusual_phyna Day 3 — this recovery is not for the weak trusting the process. @cgehealthcare #virals #foryoupagе #trendin #fy #foryou ♬ Sunset Chill Vibes – Ausku Studio

    “This is my first massage… my belly snatched sha. Everybody should go and hide,” she said in one of the clips.

    Phyna, who had previously criticised fellow reality star Chichi over cosmetic procedures, also reflected on her gym experience, suggesting that workouts no longer deliver the same results compared to surgery.

    In another post, she described waking up after her first post-op massage as intense but worth it, saying she was happy with what she saw in the mirror.

    Cosmetic surgery, especially Brazilian Butt Lift procedures, has become increasingly popular in Nigeria.

    The procedure involves removing fat from parts of the body such as the stomach or thighs and transferring it to the buttocks for a fuller shape.

    The trend has continued to grow in the country’s entertainment industry, with several celebrities reportedly undergoing similar procedures.

    Vanguard News

    The post Video: BBNaija star Phyna shares new look three days post-BBL surgery appeared first on Vanguard News.

  • Uganda’s Army Chief Offers 100,000 Troops To Defend ‘Holy Land’ Israel

    Uganda’s Army Chief Offers 100,000 Troops To Defend ‘Holy Land’ Israel

    Uganda’s Chief of Defence Forces, General Muhoozi Kainerugaba, has made a bold public offer to send 100,000 Ugandan soldiers to Israel, declaring he would personally command the force to defend “the Holy Land” and “the land of Jesus Christ our God.”

    In a post on X on Friday evening, Gen. Muhoozi wrote: “I’m ready to deploy 100,000 Ugandan soldiers in Israel. Under my command. To protect the Holy Land. The land of Jesus Christ our God!”

    The statement comes from the account of Uganda’s top military officer, who is also the son of long-serving President Yoweri Museveni.

    It marks another strong expression of personal and religious support for Israel from the Ugandan general, who has previously vowed that Uganda would enter any major war on Israel’s side if the Jewish state faced existential threats.

    Gen. Muhoozi has been vocal in recent weeks about Uganda’s alignment with Israel, citing both Christian faith and historical gratitude.

    He has referenced Israel’s past support for Uganda in the 1980s and 1990s, including assistance during regional conflicts.

    His earlier posts suggested Uganda could intervene militarily if Israel were at risk of being “destroyed or defeated,” framing the stance in biblical and messianic terms.

    However, the latest declaration goes further by specifying a massive troop deployment of 100,000 soldiers, a figure that would represent a significant portion of Uganda’s military capacity.

    The Uganda People’s Defence Force has an estimated active strength of around 45,000 personnel, with additional reserves.

    Any large-scale overseas deployment would require approval from the Ugandan government and President Museveni, as well as substantial logistical planning and international coordination.

    There has been no immediate official comment from the Ugandan presidency or government confirming the offer as national policy. So far, the statement appears to be Gen. Muhoozi’s personal declaration on social media.

    Israeli officials have not yet publicly responded to the latest statement.

    General Muhoozi Kainerugaba serves as both Chief of Defence Forces and Senior Presidential Advisor on Special Operations.

    He is widely viewed as a potential successor to his father, President Museveni, and is known in Uganda as the “Tweeting General” due to his frequent and often provocative social media posts on military, political, and religious matters.

    This latest post continues a pattern of dramatic, faith-driven statements from the Ugandan military chief amid ongoing tensions in the Middle East.

    Uganda’s Army Chief Offers 100,000 Troops To Defend ‘Holy Land’ Israel is first published on The Whistler Newspaper

  • 2027: Obafemi Hamzat tagged next Lagos Governor

    2027: Obafemi Hamzat tagged next Lagos Governor

    Lawmaker representing the Ikeja Federal Constituency, Lagos State in the 10th House of Representatives, James Faleke has tagged Dr. Kadri Obafemi Hamzat as next governor of Lagos State.

    Hamzat, who is currently the deputy governor of the state, is aspiring for the All Progressives Congress, APC ticket to contest the election.

    In a post on his X handle on Friday, the lawmaker appealed to stakeholders and supporters of the ruling party in his constituency to support Hamzat in the primary election.

    He wrote, “Good evening all. As we prepare for Party primaries next month, I urge all our supporters in ikeja Federal Constituency and Lagos State to support Dr Kadri Obafemi Hamzat as the next Governor of Lagos State from 2027-2035 IJN”.

    Meanwhile, a former Lagos State governorship candidate, Funso Doherty on Friday declared intention to contest the 2027 Lagos gubernatorial election.

    Doherty would in 2027 contest the election under the African Democratic Congress, ADC.

    The declaration was made at an ADC meeting and announced by ADC Vanguard, the coalition mobilization wing of the party, on X.

    2027: Obafemi Hamzat tagged next Lagos Governor

  • War: ‘Don’t play us’ – VP Vance warns Iran as he departs to Pakistan

    War: ‘Don’t play us’ – VP Vance warns Iran as he departs to Pakistan

    Vice president of the United States of America, JD Vance has issued a warning to Iran, advising them not to ‘play’ the US as he embarks on a journey abroad for negotiations aimed at resolving their conflict.

    Vance, who has consistently expressed skepticism regarding foreign military interventions and has been vocal about the potential of deploying troops into protracted conflicts, departed on Friday to spearhead mediated discussions with Iran in Islamabad, the capital of Pakistan.

    As he boarded Air Force Two en route to Pakistan, the Vice President said, “We are optimistic about the negotiations. I believe it will yield positive outcomes. We will, of course, see how it unfolds.”

    He referenced Trump, stating: “If the Iranians are prepared to negotiate sincerely, we are certainly ready to offer an open hand.”

    However, he cautioned: “If they intend to manipulate us, they will discover that the negotiating team is not particularly accommodating.”

    Vance also mentioned that Trump “provided us with some quite clear directives” regarding the conduct of the talks, although he did not provide further details.

    The Vice President refrained from answering questions posed by reporters accompanying him.

    War: ‘Don’t play us’ – VP Vance warns Iran as he departs to Pakistan

  • Abia homeland security suspends female staff over alleged involvement in vandalism

    Abia homeland security suspends female staff over alleged involvement in vandalism

    The management of Abia State Homeland Security has suspended one of its personnel, DDL Tochi Oluobube over her alleged involvement in vandalism of government property in Osisioma LGA.

    The Abia State homeland security agency which said this on Friday, explained that the action was in reaction to public concern regarding her alleged involvement in the alleged vandalism.

    The official statement suspending DDL Tochi Oluobube was signed by Ezinwanne Alili, the Public Relations Officer of Abia State Homeland Security Agency.

    “The agency has zero tolerance for acts of indiscipline perpetrated by any personnel. This act of vandalism allegedly involving the named personnel will therefore not be an exception.

    “The officer in question is currently suspended pending a full investigation with the Nigerian Police Force.

    “She will be dealt with in line with the extant Code of Conduct for personnel of the agency once the police concludes their investigation”, the PRO, Ezinwanne Alili.

    He assured the public that investigation into the matter would be thorough, transparent, and impartial, adding that the investigation would be done in liaison with relevant authorities to ensure that the matter is resolved swiftly and justice is served.

    ” Actions inimical to the agency’s mission to protect and serve the people of Abia State, in line with the mandate of his Excellency, the Executive Governor of the state, Dr Alex Chioma Otti OFR, will not be tolerated” the Abia State Homeland Security Agency concluded.

    Abia homeland security suspends female staff over alleged involvement in vandalism