Category: Featured

  • Brains behind alleged coup know the consequences – Defence Minister

    Brains behind alleged coup know the consequences – Defence Minister

    • Says court martial will be free, fair

    Defence Minister Christopher Musa declared yesterday that the suspects being detained in connection with the recent alleged coup plotting in the country must have been fully aware of the seriousness of their actions.

    “They must have made up their minds when they decided to do this and must have considered their families,” Musa, a retired general, told the Turkish national public broadcaster TRT.

    He spoke against the background of media reports quoting some relations of the suspects as alleging witch hunt in the arrests.

    The Defence Headquarters (DHQ) in a statement on Monday confirmed a coup plot against the government.

    It said investigations conducted in line with established military procedures revealed that some personnel were involved in the alleged coup plot.

    It said the affected officers will be arraigned before relevant military judicial panels in due course.

    Musa in his TRT interview said the suspects knew the consequences of their action, “and I’m sure they are ready to face the wrath.”

    He confirmed that they would face court-martial proceedings, which he described as free and fair, allowing them legal representation to defend themselves.

    He said despite the offence allegedly committed by the suspects, government “is ensuring that their families are treated fairly.”

    He added: “Their family members are not left alone. The government is making sure that their wives and children are looked after.”

    The Director of Defence Information, Brigadier-General Samaila Uba, said on Monday that investigations into the alleged coup plot had been concluded and the report forwarded to the appropriate superior authority in line with extant regulations.

    He said: “The comprehensive investigation process, conducted in accordance with established military procedures, has carefully examined all circumstances surrounding the conduct of the affected personnel.

    “The findings have identified a number of officers with allegations of plotting to overthrow the government, which is inconsistent with the ethics, values and professional standards required of members of the AFN.

    “Accordingly, those with cases to answer will be formally arraigned before an appropriate military judicial panel to face trial in accordance with the Armed Forces Act and other applicable service regulations.

    “This ensures accountability while upholding the principles of fairness and due process.”

    The defence spokesperson said the actions being taken against the affected officers are “purely disciplinary and part of ongoing institutional mechanisms to preserve order, discipline and operational effectiveness within the ranks.”

    Uba said the armed forces remained resolute in maintaining the “highest standards of professionalism, loyalty and respect for constitutional authority.”

    Read Also: Governor Lawal renews synergy against banditry 

    The suspects in detention are:

    Brigadier General Musa Abubakar Sadiq (44th Regular Course)

    Colonel M. A. Ma’aji ( 47th Regular Course)

    Lieutenant Colonel S. Bappah (56th Regular Course)

    Lieutenant Colonel A. A. Hayatu (56th Regular Course)

    Lieutenant Colonel P. Dangnap (56th Regular Course)

    Lieutenant Colonel M. Almakura (56th Regular Course)

    Major A. J. Ibrahim (56th Regular Course)

    Major M. M. Jiddah (56th Regular Course)

    Major M. A. Usman (60th Regular Course)

    Major D. Yusuf (59th Regular Course)

    Major I. Dauda (DSSC 38)

    Captain I. Bello (DSSC 43)

    Captain A. A. Yusuf

    Lieutenant S. S. Felix (DSSC)

    Lieutenant Commander D. B. Abdullahi (Nigerian Navy)

    Squadron Leader S. B. Adamu (Nigerian Air Force).

  • Anxiety in Southeast over IPOB’s fresh sit-at-home call tomorrow

    Anxiety in Southeast over IPOB’s fresh sit-at-home call tomorrow

    • Ignore directive, organisation’s lawyer urges residents

    The South East States of Abia, Anambra, Ebonyi, Enugu and Imo are in the grip of fresh anxiety over safety of life and property after the outlawed Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) called for a sit-at-home protest across the region tomorrow.

    The group branded it Biafra-wide solidarity lockdown to show support for Onitsha traders in the aftermath of the closure of the city’s main market for one week by Anambra State Governor Charles Soludo.

    The planned sit-at-home is also meant to press for the release of leader of IPOB Nnamdi Kanu from jail.

    In a swift reaction to the IPOB statement yesterday, lead counsel for the group, Ifeanyi Ejiofor, asked South-East residents to completely ignore the strike.

    He called it fake and fraudulent.

    Governor Soludo ordered the market shut for one week last Monday following the traders’ continued compliance with the IPOB sit-at-home directive.

    He expressed disappointment that the traders chose to obey “the long-standing, fear-enforced Monday sit-at-home order; a ghostly mandate from non-state actors that has strangled businesses and normalised weekly Monday sit-at-home for years.”

    He described his closure order as the latest and perhaps most drastic approach to determine who controls time and economic life in Southeast Nigeria on Mondays.

    Soludo said government would not stand by while a few individuals willfully undermined public safety and disregarded official directives meant to restore normalcy.

    Read Also: Military refutes viral video of ‘captured’ IPOB commander ‘Gentle the Yahoo’

    He said if the market did not reopen for business after the one-week shutdown, it would be sealed for a month.

    On Friday, the governor, accompanied by some of his commissioners, undertook another visit to the market to map out areas for remodeling in the complex.

    The market, according to him, has lost much of its functionality owning to years of unplanned development and the crippling effects of the Monday sit-at-home.

    “The Onitsha Main Market, in its current state, is no longer functional. We have done the study. The main market is no longer what it was designed to be. It has literally died,” he said.

    Soludo recalled that in the late 1970s, the market operated with wide streets, organised stalls and ample parking space, allowing smooth movement of trucks and shoppers—conditions he said no longer exist.

    He said persistent adherence to the Monday sit-at-home order has “further worsened the situation with billions of naira lost weekly and customers diverted to neighbouring states.”

    “Leadership requires taking inconvenient steps to secure the future. The closure of the market is a corrective measure to reclaim the state’s economic life,” he said.

    “This remodeling aligns with our manifesto to build planned and sustainable markets, communities and cities. Leadership beckons us to take these difficult but necessary steps.”

    He told the traders that he would be back there tomorrow to supervise resumption of business.

    Chairman of the Onitsha Main Market, Chief Chijioke Okpalaugo, said the traders were in tune with the government’s vision, but appealed for a brief grace period to secure their goods.

    “After careful consideration of the proposals presented by the state government, we, the leadership and traders of Onitsha Main Market, have chosen Option 2 (remodeling and stop sit-at-home) as the preferred path forward,” he said.

    However, IPOB did not take kindly to the governor’s action in shutting the market.

    It said the market closure amounted to economic strangulation of the Igbo and called for a “Biafra-wide solidarity strike” tomorrow.

    It said: “This total shutdown is a direct, peaceful and unified response to the tyrannical actions of Governor Soludo, who shut down the Onitsha Main Market and threatened further closures, demolitions and revocation of land ownership.

    “Soludo’s war on Onitsha traders is a war on all Biafrans. Touch one, touch all.”

    It asked traders, public transport operators, banks, schools, civil servants and residents across the region to observe the  peaceful “solidarity lockdown.”

    The group said the sit-at-home was a voluntary act of civil disobedience and warned that Soludo’s actions could provoke wider resistance.

    We’re fully prepared to maintain police —Police

    The Anambra State Police Command declared its readiness to maintain law and order following the latest statement by IPOB.

    The State Police Public Relations Officer, Tochukwu Ikenga, said the initial stage of the security crisis involved attacks on security operatives and destruction of government facilities by criminal elements seeking to instill fear in residents.

    According to the police, “the state government, in collaboration with Ndi Anambra, has now resolved to correct harmful practices arising from the security situation, including the illegal sit-at-home and closure of markets on Mondays.”

    The police assured residents of their safety and their property, adding, “security agencies are not the enemy but those who seek to inflict suffering and hardship on the people.”

    Also, members of the state security outfit, Agunechemba, have vowed to storm the Main Market to protect the lives and property of the citizenry.

    The leader of the Agunechemba outfit in the state, Prince Ken Emeakayi, said the group would not allow anyone or group to invade Anambra again, saying,”we are battle ready.”

    IPOB lawyer to Southeast residents: Ignore sit-at-home order

    Reacting to the IPOB statement, counsel to the group Ifeanyi Ejiofor urged Southeast residents to ignore the strike.

    Ejiofor said the call to strike was fake; a phantom and a calculated falsehood.

    He said: “Once again, the well-worn theatre of misinformation has opened its curtains, this time with a particularly lazy script and an insultingly predictable cast.

    “Late yesterday, a report was widely circulated alleging that a total lockdown of Ala-Igbo had been ordered under the guise of a sit-at-home directive purportedly issued by ‘Emma Powerful,’ slated for Monday, February 2, 2026.

    “Let it be stated clearly, unequivocally and without ambiguity: this directive is fake, a phantom, a calculated falsehood.

    “Upon careful inquiry and diligent verification, especially considering the delicate and hard-won calm presently returning to our homeland, it became glaringly obvious that the so-called ‘Emma Powerful’ platform has been fatally compromised.

    “It has been hijacked by vested interests whose business model thrives on fear, disruption, extortion, and the cynical exploitation of vulnerable communities.

    “The peaceful global movement of the IPOB has formally and decisively disowned this fabricated publication, categorically distancing itself from the false sit-at-home order and directing Ndi-Igbo to go about their lawful and normal activities without fear.

    “Going forward, the message from IPOB is unmistakable: any publication attributed to ‘Emma Powerful’ should be treated with extreme suspicion, if not outright contempt.

    “Frankly, one cannot but express astonishment, bordering on disbelief, that at such a critical juncture, when relative peace is cautiously resurfacing in Ala-Igbo, anyone would recklessly circulate information capable of reopening wounds and inviting criminal infiltration.

    “History has taught us, at unbearable cost, what happens when fake directives fall into the hands of violent opportunists masquerading as enforcers.

    “It is therefore no longer sufficient to merely advise our people to ‘ignore’ publications from this source. The time has come for greater clarity and firmness.

    “The platform known as ‘Emma Powerful,’ in its current corrupted state, has positioned itself as an adversary to Ala-Igbo’s peace, progress, and collective well-being.”

    Ejiofor said IPOB must go further by publicly and definitively explaining why this source has become unreliable, compromised and hostile to the collective interest of Ndi-Igbo.

  • LP crisis deepens as INEC removes Abure-led executive from portal

    LP crisis deepens as INEC removes Abure-led executive from portal

    • Faction kicks, vows to upturn judgment of lower court on appeal

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has removed the names of the Julius Abure-led executive of the Labour Party from its portal following its sack by the Federal High Court.

    The National Publicity Secretary of the party, Obiora Ifoh, confirmed this in a statement in Abuja yesterday.

    The party described the decision by the commission as “strange,” vowing to protest it. 

    It said that the judgment of the Federal High Court in Abuja as well as the removal of the names of its executive from INEC’s portal will not deter its plans to put up a strong show in the 2027 general election.

    The party vowed to ensure that the judgment of the lower court is upturned at the Appeal Court.

    The party called on Nigerians to rise against the strangulation and monetisation of democracy in the country by a few power-drunks in the country, warning that Nigeria may be heading for the precipice if the inordinate ambitions of some politicians are not checked. 

    The statement said: “Some persons who are applauding the impunity by some politicians should retrace and do some introspection, because this was how in the past they applauded injustice in our democracy because they were beneficiaries.

    “At the end of the day when their enthroned leaders began to abuse power, they started complaining.

    Read Also: Court orders INEC to recognise Nenadi-led caretaker as LP national executive

    “For us in Labour Party, our faith is strong that the appellate court will do the right thing and therefore we advise our members to remain calm. We will continue with the struggle to take our party from the godfather.

    “Labour Party is a party that is based on social democracy where no one man is permitted to appoint everybody.

    “It is against the principles of the party that one man will sit at a place and gather everybody and appoint everybody from the National Working Committee to the state, down to the ward executive.

    “That is impunity of the highest order. This, I believe, negates the principles of the party.

    “If we say there is no party ideology in Nigeria, this is how it starts.

    “We are very sure that it will be quashed on appeal.

    “The celebration of the Abia state governor, Alex Otti, Nenadi Usman and their cohorts on the appearance of their names on the INEC portal will be short-lived.

    “It is for a short time. Their victory is pyrrhic and there is nothing to celebrate because the doomsday is closer than they will imagine; which I believe will be very catastrophic for them.

    “Moreover, it is very clear that the appointment of the caretaker committee did not go through the normal procedure. Proper notice was not given in line with the party constitution and the electoral act.”

  • JUST IN: Tinubu returns after Türkiye State visit

    JUST IN: Tinubu returns after Türkiye State visit

    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu on Saturday night returned to Abuja after a State visit to Türkiye where he held high-level engagements aimed at strengthening bilateral relations and expanding economic, security and strategic cooperation between both countries.

    The President’s aircraft landed at the Presidential Wing of the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja by 8:55 p.m.

    He was received by the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Nyesom Wike; the Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Wale Edun; the Minister of State for Defence, Bello Matawalle; and other senior government officials.

    Tinubu’s return followed a series of bilateral meetings in Ankara with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, during which both leaders agreed to intensify cooperation across trade, investment, defence, energy and counter-terrorism.

    At a joint press briefing in Ankara, President Erdogan reaffirmed Türkiye’s commitment to achieving a $5 billion trade volume with Nigeria, noting that discussions toward the target had already commenced.

    Current trade volume between the two countries stands at about $2 billion.

    The Turkish leader said the planned establishment of a Joint Economy and Trade Committee would unlock opportunities to expand bilateral trade and support Turkish investments in Nigeria, describing it as a critical mechanism for reaching the $5 billion target.

    Read Also: Nigeria on ‘healing journey’ to $1trn economy by 2030 – Presidency

    Erdogan praised President Tinubu’s commitment to attracting investment, noting that the presence of several Nigerian ministers and senior officials underscored that determination.

    He also hailed ongoing reforms in Nigeria’s energy sector, expressing optimism that cooperation between the Turkish Petroleum Corporation and Nigerian counterparts would yield positive outcomes.

    On security, the Turkish President pledged support for Nigeria’s fight against terrorism, particularly in the Sahel region, and offered closer cooperation in military training and intelligence sharing.

    He said Türkiye was ready to share its experience in counter-terrorism and defence industry collaboration.

    In his remarks at the briefing, Tinubu expressed appreciation for Türkiye’s openness and willingness to collaborate in promoting global freedom, stability and shared prosperity.

    He stressed the importance of building an inclusive economy that brings vulnerable groups into productive activity.

    The President also commended Erdogan’s role in advancing global peace efforts, particularly in Somalia, and reaffirmed Nigeria’s commitment to peace and stability in Africa despite regional challenges.

    At the end of the bilateral meeting, officials of both countries exchanged nine agreements, including a Joint Declaration establishing the Economy and Trade Joint Committee, agreements on defence cooperation, diaspora policy, halal quality infrastructure, higher education, media and communication, education, diplomatic training, and social services cooperation.

  • Nigeria on ‘healing journey’ to $1trn economy by 2030 – Presidency

    Nigeria on ‘healing journey’ to $1trn economy by 2030 – Presidency

    The Presidency said Nigeria is on a “healing journey” and firmly on course to build a $1 trillion economy by 2030 as it intensifies efforts to deepen economic and financial inclusion and reposition the country as Africa’s leading hub for a borderless digital economy.

    The Technical Adviser to the President on Economic and Financial Inclusion, Office of the Vice President, Dr. Nurudeen Zauro, stated this at the weekend in Abuja during a media parley where organisers unveiled details of the 2026 RegTech Africa Conference and Expo.

    Zauro said President Bola Ahmed Tinubu set a clear economic target from his first day in office, anchored on reforms aimed at restoring confidence, expanding inclusion and attracting investment.

    “From day one, Mr President set a target of deepening Nigeria’s economic and financial sector to achieve a $1 trillion economy by 2030. To get there, we must build trust, infrastructure and inclusion, supported by policies that promote partnership and collaboration. That is the essence of a borderless economy,” he said.

    Nigeria is set to host the continental conference from May 20 to 22, 2026, under the patronage of the Office of the Vice President. 

    The event with the theme “Building trust, infrastructure, inclusion and policy for a borderless economy,” is being organised in partnership with the Presidential Committee on Economic and Financial Inclusion and in collaboration with the Inter-Governmental Action Group Against Money Laundering in West Africa.

    Zauro acknowledged that recent policy changes have been difficult for citizens but insisted they are necessary to restore long-term economic health.

    “It takes a bold decision for a father who knows his child is sick to take him to the hospital, allow him to go through surgery and come out hale and hearty. Nigeria has gone through painful reforms, but today we are on a healing journey,” he said.

    According to him, key economic indicators are beginning to improve as investor confidence gradually returns. 

    “The numbers are changing. Investors are coming, and Nigeria is back on its trajectory to success. Our leadership position in Africa is being reinforced,” he added.

    He said the administration is deliberately leveraging the African Continental Free Trade Area to strengthen Nigeria’s regional influence, noting that the President and Vice President have been engaging global partners to attract collaboration and investment.

    On financial inclusion, Zauro said the push is driven by a presidential directive and anchored on the ASO Accord on Economic and Financial Inclusion, which underscores commitment, partnership and collaboration across government.

    He added that the inclusion agenda has been elevated to the National Economic Council to ensure full buy-in by states. 

    “It is not enough to make policy at the centre; it must reach the sub-nationals so that every Nigerian is part of it. Our principle remains that no one should be left behind,” he said.

    Organisers of the conference said multi-stakeholder engagement is critical to resolving persistent challenges facing citizens and businesses, particularly in rural and underserved communities. 

    They noted that access to markets and efficient payment systems could significantly boost productivity and economic output.

    “If people have access to markets and can receive payments seamlessly, even from remote communities, productivity will increase,” they said, stressing that inclusive conversations and practical solutions are key to unlocking Nigeria’s economic potential.

  • Appeal Court affirms death sentence passed on Offa robbery convicts

    Appeal Court affirms death sentence passed on Offa robbery convicts

    The Court of Appeal sitting in Ilorin, Kwara State has affirmed the death sentences passed on five 2018 Offa robbery convicts.

    The court dismissed their appeals as lacking merit.

     The Director of Public Prosecution (DPP) in the state, Mohammed Akande, who witnessed the proceedings, said that the three Appeal Court judges unanimously agreed on the judgement and affirmed the verdict of the state High Court condemning the five persons to death by hanging.

     “The Court of Appeal, Ilorin Division comprising of Hon. Justice Ridwan Maiwada Abdullahi JCA, Hon. Justice Gabriel Kolawole JCA and Hon. Justice Abdul Dogo today, Friday affirmed the judgment of Hon. Justice H. A. Saleeman of the Kwara State High Court, that sentenced the Appellants: Niyi Ogundiran, Salawu Azeez, Ibikunle Ogunleye, Ayoade Akinnibosun and Adeola Abraham to death by hanging for the involvement in the Offa Bank Robbery”.

     Another official of the Court also said that the appellate court rejected all the grounds of appeal filed by the convicts and ordered their immediate return to prison custody.

     “The court dismissed all their grounds of appeal and upheld their convictions. They have been taken back to prison,” the official said.

    The official said that the arguments raised at the Court of Appeal were unconvincing and may not succeed if repeated at the apex court.

    Read Also: ‘Turkish investors should explore Nigeria’s $255b market for industrial, business expansion’

     It is recalled that Ayoade Akinnibosun, Azeez Salahudeen, Niyi Ogundiran, Ibikunle Ogunleye and Adeola Abraham were convicted of armed robbery, illegal possession of firearms and culpable homicide.

     A sixth suspect, Michael Adikwu, a retired police officer, died in custody before the commencement of the trial.

     At least 32 people were killed, including nine police officers, two of whom were women, making it one of the deadliest bank robberies in Nigeria’s history.

     Justice Haleemah Saleeman of the Kwara State High Court had earlier sentenced the five convicts to death by hanging after a trial that lasted about six years and attracted nationwide attention.

     In her judgment, which lasted over four hours, Justice Salman held that the prosecution proved its case beyond reasonable doubt.

    She said the convicts “acted contrary to the law and allowed their connections with those in power at the time to lead them astray”.

    In addition to the death sentence, the trial court also sentenced them to three years’ imprisonment for illegal possession of firearms, in line with provisions of Nigeria’s penal laws.

     Lead prosecution counsel, Rotimi Jacobs (SAN), described the appellate court’s decision as thorough and well considered, despite the prolonged delays that characterised the trial.

     On the defence side, Abdullah Jimba, counsel to one of the convicts, said that preparations were underway to pursue a final appeal at the Supreme Court.

  • Dispute over N1.969tr FAAC funds delays January salaries nationwide

    Dispute over N1.969tr FAAC funds delays January salaries nationwide

    • How state Commissioners of Finance rejected amount for sharing

    A disagreement over the sharing of N1.969 trillion by  the three levels of government is stalling the  distribution of federation revenue for the second week running, The Nation gathered yesterday.

    The development has affected the payment of January salary to civil/public servants in parts of the country.

     Government employees  are usually paid  within five days of  the monthly meeting of the Federation Account Allocation Committee (FAAC) where revenue from the federation account is shared.

    However, this month has been different, as the funds agreed upon at the January 20, 2026 meeting in Abuja have not yet been released to the three tiers of government.

    Sources familiar with the situation attributed the disagreement to the rejection, by Finance  Commissioners  who normally represent the states at the FAAC meeting, of  the amount tabled  for sharing.

    The commissioners ,it was gathered, believed the amount was too small and did not reflect the actual revenue that came in during December 2025.

    “The states felt the money brought forward did not match what was realised in December. That is why they did not agree to the distribution,” one of the sources said.

    READ ALSO: Tunji Olaopa, critical reforms and the Trump challenge (2)

    A fresh meeting of the  FAAC has been scheduled for Monday to break the deadlock,the source said.

    “It is possible that the amount will be adjusted to meet the expectations of the state governments,” he added.

      At the January meeting, the  FAAC had tabled  N1.969 trillion for sharing  from a total revenue of N2.585 trillion recorded in December 2025 . The meeting was chaired by the Minister of State for Finance, Dr. Doris Uzoka-Anite.

    A breakdown of the revenue shows that N846.5 billion came from Value Added Tax, N1.631 trillion from other statutory sources, and N38.1 billion from the Electronic Money Transfer Levy.

    The  Federal Government was expected to receive N653.5 billion while the 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory were to share N706.4 billion and  the 774 local government councils N513.2 billion.

    Oil-producing states were also set to receive N96 billion as their 13 percent derivation from oil revenue.

     The delay is said to have sparked  anxiety in many states, as most of them depend heavily on the monthly FAAC allocation to run their governments.

     About 31 states rely on this money for at least 80 percent of their monthly spending, including the payment of workers’ salaries and the funding of basic projects.

    One state official, who asked not to be named, said: “without this allocation, it becomes very difficult to meet our obligations, especially salary payments and essential services.”

    FAAC is made up of representatives of  key government and revenue agencies, including the Federal Ministry of Finance, the Office of the Accountant-General of the Federation, the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited, the Nigeria Customs Service, the Federal Inland Revenue Service, state Commissioners of Finance, and representatives of local governments.

    As workers across the country wait for their January pay, attention is now on the next FAAC meeting, where it is hoped that the parties involved will reach an agreement and allow the long-delayed funds to be released.

  • How I became pregnant for my husband’s son — Nasarawa housewife

    How I became pregnant for my husband’s son — Nasarawa housewife

    • Say I slept with him because my husband lost his potency  

    • Husband: I know who was responsible for my impotence

    Tongues are wagging in Bargu, a community in Awe Local Government Area, Nasarawa State over the confession of a 40-year-old housewife, Mrs Esther Jemkwe, who slept with her 23-year-old stepson because she was desperate to produce a child for her husband.

    Esther said she hit on the idea of sleeping with the only child her husband, Audu Jemkwe, had from a failed marriage he had before they met because she realised that he became impotent a few weeks after they got married in 2022.

    Our correspondent gathered that before 51-year-old Audu’s marriage to Esther in 2022, he had been involved 27 years earlier in another marriage that was blessed with a son named Theophilus before it collapsed and they parted ways. Theophilus, however, chose to stay with his father.

    It was gathered that before his second marriage in 2022, Audu, a carpenter by profession, was sexually very active, which was one of the reasons he chose to remarry. Theophilus, on his part, was an automobile mechanic and, like his father, had no meaningful education.

    Trouble began after Esther got married to Audu only to find that her once virile partner had lost his potency.

    Recalling the shocking discovery, Esther said: “His manhood stopped functioning the moment I moved into his house. We did everything humanly possible to revive it but to no avail. I was worried, but I could not discuss it with anybody because it is embarrassing.”

    Recalling the good memories of their earlier days together, she said: “We bonded together and were in love. He proposed marriage to me and we agreed to it. We planned towards a particular date.

    “What attracted me to him was that he was very good in bed and he satisfied me sexually.

    “Honestly, apart from his caring nature, his performance in bed was among the factors that attracted me to him.

    “I am the only daughter of my parents, and they are no longer alive. They died during the farmers/herders crisis in Nasarawa.

    READ ALSO: The Economist: Nigeria’s economy moving from the brink

    “I had difficulty getting a husband while I needed to get married to have a rest of mind since we lived in a village where herders disturb often. But the people who kept coming were only interested in sleeping with me until Mr Audu Jemkwe, a carpenter, came with genuine intentions and we made it.

    “So, moving into his house, my dream was to have children. Jemkwe (Audu) was sexually fit until we got married. But shortly after, his manhood started failing. I became worried because he became impotent.

    “I endured this for over year and kept hoping that the problem would go away, but months passed and the situation did not improve. So I decided to inform his first son.”

    From Esther’s discussion with Theophilus who practices his vehicle mechanic in Lafia while Esther was a trader, buying and selling goods between Awe and Lafia, the state capital, a relationship developed between the two.

    Given the mutual feelings shared by the two, they did not see any reason why they could not engage each other instead of going outside, especially as Theophilus shares the same blood with her husband with whom she was now living like cat and dog after orthodox and traditional efforts made to fix his impotence failed.

    The situation resulted in accusations and counter-accusations between the couple. Putting the blame on her husband, Esther said that while she was willing to approach a soothsayer to ascertain what was wrong with Audu, he on his part was not favourably disposed to the idea.

    She believes that Audu knew the source of the problem but chose to hide it from her. But to be doubly sure that the problem did not lie with her, Esther decided to test her own virility by luring her husband’s son into a secret affair with a stem warning not to reveal it to anyone. Investigation revealed that their intimate affair lasted the entire Year 2025.

    Each time Esther came down to Lafia for her business, she would pass a night at Theophilus’ place. The reason, she said, was to ascertain her ability to conceive a baby, because she needed a child badly and age was no longer on her side.

    After frequent visits to Lafia, Esther eventually missed her period, signaling that she was pregnant. But when she broke the news to her husband, what ordinarily should be a piece of good news became a source of quarrel. Audu vehemently denied ownership of the pregnancy and also alleged foul play. He said since they got married, there had been no intercourse between them because his manhood had been down.

    The angry husband, accusing Esther of infidelity, asked her to pack her things and move out of his house to live with the man responsible for her pregnancy.

    Pressured by our correspondent, Esther eventually opened up to tell her own side of the story.

    She said: “I am not a loose woman. I am just a woman who loves her husband very much and didn’t want to lose him. I did what I did to save my marriage even though I feel guilty about it.

    “It was not easy, but I slept with his first son from his first wife so that I could give my husband a child. But rather than sustain my marriage, the plan has scattered it.

    “I got married to my husband over four years ago. We had no child. The worst was that I never got pregnant even for one day, because we were not mating. He is impotent.

    “When I realised that I was no longer getting younger, I was worried as much as he was. His relations became so impatient that they started breathing down my neck.

    “They gave me no breathing space at all. They said I was cheating on their son and that I had no womb to bear a child. They did not know that their son was impotent.

    “The mother decided to move in to live with us in Awe and practically made life in my matrimonial home unbearable for me.

    “At a point, she stopped talking to me. The only time she would talk to me was when she wanted to insult me and remind me of how less a woman I was.

    “I was confused. More so when my husband kept mute and refused further efforts to ascertain the source of the problem.

    “But any time I was in Lafia with Theophilus, we used to have serious lovemaking sessions, especially during my ovulation period, all in a bid to get pregnant so that my mother-in-law would stop humiliating me.

    “Luckily, God answered my prayers

    “I was moved to continue my affair with Theophilus in Lafia because the insult from my mother-in-law was getting too much, too unbearable for me. She vowed to frustrate me out of her son’s home, not knowing their son was impotent.

    “It is so agonising to say this. Instead of testing someone else to ascertain my fertility, I seduced and slept with his son. Theophilus is a young man in his early 20s.He had not started sleeping with women before I lured him into making love with me.

    “I started by buying good things for him anytime I went to Lafia, sleeping with him on the same bed and playing with his manhood. Gradually, one thing led to another.

    “There was a time I asked him if he had tested sex before and he said no. I wondered why a 23 years old boy had not known a woman. I compelled him to take an oath not to disclose it to anybody, and I said I would teach him.

    “I ensured that I did that during my ovulation period. I never disclosed the reason for this, but deep in my mind, I wanted to test my fertility.

    “I planned it during my ovulation. In fact, any time I was in my ovulation period, I ensured I visited him in Lafia where he works as a mechanic.

    “I had the key to his room and most people thought I was his mother.

    “I knew I was doing the wrong thing and betraying my husband, but I saw it as a necessary action to save my marriage.

    “I didn’t want to go sleeping with another man outside. I knew it was wrong, so I preferred it from his son. After some months, I discovered that I was pregnant.”

    Now that the deed had been done and her husband has sent her packing from their matrimonial home, she said she would do nothing else but try to reassemble the pieces of her broken life and move on.

    She has since relocated to Lafia to continue with her business

    Although she regrets her action, she said she had decided to keep the pregnancy “because it is blood within blood”.

    I know who was responsible for my impotence — Husband

    Lamenting the incident, Audu said: “I know where my problem came from. A man in my village whose wife I dated for years before I got married is behind my predicament.

    “I was lucky that he allowed me to produce a child with my first wife. But he has vowed that I would not give birth.

    “He got me through my old shoes. And when my manhood stopped functioning, I consulted a native doctor somewhere without my wife knowing. That was shortly after I got married.

    “The native doctor told me everything, that the old man I was dating his wife in the village was the brains behind my sudden impotency. He advised me to go and beg the man. I did, but the man is yet to forgive me.

    “At first, he denied responsibility but later accepted and told me he would look into it.

    “I’m confused about my life. My dream of getting married to bear children that will add to Theophilus was aborted,

    “I am the only male child of my parents and they are old. In fact, my father is not alive, though he warned me against my affairs with women before he died.

    “Yes, I asked my wife to pack and leave my house. She has since moved to Lafia.

    “People are telling me that since she did it with Theophilus who is my son, I should consider her decision and allow her.

    “I’m still thinking about it.”

    Contacted, Theophilus admitted having such an affair with his father’s wife. But he said “it is a family matter that will be settled with time”.

  • Sit-at home: Soludo’s solution faces test Monday

    Sit-at home: Soludo’s solution faces test Monday

    • We’ll resume Monday trading if security is guaranteed – Traders

    • Educators, business people relive ordeal flouting order

    • Sit-at-Home enjoys no legitimacy – IPOB counsel

    • How Enugu overcame fears, broke Monday boycott

    All eyes are on Anambra State as the controversy stirred up following the one week closure slammed on Ontisha Main Market by Governor Chukwuma Soludo, over the traders Monday Sit-at-Home protest, rages on.

    Monday, February 2, 2026, will be a moment of truth for both the governor, and traders at Onitsha Market following the former Central Bank Governor’s hardline position that the Sit-at-home order started by the proscribed Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) must cease to be obeyed in any part of the state under any guise.

    The day will be a time to test if the governor’s directive will be adhered to by the traders who have expressed willingness to open for businesses if adequate security is guaranteed.

    It is also a day to show if Soludo will match his words with action by rolling everything in his government’s arsenal to deal with criminal elements who take pleasure in unleashing incalculable and unimaginable havoc on innocent citizens for defying the Sit-at-Home order.

    A meeting between Soludo and the Onitsha Main Market stakeholders on Thursday, ended with the traders promising to end Monday Sit-at-home if the government provides them with enough security.

    They told Soludo that what they did was not disobedience to his directive; rather fear of their lives at the hands of the gunmen.

    The leadership of the Market, in the interactive session, was led by the chairman, Chijioke Okpalugo with other members of the Executive, at the government’s Light House in Awka,

    While speaking, Okpalugo, said traders were prepared to commence Monday trading as usual in support of Soludo’s one Anambra, while appealing for enough security to guarantee the safety of the traders and the goods.

    They requested for visible security architecture and organized motor park to facilitate movement of goods of the customers, while also demanding for punishment to those who enforce Sit-at-home in the Market

    The governor was blunt in telling them that all markets and shops in Anambra State must remain open on every working day, including Mondays.

    He maintained that the era of sit-at-home-induced market closures was over, stating that   Igboland and Anambra state must move forward.

    “For those shouting “show me the law where you can close our shops”, I want to say that they should be ready when I show it to them. I will also show them the law that empowers me to revoke that market and use it for whatever is better for the state.

    “I can revoke that market, pay compensation to people who have private structures there, and use it for even an annex of Agunechemba Security if I like.

    “I hope that push will not come to shove, but in the next two weeks, we will start recertification. A lot of people want shops in that market, so if you are not ready to open shops, go elsewhere. We will revoke your shops and give them to people who are willing to open” Soludo said

    READ ALSO: Tunji Olaopa, critical reforms and the Trump challenge (2)

    He specifically presented a “renovate or rebuild” option for the market, offering either a complete redevelopment into a modern trading hub or a comprehensive overhaul of existing structures.

    He insisted that business activities must continue irrespective of the option chosen.

    Soludo described the enforcement of the sit-at-home as a criminal enterprise no longer connected to the agitation for the release of Mazi Nnamdi Kanu, dismissing claims that the order was linked to the detained IPOB leader.

    “It is not linked to Mazi Nnamdi Kanu. He does not support the sit-at-home. If it doesn’t happen in Umuahia, his hometown, why Onitsha and Nnewi? Soludo asked

    He assured traders of an overhaul of the state’s security architecture around markets, pledging that Anambra’s commercial centres would be protected from harassment and intimidation from the hoodlums

    Genesis of fresh trouble     

    The fresh trouble started when the governor, on Monday paid an unscheduled visit to the biggest market in sub-Saharan Africa and discovered that despite his warnings and pleadings to stop the Sit-at-home on Mondays that the market remained closed.

    He eventually closed it for one week, promising it will be extended to one month if the traders failed to resume coming Monday, declaring, “enough is enough”.

    Protest erupted the following day. The crowd of traders that went on rampage was infiltrated, it was discovered. They could not do much because Soludo had sent troops of red eyed security operatives to the market

    Some of the traders stormed the government Light House (Government House) in Awka to pour their hearts out. Soludo was not moved.

    Innocuous as the protest appeared, observers said the politics of Sit-at-home by traders isn’t ordinary.

    The Sit-at-home situation, introduced by the outlawed indigenous people of Biafra IPOB, led by jailed, Mazi Nnamdi Kanu in 2021, has become another thorn in the flesh of Ndigbo.

    Before then, Mondays were days traders from across Ghana, Cameron, Togo, Benin, Niger, Ivory Coast among others visit the major markets in Igboland to purchase goods, but that idea died about six years ago, no thanks to IPOB’s senseless killings and kidnappings.

    The Biafra agitators turned themselves into monsters every Monday, trying to enforce the Sit-at-home on the citizenry and the fear grew.

    Opposition politicians came into the fray, using the momentum to challenge the government until their families were roped in and some of them were killed, including their loved ones.

    Though, it was believed that IPOB was hijacked at a time, even when it’s leader, Nnamdi Kanu had allegedly, disengaged from the Sit-at-home, but the monster he created, continued.

    The Monday Sit-at-home has crippled the vibrant Southeast economy, yet, the leaders of these states had been helpless.

    Those leaders in different states, including Anambra, created different security outfits to compliment the conventional ones, all to no avail.

    The supposed separatist group metamorphosed into “unknown gunmen” maiming, killing the police, military, kidnapping, burning government facilities and vehicles etc.

    But today, the tide has shifted.  Soludo has brought what looks like solution that comes with fury.

    But the governor’s position didn’t go well with the people many of who wondered if the state helmsman is oblivious of the mindlessness of the enforcers of the sit at home order.

    A teacher, Anulika Okonkwo who resides in Onitsha but teaches in a school in Awka described a trip to Awka from Onitsha on Mondays as scary.

    She said, “First is the fear of the unknown gunmen. Having heard or watched on social media where gunmen killed people and destroyed properties during sit at home on Mondays, once you board a vehicle, you’re already gripped with fear, praying nonstop till you get to Awka.

    “Secondly are the limited vehicles on the road to convey you from Onitsha to Awka.

    “Many drivers have cancelled their work on Mondays due to the deadly behaviour of the gunmen on these days, making it difficult to see bus easily available to Awka.

    “Thirdly is the cost of transportation. On Mondays, transportation is very expensive compared to other days. From Onitsha to Awka is almost doubled of the price.

    “More worrisome is the time factor. Due to insufficient vehicles which lead to high cost of transportation, arriving Awka late becomes a normal thing on Mondays.”

    Another teacher in one of the schools in Ihiala area of the state who preferred anonymous complained about the availability of students and pupils on Mondays.

    “Even when the teachers come to school on Mondays, the students would not be available to be thought as parents have refused to release their children because of insecurity in the state.

    “Besides, those of us in the remote villages find it difficult transporting ourselves to school on Mondays as a result of limited vehicles.

    “Above all is the fear of insecurity in the state. Most of us are afraid of going to school on Mondays because of fear of insecurity,” she said.

    A trader in Onitsha Market, Augustine Onyema, who hails from Imo state, described Soludo as one who hates people’s progress.

    The angry 52 year old woman lamented that some of their colleagues lost their lives, while some others were kidnapped for not obeying Sit-at-home in the past.

    Another trader, Mr John Chuma Nwosu, who contested the November 8 governorship election on the platform of African Democratic Congress, ADC, described Soludo sledgehammer on the traders as hasty.

    According to him, “when a tsetse fly perches on your scrotum, you quickly learn that not all problems can be solved with force and sledgehammer. Wisdom, patience, and tact often achieve what brute action cannot”

    “When he made that decision of closing the life line of Ndigbo for days, it became immediately clear that he had misjudged the moment.

    “The sit-at-home phenomenon was largely organic and, by all indications, was gradually losing steam. What he required was sustained dialogue, diplomacy, confidence-building, and strategic engagement—not a sudden action that risked inflaming tensions and punishing innocent traders.

    “No state government has administratively ever shut Otu Nkwo Onitsha. Markets are not mere clusters of stalls; they are living institutions that sustain families, communities, and entire regional economies.

    “Decisions affecting them must, therefore, be measured, consultative, and humane” Nwosu said

    Also, Alphonsus Obi from Anambra state debunked the allegation by Soludo that majority of those who Sit-at-home are not from Anambra state.

    For Mrs Chiamaka Ezebilo, it remains a shock why the state government would be ordering them like school children.

    The woman admitted that majority of the traders are sympathetic to the IPOB leader, because according to her, “he’s the only one speaking the minds of Igbo and challenging government anywhere.

    Regrettably, some of the traders are equally, members of IPOB, the reason, they continue to observe the Monday Sit-at-home, despite all the threats from government

    According to the 61 year old woman,” we opened during the Christmas to join the season’s sells.

    Personally, I’m not a member of any group; I don’t come out on Mondays because those killing people in this state use it as decoy to perpetrate their devilish act.

    However, the leadership of the market described the government’s action as a welcome development.

    The chairman of the market, Chijioke Okpalugo, hailed Soludo, saying his action was to rescue them from the hands of the hoodlums and helping the traders. It was his opinion.”

    Soludo threatens to demolish market

    On Wednesday, Soludo, addressed select newsmen at the government House, where he threatened to demolish the entire market and reallocate the shops if the trend continues.

    Soludo told them that the market belongs to the government, adding that as the governor, he takes decision on it.

    The commissioner for Information, Dr Law Mefor, while speaking with The Nation, said the administration of Soludo is not against Biafra as being speculated by certain individuals, but the rascality or the armed struggle that has been the issue.

    He noted that when it was tried before, it set the region 50 years back, saying that the decision by Soludo is sacrosanct.

    “What we’re seeing in Anambra is economic sabotage. Anambra is losing billions of naira every Monday, including the traders themselves. Why are they not doing sit- at -home in Nnamdi Kanu’s place?

    “70% of people doing sit at home are not from Anambra. Let them go do it in their own states” Mefor said.

    Mr Tony Okafor, a senior journalist and commentator on public affairs, said he saw anger and determination on Soludo’s face and body language, while standing in the sun listening to him

    Okafor said, “For over one hour, we stood under the scorching sun, right in front of the Governor’s Office at the Light House.

    Pens, telephones, notepads and recorders in hand.

    “Yet, no one complained. No one shifted restlessly. Everyone listened—with rapt, almost solemn attention—to what felt less like a press briefing and more like a sermon in the sun.

    “I watched Governor Chukwuma Soludo closely throughout that hour, jotting down not just his words but his demeanour.

    “Even when he attempted a smile, it was dry—strained. The kind that tells you the mind is fixed elsewhere.

    “One did not need a mind reader to decode it: internally, the governor was angry and, more importantly, resolved to fight the sit-at-home menace to its logical conclusion.

    “Soludo stated firmly that there would be no going back on the decision to shut Onitsha Main Market over traders’ continued refusal to open on Mondays.

    “What is playing out, he said, is nothing short of economic sabotage. Listening to him, one sensed that the phrase was not chosen for effect, but for accuracy.

    “As he spoke, his voice remained steady. No shouting. No theatrics. Just controlled anger—perhaps more unsettling than rage itself.

    “He reminded everyone that throughout the yuletide, markets opened from Monday to Saturday, and often even on Sundays, without incident.

    “So why the sudden fear? If Mondays are unsafe, why are people attending meetings, exercising in stadiums, and moving freely on those same days? Why, he asked pointedly, is the focus on markets—especially Onitsha Main Market?

    “Under the burning sun, his conclusion hung heavily in the air: this is not about insecurity; it is about orchestration.

    “Then came the warning. If traders persist in defiance, shop ownership could be revoked.

    “If push comes to shove, the government could take total possession of the market—even demolish it and rebuild according to a new plan.

    “As these words landed, Soludo’s tone never rose. That calm delivery, in that heat, sharpened the message. He sounded less like a man issuing threats and more like one outlining inevitabilities” Okafor wrote.

    IPOB contradicts self, asks traders to ignore Soludo

    The Media Officer for IPOB, who goes by the name, Emma Powerful, had raised a statement before now, urging traders to ignore the government.

    Prior to this period, IPOB had called for the cancellation of the sit-at-home order and distanced itself from anything that had to do with it.

    At some points IPOB had accused jailed Simon Ekpa of enforcing sit-at-home order despite cancellation.

     The group, prior to this time maintained that reports linking it or its security outfit, Eastern Security Network (ESN), to the attacks on people who failed to obey the sit-at-home were false.

    In one of the statements released by Emma Powerful, IPOB said: “We the Indigenous People of Biafra, IPOB, under the leadership of Mazi Nnamdi Kanu, wish to tell Governor Chukwuma Soludo of Anambra State that IPOB is not responsible for the criminality in Southeast, including Anambra State,” the statement reads.

    “The Governor should know that our enemies are committing atrocities using our name in their desperation to blackmail IPOB.

    “It is a certain Simon Ekpa and his criminal gang called autopilots that are carrying out threats against people’s lives because of non-existent Monday sit-at-home are criminals, kidnappers and robbers.

    “These people disturbing the peace of our people are not IPOB members. They should be treated as criminals. IPOB doesn’t shed blood. We are a peaceful movement.

    “We wish to reiterate once again that IPOB has cancelled Monday sit-at-home order and anybody or group enforcing the relaxed order is neither from IPOB nor from IPOB volunteer group. Any governor in the region who deemed it fit to stop non-existent Monday sit-at-home order in the region is free to do so.

    “Anyone caught adding to the pain of our people in the name of enforcing Monday sit-at-home order will be treated like the enemy that he or she is.

    “Why should such unpatriotic elements be inflicting pain on our people and dragging our image to the mud? IPOB remains a non-violent movement and our peaceful approach for Biafra restoration has not changed.”

    Contrary to the above position it held in the past, IPOB brazenly supported the Sit- at- home protest embarked upon by the traders during the week. The group’s inconsistencies saw it warning that further action by Soludo could trigger bloodshed in the state. It is a danger signal.

    Emma Powerful wrote: “IPOB seeks no confrontation with the Governor or the Anambra State Government, but we demand respect for the wishes of the masses.

    The voice of the people is the voice of God – (vox populi, vox Dei) – a principle well-known to the Governor as a professor.

    “When the great people of Anambra, the first sons of Igboland and the origin of the Igbo race, demand action toward the unconditional release of our leader, Mazi Nnamdi Kanu, it is the divine speaking through them.”

    Monday sit-at-home enjoys no legitimacy – IPOB’s lead Counsel

    Sir, Ifeanyi Ejiofor, the lead Counsel for IPOB, says the Monday sit-at-home enjoys no legitimacy, reiterating that his position on that has never changed. 

    According to him, “I have consistently maintained that the continued “enforcement” of a directive that no longer exists, kept alive solely through threats, rests on no ideological premise, no legal footing, and certainly no moral authority.

    “It is against this backdrop that the decision to shut down the Onitsha Main Market must be interrogated with sobriety, proportionality, and an unflinching fidelity to the rule of law.

    “Collective punishment of traders and law-abiding citizens, who are themselves hostages of fear, cannot, and must not, masquerade as security policy. It is neither strategic nor just.

    “Security governance, if it is to deserve the name, must be precise, intelligence-driven, and squarely targeted at the actual architects and executors of violence.

    “To shutter an entire economic nerve centre in response to criminal threats is to punish productivity while emboldening lawlessness.

    “Any response that collapses the distinction between criminality and commerce risks achieving the perverse: legitimising the tactics of violent actors while penalising innocent enterprise” Ejimofor said

    Another lawyer, Uchechukwugemezu Okafor, told The Nation that he had not seen any law that empowers government to compel business people to open their shops

    He said, “I am yet to know of any law that empowers government to compel traders to open their shops. In a free-enterprise society, government cannot arbitrarily command traders when to open their businesses.

    “Ordinarily, traders are free to decide when and how to conduct their enterprises. This freedom flows from constitutionally guaranteed rights to property, occupation, and movement.

    “The limited power government may exercise is regulatory—for instance, prescribing general market hours such as opening by 8:00 a.m. and closing by 6:00 p.m.—purely for order, safety, and administration” Okafor said

    They argue that the traders have every right to challenge the action of Soludo anywhere, but ruled out the act of violence on the matter.

    Though, Soludo’s approach is being hailed by the majority, but few others, especially, opposition see it from the prism of waking the sleeping lion.

    It had been established in the state that any time such statements are made, the hoodlums invade the state from all angles.

    But this time, Soludo seems like a man possessed, having given the hoodlums enough time. It is the time for the security operatives, including Agunechemba and Udo Ga Achi to show strength.

    The governor doesn’t show sign of a weakling this time, some people have ‘nicknamed ‘ him (Obiakpor – meaning the man of steel). It’s time for the traders to get up and be counted.

    The next time the lion of Isuofia roars, the devastating effect will be heavier. Soludo frowns when it matters most, but his subtle smile is more dangerous than his squeezed face.

  • Alleged cyberstalking: Court grants actress Angela Okorie N5m bail

    Alleged cyberstalking: Court grants actress Angela Okorie N5m bail

    • …trial begins March 23

    Detained actress, Angela Okorie, got a reprieve on Friday as a Federal High Court in Abuja granted her bail at N5million and a surety in the same amount.

    Justice Emeka Nwite had on January 28 ordered her remand to Suleja prison in Niger State following her arraignment on charges of criminal defamation and cyberstalking.

    On Friday, while ruling on Okorie’s bail application, Justice Nwite held that although the prosecution opposed her request for bail, there was no concrete evidence before the court to show that she would jump bail if granted.

    The judge said, “Therefore, I am minded to grant the bail in the interest of justice,” adding that bail is at the discretion of the court, which must be exercised judicially and judiciously.

    Justice Nwite ordered that the defendant’s sole surety must be a level 13 civil servant, who must depose to an affidavit of means

    He said the surety must produce his appointment letter and the letter of the last promotion.

    The judge ordered Okorie and her surety to submit two passport photographs to the court registrar, and that the residence of the surety must be verified by the registrar.

    Justice Nwite, who adjourned the matter until March 23 for trial, ordered Okorie to be further remanded in Suleja prison pending her compliance with the bail conditions.

    At the commencement of proceedings on Friday, prosecuting lawyer, Victor Okoye, informed the court about a seven-count amended charge filed by the prosecution and applied that the defendant’s plea be taken in relation to the amended charge.

    Justice Nwite granted Okoye’s application, following which Okorie was re-arraigned on the seven-count amended charge.

    She pleaded not guilty, following which Okoye applied for a date for the prosecution to open its case.

    Read Also: UPDATED: Court remands actress Angela Okorie in prison over alleged cyberstalking 

    Okorie of 1 Henry Montero Street, Lekki Palm City, Ajah, Lagos, is alleged, in the amended charge, marked: FHC/ABJ/CR/278/2025, to have conspired with Ifeoma Mbonu (now at large) to commit cyberstalking and defamation by calling a fellow actress, Mercy Johnson Okojie, a blood-sucking demon in their posts on their social media platforms of Instagram and TikTok.

    Okorie’s case stemmed from a petition by Mercy Johnson Okojie’s lawyer, in which sundry allegations were made against her and Ifeoma.

    Part of the petition, dated May 14, 2025, reads, “Most alarmingly, in a recent criminal and defamatory publication, Angela Okorie published the following statement via her Instagram page @ realagelaokorie: ‘Blood sucking demon no see blood suck again, E say na slimming tea. Except there’s no God, MJ go and beg people you chop their destinies and destroy their homes else no peace for the wicked!!! Gospel songs won’t save you. Your heart Is Dark!!!’

    “This malicious statement, clearly targeted at our client, was published with the intent to cause irreparable reputational injury, incite hatred, provoke unrest among the public, and further harass and emotionally traumatize our client.

    “The tone, content, and framing of the publication aim to portray our client as a destructive person, despite her widely known public image as a humanitarian and devout Christian mother.

    “The principal suspect, Angela Okorie, has demonstrated a relentless and calculated effort to incite public hatred and threaten public peace by repeatedly using her social media platform for criminal intimidation, false accusations, and criminal defamation.

    “She has become the most aggressive and persistent in this malicious campaign.”