Tag: Niger

  • Nigeria, Niger agree on terms to eradicate regional insurgency

    Nigeria, Niger agree on terms to eradicate regional insurgency

    The Comptroller-General of Customs, Adewale Adeniyi, yesterday, expressed the Nigeria Customs Service’s commitment to strengthening regional trade facilitation, safeguarding transit cargo, and enhancing cross-border security cooperation with neighbouring countries, particularly the Republic of Niger.

     Adeniyi made this disclosure yesterday, during a high-level bilateral meeting between the Nigeria Customs Service and the Niger Republic Customs Administration, led by its Director-General, Muhammadu Yaqouba, at the Customs House, Maitama, Abuja.

    The bilateral engagement is aimed at improving cooperation on the movement of transit goods destined for Niger through Nigeria, enhancing information sharing, addressing security challenges along shared borders, reducing delays along key transit corridors, and ensuring that legitimate trade contributes optimally to economic growth in both countries.

    Speaking at the meeting, the Comptroller -General congratulated the Director-General of Niger Republic Customs on his appointment, noting that both administrations share a long history of professional collaboration built through years of engagement at World Customs Organisation (WCO) platforms and bilateral initiatives on modern customs administration.

    According to him, “Cooperation between the two Customs services is shaped not only by shared borders but also by international obligations, particularly Nigeria’s responsibilities under Articles 124 to 132 of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, which guarantee landlocked countries access to the sea.”

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    CGC Adeniyi acknowledged the operational challenges faced by landlocked nations, explaining that dependence on neighbouring countries’ ports and infrastructure often increases transaction costs and affects competitiveness.

    “The Nigeria Customs Service has, over the years, remained committed to facilitating trade for our landlocked neighbours, including the Republic of Niger. This commitment will be sustained, irrespective of political differences, because trade, security and regional stability are interconnected,” Adeniyi said.

    Addressing concerns around transit bottlenecks, the Comptroller-General disclosed that President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, has approved the provision of safe corridors and safe passage to ease the movement of loaded trucks awaiting clearance.

    He assured that cargoes transiting through Nigeria, particularly those from Apapa Ports and Nigerian airports destined for neighbouring countries, would continue to be processed and moved within 48 hours, without compromising national security or economic interests.

    Adeniyi further revealed that strict measures have been put in place to prevent diversion of transit cargo, warning that economic operators who violate transit regulations would face stiff sanctions.

    “Non-compliance by a few operators creates non-tariff barriers and undermines trust. We are determined to ensure compliance, streamline documentation, and remove avoidable bottlenecks along major corridors such as Illela–Sokoto–Kamba–Niger Republic, as well as routes linking Apapa ports and airports to neighbouring countries,” he stated.

    He described the engagement as the beginning of a renewed phase of cooperation, stressing that sustained follow-up actions would help redefine operational modalities, reduce costs, increase trade volumes and make the corridor more attractive to transport operators.

    Earlier, the Director-General of the Niger Republic Customs Administration, Muhammadu Yaqouba, described the visit as a working engagement between two professional Customs administrations bound by shared responsibilities.

    He thanked the Nigeria Customs Service for the warm reception accorded to him and his delegation, noting that the hospitality reflected the longstanding fraternity between both countries and their Customs institutions.

    According to him, the visit was necessitated by two major challenges, including the prolonged blockage of trucks transiting from the Republic of Benin to Niger Republic, as well as prevailing security concerns across the region.

    “We face common security challenges, particularly terrorism and banditry, and we believe that engagements like this provide an opportunity to find lasting solutions through cooperation and coordination,” Yaqouba said.

    He disclosed that Niger Republic has intensified efforts since 2024 to tackle terrorism, including the launch of Operation Saran Kasa, a coordinated initiative involving all national security agencies, which has recorded notable success.

    As part of the operation, he said scanners have been deployed to inspect all goods entering Niger Republic, stressing that Customs administrations have a critical role to play in combating terrorism, arms trafficking and cross-border criminality.

    The Director-General recalled previous bilateral meetings, including the last engagement held in April 2023, expressing confidence that both administrations would continue to work together to meet shared obligations and deliver tangible outcomes for their countries.

    Also speaking, the National Coordinator of the National Counter-Terrorism Centre, Office of the National Security Adviser (ONSA), Major-General Garba Laka, congratulated the Director-General of Niger Republic Customs on his appointment and extended condolences to the Government and people of Niger over the recent terrorist attack near Niamey Airport.

    He described the incident as painful, condemning the attack and sympathising with the families of soldiers who lost their lives, while reaffirming the shared resolve of Nigeria and Niger to prevent a recurrence.

    Major-General Laka stressed that Nigeria and Niger share more than borders, describing the two countries as one people with deep historical, cultural and familial ties, particularly in border communities where families live and trade across both countries.

    “Insecurity in any part of the Sahel affects all of us. Arms trafficking, drug smuggling and the concealment of ammunition in cargo vehicles remain major threats that require coordinated and sustained action,” he said.

    He disclosed that the Government of Nigeria places high priority on Niger-related matters, including trade, energy supply and security, noting that requests from Niger, particularly on petroleum products and gas, receive prompt attention at the highest level.

    The Major-General advocated the revival of bilateral security frameworks such as cross-border right-of-pursuit arrangements, stressing that such mechanisms are essential for effectively combating terrorism and organised crime.

    He called for joint Nigeria–Niger operations and sustained inter-agency collaboration, expressing confidence that the outcomes of the meeting would be translated into concrete actions.

  • Travails offarmers forced off their farmlands by miners, herders in Niger

    Travails offarmers forced off their farmlands by miners, herders in Niger

    The battle for land in Niger State is no longer just between man and nature; it is now between farmers, herders and miners, with women caught in the middle. From Paikoro to Gurara and Agaie, farmlands are being destroyed and livelihoods are being erased. In this report, Justina Asishana highlights how the women who once fed their communities are now struggling to hold on to their farmlands.

    Every morning, Agnes Aynadanyi, a farmer in Daku village, Gurara Local Government Area (LGA), Niger state, walks past deep holes carved into the earth where her millet once grew. She does not need anyone to tell her who dug them – gold miners who have invaded their lands.

    Agnes, who started farming three years ago, had always enjoyed bountiful harvests despite the challenges associated with accessing fertilisers and other farm inputs, but she barely got 10 bags of guinea corn from her last planting season.

    “When they came, they took no permission from anybody; they just started digging the corner there,” she said, standing near one of the pits and pointing to the edge of the farm.

    “Before we knew anything, they started shifting, digging holes everywhere. When we asked them, they said they were looking for gold.

    “There was a year I harvested up to 50 bags of guinea corn. But last year, I did not get up to 10 bags because these days, if you plant, nothing grows here. The land is dead.

    “Look at the corn I planted recently. You can see that they did not grow very well. The land is gone because of these miners,” she lamented.

    Comfort Joseph had to abandon her farm at Dikko ward in Gurara LGA, NigerSstate and move to a farm on Lambatta Road, which is still in the same local government but a long distance from the farm in Dikko ward, in order to be able to farm properly and avoid the menace of the miners who had destroyed her farm.

    “These miners have really driven many farmers around here out of their farms, particularly me, and it has drawn the farmers back.

    “They made me to vacate the land on which I had farmed for years. I had to get another farm in another village, which is some kilometres away. 

    “The way they have affected the land, in 10 to 15 years, no one can farm there and the crops will yield results. The farm I abandoned was where I grew maize, guinea corn and soya beans, and it is very good for those crops,” she said.

    The identity of the miners is currently unknown. Some of the affected farmers said some of them come from far northern states like Zamfara, Kano and Kebbi while there are also foreigners who come from Niger and Benin Republic to join in mining.

    The Niger State Government had formulated a policy in 2024 banning mining activities across the state, but this has not been heeded as mining activities are still going on across the state. It is very rampant in Shiroro, Munya, Rafi, Paikoro, Gurara and Rijau local government areas.

    There are usually enforcement teams from the state’s Ministry of Mineral Resources who go to these mining sites to enforce the no-mining policy. But the enforcement trains are limited by funding, which makes their operations less frequent, leaving room for the miners to operate without restriction.

    Farming between fear and loss

    Across Paikoro, Gurara and Agaie, miners are not the only concern for women farmers as they are also losing their crops to herders who graze cattle through their fields.

    “I planted cassava and I spent a lot of money on it”, said Alice Amako in Agaie LGA, her voice rising with anger. “The cows entered and ate up everything.

    “On the money I spent on it before it was wasted, I would say it was up to N200,000.  When I went to complain, the police said they would look into it, but they have done nothing about it till today.”

    Sarah Mathew, another farmer in Agaie, who plants rice and groundnut, lamented that Fulani herders unleashed their cows on her farm when her crops had gotten to the stage of harvesting and she lost a lot of money, including the sum she used in hiring labourers to help her. 

    “One of my challenges is getting labourers to the farm. I cook for them and pay them. Then, when you plant, the Fulanis will not allow you to harvest what you have planted.

    “Even yesterday, they cut my crops for their cows to eat, whereas I have spent so much.

    “They won’t even allow us farmers to harvest what we plant.”

    In Paikoro, Hannah Bala says she no longer sleeps soundly during the harvest season.

    She said: “Sometimes, I go to the farm in the morning and see that my maize and groundnuts have been eaten up (by cattle) overnight.

    “Last season, my groundnut and maize were all eaten up; I couldn’t salvage anything.

    “If you confront them, they threaten you. They carry sticks and cutlasses.”

    The cost of silence

    The women farmers say they have learned to avoid confrontation. “It is better to run for your life,” said Comfort about the herders. “If you fight, they can harm you. They have killed people before.”

    But running comes at a cost. Many have abandoned their ancestral farmlands and now rent new plots in faraway villages.

    “I pay ₦100,000 every year to rent a farmland. We women don’t get free land. If you don’t rent early, you won’t get anywhere to plant.” said Ladi Makun, who farms rice and pumpkins in Paikoro LGA.

    Efforts made to dislodge the miners from their lands are often abortive as they return days after they are driven away or arrested by security personnel. Others return at night when the farmers must have gone home.

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    “We sometimes use police and soldiers to pick them up, but after some days, they reemerge and continue from where they stopped.  We quarrel sometimes. But they have not fought anybody here on my land. They always come back despite everything we do,” said Agnes.

    The combination of destroyed farms, expensive rent, and high input costs has left many women with little or no profit. “Before I even start farming, I’m already in debt,” Ladi said.

    Mining the soil, killing the land

    The miners’ presence is changing more than the landscape. The air smells of burnt earth, and rainwater fills the pits, turning them into breeding grounds for mosquitoes. If a farmer or someone not used to the terrain gets unlucky to falls into the pit, the person gets injured and may end up breaking a leg.

    “We used to get 20 bags of corn. Now, even with fertiliser, we get little. The land is tired. The holes are too many. You can fall in and die,” Agnes said.

    Mining on fertile farmland has severe and often irreversible impacts, including land degradation, water pollution and the loss of agricultural livelihoods. Environmental experts warn that unregulated mining contaminates soil and water with heavy metals, making farmland infertile for years.

    The most direct impact is complete loss and degradation of the soil, which is the primary asset of fertile land.

    Open-pit mining, which is the most common method, involves removing topsoil and vegetation to access minerals. This permanently destroys the land’s agricultural capacity. Mining waste, known as tailings, and windblown dust can heavily contaminate the surrounding soil.

    This contamination often includes heavy metals like lead, arsenic and cadmium. These metals are toxic to plants, inhibit growth, and can be absorbed by crops, posing a serious health risk to humans and livestock.

    Mining is extremely water-intensive and a major source of water pollution, which devastates farming operations far beyond the mine’s immediate footprint.

    One of the most serious environmental effects is acid mine drainage (AMD). When sulphide minerals in excavated rock are exposed to air and water, they create sulfuric acid. This acid leaches toxic heavy metals from the rock, creating a highly polluted runoff that can poison rivers, streams, and groundwater. This water becomes unusable for irrigation or livestock, as it can kill crops and animals.

    Mining operations also consume vast quantities of water, often diverting it from local rivers or groundwater sources. This directly competes with agriculture, which relies on the same water for irrigation, especially in water-stressed regions.

    But for the women farmers, the danger is more immediate: hunger and displacement.

    Herders, fear and fading hope

    The fear of herders is the beginning of wisdom for farmers, especially women farmers, as the former move about with deadly weapons, ready to attack anyone who prevents their cattle from eating the crops.

    In Agaie, Halima Mohammed lost her entire rice farm when migrating herders let their cattle loose on her fields.

    “Those Fulani who were migrating allowed their cows to eat up my rice. The rice was already close to harvest, and they allowed their cows to finish my rice.

    “I could not farm last year because I could not get money to pay for labour. I wept the day it happened.”

    Other women say herders roam freely even in daylight, often daring farmers to protest.

    “They behave as if the land belongs to them,” said Sarah Mathew, a rice and groundnut farmer. “If you argue, they will attack you. We are women; we can’t fight them.”

    Sado said: “Sometimes, you would be on the farm and maybe a Fulani would be roaming about with his cows around your farm, waiting for you to leave. Immediately you leave, they enter and allow their cows to eat up your crops.

    “Some are even more daring. They enter when the farmer is there, daring them to do or say anything. They killed a woman on her farm last year because she tried to stop them from entering.

    “They have entered my farm, even recently. My cassava was eaten up, though not all.”

    The farmers say they have reported several of the incidents to security agents without results. “Even if the police catch them, they release them,” said Amina Mohammed, a widow from Paikoro. “It is like the herders have more power than us.”

    Where the law gets tired

    Niger State Governor, Mohammed Umaru Bago, in 2024 announced a statewide ban on mining after a mining incident in which a pit collapsed in Shiroro, burying many miners underground. This stance was reiterated by the Governor in October this year and covers both legal and illegal mining.

    During a visit to the Niger State Commissioner of Police, Adamu Elleman, the former Commissioner of Mineral Resources, Alhaji Garba Sabo Yahaya, stated the need for a stronger and more aggressive response to tackle the issue of illegal mining, pointing out that the ministry does not have the required manpower for enforcement of the state government’s suspension of illegal mining.

    He appealed to the police and other security agencies to assist the ministry in enforcement.

    The Director of Mining in Niger State Ministry of Mineral Resources, Alhaji Umar Yusuf, who spoke to the reporter exclusively, confirmed that a lot of people engage in illegal mining across the state, adding that there are others who are mining legally after being issued mining titles from the Federal Ministry of Mines. 

    He said the mineral resources ministry had received a lot of complaints about illegal mining across the state.

    Yusuf noted that the normal process in starting mining is to meet with the landowner and the community leaders where certain community development agreements will be reached upon. But many of the miners, both legal and illegal, do not do so.

    He stated the need for community residents to report such incidents to the ministry so that they would be aware and consider what to do about it.

    “What you do now, madam, anybody that complains to you, direct them to the Ministry of Mineral Resources. Once they come, we will lead them to the Federal Ministry of Mineral Resources to confirm what they would do with those people.”

    Yusuf also lamented that there is no adequate logistics to go on surveillance tours across the local government areas where illegal mining is rampant, pointing out that these surveillance tours are supposed to be done bi-weekly.

    “One of our problems is that there are no sufficient funds to go on regular surveillance tours. Because if we go and dispatch them today, they will return after we have gone.

    “It is supposed to be a continual exercise, like every two weeks. We are supposed to go there with the men of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps as back-up. But at the moment, the government does not give us the logistics to carry out that operation.

    “For the past four good months, there has been no logistics for us to go on surveillance, especially the logistics for the civil defence like fuelling our vehicles and others.

    “All these are not there now. That is the problem.”

    The director confirmed that the artisanal miners are very despotic people. He said they can harm anyone who forces them out without security backup.

    “They are hooligans. They are very despotic people.

    “But in our case, if the government sponsors us, we are able to go there with our surveillance group, with civil defence and the other hunters to talk to them and make them leave.”

    The Agro-Rangers and local vigilantes, on their part, try to intervene, but their efforts are also limited by poor logistics and lack of manpower.

    The Managing Director of Niger State Mechanization Development Agency, Muhammad Alibaba, said the agro-rangers are not enough in the state but the government is making arrangements to recruit more hands as extension workers and agro-rangers.

    Local government authorities promise action, yet the attacks and mining continue.

    The Niger State Police Public Relation Officer (PPRO), SP Wasiu Abiodun, said the police have always responded to distress calls including those of illegal and artisanal mining activities in the state, adding that a lot of arrests had been made with exhibits recovered while some of the suspects had been charged to court.

    “The Police Command as a responsive law enforcement agency have been responding to a series of distress calls, including illegal or artisanal mining activities in the state, such as the recent incidents in a school at Mutun-Daya, Shiroro LGA, Western Bye-Pass behind El-Amin area, Mechanic area around Angwan-Daji, COE Tungan-goro area and Korokpan, Chanchaga.

    “The Command has made many arrests in this regard and recovered a lot of exhibits such as shovels, diggers, head pans, and other dangerous weapons including knives, cutlasses and illicit substances. These suspects were charged to court for prosecution accordingly.”

    Abiodun, however, said the challenge at hand was the need for stiffer punishments for these offenders because it has been observed that they mostly pay a meager amount as fine and return to these activities after they are released.

    “We hope that there can be a legal framework for stiffer punishment to serve as deterrence.”

    Farming on borrowed time

    The result of the miners’ invasion of farmlands and herders leading their cattle to eat up farm produce is that more women are leaving farming altogether. Some now work as petty traders while others rely on family support.

    Mrs Grace Disa, the Niger State Coordinator of the Smallholder Women Farmers of Nigeria (SWOFON) said that women farmers in Niger East and some parts of Niger South are leaving farming due to the threats from farmers but added that she cannot give the exact numbers.

    But for many, giving up the land feels like losing a part of themselves.

    “I was born into farming,” said Agnes, gazing at her ruined field.

     “My mother farmed here. Now, even the soil doesn’t know us anymore. We will not stop farming, but we need peace to plant, and land that still remembers us.”

    Still, they keep hope alive. “We will not stop,” said Comfort. “We only want the government to protect us, give us peace and land, and we will feed the nation.”

    The cries of Niger’s women farmers are not just about lost crops; they are warnings of a deeper crisis. Each mine dug, each herd let loose on farmland, is another wound to Nigeria’s food security. Until the government acts, the women who feed the nation will remain her hungriest.

    .This report was made possible with support from the International Centre for Investigative Reporting, (ICIR).”

  • Togo, Niger, Benin owe Nigeria $17.8m for electricity supply

    Togo, Niger, Benin owe Nigeria $17.8m for electricity supply

    Though Nigerians are struggling with poor electricity supplies and estimated billings neghbouring African countries may just be enjoying our electricity more than us because there are indications that the sub Saharan countries that get supplied light from Nigeria enjoy steady supplies.

    Millions of Nigerians have decried the situation they see as unfortunate with millions of households living daily and deprived of electricity forcing them to provide electricity themselves through Solar panels, Inverters, Generators etc which consume a greater part of their income monthly.

    According to the NERC, Togo, Niger, and Benin owe Nigeria $17.8million, about N25billion at the current exchange rate of the Naira, for electricity supplied under the existing bilateral arrangements.

    In its 3rd quarter  2025 report  NERC disclosed that the three international customers were invoiced a total of $18.69million by the Market Operator for electricity supplied during the period, but unfortunately they remitted only $7.125million, leaving an outstanding balance of $11.56million.

    Similarly, the international bilateral customers had legacy invoices of $14.7million, out of which they paid only $7.84m, leaving a balance of $6.23million.

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    It added that the international off takers of power included Compagnie Énergie Électrique du Togo, Société Béninoise d’Énergie Électrique of the Republic of Benin, and Société Nigérienne d’Électricité of the Republic of Niger.

    According to NERC, the three international bilateral customer’s purchasing power from the grid-connected GenCos made a cumulative payment of $7.125million against the $18.69million invoice issued to them by the Market Operator for services rendered in the third quarter 2025.

    It stated that the remittance level represented a 38.09 per cent remittance performance, with over half of the invoices remaining unpaid at the end of the quarter.

    It explained that the electricity supplied to the three countries was generated by grid-connected Nigerian generation companies and delivered through bilateral cross-border power arrangements.

    “The three international bilateral customers being supplied by GenCos in the NESI made a payment of $7.12million against the cumulative invoice of $18.69million issued by the MO for services rendered in 2025/Q3, translating to a remittance performance of 38.09 per cent”.

    In contrast, NERC said that domestic bilateral customers performed better, remitting N3.19billion out of the N3.64 billion invoiced to them during the quarter, representing a remittance rate of 87.61 per cent.

    “The domestic bilateral customers made a cumulative payment of N3.19bn against the invoice of N3.64bn issued to them by the MO for services rendered in the 3rd quarter of 2025, translating to 87.61 per cent remittance performance,” it added.

  • Niger to reopen schools in phases as security clears selected LGAs

    Niger to reopen schools in phases as security clears selected LGAs

    Niger State govermment has disclosed that it will reopen selected public and private schools on Monday, January 12, 2026, but only in locations security agencies have cleared as safe. 

    The phased resumption follows a security review ordered by Governor Mohammed Umaru Bago. 

    The shutdown of schools began in late November after gunmen attacked St Mary’s Catholic School in Papiri, in one of the worst mass abductions in recent years. The kidnappings prompted the state to close schools across the state.

    Dr. Hadiza Mohammed, Niger state Commissioner for Basic and Secondary Education, told newsmen after an emergenct inter-ministerial meeting on safe schools reopening that the reopening will be phased and limited to schools approved by a joint committee of the ministry, local authorities and security agencies. 

    She said phase one would include schools in Chanchaga local government, parts of Boso, Suleja and Bida stressing that the schools to be opened were specifically those inside town centres, not those on the outskirts. 

    “Some schools actually will open on Monday, 12th of January, and we are going to start the opening of our schools in phases. That is why we said we are opening just the selected schools that we are agreed upon by the committee, Ministry of Education and her agencies, with a security confirmation and approval for the opening. And we continue like that until we get to all other schools.

    “We cannot at once give the confirmation of reopening of our schools because of the crisis we are in, security-wise. So we have to take them in phases, and the phase one, we open on the 12th, Monday, 2026. We are starting with few local governments for the opening on Monday, and we continue to graduate to other schools.”

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    The commissioner said local governments, not the state alone, must provide visible security presence around schools to reassure parents, pupils and communities. “The local government is the closest to the community,” she said, adding that security confirmation and approval will be required before any school reopens.

    The Commissioner stated that to keep learning going in areas that remain closed, the ministry is planning to roll out alternative options including online lessons, radio broadcasts and other remote-learning devices so pupils can continue studies at home or in safe local spaces stressing that “learning will continue” despite the phased resumption.

    “Learning will continue. We are putting in place the next alternative solution for some of our schools that are yet not to be opened. We are planning to make provision for online lessons, both radio and we have other devices that can be used for learning lessons either at home or anywhere you find yourself. So anywhere we are, learning must continue either under the tree or in your room or anywhere during holidays, security or no security, learning must continue. So the device, the methods and alternative strategic plans are being worked upon”, the Commissioner said.

    The state Director General for Schools and Education Reforms, Hajiya Maimuna Mohammed said the phased approach will allow education officials to re-register students, collect up-to-date data and assess teacher numbers and classroom capacity before scaling resumption. 

    She warned some schools on the outskirts will remain closed until security clears those areas adding that the planned reopening of Kontagora has been deferred after a security incident there, reducing the number of schools including boarding schools approved to resume. 

    The DG said 45 boarding schools exist in the state, and that 18 would open under the current security clearances after the Kontagora suspension.

    She however pointed out that the government has ruled out schools operating boarding facilities for primary school students or orphanages. 

    “We have to have clarity on where children are and what type of children. Because if you are adding orphans inside school, you are putting them in danger. If there is crisis, who do we evacuate? And we will not be able to have complete data. We are not discouraging that you should not open an orphanage, It is very helpful to the city, to the community but open it separate from the school premises. And also, we intend to stop schools from operating boarding schools for primary schools.”

  • Another Police Inspector commits suicide amid investigation into arms supply in Niger

    Another Police Inspector commits suicide amid investigation into arms supply in Niger

    Another serving police inspector has reportedly committed suicide following his arrest over alleged involvement in supplying arms and ammunition to bandits and other criminals in Niger State.

    The development comes barely a week after DSP Isah Abdullahi, Officer in Charge of Mopol 12 Armoury at the B Division of the police command on Paikoro Road, Minna, also took his own life while under investigation for similar allegations.

    The latest victim, identified as Inspector John Moses, an indigene of Shiroro Local Government Area, was arrested and detained after being implicated in the network of individuals involved in the illicit arms trade. 

    Reports indicate that Moses allegedly confessed to using his brother as an intermediary in the supply chain.

    According to sources, Moses killed himself in the detention cell on Sunday, where he was held alongside other suspects. 

    He reportedly struck his head against the wall several times before collapsing and dying.

    When contacted, Niger State Police Public Relations Officer, SP Wasiu Abiodun, said the case is currently being handled by the National Security Adviser (NSA).

  • NCTC boss: Coups in Mali, Niger, Burkina Faso worsen security in Nigeria

    NCTC boss: Coups in Mali, Niger, Burkina Faso worsen security in Nigeria

    The Coordinator of the National Counter Terrorism Centre (NCTC), Office of the National Security Adviser, Major General Garba Laka, has said insecurity in Nigeria worsened following the military coups in Burkina Faso, Niger and Mali.

    Laka made the disclosure while responding to questions from journalists during the end-of-year media parley with Defence Correspondents on Tuesday.

    According to him, the Sahel region, particularly Burkina Faso, Niger and Mali, has witnessed heightened instability and increased extremist activities, developments which have the potential to negatively impact Nigeria’s security situation.

    He said, “We have these countries facing these threats and we think we will see peace in Nigeria? No. 

    “You must have noticed that towards the end of 2023, the security situation was improving, but immediately after the coups in these countries, that was when the situation began to get worse, because these terrorist groups have connections across the Sahel.

    “So Nigeria has to play that leadership role in West Africa and the Sahel to address these threats.”

    According to Laka, while issues such as porous borders and the withdrawal of Sahelian states from the Multi-National Joint Task Force (MNJTF) may negatively impact the fight against insecurity, recent coups in those countries have significantly contributed to the worsening insecurity in Nigeria.

    “As long as those countries keep on facing this threat, Nigeria will continue facing the brunt,” Laka said.

    “If you look at the whole region, Nigeria is the richest country in West Africa. Nigeria is the only country that you kidnap somebody and ask that 100 million be paid and it will be paid.

    “So these people come into this country to look for means of running their operations across. So as security agencies, we are doing our best. It is a very hard task but we are doing our best and we need the Nigerians to believe in us.”

    The counter-terrorism chief stated that kidnapping in Nigeria has become a complex enterprise involving many people—including cases where individuals kidnap themselves and demand ransom from their own family members—as well as informants, making it difficult to address effectively.

    He added that many kidnappers have been arrested through tracking and other methods, the details of which are not publicly disclosed due to security concerns.

    He, however, noted that a major challenge the centre faces in tracking kidnappers is the use of Point of Sale (POS) operators, as families of kidnap victims often use them to transfer ransom payments, making the kidnappers difficult to trace.

    He said: “You may see that a transfer has been made by a victim to a terrorist. If an account number is provided, you might find out it belongs to a POS operator.

    “Also, the kidnappers give the POS operator’s number, the victim transfers the money to the POS operator, and then the kidnappers collect it from them. We are, however, working on this, doing our best, and we will not relent.”

    He said Nigeria was able to get off the Financial Action Task Force’s grey list through its efforts in tracking ransom payments and recovering funds from terrorists.

    “The NCTC set up a joint investigation committee comprising all security agencies involved in financial oversight—EFCC, NFIU, ICPC,” Laka said.

    “This is how we were able to track and recover the funds, and arrests were also made. Some of this information is not disclosed to the public because it is sensitive security information. But I guarantee you, we have arrested many people based on ransom payments.”

    The NCTC boss stated that the federal government, in collaboration with social media platforms, has blocked numerous accounts belonging to terrorists and violent extremists, helping to curb their indoctrination and recruitment efforts while demonstrating the government’s resolve.

    He said: “We have had so many meetings with these social media houses, TikTok, Instagram, Snapchat, Facebook and X – though they are in business looking for more subscribers – but we explained to them the effects of certain posts on our national security, and they took them down. 

    “Even the post of these bandits that you see will come on TikTok showing their loot, we took them down, you won’t see that again.”

    The NCTC stated that while terrorist tactics continue to evolve, security agencies are actively countering them as new threats emerge.

    “So we will keep on doing our best, and with Mr. President’s directive, in 2026 we are going to up our game,” Laka said. 

  • JUST IN: 50 pupils escape abductors, reunite with parents in Niger

    JUST IN: 50 pupils escape abductors, reunite with parents in Niger

    …253 persons still in abductors’ net

    …It was not an abduction – Bago defends

    The Bishop of the Catholic Diocese of Kontagora, Reverend Bulus Dauwa Yohanna, has confirmed that 50 pupils of St. Mary’s Catholic Primary and Secondary Schools in Papiri, Agwara Local Government Area, have escaped from their abductors and reunited with their parents.

    Reverend Yohanna, who is the Proprietor of the school, disclosed that the students escaped between Friday and Saturday but were unable to return to the school.

    The development came to light when some parents informed the school of their children’s safe return, while school staff discovered others during visits to families.

    Providing an update on the school’s population, Yohanna said the primary section has 430 pupils, including 377 boarders and 53 non-boarders.

    The total number of secondary students is still being verified, as many records were destroyed during the abduction.

    “Currently, aside from the 50 pupils who escaped and returned home, 141 pupils were not taken. As it stands, 236 pupils remain in captivity, along with three children of staff, 14 secondary students, and 12 members of staff,” Yohanna stated.

    It was previously reported by the Principal, Rev. Sr. Felicia Gyang, that the bandits initially targeted the primary school dormitory. To protect other students, the principal and fellow sisters guided secondary school pupils into nearby bushes to evade the abductors.

    Yohanna, who also serves as Niger State Chairman of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), called for prayers for the safe and speedy release of the remaining abducted children and adults.

    “As much as we receive the return of these 50 children that escaped with some sigh of relief, I urge you all to continue in your prayers for the rescue and safe return of the remaining victims. I want to call on everyone to remain calm and prayerful as we will continue to actively collaborate with security operatives, community leaders, government, and relevant authorities for the safe and quick return of all abductees.”

    However, in a related development, the Niger State Governor, Mohammed Umaru Bago, described the incident as more of a scare and of missing people rather than a kidnapping, stressing that it was quick to conclude that it was a case of abduction and for any figures to have been revealed.

    Read Also: How Tinubu stepped back from global stage to lead Nigeria through its most intense security week

    “Yes, there was a scare, sporadic gunshots, and the children ran because they were targeted. And from the Google imagery, there was no mass movement of people, but people running up and down”, he said.

    He, however, confirmed that some of the children have been found and reunited with their families, adding that efforts are being intensified to find the rest soon.

    Speaking on TVC News Live at 10 pm on Saturday, the Governor sought calm from all residents of the state over the incident, assuring that security agencies are not leaving any stone unturned to ensure the children are rescued unhurt.

    He also stressed that the incident was avoidable, stating that it is not the time for a blame game but to correct all mistakes, get the children back, reunite them with their families, and forge ahead.

    He again applauded the federal government for tremendous support, especially in terms of personnel and equipment to aid in surveillance and rescue operations.

  • JUST IN: 50 pupils escape abductors, reunite with parents in Niger

    JUST IN: 50 pupils escape abductors, reunite with parents in Niger

    …253 persons still in abductors’ net

    …It was not an abduction – Bago defends

    The Bishop of the Catholic Diocese of Kontagora, Reverend Bulus Dauwa Yohanna, has confirmed that 50 pupils of St. Mary’s Catholic Primary and Secondary Schools in Papiri, Agwara Local Government Area, have escaped from their abductors and reunited with their parents.

    Reverend Yohanna, who is the Proprietor of the school, disclosed that the students escaped between Friday and Saturday but were unable to return to the school.

    The development came to light when some parents informed the school of their children’s safe return, while school staff discovered others during visits to families.

    Providing an update on the school’s population, Yohanna said the primary section has 430 pupils, including 377 boarders and 53 non-boarders.

    The total number of secondary students is still being verified, as many records were destroyed during the abduction.

    “Currently, aside from the 50 pupils who escaped and returned home, 141 pupils were not taken. As it stands, 236 pupils remain in captivity, along with three children of staff, 14 secondary students, and 12 members of staff,” Yohanna stated.

    It was previously reported by the Principal, Rev. Sr. Felicia Gyang, that the bandits initially targeted the primary school dormitory. To protect other students, the principal and fellow sisters guided secondary school pupils into nearby bushes to evade the abductors.

    Read Also: Transforming Nigeria’s economy: Policies, progress and continuity

    Yohanna, who also serves as Niger State Chairman of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), called for prayers for the safe and speedy release of the remaining abducted children and adults.

    “As much as we receive the return of these 50 children that escaped with some sigh of relief, I urge you all to continue in your prayers for the rescue and safe return of the remaining victims. I want to call on everyone to remain calm and prayerful as we will continue to actively collaborate with security operatives, community leaders, government, and relevant authorities for the safe and quick return of all abductees.”

    However, in a related development, the Niger State Governor, Mohammed Umaru Bago, described the incident as more of a scare and of missing people rather than a kidnapping, stressing that it was quick to conclude that it was a case of abduction and for any figures to have been revealed.

    “Yes, there was a scare, sporadic gunshots, and the children ran because they were targeted. And from the Google imagery, there was no mass movement of people, but people running up and down”, he said.

    He, however, confirmed that some of the children have been found and reunited with their families, adding that efforts are being intensified to find the rest soon.

    Speaking on TVC News Live at 10 pm on Saturday, the Governor sought calm from all residents of the state over the incident, assuring that security agencies are not leaving any stone unturned to ensure the children are rescued unhurt.

    He also stressed that the incident was avoidable, stating that it is not the time for a blame game but to correct all mistakes, get the children back, reunite them with their families, and forge ahead.

    He again applauded the federal government for tremendous support, especially in terms of personnel and equipment to aid in surveillance and rescue operations.

  • Niger’s endless tragedies from tanker accidents

    Niger’s endless tragedies from tanker accidents

    •How illegal fuel collector’s moment of madness sparked fire that claimed more than 40 lives

    From Dikko to Bida, the same tragedy repeats – bad roads, broken systems and human choices that turn accidents into infernos. Each explosion leaves behind charred bodies and broken families – yet the cycle continues, fed by bad roads, desperation and a failure to learn from the past, JUSTINA ASISHANA reports.

    The acrid smell of burnt rubber and charred bodies still lingers over the scorched stretch of the Bida-Badegi-Agaie Road; a grim testament to yet another preventable catastrophe in Niger State’s long history of tanker explosions.

    The sequence of events on the afternoon of October 21 was eerily predictable. The tanker, reportedly en route from Lagos to the North, lost control on the dilapidated road, overturning and spilling its volatile cargo. Eyewitnesses described a chaotic scene, ignoring frantic warnings of people.

    What followed was not just an accident, but a human tragedy amplified by desperation: residents, villagers armed with jerry cans, buckets, and even plastic bags swarmed the site, drawn like moths to a flame, and rushed to scoop the spilling fuel.

    “They were shouting, ‘God has provided!’ as they filled their containers,” recounted Musa Ibrahim, a survivor who lost his brother in the blaze.

    Minutes later, a spark ignited the fuel vapors, turning the roadside into a fireball that engulfed people, motorcycles and livestock, claiming about 45 lives and injuring over 60 others, according to updates from the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) and the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC).

    The victims, mostly youths from nearby communities, were not passive bystanders as they became active participants in their own demise.

    It was gathered that a tanker filled with groundnut oil had fallen along the same spot two days before and the residents of the community counted their luck as they proceeded on scooping the oil to their various residences.

    Several of the victims who were injured and were receiving treatment at the Federal Medical Centre in Bida were not willing to talk about the incident when the health team delegated by the state government visited them.

    One of them, Mohammed Dauda, who secured burns in his legs and was still in pains, explained that he thought it was another tanker that was transporting groundnut oil that had fallen, stressing that if he had known that it was a fuel tanker, he would not have approached it.

    Dauda stated that he did not scoop any fuel but was among those telling people to stop scooping the fuel. He explained that the explosion was caused when a man tried to use his lighter and in the struggle to take the lighter from him, he threw the lighter in the fuel which ignited, causing the fire.

    He said: “What happened was a misfortune. A tanker crashed and we went there. But what we first heard was that it was a tanker transporting groundnut oil. If I knew it was fuel, I wouldn’t go.

    “When we got there and discovered that it was petrol, I was one of the people who kept telling those that went to scoop the fuel that it was not advisable to do so. I told them to use plastic containers instead.

    “I was still saying that when

    I noticed a Hausa man standing there trying to use a lighter. A lot of people started struggling with him. He threw the lighter and the tanker caught fire.

    “I only heard the sound of the explosion and the fire threw me across the road. My leg caught fire in the process.

    “The same thing happened with this person close to me. There are also three other children. There were more than 30 others who died around me that day.

    “I recently confirmed that the number has scaled up to 40, five people from a village near ours.

    “This is my first time going to an accident scene to scoop fuel.”

    This incident, the latest in a string of similar disasters in Niger State, underscores a harsh reality: these explosions are not inevitable acts of fate, but often self-inflicted wounds.

    If the crowds had resisted the temptation to harvest free fuel from the overturned vehicle, there might have been no explosion at all.

    As one elder in Esa community who gave his name as Ndagi Mohammed put it during the somber mass burial the following day, “the tanker fell, but it was their greed that lit the match. If no one was there when it exploded, no one would have died.”

    Yet, as Nigeria grapples with soaring fuel prices and economic hardship, such rational pleas fall on deaf ears.

     Among the deceased were entire families, including eight relatives from one household, as shared in a heart-rending account by a grieving survivor.

    A community leader in Essa, Muhammad Kudu, disclosed that they tried to stop the people from going to scoop the fuel but all restriction calls fell on deaf ears.

    “Because the road is bad, accidents always happen. Tankers and trailers always fall, and whenever they do, you see people rushing out to take what they can. No matter how hard you try to stop them, they pay no heed,” Kudu said.

    The Village Head of Essa, Alhaji Adamu Bagudu, said his younger brother lost his two wives and two children in the tragedy, adding that at his residence, 24 of the victims were given a mass burial, while four others who died at the Federal Medical Centre (FMC), Bida, were buried penultimate Wednesday.

    He disclosed that more than 90 per cent of the victims were women, adding that some travellers were also caught in the inferno.

    “Of these, 24 were women while the remaining four were made up of two men and two children. Some of the victims were travellers, including two people on a motorcycle.

    “Others were returning from their farms and had nothing to do with scooping fuel.

    “I have been sensitising and educating my people about the dangers of scooping fuel for the past three years.

    “I have cited several examples, including the one that happened in Dikko. Even the DPO of Katcha Police Division is aware of my efforts to discourage this dangerous habit.”

    He recalled that on September 9, 2024, a similar tanker explosion occurred just a few kilometres from the village, killing 61 people, 54 cows and 17 goats, and burning seven motorcycles.

    “I even invited some residents to the scene so they could see the devastation firsthand and warn others,” he added.

    Speaking on the exexplosion, which occurred penultimate Tuesday, the village head said he believed the tragedy would serve as a lasting warning to the people in the community.

    Bagudu appealed to the federal government to urgently reconstruct the Agaie-Bida Road to prevent further loss of lives and property.

    The Niger State Government swiftly organised a mass burial and pledged free medical treatment for the survivors, led by a team under Dr. Murtala Muhammad Bagana after he had directed that all the injured should be transferred to Gwagalada Specialist Hospital, Abuja for intensive care.

    When the Governor, Mohammed Umaru Bago, personally visited the community, he frowned at the attitude of people rushing to scoop content from a fallen tanker, saying that the government would not condone such acts anymore.

    “We came here to commiserate with them over the loss of lives and to also talk to their conscience.

    “It is a terrible thing that a truck will fall and the people of the community will carry containers to scoop.

    “It is theft and must be addressed as such, and we can’t condone or encourage it,” he stressed.

    He acknowledged that the roads are bad, but stated that people should not see it as an opportunity to do wrong. Rather, when a truck or trailer falls, they should make efforts to rescue the driver and other passengers.

    Commiserating with the people over the loss of their loved ones and the quick recovery of the injured, the governor announced a donation of N1 million to families of each of the deceased victims and N500,000 to each of the injured victims receiving treatment.

    Chairman of Katcha Local Government Council, Zubairu Mohammed Essa, described the assistance the state government has been rendering to victims of the disaster as tremendous, especially the free medical services, adding that the people of Katcha remain very grateful for the gesture.

    But this is no isolated event.

    Niger State, a key transit hub for fuel tankers plying the North-Central corridor, has become synonymous with such infernos. Earlier this year, in January 2025, another tanker explosion occurred at Dikko Junction which claimed lives, with bad roads cited as the primary culprit while in September 2024, another tanker explosion occurred just a few kilometres from the village, killing 61 people, 54 cows, 17 goats, and burning seven motorcycles.

    Over the years, similar incidents have dotted the state’s highways, from the Minna-Suleja Road to the Lapai axis, often following the same script: a vehicle mishap, spilled fuel, opportunistic scavenging, and then, boom.

    A report from the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) highlights that Nigeria records dozens of tanker accidents annually, many escalating into explosions due to human intervention.

    Read Also: Finance coach to Nigerians: be responsible citizens

    Critics, including members of the House of Representatives, have lambasted the federal government for the “deplorable conditions” of roads like the Bida-Agaie-Lapai-Lambata highway, arguing that poor infrastructure sets the stage for these disasters.

    Residents echo this, blaming potholes and narrow lanes for the initial overturns. Yet, as valid as these grievances are, they sidestep a crucial truth: the tanker might overturn, but without the crowds descending to siphon fuel, the risk of explosion plummets. Fuel tankers are designed with safety valves and compartments to contain spills; it is the tampering and proximity of people that turns a spill into a slaughter.

    Victims as culprits: A controversial lens

    In the aftermath, a chorus of voices, from government officials to social media commentators, has zeroed in on this victim-blaming narrative, albeit with varying degrees of sensitivity. Lanre Issa-Onilu, Director-General of the National Orientation Agency (NOA), minced no words: the explosion stemmed not from ignorance but from a “failure of community leadership and a breakdown of societal values.”

    He argued that locals know the dangers but chose to ignore them, driven by poverty and a culture of opportunism.

    On social media platform X (formerly Twitter), the conversation is raw and unfiltered. User @usmanlade shared a video of the chaos, lamenting, “We should always prioritise our safety over risking our precious lives in exchange for ‘dangerous gains.”

    Another post from @ppjkis warned, “As soon as one crashes, they are overwhelmed with locals trying to get free fuel. But they are time bombs waiting to explode. It is best to stay far away.”

    These sentiments resonate with a broader online consensus: poverty fuels recklessness, but personal responsibility is key.

    Experts concur. In a Conversation Africa article, analysts noted that fuel tanker accidents are preventable through “restructuring the built environment, providing parking spaces for tankers,” and stricter enforcement. But they also stress public education: campaigns warning against scooping fuel have been ongoing, yet ineffective amid economic woes. Fuel prices have skyrocketed post-subsidy removal, making spilled petrol a literal goldmine for the impoverished.

    A state plagued by flames

    Niger State’s tanker woes are emblematic of Nigeria’s broader petroleum transport crisis. With over 5,000 tankers on roads daily, accidents are rampant, FRSC data shows hundreds yearly, many in transit states like Niger.

    Past explosions include the 2018 Odukpani incident in Cross River (12 dead) and the 2020 Kogi blast (23 dead), but Niger’s frequency stands out due to its highways’ poor state.

    A YouTube analysis titled “How To Avert Incessant Tanker Explosion In Nigeria” called for better driver training and vehicle maintenance, but again, emphasised avoiding spill sites.

    Global Rights, an advocacy group, condemned the latest blast, urging “immediate preventive action” like road repairs and community sensitization.

    On Facebook, a post from Prevention of Fuel Tanker Explosions in Nigeria referenced President Bola Tinubu’s directive for traffic rule enforcement to curb such incidents. Yet, enforcement remains weak; tankers often overload or speed, but the real escalation happens post-accident.

    Breaking the cycle: A call to action

    As Niger State buries its dead, the question looms: how many more must perish before change? The victims’ role in these tragedies is undeniable, scooping fuel is not survival, but suicide. Yet, blaming them alone ignores the poverty trap set by failed policies.

    True mitigation demands a multi-pronged assault: fix the roads, enforce regulations, educate communities, and diversify transport.

    Nigeria’s highways should be lifelines, not death traps. Until citizens and leaders alike prioritise safety over shortcuts, the flames will keep claiming lives.

  • Niger seals three hospitals in Suleja

    Niger seals three hospitals in Suleja

    Niger Ministry of Secondary and Tertiary Health, through its Inspectorate Unit, has sealed three hospitals in Suleja local government area for quackery and operating below approved standards.

    The affected hospitals include Base Medical Center, Emirates Clinic and Maternity, and Ayisha Hospitals.

    They were shut during an inspection exercise by a five man inspection committee in the ministry of Secondary and Tertiary Health led by Dr. Ma’ali Muhammad Ishaq, Chairman of the Committee and Deputy Director, Medical Services and Training, Ministry of Health. 

    The team visited 30 primary and secondary health facilities, including laboratories, during the inspection tour that took place across Suleja and Gurara local government areas.

    Read Also: Anti-Nigeria propaganda: FG moves to counter false narratives —Minister

    Several other health facilities were sanctioned and issued fines for various offenses which ranged from lack of proof of premises registration, absence of qualified medical staff, and unlicensed practitioners, to poor sanitation, lack of pharmacy or laboratory departments, and non-compliance with safety standards.

    Speaking during the routine inspection, Dr. Ma’ali emphasized the State Government’s appreciation for the role of private health facilities in complementing public healthcare delivery while stressing the need for all facilities to adhere strictly to professional standards and regulatory requirements to ensure quality healthcare.

    He urged the health facility owners to register with the Niger State Health Insurance Scheme (NiCare), highlighting the benefits of such registration, including access to capitation payments and the opportunity for vulnerable groups within communities to receive free medical services.

    As the exercise extends to other LGAs in the coming months, the Ministry reaffirmed its commitment to maintaining high standards in healthcare delivery and warned that any facility found violating operational guidelines would face appropriate sanctions.