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Court to Rule on ICPC’s Request for 14‑Day Detention Extension for El‑Rufai

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Former Kaduna State Governor Nasir El‑Rufai
Former Kaduna State Governor Nasir El‑Rufai

Court to Rule on ICPC’s Request for 14‑Day Detention Extension for El‑Rufai

A Magistrate Court in Abuja is set to deliver a ruling on Tuesday, March 17, regarding the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC)’s request to extend the detention of former Kaduna State Governor, Nasir El‑Rufai, by another 14 days.

The court, presided over by Magistrate Okechukwu Akweke, will decide whether to approve or reject the ICPC’s application as the anti‑graft agency continues its probe into allegations against El‑Rufai, including money laundering, abuse of office, and illegal interception of communications linked to the National Security Adviser, Nuhu Ribadu.

El‑Rufai has been in ICPC custody since February 18, 2026, following an earlier 14‑day remand order obtained from a Magistrate Court in Bwari, Abuja. That initial remand expired on March 5, 2026, prompting ICPC to seek a fresh extension as investigations continue.

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The former governor’s legal team, relatives, and supporters have criticised the continued detention, describing it as unlawful. They argue that since the initial remand expired, El‑Rufai should either be released or formally charged before a competent court. In response, he has filed a fundamental rights enforcement suit at the Federal Capital Territory High Court, naming the ICPC, EFCC, DSS, and Attorney-General of the Federation as respondents.

The ICPC maintains that it is acting within the law, insisting that the fresh 14‑day remand order is valid and necessary to conclude ongoing investigations, which involve forensic examination of electronic devices, financial records, and other evidence recovered from El‑Rufai’s Abuja residence. The agency has filed an inventory listing 67 items retrieved during the search, including laptops, phones, and storage devices.

El‑Rufai’s lawyers, however, contend that some of the searches were irregular, violating his constitutional rights, and have challenged the admissibility of the evidence in court. The FCT High Court is also considering claims for ₦1 billion in damages for alleged rights violations related to the searches.

Observers say the outcome of Tuesday’s ruling will be critical in determining whether El‑Rufai remains in ICPC custody beyond March 19, or whether he will be released or granted bail while legal proceedings continue. The case has drawn national attention, highlighting ongoing debates over anti-corruption investigations, rule of law, and the rights of former public officials.

Court to Rule on ICPC’s Request for 14‑Day Detention Extension for El‑Rufai

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VIDEO: Jubilation as Kidnapped Family Is Freed After Sunday Igboho’s Two-Hour Ultimatum

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VIDEO: Jubilation as Kidnapped Family Is Freed After Sunday Igboho’s Two-Hour Ultimatum
Yoruba Nation activist Sunday Adeyemo, popularly known as Sunday Igboho

VIDEO: Jubilation as Kidnapped Family Is Freed After Sunday Igboho’s Two-Hour Ultimatum

Residents of Igboho in Oyo State erupted in celebration on Sunday after a kidnapped family, including a pregnant woman, her children and a sibling, reportedly regained their freedom hours after Yoruba Nation activist Sunday Adeyemo, popularly known as Sunday Igboho, issued a two-hour ultimatum demanding their release.

Videos circulating on social media showed hundreds of residents singing, dancing and escorting the freed victims through the community, expressing relief after days of anxiety over the abduction.

Earlier on Sunday, Sunday Igboho met with suspected Fulani community leaders, traditional rulers and other stakeholders in Igboho, where he condemned the rising cases of kidnapping and violent attacks in the Oke-Ogun area of Oyo State.

In a viral video from the meeting, the activist accused some members of the Fulani community of involvement in kidnappings and recalled an incident in which a ransom bearer was allegedly killed despite delivering money to secure the release of abducted victims.

“The person who brought the ransom, you still killed him and spared only one person,” he said.

He maintained that he had remained calm out of respect for appeals by traditional rulers but warned that the incidents must not continue.

“I am Sunday Igboho. I am calm because my fathers asked me to be calm with you. Let this be the last time such a thing will happen,” he declared.

The activist subsequently gave a two-hour ultimatum for the release of all abducted victims and warned that failure to comply would attract decisive action.

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Hours after the ultimatum expired, fresh videos emerged showing residents celebrating the return of the kidnapped family.

The victims, reportedly comprising a pregnant woman, her children and a sibling, appeared unharmed as they were welcomed by excited members of the community.

Residents could be seen chanting songs of thanksgiving, dancing and praising God while accompanying the family through the town in scenes that quickly went viral across social media platforms.

As of the time of filing this report, neither the Nigeria Police Force nor the Oyo State Police Command had issued an official statement confirming how the victims regained their freedom or whether the release was directly connected to Sunday Igboho’s ultimatum.

No arrests have also been announced in connection with the kidnapping.

The incident has once again highlighted growing concerns over kidnapping and insecurity in parts of Oyo State, particularly in the Oke-Ogun axis.

Residents have repeatedly called on security agencies to strengthen surveillance and intelligence gathering to tackle criminal activities in the region.

While many supporters have credited Sunday Igboho with influencing the release of the victims, there is currently no official evidence establishing a direct link between his ultimatum and the family’s freedom.

The viral videos, however, have continued to attract widespread attention, with many Nigerians expressing relief over the safe return of the abductees and urging authorities to ensure those responsible are brought to justice.

VIDEO: Jubilation as Kidnapped Family Is Freed After Sunday Igboho’s Two-Hour Ultimatum

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Pregnant, Bleeding, and Still Forced to Work: The Unthinkable Ordeal of 7 Nigerian Teens

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Pregnant, Bleeding, and Still Forced to Work: The Unthinkable Ordeal of 7 Nigerian Teens

Pregnant, Bleeding, and Still Forced to Work: The Unthinkable Ordeal of 7 Nigerian Teens

In a devastating betrayal of trust, seven young Nigerian women—most still teenagers—were lured across West African borders by friends and relatives with promises of legitimate jobs, only to be trapped in a brutal sex trafficking network where they were forced to service multiple men daily, even during pregnancy and menstruation.

For these seven young Nigerian women, most of whom are teenagers, the nightmare began not with strangers lurking in shadows, but with familiar faces—friends, relatives, and community members who presented themselves as trusted helpers offering a lifeline out of poverty. The recruiters claimed to have connections abroad who could secure decent jobs in boutiques, restaurants, salons, and homes. What awaited the young girls across the border, however, was a brutal reality of deception, coercion, and exploitation. Their rescue by the Global Anti-Human Trafficking Organization (GAHTO) , working with authorities in Mali, Burkina Faso, and Nigeria’s National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP) , is more than a narrative of survival. It is a chilling reminder of how human traffickers increasingly rely on trusted agents, relatives, and acquaintances to lure vulnerable young people into modern-day slavery.

For 22-year-old Sunday Sofia, known in Mali as “Testie,” the trap was carefully laid. Working as a maid and sales assistant in a Lagos boutique for just ₦20,000 monthly, she dreamed of earning more to support her family and younger siblings. When a friend introduced her to what appeared to be a better opportunity, she saw hope. “It was one of my friends who told me she had secured another job for me,” Sofia recalled. “I accepted thinking it was a legitimate job. We were told we were going to work as housekeepers.” Instead, she found herself trapped in Mali, far from home and stripped of every right she once took for granted.

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Her story mirrors those of 17-year-old Blessing SamsonEsther GyangOdey Blessing, and others who were allegedly recruited through a network of agents who presented themselves as trusted helpers. Blessing said a man identified as Peter approached them in their hometown in Plateau State with what sounded like a life-changing opportunity. “He told us his sister had a business in Mali and needed people to work with her,” Blessing stated. The girls were promised jobs in boutiques, restaurants, and phone shops. They repeatedly sought assurances, suspicious of the too-good-to-be-true offer. “We asked him if it was really the work he told us we were going there to do. We even asked if it was hookup work. He said no,” recalled Odey Blessing, known as “Beauty.” 22-year-old Sandy Sophia, also from Plateau State, echoed this sentiment: “I asked countless times if it was prostitution, and they kept telling me it was not. It was only after we reached Burkina Faso that they finally admitted it was prostitution.”

The assurances were enough. They packed their bags, filled with hope and dreams of a better life. The moment they crossed the border, the dream died. Upon arrival in Mali, the girls were taken not to boutiques or restaurants but to bars where other young women greeted them with a phrase they did not understand at the time. “The following day, reality became impossible to ignore. They told us there was no boutique or phone plaza. They said it was prostitution,” Odey said. The girls cried. They pleaded. They begged. But they were told they had no choice.

One alleged trafficker reportedly informed them they owed 1.5 million CFA Francs each—approximately ₦4 million—and could only repay the debt through sex work. This tactic of debt bondage is a common tool used by trafficking networks to control their victims, creating a cycle of exploitation that seems impossible to escape. “They started starving us for three days. We had no option. What followed were weeks of exploitation. Some of us had to service multiple men daily while struggling to repay debts that seemed impossible to clear,” Odey recounted. According to Odey, there were no breaks—even during menstruation. “Even when we were having our menstrual cycle, we still had to sleep with men,” she said.

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Perhaps the most disturbing revelation from the rescue operation is how pregnancy became another layer of vulnerability rather than a shield from exploitation. 20-year-old Augusta Akoghamhen said the recruitment began through a relative of her father. The man allegedly assured the family that she would work as a domestic employee for foreigners and would travel by air. Because the information came through someone known to the family, suspicion never arose. “My father agreed because he believed the job was legitimate,” Augusta said. The journey eventually took more than a week by road. When they arrived, the promises vanished. “They didn’t even allow us rest from the stress of the travel. That same evening we were forced to start working. The work, I discovered, was prostitution. At the time, I was already pregnant. Unfortunately, pregnancy offered no protection,” she recalled. Augusta said she was beaten whenever she resisted working. “Anytime I refused to work because I was not feeling well, my boss attacked me. Despite being pregnant, I was expected to continue servicing clients while handing over virtually all earnings,” Augusta noted.

Elizabeth, another survivor who was trafficked alongside Augusta, experienced the same cruelty. “If they had told me it was prostitution, I would not have agreed to travel. My trafficker continued demanding work despite my advancing pregnancy. She said we would continue to work until we gave birth,” Elizabeth said. The dehumanization was complete when Elizabeth discovered she had become a commodity in a dispute between traffickers. “What shocked me most was discovering I had effectively become a commodity in a dispute between my boss, Osas, and her co-trafficker, Aisha. She refused and said except Aisha would buy me. I became a commodity for sale,” Elizabeth recounted.

Several of the girls recounted threats that they would go mad if they attempted to escape. Blessing remembered being warned repeatedly. “Our madam threatened that we would run mad if we refused to work or escape,” Blessing stated. The threats were designed to exploit cultural fears and keep victims psychologically trapped, demonstrating the sophisticated manipulation tactics employed by trafficking rings.

Despite the intimidation, the girls quietly began planning their escape. Ironically, one of the people who eventually helped rescue the girls was someone they knew from home. Sofia recalled meeting a man from their village who worked in Mali. “We knew him in our village before we travelled. He knows us and he knows our parents. When he discovered our situation, he promised to help,” she said. That intervention eventually connected the victims to GAHTO, setting in motion a rescue effort that would bring them back to Nigeria. For Augusta, the turning point came when she secretly reached out to her father in Nigeria. The message triggered a chain of events that eventually reached GAHTO and NAPTIP.

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GAHTO coordinated efforts leading to the rescue of Augusta and Elizabeth from Burkina Faso, after which they were received by NAPTIP’s Benin Zonal Command upon arrival in Nigeria. For the five girls rescued from Mali—Sunday Sofia, Blessing Samson, Esther Gyang, Odey Blessing, and Rose Pam—the intervention also brought an end to months of fear and uncertainty. Most returned home with little more than the clothes they were wearing. Some lost personal belongings; others worked for months without compensation. Yet all returned with something more valuable: freedom.

For Sofia, who spent two months in Mali, returning home felt like being given a second chance. “My greatest regret is travelling to Mali. I am happy to see myself in Nigeria. I won’t go back again,” Sofia declared. Today, she hopes to return to hairdressing and complete the apprenticeship she abandoned in pursuit of a better life. “I want to complete my hairdressing training. I was learning before I left, and I want to continue. I don’t want to experience that kind of life again,” she said.

These young women were not kidnapped by strangers lurking in dark corners. Many were recruited by people they knew: friends, relatives, neighbours, and trusted community members. The traffickers understood a painful truth: trust opens doors that force cannot. According to NAPTIPhuman trafficking remains a major challenge in Nigeria. In 2025 alone, NAPTIP rescued over 370 Nigerian trafficking victims from countries including Ghana, Senegal, and other West African states, reflecting ongoing cross-border trafficking networks within the region. The agency also secured 93 convictions of human traffickers and intercepted more than 2,500 potential victims of trafficking both within Nigeria and across borders. The agency has noted that Edo and Delta States remain high-risk zones for human trafficking due to proximity to international borders and high migration pressure.

GAHTO’s founder, Prosper K.A. Michael, emphasized that poverty remains the primary driver of the crime: “When young people lack opportunities and parents are struggling, traffickers step in with false promises. We must tackle poverty and strengthen family bonds to protect our children.” The survivors’ stories exposed how false promises of jobs, education, and prosperity continue to lure vulnerable young Nigerians across borders into exploitation through recruitment by trusted connections, cross-border transportation, debt bondage, forced prostitution, psychological manipulation, and exploitation of vulnerability even during pregnancy and illness.

Anti-trafficking advocates and survivors themselves agree that meaningful change requires strengthening border controls to intercept trafficking networks, launching public awareness campaigns in high-risk communities, implementing economic empowerment programs to reduce vulnerability, ensuring stricter prosecution of traffickers including those who recruit through trusted networks, providing support services for survivors including counseling and job training, and offering community education to help families recognize recruitment tactics. Today, Sofia dreams of reopening her path to becoming a professional hairdresser. Others hope to return to school, rebuild their lives, and reunite with their families. For them, the journey home is a new beginning—and a powerful reminder that no promise of quick wealth is worth the price of freedom. Their stories are not just tales of survival. They are a call to action for governments, communities, and individuals to stand against human trafficking and protect the vulnerable among us.

Pregnant, Bleeding, and Still Forced to Work: The Unthinkable Ordeal of 7 Nigerian Teens

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Abia Police Arrests Man Captured Assaulting Woman In Viral Video

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Abia Police Arrests Man Captured Assaulting Woman In Viral Video

Abia Police Arrests Man Captured Assaulting Woman In Viral Video

Operatives of the Violent Crime Response Unit (VCRU) , Abia State Command, led by CSP Emeka Amanchukwu, have arrested the man seen physically assaulting a woman in a viral video that circulated widely on social media. The suspect was arrested on Saturday around the Ogbor Hill area of Aba following credible intelligence received by the unit, acting swiftly on the information to track down and apprehend the suspect. The Violent Crime Response Unit (VCRU) is a newly established specialised police unit inaugurated by the Abia State Police Command on May 19, 2026, following a rigorous process of screening, selection, and specialised training. The unit, which operates under the oversight of a Civilian Oversight Board comprising representatives from the Abia State Traditional Rulers Council, human rights bodies, the Nigerian Bar Association, and Amnesty International, is specifically mandated to respond to and investigate all forms of violent crimes across Abia State with speed, precision, and professionalism. The VCRU has established a fully equipped operational base at Orji Uzor Kalu Bridge, Aba, with additional sub-units across the state, ensuring that the rights and dignity of all suspects are respected at all times.

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The VCRU reiterated its resolve to ensure that perpetrators of violent crimes are brought to justice and has urged residents to continue providing useful information to aid security agencies in maintaining law and order across the state. Recall that the Abia State Police Command had earlier announced that it had commenced an investigation into the viral video. The Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO) of the Command, DSP Maureen Chinaka, confirmed that the command had taken up the matter and initiated investigations to ascertain the circumstances surrounding the incident and identify all parties involved. According to the statement, the police strongly condemned the alleged assault, stressing that violence against any individual is a criminal offence punishable under Nigerian law. DSP Chinaka emphasised that domestic violence, physical abuse, and other forms of assault have no place in a civilised society.

The Command reiterated its commitment to protecting the rights and dignity of all citizens and ensuring that perpetrators of violence are brought to justice. DSP Chinaka noted that the police remain dedicated to enforcing the law without fear or favour and will take appropriate action based on the outcome of ongoing investigations. In line with the reform agenda of the Inspector-General of Police, Tunji Disu, the Abia State Police Command, under Commissioner of Police Danladi Isa, has emphasised that acts of impunity, misconduct, or abuse of power will not be tolerated under any circumstances. The Command has also warned that all forms of domestic abuse and gender-based violence will not be tolerated under any guise, urging victims and witnesses to report such incidents through appropriate channels.

As investigations continue, the Abia State Police Command assured residents that updates would be provided as necessary and reaffirmed its resolve to tackle all forms of violence and criminality within the state. The arrest of the suspect marks a significant victory for the newly inaugurated Violent Crime Response Unit and signals the command’s commitment to proactive, intelligence-led policing in Abia State.

Abia Police Arrests Man Captured Assaulting Woman In Viral Video

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