News
Police confirm Mushin Market Bomb Blast in Lagos
Preliminary findings indicated that the explosion was caused by an Improvised Explosive Device planted under a vehicle.
The Commissioner of Police, Lagos State Command, Mr Fatai Tijani, has assured residents of safety following a bomb explosion at the Shoe Materials Market in Mushin on Monday.
Tijani gave the assurance while addressing journalists at the scene of the incident suspected to be an Improvised Explosive Device (IED), which triggered brief panic in the area.
According to him, the police received information about an explosion and immediately deployed Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD) operatives to cordon off and secure the area.
” We promptly deployed our EOD team after receiving reports of an explosion. The area was cordoned off and thoroughly searched,” he said.
He explained that preliminary findings indicated that the explosion was caused by an Improvised Explosive Device planted under a vehicle.
Tijani said the device was placed beneath the passenger side of the vehicle and detonated when the engine was started.
News
PenCom gives MDAs deadline to submit retirees’ details
According to PenCom, the data collection exercise is critical to the smooth rollout of the Exit Benefit Scheme, which was recently approved by the Federal Government for employees of treasury-funded MDAs.
The National Pension Commission has directed treasury-funded Ministries, Departments and Agencies to submit details of employees who retired or are due to retire between January 1 and December 31, 2026, as part of preparations for the implementation of the Federal Government’s newly approved Exit Benefit Scheme.
In a circular dated June 16, 2026, signed by the Acting Head of the Contribution and Bond Redemption Department, Murtala Modibbo, PenCom said that the information must reach the Commission on or before July 6, 2026, warning that submissions must be complete, accurate and strictly comply with the prescribed template.
The circular was addressed to heads and chief executive officers of treasury-funded federal MDAs.
According to PenCom, the data collection exercise is critical to the smooth rollout of the Exit Benefit Scheme, which was recently approved by the Federal Government for employees of treasury-funded MDAs.
News
DSS witness, Deji Adeyanju, admits El-Rufai hacks NSA phone lines
Adejanju confirmed to investigators that he was present when El-Rufai made the statements on air and that when further questioned during the interview, the former governor stated that someone carried out the phone tapping and passed the information to him.
A witness has confirmed that the former Kaduna State governor, Nasir El-Rufai wiretapped the telephone lines of the National Security Adviser (NSA).
At the resumption of the trial on Monday, a witness of the Department of State Services, DSS, Deji Adeyanju told a Federal High Court in Abuja that he appeared for an interview program on Arise News on February 16, the same day El-Rufai made the confession on the same television channel.
Adeyanju, the second witness to appear for the prosecution during the trial, told the Court that the former governor admitted during the television interview that ‘we listened to the conversations of the NSA, Mallam Nuhu Ribadu.
Led in evidence by prosecution counsel, Oluwole Aladedoye, Adeyanju confirmed that he knew El-Rufai as a former governor of Kaduna State and recalled issuing a public statement after reports emerged that the former governor was to be arrested by security operatives.
The prosecution tendered the subpoena used to summon Adeyanju, which was admitted and marked as Exhibit G.
The Arise News interview was watched in open court. The prosecution subsequently tendered Adeyanju’s own interview contained in a flash drive alongside a certificate of compliance.
Both were admitted in evidence as Exhibits.
Adeyanju told the court that he was invited by the Department of State Services, DSS, where he was asked to recount what transpired at the television studio.
Adeyanju confirmed to investigators that he was present when El-Rufai made the statements on air and that when further questioned during the interview, the former governor stated that someone carried out the phone tapping and passed the information to him.
Under cross-examination by defence counsel, Paul Erokoro, Adeyanju stated that while he did not hear El-Rufai specifically say he hacked the phone lines of the National Security Adviser, NSA, he heard him say, ‘we listened to the conversations of the NSA.
‘When asked whether he knew the means through which the NSA makes calls, and if he would be surprised to learn that DSS investigators did not ask the NSA which of his devices was allegedly compromised, he replied that those were not his business.
The matter was adjourned until June 23 for continuation of trial.
The DSS had filed a charge against El-Rufai over his alleged involvement in wiretapping the telephone lines of the NSA, Nuhu Ribadu.
In the three-count charges, marked: FHC/ABJ/CR/99/2026 was filed early before the Federal High Court in Abuja, the secret police accused the former governor of breaching the Cybercrimes Prohibition Act, (2024), and the Nigerian Communications Act (2003.)
The matter was adjourned until June 23 for continuation of trial.
Counts in the charge reads:
*That you, Mallam Nasir El Rufai, adult, male, on 13th February, 2026, while appearing as a guest on Arise TV station’s Prime Time Programme in Abuja, within the jurisdiction of this court, did admit during the interview that you and your cohorts unlawfully intercepted the phone communications of the National Security Adviser, Nuhu Ribadu and thereby committed an offence contrary to and punishable under Section 12(1) of the Cybercrimes (Prohibition, Prevention, etc) Amendment, Act, 2024.
*That you, Mallam Nasir El Rufai, adult, male, on 13t February, 2026, while appearing as a guest on Arise TV station’s Prime Time Programme in Abuja, within the jurisdiction of this court, did state during the interview that you know and relate with certain individual, who unlawfully intercepted the Phone Communications of the National Security Adviser, Nuhu Ribadu, without reporting the said individual to relevant Security agencies and thereby committed an offence contrary to and punishable under Section 27 (b) of the Cybercrimes (Prohibition, Prevention, etc) Amendment, Act, 2024.
*That you, Mallam Nasir El Rufai, adult, male, and other still at large, sometime in 2026, in Abuja, within the jurisdiction of this court, with others still at large did use technical equipment or systems which compromised public safety, national security and instilling reasonable apprehension of insecurity among Nigerians by unlawfully intercepting the phone communications of the National Security Adviser, Nuhu Ribadu, to which you admitted during an interview on 13th February, 2026, on Arise TV station’s Prime Time Programme in Abuja and thereby committed an offence contrary to and punishable under Section 131(2) Nigerian Communications Act 2003.
News
JAMB Ends Degree Admissions Through Colleges of Education, Makes NCE Mandatory
The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) has abolished admissions into affiliated degree programmes offered by Colleges of Education across Nigeria, making the Nigeria Certificate in Education (NCE) the only admission pathway into the institutions from the 2026/2027 academic session.
The decision was announced in JAMB’s newly released NCE/ND Agric Registration Guidelines issued by the Office of the Registrar.
Under the new policy, admissions into university degree programmes run through affiliations between Colleges of Education and conventional universities will no longer be permitted, and directed that no fresh admissions should be conducted into either 100-level or 200-level degree programmes in Colleges of Education.
According to the Board, all new entrants must now be admitted through the NCE programme, reinforcing its role as the foundational qualification for teacher education in Nigeria.
To accommodate candidates already affected by the change, JAMB provided several options. Direct Entry applicants who selected affiliated degree programmes may switch institutions free of charge, transfer to the parent university overseeing the degree programme, or have their second-choice institution upgraded to first choice for admission consideration.
Similarly, UTME candidates seeking admission into affiliated degree programmes in Colleges of Education may either change institutions, elevate their second-choice institution to first choice, or migrate to the NCE programme.
Candidates opting for the NCE route will be required to obtain an O’Level verification code and pay a registration fee of ₦700 through the JAMB portal.
The Board further stated that candidates admitted into NCE programmes will have any ongoing UTME or Direct Entry admission processes suspended, as it urged Colleges of Education, accredited CBT centres, Professional Registration Centres and its officials nationwide to study the new guidelines and ensure strict compliance with the policy, which marks the end of affiliated degree admissions in Colleges of Education.
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