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Reps Committee Invites Minister Of State FCT, Chairmen Of 6 Area Councils

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By Gloria Ikibah 
 
The House Committee on FCT Area Councils and Ancillary Matters has invited the Minister of State FCT and the Six area councils Chairmen to appear before the Committee on Tuesday 16th July.
 
The Committee also threatened to sanction the Ministry and the six area councils, if they deliberately refused to appear next week.
 
This resolution was sequel to the refusal of the Chairmen of Area Councils to honour the invitation of the Committee on Tuesday in Abuja. 
 
Chairman of the Committee, Rep. Fredrick Agbedi, said the action of the minister of state and the council chairmen is a breach of their constitutional responsibilities and a disservice to the people they serve.
 
“The committee’s oversight function is essential to ensuring accountability and good governance, and this refusal to honour our invitation undermines these efforts”, he said.
 
According to Agbedi, the six area council chairmen had not flagged-off, completed or commissioned any project in the area councils, unlike the Minister.
 
“This is appalling considering the huge monthly allocation running into billions of Naira to each of the six area councils in the last one year and beyond”, he added.
 
He said the committee, would not hesitate to invoke its power to ensure that the area council operate in the best interest of the people.
 
Earlier, a member of the committee, Rep. Ikonne Ifeanyi, said it was a show of disrespect and lack of regard for the House that the Minister of state and her council chairmen refused to appear before the House after they were duly invited.
 
“Why must we invite someone here and they will give us the date they will appear? What about the risk people took to be there? We should not be seen pleading for them to appear before us.
 
“My own decision is that they should be the ones to look for us. If we don’t stop this arrogance, it will not stop.
 
“Henceforth, we will not approve anything for both the minister and the area council chairmen, and as a matter of fact, we will tell the president to remove Wike as the FCT minister.
 
“I hereby move as a motion to bring this to the floor of the house for them to come and explain why they are not honoring our invitation,” he said.
 
Also speaking, Rep. Adesola Adebayo, a member of the committee, said that the function to oversee the activities of the council areas resides in the House.
 
He said as former council chairman of Apapa Local Government in Lagos State, the chairmen should know that they are extensions of the state House.
 
Rep. Adebayo stated that no chairman dares not to appear before the state House of Assembly because they have the power to remove them.
 
The lawmaker said that he considered the attitude of the area council chairmen as an affront on the House of Representatives for them to have been invited and they refused to come.
 
“They were fully invited but wrote a letter within an hour saying that they would not be coming.
 
We should apply the maximum pressure on them; they should be accountable to the legislature.
 
“It is disrespectful and disregardful for the House of Representatives for them not to have shown up,’’ he said.
 
Rep. Nurudeen Abbas, however, appealed that the minister and council chairmen be given the last chance.
 
“Let’s communicate with them again, and if they fail to appear again, then we should sanction them”.
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El-Rufai confessed to wiretapping NSA’s phone on TV interview- witness

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A witness in the trial of former governor of Kaduna state, Nasir Ahmad El-Rufai on the alleged wiretapping the telephone lines of the National Security Adviser (NSA), Mallam Nuhu Ribadu has admitted that El-Rufai confirmed the wiretapping remarks during a television interview.

The Department of security service (DSS) witness, Barrister Deji Adeyanju told the Federal High Court in Abuja on Monday that he appeared for an interview program on Arise Television Station on February 16, the same day El-Rufai made the confession on the same television.

Adeyanju, the second prosecution witness in the trial, told the Court that the former governor admitted during the television interview that “we listened to the conversations of the NSA.”

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.

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The prosecution tendered the subpoena used to summon Adeyanju, which was admitted and marked as Exhibit G.

The court also viewed the Arise Television interview involving El-Rufai, after which Adeyanju confirmed the recording and the statements allegedly made during the programme.

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 H and H1.

While giving evidence, Adeyanju told the court that he was later invited by the Department of State Services, DSS, where he was asked to recount what transpired at the television studio.

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According to him, he 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.

Meanwhile, the prosecution tendered an official gazette without objection from the defence. The document was admitted and marked as Exhibit I.

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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, Mallam Nuhu Ribadu.

In the three-count charge, 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.)

Counts in the charge read:

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*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.

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Ex-Delta Gov Okowa Visits EFCC Lagos Office

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Former Delta State Governor, Ifeanyi Okowa, was at the Lagos office of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) on Awolowo Road, Ikoyi, today in connection with an ongoing investigation into allegations of illegal diversion of about ₦1.3 trillion.

The EFCC spokesman, Dele Oyewale, was not available for comments on the issue, but a source within the commission who did not want to be named told Channels Television that the former governor is being investigated for alleged diversion of 13 per cent derivation funds accrued to Delta State from the Federation Account between 2015 and 2023.

The former governor was previously arrested on November 4, 2024, and questioned by operatives of the EFCC at its Port Harcourt Zonal Directorate over the allegations.

He reportedly showed up at the Lagos office today, in a bid to secure the release of his passport to enable him to travel abroad for medical treatment.

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As of the time of this report, it was unclear whether his request was granted by the anti-graft agency.

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‘We Need Help Now’ — Nigerians Trapped in South Africa Appeal to Tinubu

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As the Malawian government moves to evacuate its citizens from South Africa following renewed xenophobic attacks, Nigerians caught in the unrest have expressed frustration over what they describe as a lack of support from their home country.

Chairman of the Pentecostal Fellowship of Nigeria (PFN) in Gauteng, South Africa, Ikye Okwuakwu, has called on President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to urgently intervene and assist Nigerians affected by the crisis.

Speaking amid reports that thousands of foreign nationals have been displaced and are currently sheltering in temporary camps, Okwuakwu questioned Nigeria’s response to the situation.

“Malawi is taking its people home. What is Nigeria doing for its own citizens?” he asked.

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He urged the Federal Government to take immediate steps to protect and support Nigerians stranded in South Africa, warning that many are facing uncertainty and hardship as tensions persist in affected communities.

The appeal comes as concerns continue to grow over the welfare and safety of foreign nationals impacted by the wave of xenophobic violence in parts of South Africa.

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