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Traditional Rulers Advocate Restoration Of Their Constitutional Roles

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Ɓy Gloria Ikibah

Traditional rulers in Zone A North Central, have urged the National Assembly to restore their Constitutional roles they have been guaranteed in the previous Nigerian Constitutions which were expunged in the 1999 Constitution.

They made the call at the Zonal Public hearing on the Constitution amendment for Zone A North Central, comprising of Niger, Kogi and Kwara States held in Minna, Niger state on Saturday.

In a submission on behalf of the Council of Traditional Rulers of Nigeria, Chaired by the Sultan of Sokoto, Alhaji Muhammad Sa’ad Abubakar, the Etsu Nupe, Alhaji Yahaya Abubakar informed that, prior to the 1999 Constitution, traditional rulers have played active role in the implementation of government policies and governance at local level through clear cut administrative jurisdictions.

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He said, “I am going to speak on behalf of the National Council of Traditional Rulers of Nigeria under the Chairmanship of His Eminence, the Sultan of Sokoto, Co-Chairced by His Royal Majesty, the Ooni of Ife and members in all the 36 states and Abuja and members of this Council, Emirs, Obas and Obis of this Council.

“We believe that, traditional rulers in Nigeria decided to freely associate and share a common principle of fairness, justice and equity, and to jointly offer useful advice, cooperation and assistance to governments at all levels and to safeguard the traditions, cultures and values of their respective circles.

“Between the years 1920s and 1960s, the traditional rulers were very-very influential and in charge of the Native Authorities and institutions. In the first Republic, regional governments have governance arrangements, so all these things were included in our previous Constitutions.

“Up to the 1979 Constitution, we had some roles to play as traditional institutions. However, the 1999 revised Constitution, actually cleaned out these basic roles of the traditional institutions thereby breaking the link between the government and governed. This link has been very much effective in the other Constitutions and the years passed.

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“So, since we had that broken link between the government and the governed, we have so many challenges, especially in the areas of security and mobilisation of our people and even programmes and policies of government cannot be actually implemented satisfactorily. So, we are praying that, this time around that link will be joined again. The broken link that we have between the government and the governed in the art of governance to be joined so that we have the advantages of governance.

“So, we, on our own side, we made some recommendations, we put some observations all contained in our Memo that we submit to this Committee. We hope, it is important that, the Committees, the National Assembly Committees on the Review of the 1999 Constitution and by extension, the National Assembly as a whole ensure that, the Constitutional provision is made with a view to creating roles for traditional rulers in matters involving religion, culture, security, justice and other ancilliary matters.

“The Constitutional provisions should provide for states to Enact laws to cater for peculiar matters relating to traditional rulers in the respective states. In addition, the Chairman of State council of chiefs should be recognized by the Constitution as members of the Council of States it has been in all the Nigerian Constitutions except that of 1999”.

In his opening address earlier, the Chairman North Central Center A, Deputy Majority Leader, Rep. Ali Abdullahi Ibrahim assured the participants that, the House Committee on Constitution Review headed by the Deputy Speaker, Rep. Benjamin Kalu would be thorough and do justice to all submissions in an objective manner to give Nigerians the Constitution they deserve.

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He said, “The House has debated all the issues and thereby created the avenue for this further legislative action so as to ensure participation of Nigerians and other very important stakeholders in the process of the amendment.

“A lot of dust has been raised on the need to again alter the constitution of the country. What of dust? Ranging from one issue to another. However, it should be noted that this same constitution has been formally amended five good times, with the most recent in the last 9th assembly. That was signed into law in 2023.

“This public hearing is another opportunity for stakeholders and citizens to air their views and contribute to improving the living condition and standard of all Nigerians, as well as contributing to the institutional strengthening that is next week to make the country great again. We have the obligation to do what we must do to strengthen the country. We have the obligation to ensure that no group is marginalized or oppressed.

“Permit me also to emphasize that the key to the unity of this great nation lies mostly in this exercise. The significance of this cannot be overemphasized as the outcome will go in long. way in the history of this great country either to make or mind to this and I wish to order every presenter to do what would bring growth unity peace and development to Nigeria”.

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OpenAI restricts limited release of new model to US only

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OpenAI on Friday launched a US-only preview of its latest powerful AI model series to a limited group of partners at the request of the US government, the company said.

The release comes two weeks after the White House took Silicon Valley by surprise by ordering OpenAI’s rival Anthropic to ban all foreign nationals from accessing its Fable 5 and Mythos 5 models, citing national security concerns.

Anthropic swiftly shut down all access to those models, saying it could not reliably comply with the restriction on foreign nationals.

The latest models from leading AI companies, such as Anthropic’s Mythos series and now OpenAI’s GPT-5.6, have drawn major concerns over their reportedly unprecedented ability to identify software vulnerabilities — weaknesses in code that hackers can exploit.

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Under pressure over the novelty of their capabilities, Trump earlier this month signed an executive order setting up a voluntary federal review of national security risks in advanced AI models before their release.

The White House has communicated little about how it will enforce its executive order — in which companies are understood to be participating voluntarily — and what models would fall under its review rules.

The intervention was striking for a White House that has otherwise pushed to loosen AI oversight — even moving to block states from writing their own rules.

The strong action against Anthropic has drawn accusations of government overreach, and OpenAI said it was uncomfortable with the process it was required to follow for its new models.

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OpenAI said it briefed the US government on its new models’ capabilities ahead of the launch and, at the government’s request, is beginning with a limited preview for a select group of trusted partners whose identities have been shared with authorities.

The partners are US-based, but OpenAI said overseas employees at those companies or entities would also have access to the new models.

“We don’t believe this kind of government access process should become the long-term default,” OpenAI said in a blog post.

“It keeps the best tools from users, developers, enterprises, cyber defenders, and global partners who need them. We are taking this short-term step because we believe it is the strongest path to broader availability in the coming weeks.”

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When Anthropic was initially targeted, some believed the safety-focused company was being unfairly singled out by the Trump administration for political reasons.

In an earlier clash with the White House, Anthropic angered Trump’s team by refusing to allow its technology to be used for mass surveillance and autonomous weapons, leading the Pentagon to cancel its contracts with the company.

That feud is now being litigated in two separate lawsuits.

– Three new models –

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OpenAI’s GPT-5.6 series comprises three new models: Sol, the company’s new flagship; Terra, a mid-range model for everyday work; and Luna, a fast, low-cost option.

Once broadly available, Terra would be priced at half the cost of its predecessor GPT-5.5, the company said, as it seeks to lock in customers amid fierce competition from Anthropic and Google.

Both OpenAI and Anthropic have filed confidential IPO documents with US regulators and are targeting public listings at valuations approaching $1 trillion, raising the commercial stakes of the AI arms race between them.

AFP

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Edo CJ constitutes special court to try cultists, kidnappers

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The Chief Judge of Edo State, Justice Daniel Okungbowa, has set up a special court to try cases relating to cultism and kidnapping in the State.

This was disclosed in a statement by the Chief Registrar of the State High Court, B.O Osawaru, dated June 25, 2026, and titled: ‘Establishment and Composition of a Special Criminal Court for Edo State sitting in Benin City.’

According to Osawaru, the establishment of the Special Court, which is to be known as “Special Criminal Court 1”, would take effect from Wednesday, July 1, 2026.

Osawaru, who noted that the court will be sitting in Benin City, the state capital, said it was “pursuant to the request by His Excellency, the Governor of Edo State, Senator Monday Okpebholo, for the constitution of a Special Court for offences relating to cultism and kidnapping, an additional court to be known as “Special Criminal Court 1” is hereby established with effect from Wednesday, the 1st day of July, 2026, for offences relating to cultism and kidnapping and such other matters as may be assigned to the court by the Honourable Chief Judge of Edo State.”

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Recall that Governor Monday Okpebholo had on June 18, 2026, during the parade of arrested suspected kidnappers and others for various criminal activities by the Commissioner of Police, Edo State Command, Monday Agbonika, threatened to set up a special court to try cases relating to cultism and kidnapping.

The Governor, in living up to his threat on June 19, 2026, wrote to the Chief Judge of the state requesting him to set up the special court.

The Governor’s request was contained in a letter dated June 19, 2026 and signed by Umar Musa Ikhilor, the Secretary to the State Government and addressed to the Chief Judge of the state.

The letter with reference number SGA.710/T/40 was also received by the office of the chief judge on the same date, June 19, 2026, at about 3:16pm.

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The said letter is titled, ”Request for the constitution of a special court for offences relating to cultism and kidnapping”.

The SSG said the request was necessitated by the governor’s unwavering commitment to tackling and eradicating the menace of cultism and kidnapping in the State, as well as strengthening the administration of criminal justice.

The letter also requested the Chief Judge to nominate three judges or such numbers as he may deem fit, to constitute the Special Court.

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Army to recruit 28,000 additional soldiers to combat insecurity

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The Nigerian Army has announced plans to recruit and train an additional 28,000 personnel as part of efforts to strengthen ongoing operations against insecurity across the country.

The Chief of Army Staff (COAS), Lt.-Gen. Waidi Shaibu, disclosed this on Friday during a press conference to herald the 2026 Nigerian Army Day Celebration (NADCEL), themed “Protecting the Nation and Serving the People: A Way Forward for the Nigerian Army.”

Represented by the Chief of Policy and Plans (Army), Maj.-Gen. Bamidele Alabi, the COAS said the Army has also established additional brigades and units while reviewing its force structure to address operational gaps and respond to emerging security threats nationwide.

According to Shaibu, the recruitment drive forms part of broader reforms aimed at enhancing the Army’s operational effectiveness.

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“The Nigerian Army will recruit and train an additional 28,000 troops to help stem the tide of insecurity across the country. We have also established additional brigades and units and are continuously reviewing our force structure to address observed gaps in deployments and emerging security challenges,” he said.

He added that the Army is strengthening its operational capability through the acquisition of modern combat platforms, force multipliers and strategic partnerships, alongside extensive infrastructure upgrades across formations and units nationwide.
The week-long Nigerian Army Day Celebration will begin on July 1 and culminate in the grand finale on July 6, 2026.

Highlighting activities lined up for the celebration, Shaibu said there would be Jumat prayers and interdenominational church services across Army formations, public speaking engagements in secondary schools nationwide, the NADCEL Lecture, the Chief of Army Staff Literary Competition Award Ceremony, a media interaction with senior journalists and the Nigerian Army Officers’ Wives Association (NAOWA) Charity Outreach Programme in Port Harcourt.

He further disclosed that the grand finale would feature the African Land Forces Forum (AFRILAFF) 2026, organised by Great Minds Event Limited, a Dubai-based event management company.

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The forum, themed “Securing Africa: Advanced Defence, United Efforts,” will bring together Chiefs of Army and other military leaders from across Africa to discuss regional security challenges and defence cooperation.

According to the COAS, the event will also feature an international defence exhibition where manufacturers and vendors will showcase modern military equipment, technology and combat support systems for potential acquisition by African armed forces.

Shaibu noted that the Nigerian Army Day Celebration was first observed on July 6, 1978, to commemorate the outbreak of the Nigerian Civil War on July 6, 1967.
He described the annual celebration as a reminder of the cost of national disunity and the enduring importance of peace, reconciliation and national cohesion.

The Army chief also recalled that the Nigerian Army traces its origins to 1863 when Lieutenant John Glover of the Royal Navy established a small force of 18 indigenous soldiers known as the “Glover Hausas.”

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He said the force later evolved into the West African Frontier Force in 1890 before becoming the Nigerian Regiment, the Queen’s Own Nigerian Regiment and subsequently the Nigerian Military Force.

Following Nigeria’s independence in 1960, it became the Royal Nigerian Army and officially assumed its current name, the Nigerian Army, after the country attained republican status in 1963.

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