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Enugu retirees risk losing homes over N8m levy
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Retirees and landlords at Olympic Layout, a residential area on the outskirts of Enugu, have lamented a forced eviction due to an N8m infrastructure levy mandated by Governor Peter Mbah.
Since April, residents have been locked in a standoff with the state government over the policy, which requires them to pay N10,000 per square metre as an infrastructure fee and an additional N4,000 per square metre for a Certificate of Occupancy.
Saturday PUNCH gathered that a plot measuring about 540 square metres, the total bill is close to N8m, which residents said is higher than the market value of their properties.
The chairman of Olympic Layout, George Agusi, said, “We are not against the government imposing a levy, but if they want to impose, they should use a human face.
“How can somebody, after using all his savings and gratuity to buy land from a community, and after so many years, the government come demanding this outrageous payment? Most of our people are retirees, many of them widows. How could they get close to N8 million to pay? That means we are repurchasing our land.
“Even if you have close to N8m, where do you bring that kind of money at this hard time? There are other meaningful things you can use your money to do. After buying a land, somebody will come and tell you that you must pay, or it will be reallocated. I am asking them: even if we must pay, reduce it so that people can pay.”
Agusi added that many plots in Olympic Layout were worth less than the levies being demanded.
“You can’t sell a plot here for N7m. Yet the levy is more than that. How do you ask a retiree to pay N8 million for a property that isn’t worth that much?”
Our correspondent, who visited the layout, observed that the area, accessed through Agbani road by One Day Bus Stop, shows visible signs of neglect.
One of the landlords in the area, Ede Ezekiel, explained, “The settlement we have been looking for between the two warring communities, Umu-Ugwu Akum Akwuke, our original landlord, and Etiti Ngwo, is the problem that is telling on us. We need the government to settle the crisis for us to have peace here.
“If you go to ENGIS, the original buyer registers with N100,000, and they will collect from you and still collect N100,000 from the same people who bought from Etiti Ngwo on the same plot of land. Isn’t this double registration?” one resident asked.
“I retired from public service in February 2021, and four years down the line, my gratuity is not yet paid. From little savings from my meagre salary while in service, I acquired a plot of land in this layout and built a little structure that gave me the leverage of not being a tenant after retirement, because that is the worst thing that can happen to a public servant when you are no longer paid.
“Now the government wants to reallocate it to others because I cannot pay the levy imposed on us. I am appealing to the government to please reduce the infrastructure levy to N1 million and give us time,” a landlord in the area, Innocent Ekwu, said.
The Enugu State Geographic Information System Services, in a June 3, 2025, letter to the Olympic Layout Board of Trustees, defended the levy as part of a regularisation process to bring the layout under the state’s development masterplan.
“The land currently under your association’s management is classified as Crown Land, which is legally owned by the state government,” wrote ENGIS Executive Director, Mr Chiwetalu Nwatu.
“The compulsory infrastructural development fee of N10,000 per sqm is essential to cover the costs of basic infrastructure, which is lacking in the area. It is not a penalty but rather a contribution towards ensuring that the land can be brought up to acceptable living standards.”
He said the government had extended the payment window for the initial 30 per cent of the levy by 30 days, from June 15 to July 14, 2025, and would allow residents to pay in two instalments.
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Pope Leo appoints two Nigerians to key Vatican roles
Pope Leo has appointed two Nigerians to key positions in the Vatican’s Dicastery for Evangelization.
According to Fides News Agency, the appointments were announced alongside those of three other African Catholic leaders.
Archbishop Alfred Adewale Martins of Lagos was named a member of the Dicastery for Evangelization (Section for First Evangelization and New Particular Churches), one of the Vatican’s principal departments responsible for missionary activities and the establishment of new local Churches.
Also appointed as a consultor of the same Dicastery is Father Wenceslaus C. Madu, C.M.F., Vice-Chancellor of the Claretian University of Nigeria, Nekede.
Other African appointees as members of the Dicastery are Cardinal Fridolin Ambongo Besungu, OFM Cap, Archbishop of Kinshasa in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and Archbishop Andrew Nkea Fuanya of Bamenda, Cameroon.
Archbishop François Sylla of Conakry, Guinea, was also appointed as a consultor.
The appointments are expected to strengthen African representation in the Vatican’s evangelization mission and governance of new particular Churches.
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Terrorists Now Recruit, Raise Funds Online, Nigerian Army Warns
The Nigerian Army has warned that terrorist and criminal groups were increasingly exploiting cyberspace to recruit members, raise funds, coordinate attacks and spread propaganda, describing the trend as a growing threat to Nigeria’s national security.
The Chief of Army Staff (COAS), Lt.-Gen. Waidi Shaibu, raised the alarm on Tuesday at the 2026 Nigerian Army Cyber Warfare School Seminar in Abuja.
Represented by the Deputy Chief of Special Services and Programmes, Maj.-Gen. Jeremiah Manjang, the Army Chief said cyberspace has evolved into a strategic battlefield where both state and non-state actors operate with unprecedented speed, making security threats more complex and difficult to counter.
He noted that hostile actors no longer require physical presence to disrupt critical infrastructure, compromise sensitive information, manipulate public opinion or undermine national security through anonymous cyber attacks.
According to him, terrorism, insurgency, banditry, kidnapping, separatist agitations, organised crime, misinformation and disinformation are increasingly being enabled, coordinated and amplified through digital platforms and cyber networks.
“The reality is that terrorist and criminal groups now exploit cyberspace for recruitment, propaganda, fundraising, intelligence gathering, attack coordination and concealment of illicit financial transactions. This demands a proactive and coordinated national response,” he said.
Shaibu said the changing nature of security threats had compelled the Nigerian Army to strengthen its cyber capabilities to effectively address complex, asymmetric and technology-driven challenges.
He called for stronger cyber intelligence capabilities driven by artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning and advanced data analytics to improve early warning systems, threat detection and predictive security analysis.
The COAS also advocated deeper collaboration among government institutions, the military, law enforcement agencies, academia and the private sector, stressing that cybersecurity can no longer be handled by a single institution.
He emphasised the need for sustained investment in indigenous cyber capabilities, research, technological innovation and human capacity development to protect Nigeria’s digital sovereignty and enhance national resilience against emerging threats.
Shaibu further stated that integrating cyber capabilities into conventional military operations would strengthen surveillance, intelligence gathering, geospatial analysis, command-and-control systems, situational awareness and overall operational effectiveness.
Earlier, the Commandant of the Nigerian Army Cyber Warfare School, Brig.-Gen. Jacob Bawa, said the seminar was organised to deepen cybersecurity awareness, strengthen cyber resilience and promote collaboration among security stakeholders.
Bawa noted that Nigeria’s increasing reliance on digital technologies has exposed critical infrastructure, including telecommunications, power systems, financial institutions and government databases, to cybercriminals, terrorists and hostile state actors.
He said the Cyber Warfare School was established as a centre of excellence for cyber warfare training, education and research.
According to him, participants at the seminar would examine cyber resilience, threat intelligence, incident response, cyber warfare and emerging technologies with a view to developing practical recommendations for strengthening Nigeria’s cybersecurity architecture.
Also speaking, cybersecurity expert Abdulhakeem Ajijola warned that national security now depends significantly on the protection of digital systems, noting that artificial intelligence is transforming military operations, command structures and the protection of critical infrastructure.
Ajijola urged Nigeria to develop sovereign cyber capabilities, warning that excessive dependence on foreign-controlled software, platforms and artificial intelligence systems could undermine national resilience, operational continuity and independent decision-making during periods of crisis.
He stressed that while technology should be deployed to strengthen national sovereignty, responsibility for operational decisions must remain with human commanders.
News
Kano, Lagos maintain lead in Continuous Voter Registration
Kano and Lagos states have continued to lead the ongoing Continuous Voter Registration exercise ahead of the 2028 general election, with 118,207 and 78,360 registered voters, respectively.
However, the seven states in the North West and their counterparts in the North Central are leading the zonal distribution of registered voters, with 414,208 and 262,252 registered voters, respectively.
These figures are contained in data released by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) at the end of week seven in the last phase of the registration exercise, which began in August 2026.
The CVR exercise, which is expected to conclude on the 20th of July 2026, is suspended in Ekiti and Osun states due to the off-cycle governorship elections in both states.
Kano and Lagos are closely followed by Taraba with 64,293, Sokoto with 64,019, Jigawa with 57,304, Kaduna with 53,998, Benue with 52,861, Bauchi with 52,603, Ogun with 48,684, and Niger with 48,267 registered voters.
Ondo State has the fewest registered voters, with 8,578; Akwa Ibom, 14,253; Plateau, 16,878; the Federal Capital Territory, 21,826; and Enugu and Borno, 24,225.
Meanwhile, the Commission has charged media practitioners in the country to treat vote buying as a frontline investigative priority ahead of the August 15, 2026 Governorship Election and asked journalists to help document incidents with the specificity needed to trigger prosecution.
National Commissioner and Chairman, Information and Voter Education Committee (IVEC), Mohammed Kudu Haruna, made the call at a One-Day Media Stakeholders’ Forum in Osogbo, Osun State.
Haruna described vote buying as the most alarming development to emerge from the June 20, 2026, Ekiti State Governorship Election, saying political actors and their agents were widely reported to have offered cash to voters at polling units, in some cases through numbered vouchers redeemable outside polling locations to evade detection.
Haruna cited Section 22 of the Electoral Act 2026, which prescribes a fine of not less than five million naira, imprisonment of up to two years, or both, and a ten-year disqualification from contesting public office for persons convicted of vote trading.
He called on editors to allocate dedicated resources to the issue before, during and after Election Day, and on reporters to capture names, locations, amounts and the structure of coordination in their investigations, adding that such reporting would feed directly into an enforcement framework involving the Commission, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, the Nigeria Police Force and the State Security Service.
He said the Commission had concluded major pre-election preparations for Osun State, including clearing candidates from fourteen political parties, enrolling 381,817 new voters during the Continuous Voter Registration exercise, and arranging the deployment of the Bimodal Voter Accreditation System (BVAS) and the INEC Result Viewing Portal (IReV) across all 30 local government areas.
He cited the performance of these technologies in Ekiti, where BVAS recorded a 96 per cent functionality rate and IReV achieved a 98 per cent result-upload completion rate, as a benchmark for the Osun exercise.
The National Commissioner also highlighted declining voter turnout nationally, noting that accreditation in the Ekiti election covered fewer than four in every ten registered voters. He urged media organisations to extend their reach to voter mobilisation, alongside continued public enlightenment on the dangers of vote buying and the importance of result verification through IReV.
Osun State Resident Electoral Commissioner, Mrs Oluwatoyin Babalola, described the media as an indispensable partner of the Commission in promoting democratic values through objective reporting and public enlightenment, and called for continued collaboration to deliver a peaceful and credible election.
INEC Director, Voter Education and Publicity, Mrs Victoria Eta-Messi, said the forum was designed to strengthen INEC’s working relationship with media professionals, provide updates on election preparations, and clarify the Commission’s processes under the Electoral Act 2026.
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