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Ramadan/Lent: Police, religious Leaders advocate unity among journalists

By Francesca Hangeior
The Assistant Inspector General of Police, Special Protection Unit ( SPU) Force Headquarters Olatunji Disu and religious leaders on Wedbesday stressed the need to embrace peace, unity and compassion amongst Nigerians.
This call is coning as Muslims and Christians observe the holy periods of Ramadan and Lent,
They made the call during the Breaking of fast with journalist, an event put together by the NIgeria Union of Journalist,(NUJ) FCT council on Tuesday in Abuja.
Speaking during the event, AIG, Disu called on journalist to continue to promote peace and unity . He also commended the togetherness and professionalism of members of the forth estate of the realm.
He said:”.we use this opportunity to urge all Nigerians to embody values of compassion, humility, and service in their interactions with one another. This is a call for all faiths to work together for a harmonious and prosperous Nigeria.
Also speaking, the Deputy Imam of Abuja, Yusuf Abdulateef delivering a message on the significance of Ramadan, describing it as a time not only for fasting but for spiritual purification and closeness to God.
He said: “Ramadan is not only for us to abstain from eating alone, but it is also coming for us to be purified. For our souls to be purified and for us to be brought closer to our Creator.
He further explained the special role of the month of Ramadan in the Muslim faith, noting its connection to the revelation of the Holy Quran.”Allah revealed the Holy Quran in the month of Ramadan, and that is why Ramadan is so special to us as Muslims”.
He also underscored the importance of the last 10 days of Ramadan, which are considered a time for deep reflection and seeking Allah’s forgiveness.
The Deputy Imam also highlighted the spirit of unity fostered by Ramadan, sharing a personal experience of Christians and Muslims coming together to break fast and pray at his mosque.
“This is one of the special significances of Ramadan. We come together in spirit, unity, cooperation, and one and the same faith.”
The Chairman of the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ) FCT Chapter, Comrade Grace Ike, while calling on journalists to promote peace and unity through their work said Nigeria, as a diverse nation with ethnic groups and multiple faiths, thrives on peace and unity.
According to her, Nigeria’s history has been marred by ethno-religious conflicts that threaten our shared future,” she said.
Ike stressed the role of journalists in shaping narratives that either unite or divide communities. She urged both Muslim and Christian journalists to report stories that foster interfaith dialogue and tolerance.
She said: “In promoting unity, we have to uphold fairness in reporting to ensure that no group feels marginalized or misrepresented. This builds trust among communities and strengthens societal cohesion.
“May Allah guide us in our mission to serve truthfully and justly. May our efforts contribute to a peaceful and united Nigeria. Ramadan Kareem and Graceful Lenten Season.”i
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BREAKING! Finally, White Smoke Emerges From Sistine Chapel as Vatican Elects New Pope

Finally, white smoke emerged from the Sistine Chapel on the evening of Thursday, May 8, signalling that the Vatican has elected a new Pope. The cardinal selected to succeed Pope Francis will be announced in due course.
On Wednesday, 133 cardinals entered the chapel for a deeply choreographed ritual that has preceded the election of every Pope since 1179. The first session started with a vow of secrecy—excommunication awaits anyone who leaks details of the votes—followed by the vote.
Once the numbers were tallied, the votes were burned in a special stove set up inside the chapel. Yesterday’s black smoke informed the public that the cardinals had yet to make their decision.
The papal conclave is a centuries-old process with modern-day consequences.
Francis’ 12-year pontificate was pivotal, not just for the church, but for the globe. His advocacy for care of migrants and the poor, his tolerance for homosexuality, and his denunciation of climate change and conflicts in Gaza and Ukraine helped reset the world’s moral compass.
Yet within the church, his reformist interpretation of church doctrine—”Who am I to judge?” he famously responded when asked to weigh in on gay priests—set off a polarizing struggle between modernists and traditionalists. So too has his big tent inclusivity that welcomed practitioners of all kinds, and invited many of them, even members of the LGBTQ community and lay women, to sit with bishops and contribute their thoughts on the direction of the church in meetings called synods. It is this vision of synodality—the church as a listening one instead of a top-down enforcer of doctrine—that is at the core of Francis’ progressivism, and the biggest threat to traditionalists who want to maintain the power and influence of bishops and cardinals.
Every conclave, at its most fundamental, is a referendum on the previous pope’s legacy. Behind closed doors and sworn to secrecy, the cardinals will have had to decide if the new pope is one to continue on Francis’ radically inclusive path, or someone who will roll back his policies in favor of a more inward-looking church focused on doctrine.
That will have repercussions in a tense historical moment of religious and ethnic strife exacerbated by conflict, climate change, rising nationalism and anti-migrant sentiment are coming to the fore, says Alberto Melloni, a Vatican historian who is the director of the John XXIII Foundation for Religious Sciences in Bologna, Italy. There are relatively few global figures who can move opinion, drive conversation, and call for change like a pope. “It will be very different if we have a pope who is more worried about ideological topics of tradition than someone who makes the unity of the human family and care for the planet the first point in his agenda,” says Melloni.
There are 252 cardinals, but only those under the age of 80 took part in the conclave. Of the 133 cardinals that voted, Francis appointed 108.
Over the past several years, Francis sought to elevate bishops from underrepresented places such as Myanmar, Rwanda, and East Timor to the college of cardinals to better represent the scope of global Catholicism. Coming from wildly varying cultural backgrounds, they do not align on any consistent ideological spectrum. Many of them are more conservative on issues of homosexuality and women, even if they embrace Francis’ focus on other kinds of inclusivity. That made for a very unpredictable vote, says Melloni. “It is not liberals vs. conservatives. It is not donkeys and elephants facing one another across the aisle. It is a collage of people divided into very small groups,” aligned by theological leanings, doctrinal philosophy, or missionary experience.
Given the stakes, the competing agendas, and the constantly shifting micro alliances and priorities, it was impossible to predict from the outset who will ultimately get support from two-thirds of a very divided electorate, faced with one of the most, if not the most, important decisions of their career. “The only thing we can say with any confidence is that we’ll have a male pope,” says Melloni, when pressed to hazard a guess for the outcome ahead of the papal election.
Most of the politicking has already been done, conducted in private over informal meetings and at dinners in the nearby guesthouse where the cardinals stay. Overt campaigning is frowned upon, but it is not uncommon for trusted “kingmaker” cardinals to push for the candidates that share their values and vision for the church.
Once a papal election starts, the cardinals cannot leave the conclave except in rare cases, and they are cut off from the rest of the word, with no access to phones, the internet or even newspapers (the word conclave comes from the Latin “with key,” as in, locked up.)
Inside the chapel, the electors share a brief prayer and take an oath to observe the sanctity of the process before handwriting the name of their chosen candidate on a piece of folded paper. One by one, the cardinals will deposit their votes in a special urn. Once voting is done, the votes are tallied, then burned.
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Reps To Host National Summit On Security Over Plateau Killings

At the same time, the lawmakers also called on the President to take immediate steps by deploying security forces to the most affected areas, particularly Bokkos and Bassa—and to extend protection to other communities at risk.
Lawmakers also pressed for urgent humanitarian action, as relief items were requested for those caught in the crisis, and the ministry responsible for humanitarian matters was told to design a long-term recovery plan for the devastated villages.
This decision came after a motion was raised by Rep. Daniel Asama, who stressed the need to act swiftly. He pointed out that people living in and around Jos, especially in Bokkos and Bassa have endured wave after wave of attacks.
He painted a grim picture: “Families torn apart, homes burned down, farms abandoned, and entire communities uprooted. He insisted the violence must end and the displaced must be supported before the situation worsens.
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