Apart from the Nigeria Air fraud, Hadi Sirika is also on trial for contract fraud and abuse of office for awarding government contracts worth 3 billion naira to a company linked to his daughter & son in law when he was Minister of Aviation under Buhari Mr Integrity. The same man was shamelessly running for Katsina senatorial seat under APC. Nigeria keeps recycling frauds and expecting good governance.
Money gone under Buhari:👇
• Hadi Sirika — ₦2bn
• Mele Kyari — ₦210tn
• Sadiya Farouq — ₦38.7bn + $1.3m
• Malami — ₦256bn
That's about ₦210.297tn, excluding the dollar amount.
Buhari's appointees had mission to ground this country. The looting just too much.
IRAN TAKE OUT HUGE NUMBER OF FIGHTER JETS
“In response to the missile attacks by the child-killing US army on a recreational area, a manufacturing complex, and a barracks area around Karaj and Nazar Abad, and a local IRGC base in Pishva County, to punish the aggressor, this morning, 12 ballistic missiles were fired at the location of the American F35, F15, and F16 fighter jets, as well as important installations of the US terrorist army located at the Al-Azraq air base and control center, destroying those installations and a large number of fighter jets.”
BREAKING: IRANIAN PRESIDENT PEZESHKIAN:
“It is impossible to force a nation into surrender through airpower and bombing.
Gaza, despite its small size, has not been forced into surrender after three years.
They will not be able to force Iran to surrender either, and we certainly will not surrender.”
JUST IN: IRAN FM SPOX ESMAEIL BAQAEI:
“Water is the pulse of life and the U.S. is deliberately targetting the lifeblood of the Iranian people.
As part of its aggression against Iran, the U.S. military has deliberately struck vital civilian water infrastructure in Sirik, Hormozgan, destroying two reservoirs with a combined capacity of 2,500 cubic meters.
These facilities supplied drinking water to more than 20,000 residents across ten villages.
This is not collateral damage it is a calculated war crime and a flagrant violation of human rights and international humanitarian law.
The U.S. must be held accountable for committing such systematic brutal attacks on civilian life-sustaining infrastructure.”
Senator Abdulaziz Yari is set to chair his first annual general meeting as the controlling shareholder of Geregu Power Plc, following his approximately $750 million buyout of Femi Otedola's majority stake completed in December 2025.
Yari, a former governor of Zamfara State and a current senator, took control of Geregu Power after Otedola moved to redeploy capital toward FirstHoldCo and the upcoming $100 million personal investment in Dangote Refinery's planned IPO, with the December transaction landing as one of the largest privately negotiated equity transfers on the Nigerian Exchange in recent years.
The first AGM under Yari's chairmanship will set the operational and capital-allocation tone for Geregu, which operates a generation portfolio anchored on the 414MW Geregu I and 435MW Geregu II plants in Kogi State, with shareholders watching for guidance on dividend policy, debt restructuring, potential capacity expansion and how Yari intends to position Geregu within Nigeria's evolving power-sector reform, willing-buyer-willing-seller market and gas supply agreements.
Yesterday evening, funeral prayer in absentia (Salat al-Gha'ib) was held in Besse, Kebbi State, for Malam Yahaya Tanko Besse, chairman of JIBWIS (Izala) in Koko-Besse LGA, who reportedly died while in captivity after being abducted by bandits on May 18, 2026 alongside his friend who is also APC Party chairman in Koko-Besse LGA.
Religious leaders, government officials and hundreds of residents gathered to pray for the deceased as news of his death spread across the country.
How many more community leaders must be lost to insecurity before effective protection reaches vulnerable communities?
The manner in which the Courts have consistently denied bail applications for an alleged offence that is clearly bailable, or imposed bail conditions that are practically impossible to meet on the case of Nasir El-Rufai, raises serious concerns about the administration of justice.
This was exhaustibly discussed by the directive of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) last week. Such actions create the impression that the judicial process is being used not to ensure justice, but to facilitate the continued detention of Mallam.
It is becoming difficult to ignore the political undertones surrounding Mallam's prolonged detention. The circumstances suggest a an already held notion of a deliberate effort to keep him out of the political space at a critical period leading up to the 2027 elections.
Detaining Mallam Nasir El-Rufai beyond the period required for legal proceedings is unlikely to alter Nigeria's political trajectory in 2027. Mallam has already paid his dues, and Nigerians will assess and judge the government of the day based on the realities they experience in their daily lives: economic conditions, security, social welfare, and the quality of governance.
H A. Dandajeh.
10.06.2026