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Xenophobic Attacks: Oshiomhole Asks FG to Revoke Licence of MTN
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Alkalanci brings media, information literacy training to Kaduna female Islamic scholars and teachers
Kaduna State became the latest stop in a growing national campaign against misinformation on Tuesday, as Alkalanci a Hausa-language fact-checking and media literacy organisation commenced a two-day training workshop for female Islamic scholars and teachers drawn from across the state.
The initiative, which has previously held sessions in Kano, Sokoto, Gombe and Maradi in Niger Republic, marks its first women-focused edition in Kaduna, with organisers expressing confidence it will deliver its most consequential results yet.
Speaking at the opening ceremony, Managing editor and program manager of Alkalanci Victoria Bamas, framed the gathering around the responsibilities that women carry as society’s primary educators. “If you educate a man, you educate an individual; but if you educate a woman, you educate a nation,” she said, invoking a widely cited maxim to underscore the workshop’s rationale.
Bamas warned that the spread of misinformation and disinformation including content manipulated by deepfake technology posed mounting dangers to Nigerian communities, particularly as the country moves toward another election cycle. She urged participants, as trusted voices in their communities, to take on the role of defenders of accurate information. “Pause, question, verify, and ultimately reject falsehood,” she urged.
The workshop was designed with an all-women team of facilitators drawn from academia, the media and religious institutions. Participants will receive practical tools for verifying text, images and video content, with the expectation that they carry the training back to their communities and multiply its reach.
Kaduna State Commissioner for Women Affairs, Hon. Rabi Ibrahim, commended Alkalanci for targeting women in its outreach, and drew attention to the particular harm caused by deepfake content circulated against women and girls on social media. She described media literacy and verification skills as essential not just for the women trained, but for the broader communities they serve and protect.
The Deputy Amira of Federation of Muslim Women’s Associations of Nigeria (FOMWAN) Hauwa Idris also pledged its support and partnership, with its delegation framing the fight against misinformation in humanitarian terms. “Combatting misinformation is like preventing a crisis it means saving humanity,” a spokesperson said. FOMWAN committed to cascading the knowledge gained at the workshop to women across all the states where it operates.
Representatives of Jamiiyyar Matan Arewa, Hajiya Ladi Garba the umbrella body for northern Nigerian women, echoed those sentiments, noting that the effects of disinformation from lost lives to health crises fall disproportionately on women. The group pledged institutional support for organisations like Alkalanci in their efforts to equip women with the tools to critically assess information they encounter.
Alkalanci said the Kaduna edition builds on lessons from its earlier engagements across the region, and that outcomes from those sessions had already demonstrated measurable impact in communities’ ability to identify and resist false narratives.
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SSANU, NASU to Suspend Strike May 11
Yusuf Danjuma Yunusa
Non-academic staff in Nigeria’s public universities have moved to suspend their ongoing nationwide strike, raising hopes for the resumption of full academic activities across campuses.
The Joint Action Committee of the Non-Academic Staff Union of Educational and Associated Institutions and the Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities directed its branches to commence processes for the suspension of the strike effective Monday, May 11, 2026.
The decision followed a series of meetings between the unions and the Federal Government over unresolved demands, particularly the renegotiation of the 2009 agreement and welfare-related concerns.
In a circular sent to branch chairpersons which was obtained by our correspondent on Wednesday morning, the unions said they had secured a firm commitment from the federal government to conclude all outstanding renegotiations within two weeks of suspending the industrial action.
The circular, jointly signed by NASU General Secretary, Peters Adeyemi, and SSANU National President, Mohammed Ibrahim, indicated that the breakthrough came after a crucial meeting with the federal government’s Expanded Renegotiation Committee led by a former Head of the Civil Service of the Federation, Yayale Ahmed.
According to the unions, the government explained that any further review of its earlier offer would require the approval of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu.
“The leadership of JAC considered the passionate appeal for the suspension of the ongoing strike action and also extracted a commitment from the FGN Expanded Renegotiation Committee that all renegotiations, including a reviewed offer of the Consolidated Tertiary Institutions Salary Structure (CONTISS), shall be concluded in two weeks from the date of the suspension of the strike,” the statement read.
It added that branch leaders had been directed to convene congresses to brief members and ratify the decision.
“Branch leaders are hereby urged to note this appeal and convene congresses to report the above, for a suspension of the strike effective from Monday, 11th May, 2026, while other engagements with relevant stakeholders continue,” the unions said.
The unions also disclosed that part of the ongoing discussions included a controversial 30 per cent salary increase under the Consolidated Tertiary Institutions Salary Structure which had earlier been proposed but later withdrawn by the government.
They expressed appreciation to members for their compliance with the strike directive, describing the solidarity shown nationwide as encouraging.
NASU and SSANU commenced the strike on May 1, 2026, over the Federal Government’s delay in concluding the renegotiation of the 2009 agreement, which covers salaries, allowances, and general working conditions of non-academic staff in universities and inter-university centres.
The industrial action disrupted administrative operations in public universities, affecting activities such as student registration, documentation, hostel management, and other essential support services critical to the smooth running of academic institutions.
The strike also added to mounting concerns over instability in Nigeria’s tertiary education sector, which has experienced repeated disruptions in recent years due to disputes between university-based unions and the government.
Although academic staff were not directly involved in the latest action, the absence of non-teaching personnel significantly slowed down campus operations, forcing many institutions into partial shutdown.
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ECOWAS Parliament to Probe, Make Recommendations on Xenophobic Violence Against West Africans in South Africa
Yusuf Danjuma Yunusa
In a rare moves, West African Lawmakers have registered dismay over violent attacks against their citizens living in South Africa prompting an urgent investigation and recommendations.
It could be recalled that the last few weeks have witnessed grave attacks on Africans mostly Nigerians and Ghanaians living in South fueled by anti migrant movements and sentiments such as Operation Dudula.
In a touching presentation titled:
“West African lives, dignity, and the imperative of integration: accountability, justice and free movement, and regional security,” Hon. George Kweku Ricketts-Hagan, Third Deputy Speaker of the ECOWAS Parliament and Leader of the Ghanaian Delegation said:
“The xenophobic violence engulfing South Africa – Across KwaZulu-Natal, Gauteng, Cape Town, and Pretoria, Ghanaians, Nigerians, Zimbabweans, Ethiopians, and other African nationals have been attacked, looted, displaced, and killed.”
He noted that the Nigerian Consulate in Johannesburg confirmed the deaths of two citizens — Amaramiro Emmanuel and Ekpenyong Andrew.
He reported that an Ethiopian national was shot dead at a busy intersection, and the killing was captured on CCTV.
Hon. George pointed out that:
“Ghanaian shops have been shuttered under threat. Vigilante groups have stopped people outside hospitals and schools to demand documents. Footage of foreign nationals being beaten and subjected to verbal assault has circulated on every screen across this continent.”
He explained that Ghana’s Foreign Minister, the Honourable Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa, summoned South Africa’s Acting High Commissioner in Accra over a documented incident in which a Ghanaian legal resident was confronted and told — to leave and ‘fix his country.’
Hon. George said:
“Nigeria similarly summoned South Africa’s envoy in Abuja. The Nigerians in Diaspora Commission declared on the twenty-ninth of April that the situation is deteriorating and earlier engagements have not yielded calm. The African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights has formally deplored the attacks. And on the first of May, Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) leader Julius Malema asked his own compatriots: after beating Nigerians and Ghanaians, how many jobs have you created?”
Hon. George called on the Speaker and Community Parliamentarians to address directly the intervention of President Cyril Ramaphosa in his keynote address at the 2026 Freedom Day National Celebrations in Bloemfontein on the twenty-seventh of April.
“This Parliament acknowledges that President Ramaphosa spoke. He said — and I quote the official record of the Presidency — ‘We must not allow these concerns to give rise to xenophobia, directed towards people from other African countries or any other parts of the world. Instead, we must insist that the law be upheld and enforced.”
He referenced the South African President’s comments in which he said that “We will not allow people to take the law into their own hands.”
“And he affirmed: ‘It cannot be, and it must never be, that we trample into the dust the African fellowship that made our freedom possible.”
Hon. George said that they take President Ramaphosa at his word but expressed reservations on the rhetorical framing.
“But it is precisely because we take him at his word that I say, through this forum and for the record: words delivered from a ceremonial platform do not arrest a single perpetrator,” Hon. George emphasized.
“Condemnations, however eloquent, do not bring a single attacker before a magistrate.
Calls to uphold the law ring hollow when the perpetrators of mob violence, arson, looting, assault, and murder walk free — their faces visible in videos that every African has seen.”
Hon. George recalled that on the same Freedom Day speech, President Ramaphosa described African nationals as “guests whose welcome is conditional on respect for South African laws”.
“That framing — however unintentionally — provides militant groups with a grammar of conditional hospitality that they have readily translated into a licence for violence.
A government cannot simultaneously condemn mob justice and deploy the language that mobs use to justify their actions.
My personal statement to this House, Mr Speaker, is this: South Africa must move from speeches to action.
The South African Police Service, the National Prosecuting Authority, and the Independent Police Investigative Directorate must investigate every documented incident.
Social media has provided an abundance of documentation.
The perpetrators many of whose faces are known must be identified, arrested, charged, and prosecuted to conviction, without fear or favour, without selectivity, and without impunity. Not some of them. All of them.
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