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Twenty-Five Organisations Petition Kano Health Commissioner Over Engagement of Anti Government CSO in GAVI-Funded Polio Programme

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A coalition of twenty-five concerned citizens’ organisations and patriotic groups in Kano State has formally petitioned the Commissioner for Health, Dr. Labaran Yusuf, and the Executive Secretary of the Kano State Primary Health Care Management Board, for engaging Maryam Garba Usman, of the Centre for Gender and Social Inclusion, CAGSI, under the Solina GAVI Grant Polio Programme currently being implemented in the state, an organization the petitioners described as Anti Government and a leading critic of the Government programmes and activities in Kano State.

 

The petition, dated May 12, 2026, and addressed to the Hon. Commissioner, Ministry of Health with copies transmitted to the Executive Governor, Alhaji Abba Kabir Yusuf, the Secretary to the State Government, Alhaji Farouk Umar Ibrahim, the Commissioner for Information and Internal Affairs, Comrade Ibrahim Abdullahi Waiya and the Kano State Public Complaint and Anti-Corruption Commission. The petotion raises concerns about the integrity, transparency, and non-partisan character of the organization engaged in the donor-supported health intervention programmes in the State.

The petition, signed on behalf of the coalition of concerned organisations, states that the engagement of the named individual has generated questions among stakeholders about the impartiality and professional neutrality required of all organizations and individuals involved in government-supported and donor-funded health programmes. The petitioners maintain that the GAVI-funded polio programme, like all internationally supported public health interventions, must be implemented strictly in accordance with the professional, ethical, and governance standards that donor organisations and the Nigerian public expect, and that the selection of programme personnel must be guided exclusively by professional neutrality and independent of partisan politics, sabotage against Government, competence, institutional credibility, and a demonstrable commitment to the public interest rather than any consideration that could compromise the programme’s neutrality or public trust.

The concerns raised in the petition go to the heart of a governance challenge that is not unique to Kano State but that carries particular significance in the context of northern Nigeria’s polio eradication history. The success of polio vaccination and health intervention programmes in communities across the north has always depended, to a substantial degree, on the public confidence that those programmes command, and that confidence is inseparable from the perceived integrity and impartiality of the organisations and individuals responsible for implementing them.

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When questions arise about whether programme personnel are truly neutral, truly professional, and truly committed to the public health objectives of the intervention rather than to any other agenda, those questions have the potential to erode the community’s trust upon which effective health programme delivery depends. It is precisely to prevent that erosion that the petitioning organisations have brought their concerns to the attention of the appropriate authorities.

 

The coalition specifically called on the Ministry of Health and the Kano State Primary Health Care Management Board to conduct a thorough review of the engagement process for all personnel involved in the Solina GAVI Grant Programme, to ensure that all procedures, standards, and guidelines governing the programme are strictly followed, and to ensure that only organisations and individuals that are genuinely neutral and demonstrably committed to the programme’s public health objectives are engaged in its implementation. The petitioners further urged the relevant authorities to take all necessary steps to uphold transparency, accountability, and fairness in the administration of the programme, noting that the integrity of donor-funded health interventions is a matter of public interest that extends well beyond the boundaries of any single engagement decision

The timing and the target of this petition carry a significance that deserves to be understood in its proper governance context. The Solina GAVI Grant Polio Programme represents a significant international investment in Kano State’s public health infrastructure, and the organisations and individuals who implement it carry the responsibility not merely of delivering a health programme but of maintaining the trust, the cooperation, and the confidence of the communities they serve.

 

The Kano State Government, under the leadership of Governor Abba Kabir Yusuf, has consistently demonstrated its commitment to transparency, accountability, and professional standards in the management of public programmes and donor-funded interventions. The administration’s broader governance record, reflected in the historic N1.477 trillion budget for 2026, its first-place ranking in the 2025 NECO results, and its extensive investments in healthcare infrastructure, community health services, and grassroots empowerment across all 44 local government areas of the state, speaks to a government that takes its responsibilities to the people of Kano seriously and that expects the same seriousness of purpose from all those who operate under its umbrella or within its programmes. The petition submitted by the coalition of twenty-five organisations is consistent with the governance philosophy, reflecting the conviction that public programmes, particularly those funded by international donors and designed to protect the health of the most vulnerable members of the community, must be insulated from every form of compromise, however it presents itself and whoever it involves.

The petitioners expressed confidence that the Commissioner for Health and the Executive Secretary of the Kano State Primary Health Care Management Board will give the matter the urgent and serious attention it deserves, noting that the integrity of the GAVI-funded polio programme and the public trust it depends upon are too important to be compromised by questions that proper and timely institutional action can resolve. They further expressed their confidence in the Kano State Government’s commitment to due process, fairness, and good governance, and their expectation that the relevant authorities will act with the transparency and the decisiveness that the situation demands and that the people of Kano State deserve.

 

As of the time of going to press, neither the Ministry of Health nor the Kano State Primary Health Care Management Board had issued a public response to the petition.

 

The petitioners while contacted, asserted that, the Centre for Gender and Social Inclusion, CAGSI, had been involved in many activities that, publicly condemned and criticized Governor Abba Kabiru Yusuf administration programmes, activities and initiative alongside other anti Government organizations operating in Kano

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Court Adjourns Nafiu Gombe’s Suit Challenging Mark’s Leadership of ADC

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By Yusuf Danjuma Yunusa

The Federal High Court in Abuja on Wednesday adjourned a suit filed by Nafiu-Bala Gombe against Sen. David Mark-led leadership of the African Democratic Congress (ADC), until June 8 for hearing.

Justice Peter Lifu adjourned the case after Gombe’s lawyer, Robert Emukpoeruo, SAN, applied for an adjournment following the absence of counsel to parties seeking to join the suit in court.

When the case was called, only the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, and parties seeking joinder were not represented in court.

Although it was confirmed from the court record that INEC was duly served with hearing notice, parties seeking to join were not served.

Counsel to ADC, Shaibu Aruwa, SAN, called the attention of the court to the history of the suit in relation to parties applying for joinder.

He said the former trial judge, Justice Emeka Nwite, had taken judicial notice of them in the previous proceedings.

Aruwa, therefore, urged the court to accord the parties seeking joinder the same respect to come and say why they needed to be joined in the interest of fair hearing.

Besides, he said issues had already been joined with the parties seeking to join the case, and that the plaintiff was in the know.

Responding, Emukpoeruo gave a titbit about the Supreme Court judgement which ordered for an accelerated hearing of the case, in line with the earlier Appeal Court judgement.

The lawyer, who applied that all pending processes be filed and served, sought an adjournment to give the parties seeking to join the leverage for fair hearing.

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ADC’s counsel, Aruwa; Suleiman Usman, SAN, who appeared for Sen. David Mark; Realwan Okpanachi, who represented Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola and P. I. Oyewole, lawyer to Chief Ralp Nwosu, did not oppose the application for adjournment.

The defence counsel however informed the court that the attitude of the plaintiff, in applying for the reassignment of the case when the matter was before Justice Nwite, had allegedly frustrated the order of accelerated hearing of the apex court.

But Justice Lifu, who said that nobody has the right to choose which court his case should be determined, said based on the directive of the chief judge who assigned the case to him and the Supreme Court decision for accelerated hearing, he was bound to do justice to the matter.

The judge said the court would take the full responsibility for inability to effect service of the hearing notices on the parties seeking to join the suit.

He subsequently adjourned the matter until June 8 for hearing.

Justice Lifu, who ordered accelerated hearing of the case, directed the bailiff of the court to serve all the parties seeking to be joined in the suit within 24 hours of the order.

“In the circumstances of this case and overall interest of justice and order of the Supreme Court and the Appeal Court, this case is hereby given accelerated hearing,” he said.

He ordered all the parties to file and serve all their processes before the next adjourned date.

The aggrieved former National Deputy Chairman of ADC, Nafiu Bala, had filed the suit marked: FHC/ABJ/CS/1819/2025.

The plaintiff, in the suit, is seeking an order restraining Mark, the embattled National Chairman of ADC; Aregbesola, the National Secretary, and members of their interim National Working Committee (NWC) from parading themselves as the party’s leaders.

He had argued that the emergence of Mark, Aregbesola and other NWC members as party’s leaders breached the provisions of the party’s constitution and the Electoral Act.

Gombe had sued ADC, Mark, Aregbesola, Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and Ralph Nwosu as 1st to 5th defendants respectively in the suit.

Nwosu was the former ADC National Chairman who stepped down for David Mark leadership of the party.

The former Vice President Atiku Abubakar emerged as ADC presidential candidate on May 27 after defeating two other aspirants, including Rotimi Amaechi, former Minister of Transportation, at the party’s national convention.

Also, Dumebi Kachikwu, in a national convention conducted by another faction of ADC, emerged the presidential candidate of the party for the 2027 general election.

The 2023 presidential candidate of the party was adopted by factional members of the party as sole presidential candidate on May 24.

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Court Sentences Four to Death over Owo Church Massacre

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By Yusuf Danjuma Yunusa

The Abuja Federal High Court on Wednesday sentenced four members of the Al-Shabaab terrorist group to death by hanging for their involvement in the June 5, 2022, attack on St. Francis Catholic Church, Owo, Ondo State, which left more than 40 worshippers dead and over 100 others injured.

The trial judge, Justice Emeka Nwite, made the declaration after convicting Idris Abdulmalik Omeiza, 25; Al Qasim Idris, 20; Jamiu Abdulmalik, 26; and Abdulhaleem Idris, 25, on a nine-count terrorism charge filed by the Department of State Services on behalf of the Federal Government.

The court, however, discharged and acquitted the fifth defendant, Momoh Otuho Abubakar, 47, after finding insufficient evidence linking him to the terrorist attack.

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In the judgment, Justice Nwite held that the prosecution successfully established the guilt of the four convicts beyond reasonable doubt, noting that the evidence before the court clearly showed that they were members of, and active participants in, the activities of the terrorist group responsible for the deadly church attack.

The court found that the convicts were principal members of an Al-Shabaab terrorist cell operating in Kogi State and that they took part in the assault on the church during a Pentecost service.

According to the prosecution, the attackers stormed the church, held worshippers hostage, and unleashed violence that resulted in massive casualties and destruction.

They were said to have used improvised explosive devices and AK-47 rifles in attacking furtherance of their extremist religious ideology.

To establish its case, the prosecution called 11 witnesses and tendered 23 exhibits, including confessional statements and a digital forensic examination report.

Among the exhibits admitted by the court was a technophone device alleged to contain communications exchanged by the defendants before and after the attack.

One of the prosecution witnesses, a Catholic priest who survived the incident, gave a chilling account of how the assailants detonated at least three explosive devices inside the church, triggering panic and bloodshed among worshippers.

Justice Nwite held that the totality of the evidence presented by the prosecution firmly linked the four convicts to the attack and justified their conviction on the terrorism charges.

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Insecurity:Sack Service Chiefs, Pastor Adeboye Urges FG

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By Yusuf Danjuma Yunusa

The General Overseer of the Redeemed Christian Church of God, Pastor Enoch Adeboye, has urged the federal government to give Nigeria’s security chiefs a 90-day deadline to eliminate terrorists across the country or resign from office.

Adeboye made the call in a video shared on X on Tuesday in which he expressed concern over the country’s security situation and urged authorities to act swiftly against those responsible for the violence.

Addressing the government, the cleric said security chiefs should be held accountable for delivering results in the fight against terrorism.

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“If I were asked to make suggestions, I would say quietly to our government, ‘Move fast and tell our security chiefs, get rid of these terrorists within 90 days or resign,” he said.

The cleric also called on the government to go beyond targeting terrorists and focus on those financing and supporting their activities.

“When giving orders to the service chiefs this time around, we should make it clear to them that they are not only to eliminate the terrorists; they should eliminate their sponsors, no matter how influential they may be,” he added.

Adeboye recalled advising a former Nigerian president to issue a similar ultimatum to security chiefs in the past, noting that although the directive was given, it was not fully enforced when the deadline elapsed.

According to him, the experience underscored the need for stronger political will and strict enforcement of directives aimed at ending insecurity.

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