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NIMC Warns Nigerians Against Illegal NIN Correction Portal
NIMC Warns Nigerians Against Illegal NIN Correction Portal
The National Identity Management Commission has alerted Nigerians to a fraudulent social media post promoting a purported free portal for correcting National Identification Number records.
This was disclosed in a public advisory on the commission’s X handle on Tuesday.
The commission in the advisory described the message and its accompanying links as a phishing scheme aimed at stealing personal information from unsuspecting members of the public.
Eereporter.com
It advised Nigerians to disregard the post and avoid clicking any suspicious links that claim to offer free modification of NIN details.
The commission said that all requests for updates or corrections to NIN records should be submitted only through its approved self-service platform, accessible via the official NIMC portal.
It urged citizens to rely on its verified communication channels for information on NIN enrolment, modifications, and other identity management services.
According to NIMC, the portal circulating online has no connection to the commission and should not be trusted.
The commission reassured Nigerians that the National Identity Database remained secure and protected against unauthorised access.
“We assure citizens that the National Identity Database is secure and fully protected,” NIMC said.
The commission urged the public to remain vigilant and refrain from engaging with suspicious online links.

NIMC
It reiterated its commitment to protecting citizens’ identity data and maintaining the integrity of the country’s identity management system.
It further encouraged members of the public to report any suspicious messages, websites or activities falsely claiming affiliation with the commission to the appropriate authorities.
Eereporter.com
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NNPC Foundation To Commission 1.5 Tesla MRI System in NOH Dala, Kano
NNPC Foundation To Commission 1.5 Tesla MRI System in NOH Dala, Kano
NNPC Foundation Ltd./Gte., the Corporate Social Responsibility arm of NNPC Limited, will tomorrow commission and hand over an installed 1.5 Tesla Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) System to the management of the National Orthopaedic Hospital (NOH), Dala, Kano State.

NNPC Foundation
The ceremony will hold on Thursday, 4th June 2026, at 11:00 a.m. at the Hospital Auditorium, National Orthopaedic Hospital, Dala, Kano State.
Eereporter.com
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Classroom To Citizenship: ICPC Plants Integrity Seed In Boys’ Secondary School, Inaugurates Anti-Corruption Club
Classroom To Citizenship: ICPC Plants Integrity Seed In Boys’ Secondary School, Inaugurates Anti-Corruption Club
In a decisive move to nurture integrity from the classroom upwards, the Imo State Office of the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) recently conducted a sensitisation programme and inaugurated a Students’ Anti-Corruption Club (SAC) at Boys’ Secondary School, New Owerri.

ICPC
The initiative, part of the Commission’s preventive public enlightenment mandate, seeks to catch young citizens early and equip them with the ethical grounding required for responsible leadership. Eereporter.com
ICPC plants integrity seed in Boys’ Secondary School, inaugurates anti-corruption club.
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UN: Weapons Looted During Libyan War Found With Terrorist Groups In Nigeria
UN: Weapons Looted During Libyan War Found With Terrorist Groups In Nigeria
The United Nations says some weapons looted during the Libyan conflict in 2011 have ended up in the hands of extremist groups in Nigeria.
Izumi Nakamitsu, the UN under-secretary-general and high representative for disarmament affairs, stated this at UN Headquarters in New York on Tuesday, as delegates gathered to address the global spread of illicit firearms.
The UN’s top disarmament official expressed regret that weapons continue to fuel violence in communities long after wars end, causing devastation across once peaceful communities.
She cited “Libya, where weapons looted or diverted during and after the 2011 conflict, which ended the rule of Muammar Gaddafi, later surfaced across the wider Sahel region, including in Niger, Burkina Faso, and Nigeria”.
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“Some were subsequently found in the hands of extremist groups, illustrating how arms from one conflict can destabilise neighbouring countries years later. The end of the conflict does not mean the end of the circulation of those weapons; it stays, and it continues to harm people,” Ms Nakamitsu said.
In parts of sub-Saharan Africa, the UN said the proliferation of small arms can undermine peacebuilding efforts long after fighting subsides. Weapons retained by armed groups, militias or communities for self-protection can contribute to renewed violence and instability, she stressed.
According to her, illicit weapons are also linked to human rights abuses, terrorism and sexual and gender-based violence.
“It is not just a security issue. It is also about peacebuilding. It is about human rights. It is also about development,” Ms Nakamitsu said.
She said years after conflicts fade from the headlines, the weapons used to fight them often continue to circulate, crossing borders, fuelling crime and undermining an often-fragile peace.
“Wars end, but unfortunately, the weapons that are used in that particular conflict would not be under full control,” Ms Nakamitsu said. “They continue to circulate. They are sometimes hidden. They are brought across borders.”
She expressed concerns that the emergence of ghost guns, 3D-printed firearms and increasingly sophisticated trafficking networks are creating new challenges for governments worldwide.
“Those weapons or weapon parts, if they are disassembled and then trafficked, are more difficult to trace,” Ms Nakamitsu said.
UN member states adopted an action programme in 2001, committing to strengthen national legislation, improve stockpile security, combat illicit trafficking, and expand international cooperation.
A major milestone followed in 2005 with the adoption of the International Tracing Instrument, which established global standards for marking, recording, and tracing illegal weaponry.
The framework helps investigators identify where illicit weapons originated and how they entered illegal markets, while reducing the risk of diversion from legal stockpiles.

Boko Haram
The UN supports implementation through technical assistance, policy guidance, and capacity-building programmes aimed at helping governments secure weapons stockpiles, improve tracing systems and strengthen border controls.
Eereporter.com
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