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EFCC Arraigns Fake EFCC Staff In Abuja

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EFCC

EFCC Arraigns Fake EFCC Staff In Abuja

The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, on Tuesday, May 26, 2026 arraigned one Salifu Olije Mustapha before Justice A.I. Akobi of the Federal Capital Territory High Court, Kubwa, for allegedly posturing and parading himself as an officer of the Commission

He was arraigned on a four- count charge bordering on impersonation and misrepresentation.

Count two of the Charge reads:

“That you, Salifu Olije Mustapha sometime in March 2026, within the jurisdiction of this Honourable Court, while falsely pretending to be a Nigerian Air Force officer did abet the duo of Abubakar (now at large) and Haruna Mamuda (currently undergoing investigation with another law enforcement agency by conveying them fully dressed in the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission’s operational uniforms as operatives of Commission in a Toyota Corolla with Registration No. KTU399GT to Sheriff Plaza, Wuse II, Abuja to defraud unsuspecting members of the public and thereby committed an offence contrary to Section 84(c) and punishable under Section 132 of the Penal Code Act”

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Count three reads: “That you, Salifu Olije Mustapha sometime in March 2026, within the jurisdiction of this Honourable Court, impersonated a Public Servant by falsely presenting yourself as officer of the Nigerian Air Force and in that assumed character defrauded unsuspecting members of the public and thereby committed an offence contrary to and punishable under section 132 of the Penal Code Act”

The defendant pleaded guilty to all of the four count charges when they were read to him, prompting the prosecution counsel, R.U Adaga to pray the court to convict and sentence him accordingly.

Justice Akobi thereafter adjourned the matter to June 1, 2026 for sentencing of the defendant.

EFCC

EFCC

Mustapha was arrested by operatives of the EFCC following actionable intelligence linking him with impersonation of EFCC officers.

He was specifically spotted in a fake EFCC uniform, alongside two other suspects, harassing motorists and defrauding them in the process.
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N10million Damages: EFCC Appeals Judgment Against Agunloye

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N10million Damages: EFCC Appeals Judgment Against Agunloye

The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, has filed a notice of appeal at the Court of Appeal, Abuja, against the judgment of Justice Peter Kekemeke of the Federal Capital Territory, FCT, High Court, Abuja, finding it liable for defaming former Minister of Power, Olu Agunloye over a social media publication of an alleged $6billion Mambilla Power Project fraud.
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The Notice of Appeal was filed on Friday, July 10, 2026 by counsel to the EFCC, Wahab Shittu, SAN.

In the appeal contained in Suit No: FCT/HC/CV/1199/2024, the EFCC expressed dissatisfaction with the “whole of the judgment of the High Court of the Federal Capital Territory, sitting at Maitama, Abuja, Coram: Hon. Justice Peter O. Kekemeke, delivered on the 8th day of July, 2026….”

Specifically, the appeal was hinged on 11 grounds and four different orders. The orders the Commission is seeking in the appeal, are orders allowing the appeal, setting aside the whole of the judgment, dismissing Agunloye’s claim before the trial court in entirety and any other order the court may deem fit to make in the circumstances of the appeal.

Justice Kekemeke had declared in his judgment that the EFCC’s publication on Agunloye was false, defamatory and injurious to the former Minister’s reputation and awarded N10 million in damages against the Commission.

EFCC

EFCC

Shittu, in the appeal, also filed a stay of execution of the judgment of the trial court.

No date has been fixed for the hearing of the appeal.
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ICPC Lagos Instills Ethical Vigilance In Medical College Staff As Anti-Graft War Intensifies

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ICPC Lagos Instills Ethical Vigilance In Medical College Staff As Anti-Graft War Intensifies

In a determined push to fortify Nigeria’s public institutions against the creeping menace of corruption, the Lagos State office of the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) convened a comprehensive sensitisation programme for staff of the National Postgraduate Medical College of Nigeria (NPMCN) in Ijanikin, Lagos.
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The initiative, which drew participation from college personnel, forms a crucial pillar of the Commission’s preventive strategy; building corruption-resistant institutions through sustained public education and stakeholder engagement, rather than merely responding to infractions after they occur.

Delivering a stirring presentation on the Whistleblowing Policy and an Overview of the Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Act, 2000, Mrs. Yvonne William-Mbata underscored whistleblowing as an indispensable weapon in the nation’s anti-corruption arsenal. She implored staff to embrace moral courage by reporting acts of misconduct through established channels, assuring them that the policy enshrines robust mechanisms for safeguarding whistleblowers from reprisals or victimisation.

Mr. Emeka Okaro, in his address on the Regulations and Guidelines on the Acceptance of Gifts, Donations and Hospitality, sounded a stern note of caution. He warned that public officers must exercise heightened vigilance in accepting gestures of goodwill that could compromise—or even appear to compromise; their impartiality and professional integrity.

Mr. Okaro dissected the regulatory framework governing such exchanges within the public service, emphasising that strict adherence to these guidelines is not merely procedural but existential. Compliance, he argued, is essential for preventing conflicts of interest and for preserving public trust in government institutions—a currency that, once debased, proves exceedingly difficult to restore.

The session proved far from a passive lecture; participants seized the opportunity to engage dynamically, posing incisive questions and seeking clarification on practical workplace dilemmas surrounding ethical conduct, whistleblowing procedures and the real-world application of anti-corruption statutes.

ICPC

ICPC

For the NPMCN, a citadel of medical excellence charged with postgraduate training and specialisation, the sensitisation programme represents a timely intervention. As the College moulds the nation’s future medical leaders, ensuring that its own administrative and operational frameworks remain unsullied by corrupt practices is paramount to safeguarding the broader healthcare ecosystem.

The ICPC, through such engagements, continues to demonstrate that the fight against corruption is as much about prevention as it is about prosecution; a dual-front war that demands the active participation of every Nigerian public servant.
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Atiku Condemns FG Proposed ₦50,000 Uniform WAEC, NECO Fees

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Atiku Condemns FG Proposed ₦50,000 Uniform WAEC, NECO Fees

Ex-Vice President and presidential candidate of the African Democratic Congress, Atiku Abubakar, has criticised the Federal Government over the reported approval of a uniform ₦50,000 examination fee for candidates sitting the West African Senior School Certificate Examination and the National Examinations Council examinations from 2027, warning that the policy would deny millions of children access to education.
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Atiku also condemned the recent increase in fees charged by Federal Unity Colleges, describing the measures as economically insensitive and inconsistent with the government’s constitutional obligation to make education accessible to every Nigerian child.

In a statement issued on Sunday by his Senior Special Assistant on Public Communication, Phrank Shaibu, the former Vice President said the Tinubu-led government is imposing additional financial burdens on families already struggling under the weight of inflation, rising food prices, high transportation costs, electricity tariff increases and widespread unemployment.

“It is unconscionable that at a time when Nigerian families are battling record inflation, soaring food prices, rising transportation costs, crippling electricity tariffs, stagnant incomes and widespread unemployment, the Tinubu administration has chosen to make education even more expensive,” Atiku said.

He argued that education remains the most effective instrument for breaking the cycle of poverty and warned that increasing the cost of schooling would further widen inequality.

“A government that genuinely believes in the future of its people does not erect financial barriers between children and education. It removes them. Education is not a privilege reserved for the wealthy; it is the birthright of every Nigerian child and the foundation upon which prosperous nations are built,” he stated.

The ADC chieftain noted that the proposed examination fee and higher Unity School charges were particularly troubling because they come at a time Nigeria is grappling with one of the world’s largest out-of-school children populations.

According to him, estimates put the number of Nigerian children and young people outside the classroom at between 10.5m and 15m.

“Nigeria already bears the painful distinction of having one of the largest populations of out-of-school children in the world. Any government confronted with such a national emergency should be investing aggressively to bring these children back into school. Instead, this administration is choosing policies that will inevitably swell those numbers,” he said.

Atiku warned that higher examination fees would disproportionately affect children from poor and middle-income households, many of whose parents are already forced to choose between meeting basic needs and paying school-related expenses.

“The consequences of these policies extend far beyond school gates. Every child priced out of education today becomes tomorrow’s victim of unemployment, poverty, child labour, criminal exploitation, drug abuse or insecurity. Nations do not become prosperous by making education more expensive; they prosper by making education more accessible,” he added.

He further argued that the proposed ₦50,000 fee for WAEC and NECO examinations would create another barrier to tertiary education for indigent students.

“It is a systemic filter that will inevitably restrict access to tertiary education for thousands of indigent but academically qualified Nigerian students. For many children from low-income families, the journey to university does not end at the admission gate—it is terminated long before then by the inability to afford the qualifying examinations that determine their future,” he said.

He noted that although more than two million candidates seek admission into tertiary institutions annually, public universities admit only between 500,000 and 700,000 students because of inadequate infrastructure.

“Rather than addressing this structural deficit by expanding infrastructure and increasing admission capacity, the government is effectively constricting access even further through higher Unity School fees and the proposed ₦50,000 WAEC and NECO examination fee. The result is a cruel double punishment,” he said.

The former Vice President also questioned the government’s emphasis on the Nigerian Education Loan Fund, arguing that student loans cannot compensate for policies that make it difficult for children to complete secondary education or sit qualifying examinations.

“A university loan offers little comfort to a child who has already been priced out of secondary education or cannot afford the qualifying examination required to secure admission. A government cannot credibly claim to be expanding access to higher education while simultaneously erecting financial barriers that prevent millions of young Nigerians from ever reaching the university gates,” he noted.

Atiku maintained that meaningful education reform should focus on making education affordable at the basic and secondary levels, expanding university infrastructure and ensuring that poverty does not determine access to learning.

“No nation has ever taxed its way into educational excellence. Countries that aspire to economic greatness invest more—not less—in education during difficult times because they understand that human capital is the engine of sustainable development,” he stressed.

He called on President Bola Tinubu to reverse the increase in Unity School fees and shelve the proposed ₦50,000 WAEC and NECO examination fee, while convening a stakeholders’ dialogue on sustainable financing of public education.

Atiku

Atiku

He also urged the Federal Government to invest more in public schools, recruit additional teachers, expand the capacity of tertiary institutions and ensure that no Nigerian child is denied education because of financial hardship.

The statement comes amid growing public debate over the affordability of education following recent increases in school-related charges and concerns about the rising cost of living.

Although the Federal Government has introduced NELFUND to improve access to tertiary education, critics argue that affordability challenges begin much earlier in the education value chain, particularly at the secondary school level where students must complete qualifying examinations before seeking university admission.

The plan to introduce a uniform ₦50,000 examination fee for WAEC and NECO candidates from 2027 has also sparked widespread public reactions, with stakeholders calling for clarity from the relevant authorities on the policy.
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