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Black Thursday

Rostrum The ancient narrow pathway had become so bad that they could not find their way to their destination as the three moved in a grey Honda Sport Utility Vehicle (SUV) being piloted by Dayo who was very mindful of the steering. It was on a Thursday. The 35-year-old Misters Dayo, Emeka and Okon were old time friends who reunited just a few days ago at Nsukka in Enugu State having lost contacts about eight years back, or thereabouts, after their graduation from one of the reputable higher citadels of learning in Nigeria situated in the Eastern part of the country, precisely University of Nigeria Nsukka popularly known by its acronym ‘U.N.N’. What occasioned the long-awaited reunion was the convention of their alma-mater’s alumni body themed ‘The homecoming of UNN Alumni’, which usually held once in a blue moon. Though they never studied in the same department, they were conspicuously best of friends during their school days that people within bega...

US pressurises Nigeria over Insecurity

Ben Achi
Details have emerged from the meeting between the United States (US) Defence Secretary, Pete Hegseth and Nigeria’s National Security Adviser, Nuhu Ribadu, as the former intensifies pressure on the latter over rising insecurity and targeted extremist attacks in Nigeria.

The talks, held at the Pentagon, US focused on the surge in violence linked to jihadist groups and increasing threats against Christian communities across Nigeria.

According to the US officials, the discussion was urgent and direct, with Hegseth pushing for firmer and sustained action from the Federal Government of Nigeria.

Hegseth later shared highlights of the meeting on his X page, describing the situation as horrific and stressing Washington’s commitment to supporting Nigeria.

He wrote that the US, under President Donald Trump’s administration, was working aggressively with Nigeria to end the persecution of Christians by jihadist terrorists.

Pentagon sources confirmed that Hegseth urged Nigeria to take immediate and lasting measures to stop attacks on Christian populations.

He also emphasized Washington’s interest in deeper security cooperation to help deter and degrade terrorist networks that threaten both Nigeria and the US.

The meeting took place a month after President Trump warned that Christian communities in Nigeria faced an “existential threat,” warning the US could consider military intervention if the killings continued unchecked.

In a separate development, Congressman Riley Moore disclosed that he also met with the Nigerian delegation in Washington, US.

He described their conversation as frank, honest, and productive, noting the dialogue covered counterterrorism support, intelligence sharing, security assistance and measures to protect vulnerable groups affected by extremist attacks.

The Nigerian delegation featured several top government and security officials, including Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, Bianca Ojukwu; Inspector General of Police, Kayode Egbetokun; Attorney General of the Federation, Lateef Fagbemi (SAN); Chief of Defence Staff, General Olufemi Olatunbosun Oluyede; and Chief of Defence Intelligence, Lt. Gen. Emmanuel Undiendeye.

The high-level engagements underscore Washington’s growing concern and signal a renewed push for Nigeria to strengthen its internal security response and improve coordination with international allies.

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