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Attorney General Fagbemi Takes Over Malami’s Prosecution

The Minister of Justice and Attorney General of the Federation, Lateef Fagbemi, has taken over the prosecution of his immediate predecessor, Abubakar Malami.

Malami faces terrorism and illegal firearms possession charges brought against him by the Department of the State Service (DSS).

Fagbemi, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN) took over the trial from the DSS on Wednesday at the Federal High Court in Abuja.

The Director of the Public Prosecution of the Federation, Rotimi Oyedepo, announced the attorney general’s appearance in the matter.

Oyedepo told Justice Joyce Abdulmalik that the trial cannot proceed because Fagbemi has just taken over the prosecution.

He informed the court that the prosecution needed more time to familiarise itself with the facts of the case.

Counsel to the defendants, Adedayo Adedeji, who did not oppose the application, however urged the court to strike out the matter if the prosecution fails to open its case at the next adjourned date, citing lack of diligent prosecution.

Justice Abdulmalik subsequently adjourned the matter to March 10 for trial and for the prosecution to formally open its case.

READ ALSO: ADC Faults Handling Of Malami, El-Rufai Cases, Alleges Selective Justice

The Court had on February 27 admitted Malami and his son, Abdulaziz to ₦200m bail, with two sureties, each one of whom must own landed property either in Maitama or Asokoro.

Justice Abdulmalik had said that the title of the property must be deposited with the Deputy Chief Registrar of the Court along with valid international passports.

The sureties were also ordered to depose to affidavit of means and submit their two recent passport photographs with the court.

Malami and his son were also ordered to submit their international passports and recent passport photographs to the court.

The DSS had arraigned Malami and his son, Abdulaziz on a five-count charge bordering on terrorism and illegal firearms possession.

In the charge, marked, FHC/ABJ/CR/63/2026, filed before the Federal High Court in Abuja, Malami is also accused of refusing to prosecute suspected terrorism financiers, whose case files were handed to him while he served as the AGF and Minister of Justice.

Malami and Abdulaziz are equally accused of warehousing firearms in their residence at Gesse Phase II Area, Birain Kebbi LGA, Kebbi State without lawful authority.

The DSS accused Malami in count one of the charge, with knowingly abetting terrorism financing, while the ex-AGF and his son are charged in counts two to five, with unlawful, possession of a Sturm Magnum 17-0101 firearm, 16 Redstar AAA 5720 live rounds of cartridges and 27 expended Redstar AAA 5’20 cartridges, contrary to and punishable under relevant Sections of Terrorism (Prevention and Prohibition) Act, 2022 and Firearms Act, 2004.

“That you, Abubakar Malami of Gesse Phase II Area, Birnin Kebbi LGA, Kebbi State, Adult, male, sometime in November, 2022 at Federal Ministry of Justice, Maitama, Abuja, within the jurisdiction of this honourable court, did knowingly abet terrorism financing by refusing to prosecute terrorism financiers whose casefiles were brought to your office as the Attorney-General of the Federation, for prosecution, and thereby committed an offence contrary to and punishable under Section 26 (2) of Terrorism (Prevention and Prohibition) Act, 2022,” the charge sheet read.

“Abubakar Malami and Abdulaziz Abubakar Malami of Gesse Phase II, Area, Birnin Kebbi LGA, Kebbi State, adults, males, sometime in December, 2025, in your res:dence at Gesse Phase II Area, Birnin Kebbi LGA, Kebbi State, within the jurisdiction of this Honourable Court, did engage in a conduct in preparation to commit act of terrorism by having in your possession and without licence, a Sturm Magnum 17-0101 firearm, Sixteen (16) Redstar AAA 5°20 live rounds of Cartridges and Twenty-Seven (27) expended Redstar AAA 5’20 Cartridges, and thereby committed an offence contrary to and punishable under Section 29 of Terrorism (Prevention and Prohibition) Act, 2022 .

“That you, Abubakar Malami and Abdulaziz Abubakar Malami, of Gesse Phase II Area, Birnin Kebbi LGA, Kebbi State, adults, males, sometime in December, 2025, in your residence at Gesse Phase II Area, Birnin Kebbi LGA, Kebbi State, within the jurisdiction of this honourable court, without licence, did have in your possession a Sturm Magnum 17-0101 firearm, and thereby committed an offence contrary to Section 3 of Firearms Act 2004 and punishable under Section 27 (1) of the same Act.

“That you, Abubakar Malami and Abdulaziz Abubakar Malami, of Gesse Phase II Area, Birnin Kebbi LGA, Kebbi State, adults, males, sometime in December, 2025, in your residence at Gesse Phase II Area, Birnin Kebbi LGA, Kebbi State, within the jurisdiction of this honourable court, without licence, did have in your possession sixteen (16) Redstar AAA 5’20 live rounds of cartridges, and thereby committed an offence contrary to Section 8(1) of Firearms Act 2004 and punishable under Section 27 (1) of the same Act.

One question for all 22 F1 drivers on the 2026 grid

Huzaifah Khan

BBC Sport journalist

The Formula 1 season gets under way this weekend and with more regulation changes than ever before.

The cars are not the only change on the grid as there will now be 22 drivers on track for the first time in a decade, with new addition Cadillac ready to shake things up.

To get your engines started for 2026, have a go at this mega quiz with each question based on one of the 22 drivers competing this season.

What information do we collect from this quiz?

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Nigeria’s Business Confidence Index Hits 117.2 Record-High Points In February

Nigeria’s business environment strengthened significantly in February 2026, with the Business Confidence Index (BCI) soaring to a record 117.2 points from 105.8 points in January, according to the latest report from the Nigerian Economic Summit Group (NESG).

The figure marks the highest reading on record and signals robust expansionary momentum across the economy.

The Current Business Performance Index, which measures firms’ assessment of ongoing economic conditions, highlights significantly improved business conditions nationwide.

The February report underscored broad-based growth across major sectors, with the non-manufacturing sector leading the expansion, rising to 128.9 points.

Manufacturing improved to 121.1 points, reflecting stronger activity in industries such as food, beverages, and chemicals.

Services climbed to 109.2 points on gains in finance, telecoms, and real estate.

Trade rebounded robustly to 108.7 points, after underperformance earlier in the year.

Agriculture returned to expansion territory at 104.8 points.

The broad expansion reflects improving demand conditions, stronger operational performance, and renewed activity across production, trade, and service-oriented sectors.

Nigerian Stock Market

The Future Business Expectation Index, a gauge of firms’ optimism for the next 3–6 months, also climbed substantially to 135.5 points in February 2026, up from 124.7 in January. This rise signals heightened confidence among business leaders in continued growth prospects.

Sector-specific outlooks were particularly upbeat, with manufacturing and trade firms reporting especially strong expectations for future activity.

Shoe seller Bidemi Bello attends to a customer while selling sandals at her stall in the Balogun Market in Lagos on December 18, 2023. – Christmas and year-end celebrations are marred by the economic crisis and soaring prices in Nigeria. Poverty in the most populous country in Africa has risen in 2023, affecting 104 million people, compared to 79 million five years earlier, according to the World Bank. The prices of food items and basic goods have skyrocketed following an increasing inflation rate and devaluation of the Naira, making daily life increasingly difficult for millions of Nigerians. (Photo by Benson Ibeabuchi / AFP)

READ ALSO: Electricity Customers To Get ₦20bn Meter Cost Refunds From DisCos – NERC

Despite the upbeat mood, firms highlighted ongoing structural constraints such as infrastructure gaps, security concerns, limited access to affordable financing, and high operating costs that continue to affect certain sectors, particularly manufacturing and agriculture.

Analysts say the record‐high confidence index points to renewed business dynamism in the early part of 2026 and aligns with other economic indicators showing recovery, including a rebound in private sector activity measured by the Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI).

Iranian missile hits base housing US troops in Qatar

NewsFeed

An Iranian missile has hit a military base housing US troops in Qatar. No casualties have been reported so far. Al Jazeera’s Zein Basravi reports on the latest developments.

‘We were just praying’: Pakistani students recount escape from war-hit Iran

Islamabad, Pakistan – It was the first working day of the week and Muhammad Raza, a 23-year-old Pakistani medical student, was assisting the doctors treating patients at Tehran University of Medical Sciences hospital in the Iranian capital.

A loud explosion brought the ward to a halt. Israel and the United States had began bombing Iran in a joint operation on the morning of February 28.

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“We had been hearing about an imminent attack, and when it did strike, it sent a surge of anxiety and panic through my body,” Raza told Al Jazeera from inside a bus on his way to Islamabad on Tuesday.

As chaos and fear gripped Tehran following the bombings, Raza rushed to his hostel near the hospital compound and immediately called the Pakistani embassy, less than 2km (1.2 miles) away.

The mission instructed him and other students to gather with essential belongings by the evening before arrangements could be made to send them home.

“It was really scary. All of us were afraid of what might happen and wanted to reach Pakistan at the earliest,” Raza said.

Muhammad Raza, left, with along with his fellow medical students in Tehran. [Courtesy Muhammad Raza]
Raza, left, with fellow students at Tehran University of Medical Sciences [Courtesy: Muhammad Raza]

Muhammad Tauqeer, another Pakistani medical student, told Al Jazeera he was on a field deployment away from the college campus when the strikes began.

“The second we heard the first strike landing in Tehran, everything fell into chaos. People rushed outside. Our teachers told the foreign students to immediately seek assistance from our embassies and return to our hostels, which is what we did,” said the 24-year-old on Tuesday, speaking from another bus to his hometown of Jhang in Punjab province.

“I called my family and told them about the situation,” Tauqeer added.

The Pakistani embassy in Tehran asked its nationals to report by Saturday evening. Hundreds arrived, carrying essentials including clothes, laptops, textbooks, documents and cash.

Five buses left the embassy compound on Saturday night for Zahedan, a 1500km (932-mile) journey that took about 20 hours as the convoy cut through central Iran, passing cities such as Yazd, Isfahan and Kerman as they were being hit in the US-Israeli assault.

INTERACTIVE_LIVETRACKER_IRAN_US_ISRAEL_MIDDLEEAST_ATTACKS_MARCH3_2026_GMT1400-1772546539
(Al Jazeera)

During their journey, the students were also trying to get updates on the Iran war, which had soon escalated into a regional conflict, with Iran’s retaliatory attacks targeting US assets across the Gulf and Saudi Arabia.

Kainat Maqsood, another Pakistani student, said it was during the “deeply distressing” journey that she learned about the killing of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

“It was such a devastating news for us,” she said as she waited to board her onward bus to Multan city in Punjab. “He was a leader many of us looked up to, and now he is gone.”

‘Entire bus was silent’

From Zahedan, the Pakistani border town of Taftan was about 100km (62 miles) away. For almost the entire stretch of their journey, the passengers had no mobile signal.

“We were all so scared. The journey was at night and we had no idea what was going to happen,” said Tauqeer. “The entire bus was silent. Everyone was just praying.”

The buses crossed into Pakistan on Sunday evening. Pakistani officials on Tuesday night said nearly 1,000 citizens, including some 400 students, had returned to the country in the past three days through the Taftan border in Cha­gai district and the Gabd-Rimdan border in Gwadar district.

Both the border crossings fall in Balochistan, Pakistan’s most volatile province, where deadly separatist violence has spiked in recent months. The convoy from Iran was barred from any night travel by the local authorities over security concerns.

But now, the students were finally able to talk to their families. “Since I finally had my mobile working after entering Pakistan, I informed my family that I would join them soon,” said Raza, a resident of Skardu in the scenic Gilgit-Baltistan region.

‘I want to go back’

On Monday morning, the buses left for Quetta, the capital of Balochistan – another arduous 12-hour trip through the barren expanse of Pakistan’s largest province. From Quetta, the students parted ways for their respective hometowns.

“I am just very tired and want to get home to see my parents,” Tauqeer said on Tuesday evening, the repeated honking of his bus to Jhang audible over the telephone.

Iran hosts nearly 35,000 Pakistanis, according to officials, including some 3,000 students at various institutions in Tehran, Isfahan, Zanjan and Yazd, among other Iranian cities.

As the Pakistani students escaped the war in Iran, the fate of their careers weighed heavily on their minds.

“I have just two to three months left before I complete my degree. I moved to Tehran in 2021, and there is no way I am letting my degree slip with so little time remaining,” said Tauqeer, who is in the final semester of his MBBS programme.

Raza, who is in the penultimate semester of his MBBS degree, however, wondered if he would ever be able to go back to his college.

“I need to go back. I want to go back, I have only one year left,” he said. “But I don’t know, realistically, if I will be able to. I really hope things improve and I get the chance to return. We just have to sit and wait.”

Like Raza, Maqsood also has less than a year left in her programme. But she wants to return to Iran for more than just academics.

“There is no other country fighting on behalf of Muslims the way Iran is. I want to go back to show my solidarity as well,” she said, before boarding her bus for Multan.