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El-Rufai Is In Our Custody — ICPC

The Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) says that former Kaduna State Governor, Nasir El-Rufai, is in its custody in connection with an ongoing investigation.

ICPC’s Head of Media and Public Communications/Spokesperson, John Odey, said El-Rufai was in the custody of the Commission as of the close of work on Wednesday, February 18, 2026.

“The Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) writes to state that Malam Nasiru El-Rufai, former Governor of Kaduna State, is in our custody as of the close of work today, Wednesday, the 18th day of February, 2026. Malam Nasiru El-Rufai is in the custody of the Commission in connection with investigations,” ICPC’s statement read.

But the ICPC did not provide further details on the nature of the case.

On Friday last week, the chieftain of the African Democratic Congress (ADC) confirmed his invitation by the ICPC.

“Yesterday, after the futile attempt to abduct me, the ICPC delivered a letter to invite me to their office. My lawyer has written to confirm that I will be attending the ICPC office on Wednesday, 18 February 2026,” the former governor wrote on his X account.

READ ALSO: FG Sues El-Rufai Over NSA Phone-Tapping Claims

His arrest comes in the wake of a series of allegations against him and engagements with security agencies.

About three days ago, the former Kaduna governor was in the headquarters of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) in Abuja.

He was invited over allegations of financial improprieties during his stint as the governor of Kaduna State from 2015 to 2023.

Two years ago, the Kaduna State House of Assembly indicted the former governor for alleged diversion of ₦423 billion in public funds and money laundering.

The lawmakers then asked anti-corruption agencies to probe the claims.

A few days ago, there were reports that security operatives attempted to arrest El-Rufai upon his return from Cairo, Egypt. 

The former APC chieftain later claimed that someone “wiretapped” the National Security Adviser (NSA), Nuhu Ribadu’s phone, helping him overhear instructions for his arrest.

That led the Department of State Services (DSS) to file a three-count charge against El-Rufai for allegedly intercepting Ribadu’s phone conversation.

According to prosecutors, the allegation contravenes Section 12(1) of the Cybercrimes (Prohibition, Prevention, etc.) (Amendment) Act, 2024.

The DSS, in count two, accused El-Rufai of saying that he knew and associated with an individual who unlawfully intercepted Ribadu’s communications but failed to report the person to security agencies. This, the agency said, is contrary to Section 27(b) of the Cybercrimes Act.

The third count alleged that El-Rufai and some persons, now at large, used technical equipment or systems in a way that compromised public safety and national security by intercepting the NSA’s communications, in contravention of Section 131(2) of the Nigerian Communications Act, 2003.

Legal doping in sport: Records or Ethics?

Game Theory

As the Winter Games celebrate the Olympic motto, Faster, Higher, Stronger — Together, a new competition is openly allowing the use of performance-enhancing drugs. Samantha Johnson looks at the Enhanced Games and how doping, once sport’s red line, is now being marketed as innovation.

Gunmen Abduct, Kill Traditional Ruler In Ondo

Gunmen have abducted and killed a traditional ruler, Oba Kehinde Jacob Falodun, of Alagamo of Agamo community, in Akure North Local Government Area of the State.

Police authorities in Ondo State said six armed men stormed the traditional ruler’s residence on Wednesday and took him away.

“Information received at the Division at about 7:50 p.m. from a community leader, High Chief Ajewole Clement of New Town, Itaogbolu, indicated that approximately six armed men stormed the residence of the monarch, forcibly took him from his compound, and subsequently fled the scene,” the spokesman of the Ondo State Police Command, Abayomi Jimoh, said in a statement on Thursday.

“The victim was later found a few metres away with gunshot wounds. He was confirmed dead at the scene.”

READ ALSO: Bandits Kidnap Four In Fresh Attack On Kwara Community

Jimoh disclosed that a team of police detectives has since been deployed to the area to beef up security and possibly apprehend the killers of the monarch.

“Upon receipt of the report, the Divisional Police Officer, alongside command Tactical teams, promptly mobilized officers in collaboration with local security outfits, including Atuluse Security, local hunters, and Amotekun operatives, to comb adjoining bushes and surrounding areas in a bid to apprehend the perpetrators.”

READ ALSO: Bandits Kidnap Four In Fresh Attack On Kwara Community

The spokesperson called for calm among residents, urging them to promptly provide relevant information that could help the police investigation into the killing.

“The Police Command assures the public that no stone will be left unturned in bringing those responsible for this heinous act to justice.

Weekly sports quiz: How long did Dyche last at Forest?

Adam Millington

BBC Sport journalist
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So much has happened over the past seven days, including two Premier League managers departing, the second round of the Six Nations and many medals being won at the Winter Olympics.

About 9% of you got full marks in last week’s edition. How will you do this week?

What information do we collect from this quiz?

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    • 6 days ago
    • 4 February

Fancy testing your memory? Play last week’s quiz.

From US threats to ‘holding hands’: Did Nigeria disarm Trump on security?

In early November, a social media post by United States President Donald Trump set off alarm bells across Nigeria. The US “Department of War”, he said, was preparing to go into the West African country “guns-a-blazing” over what he claimed was the killing of Christians in Nigeria.

Nigeria’s government under President Bola Ahmed Tinubu swiftly hit back, rejecting the claims, saying that while the country faced a challenging security situation due to armed groups and banditry, it was untrue that Christians were specifically being targeted, as Muslim communities and traditional believers had also come under attack.

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But the Trump administration was not appeased. It had placed Nigeria on its “Countries of Particular Concern” (CPC) watchlist for religious freedom, and soon made threats of sanctions, cuts to financial aid, and punitive measures against Abuja for “failing” to protect Christians.

As Nigerians worried about a potential bombing campaign against their nation, the Tinubu government — though still denying accusations of a “Christian genocide” — quietly pivoted. Instead of aggressive rhetoric, it said it would welcome US assistance in dealing with security challenges that have long proved a thorn in the side of successive Nigerian governments.

Weeks later, on the night of December 25, the US launched what Trump described as “powerful and deadly” strikes in northwest Nigeria but the US military’s Africa Command (AFRICOM) made clear the attacks were carried out “at the request of Nigerian authorities”.

That cooperation between the US and Nigeria only appears to have grown, culminating this week in 100 US military personnel arriving in the country to help train Nigerian soldiers in the fight against armed groups.

Nigeria’s Ministry of Defence said US forces will assist with “technical support” and “intelligence sharing”, and despite not playing a direct combat role, will help target and defeat “terrorist organisations”.

To many, the developments come as a surprise – as in a little over three months, Nigeria appears to have overturned Trump’s “Christian slaughter” claim to instead win US military support for Abuja’s own military goals against armed groups.

“There’s been a strong shift,” said Ryan Cummings, the director of analysis at Signal Risk, an Africa-focused risk management firm. The narrative has “transitioned completely from a slap on the wrist to one where there seems to be a holding of hands in tackling this issue together”.

Although a notable shift, it is not fully surprising to many analysts, who see Nigeria’s cooperation as a strategic move to de-escalate tensions.

“It is neither unexpected nor hypocritical,” said Cheta Nwanze, the CEO of Nigerian risk advisory SBM Intelligence, who noted that Nigeria’s longstanding security partnerships since 1999 have favoured Western military doctrines.

What has shifted, he said, is the “US posture”: Washington now feels more entitled to get involved in a country where it sees strategic interests.

Nigeria
Nigeria’s National Security Adviser Nuhu Ribadu and US Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs Allison Hooker deliver a speech during the inauguration of the Nigeria-US Joint Working Group to boost counterterrorism cooperation at the Office of the National Security Adviser in Abuja, Nigeria, on January 22, 2026 [Marvellous Durowaiye/Reuters]

Lobbyists and working groups

Kabir Adamu, the director of Beacon Security and Intelligence in Abuja, feels the Tinubu administration has been “successful in de-escalating the Trump threat and in establishing a joint working group between the two countries”. But the “challenge”, the risk analyst said, is that Abuja has not been transparent enough about the process.

“At what cost did [the government] do this?” he asked. “It has so far failed to be transparent in letting Nigerians know what agreement it entered with the US government that led to a de-escalation of the situation.”

In January, the US and Nigeria convened a joint working group to address Nigeria’s designation as a CPC and how the country can work to reduce violence against vulnerable groups. But outside of that, details of what transpired between the first Trump threats and the first US strikes are scant.

However, Cummings of Signal Risk points to one deal, in particular, that he believes helped turn the tide: on December 17, the Nigerian government, through a legal intermediary, hired the DCI Group, Washington, DC-based lobbyists, for a reported sum of $9m.

According to the terms of the contract published online, DCI would “assist the Nigerian government through Aster Legal in communicating its actions to protect Nigerian Christian communities and maintaining U.S support in countering West African jihadist groups and other destabilizing elements”.

In hiring DCI, Nigeria has decided to “fight fire with fire”, Cummings said, comparing Abuja’s approach with what South Africa has done in the face of similar false accusations by Trump’s government that a “white genocide” is taking place there.

In both Nigeria and South Africa, the claims were first spread by local minority lobby groups aided by Republicans and evangelicals in the US, Cummings said. These groups fed selectively framed or exaggerated accounts into the Trump administration.

Nigeria hired a lobby group “to basically persuade the Trump administration that what is happening in Nigeria and what has been told to the Trump administration by certain lobby groups was not an accurate reflection of the status quo,” Cummings said.

“And that seemingly has been pivotal in changing the stance of the US government towards Nigeria,” he said.

Trump’s Africa positions are strongly shaped by a conservative evangelical base in the US, Cummings added, displaying concern for Christians globally and sympathy for white minorities portrayed as supposed victims of Black governments.

In the sense of playing to his core constituency, Trump’s concerns for these groups are genuine, Cummings said, but in other ways, they are instrumental: Trump uses issues like “Christian persecution” or “white genocide” to pressure other countries on broader foreign‑policy alignment.

Nigeria
People read newspapers reporting on US air strikes against Islamic State fighters in Nigeria, in Lagos, on December 26, 2025 [Sodiq Adelakun/Reuters]

‘Calculated trade-off’

Pressuring states for geopolitical gains plays out not just in Africa but outside the continent as well, both Nwanze and Adamu pointed out, citing the US’s recent abduction of Nicolas Maduro, the then-president of Venezuela, which, like Nigeria, holds significant oil reserves.

“Nigeria holds tens of billions of barrels of oil reserves and is Africa’s largest producer. The US National Security Strategy prioritises securing strategic resources through unilateral action”, so to some extent, the US’s recent moves regarding Nigeria are about “asserting control over global energy flows”, Nwanze said.

“The counterterrorism framing is genuine but convenient because it provides cover for interventions that also serve resource security objectives,” he explained.

Also citing the example of Venezuela, Adamu said that witnessing the US’s abduction of Maduro also likely “made the Nigerian government more disposed to US cooperation”.

Adamu described Nigeria’s decision to allow the US to intervene as “a calculated trade-off” – one that provides security benefits through US troops and intelligence sharing; and stronger diplomatic ties with a powerful country — while also maintaining Nigeria-led oversight of US operations.

From Tinubu’s side, cooperation with the US is an “operational necessity”, Nwanze said. “Nigeria’s security forces are overstretched, and US intelligence and air power offer tactical advantages against militant groups.”

However, Cummings cautioned that while US support may improve Nigeria’s tactical counterterrorism capacity, it “treats the symptoms” and not the socioeconomic conditions at the root of the violence.

“There hasn’t been enough focus on how America can actually assist the Nigerian government in addressing the causes of these insurgencies, which very much lies in basic economics – creating employment opportunities, ensuring governance and access to public services in these areas are good, and ensuring that you as a country or as a government can make a better deal for local communities than the jihadists can,” he said.

Risk of escalation by armed groups

In fact, a US military presence in Nigeria may actually empower the armed groups, the analysts noted.

“There is a real risk of escalation,” Nwanze said, noting that recent security data compiled by his firm has shown “an uptick in attacks” since the US’s CPC designation.

He said armed groups like Islamic State Sahel Province (ISSP) and the al-Qaeda-linked Jama’at Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimin (JNIM) “have consistently exploited narratives of foreign intervention to recruit and radicalise”.

“The December strikes [on Nigeria by the US] provide propaganda material, allowing them to frame local grievances as part of a global war against Western forces,” he added.

“There is also the risk that militant groups will rebrand themselves as resisting foreign occupation, gaining propaganda advantages that outweigh tactical losses.”

Adamu said a US presence could motivate armed groups to intensify attacks, especially symbolically. But more than that, “due to the controversy and difference in support between Nigerians for the US presence, it can lead to a further polarisation of Nigeria along religious and ethnic divides”.

There are “domestic perception risks” for Abuja, he said, noting that previous Nigerian governments had faced public criticism when allowing US presence in Nigeria, and many now feel Tinubu is “handing the country over to US imperialism”.

The domestic “optics” are a concern, Nwanze agreed. “The perception of compromised sovereignty feeds nationalist resentment and deepens distrust in government,” he said.

For Cummings, Nigeria was in a tough spot in the face of US aggression, and “on balance, it was a smarter decision by the Tinubu government [to have] greater alignment with the United States”.

The analyst argues that Nigeria is historically more pro‑West, with economic, political, social and diaspora ties to the US. He says in the absence of alternative partners – like BRICS or other South-South alliances – Abuja’s cooperation and seeming alignment with the Trump administration was the best way to de-escalate this crisis.

But other analysts like Nwanze are concerned that by choosing to concede to Trump the right to violate Nigerian sovereignty — even with Nigerian oversight — the Tinubu government had left the country exposed to further crises.

“Adding a US military footprint, however limited, risks deepening instability by broadening the conflict’s ideological scope,” he warned. “The [armed] groups were already motivated; now they have a more compelling story to tell.”

Como’s Fabregas, Milan’s Allegri and an alleged pull of Saelemaekers’ shirt

AC Milan’s 1-1 home draw with Como saw them drop seven points behind rivals Inter in the race for Italy’s Serie A title, but the result was even more infuriating for the Rossoneri and their supporters after a controversial incident involving a Milan counter and the opposition manager, Cesc Fabregas.

A coming together on the touchline, involving the former Arsenal and Barcelona midfielder while the ball was in play, resulted in play being stopped and the Milan manager, Massimiliano Allegri, being sent off.

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The overview of the incident was not completely clear at the time and continued into post-match interviews, where the allegations and accusations increased.

What happened between Fabregas and Alexis Saelemaekers?

With the match level at 1-1 and with only 10 minutes to play, Milan attempted a counterattack on the left flank just in front of the Como technical area.

Rossoneri winger Alexis Saelemaekers was surrounded by Como defenders but attempted to cut infield to break clear of his opponents.

Rather than continue his run, however, the Belgium international instead ground to a halt and immediately turned to remonstrate with Como manager Cesc Fabregas.

The replays show Fabregas alongside Saelemaekers on the edge of the field of play, with Milan alleging the away team manager pulled the shirt of their player, preventing their attempted attack.

Why was AC Milan’s Allegri sent off for the incident with Fabregas?

A touchline bust-up ensued as the Milan bench, and their manager Allegri, confronted their opposite numbers from Como. Allegri was shown a red card by referee Maurizio Mariani for his part in the melee.

Fabregas’s assistant, and Como team manager, was also shown a red card.

What have Fabregas and Allegri said about the incident?

In his post-match interview, Allegri made no attempt to hide his annoyance about the incident.

“I believe there was a foul,” Allegri told the broadcaster, DAZN.

“Saelemaekers was starting a counterattack and was pulled by someone from the bench – I think it was Fabregas.”

AC Milan's Italian coach Massimiliano Allegri, left, leaves the field after his red card and argument with Como's Spanish coach Cesc Fabregas argue during the Italian Serie A football match
AC Milan coach Massimiliano Allegri is shown a red card by referee Maurizio Mariani [Daniele Mascolo/Reuters]

Later, Fabregas admitted that his behaviour was “unsporting” but said he had touched the ball with his hand and not pulled Saelemaekers’s shirt.

“I want to apologise first and foremost, I did something I am not proud of, and was unsporting,” Fabregas told DAZN. “We’ve got to keep our hands to ourselves … especially the coaches.

“I apologise, it was just a little touch and Allegri’s response was exaggerated, but I admit I shouldn’t have done it.

“I would’ve got angry too, so I can only apologise and say I hope it never happens again in my career.

“I touched the ball with my hand to prevent Milan from resuming play… I acted unsportsmanlike, and I apologise,” Fabregas said.

On Fabregas apologising for his part in the incident, Allegri replied: “I understand, but next time if someone runs down the line, I will make a sliding tackle and come in too.”

Allegri also defended his actions, saying he only left his technical area to “defend his player”.

Do Fabregas and Allegri have a history of poor behaviour?

Allegri is known for his calm approach on and off the field. The former midfielder had a reputation for seeing the game at a quicker pace than others and controlling the flow of play accordingly, an alertness he is also renowned for on the touchline.

Fabregas was an all-action midfielder for Arsenal, Barcelona, Chelsea and Spain, and – much like Allegri – was hugely gifted technically. Having spent the majority of his career in the fast-paced English Premier League with the two London sides, Fabregas was known for a fiery approach in the centre of the park.

As Como manager, Fabregas saw his team involved in a mass brawl during a preseason friendly in Spain against Real Betis last summer, which saw both sets of coaching staff drawn into the on-field scuffle where punches were thrown.

How did the Serie A game between AC Milan and Como play out?

Argentina midfielder Nico Paz put Como ahead in the 32nd minute following a clumsy error from Milan goalkeeper Mike Maignan.

The France number one tried passing the ball from the edge of his penalty area, but Paz swiftly intercepted it and shot through Maignan’s legs for his ninth league goal of the season.

Portugal winger Rafael Leao equalised midway through the second half for Milan with a neat lob after being set up by midfielder Ardon Jashari.

How is the rest of Serie A shaping up behind Inter and AC Milan?

The draw with Como extended Milan’s unbeaten streak in the league to 24 games, though the seven-point gap to rivals Inter is now looking substantial.

Second-placed Milan are four points ahead of defending champions Napoli in third.