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Suspected Vigilante Killer Arrested In Niger State After Two-Year Manhunt

The Niger State Police Command has arrested a suspected killer of a vigilante member who had been on the run since 2024.

The suspect, Sudais Zakari of Angwan-Roka, Minna, was apprehended alongside Danjuma Idris of Maitumbi during a police operation targeting criminal hideouts in the Maitumbi area of the state capital.

Zakari allegedly fled Minna after reportedly killing Ibrahim Yahaya, also known as Danladi Baushe, a member of a local vigilante group in Maitumbi, in April 2024. Police investigations indicate that he had since been evading arrest.

According to the Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO), Wasiu Abiodun, the arrest followed a coordinated operation carried out on February 7, 2026, at about 10:30 p.m. Operatives of the Maitumbi Division, led by the Divisional Police Officer (DPO), conducted the operation in collaboration with vigilante members.

READ ALSO: Police Confirm Six Dead In Fresh Niger State Attack By Bandits

“Sudais has been on the run for various crimes, including the culpable homicide of one Ibrahim Yahaya, a.k.a. Danladi Baushe, a vigilante member in Maitumbi. The incident occurred in April 2024,” Abiodun stated.

Preliminary investigations further revealed that Zakari allegedly participated in several armed robbery incidents within the Maitumbi area in 2025.

Danjuma Idris was arrested with suspected burglary tools, including a bolt cutter, machete, screwdriver, pliers, a bunch of keys, a face cap, and a bag believed to have been stolen.

In a related development, Abiodun disclosed that on February 8, 2026, at about 3:00 a.m., operatives of Operation Flush intercepted and arrested another suspect, Aji Gana, around Maitumbi Roundabout.

Items recovered from him include a cutlass, a pitcher, a bunch of keys, pliers, a screwdriver, and two mobile phones.

Four Kidnapped Victims Regain Freedom In Kwara

The four people kidnapped along the Omu-Aran–Isanlu-Isin Road in Kwara State on January 5, 2026, have regained their freedom.

It was gathered that the abductees were released on Wednesday.

A security source who confirmed their release said, “The released individuals are receiving treatment in various hospitals in Ilorin and Omu-Aran respectively.”

However, in another twist of events, one person was killed and another kidnapped on Tuesday evening along the Correctional Centre Road.

READ ALSO: One Dead As Gunmen Attack Kwara Community

“Residents of Isanlu-Isin and neighbouring communities are in a panicking mood, as a result of which some schools have closed down,” the source added.

In another development, a suspected bandit disguised as a beggar was arrested in Igbaja, Ifelodun Local Government Area of the state.

A security source disclosed, “The suspect was caught disguising himself as a beggar in Igbaja.”

The source added that intelligence reports indicated that some bandits fled Baba Sango after realising that their informants posing as beggars were being tracked while roaming towns and villages across Kwara South.

Bangladesh goes to polls in crucial first election since deadly uprising

Bangladesh is voting in an election seen as pivotal for the nation’s future as it seeks to chart a democratic course in the wake of the 2024 ouster of longtime leader Sheikh Hasina in a student-led uprising that killed hundreds.

Voters headed to the polls on Thursday to cast their votes in a contest pitting the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) and a Jamaat-e-Islami-led coalition that includes the National Citizens Party, formed by youth ‌activists instrumental in ousting Hasina. There are nearly 127 million registered voters in the South Asian country.

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The two leading prime ministerial candidates are the BNP’s Tarique Rahman, a political scion who has edged ahead in polls with his anticorruption campaign, and Jamaat chief Shafiqur Rahman, who is aiming to present his long-excluded Islamist party as a credible and modern force for change.

Polls opened amid tight security, with hundreds of thousands of security personnel deployed on the streets, but voters cast their ballots in a mood of optimism in what is seen as the first free and fair election since 2008, when Hasina embarked on an oppressive 15-year stretch in power.

Jainab Lutfun Naher, a voter from the Gulshan area of Dhaka, told Al Jazeera that the experience was emotional and empowering. “I want this country to prosper,” she said. “I want it to be democratic, where everyone has rights and freedom.”

AMM Nasir Uddin, the chief election commissioner, said the poll would mark a break from the “arranged elections” of recent history. “We must forget the history of centre-grabbing and ballot box capture,” he said.

Uddin noted that voter turnout had been strong, saying Bangladesh had “boarded the train of democracy” and would soon “reach its destination”.

In parallel to the election, the country is also holding a referendum on constitutional reforms that the country’s caretaker government, led by Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus, had put together after the student-led protests.

Reporting from Dhaka, Al Jazeera’s Jonah Hull said they included “institutional reforms, electoral, policing and constitutional reforms designed to ensure this country doesn’t again slide into autocracy”.

“I think this is really important as a sort of subtext to this election,” he said, predicting a “landslide ‘Yes’ vote”. “It is, perhaps, the truest legacy of that revolution 18 months ago, in which hundreds of students gave their lives.”

But the “bigger question”, he noted, is whether the election victor actually puts the reforms into practice.

‘Deep challenges’

Elections were held during Hasina’s tenure, but they were marred by opposition boycotts and intimidation, critics have said.

The 78-year-old former leader was sentenced to death in absentia for crimes against humanity for the bloody crackdown on protesters during her final months in power, and remains in hiding in India. Her Awami League party has been barred from the election.

Following the 2024 uprising, Yunus stepped in as interim leader with a mandate to restore a credible electoral process and build consensus around reforms, acting as democratic safeguards that would balance power among different state institutions.

“This election is not just another routine vote,” Yunus said this week. “It will determine the future direction of the country, the character of its democracy, its durability, and the fate of the next generation”.

Farhana Sultana, a professor of geography at Syracuse University, told Al Jazeera that if the election succeeded in restoring public trust, it would create a foundation for the country to tackle its “deep challenges”.

“Economic pressure, including youth unemployment and stagnating growth, is fuelling frustration among a new generation that demands real opportunity rather than symbolic change,” she said.

Climate, too, is an “ongoing existential issue for Bangladesh”, she said, adding that the new government would need to “integrate climate adaptation and water security into governance, economic planning and international cooperation”.

Iran’s Larijani accuses Israel of trying to sabotage US negotiations

Iran’s security chief Ali Larijani has accused Israel of attempting to sabotage negotiations with the United States over Tehran’s nuclear programme, so it can ignite a new war that would destabilise the region.

In an interview with Al Jazeera Arabic during his visit to Doha, Qatar, where he met top officials on Wednesday, Larijani, secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, said Israel had been fabricating pretexts to try to derail the negotiations with Washington, as the renewed talks were at a delicate stage.

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“Our negotiations are exclusively with the United States – we are not engaged in any talks with Israel,” he said.

“However, Israel has inserted itself into this process, with their intent on undermining and sabotaging these negotiations.”

He said Israel’s strategy was “to destabilise the region”, and that its agenda “extends beyond its alleged concerns about Iran”, as was evidenced by its attack on the Qatari capital targeting Hamas officials in September.

“They are gambling not only with Iran, but also Qatar, Saudi Arabia and Turkiye,” he said, calling on regional leaders to “be aware of this.”

Israel’s attack on Iran in June came as Tehran and Washington were engaged in talks and effectively torpedoed the negotiations, which were several rounds in.

Netanyahu meets with Trump

Iran and the US held a round of indirect negotiations in Muscat, Oman, on Friday, seeking to negotiate a resolution to the nuclear dispute, amid a US military buildup in the region and Trump’s ongoing threats to strike Iran if it does not accede to his demands.

Amid plans for a second round of talks – the timing of which is currently under discussion, Larijani said – Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu travelled to Washington on Wednesday for urgent talks with Trump, where he presented the US leader with “principles” for negotiating with Iran.

After the meeting, Trump said “nothing definitive” had been reached, “other than I insisted that negotiations with Iran continue to see whether or not a Deal can be consummated”.

‘Common ground’

Larijani told Al Jazeera that Tehran had not yet received a specific proposal from Washington in the negotiations, and that the talks in Muscat had consisted of an exchange of messages.

He said that Tehran was taking a positive position towards the negotiations, and that Washington, too, appeared to have concluded that negotiations were the preferred option.

He said there was common ground between Tehran and Washington regarding Iran not possessing a nuclear weapon, which it insists it is not pursuing.

Missiles, zero enrichment off the table

However, Larijani reiterated that the negotiations would be limited to Iran’s nuclear programme, with issues such as Iran’s missile programme – which the US has pushed to address in the talks, and is a key concern for Israel – not up for discussion.

“When we met at the negotiating table, a clear boundary was drawn … our talks centred solely on the nuclear issue,” he said, adding that this was a “logical” approach.

“Our missile program stands entirely separate from the nuclear one. It is a domestic matter, basically linked to our national security. As such, it cannot be part of these negotiations.”

Similarly, he said, the notion of Iran reducing its uranium enrichment to zero was “not on the table”.

“It is impractical for a country that has already mastered this technology to reduce it to zero,” he said, citing the need for enriched uranium for peaceful civilian purposes such as in cancer treatment.

“Meanwhile, we are open to verification, and anybody is welcome to come and see [our facilities] for themselves.”

If the US did opt to attack Iran, as it did in a series of strikes targeting the country’s nuclear facilities in June as part of a 12-day war, then Tehran would respond by attacking US military bases in the region, Larijani said.

Why the Nations League still matters to World Cup-bound Scotland

Who needs the Nations League? Now Steve Clarke has ended decades of heartache and taken Scotland to the World Cup, does anything else matter?

Understandably, ever since December’s gala draw for the summer’s finals in North America, every Scotland fan has been consumed with thoughts of facing Haiti, Morocco and Brazil.

The prospect of partying at the finals for the first time since 1998 has given long-suffering supporters plenty to savour and there’s been no need to look beyond, nor anything definite to anticipate.

That changes at the Nations League draw in Belgium on Thursday evening, when Scotland’s opponents for matches in the second half of 2027 are confirmed.

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How does the Nations League work?

Nations League trophyGetty Images

Since being introduced in 2018 in an attempt to add more structure to the international calendar and phase out meaningless friendlies, the competition has followed a familiar format.

National teams are split into four tiers based on promotion and relegation from the last edition, theoretically putting sides of the same level together.

Each of these tiers are split into groups of four and there’s promotion and relegation through the divisions. The best teams in League A then go on into a knock-out finals tournament the following summer with the champions crowned at the end. Simple.

Scotland played in the top flight in the last edition back in 2024 but finished in third place in their group behind eventual champions Portugal and Croatia. That put the national team in a play-off to fight for survival and defeat by Greece meant relegation to League B.

Who could Scotland draw?

Sweden's Alexander Isak hitting the post against SwitzerlandGetty Images

Scotland are in Pot 1 of the League B draw, but a quick look at the possible opposition puts paid to any ideas that it means an easy draw.

Hungary, Poland and Israel are the only sides Scotland cannot face, but with the likes of Switzerland, Republic of Ireland and Sweden as a potential group of opponents, fans won’t be taking success for granted. Though do we ever?

Pot 1: Scotland, Hungary, Poland, Israel

Pot 2: Switzerland, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Austria, Ukraine

Pot 3: Slovenia, Georgia, Republic of Ireland, Romania

Pot 4: Sweden, North Macedonia, Northern Ireland, Kosovo

Scotland will play each opponent home and away, with the fixtures grouped into three double-headers in September, October and November.

Why is it important for Scotland?

Even eight years after its introduction, the competition does not have the allure of its counterparts, but it is still an important part of the international calendar, especially for Scotland.

Head coach Clarke has spoken repeatedly about how his players need to face strong opposition to keep improving.

This time around, they will not be playing Europe’s elite, but competitive games against sides of a similar level present a good test and strong preparation for the next set of European Championship qualifiers.

Promotion brings prestige, glamour games next time around and prize money, but arguably the real prizes come in how a successful campaign sets Scotland up for the future.

The seeding for qualification campaigns and finals is always a complicated affair, but there is one simple truth that applies to them all. Winning games pushes a team up the rankings and into a better position – and winning competitive games is more valuable than victory in friendlies.

There is also the importance of a good Nations League as a lifeline to reach major finals. Four teams who failed to qualify for the World Cup directly have been given a second chance through the play-offs due to their Nations League record.

And let us not forget that Scotland’s long exodus from a major finals was ended because of a Nations League lifeline – the emotion of the play-off victory in Serbia that sealed a place at Euro 2020 was only possible because of a strong campaign.

It should not be the case that the national team needs a similar chance to reach Euro 2028, but a horrible set of circumstances could arise that make Nations League success essential.

As co-hosts of the tournament, the idea of Scotland not making the finals and seeing fans of other nations celebrating at Hampden in unthinkable.

However, with four nations hosting the finals, Scotland, England, Wales and Republic of Ireland all have to go through the qualification campaign.

In an ideal world, the national team succeeds there and books a place, with three group games at Hampden guaranteed.

Uefa has set aside two places for host nations who fail to qualify in an attempt to make sure all four are in the tournament proper.

However, if more than two of the four fail to qualify automatically, it comes down to qualifying ranking and Scotland could conceivably miss out altogether.

A new face in the dugout?

Scotland head coach Steve ClarkeSNS

There’s one other intriguing footnote to the draw: it could set up the opposition for the next Scotland head coach’s first game in charge. Steve Clarke’s contract expires after the World Cup and there’s no indication if he’ll carry on in the job, regardless of what happens at the finals.

How can you watch the draw?

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  • Scottish Football
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