First Lady, Remi Tinubu, wants Nigerians to pray for the peace and prosperity of the country as the Lenten season begins.
Remi Tinubu, in a message on her X handle on Wednesday, described the season as a time of spiritual growth, asking for compassion and unity in the solemn period.
“As we begin this Lenten period, I pray that this time of spiritual growth, self-reflection, and drawing closer to God is committed to following Christ’s example of love,” the First Lady wrote.
“May our prayers and acts of compassion and kindness deepen our faith and reflect on our relationships with others. I urge us to remember to pray for the peace and prosperity of our dear nation, Nigeria. I wish us all a blessed and fulfilled Lenten season.”
The Lenten season began with Ash Wednesday. The period is one of the most important seasons in the Christian liturgical calendar.
Lent, which is 40 days, excluding Sundays, is dedicated to penance, fasting, prayer, and almsgiving.
It leads up to the celebration of Easter and reflects the 40 days Jesus Christ spent fasting in the desert, a time marked by reflection, sacrifice, and spiritual preparation.
READ ALSO: Govs, UN, Others Preach Love, Sacrifice At Ramadan
Ash Wednesday marks the beginning of Lent, a 40-day season of reflection, fasting, and renewal.
Across Nigeria and around the world, churches will gather the faithful to begin this sacred journey.
Whether you’re attending a morning mass or an evening service after work, this… pic.twitter.com/xLMuFjeOy2
‘Very Significant’ Period
The Lenten season, which began on Wednesday, coincides with the start of the Muslim Ramadan fast, a rare occurrence that has elicited calls for love and peace among Nigerians.
Several governors, including those of Lagos, Edo, Kwara, and others, told Nigerians that the period is a reminder of the importance of tolerance.
Governor Sanwo-Olu, in a statement issued by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Gboyega Akosile, said, “The fasting period is very significant to Christian and Muslim faithful across the world.
“It teaches abstinence from worldly pleasures, steadfastness in prayers, and total submission to the will of God.
“I believe strongly that the start of these two major religions’ activities on the same day is not a mere coincidence but God’s design for our nation and the entire world for peace and stability,” the governor said.
“Lent and Ramadan are important seasons in the Christian and Islamic calendars. It is a period when the adherents are expected to fast and seek God’s intervention in the affairs of man. The season teaches us the significance of abstinence for the sake of seeking God’s grace, mercy, and forgiveness.
“Let us be good to one another. We should be tolerant and be of good behaviour to one another. Let us continue to offer prayers for continued peace, unity, and stability in Lagos and Nigeria at large.”
His Kwara and Edo counterparts also shared similar sentiments, calling for tolerance among the faithful.
“The two fasting seasons beginning on the same day again signal a need for all of mankind across creeds to work for harmony, peace, and unity, while acting as a united force against all forms of evil and things that could slow down the pace of development in Kwara State and Nigeria,” Abdulrahman Abdulrazaq of Kwara State said.
I extend special greetings to the Muslim and Christian communities on the dawn of Ramadan and Lent fasting seasons.
The two fasting seasons beginning on the same day again signals a need for all of mankind across creeds to work for harmony, peace, and unity, while acting as a…
Abdulrazaq urged “the two faith communities to pray and work with the government to improve the well-being of the people”.
Governor Monday Okpebholo of Edo State said the coincidence of these sacred seasons offers a rare opportunity for collective reflection, unity, and renewed commitment to the values of faith, sacrifice, love, and peaceful coexistence.
“This is a profound spiritual moment for our nation. As Muslims fast and Christians observe Lent, I encourage all faithful to lift Nigeria before God in prayer and supplication.
Convicted American sex offender Jeffrey Epstein and former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak collaborated for more than a decade to profit from instability in Nigeria, marketing surveillance technology honed in the occupied Palestinian territory to gain access to the West African country’s lucrative oil and logistics sectors, according to an investigation by Drop Site News (DSN).
A trove of emails originally released by the United States Department of Justice, the DSN investigation found, outlines how the late financier and the Israeli politician leveraged the Boko Haram rebellion to pitch “field-proven” security solutions to Nigerian officials.
The correspondence indicates that these security deals were frequently utilised as a gateway for broader commercial interests, including infrastructure projects for DP World and investments in the energy sector.
The revelations come days after Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem resigned as chairman of the Emirati logistics giant DP World on February 13 amid fallout from the disclosure of his close ties to Epstein.
According to the documents, Epstein and Barak viewed the escalating violence in West Africa not as a humanitarian crisis but as a business opportunity. In a 2014 email (PDF) regarding civil unrest in Syria, Libya, and Somalia, Epstein wrote to Barak, “isn’t this perfect for you”.
Barak replied, “You’re right in a way. But not simple to transform it into a cash flow.”
‘Field-proven’ on Palestinians
The files detail how Israeli intelligence firms marketed their technology to Nigeria using euphemisms such as “field-proven”, a reference to systems deployed by the Israeli military against Palestinians under occupation.
In 2015, Barak and a business partner invested $15m in FST Biometrics, a firm founded by the former head of Israeli military intelligence, Aharon Ze’evi Farkash. The company’s core technology, a biometric system known as Basel, was originally prototyped at the Beit Hanoon (Erez) crossing between Israel and the besieged Gaza Strip to control the movement of Palestinian workers.
While the Nigerian military battled Boko Haram, Barak facilitated the sale of similar biometric surveillance equipment to Babcock University, a Christian institution in Nigeria. The project was framed as a counterterrorism measure, with a press release at the time boasting that the technology would “filter away all unwanted persons”.
The emails suggest this initial foothold allowed Barak to institutionalise Israeli cyber-expertise within the Nigerian state. By 2020, the World Bank had tapped the Israel National Cyber Directorate and a startup cofounded by Barak to shape Nigeria’s national cyber-infrastructure.
Resources and logistics
The documents indicate that security cooperation was often a pretext for accessing Nigeria’s vast resource wealth. Epstein facilitated high-level talks for DP World, aiming to secure ownership of ports in Lagos and Badagry.
In the summer of 2018, Epstein brokered discussions between Jide Zeitlin, then-chair of Nigeria’s sovereign investment fund, and bin Sulayem. The documents show Epstein attempting to navigate US sanctions on figures involved in the mining sector to facilitate these deals.
“I hope your pal’s sojourn in Tel Aviv … was more effective than his efforts on the African continent,” Zeitlin wrote (PDF) to Epstein in September 2018, referring to the diplomatic normalisation Epstein and bin Sulayem were quietly cultivating between Israel and the United Arab Emirates years before the Abraham Accords.
‘Friends for Israel’
The correspondence highlights the immense access Epstein and Barak secured within the Nigerian government. In 2013, Barak attended a cybersecurity conference in Abuja, which organisers privately described as a cover to arrange meetings with then-President Goodluck Jonathan.
“The dinner is one other excellent way … to meet with good Friends of Israel and make new friends for Israel as well,” the event organiser wrote to Barak.
Following these meetings, Israeli defence contractor Elbit Systems proceeded with a controversial internet surveillance project in Nigeria, despite opposition from the country’s legislature.
The documents further reveal that Epstein coached Barak on how to parlay these security relationships into personal gain. When Barak shared financial details of a potential oil deal, Epstein responded (PDF) with harsh advice: “I told you on the phone before sending or asking anyone about it you should do your own homework.”
The ties between Epstein and Israel have come into sharp focus after the release of millions of documents.
The documents have revealed more details of Epstein’s interactions with members of the global elite, including Barak. But they also document his funding of Israeli groups, including Friends of the Israeli army, and the settler organisation the Jewish National Fund, as well as his ties to members of Israel’s overseas intelligence services, the Mossad.
Scotland’s incredible dismantling of England prompted joyous scenes among their fans, but also left a familiar question hanging in the air – can they back it up?
The Scots have beaten England eight times in the Six Nations, with the first victory in 2000 coming in the final round of the Championship.
Following six of the other seven triumphs, Scotland have gone on to lose their next match.
Which brings us to Principality Stadium on Saturday. Round three and an opportunity for Scotland to properly put themselves in the mix for the title.
The emotional and physical energy expended in delivering these incredible Calcutta Cup victories has proved hard for Scotland to recover from and then replicate.
Scotland bounced back brilliantly from the gut punch of defeat to Italy in Rome to dispatch England in sensational fashion, but the memories of the Stadio Olimpico will remain with them, serving as a cautionary tale as they prepare to face a Wales side at a low ebb.
“We’ll obviously be sitting there with Italy in the back of our mind and that performance,” Scotland second row Scott Cummings said.
“We know that we can’t let our performance dip to that point again. We know that we can push on and we believe we can push on. But the weekend was just a start for us, now we need to back it up.
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Familiar faces will bring ‘gritty’ Wales performance
Captain Sione Tuipulotu spoke before the England match about how Scotland were “a desperate team” with their Six Nations hopes on the line.
That desperation for a win surely applies to Wales this weekend.
Steve Tandy, the former Scotland defence coach now in charge of Wales, has watched his side get battered in their opening two matches against England and France.
They sit bottom of the table having scored only 19 points across two games while conceding 102.
France ran riot with eight tries in Cardiff to consign Wales to a 13th consecutive Six Nations defeat.
Yet Scotland have had enough bad experiences in Cardiff to never take a victory for granted, even with Welsh rugby in dire straits.
“I obviously know some of their coaching staff, Steve Tandy and [former Glasgow head coach] Danny Wilson,” Cummings said.
“They’ll be obviously pretty up for this game, having worked with us in the past.
“We’re expecting a pretty solid, gritty performance from them, and they’ll definitely be tough to break down.
“They’re going to be a team that’s obviously hurting and, like we were last week, that often brings the best out in teams. So we’re expecting a massive fight from them.
“I want the heat on us. We need to view every single moment as the most important moment of the match. If we don’t, then I don’t think we’ll get the win out of it. So I don’t think the pressure’s off us.
Islamabad, Pakistan – When armed officers from Pakistan’s Crime Control Department raided Zubaida Bibi’s home in Bahawalpur city in southern Punjab province last November, they took everything: mobile phones, cash, gold jewellery and her daughter’s wedding dowry. They also took her sons.
Within 24 hours, five members of her family were dead, killed in separate “police encounters” across different districts of Pakistan’s Punjab – the province that alone is home to more than half of the country’s population.
Her sons Imran, 25, Irfan, 23, and Adnan, 18, along with two sons-in-law, were among them.
“They broke into our house in Bahawalpur and took everything we owned,” Zubaida told a fact-finding mission from Pakistan’s foremost rights group, the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP).
“We followed them to Lahore and begged for our sons’ release. The next morning, five of them were dead,” she added.
When she later filed a legal petition, Zubaida says police threatened to kill whoever remained in her family if she did not withdraw it.
Her husband, Abdul Jabbar, insists his sons had no criminal records. “They were working men, married with children,” he said.
The family’s account sits at the centre of an explosive HRCP fact-finding report, published on February 17, which concludes that Punjab’s Crime Control Department (CCD) is pursuing what it calls “a systemic policy of extrajudicial killing in contravention of the law and Constitution”.
The HRCP documented at least 670 “encounters”, resulting in 924 suspected deaths between April 2025, when the unit was formed, and December 2025.
The CCD, formally constituted in April last year, was mandated to combat serious and organised crime.
But the HRCP describes it as a “parallel police force” operating with virtual impunity, linking it to a sharp spike in encounter killings that has ignited debate over the rule of law and the state’s duty to protect the right to life.
Farah Zia, the HRCP’s director, says Punjab was historically where encounter killings first took root in the 1960s, “partly because of an already existing policing culture where there was impunity for torture”.
She said the practice later spread to other provinces. HRCP’s annual State of Human Rights reports document hundreds of police encounters each year elsewhere, particularly in Sindh.
“That the governments choose to apply such short-term, unsustainable and illegal measures to curb crime rather than invest in better forensic investigation techniques, community-based policing and more effective prosecution has not helped matters,” Zia told Al Jazeera.
A new force, a sharp rise
Under the Punjab Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz Sharif, the CCD was established with the stated aim of helping bring to fruition the provincial government’s “Safe Punjab” vision.
It is a specialised force aimed at tackling serious and organised crime, inter-district gangs and hardened offenders whom regular police struggle to combat.
Maryam, daughter of three-time Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and niece of current Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, belongs to the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz party.
Within weeks of the CCD’s formation, a sustained rise in police encounters was recorded across Punjab. More than 900 suspects were killed in eight months. In the same period, two police personnel were killed and 36 were injured.
By comparison, HRCP’s annual report for 2024 recorded 341 suspects killed in encounters across Punjab and Sindh combined over the entire year. The CCD, operating in a single province, more than doubled that toll in less than eight months.
The highest concentration of killings occurred in Lahore, with 139 encounters, followed by Faisalabad with 55 and Sheikhupura with 47.
The largest category of suspects killed was those accused of dacoity, armed gang robbery, accounting for 366 deaths. Narcotics-related suspects accounted for 114 deaths, robbery suspects 138, and those accused in murder cases, 99.
A familiar script
Drawing on multiple police reports filed after the killings, the commission describes how a CCD team typically intercepts suspects, almost invariably on motorcycles and described as moving “suspiciously”, typically at night or at a roadblock.
The suspects allegedly react aggressively and open fire first, forcing police to respond in self-defence. During the exchange, the suspects are hit while their accomplices escape, “taking advantage of the dark”.
HRCP notes what it calls “strikingly similar” wording in numerous FIRs, including accounts in which a wounded suspect briefly regains consciousness and, just before dying, volunteers his full name, parentage, home address and criminal history to the officers who have shot him.
The commission found identical phrases appearing across districts, dates and alleged crimes, suggesting “copy-paste structuring rather than incident-specific reporting”.
Official police media releases issued after each encounter and circulated to crime reporters via WhatsApp groups often also reproduce the same sequence almost verbatim, emphasising the deceased’s alleged criminal record while omitting procedural details.
Asad Jamal, a Lahore-based human rights lawyer who has long worked on encounter cases, said the chief minister, Maryam Nawaz, has repeatedly claimed that crime in Punjab has been curtailed, suggesting the approach reflects a policy decision at the highest political level. He expressed scepticism about prospects for accountability.
“They seem to think that if the crime rate is lowered,” Jamal told Al Jazeera, they are justified in resorting to “extrajudicial killings” – instead of improving investigation techniques, better resources for law enforcement and improved intelligence.
Punjab police officers stand as they use tear gas to disperse supporters of the far-right religious group, Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP) in Lahore, Pakistan, on October 10, 2025 [Mohsin Raza/Reuters]
What the government and police say
Indeed, in court filings, according to the HRCP, the CCD has claimed its operations reduced property crimes by more than 60 percent in a seven-month comparison with 2024, with dacoity-linked murders down by a similar margin.
The department says it follows an “intelligence-driven policing model” that has dismantled notorious organised gangs.
It has dismissed the HRCP’s concerns, saying the commission lacks evidence of extrajudicial killings.
The HRCP counters that even if crime figures have fallen, the method matters. Whether crime is addressed through investigation, prosecution and a judicial process, or through summary execution, goes to the heart of what kind of state Punjab seeks to be, the commission argues.
The commission says families reported being told to bury their dead immediately, before independent postmortem examinations could take place.
The HRCP said it received no data from Punjab Police after requesting material on encounter procedures, and written requests to meet senior police and provincial officials went unanswered.
Al Jazeera also repeatedly contacted Punjab police officials, including the CCD, as well as Information Minister Azma Bokhari and Senior Minister Marriyum Aurangzeb, but received no replies.
A former senior Punjab police official, who retired in the 2010s, said two main factors drive the rise in encounter killings: an overburdened and often corrupt justice system, and political pressure to demonstrate control over crime.
Court delays and weak prosecutions create “frustration amongst the people and the police, and they start legitimising short cuts like extrajudicial killings”, he said.
“The political government wants to be seen as controlling crime, even violating due process. This approach also encourages police to resort to extrajudicial killings, knowing there won’t be any accountability for such actions,” the official told Al Jazeera on condition of anonymity.
A decade of encounters
The HRCP’s annual reports show nearly 5,000 encounter cases nationwide over the past decade to 2024, with almost 2,000 in Punjab alone.
Between 2020 and 2023, encounter figures in Punjab hovered below 400 annually, suggesting a persistent but relatively stable baseline.
In 2024, however, the number surged to 1,008, more than tripling from the previous year. The latest report records fewer encounters overall but a significantly higher number of fatalities.
The HRCP and independent observers have repeatedly characterised many such incidents as staged or fake encounters, effectively extrajudicial killings in which suspects are executed rather than arrested.
Rida Hosain, a Lahore-based lawyer, said encounter killings and extrajudicial violence are a “relic of colonial control structures and military dictatorships” that treated citizens as subjects rather than rights-bearing individuals entitled to a fair trial and due process.
“The Punjab government frames these measures as a pathway to ‘zero crime’, when in fact it appears to institutionalise another form of criminality: state-sanctioned criminality. Once state-sanctioned violence is normalised, it rarely remains confined to alleged ‘criminals’,” Hosain told Al Jazeera.
Philippine Vice President Sara Duterte has announced she will run for president in 2028, despite facing impeachment complaints over corruption claims and an alleged threat against the president. Here’s what we know.
Bulgaria will hold a snap parliamentary election on April 19, President Iliana Iotova has said.
The announcement on Wednesday comes after the resignation of the previous government in December following weeks of anticorruption protests.
Last week, Iotova tapped Andrey Gyurov, deputy governor of the Bulgarian National Bank, to head a caretaker government tasked with preparing the way for the vote.
“I will make a decree to have elections on the 19th of April,” Iotova told a news conference on Wednesday, after meeting Gyurov, who presented the members of his caretaker government.
Bulgaria, which joined the eurozone on January 1, has faced prolonged political instability, with parties unable to form stable ruling coalitions in a fragmented parliament.
The upcoming parliamentary election will be the eighth in just five years in the country.
The conservative GERB party came first in the most recent election in 2024, forming a coalition government.
People, however, began taking to the streets in late November over the 2026 draft budget, with protesters branded it as an attempt to mask rampant corruption.
Last month, Bulgaria’s longtime President Rumen Radev, a vocal government critic who supported the protests, announced his resignation amid speculation that he was looking to take part in the elections.
In an address to the nation, Radev, 62, said at the time he was eager to participate in the “battle for the future” of the European Union and NATO member.