Archive September 30, 2025

VIDEO: Sowore In Court Over Alleged False Post Against Tinubu

Omoyele Sowore, a human rights activist, is set to be detained by the Federal Government on a five-count charge of fabricating statements against President Bola Tinubu in order to undermine international law and order.

READ MORE: X, Meta, DSS Sues Sowore,   OVER POST About Tinubu.

On Tuesday, Sowore was spotted at Abuja’s Federal High Court.

Two additional defendants are named in the charges: X. Incorporation and Meta (Facebook).

On Tuesday, Sowore (left) was spotted at Abuja’s Federal High Court.

He was charged with fabricating offensive posts using his official X handle.

According to the Federal High Court, the alleged offending post, which is said to be against Section 24 (2) of the Cybercrimes Prohibition and Prevention Act 2024, was made on August 25.

Watch the video below.

Venezuela’s Maduro ready to declare state of emergency if US attacks

UN General Assembly: What did world leaders say about Israel’s war on Gaza?

World leaders gathered in New York from September 23 to 29 for the 80th session of the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA).

Israel faced growing isolation as speaker after speaker condemned its ongoing war on Gaza, and delegates from multiple countries staged walkouts when Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu took the stage. Many diplomats left the chamber in protest during his speech.

Outside the UN headquarters, large crowds filled the streets in support of Palestinians and to protest against Netanyahu, who faces an International Criminal Court (ICC) arrest warrant for alleged war crimes. While the United States and a small group of allies continued to stand by Israel, the overwhelming chorus of criticism highlighted its growing isolation on the global stage.

Below are notable quotes from leaders around the world on Israel’s genocidal war.

UN chief

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres described the war on Gaza as unlike any other conflict he has witnessed during his tenure, warning of its devastating scale. He pointed to International Court of Justice (ICJ) rulings that ordered Israel to prevent genocide, allow investigations and enable greater humanitarian access.

Brazil

By tradition, Brazil is always the first country to speak, a practice that began in 1955 when it volunteered to open the debate.

President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva framed Palestine as the starkest example of disproportionate and illegal use of force.

He cautioned that the Palestinian people risk disappearing unless they achieve an independent state fully integrated into the international community.

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United States

Next to the podium was US President Donald Trump.

In a nearly hourlong speech, Trump dismissed the role of the UN, criticised immigration and climate policies, praised US military strength, and attacked European allies for national decline.

On Palestine, he demanded the immediate release of all captives and warned that unilateral recognition of a Palestinian state would amount to “a reward to Hamas for its horrible atrocities”.

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Indonesia

President Prabowo Subianto told the UNGA that Indonesia is ready to deploy 20,000 peacekeepers to Gaza – or “anywhere” peace is needed, including Ukraine.

Framing Gaza’s plight through Indonesia’s own history of colonial suffering, he drew parallels between his nation’s past and the struggles of Palestinians today.

He urged the UN not to remain silent while Palestinians are “denied justice and legitimacy” in its very hall, reminding delegates that the institution exists to defend both “the strong and the weak”.

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Turkiye

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan opened his speech by criticising Washington for denying visas to Palestinian Authority (PA) officials, including President Mahmoud Abbas, in violation of the UN host agreement.

Erdogan devoted much of his address to Israel’s war on Gaza, showing delegates photos of women waiting for food and a severely malnourished child. “Can we possibly have a reasonable reason for this brutality in 2025?” he asked, calling the situation one of humanity’s darkest moments.

He demanded an immediate ceasefire, unhindered humanitarian aid and accountability for those committing genocide.

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Jordan

Jordan’s King Abdullah II warned that failing to address the war on Gaza would “signal acceptance of the situation and abandonment of our humanity”. He described the conflict as “one of the darkest moments in this institution’s history”, stressing that Palestinian suffering has spanned the very lifetime of the UN.

He argued that interim agreements have failed, often serving only as a cover for Israel’s land grabs, settlement expansion and home demolitions.

Lasting security, he said, will come only through a two-state solution – an independent and viable Palestinian state with currently occupied East Jerusalem as its capital, alongside Israel.

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Qatar

Qatar’s Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani condemned Israel for what he called a “treacherous attack” on September 9 that targeted a Hamas negotiating delegation in Doha. He described the strike as a political assassination that undermines diplomatic efforts to end the genocide in Gaza, arguing it shows Israel has become a “rogue state”.

He warned that Israel’s real aim is to render Gaza uninhabitable.

“Their goal is to destroy Gaza so that it is unlivable and where no one can study or receive treatment.”

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South Africa

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa used his UN address to highlight the case his country is leading at the ICJ, pressing for a ruling that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza. He cited a recent UN commission report that reached the same conclusion.

He noted a “growing global consensus” that Israel is committing genocide, and said South Africa’s case aims to “save lives by insisting that the ICJ should rule that genocide is being committed in Gaza – and that it must stop.”

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Lebanon

President Joseph Aoun told the UNGA that while he speaks of peace, development and human rights, many Lebanese citizens face death daily, parts of Lebanon remain under occupation, and the country lives in “persistent uncertainty”.

Aoun called for the full implementation of UN Security Council (UNSC) Resolution 1701, demanding an end to Israeli aggression, the withdrawal of occupying forces from Lebanese territory, and the release of Lebanese prisoners from Israeli jails.

On Gaza, Aoun said the devastation must end immediately, and he reaffirmed Lebanon’s support for a two-state solution as the only path to lasting peace.

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France

Following France’s decision earlier in the week to formally recognise Palestinian statehood, President Emmanuel Macron called on more countries to follow suit in the name of peace.

He said the UN’s 80th anniversary must be a moment of renewal.

Macron backed the New York Declaration, signed by 142 states, which calls for the release of captives, stabilisation of Gaza, dismantling of Hamas and recognition of Israel and Palestine. He urged remaining countries to endorse it and pressed for a political solution that ensures lasting peace.

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Colombia

Colombian President Gustavo Petro accused the UNGA of being a “mute witness” to genocide in Gaza, where more than 60,000 people have been killed.

He urged member states to bypass the UNSC’s repeated vetoes and take binding action through the UNGA.

“Diplomacy has been tried in Gaza,” Petro said, warning that every day “more children die, more bombs fall, more bodies are destroyed”.

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Spain

Opening the second day of the General Debate, Spain’s King Felipe VI told the UNGA that “the dignity of the human being is non-negotiable”, describing the UN as “indispensable and irreplaceable” in defending a rules-based order against the “law of the strongest”.

Turning to Gaza, he condemned the devastation and mass displacement caused by Israel’s war, while denouncing Hamas’s October 7, 2023 attacks.

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Syria

President Ahmad al-Sharaa, addressing the UNGA for the first time since Syria’s political transition, framed its recent history as a struggle between “truth and falsehood”, marked by years of tyranny, war crimes and destruction.

Al-Sharaa warned against renewed Israeli threats during Syria’s fragile transition, reaffirming his country’s commitment to sovereignty and dialogue. He called for the lifting of sanctions, inviting international investment to help rebuild the nation.

On Gaza, he said Syria’s own suffering makes it “stand firmly with the people of Gaza”, and called for an immediate end to the war.

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Iran

Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian framed the UN’s 80th anniversary theme – “Better Together” – as a call to solidarity rooted in timeless moral principles shared across faiths and philosophies: to desire for others what one desires for oneself. He urged leaders to return to these values, warning that today’s global order falls dangerously short.

Pointing to what he called “genocide in Gaza”, the destruction of homes in Lebanon, Syria’s devastation, Yemen’s famine, and the assassination of Iranian scientists, he condemned repeated violations of sovereignty carried out under the guise of self-defence. Such acts, he said, betray the very foundations of humanity.

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Palestine

In a prerecorded video message, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas told the UNGA that Gaza has endured “a war of genocide, destruction, starvation and displacement” that has killed or wounded more than 220,000 people, mostly civilians.

He denounced Israeli settlement violence and rejected Netanyahu’s vision of a “greater Israel”, accusing settlers of killing Palestinians “in broad daylight under the protection of the occupation army”.

Abbas also distanced the PA from Hamas, condemning its October 2023 attacks and insisting the group “will not have a role to play in governance” in Gaza.

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Ghana

Ghanaian President John Dramani Mahama sharply criticised the ongoing war in Gaza and the treatment of the Palestinian delegation at the UN.

He warned that the denial of visas to PA leader Abbas and his team “sets a bad precedent” for the UNGA, stressing that Ghana has long recognised the State of Palestine and supports a two-state solution.

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United Kingdom

UK Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy called the situation in Gaza “indefensible” and “utterly unjustifiable”, urging an immediate end to the suffering. He said Palestinians – whose state the UK had just recognised – and Israelis “deserve better”.

While condemning Hamas’s October 2023 attacks, Lammy also denounced Israel’s blockade of aid that has driven famine in Gaza, insisting that only urgent diplomatic action could end the crisis.

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Yemen

Rashad Mohammed al-Alimi, president of Yemen, described Gaza as a “wound that continues to bleed”, describing both Yemen and Palestine as “the moral testing ground” for the UN – places where the “might of right” must confront the “right of might”.

Expressing solidarity with the PA, he urged all states that have not yet recognised Palestine to do so.

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Israel

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told the UNGA that Israel has crushed Hamas, Hezbollah, now-ousted Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s forces, and Iran’s proxies, while severely damaging Iran’s nuclear and missile programmes in a joint campaign with the US. He warned that Iran must not be allowed to rebuild its military nuclear capacities, urging UN sanctions to “snap back”.

He recounted the October 2023 Hamas attacks as the worst massacre of Jews since the Holocaust and accused Hamas of using civilians as human shields. He rejected accusations of genocide, arguing Israel has taken unprecedented measures to minimise casualties while providing food aid to Gaza.

He insisted Israel will never accept a Palestinian state imposed after the October 2023 attacks.

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Pakistan

Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif told the UNGA that Israel’s “genocidal onslaught” in Gaza has unleashed “unspeakable terror” on women and children, calling it one of the darkest chapters in history. He urged immediate action for a ceasefire, saying the world “failed Hind Rajab”, the Palestinian child whose final pleas were broadcast globally.

Sharif reaffirmed Pakistan’s support for a sovereign Palestinian state with pre-1967 borders and East Jerusalem as its capital, urging more countries to follow recent recognitions of Palestinian statehood.

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Ireland

Taoiseach Micheal Martin, the Irish prime minister, told the UNGA that Gaza is now a “catastrophe of the most monumental and consequential kind”.

“We are all witnesses to the immense wrath of one of the world’s most modern and best-equipped armies brought to bear on a trapped and defenceless civilian population,” he declared.

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Bangladesh

Muhammad Yunus, chief adviser to the interim government of Bangladesh, said Dhaka agrees with a UN human rights commission’s finding that Israel has committed genocide in Gaza.

“We do agree with the UN independent international inquiry commission that we are witnessing a genocide happening live,” he said.

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Russia

Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said Israel is seeking to “blow up” the whole of the Middle East as he criticised its attacks on Iran and Qatar and opposed calls to annex the occupied West Bank.

He questioned the delay in recognising Palestine by Western governments, suggesting they hoped there would soon be “nothing and no one left to recognise”.

Calling for urgent action to preserve Palestinian rights, he linked the Gaza war to a wider pattern of Western double standards, accusing the US and its allies of sabotaging diplomacy and undermining the UN system.

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Saudi Arabia

Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan Al Saud condemned Israel’s “brutal and unchecked” practices in Gaza, including starvation, forced displacement and systematic killing, stressing the famine designation by the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC).

He called for urgent action to end the aggression. He welcomed new recognitions of Palestine by countries including France, the UK, Canada, Australia and several European states.

How likely is it that Horner will be in F1 next year?

A graphic of, from left to right, Alex Albon, George Russell, Max Verstappen, Lewis Hamilton, Lando Norris, Fernando Alonso and Oliver Bearman. It is on a blue background with 'Fan Q&A' below the drivers

Singapore Grand Prix

3 to 5 October, starting at 13:00 BST on Sunday.

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The lights go on in Singapore this weekend as the battle for the Formula 1 world title resumes on the streets of Marina Bay.

Before the night race, Red Bull’s Max Verstappen was 69 points ahead of Oscar Piastri, who now leads McLaren team-mate Lando Norris by 25 points, a race win.

With only 13 points required to win a second consecutive team title, McLaren appears determined to win the constructors’ championship in Singapore. Even if they don’t manage that, Mercedes need to outscore them by 31 points or Ferrari by 35 to prevent them winning it this weekend.

How likely is it that Christian Horner will compete for another F1 team next season now that he has been officially released by Red Bull Racing, and would he only agree to serve as the CEO or something similar? – Matthew

Last week, a full article covered the subject.

In summary, Horner appears to be eager to return to F1, but he does not want to be “only” a team principal. He would want a shareholding in the team and a strong degree of control.

Toto Wolff, his nemesis at Mercedes, has had since he joined the team in 2013, and he wants that status.

Although Horner was already the team principal and chief executive officer of Red Bull Racing, he did not have any equity, and his failure in the end resulted in his failure.

Where could he go? That’s more difficult to say, and there are potential obstacles in many places you can look.

Alpine ? They have just employed a new person in a role that is effectively team principal, managing director Steve Nielsen. And they already have Flavio Briatore, the executive adviser in charge, as their top echelon.

Given the state of their relationship, it’s difficult to imagine Wolff agreeing to give his power-units to any team led by Horner. Alpine also has Mercedes engines.

Aston Martin have been mentioned in some reports. Through Lawrence Stroll, the owner of the team, they have ambition and wealth.

Adrian Newey, who has a shareholding, became the company’s managing technical partner in March. And Newey left Red Bull largely because of Horner – the allegations levelled against him by a female employee, and Horner’s role in diminishing Newey’s contribution over the previous couple of years.

In those circumstances, would Newey want to work with Horner again?

Ferrari ? Frederic Vasseur has just signed a new multi-year contract as team principal, and it’s hard to imagine them making Horner CEO of the car company and giving him a substantial shareholding, especially given how well Ferrari has done since it was listed.

Haas ? Owner Gene Haas wants to sell a sizable share of the company. So far, the answer has been no.

Does he want to alter the philosophy of his team? He has so far enjoyed doing F1 with a small budget and obtaining as many Ferrari parts as possible. And does he want to spend a lot of money on Horner’s salary?

If the car isn’t competitive, Fernando Alonso claims it will be difficult for him to retire next year. What are his legitimate options for a championship-winning vehicle other than an Aston Martin, and do you think he’ll stay? – Srinivasan

Alonso’s Aston Martin contract expires at the end of the 2026 season and he will turn 45 in July of next year.

So, what are the two questions: Will he continue to work after the following year and will any team want to sign a 46-year-old player?

There is no sign so far of Alonso’s performance dropping off with age. He trails teammate Lance Stroll in the championship game this year, which is unusual, but that has more to do with circumstances than performance.

Alonso leads in the qualifying standings, going 19-1 ahead of them in each session with an average of 0. 319 seconds.

Realistically, though, it’s unlikely a top team would want to sign Alonso, and I’m not convinced he’d want to leave Aston Martin – he believes in the project and they have Adrian Newey.

So, one would anticipate that if he stays with F1 and works for Aston Martin.

I have to admit that I don’t fully understand Alonso’s logic when he says, “Let’s say that if we are competitive, there is more chance that I stop,” in an interview that Aston Martin released last week. If we are not competitive, it will be very hard to give up without trying again”.

You’d think it could be the opposite: if they were competitive, he would want to keep going, and if not, he might just say, “Well, I hung on for this, it hasn’t worked, I might as well stop.”

The improvements at Williams have been impressive since James Vowles took charge. How far can he possibly join the team without a sizable injection of cash or a car manufacturer’s support? – Mark

Williams ‘ ambitions are clear – they want to return to their former position at the top of F1.

Owner Dorilton has already made a sizable investment in the team. That’s one of the reasons James Vowles’ work has made such a significant progress.

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Max Verstappen’s dominance over his Red Bull team-mates is ironically reminiscent of Michael Schumacher’s over Jos Verstappen at Benetton in 1994. Was dad Jos’ experience a key factor in making Max a true champion? Alexander

Jos Verstappen devoted his life to preparing Max for F1 from the moment his own career came to an end.

You can read more about how he did this in this article, which was first published on the eve of the 2021 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix.

Jos was a very demanding tutor, and Max started out in karts at age three.

It seems as if Max is the perfect combination of nature and nurture. His father raced in Formula One. Sophie Kumpen, Sophie’s mother, was a highly regarded go-karter who competed against a lot of aspiring F1 drivers. And Max has put in the practice necessary.

Let’s face it, it still does. Weekend off from F1 took place last weekend. Was Max relaxing? No . He was competing at the Nurburgring Nordschleife, and he was winning. Unsurprising in a way, given who he is. But also remarkable.

Only Graham Hill has ever won the motorsport triple crown, winning the Le Mans, Monaco Grand Prix, and Indy 500. Do you believe that any driver has a good chance of finishing it in the near future? – Josh

At this point, only two drivers are on par to winning the triple crown. Le Mans and Monaco have been won by Juan Pablo Montoya, but not Le Mans. Fernando Alonso has won Monaco and Le Mans twice, but not the Indy 500.

Montoya has effectively retired at the age of 50. Alonso did not seem particularly interested in returning the last time I inquired about Indy.

This was in 2022, admittedly, but he said that he was concerned about safety and had found the cars less satisfying since the introduction of the aero screen, IndyCar’s version of the halo head-protection device in F1.

Alonso responded, “No, it’s too dangerous.” Additionally, the aero screen has become more challenging to follow and less enjoyable.

Of course, he might change his mind. After leaving Formula One, it appears that Alonso will be more likely than Indy to compete in the Dakar Rally.

In that context, it seems unlikely that the triple crown will be won for some time. In today’s world, it’s difficult to imagine a driver competing in F1, IndyCars, and Le Mans throughout their careers.

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AAUA Lecturers Threaten To Disrupt Students’ Resumption Over Unpaid Salaries

If their outstanding salaries are not paid, the academic staff at the Ondo State-owned Adekunle Ajasin University, Akungba-Akoko (AAUA), have threatened to obstruct the planned resumption of classes and the upcoming convocation.

READ MORE: ASUU Issues 14-Day Ultimatum To FG Threatens Indefinite Strike;

The university’s Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) members went on strike last month over the non-payment of their salary arrears, which has since caused academic activities on campus to become inaccessible.

Boluwaji Oshodi, the head of the university’s branch of ASUU, claimed that the lecturers had had enough patience with the alleged government’s refusal to address their situation.

We’ve been patient and tolerant for a while, but we won’t be doing it again. The population of our country has been pushed against the wall.

We don’t see any efforts that can indicate that the state government is ready to act responsibly, Oshodi said.

The union’s meeting with Governor Lucky Aiyedatiwa was unsuccessful, according to the ASUU chairman, adding that lecturers had endured “urgent conditions,” including taking exams “on an empty stomach,” due to the union’s efforts.

Igbekele Ajibefun, the state’s commissioner for education, science, and technology, refuted claims that the government had abandoned the institution while responding to ASUU’s threat.

The commissioner made it clear that the state government had been working with the squabbling lecturers to resolve the conflict and that it would be resolved quickly.