Governor Yusuf Relieves Kano Head Of Service Of Appointment

Governor Abba Yusuf has relieved the Kano State Head of Service, Abdullahi Musa, of his appointment with immediate effect as part of efforts to reposition the state civil service in the state.

The development was announced in a statement issued on Tuesday evening by the governor’s spokesperson, Sunusi Bature Dawakin Tofa.

According to the statement, the decision forms part of the administration’s ongoing reforms aimed at strengthening efficiency, discipline, and service delivery across government institutions in Kano State.

The governor commended the outgoing Head of Service for his contributions to the state during his tenure.

READ ALSO: Kwankwasiyya Movement Warns Kano Assembly Against Impeaching Deputy Governor

Governor Yusuf expressed appreciation for Abdullahi Musa’s dedication, saying, “We wish him the best in his future endeavours and pray for his continued success in all aspects of life.”

The statement further disclosed that Hajiya Bilkisu Shehu Maimota, the Permanent Secretary in charge of Administration and General Services at the Cabinet Office, has been directed to serve as Acting Head of Service pending the appointment of a substantive replacement.

The government also instructed the outgoing Head of Service to hand over the affairs of the office without delay.

Terrorist Taking Advantage Of Porous Borders To Create Insecurity At Mineral Sites – Capt Johnson

Retired US soldier, Captain Bishop Johnson, has identified weak policing at Nigeria’s borders as a challenge exploited by terrorists to fuel insecurity at mineral sites in the country.



Johnson said this on Wednesday during an interview on Channels Television’s The Morning Brief.

“So we have porous borders and we also have mineral resources that all of them are all after, including some foreigners who are providing them with technical expertise to mine all these mineral resources.

“All of them have come together with the host communities to move with them to create this upheaval of insecurity around these mineral sites,” Johnson said on the breakfast show.

READ ALSO: Insecurity: We’ll Work Together To Take Back Our Communities, IGP Tells Kwara Residents

According to him, there is always going to be insecurity in areas where illicit mining and other unlawful activities related to mineral resources are rampant.

On claims that the government knows who the bandits are, the veteran stated that it was not news that the government knows the identities of the bandits, adding that there had been complicity in handling the situation.

He also urged the Federal Government to invite those with useful data to extract valuable information that would complement measures taken against bandits.

Insecurity continues to pose a serious challenge in Nigeria, particularly in the northern region, where insurgency, banditry, and violent attacks by terrorists have persisted for more than a decade.

Different groups, including Boko Haram, Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP), and recently, Lakurawa, in the North, operate across several northern states, including Borno, Zamfara, Katsina, Kaduna, and Niger, where they frequently target communities, security personnel, and infrastructure.

Numerous attacks have been recorded in the region over the years, resulting in loss of lives, displacement of residents, and destruction of property.

In response to the growing security threats, the Nigerian military has intensified counter-terrorism operations aimed at weakening insurgent and bandit networks.

One of the key operations is Operation Hadin Kai, under which troops carry out coordinated offensives in several locations known as insurgent hideouts.

In addition, security forces have conducted airstrikes and ground operations against bandit camps in Zamfara and other northwestern states.

Europe’s hard right fractures over US-Israel war on Iran

The US-Israeli war on Iran has exposed divisions among Europe’s far-right parties and personalities.

In one camp, Atlanticists such as Nigel Farage, founder of the populist hard-right Reform UK party, support the war.

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In a recent post on X, he urged United Kingdom Prime Minister Keir Starmer to “back the Americans in this vital fight against Iran!”

Days later, he stated that any refugees fleeing Iran “should be housed in the Middle East and not in Britain”.

Spain’s far-right Vox party has also backed the war, criticising Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez after the left-wing prime minister condemned it as an “unjustified” and “dangerous military intervention”.

Others are more sceptical.

Nigel Farage speaks next to U.S. President Donald Trump during a campaign rally at Phoenix Goodyear Airport in Goodyear, Arizona, U.S., October 28, 2020. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
Nigel Farage, right, speaks next to US President Donald Trump during a campaign rally at Phoenix Goodyear Airport in Goodyear, Arizona, US, October 28, 2020 [Jonathan Ernst/Reuters]

Tino Chrupalla, co-chair of Alternative for Germany (AfD), warned that US President Donald Trump was becoming a “president of war”.

Markus Frohnmaier, the AfD’s lead candidate for state elections in Baden-Wurttemberg, told Welt that the war must be considered in a “nuanced way” and that it is in “Germany’s interest” not to experience “new migration flows” as a result of it.

In the UK, two combative figures, Tommy Robinson and Paul Golding, are diverging over the war.

Robinson, an Islamophobe and staunch supporter of Israel, has enthusiastically supported it, while Golding, leader of the far-right Britain First party, took to X to write: “Not our fight, not our war. Put Britain First.”

Other parties appear hesitant.

Marine Le Pen, leader of France’s far-right National Rally, criticised US intervention in Venezuela in January, stating “the sovereignty of States is never negotiable”.

However, after the Iran war began, she expressed cautious support, telling French media that she found “nothing shocking” about President Emmanuel Macron’s announcement that France was sending an aircraft carrier to the Mediterranean in response to the widening conflict.

The limits of far-right unity

The split in opinion over Iran reflects a “paradox” about the European far right, Tim Bale, a politics professor at Queen Mary University of London, told Al Jazeera.

The hard right is often “seen as riding a wave built on similar grievances and concerns in every country – most obviously around immigration”, he said.

“It’s also built on nationalism and, as a result, there are limits both to cooperation between different parties in different countries.”

He said that historically, parts of the far right in countries such as France and Germany have viewed the United States with suspicion, while others, particularly in countries where anti-communism shaped post-war politics, tended to see Washington as a strategic ally.

That divergence is now resurfacing over Iran.

Morgan Finnsio, a Swedish researcher who studies far-right movements, noted that the Western far right has long aspired to ideological unity but has consistently fractured over geopolitical issues.

He told Al Jazeera that factions were previously split over Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

Divisions now centre on Trump’s “radical new geopolitical orientation, with its consequences such as attacking Venezuela [and] threatening Greenland”, he told Al Jazeera.

“In recent years, [Vladimir] Putin’s Russia, Trump’s United States, and [Benjamin] Netanyahu’s Israel have all courted European far-right actors,” said Finnsio, adding that “these outside powers have geopolitical preferences that tend to be absorbed by their allies and proteges.”

Those with closer ties to Washington or Israel have supported the onslaught in Iran, which has killed more than 1,000 people, he said. Parties with stronger ideological or political affinities with Russia, which maintains ties with Iran, have been more cautious or openly opposed.

Far-right positions on foreign conflicts are “more motivated by the particular geopolitical circumstances at a given time” rather than principles, Finnsio said.

Existing fault lines

Finnsio said these divisions are maintaining an “already-existing” split.

Whether the Iran war will impact elections remains to be seen, he added.

In the UK, Bale said it could.

“Farage’s gung-ho attitude to the attack on Iran may please some of his party’s base, but voters as a whole aren’t enthusiastic, and Reform UK will likely perform less well than it would have done in contests coming up this spring.”

Reform UK is currently leading national opinion polls.

Its leadership has backed the war, but polling suggests its voters are less enthusiastic, with a March 2026 YouGov survey showing that only 28 percent of Reform UK voters strongly support US military actions against Iran.

More broadly, analysts suggest that a close association with US President Donald Trump could become politically risky.

“I think any European far-right actor that is seen as being too close to Trump may find themselves discredited to some extent,” said Finnsio, while cautioning that the longer-term landscape remains uncertain.

Even when the war enters political debate, analysts say it is more likely to be reframed through domestic issues for the far right.

Finnsio pointed to Sweden’s September elections as an example.

Al Jazeera reports from Israeli bombing of Beirut apartment block

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Al Jazeera’s Zeina Khodr reports from the site of an Israeli strike on a residential building in central Beirut, in what appears to be part of a pattern of targeted assassinations far from Hezbollah’s traditional strongholds.

Trump will welcome Iran at World Cup – Infantino

US President Donald Trump has said Iran are “welcome” to take part in this summer’s World Cup despite the countries being at war, according to Fifa president Gianni Infantino.

Posting on Instagram, Infantino said he met with Trump on Tuesday to discuss preparations for the tournament, which is being hosted by the US, Canada and Mexico and gets under way on 11 June.

Infantino said he and Trump “spoke about the current situation in Iran”.

Iran are scheduled to play three matches in the US, but their participation has been in doubt since the US and Israel launched strikes on the country this month, killing Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

Iran responded by launching missiles and drones towards Israel and four Gulf Arab countries which host US military bases – Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates.

“During the discussions, President Trump reiterated that the Iranian team is, of course, welcome to compete in the tournament in the United States,” Infantino said.

    • 1 March

Iran are due to face New Zealand and Belgium in Los Angeles on 15 and 21 June respectively and Egypt in Seattle on 26 June.

Trump last week told Politico “I really don’t care” if Iran play in the World Cup.

Following the outbreak of military action, Iran football federation president Mehdi Taj has been quoted as saying: “What is certain is that after these attacks, it’s hard to look at the World Cup with hope.”

Australia has granted six humanitarian visas to members of Iran’s women’s team over concerns about their safety.

The remaining Iran players left Australia on Tuesday after the team’s elimination from the AFC Asian Cup.

Related topics

  • Iran
  • Football

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