Kebbi APC Lifts Suspension On Aide Who Brought Snake To Govt House

Kabir Sani-Giant, the Special Adviser to Governor Nasir Idris on Power and Politics, has been reinstated by the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Kebbi State.

Following an incident on February 8, when he allegedly brought a snake to the Government House to allegedly intimidate dignitaries, officials, and state officials, Sani-Giant was suspended on February 28, 2025.

The state APC Chairman, Muhammad Kana-Zuru, confirmed that the suspension had been lifted with immediate effect in a statement released on Monday in Birnin Kebbi.

READ ALSO: ADC Members File Suit Controversial Legality Of Interim Executive’s Positions

The State Working Committee (SWC) of the APC, in accordance with Kana-Zuru, decided to end the suspension after reviewing a letter of apology submitted by Sani-Giant at its meeting on Tuesday.

The committee made the decision to re-establish your All Progressives Congress (APC) membership.

You are therefore instructed to resume your official duties in this letter. Your position’s rights and privileges are hereby restored, the statement read.

See the following statement:

Villa sign England keeper Roebuck after Barca exit

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Aston Villa have signed England goalkeeper Ellie Roebuck from Barcelona on a two-year deal.

The 25-year-old spent last season with the Liga F champions but reached a mutual decision to terminate her contract.

Roebuck appeared just twice for Barca, making her debut in December last year before a further appearance in February.

Before moving to Spain, Roebuck made 136 appearances for Manchester City and won seven major titles – the Women’s Super League as well as the FA Cup and League Cup on three occasions.

“We are delighted that Ellie will be joining our club,” said Aston Villa’s director of women’s football Marisa Ewers.

“She is an exciting addition to the team and is a player with a lot of experience who can help drive our performance levels.”

Roebuck has 11 England caps but is not part of the squad at Euro 2025 in Switzerland.

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‘England need to bottle disappointment and use it as fuel against Dutch’

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I was a member of the England squad that won the tournament’s opening game and advanced to the final.

Italy defeated us 2-1. Casey Stoney was sent off, and I was forced to play left-back and sustained injuries. It didn’t go according to plan.

There was no such external pressure, as in the case of this England team, who will have to overcome their 2-1 defeat by France.

There is more expectation given that Sarina Wiegman’s side is currently the defending champion.

In the end, there is a second chance to recover and improve. You can’t go into too much about that outcome. We were devastated and lost, but we had to park it, store it, and use it as extra fuel.

Where did France go wrong in the end?

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That victory for France doesn’t guarantee their place as European champions. Losing that game does not imply that England is out.

France executed everything with quality and it seemed to work out just fine. That was the difference.

England simply failed to carry out the necessary steps.

Not a surprise result, either. One of the tournament favorites is France, who have rebuilt in an effort to win something. Since reaching the Women’s World Cup final, England has been inconsistent for two years. They never even attempted to take control of the game.

Europe’s level is constantly rising. Every game, you must perform at your absolute best.

Afterward, everyone speculated that England might lose their matches. Was there a lack of desire or a tactical reason for that? Did we not take control of the situation, or were we too far off the mark to make the tackles? The players simply have to be better, and they will be aware of this.

The best instance is when Sandy Baltimore wriggled away from the two players who were watching her during the second goal. We kept our minds and engaged with conviction even though we shouldn’t have.

Sakina Karchaoui was running everywhere in the middle, so we needed to get a hand on her and warn her not to get hurt. We had to stifle the game, use the dark arts a little, and settle in for a while.

Who are the squad’s characters and leaders who sense that the battle is raging? That is, in my opinion, a question mark for England. From the outside, I can’t tell. The communication is not where I see it. Do we have a presence on the pitch despite having mature players and well-considered personalities?

England: Will it ever reach the quarter-finals?

England can still make the quarter-finals, of course. Absolutely not. However, they cannot afford to have ignored the lessons of France.

Can we exploit our strengths more frequently when they face the Netherlands next, which will be a similarly challenging game? Vivianne Miedema needs to be constrained, so she drifts further away from the intended goal. Long-range shots must be stopped by Jill Roord.

We know so many of the Netherlands individually because they frequently play for English clubs or have recently done so. Both countries have very similar play styles.

When at their best, England can play through the lines, find Russo to collaborate with the other forwards, and get Keira Walsh involved. The way they play is a fluid one.

However, I’ve always wondered whether Walsh can play that role for the defense of quick transitions and how effective he is at defending fast transitions. When the game is scruffy, she lacks a real defensive presence. We put a lot of emphasis on her possession-related behavior, but we don’t really observe her off-the-ball. When England is on her own in a single pivot, perhaps that is where she appears vulnerable and exposed.

Why don’t we play with two defensive midfielders, I frequently ponder? Walsh is already marked out of the game by everyone who knows we want to play through her. Why aren’t we able to identify those instances where Georgia Stanway might need to turn around?

little adjustments. I don’t advise making drastic changes. When a game is transitional, the players must be aware of how to change within the system.

At the World Cup two years ago, we looked vulnerable against Haiti and Nigeria for the same reasons. We need a framework that makes us less vulnerable because we aren’t counter-pressing well enough to stop those attacks.

A player of her caliber needs to be in a position where she can isolate defenders more frequently, even though I’m a big fan of James, who only had an impact in the number 10 role during the game against France. Wiegman’s planning didn’t work, despite what I could see. In that capacity, you must be defensively aware. I would play her wide against the Netherlands. There is room for Ella Toone. She can play that role, but we haven’t seen her play for more than 90 minutes off the bench.

Michelle Agyemang came on and made a big impact, but I don’t believe people should be yelling at her for five more. Due to her energy and run-in-the-field ability, which complements Russo’s hold-up play, Aggie Beever-Jones might be able to play this kind of game.

Although Wiegman’s side has previously lost to France, she has not yet lost a game at Euros.

They can of course recover from back-to-back losses against strong opposition, but it’s uncommon.

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Poland imposes controls on Germany, Lithuania borders to check migration

In response to a growing influx of undocumented immigrants and growing public concern about security, Poland has resumed temporary border checks with Germany and Lithuania.

Donald Tusk, the country’s prime minister, made the announcement on Monday, arguing that Warsaw needed to “redirect” migration routes that bypassed barriers along the Belarusian border and instead pass through neighboring Latvia and Lithuania.

To “reverse this stream of people,” Tusk said, “to redirect this stream of people who wants to cross Poland once more through the border with Latvia and Lithuania and further into Europe.”

The decision was made as a result of growing tensions between Europe’s various Schengen countries, including Germany, Belgium, and the Netherlands, which have already taken similar measures over the past 18 months, straining the country’s passport-free travel zone.

Since 2023, Germany has maintained controls on its border with Poland, but it recently has stepped up enforcement by rejecting undocumented arrivals and returning them to Poland in accordance with EU and bilateral agreements.

Polish authorities claim that this has burdened their nation unfairly.

Without effectively reducing migration, Germany’s envoy for Polish relations Knut Abraham warned that the new checks could create traffic congestion and stifle trade. Similar concerns were raised by Zgorzelec’s mayor, Rafal Gronicz, who dismissed fears of a migrant crisis as exaggerated.

He told local radio, “I have never known anyone who wanted to flee Germany to Poland,” adding that as long as I live. “Zgorzelec’s residents are not rushing waves of migrants moving.”

When Berlin’s stricter controls are overturned, according to Polish Interior Minister Tomasz Siemoniak, checks on the German border will be lifted.

We won’t delay either, Siemoniak said, “if Germany lifts its controls.” We want that neither side of the conflict between illegal immigration and migration suffers in any way.

After a Venezuelan national was accused of killing a 24-year-old woman in Torun, escalating tensions in Poland in recent weeks. Around 10,000 people marched on Sunday in her honor on the heels of that killing, sparking nationwide demonstrations led by nationalist organizations.

A Polish man was fatally stabbed in a separate incident on Saturday in Nowe, a town in the north of Poland. Three Poles and ten Colombians were among the 13 people who were detained, according to authorities on Monday. According to state media reports, angry crowds gathered outside a Colombians’ workers’ hostel.

Far-right organizations are also claiming to guard Poland’s western frontier from migrant flows. These vigilante activities were condemned by human rights organizations because they promoted xenophobia and undermined trust in government institutions.

Netanyahu, Trump discuss forced transfer of Palestinians out of Gaza

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has met United States President Donald Trump at the White House, with the two leaders repeating their controversial proposal to forcibly transfer thousands of Palestinians out of the Gaza Strip.

Trump and Netanyahu met for dinner in the Blue Room of the White House on Monday as indirect talks in Qatar between Israel and Hamas on US-backed proposals for a 60-day ceasefire to end the 21-month Gaza war appeared to gather some momentum.

Netanyahu told reporters present at the meeting that the US and Israel were working with other countries to give Palestinians a “better future”, suggesting that the residents of Gaza could move to neighbouring nations.

“If people want to stay, they can stay, but if they want to leave, they should be able to leave. It shouldn’t be a prison. It should be an open place and give people a free choice,” Netanyahu said.

“We’re working with the United States very closely about finding countries that will seek to realise what they always say, that they wanted to give the Palestinians a better future. I think we’re getting close to finding several countries.”

Trump, who earlier this year caused outrage when he floated his idea of relocating Palestinians and taking over the Strip to turn it into a “Riviera of the Middle East”, said there had been “great cooperation” on the matter from “surrounding countries”.

“So something good will happen,” he added.

‘Recipe for catastrophe’

“This is something the Israelis have been saying for some time, calling it the ‘voluntary migration’ of Palestinians from their homelands. But of course, this has been condemned as ethnic cleansing,” Al Jazeera’s Hamdah Salhut said, reporting from Amman, Jordan.

Former Israeli diplomat Alon Pinkas told Al Jazeera that just because there are ongoing reports and statements about relocating Palestinians in Gaza to other countries, it does not mean that there is a “practical plan”.

“The fact that the Israeli defence minister blurts some ideas out, or even the prime minister, or even the president of the United States, doesn’t mean there is a plan,” he said.

“In early February, Trump spoke about a Palestinian Riviera, and within 36 hours, he changed that from a Riviera for the Palestinians to the Palestinians will be expelled,” he added.

Pinkas explained that amid reports that the Boston Consulting Group, which has been asked to come up with a plan to relocate Palestinians, it “doesn’t mean it’s implementable, it doesn’t mean it’s practical”.

“[It] is a recipe for catastrophe because it ensures that no [post-war] agreement in Gaza is durable,” Pinkas said.

Trump and Netanyahu met as Israeli and Hamas negotiators held a second day of indirect talks in Qatar, seated in different rooms in the same building. Proposals for a 60-day pause in fighting envisage a phased release of Hamas-held captives and Palestinian prisoners, Israeli troop withdrawals from parts of Gaza, and discussions on completely ending the war.

But a sticking point is whether the ceasefire will end the war altogether. Hamas has said it is willing to free all the captives in exchange for all Palestinian prisoners and a full Israeli withdrawal from Gaza. Netanyahu says the war will end once Hamas surrenders, disarms and goes into exile – something the Palestinian group refuses to do.

In advance of Netanyahu’s visit to the US, Trump predicted that a ceasefire deal could be reached this week. But Netanyahu appeared cagey, ruling out a full Palestinian state, saying Israel will “always” keep security control over the Gaza Strip.

Monday’s talks in Qatar ended with no announcements. Trump’s special envoy Steve Witkoff, who played an important role in crafting the proposals, is expected to join negotiators in Qatar this week.

Coveted Nobel nomination

Trump and Netanyahu’s discussions came just over two weeks after the former ordered the bombing of Iranian nuclear sites in support of Israeli air strikes, before announcing a ceasefire in the 12-day Israel-Iran war.

During their meeting, Netanyahu gave Trump a letter that he said had been used to nominate the US president for the Nobel Peace Prize. Trump, appearing pleased by the gesture, thanked him.

“So much of this is about optics,” said Al Jazeera’s Phil Lavelle, reporting from Washington, DC. “Of course, the [Israeli] prime minister will be very keen to make sure that this is seen back home as a major success … He is very keen to make sure that he is portrayed as being back in the good favours of Donald Trump.”

Trump has made little secret of the fact that he covets a Nobel, trumpeting recent truces that his administration facilitated between India and Pakistan, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) and Rwanda.

During the meeting, Trump indicated that Iranian officials have reached out to the US to schedule talks about Iran’s nuclear programme. Negotiations had started in April but were scuppered after Israel launched attacks last month.

“We have scheduled Iran talks, and they … want to talk. They took a big drubbing,” said the US president.

Sitting at the table with Trump, Witkoff said the meeting would be soon, perhaps in a week.

Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian said in an interview with US journalist Tucker Carlson, released on Monday, that he believed Tehran could resolve its differences with Washington through dialogue.

England captain Sciver-Brunt returns for India ODI series

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Captain Nat Sciver-Brunt has returned to the England squad for the one-day international series with India as she edges closer to fitness following a groin injury.

The 32-year-old suffered the injury in England’s second T20 defeat to India on 1 July and missed Friday’s third match.

She will also sit out games at Old Trafford on Wednesday and Edgbaston on 12 July, with Tammy Beaumont continuing to lead the side.

England expect the all-rounder to feature in all three ODIs, the first of which takes place at Southampton on 16 July.

Those matches will be England’s last in the format before the 50-over World Cup in the autumn.

Maia Bouchier, Lauren Filer and Sophie Ecclestone are also recalled by coach Charlotte Edwards.

Ecclestone missed both white-ball series against West Indies in May and early June to “prioritise her wellbeing” and recover from a a quad injury, but returned for the T20 series.

“The squad has largely stayed the same since the ODI series against West Indies, but Soph]Ecclestone] comes back into the side meaning Sarah Glenn misses out this time around”, said Edwards.

“We’ve also added in Maia Bouchier to bolster our batting line-up and continue to offer competition for places.

” This series is the perfect preparation for the ICC Women’s World Cup in India this autumn, but it’s also a series we’re determined to win. “

England won Friday’s third T20 by five runs to keep the series alive following defeats in the opening two games.

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