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Owo Church Attack: Suspect Tells Court How DSS Officers Nabbed Them

One of five persons accused by the Department of State Services (DSS) of carrying out the June 5, 2022 attack on the St. Francis Catholic Church, Owo, in Ondo State, Abdulmalik Omeiza, has told the Federal High Court in Abuja, how he was arrested by the secret police.

A total of 41 worshippers were killed during the terror attack on the church, with over 140 others suffering various injuries.

The DSS had called 11 witnesses to establish the allegations against the defendants in the trial that began on August 1, 2025. The trial court had admitted the confessional statements of the defendants following the conclusion of the trial- within-trial conducted to establish that the witnesses’ statement were voluntarily given.

The five defendants are Idris Abdulmalik Omeiza (25 years), Al Qasim Idris (20 years), Jamiu Abdulmalik (26 years), Abdulhaleem Idris (25 years) and Momoh Otuho Abubakar (47 years).

Omeiza, who opened his defence, was led in evidence in an accelerated hearing conducted at the instance of the DSS, by his lawyer, Abdullahi Muhammad. Even though Omeiza claimed to be an auxillary nurse, he chose to narrate his testimony in Ebira, prompting the court to seek an interpreter.

READ ALSO: DSS Captures Sixth Suspect In Owo Church Attack

He told the court that he was arrested on August 1, 2022 alongside two other young boys named Hauwa and Yusuf, in the same house.

“The night I was arrested, I used to wake up in the morning to read my book. When I woke up and was reading, I looked at the clock and it was 2:20 early in the morning.

In his lengthy testimony, the defendant told the court that it was at the DSS facility in Lokoja, the state capital, that he met the 5th defendant, Momoh Otuho Abubakar, who had also been arrested by operatives of the secret police.

At the DSS office in Lokoja, Omeiza explained that the four of them were kept in a room where information in respect of their names, schools attended, their work, and their father’s name was obtained and recorded.

The defendant said the following day, he volunteered statement and was in detention till August 18, 2022 when he got to know that his elder brother was also arrested.

He further told the court that before August 18, 2022, when they were moved to Ondo state, the DSS didn’t say anything relating to the Owo Catholic Church attack and membership of ISWAP or any other terror organization with him.

At the Ondo State DSS headquarters, Omeiza claimed he was detained alongside his elder brother in the same room where interrogators questioned them about the attack on Owo Catholic Church.

Allen’s 33-ball century powers New Zealand into T20 World Cup final

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Elizabeth Botcherby

BBC Sport journalist
  • 290 Comments

Men’s T20 World Cup semi-final, Kolkata

South Africa 169-8 (20 overs): Jansen 55* (30); Ravindra 2-29

New Zealand 173-1 (12.5 overs): Allen 100* (33); Seifert 58 (33)

New Zealand won by nine wickets with 43 balls remaining

Finn Allen struck the fastest century in T20 World Cup history as a staggering performance by New Zealand demolished 2024 runners-up South Africa by nine wickets and booked the Black Caps a place in Sunday’s final.

Chasing 170 after a 27-ball half-century from Marco Jansen had rescued South Africa from 77-5, Allen bludgeoned 100 not out from 33 balls, including 10 fours and eight sixes, as a ruthless New Zealand romped to victory with 43 balls to spare.

Allen bettered Chris Gayle’s 47-ball century against England in 2016 by 14 deliveries, with his knock also the joint third-fastest century in men’s T20 internationals.

Tim Seifert thrashed a brisk half-century of his own (58 off 33) as New Zealand’s openers put on 117 runs (55 balls) for the first wicket before Allen kicked into overdrive.

He smacked 42 runs off just 11 deliveries to dominate his 56-run stand with Rachin Ravindra, including dispatching Jansen for five consecutive boundaries to complete an emphatic win.

“I am sure my parents were up watching the whole game. Hopefully they are proud,” Allen said.

“It was an extremely impressive start from our bowlers. They set the game up for sure.

“I just looked to play a support role to Tim and if it was in my area I tried to hit it for four or six.

“He has shown the world what he can do and that made it easy for me to sit back and have the best seat in the house. It was good fun batting together.”

South Africa were previously unbeaten at this tournament, including a seven-wicket victory over the Black Caps in the initial group phase, but faltered with the bat after losing the toss.

They lost Quinton de Kock (10) and Ryan Rickelton (0) to consecutive deliveries in the second over to slump to 12-2 while Aiden Markram (18 off 20) and David Miller (6) both failed to capitalise on being dropped on three.

When Dewald Brevis (34 off 27) chipped a routine catch to Mitchell Santner in the covers in the 11th over, it felt like game over for South Africa but Jansen found a stable partner in Tristan Stubbs (29 off 24) before bursting into life in the final five overs to propel the Proteas from 108-5 to 169-8.

Jansen put on 73 runs (48 balls) for the sixth wicket with Stubbs and struck five sixes in his unbeaten 55 off 30 balls.

‘Incredible’ Allen a ‘nightmare’ for South Africa

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Allen is no stranger to monster scores, with this latest knock his sixth T20 century and third in a New Zealand shirt.

But after posting an unbeaten 84 (50) against Nepal in the Black Caps’ opener, he’d had a relatively quiet tournament. While he registered a strike-rate above 170 in three of his next four innings, his contributions were all too brief, with 31 his highest score.

Not so against South Africa, with the 26-year-old producing a knock his captain Mitchell Santner jokingly described as “not bad” and Matt Henry hailed as “incredible”.

He was initially starved of the strike, with Seifert facing 21 of the opening 30 deliveries, but when presented with an opportunity, Allen pounced, playing South Africa on the front foot and flaying boundaries for fun in a chanceless knock.

He struck two sixes in his first nine deliveries before taking the game away from South Africa in the final over of the powerplay.

He brought up his half-century off just 19 deliveries, proving himself equally adept at hitting boundaries against spin with a four and a six off Keshav Maharaj either side of raising his bat, and required only 14 more deliveries to amass his second fifty.

Allen tucked into Bosch again on the right-armer’s return to the attack in the 11th over, picking off a four and a six, before finishing the match with seven boundaries in eight balls, two against Maharaj and the remainder consecutive blows to Jansen, who finished 0-53 from his 2.5 overs.

“Finn Allen is a nightmare for a captain,” said South Africa Test skipper Temba Bavuma. “He only faced about four dot balls. Every other ball he was scoring. In areas where there were gaps, he was able to find them.

Finn Allen's interception point graphicCrivcViz

South Africa fail to shed ‘chokers’ reputation

Going into this match, South Africa were the favourites not only to beat New Zealand but also to end their wait for a maiden T20 World Cup title.

The unbeaten Proteas had topped Group D, the so-called group of death, before brushing aside India and West Indies in the Super 8s to book their spot in the knockout stages with a match to spare.

The tag of favourites was something they were more than happy to wear, head coach Shukri Conrad said on Wednesday, but over the course of 32.5 chastening overs, the memories of Sydney in 1992, Kolkata in 1999, Melbourne in 2015 and Barbados in 2024 came flooding back.

Their top order, which included the third-highest run-scorer in the competition in Markram, faltered for the second consecutive match, undone by spin as had happened against Zimbabwe.

It was Sikandar Raza who accounted for their openers in the powerplay on Sunday.

In Kolkata, Cole McConchie struck with back-to-back deliveries in the second over as De Kock and Rickelton gifted routine catches to Lockie Ferguson and Allen, respectively, while Ravindra accounted for Markram and Miller: South Africa 77-4.

With the ball, tasked with defending a below-par 169, their bowlers were torn apart, none more so than the usually reliable Jansen, who leaked 29 runs from his two powerplay overs.

Of the 12.5 overs New Zealand needed to complete their rapid chase, only three cost fewer than 10 runs.

“To get to 170 was a great effort and we felt we had a sniff. But as it goes in T20 cricket, the powerplay got off to a flyer and it was hard to pull back,” said Markram.

“You give credit to their openers to kill the game like they did. A bad night for us tonight.

“We have to get back on the horse and prepare for the future. It feels like a slap in the face and we need to be better as a team.”

South Africa have now lost three of their four men’s T20 World Cup semi-finals and four out of five knockout matches. In the 50-over tournament, all five of their semi-final outings have ended in defeat.

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    • 16 August 2025
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Elections: Amupitan Links Voter Apathy To ‘Unpopular Candidates’ Produced By Faulty Party Primaries

Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Joash Amupitan (SAN), has said that the fielding of candidates produced by a non-transparent primary by political parties is responsible for growing voter apathy and escalating pre-election litigations in the country.

READ ALSO: Nobody Can Trust Amupitan To Conduct Credible Polls In 2027 – Odinkalu

Amupitan, who said billions of naira had been spent on litigations because of inter-party fightings, stated that candidates produced through such processes during party primaries adversely affect the outcome of the elections.

Speaking during the Technical Workshop on the Revision of INEC Regulations and Guidelines for Political Parties on Wednesday in Ikot Ekpene, Akwa Ibom, the INEC Chairman called on political parties to formulate ideologies and adhere to party constitutions.

“Political parties in Nigeria face the crisis of internal democracy. Of grave concern is the quality of Party Primaries. As we move towards the primary window of April 23 to May 30, 2026, we must enforce a level playing field.

“The quality of internal party democracy has a direct bearing on the secondary election conducted by INEC. If unpopular candidates are forced upon the electorate through non-transparent processes, we face the twin monsters of voter apathy and an explosion of pre-election litigation.

“Our collective commitment is being challenged by leadership squabbles and judicialised politics. In the last cycle alone, INEC was joined in scores of suits that could have been avoided by simple adherence to party constitutions,” he stated.

‘Theatres Of Permanent Strife’

Amupitan further lamented that rather than being used as vehicles for national transformation, political parties are currently witnessing a disturbing trend of leadership squabbles and infighting that threaten to turn them into theatres of permanent strife.

A voter checking a voter register during the Federal Capital Territory area council elections in Abuja.

He said growing leadership squabbles within the parties was a distraction to the primary mandate of the Commission, adding that each day spent in defending these intra-party disputes in court is a day diverted from the primary mandate of election planning.

“We are currently witnessing a disturbing trend of leadership squabbles and infighting that threaten to turn political parties into theatres of permanent strife rather than vehicles for national development.

“These frequent leadership tussles do more than just dilute party ideologies; they spill over into our courtrooms, resulting in a deluge of unnecessary litigations where INEC is routinely joined as a party.

“Each day spent defending these intra-party disputes is a day diverted from our primary mandate of election planning,” the INEC chairman said.

He stated that the 2026 guidelines would introduce stricter benchmarks for membership documentation, financial transparency, and the inclusion of women, youth, and persons with disabilities (PWDs).

He urged the workshop participants to provide practical directions for a more stable and predictable political environment that would ensure political parties translate into democratic institutions that promote constructive dialogue and internal dispute resolution.

“We must use this workshop to embed regulatory mechanisms that encourage constructive dialogue and internal dispute resolution, reminding party leaders that cohesive leadership is not an option; it is a democratic imperative.

“Let us build a framework that protects the sovereign will of the Nigerian people from the point of candidate nomination to the final declaration of results.

“Our task is to ensure that political parties evolve from mere election vehicles into enduring democratic institutions,” he stated.

‘Political Parties, Internal Democracy’

Country Director, Westminster Foundation for Democracy (WFD), Nigeria, Mr. Adebowale Olorunmola, said the workshop was designed to review the regulations and guidelines for political parties following the passage and assent of the Electoral Act 2026.

Olorunmola explained that the workshop was necessary for the guidelines and regulations to be improved to strengthen the electoral act, adding that it involved bridging the gap between the letter of the 2026 Act and the practical, day-to-day operations of political parties.

He stated that the workshop aims to ensure political parties move from just being platforms for conducting election to viable institutions for sustaining democracy in Nigeria.

He maintained that WFD’s collaboration with INEC was rooted in the Political Parties Performance Index (PPPI), a new initiative that would allow more internal democracy and inclusivity among political parties, capable of reaching out to all demographics, and accountable by being legally compliant.

Tinubu Sends Delegation To Jesse Jackson’s Funeral

President Bola Tinubu has sent a five-person delegation to represent him and Nigeria at the final burial rites of Reverend Jesse Jackson, the American civil rights leader, activist and former presidential candidate.

Jackson died at age 84 on February 17, 2026, in Chicago.

According to a statement by presidential spokesperson, Bayo Onanuga, the delegation will be led by Senator George Akume, Secretary to the Government of the Federation.

Other members are the Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, Bianca Odumegwu-Ojukwu; the Minister of Arts, Culture and Creative Economy, Hannatu Musawa; the Special Presidential Envoy for Global and Pan-African Affairs, Brian Browne; and the Senior Special Assistant on Foreign Affairs and International Relations, Ambassador Sola Enikanolaye.

READ ALSO: How Jesse Jackson Was Part Of June 12 Struggle – Bolaji Akinyemi

Onanuga said the delegation would deliver President Tinubu’s message of condolences to the Jackson family.

In an earlier tribute, Tinubu described Jackson as a great friend of Nigeria and Africa.

“He was a moral voice and a formidable opponent of apartheid in South Africa. He played a leading role in the campaign for the release from prison of Nelson Mandela and other African National Congress leaders. He won critical support for sanctions against the then apartheid government,” the president wrote.

The burial programme began on February 26 with a lying-in-state at the Rainbow PUSH Coalition in Chicago. Services in South Carolina and Washington, D.C., and a lying-in-state at the South Carolina Statehouse were scheduled for March 1–5.

Miracle to walk after lift shaft fall – Pavan

Italian golfer Andrea Pavan said it feels “like a miracle to be able to walk” following his release from hospital after a fall down an open lift shaft.

The accident occurred before the recent South African Open at Pavan’s private accommodation near Stellenbosch Golf Club when the lift doors opened but there was no lift car in the shaft, causing him to tumble three stories down.

The 36-year-old was taken to a local hospital with severe shoulder damage and fractures to several vertebrae in his back, and had major surgery.

In a message on social media on Wednesday, he said it was a “big day” as he “got discharged from the hospital to continue my rehab at an accommodation nearby”.

He added: “It truly feels like a miracle to be able to walk and start to do some basic activities, although at a very slow and careful pace.

Pavan is a two-time DP World Tour winner, earning victory at the Czech Masters in 2018 and the BMW International Open in 2019.

His post on Wednesday included pictures of him in hospital, sitting in a wheelchair, and standing up with his right arm in a sling as he held crutch in his left hand.

“The road is very long but this small step feels very good,” Pavan added.

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Trump’s endgame in Iran: Regime change without US ‘boots on the ground’

Washington, DC – Hours after the United States and Israel unleashed their bombing campaign against Iran on Saturday, President Donald Trump said that all he wants from the war is “freedom for the people”.

Analysts say that despite this claim and other objectives articulated by US officials, Trump appears to be seeking to collapse the ruling system in Tehran.

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Kelly Grieco, senior fellow at the Stimson Center think tank, told Al Jazeera that achieving such a sweeping political shift will be difficult – if not impossible – without troops on the ground.

“It seems like they’re not willing to pay certain costs to achieve regime change, so there’s sort of a set of secondary goals that perhaps will be enough if they can’t achieve that through air power alone,” Grieco said.

After the opening US-Israeli strikes, Trump told the Iranian people that their “moment of freedom” is at hand.

“When we are finished, take over your government. It will be yours to take,” he said, suggesting that the US will take down the Iranian regime.

Matthew Duss, the executive vice president at the Center for International Policy, stressed that air strikes alone cannot collapse the Iranian ruling system.

“You can damage buildings; you can damage the regime, but we don’t have examples of when air power alone has achieved regime change,” Duss said.

A NATO-led air campaign in Libya in 2011 managed to dislodge Muammar Gaddafi from power, but Libyan rebels led the offensive on the ground that removed the regime.

While Trump and other US officials have called on Iranians to rise up against their government, as of now, there does not appear to be any meaningful force on the ground capable of taking on the Islamic Republic system.

Boots on the ground?

While the US has kept the door open for the involvement of ground troops in the war, the move would pose an increased risk to American forces and mark a stark departure from Trump’s stated preference for swift military campaigns.

“The war is already unpopular, even without any American boots on the ground in Iran,” said Duss.

A recent Reuters survey suggested that only about one-quarter of Americans support the war.

Duss drew a contrast between the ongoing conflict and the 2003 invasion of Iraq, which had more than 55 percent support from the US public, according to various polls.

“I would imagine that as this war continues, especially if US troops are put on the ground, that support will drop even more,” Duss told Al Jazeera.

On Tuesday, Democratic Senator Richard Blumenthal told reporters after a classified hearing with administration officials that he fears that the US may be heading towards a ground operation in Iran.

“I am more fearful than ever after this briefing that we may be putting boots on the ground and that troops from the United States may be necessary to accomplish objectives that the administration seems to have,” Blumenthal said.

Other objectives

Over the past few days, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth have articulated more modest goals than regime change in Iran: destroying the Iranian nuclear and drone programmes as well as the country’s navy.

Rubio has argued that Iran was building a large missile and drone arsenal to “achieve immunity” and deterrence against foreign attacks that would allow it to build a nuclear weapon.

For his part, Hegseth has emphasised that the bombing campaign in Iran will not turn into a “forever war”.

“We’re ensuring the mission gets accomplished, but we are very clear-eyed – as the president had been, unlike other presidents, about the foolish policies of the past that recklessly pulled us into things that were not tethered to actual, clear objectives,” he said.

Grieco, however, noted that Trump’s own objectives have been unclear.

“What is this all for? What are we trying to achieve? The administration certainly has not done itself any favours in the fact that they don’t seem to have a consistent narrative or message on this,” she told Al Jazeera.

Senator Elizabeth Warren, a Democrat, emerged from a briefing with Trump officials on Tuesday with a similar assessment.

“It is so much worse than you thought. You are right to be worried,” Warren said in a video message.

“The Trump administration has no plan in Iran. This illegal war is based on lies, and it was launched without any imminent threat to our nation. Donald Trump still hasn’t given a single clear reason for this war, and he seems to have no plan for how to end it.”

The US and Israel launched the bombing campaign against Iran early on Saturday, killing Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, several top officials and hundreds of civilians.

The conflict quickly spread across the Middle East, with Iran lashing out against Gulf countries, launching drone and missile attacks at US assets as well as energy and civilian targets.

Tehran has also been targeting Israel with missile volleys.

Iran-allied groups in Iraq joined the war as well, claiming drone attacks against US-affiliated targets. Hezbollah in Lebanon also entered the fray amid reports that Israel was planning an invasion of the south of the country.

Weeks or ‘far longer’

Despite Hegseth’s insistence that the war is not open-ended, the Trump administration’s timeline for the conflict has been elastic.

Trump has said that the US is ahead of schedule in completing its mission as the conflict expands. At the same time, he said the war could last four to five weeks and “far longer”.

The US president’s allies have also been hailing the war as a success, predicting that the Iranian system will soon fold.

“We are not there yet but, in my view, it’s not if this terrorist regime falls in Iran — it is only a matter of when,” Republican Senator Lindsey Graham wrote on X after a call with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Graham said the “gateway to peace that would be opened” after the Iranian regime falls and ties between Israel and Arab states would take the region to a “new level of prosperity and security”.

However, Duss said it is hard to assess US progress in the war because Trump “has not been clear yet what the objectives really are”.

“You really can’t judge whether we’re ahead of time or behind time on those objectives. That’s the problem here,” he said.

“They didn’t bother to build any case for why this war was necessary. They certainly did not bother to explain what they hope to achieve and how and when. So all we have is just this killing.”

With the war still in its first week, it is starting to appear like a longer conflict than the decisive strikes Trump prides himself on, such as the abduction of Venezuela’s Nicolas Maduro in January and the strikes against Iran’s nuclear facilities in June.