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Why Real Madrid superstar, Kylian Mbappe, was sent off for a bad tackle during his team’s La Liga game at Alaves

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Real Madrid superstar, Kylian Mbappe, was sent off for a bad tackle during his team’s La Liga game at Alaves on Sunday.

It was his first red card after joining the Spanish and European champions last summer.

Mbappe lunged in high on former Madrid midfielder Antonio Blanco and was dismissed in the 38th minute, with his side leading 1-0 through Eduardo Camavinga’s strike.

Madrid are trying to close the gap on leaders Barcelona, who moved seven points clear at the top of the table after their 1-0 win at Leganes on Saturday.

French striker Mbappe is Madrid’s top scorer with 22 strikes in La Liga.

United States Embassy has introduced updated visa interview requirements for Nigerian applicants, effective from April 22, 2025

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The United States Embassy has introduced updated visa interview requirements for Nigerian applicants, effective from April 22, 2025.

In a statement released on Friday, the US mission emphasised that all applicants attending visa interviews in Abuja and Lagos must present a DS-160 form featuring a confirmation barcode that begins with “AA” followed by two zeroes (00). Crucially, this barcode must match the one used to book the appointment online.

Applicants with mismatched barcode information will be denied entry to the Consular Section and disqualified from their scheduled interviews.

“Starting April 22, 2025, all visa applicants in Abuja and Lagos must bring a DS-160 visa application form with a confirmation/barcode number (starting with AA and followed by 00 – two zeroes) that matches the one used to make their appointment online. You also must make your appointment in the location you selected when filling out your DS-160,” the statement read.

To avoid issues, applicants are strongly advised to verify that their DS-160 barcode matches their appointment information at least two weeks before their interview date.

The embassy also clarified that DS-160 forms from previous applications cannot be reused. In the event of a mismatch, applicants must log into their AVITS account at least 10 days before the interview and submit a correction request.

“If your DS-160 barcode is incorrect, you must log into your AVITS account at least 10 days before your appointment to create a support ticket requesting correction of your barcode number,” the mission added.

Additionally, appointments must be made at the same location indicated on the DS-160 form. Applicants who are turned away due to mismatched barcodes will need to resolve the issue and reschedule a new appointment. If the visa fee has expired, a new payment may be required.

Since January 1, all applicants have also been required to visit the US Consulate General in Lagos twice as part of the visa application process.

Anambra State Police Command has arrested a suspect, Nnamdi Anyaji, for killing his mother

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The Anambra State Police Command has arrested a suspect, Nnamdi Anyaji, for killing his mother and attempted to commit suicide.

It was gathered that the 49-year-old Anyaji, an indigene of Amudo Village in Ekwulobia, Aguata Local Government Area of Anambra State, after killing his mother, Dorathy Anyaji aged 68 years, attempted to kill himself before he was stopped and apprehended by neighbours.
He was said to have killed his mother during an altercation over the sharing of money realised from a cassava business.

The Anambra State Police spokesman, Tochukwu Ikenga, who confirmed the arrest of the suspect in a press statement on Sunday, said police operatives also recovered one axe at the scene of the incident.

Ikenga said, “Police operatives attached to the Ekwulobia Divisional Police Station on April 11, 2025 by 1.40pm, arrested one Nnamdi Anyaji ‘M’ aged 49 years of Amudo Village, Ekwulobia who attempted to take his own life after killing his mother Mrs Dorathy Anyaji of the same address aged 68 years.

“The operatives also recovered one Axe at the scene. Preliminary information revealed that the squabble started when the suspect accused the deceased of being dishonest about the money realised from a cassava business. 

“Meanwhile, the suspect is in custody and under close monitoring so as not to commit suicide and would be charged to court after the investigation.”

US court orders FBI, DEA to release Tinubu’s probe records – here’s why this ruling is important

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A United States District Court in Columbia has ordered the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Drug Enforcement Administration to release records relating to the criminal investigation of President Bola Tinubu over alleged drug trafficking.

Judge Beryl Howell, in a ruling dated April 8, which can be found on the court’s website, directed both agencies to search for and process non-exempt records tied to Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests filed by American researcher Aaron Greenspan.

Greenspan, founder of legal transparency platform PlainSite, had submitted 12 FOIA requests between 2022 and 2023, seeking information on a Chicago drug ring that operated in the early 1990s.
His request included records on Tinubu and three others: Lee Andrew Edwards, Mueez Abegboyega Akande, and Abiodun Agbele.

The FBI and DEA had previously issued “Glomar responses”—a refusal to confirm or deny the existence of requested records—but the court ruled that such responses were improper in this case.

The FBI and DEA have now been ordered to conduct a search and release non-exempt materials, while the parties are to report back to the court on the case’s status by May 2, 2025.

The judgment read, “The FBI and DEA have both officially confirmed investigations of Tinubu relating to the drug trafficking ring.

“Any privacy interests implicated by the FOIA requests to the FBI and DEA for records about Tinubu are overcome by the public interest in release of such information.

“Since the FBI and DEA have provided no information to establish that a cognizable privacy interest exists in keeping secret the fact that Tinubu was a subject of criminal investigation.

“They have failed to meet their burden to sustain their Glomar responses and provide an additional reason why these responses must be lifted.”
The court upheld the CIA’s Glomar response after Greenspan conceded that the agency had acknowledged the existence of responsive records.
The judge ruled, “For the reasons discussed above, plaintiff is entitled to summary judgment as to each of the four Glomar responses asserted by defendants FBI and DEA, while defendant CIA is entitled to summary judgment, since its Glomar response was properly asserted.

“Accordingly, the FBI and DEA must search for and process non-exempt records responsive to the FOIA requests directed to these agencies.
“The CIA, meanwhile, is entitled to judgment in its favour in this case. The remaining parties are directed to file jointly, by May 2, 2025, a report on the status of any outstanding issues in this case, as described in the accompanying order.”

Farooq A. Kperogi: Selective outrage over mass murders in Nigeria

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By Farooq A. Kperogi

When vigilantes incinerated traveling Hausa hunters in Uromi, Edo State, on the mistaken assumption that they were “Fulani herdsmen,” countless Hausaphone Muslim northerners sent the videos to me with commentaries that reeked of unappeasable wrath.

Because there is a 6- to 5-hour time difference between Atlanta and Nigeria, some of the people who shared the videos with me became noticeably impatient with the perceived delay in my response. 

Frustrated by the lag in my intervention, they sent messages reminding me of my swift and impassioned condemnation of the May 2022 murder of Deborah Yakubu in Sokoto. They wondered aloud why, unlike my immediate reaction to that previous incident, I had not yet commented on these recent videos.

A few even recalled my January 1, 2011, column titled “Jos bombings: Can we for once be truthful?” where I denounced, in the strongest terms possible, the mass massacre of Jos Christians by a group that called itself Jama’atu Ahlus Sunnah Lid Da’awati Wal Jihad. (I’ve just been made aware of a similar mass murder in Plateau recently. I could republish my 2011 column, and most people won’t notice that it’s a 14-year-old piece except for some names).

Of course, they never reminded me of my swift, full-throated denunciation of the February 1, 2018, murder and burning of 7 innocent Fulani cattle herders in Benue “by people who have been programmed to associate criminality with all Fulani cattle herders,” as I pointed out in my February 10, 2018, column titled “News Media’s Cultivation of ‘Fulani Herdsmen’ Hysteria.”

The people who were impatient with me implied that I was deliberately courting the approval of Christians. In their view, this meant I was seeking validation or favor from the Christian community, possibly at the expense of my own religious identity. Essentially, they accused me of prioritizing external validation over internal solidarity, implying a certainnegligence or disregard for the sentiments and expectations of my own religious community.

Nonetheless, since the publication of my March 29 column, titled “Barbaric Mass Burning of Innocents in Edo,” scores of Christians routinely tag me to mass murders committed by Muslims against Christians and challenge me to objurgate them with the same passion as I did the Edo mass incineration. 

It seems to me that public commentators unfairly shoulder a burden of intervention that should properly belong to people in positions of authority. Too often, it falls upon commentators to address and amplify crises, even though their roles are fundamentally different from those who wield executive power and influence. 

Writing about the horrendous human tragedies that have increasingly become the signature of our national life in Nigeria imposes tremendous mental strain on me. It is emotionally draining and psychologically taxing to continually engage with, dissect, and articulate these disturbing events. 

Nonetheless, I deeply understand the reasons behind distraught citizens’ desire to have their anguish acknowledged and amplified by individuals they perceive as having sizable platforms. They turn to public commentators because of their frustration with those in authority, who are perceived as detached, indifferent, or ineffective in responding adequately to their suffering.

Most importantly, though, our outrage toward mass murders often seems conditioned by whether the perpetrators differ from us in identity or affiliation. During Muhammadu Buhari’s presidency, for instance, I faced vicious personal attacks from northern Muslims for drawing attention to Boko Haram’s relentless massacres of Muslims in the North, massacres that many preferred to overlook. 

Similarly, bandits in the North have consistently burned, slaughtered, and dismembered their victims, yet these atrocities rarely provoke widespread indignation or inspire righteous anger. Because the victims do not fit the narrative of northern Muslims being victimized by (southern) Christian aggressors, their suffering is met with muted concern at best and outright indifference at worst rather than outrage or vigorous outcry for intervention.

This dynamic is not unique to the Muslim North. In the Christian North, numerous lives are frequently lost in inter-ethnic communal violence. In these cases, however, both the victims and perpetrators typically share a common Christian identity.

As a result, the collective sense of hurt and urgency felt by communities within these areas is markedly diminished. The outrage and intensity of grief that would typically accompany violence perpetrated by Muslims against Christian communities is notably absent, which reflects how religious identities powerfully shape public empathy and indignation.

In the southeast, so-called unknown gunmen perpetrate shocking acts of brutality, including gruesome murders, against fellow Igbo people. But there is rarely any pressure or expectation placed upon commentators like me to amplify these events publicly or to demand action from authorities. 

This selective silence, this inconsistency in how acts of violence are perceived and responded to, this tendency for our outrage to be contingent upon the identity dynamics between victims and perpetrators, is an instinctive, age-old, even evolutionary human trait about which psychologists and philosophers have written.

For example, in their Social Identity Theory formulation, Henri Tajfel and John Turner assert that we derive our sense of self from our membership of collective identities, and that attack on the collective triggers an intense emotional response but that intra-group violence, though troubling, is psychologically processed as an internal issue and thus evokes less public rage.

From the standpoint of evolutionary biology, we are hardwired to depend on group cohesion and cooperation and to be suspicious of outsiders. Thus, violence perpetrated by out-groups is perceived as a threat to group resources or status, which invokes defensive anger and intolerance.

Emmanuel Levinas and Richard Rorty have also written about the moral burden of “othering,” which refers to the process through which out-group members are mentally constructed as fundamentally incompatible or as morally deficient, thus deserving harsher judgment or reduced moral consideration.

The moral distance created by “othering” leads people to interpret out-group violence as evidence of moral depravity or inherent hostility. The result is that out-group violence elicits intense moral condemnation. Conversely, violence within the in-group, involving individuals perceived as morally closer, is more readily explained away, forgiven, or rationalized.

In communication scholarship, we also talk of selective perception. It is an instinctive cognitive bias that predisposes us to perceive reality in ways that reinforce and soothe our predetermined prejudices. 

Related concepts are selective exposure (the tendency to see only those things that affirm our pre-set biases and to block out those that cause us cognitive dissonance) and selective retention (the tendency to remember only those things that confer psychic comfort to our sentiments and to forget those that don’t fit that frame).

We are more tolerant of and readier to justify hurtful words that come from our “friends” than we are of even less hurtful words that come from our “enemies.”

Psychologists who study cognitive biases point out that our default positions as humans is to support our kind, to selectively expose ourselves to and perceive, even retain, only those points of views and perspectives that reinforce our prejudices. 

It’s often an unconscious process. And so, it takes nothing to be prejudiced. It’s effortless. What isn’t effortless is the capacity for conscious distancing, for dispassionate reflection, and for self-criticism.

It takes self-reflexivity and self-awareness to rise superior to the default impulses that so readily and so easily crowd and becloud our minds in moments of emotional tension. Very few are capable of this, and that’s why some people question the practical utility of the idea of deliberative democracy—the idea of government by rational conversation.

Because this is not unique to Nigeria, I hope humans can evolve to the point where we transcend these troubling predispositions. 

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10 things you may not know about Nicholas Ukachukwu, APC’s governorship candidate in Anambra 2025

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Ahead of the Anambra governorship election scheduled for Saturday, November 8, 2025, by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Nicholas Ukachukwu has emerged as the flagbearer of the All Progressives Congress (APC).

In case you are hearing the name Nicholas Ukachukwu for the first time, or you have heard about him before, NewswireNGR has compiled ten(10) things you might not know about the Anambra politician and billionaire.

  1. Date of Birth: Nicholas Ukachukwu was born on March 20, 1969. He is 56 years old as of 2025.
  2. Hometown: He was born in Osumenyi, Nnewi South Local Government Area of Anambra State.
  3. Qualifications: Ukachukwu studied Political Science and obtained a Bachelor of Science degree in 1984. He also has a Master of Business Administration (MBA) degree from the University of Manchester, England, in 1988.
  4. Marriage: He lost his first wife, Mrs Nnenna Ukachukwu, in an auto accident along Ore-Benin expressway on Thursday, November 19, 2020. Ukachukwu however remarried about 3 years later to Mitchel Ihezue, Miss Universe Nigeria 2023 and the Most Beautiful Girl in Nigeria (MBGN)/Miss World Nigeria 2017 in 2023.
  5. Children: Nicholas marriage to Nnenna produced five children.
  6. Start of business career: Ukachukwu became active in the business world in 1985 when he joined his father’s company, Nwakwo and Sons Limited as director.
  7. Companies: He established SNECOU Oil and Gas Limited, a firm engaged in petroleum products’ exploration, production, and marketing; SNECOU Construction Limited which has executed construction projects like roads, bridges, and dams in Nigeria; he also owns and operates the British Nigeria Academy, a private school offering education for nursery to secondary level; his media company, SNECOU Media Limited, operates newspaper publications, along with radio and television stations.
  8. Political party: He is a founding member of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), but presently a member of the All Progressives Congress (APC) and the governorship candidate of the party for the Anambra 2025 gubernatorial election.
  9. Political journey: After his unsuccessful attempt to get the PDP governorship ticket, he left in 2006 to join the Progressive Peoples Alliance (PPA), where he emerged as the party’s candidate but was defeated by Peter Obi of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA). He contested again on the platform of the Hope Democratic Party (HDP) but was again defeated by Obi, who was re-elected for a second term. Charles returned to PDP in 2013 but again was unable to win the party’s ticket, which was won by Osekoka Obaze, who would later lose at the general poll to Willie Obiano of APGA. He left PDP again in 2018 to join APGA, where he contested and won the primary election to emerge as the party’s candidate for the Anambra South Senatorial District in the 2019 election. However, his victory was short-lived as an aggrieved aspirant, Dr Anselm Enyimba, filed a suit at the Federal High Court in Abuja, claiming the primary election was marred by irregularities and fraud. The court nullified his candidacy and ordered the Independent National Electoral Commission to recognize Enyimba as the party’s candidate. Enyimba would later lose to Ifeanyi Ubah of the YPP.
  10. Political Office: Nwachukwu served as a member of the House of Representatives, representing the Bwari Abuja Municipal Federal Constituency between 1999 and 2003.

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Odumodu Black hit song, Declan Rice, experienced a 200% increase in streams as a result of the performance of Arsenal’s midfielder, Declan Rice, in the UEFA Champions League

Popular Nigerian rapper, Tochukwu Ojogwu, also known as Odumodu Black, has said his hit song, Declan Rice, experienced a 200% increase in streams as a result of the performance of Arsenal’s midfielder, Declan Rice, in the UEFA Champions League.

The musician made this known via his official X (formerly Twitter) handle on Wednesday night.

He wrote, “Yesterday, Declan Rice went 200% o’ streams. Make una go use footballer name sing o.”

PUNCH Online reports that Rice, the English midfielder, who the song was named after, delivered an incredible performance in a game between Arsenal and Real Madrid on Tuesday, and he was awarded as the ‘Man of the Match’.

As a result of this, the song has experienced a major stream increase.
The hit song by Odumodu-Declan Rice was released in 2023 and has been a success, earning awards like Rap Song of the Year at the Headies.

The rapper has been on an all-time high since then as the song was also used to unveil the footballer after signing a club deal with Arsenal. The Nigerian musician was also awarded the Leadership Artist of the Year Prize for 2024 not long after releasing a 16-track album.

Odumodu has also received 8 nominations for different categories for the 17th Headies award.

12 members of the Indigenous People of Biafra, who had been in prison since May 24, 2021, have regained their freedom

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Twelve members of the Indigenous People of Biafra, who had been in prison since May 24, 2021, have regained their freedom.

They were released on Thursday after a ruling by the Ebonyi State High Court.

This was disclosed by the IPOB’s lawyer, Ifeanyi Ejiofor, in a statement posted on his Facebook page on Thursday.
The 12 were among 36 IPOB members arrested in 2021.

Although earlier court rulings had discharged and acquitted them, they remained in custody due to delays in carrying out those decisions.
That changed when the Ebonyi State Director of Public Prosecution officially dropped the latest charges against them.

“This victory follows a formal application by the Ebonyi State Director of Public Prosecution (DPP), who, in acknowledgement of repeated judicial pronouncements, withdrew the latest charge filed against these 12 individuals,” Ejiofor stated.

He described the move as “a long-overdue respect for the rule of law” and said he personally made sure the release was carried out properly, with the prison authorities obeying the court order.

Ejiofor also said the legal team is not backing down on efforts to free the remaining IPOB members who were also cleared by no fewer than four High Courts in Ebonyi State.

“Our legal team remains relentless and fully committed to securing the freedom of the remaining detainees—men who have also been discharged and acquitted by no fewer than four different High Courts in Ebonyi State,” he said.

Even though 12 detainees are now free, others are still waiting to be released. But Ejiofor is confident their freedom is near.
“Their release is no longer a matter of if but when, and that moment draws closer by the day,” he said.
He added, “Justice may be delayed, but it shall not be denied. Freedom must prevail.”

Michelle Obama, has denied rumours that she and former President Barack Obama are headed for divorce

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Former United States First Lady, Michelle Obama, has denied rumours that she and former President Barack Obama are headed for divorce.

Michelle dispelled the rumours during a chat with Hollywood actress, Sophia Bush, for an episode of her podcast, Work in Progress, which was released on Tuesday.

She explained that her decision to skip President Jimmy Carter’s funeral and President Donald Trump’s inauguration were simply decisions she made for herself.

Her absence at both high-profile political events sparked divorce rumours, with Obama admitting last week that he was in a ‘deep deficit’ with his wife.

“That’s the thing that we as women, I think we struggle with: disappointing people. I mean, so much so that this year people were, you know, they couldn’t even fathom that I was making a choice for myself that they had to assume that my husband and I are divorcing.

“That this couldn’t be a grown woman just making a set of decisions for herself, right?’ she continued.

Federal Government warns of floods in 30 states and the Federal Capital Territory

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The Federal Government has predicted heavy rains and floods in 30 states and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Abuja.

The high-flood risk states are: Abia, Adamawa, Akwa Ibom, Anambra, Bauchi, Bayelsa, Benue, Borno, Cross-River, Delta, Ebonyi, Edo, Gombe, Imo, Jigawa, Kebbi, Kogi, Kwara, Lagos, Nasarawa, Niger, Ogun, Ondo, Osun, Oyo, Rivers, Sokoto, Taraba, Yobe, Zamfara and the Federal Capital Territory.


The Minister of Water Resources and Sanitation, Joseph Utsev, on Thursday, said coastal and riverine flooding would be experienced in some parts of the South-South geopolitical zone of the country due to a rise in sea level.

Among these states are Bayelsa, Cross River, Delta, and Rivers while Akwa-Ibom and Edo fall under the high-flood risk states.

Utsev stated this during the public presentation of the 2025 Annual Flood Outlook by the Nigeria Hydrological Services Agency (NIHSA) in Abuja.

The 2025 Annual Flood Outlook (AFO) was segmented into three parts to address the pressing challenges of flood disasters and provide information for mitigation, especially in the most vulnerable communities.

Dangote reduces Petrol Price to N865 per litre

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Dangote Petroleum Refinery and Petrochemicals has reviewed its ex-depot (gantry) loading cost of petrol to N865 per litre.


The company informed its customers of the price reduction via a notice on Thursday.

The new price is a reduction of N15 from N880 per litre sold by the refinery on Wednesday.

This comes after the federal government said the sale of crude oil and refined product sales in naira will continue in the country.

In a statement on Wednesday, the Federal Ministry of Finance said the policy is not a temporary measure but “a key policy directive designed to support sustainable local refining, bolster energy security, and reduce reliance on foreign exchange in the domestic petroleum market.”

The ministry added that the stakeholders reaffirmed the government’s continued commitment to the full implementation of this strategic initiative, as directed by the Federal Executive Council (FEC).

Buba Galadima, a key figure in the Kwankwasiyya movement, has opened up on how Tinubu helped his daughter secure a job at the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission

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Buba Galadima, a chieftain of the New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP) and key figure in the Kwankwasiyya movement, has opened up on how his daughter secured a job at the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) through President Bola Tinubu. 

He spoke while during a programme on AIT.

Galadima said despite his constant criticism of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) government, he is still friends with President Tinubu.

He said: “We are friends and will continue to be friends. If I want anything from him, I can ask. Let me confess on national television. My daughter used my phone to call the President and the President picked the call thinking it was me. And they said they are my children, and that they are calling him because the country is hard.

“They told Tinubu that ‘our father cannot do this for us and he told us that you are his friend.

“The little one said she just finished the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC), she could not get a job with the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) headed by Gbenga Komolafe. He (Tinubu) just asked, ‘call Komolafe’, go and give my friend’s daughter job’. That is why she wants to go to Mecca to thank God and to thank even Mr President.”

Speaking further, the NNPP chieftain said he worked for former President Muhammadu Buhari for 13 years while his daughter worked for four years without pay.

“My daughter worked for him for four years and he instructed that she should not be paid salary.

“Let them bring any voucher where she was paid. She worked for Buhari for four years in Osinbajo’s office without payment,” he said.