News
PDP: Court set for definite hearing of suit by Wabara-led BoT July 7
The Federal High Court in Abuja on Tuesday slated July 7, 2026 for the hearing of all pending applications and the substantive suit filed by the Board of Trustees of the Peoples Democratic Party led by former Senate President Adolphus Wabara, seeking to compel the Independent National Electoral Commission to recognise the Kabir Turaki-led interim National Working Committee of the party.
Justice Salim Ibrahim slated the date after parties agreed to file and exchange all outstanding processes before the next adjourned date.
The judge directed all parties to file and serve their processes on or before July 6, 2026 and warned that no further delay would be entertained when the matter comes up for hearing.
The court had, on June 19, 2026 ordered an accelerated hearing of the suit after counsel to the plaintiffs, Chief Gordy Uche (SAN), argued that the case was time-sensitive in view of INEC’s timetable for the 2027 general elections.
The plaintiffs, including Wabara, former Niger State Governor Mu’azu Babangida Aliyu, Prof. Jerry Gana, Chief Olabode George and the PDP, are asking the court to direct INEC to recognise the Turaki-led interim NWC and update the party’s leadership records on its official website ahead of the 2027 poll.
They also want the commission to accept all communications from the interim leadership, which they said was forwarded to INEC through letters dated May 4, 2026.
At yesterday’s sitting, Chief Uche, SAN urged the court to hear all pending joinder applications alongside the substantive suit to save judicial time and enable his clients to comply with INEC’s electoral timetable.
He said, “The commission has reiterated that its July 11, 2026 for the submission of names of candidates is sacrosanct.
“They said the submission started yesterday and parties have been given access code and we also need the access code too.”
Describing the request as “a passionate appeal,” Chief Uche urged other counsel not to oppose the application.
Justice Ibrahim thereafter adjourned the case until July 7, 2026 for hearing of all pending applications and the substantive matter.
The suit, marked FHC/ABJ/CS/1159/2026, was filed on June 4, 2026 by lawyers led by Chief Chris Uche (SAN) and others.
The plaintiffs are seeking declarations that INEC is constitutionally bound to give effect to judgments of the Federal Capital Territory High Court, the Court of Appeal and the Supreme Court, which they contend invalidated the PDP’s November 2025 national convention and upheld the suspension of some senior executives of the party.
News
Certificate forgery: Ex- Minister Uche Nnaji arrested
The immediate past Minister of Science and Technology, Uche Nnaji, was arrested on Wednesday at the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja, on arrival from Enugu via a chartered flight.
Authoritative sources at the airport confirmed the arrest, saying Mr Nnaji would be handed over to the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) for interrogation.
The reported arrest comes weeks after the Federal High Court reportedly granted the ICPC permission to arrest and investigate Nnaji over the allegations.
The court also authorised the anti-graft agency to declare him wanted through newspapers, social media platforms and other media channels after the commission alleged that he repeatedly failed to honour invitations for questioning.
According to the ICPC, its application to the court followed Nnaji’s alleged refusal to appear before investigators despite several invitations relating to the forgery allegations.
The case stems from a two-year investigation which alleged that Nnaji submitted forged University of Nigeria degree and National Youth Service Corps certificates during his ministerial screening and confirmation process in 2023.
The report alleged that the documents were presented to President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, the Nigerian Senate, the Office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation and the State Security Service.
Nnaji later acknowledged that the University of Nigeria did not issue him the degree certificate in question.
The former minister had previously denied the existence of the court order authorising his arrest, dismissing the publication as a “media trial.”
However, on June 18, he reportedly filed an appeal before the Court of Appeal, seeking to overturn the arrest order.
News
El Rufai denied bail, granted medicare access
The Kaduna State High Court on Monday declined the bail application filed by former Kaduna State Governor, Nasir El-Rufai, who is standing trial on a nine-count charge bordering on alleged abuse of office. The court however granted him access to medical attention.
Ruling on the application, the trial judge, Justice Diruis Khobo, held that the application lacked merit, saying the defendant failed to place sufficient and convincing materials before the court to justify the grant of bail.
The judge noted that the applicant did not present reliable evidence or credible documents capable of persuading the court to exercise its discretion in his favour.
The proceedings were conducted in the absence of the defendant, who remained in the custody of the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission.
Despite refusing the bail request, Justice Khobo directed the ICPC to grant El-Rufai unhindered access to his medical team or any medical facility of his choice within Nigeria to enable him to receive appropriate medical attention.
The court further ordered that the former governor remain in the custody of the anti-graft agency pending the determination of the case.
News
Nigeria scraps JSS, SSS school system
…as 20m children drop out of school after primary
The Federal Government, Tuesday, directed the overhaul of Nigeria’s education structure.
Minister of Education, Dr. Maruf Tunji Alausa, announced this during the inauguration of the Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC) Ministerial Implementation and Monitoring Committee in Abuja.
Nigeria operates a formal education framework generally referred to as the 6-3-3-4 system, which consists of 6 years of primary education, 3 years of junior secondary, 3 years of senior secondary, and a minimum of 4 years of tertiary education.
The system is broken down into three major tiers: Basic Education, Post-Basic/Senior Secondary, and Tertiary Education.
Dr. Alausa however, stated that the arrangement separating Junior Secondary Schools (JSS), from Senior Secondary Schools (SSS) had failed and contributed to the alarming number of out-of-school children.
He said findings by the government showed that while Nigeria has about 80,000 public primary schools, there are only about 15,000 junior secondary schools, creating a huge transition gap that has left millions of children stranded after completing primary education.
According to him, the policy requiring JSS and SSS to operate as separate institutions has worsened access to education by overcrowding junior secondary schools while leaving many senior secondary schools underutilised.
He said successive governments had failed to adequately address the problem but assured that the Tinubu administration was determined to reverse the trend by expanding access to basic education.
The minister cited evidence from Kaduna and several northern states showing that the disarticulation policy created unnecessary administrative structures at the expense of students.
“About 24million children enrol in our primary schools, but only about 4million of them complete senior secondary. We have over 20 million children dropping out between primary school and junior secondary school. Where are those students?
“The previous governments may have failed in this regard, but this government will not fail. We are fixing this. We need to create more opportunities for children to move seamlessly through the education system.
“We have overflowing junior secondary schools and empty senior secondary schools. I can objectively report today that this disarticulation policy has failed. We will phase it out. We cannot continue creating administrative positions while damaging our education system. It is about doing what is best for every Nigerian child,” he said.
Alausa disclosed that the proposal to abolish the policy would be presented at the next meeting of the National Council on Education for formal consideration.
He also inaugurated a high-powered committee chaired by renowned education expert, Prof. Rashid Aderinoye, to fast-track the completion, handover and operationalisation of hundreds of Smart Schools, Bilingual Schools and Alternative Schools funded by UBEC across the country.
The minister lamented that despite huge public investments, many of the schools remained abandoned, while several completed projects had yet to be handed over to state governments or opened for academic activities.
He described the situation as a waste of scarce public resources and a denial of learning opportunities to thousands of Nigerian children.
“The purpose of these schools is to educate children, not to remain locked up after completion,” he said, charging the committee to eliminate implementation bottlenecks and ensure the facilities begin serving their intended purpose.
Speaking earlier, UBEC Executive Secretary, Aisha Garba, said the Federal Government had recorded significant progress in expanding access to quality basic education through the Smart Schools, Bilingual Schools and Alternative Schools programmes.
She disclosed that 37 Smart Schools had been established nationwide, with 24 already in operation, while the remaining schools were at various stages of completion, furnishing and readiness for academic activities.
Garba added that under the UBEC-Islamic Development Bank Bilingual Education Programme, 30 schools had been established across nine states, with three boarding schools already commissioned and four others substantially completed and awaiting inauguration.
She also noted that the Alternative Schools Programme was expanding access to education for vulnerable and out-of-school children through flexible and inclusive learning models.
According to her, the newly inaugurated implementation committee will oversee project execution, ensure the timely completion and handover of schools, resolve implementation challenges and guarantee that government investments translate into fully functional learning centres.
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