Breaking News
I Told Them Coup Will Fail’ – Islamic Cleric Says in Confession Video
A Federal High Court in Abuja on Monday watched a video recording of the alleged confession of the sixth defendant in the ongoing trial of persons accused of conspiring to plot a coup against the President Bola Tinubu-led government.
In the video, the defendant, Sheikh Sani Abdulkadir, told investigators he had warned the alleged plotters that the plan would fail and that they would eventually be exposed.
The video was played during the continuation of trial with the fourth prosecution witness, identified as PW4, still in the witness box.
In the recording previewed before the court, Abdulkadir, who described himself as an Islamic cleric, said he knew the alleged ringleader, one Colonel Ma’aji, for less than a year and was approached through a man identified as Sanda for prayers concerning the alleged coup plot.
According to him, Sanda informed him that his “oga” intended to stage a coup and needed spiritual prayers and divination regarding its success.
Abdulkadir told investigators that after conducting prayers, he informed them the operation would fail and that two persons would eventually betray those involved.
He said a message was later relayed back to him through Sanda requesting further prayers so that the two individuals would not betray the group.
The defendant further stated that money was subsequently sent to him for prayers and charity, while names of individuals allegedly involved in the plot were also forwarded to him for inclusion in the prayers.
He said shortly after the prayers commenced, Sanda informed him that Colonel Ma’aji had not been seen for four days, adding that he later learnt through media reports that arrests had been made over an alleged coup plot.
In the video, Abdulkadir maintained that the funds transferred to him were not payments for supporting a coup but were meant for prayers.
He also told investigators that he never reported the alleged plot because he did not know who to report to, despite admitting that he understood a coup to mean a military overthrow of government.
The defendant narrated that he was eventually arrested after visiting the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, over restrictions placed on his bank account.
According to him, he had gone to withdraw from the money transferred to him when he discovered that the account had been flagged.
He said after contacting an EFCC deputy director, he was invited to the commission’s office where he explained that the money was meant for prayers.
Abdulkadir insisted in the recording that he did not make any statement relating to a coup while in EFCC custody.
Before the video ended, the defendant also stated that nobody assaulted or tortured him and that his statements were made voluntarily.
Following the playback, the prosecution sought to tender the extra-judicial statements allegedly made by the 1st to 5th defendants before a Special Investigation Panel and military police authorities, as well as the sixth defendant’s statement made before military police investigators.
However, counsel to all six defendants separately objected to the admissibility of the statements and accompanying video recordings.
Lawyers to the defendants argued that the statements were either not voluntarily made or were obtained in violation of provisions of the Administration of Criminal Justice Act, ACJA.
Counsel to the 1st defendant argued that the written statement sought to be tendered did not correspond with what was shown in the video evidence regarding voluntariness.
The second defendant’s lawyer contended that his client was neither informed of his right to legal representation nor provided access to counsel before the statement was recorded, adding that the video shown in court was not a recording of the making of the written statement sought to be tendered.
The third defendant equally challenged the admissibility of the statement, arguing that the contents of the video differed from the written extra-judicial statement.
Counsel to the fourth defendant argued that the video and statement contravened Sections 15 and 17 of the ACJA, which provide for the presence of legal representation during statement-taking.
He further alleged that his client was coerced into making the statement and argued that the recording failed to show whether the defendant’s legs were free at the time the video was made.
The fifth defendant’s lawyer also opposed the admissibility of the statements on grounds of alleged inducement, torture and non-compliance with provisions of the ACJA and the Evidence Act.
He further argued that since there were multiple defendants in the matter, the court ought to conduct separate trial-within-trial proceedings for each disputed statement rather than a joint exercise.
Counsel to the 6th defendant similarly objected to the admissibility of both the written and video statements credited to Abdulkadir, insisting they were obtained through inducement and were not voluntarily made.
Responding, the prosecution urged the court to reject the defence arguments and order a single trial-within-trial proceeding for all the disputed statements.
The prosecution argued that the law did not require separate proceedings for each defendant and maintained that the trial judge retained discretion over how evidence is received.
In a ruling, Justice Joyce Abdulmalik ordered a joint trial-within-trial to determine the voluntariness and admissibility of both the written and video statements of all six defendants.
The matter was subsequently adjourned to May 12, 2026, for continuation of proceedings.
Breaking News
National Youth Council, NYC Criticizes AYA Over Impeachment Call Against Govs Abiodun, Mbah
The National Youth Council has strongly criticized the Arewa Youth Assembly over its call for the impeachment of Ogun State Governor, Prince Dapo Abiodun, and Enugu State Governor, Mr. Peter Mbah, describing the move as irresponsible, politically misguided, and outside the mandate of any youth organization.
In a statement issued on Monday by the National Vice President of the Council, Comrade Kehinde Olorunjubelo, the Council said the Arewa Youth Assembly goofed by dabbling into the internal affairs of the Progressive Governors Forum (PGF), an exclusive political structure with established mechanisms for resolving its issues.
According to the Council, it is not the responsibility of any youth group, particularly one claiming to represent northern youths, to interfere in the operations, leadership dynamics, or political disagreements within the PGF.
“The Progressive Governors Forum is an internal political platform with its own constitutional processes and conflict-resolution mechanisms. It is therefore unnecessary, inappropriate, and politically immature for any youth assembly to insert itself into matters that do not concern the welfare or collective interests of Nigerian youths,” the statement said.
The Council noted that the Arewa Youth Assembly erred by attempting to politicize the youth constituency and drag young Nigerians into partisan battles orchestrated by disgruntled political interests.
“Youths should not dabble into Progressive Governors’ Forum politics, and they should not bastardize the youth constituency with this kind of politics influenced by disgruntled elements seeking relevance through media noise,” Olorunjubelo added.
The Council further stated that the impeachment call exposed a poor understanding of constitutional governance and democratic processes, stressing that impeachment is a serious legislative procedure that cannot be reduced to political propaganda or emotional blackmail.
It maintained that rather than dissipating energy on political distractions, youth organizations should focus on critical national issues affecting young Nigerians, including unemployment, insecurity, poor education, economic hardship, and youth empowerment.
“Nigerian youths expect advocacy on issues that affect their future and survival, not unnecessary interference in intra-party affairs. Attempting to turn youths into political tools for settling elite disagreements diminishes the credibility of youth advocacy in the country,” the statement added.
The National Youth Council therefore urged all youth groups across the country to remain focused, responsible, and independent, while avoiding actions capable of dragging the youth constituency into needless political controversies.
Breaking News
Rivers State: APC House of Assembly Screening Appeal Committee Confirms Disqualification of Assembly Aspirants Linked To Fubara
The Rivers State All Progressives Congress, APC, House of Assembly Screening Appeal Committee, chaired by Abdul Mahmud, has confirmed the disqualification of aspirants linked to the state governor, Siminalayi Fubara.
DAILY POST reports that about 33 aspirants who participated in the screening exercise on Saturday were cleared while 65 were disqualified.
The 65 disqualified aspirants have been identified as Fubara’s loyalists.
Addressing journalists on Tuesday, the appeal committee chairman confirmed that 19 appeals have been submitted by some of the disqualified aspirants.
He stated that the submission of appeals ends on Wednesday.
According to the committee, the final list of cleared aspirants will be released when the date for appeals elapses.
-
Breaking News5 months agoTerrorists Want ₦2m ‘levy’ in Katsina Community Despite Peaceful Agreement
-
Breaking News6 months agoEx-EFCC Exhibit Keeper Kaduna Zonal Directorate, Allegedly Steals ₦22m
-
Breaking News7 months agoNiger Delta Group hails Tinubu, NUPRC for ₦373bn host community fund and 536 life-changing projects
-
Breaking News4 months agoBreaking News: Nigerian Air Force Reportedly Kills 750 Terrorists in Borno State
-
Business7 months agoHouse of Representatives probes $35m modular refinery project
-
Breaking News6 months agoBreaking: Robbery Suspects Caught After Leaving Phone At The Scene
-
Breaking News4 months agoNasarawa Insecurity: Suspects Apprehended, Man Hunt Ongoing – Gov Sule
-
Breaking News7 months agoUCL: Osimhen Statement after Galatasaray’s 3-1 Win over Bodo/Glimt
