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ALIA INVITES ICPC TO PROBE AONDOAKAA’S RICE COMPANY (Mikap Nig. Ltd) BUT WHO WILL PROBE ALIA?

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By: Aondoakaa Tersugh Daniel | 11/06/2026

There is a certain desperation that comes over a man when he finally sees the writing on the wall and cannot erase it. Governor Hyacinth Iormen Alia is at that point. And rather than govern, he has chosen to fight.

Before now, Alia turned his attention to his predecessor, Chief Samuel Ortom, mobilising committees and panels to investigate the Ortom administration, hoping to drag the former governor through the mud and emerge looking righteous. The strategy collapsed under its own weight. Nobody paid serious attention to it. The noise faded. And the irony that stung the loudest was this: the same Samuel Ortom, whom Alia tried desperately to discredit, had the foresight and the capacity to construct an asphalt road in Vandeikya, the very local government that produced Alia, the sitting governor who cannot point to one completed road project in that same community.

Now, having failed to bury Ortom, Alia has reached deeper into his political hat. This time, he has pulled out the ICPC. His administration has orchestrated the filing of complaint before the anti-corruption agency against Mikap Nigeria Limited, the company owned by Chief Michael Kaase Aondoakaa SAN, the PDP gubernatorial candidate and the man that every reading of Benue’s 2027 political weather positions as Alia’s successor in waiting. Let us be honest about what this is. This is not anti-corruption. This is panic wearing the costume of governance.

Here is what makes Alia’s gambit particularly revealing. Chief Michael Kaase Aondoakaa founded Mikap Nigeria Limited. Chief Gabriel Suswam, who is now a celebrated ally and political bride to Alia himself, founded Ashi Rice and the broader Ashi Conglomerates. Both companies were established in the same year. Both companies, at different points, supplied rice to the Benue State Government. Both exist within the same commercial and regulatory universe. Yet when Chief Alia went searching for targets at the ICPC, Suswam’s Ashi Rice was not summoned. The Ashi Conglomerates were not disturbed.

That selective amnesia tells the full story. Alia is not fighting corruption. He is fighting competition. He is fighting his own fear.

Mikap Nigeria Limited is not some obscure shell operation. It is an award winning company in Nigeria with a verifiable business record. Attaching an ICPC invitation to its name is intended to do one thing: soil the image of Aondoakaa SAN ahead of an election that Alia can already see he is losing. It is a political instrument dressed in the language of accountability, and the Benue voter is not obligated to be deceived by it.

There is a perception that Alia’s so-called legacy companies may have been threatened by the international recognition that Mikap Nigeria Limited has earned. Aondoakaa’s company was among 131 companies from 23 states of the federation to receive the prestigious ARSO Quality Mark Award, conferred by the African Organisation for Standardisation and certified by the Standards Organisation of Nigeria. Of those 131 companies, Mikap Nigeria Limited received Grade 1, the highest classification in that entire award cycle. Contrast that with ZEVA, which plasters its branding on a brewed product assembled elsewhere and has received no recognition beyond Makurdi. If envy has a face in Benue State today, it is wearing Alia’s expression.

That same envy is the force that has driven the prestigious Benue State University to her knees while Alia pours energy and attention into promoting the university he founded in his hometown. This is not governance. This is a man protecting his ego at the expense of a state.

Many who watched Alia step into public life with the language of a man of God have privately nursed a growing suspicion. This ICPC move against Aondoakaa has turned that private whisper into a public question. If the governor’s conscience is clean, why the selectivity? Why does the probe go only as far as the man standing between him and a second term?

There is also the matter that Alia himself cannot afford to open. His own administration’s record on contract handling and financial transparency is not one that invites scrutiny from a man of courage. The allegations that trail his government’s procurement processes and contract awards are not whispers. They are documented concerns that are growing louder with time. When the season of accountability finally arrives for Benue, and it will, Alia will not be exempted simply because he held the executive pen.

What Alia has done by firing first is actually a gift to Aondoakaa and to the historical record. When Aondoakaa returns fire in 2027, nobody should call it a witch-hunt. Nobody should frame it as persecution or political score-settling. Alia drew first blood. He opened this account. Whatever accountability comes his way when the Alia administration is eventually sitting on the other side of power will be a direct consequence of the aggression he chose today.

A frightened man does frightened things. Alia has confirmed what the 2027 election numbers already suggested. He knows what is coming. And he is not ready for it.

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NSGF Appoints Ex-CDS, Former Defence Minister Co-Chairmen of Northern Security Trust Fund

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By Achadu Gabriel, Kaduna

The Northern States Governors’ Forum (NSGF) has appointed former Chief of Defence Staff, Gen. Martin Luther Agwai (rtd), and former Minister of Defence and Head of the Civil Service of the Federation, Alhaji Mahmud Yayale Ahmed, as co-chairmen of the Northern Nigeria Security Trust Fund Board.

The inauguration, held at Sir Kashim Ibrahim House in Kaduna, marks a major step in the North’s regional response to worsening insecurity.

The board comprises retired military officers and former security chiefs drawn from the 19 northern states to provide strategic oversight, mobilise resources, enhance intelligence sharing and coordinate efforts against banditry, terrorism, kidnapping and cattle rustling.

Other members include former Chief of Army Staff, Lt. Gen. Faruk Yahaya (Sokoto); former Inspector-General of Police, Usman Alkali Baba (Yobe); former Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Boss Mustapha (Adamawa); Sen. Napoleon Bali (rtd) (Plateau); former Deputy Inspector-General of Police, Hafiz Inuwa (Jigawa); AVM Kabiru Aliyu (Taraba); Prof. Usman Tar (Borno); Maj. Gen. A.M. Dikko (Niger); AIG Sunday Babaji (Gombe); AVM Farouk Omeiza Umar (Kogi); Maj. Gen. Muhammad Sani (Kano); Maj. Gen. Bello Sarkin Yaki (Kebbi); Maj. Gen. John Malu (Benue); and Brig. Gen. Ibrahim Agbab (Kwara), among others.

Speaking at the inauguration, NSGF Chairman and Governor of Gombe State, Muhammadu Inuwa Yahaya, said the Trust Fund would complement, rather than replace, the efforts of the Federal Government and security agencies.

He said the initiative must remain focused, responsive and credible, stressing that its success would be measured by its ability to protect lives and property.

The governors also resolved that each of the 19 northern states, alongside their local government councils, would contribute ₦1 billion monthly for 12 months to fund the initiative.

Traditional rulers, led by the Sultan of Sokoto, Alhaji Sa’ad Abubakar III, endorsed the initiative, describing it as a practical and long-overdue response to the region’s security challenges.

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EFCC Arraigns Miyetti Allah Leader Bodejo Over Alleged $2.33 Million Money Laundering

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By Francis Wilfred

The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has arraigned the leader of Miyetti Allah Kautal Hore, Bello Abdullahi Bodejo, before the Federal High Court in Abuja over an alleged $2.33 million money laundering case.

Bodejo was arraigned before Justice Inyang Edem Ekwo on a 12-count charge bordering on money laundering and unlawful cash transactions, contrary to the provisions of Nigeria’s anti-money laundering laws.

At the commencement of proceedings, EFCC counsel, Wahab Shittu (SAN), informed the court that the 12-count charge was dated June 24 and filed on June 25, 2026, and urged the court to allow the defendant to take his plea. The request was granted.

One of the charges alleged that Bodejo knowingly accepted $100,000 in cash from Sa’idu Abubakar, a former Accountant-General of Bauchi State, on January 11, 2022, in Abuja.

According to the EFCC, the transaction exceeded the legal cash transaction threshold of N5 million and was not processed through a financial institution as required by law.

Another count alleged that he received $980,000 in cash from the same former government official on February 7, 2024, also in Abuja, without routing the funds through a financial institution.

The anti-graft agency maintained that the transactions violated the provisions of the Money Laundering (Prevention and Prohibition) Act, 2022.

The prosecution told the court that the alleged transactions formed part of a wider pattern of cash dealings amounting to about $2.33 million.

When the charges were read, Bodejo pleaded not guilty to all 12 counts.

Following the plea, Shittu asked the court to fix a date for trial and remand the defendant in the custody of the Nigerian Correctional Service pending further proceedings.

However, defence counsel, Ahmed Raji (SAN), urged the court to grant his client bail, relying on a bail application filed on June 30, 2026.

The prosecution opposed the application, relying on a 28-paragraph counter-affidavit filed on July 6, 2026.

Shittu argued that the defendant posed a public risk and could interfere with witnesses or obstruct the course of justice if released. He also informed the court that the Department of State Services (DSS) had an interest in the matter.

After hearing both parties, Justice Ekwo ordered that Bodejo be remanded in the EFCC holding facility pending a ruling on his bail application.

The court adjourned the matter until July 20, 2026, for ruling on the bail application.

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Aniekan Bassey Reaffirms Senate’s Commitment to Healthcare Reform at National Assembly Public Hearing

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Chairman of the Senate Committee on Diaspora and Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs), Senator Aniekan Bassey, has reaffirmed the 10th Senate’s commitment to strengthening Nigeria’s healthcare system through far-reaching legislative reforms aimed at improving the quality, accessibility, and regulation of health services across the country.
Senator Bassey made the declaration while representing the President of the Senate, Senator Godswill Akpabio, GCON, at the National Assembly’s Public Hearing on key healthcare bills, where he also formally declared the event open.
The public hearing brought together the Honourable Minister of State for Health and Social Welfare, Dr. Iziaq Adekunle Salako, lawmakers, healthcare professionals, regulatory agencies, and other critical stakeholders to deliberate on legislative measures expected to transform Nigeria’s health sector.
Speaking at the event, Senator Bassey emphasized that the 10th Senate remains focused on enacting people-oriented legislation that bridges the gap between policy formulation and the healthcare needs of ordinary Nigerians. He noted that improving healthcare delivery is central to the National Assembly’s legislative agenda and is essential to national development.
He explained that deliberations centered on two landmark bills designed to strengthen Nigeria’s healthcare architecture.
The first, the University Teaching Hospitals Act (Amendment) Bill, seeks to modernize the country’s teaching hospitals by improving clinical training, upgrading medical infrastructure, and enhancing service delivery to align with global best practices.
The second, the National Health Facilities Regulatory Agency Bill, proposes the establishment of a regulatory framework that will enforce high professional standards, improve oversight, and guarantee patient safety across public and private healthcare facilities nationwide.
According to Senator Bassey, the proposed legislation reflects the Senate’s determination to build a healthcare system that is resilient, efficient, accountable, and capable of meeting the growing needs of Nigerians.
He expressed appreciation to the President of the Senate for the confidence reposed in him to represent the leadership of the National Assembly at the important national engagement, describing Senator Akpabio’s dedication to the welfare of Nigerians as a driving force behind the ongoing legislative reforms.
Senator Bassey stressed that lawmakers have a moral and constitutional responsibility to safeguard the lives and well-being of citizens through sound legislation that strengthens public institutions and improves service delivery.
He assured Nigerians that the Senate would continue to work with the Executive, healthcare professionals, and relevant stakeholders to enact laws that promote quality healthcare, protect patients, and expand access to affordable medical services across the country.
He added that the ultimate objective is to build a professional, accessible, and sustainable healthcare system that serves every Nigerian, irrespective of social or economic status.

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