Hello! Here are things you have to know today.
1. A suspected Boko Haram member, Musbau Ishola, narrowly escaped death in Mile Two range of Lagos State after he was grabbed by a furious group of people. We learnt that the suspect, called Ishola, who wore a turban on a military top, likewise had a long facial hair and was originating from the Oke Afa range around 5pm when individuals, who thought he was an individual from the Boko Haram faction, confronted him.
2. Suspected Fulani Herdsmen have executed not less than 4 persons in a retaliation assault on Gaambe-Tiev, Logo Local Government region of Benue State. The herdsmen who were said to have attacked the group at around 7.30am on Monday, shot sporadically, bulldozing structures and farmland in the territory.
3. President Muhammadu Buhari has pledged to prosecute any individual from the All Progressives Congress, APC, indicted for corruption. Buhari said this in a chat he had with a magazine, The Interview, was to contradict claims in a few quarters that his battle against corruption was one sided, vowing to arraign any of his supporters discovered to be corrupt.
4. It was without a doubt a dark Monday in Lagos as three persons were rosted alive and scores injured, after a tanker fell and caught fire. The mishap, happened at Cele transport stop, along the ever bustling Oshodi-Apapa Expressway when 33,000 liters truck slammed into another.
5. The Ohanaeze Youth Council, OYC, has required the fast release of Mazi Nnamdi Kanu, stating that his discharge was long overdue. President of the OYC, Mazi Okechukwu Isiguzoro, who made this known, said such a stride would help in quietening frayed nerves in the South-East and the South-South locale.
6. The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission has captured a previous Deputy Speaker of the House of Representatives, Chief Chibudom Nwuche over a fraudulent contract of N5.6billion. Nwuche, who was a member of the House of Representative around 1999 and 2003, was kept to react to an EFCC invitation, to explain how he secured three contracts from the Kingsley Kuku-led Presidential Amnesty Office.
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