Connect with us

News

Unity Cup 2026: NFF President Ibrahim Gusau Says Tournament Will Help Super Eagles Discover New Stars

info

Published

on

IMG 20260217 WA0013.jpg

President of the Nigeria Football Federation, Ibrahim Musa Gusau, has revealed that the upcoming Unity Cup will serve as an important platform for discovering new players ahead of the 2027 Africa Cup of Nations qualifiers.

Speaking on the objectives of the tournament, Gusau explained that the competition will give Super Eagles coach Eric Chelle the opportunity to properly evaluate players and build a stronger squad before September’s AFCON qualifying campaign.

Read Also: Flamingos Coach Akeem Busari Warns Nigeria Against Complacency After 5-0 Win Over Guinea

“The Unity Cup is an avenue to discover more players,” Gusau said.

According to the NFF president, the tournament will also help the technical crew establish a clearer tactical direction for the national team.

“These games will help the coach shape his plans,” he implied.

Gusau further disclosed that Chelle has already been given a major target ahead of the next continental tournament.

“He has been mandated to win the AFCON,” he noted.

The Unity Cup is expected to feature several new faces, including home-based players, as the Super Eagles continue rebuilding following recent disappointments.

“This competition could shape the future of the team,” many football observers believe.

The NFF president stressed the importance of using the tournament wisely to strengthen squad depth and competition.

“We must prepare properly for the qualifiers,” he added.

Nigeria remains under pressure to respond strongly after missing out on the FIFA World Cup.

“The expectations around the Super Eagles remain massive,” supporters continue to emphasize.

For the NFF president, the message is clear.

The Unity Cup is more than a friendly tournament.

New players must emerge.

And the Super Eagles must begin building seriously toward AFCON success.

Because winning major tournaments starts with proper preparation and squad development.

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

News

Troops killed 317 terrorists, rescued 221 victims in May nationwide operations: DHQ

info

Published

on

By

Untitled design 251.png

The military says troops on land, air and maritime operations nationwide eliminated 317 terrorists and criminals while rescuing 221 kidnapped victims in May.

The Director of Defence Media Operations, Michael Onoja, disclosed this on Tuesday in Abuja at a monthly press briefing on ongoing military operations.

Mr Onoja said troops, during joint land, air and maritime operations with other security agencies, also arrested 314 suspects and recovered 93 assorted weapons during the period.

He said the operations led to the surrender of 18 terrorists, destruction of three illegal refining sites, and recovery of 21,910 litres of stolen petroleum products.

According to him, the renewed offensive reflects the military’s sustained pressure on terrorist networks, criminal gangs and economic saboteurs across all theatres.

In the North-East, troops of Operation Hadin Kai killed 73 insurgents, arrested 159 suspects and rescued 112 civilians, while several terrorists surrendered due to intensified operations.

Mr Onoja said the troops also repelled multiple attacks, disrupted cross-border logistics and recovered arms and ammunition in Borno and Yobe states.

“In the North-West, Operation Fansan Yamma troops neutralised 24 terrorists, arrested 13 and rescued 22 kidnap victims through aggressive patrols and coordinated air-ground operations,” he said.

He added that troops in the North-Central under Operations Savannah Shield, Enduring Peace and Whirl Stroke conducted clearance and interdiction missions, dismantling kidnapping networks and illegal arms supply chains.

He noted that a major breakthrough was the discovery and dismantling of an illegal arms manufacturing facility in Plateau.

In the South-South, troops of Operation Delta Safe intensified operations against oil theft, arresting 14 suspects, destroying illegal refining sites and intercepting large volumes of stolen petroleum products.

Similarly, troops of Operation Udo Ka in the South-East arrested 60 suspects, rescued 18 victims and recovered weapons while sustaining pressure on criminal and secessionist elements.

Mr Onoja said the operations also exposed networks of collaborators, gunrunners and informants aiding criminal groups across the country.

He acknowledged a recent kidnapping incident in Oyo State, adding that the Chief of Defence Staff, Olufemi Oluyede, had ordered immediate reinforcement and deployment of surveillance assets to track the perpetrators.

He said the military remained resolute in restoring security, assuring that troops would sustain pressure until all threats were neutralised.

“The Armed Forces will not relent in its constitutional mandate to defend Nigeria’s sovereignty and protect citizens,” he said.

Mr Onoja commended troops for their gallantry and professionalism and called on Nigerians to support security agencies with credible intelligence. 

(NAN) 

Continue Reading

Business

Malabu faction sues FG over OPL 245 split, demands N1 trillion in damages

info

Published

on

By

Oil rig 4.jpg

A faction of Malabu Oil & Gas Ltd has filed a N1 trillion suit against the federal government over the splitting of the Oil Prospecting Licence (OPL) 245.

In the suit filed in the firm’s name through its lawyer, Reuben Atabo, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), the plaintiff sought an order from Judge Mohammed Umar of the Federal High Court in Abuja to quash the government’s conversion of OPL 245 to OML 245.

Malabu sued the President, the Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF) and the Minister of Petroleum Resources in the suit marked FHC/ABJ/CS/871/2026.

In a motion on notice filed on 25 May by Mr Atabo, the company argued that the conversion of OPL 245 to OML 245 was done while several cases were pending at the Federal High Court up to the Supreme Court.

It therefore sought a declaration that splitting OPL 245 into four assets—to be managed by Shell Nigeria Ultra-Deep Limited, Shell Nigeria Exploration Production Company Ltd, Nigerian Agip Exploration Company Ltd, and NNPC Limited through the OPL 245 Resolution Agreement signed around 5 March—was unlawful.

PT WHATSAPP CHANNEL

Malabu also seeks an order awarding N1 trillion in damages against the respondents jointly and severally.

The company said the fine was for unlawful interference with its interests in OPL 245 and for actions that exceed the limits of the Petroleum Industry Act 2021.

In an affidavit in support of the motion, a shareholder and director, Alhaji Mohammed Sani Abacha, detailed the company’s history and its prolonged legal battle over OPL 245.

The judge set 11 June for the hearing.

Last Thursday (22 May), Mr Umar granted leave to Malabu Oil & Gas Ltd to apply for a judicial review, to seek declarations and injunctions against the executive action of the federal government to split OPL 245.

The judge, in a ruling, held that the motion ex-parte, moved by Atabo, in respect of the relief sought, was meritorious.

The suit came less than two months after President Bola Tinubu on 5 March announced the government had resolved a decades-long dispute over Oil Prospecting Licence (OPL) 245, one of Nigeria’s most commercially significant deepwater oil blocks.

At the time, the presidency said the agreement paves the way for development that could add approximately 150,000 barrels per day to Nigeria’s production capacity.

Although details of the agreement are still sketchy and were not made public, the president’s office described it as a “historic settlement” that would unlock the development of one of Nigeria’s most strategically important deepwater resources.

On Thursday, Malabu in its suit alleged that the Federal Government split OPL 245 into four separate assets and reassigned them to Shell Nigeria Ultra-Deep Limited, Shell Nigeria Exploration Production Company Limited, Nigerian Agip Exploration Company Limited, and Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) Limited.

According to Malabu, the reallocation was carried out through the OPL 245 Resolution Agreement executed on or about 5 March.

The firm further alleged that the action was taken without the consent or approval of its directors.

The matter is expected to return to court on 11 June for further proceedings.

Background

OPL 245 was originally awarded to Malabu Oil and Gas by the regime of General Sani Abacha in 1998.

Under the terms of the award, Malabu — a briefcase company set up by Mr Abacha’s son and the then petroleum minister, Dan Etete, in controversial circumstances — was required to develop the block in partnership with an international technical partner and pay a signature bonus of $20 million.

The company paid only $2 million before entering into a joint operation agreement with Shell Nigeria Ultra Deep Limited (SNUD). Malabu received its operating licence in April 2001, but it was revoked three months later, in July 2001.

The administration of former President Olusegun Obasanjo subsequently invited ExxonMobil and Shell — Malabu’s technical partner — to bid for OPL 245 in partnership with the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC). Shell won the bid and began work on the block.

Malabu accused Shell of conniving with the government to seize the block and petitioned the House of Representatives, which directed the federal government to re-award Block 245 to the company.

Malabu also approached the Federal High Court in Abuja, but the suit was struck out. While an appeal was pending, the then Minister of State for Petroleum, Edmund Daukoru, sought an out-of-court settlement on behalf of the federal government.

The block’s association with Mr Etete — whom the federal government alleged had awarded the block to himself while in office — inflamed opinion in the Niger Delta, where communities demanded a full audit of oil block allocations and disclosure of the ethnic identities of their owners.

The Obasanjo government eventually reversed course, reclaimed OPL 245 from Shell, and re-awarded it to Malabu on the condition that the company pay a new signature bonus of $210 million, in addition to the $2 million earlier paid in 1998.

Malabu paid the sum and withdrew its court cases, but the settlement created another dispute.

Shell filed for arbitration at the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID) in Washington, D.C., and also instituted proceedings at the Federal High Court in Abuja. SNUD, which had entered into a Production Sharing Contract with the NNPC in 2002, had paid $1 million of the $210 million signature bonus and held the remaining $209 million in an escrow account with JP Morgan pending resolution of the dispute.

Shell sought compensation and damages exceeding $2 billion, citing costs incurred in de-risking the block.

Several settlement efforts followed, though none produced a definitive outcome. However, a Terms of Settlement Framework was adopted in 2006.

In April 2011, under the Goodluck Jonathan administration, then Attorney-General Mohammed Adoke brokered a Resolution Agreement.

Under the agreement signed on 29 April 2011, Malabu agreed to waive all claims to OPL 245 in exchange for compensation from the federal government. Shell, in turn, agreed to withdraw all suits against the government and to pay, through the federal government, the sum of $1.092 billion as full and final settlement of Malabu’s claims. The block would then revert to Shell and its new partner, Italian oil company Eni.

In June 2013, the matter was formally concluded on those terms, and presidential approval was granted for the payment of $1.092 billion to Malabu — now controlled by Mr Etete after scheming out the Abachas — from the federal government’s escrow account at JP Morgan in London.

Italian trial and acquittals

The deal later attracted international scrutiny. Italian prosecutors alleged that most of the $1.3 billion purchase price for OPL 245 had been siphoned off to politicians and intermediaries.

PREMIUM TIMES reported that about half of the funds were transferred to the accounts of controversial businessman Abubakar Aliyu, believed to be a front for senior government officials.

Shell and Eni, along with several of their former and current executives — including Eni CEO Claudio Descalzi — were tried in Italy. All were acquitted in 2021 after denying any wrongdoing.

In Nigeria, Mr Adoke was later named in the $1.1 billion scandal. The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) accused him of benefitting fraudulently from the deal he had helped broker as Attorney-General.

He was arraigned before the FCT High Court in Abuja in February 2020 on a 40-count amended charge of bribery and related offences alongside Mr Aliyu, Rasky Gbinigie, Malabu Oil and Gas Limited, Nigeria Agip Exploration Limited, Shell Nigeria Extra Deep Limited, and Shell Nigeria Exploration Production Company Limited.

The EFCC later admitted it lacked sufficient evidence against Mr Adoke, and the court dismissed the charges. In a separate case at the Federal High Court, the EFCC accused him of laundering N300 million allegedly derived from bribery. He was also discharged and acquitted in that case.

In his book (The Burden of Service) published last year, Mr Adoke described the OPL 245 litigation as “as lucrative as OPL 245 itself for lawyers and their allies” during the Buhari administration. He characterised it as “a monumental waste of resources.”

Mr Adoke has continued to deny any wrongdoing, maintaining that no federal government money went missing and that those who brokered the 2011 settlement should be credited for civic patriotism, having saved the government from financial embarrassment arising from mismanagement of the original award process.

Following the announcement of a resolution by Mr Tinubu, Mr Adoke called on the Nigerian government to offer him an “unreserved apology” over what he described as years of persecution and humiliation linked to the controversial OPL 245 oil block deal.

(NAN)


Continue Reading

Trending