27/11/2025
Today in Abuja, the Nigerian Senate finally said, ‘Enough is enough.’ Kidnapping has now been officially classified as an act of terrorism. Yes the same menace stressing communities across the country now carries the full weight of anti-terror laws.
This decision, made during yesterday’s plenary, is already trending everywhere this morning. And honestly? Nigerians are calling it long overdue. The big question now: will this strong label come with strong action? Because the streets are tired, the villages are tired and we need more than headlines. We need results.”
And in another major update, after declaring kidnapping an act of terrorism, the Senate is now considering a full review of Nigeria’s gun laws. Lawmakers are debating whether citizens should legally own fi****ms for self-defence because, honestly, the state has been struggling to protect people.
The conversation is heating up: some say it’s time Nigerians defend themselves, others fear it could open the door to even more chaos. Either way, the message is clear insecurity don reach breaking point, and Abuja knows it.”
ECOWAS and AU Condemn Coup: The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) and the African Union (AU) where Nigeria is a key leader are strongly condemning the recent military takeover in Guinea-Bissau, demanding the immediate release of detained officials and a return to constitutional order..”
“Listen, Nigeria this one weak everybody. A new revelation has dropped in the National Assembly, and it is wild.
Lawmaker Idris Wase revealed that suspected Boko Haram members and other criminals were actually found on the Nigerian Army and Police recruitment lists. Yes, you heard that right the same people we’re fighting were almost the ones given uniforms and guns.
This exposes a serious infiltration problem and raises one loud question: who exactly is screening these recruits? Because if terrorists are slipping into the system like this, then we’re not just fighting insecurity we’re fighting internal sabotage.
✨