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09/06/2026

Delta Police Arrest Four Suspected Gun Runners Linked to Effurun Firearm Case ゚

LIFE Advocates Stronger Community Support for Reproductive Health Laws in Lagos....Mobilizes Stakeholders to Strengthen ...
09/06/2026

LIFE Advocates Stronger Community Support for Reproductive Health Laws in Lagos
....Mobilizes Stakeholders to Strengthen Reproductive Health Advocacy in Lagos

By Naomi Onome

On June 2, 2026, the Leadership Initiative for Youth Empowerment (LIFE) intensified calls for stronger community engagement and sustained advocacy to advance s*xual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR) laws and policies in Lagos State, emphasizing the need for collective action to ensure improved access to reproductive healthcare services and the protection of the rights of women and girls.

The call was made during an Advocacy Stakeholders Exchange on "Strengthening Community Demand for Reproductive Health-Related Laws and Policies in Lagos State," held at the Ishaga Community Town Hall in Oshodi-Isolo Local Government Area on Tuesday.

The engagement brought together healthcare workers, community and religious leaders, Lagos State health officials, youth representatives, and other stakeholders from Oshodi-Isolo and neighbouring communities to discuss challenges affecting access to s*xual and reproductive health services and strategies for improving policy implementation.

Facilitating the discussion, LIFE Program Officer Obinna Okonkwo, described the forum as an interactive platform aimed at educating stakeholders on s*xual and reproductive health rights and empowering them to advocate for improved services within their communities.

According to him, the objective is to build the capacity of community leaders and stakeholders so they can identify gaps in reproductive health services and demand implementation of policies and laws that guarantee access to quality reproductive healthcare for women and girls in Lagos state.

"Once people are informed and empowered, they can begin to demand laws and policies that ensure women and girls have access to the reproductive health services they need," he said.

A major focus of the engagement was the discussion around safe and unsafe termination of pregnancy. Participants examined the circumstances under which pregnancy termination may be physically or mentally necessary, including cases where a pregnancy poses a threat to a woman's life, health or mental well being, or results from r**e or in**st.

Okonkwo referenced the Safe Termination of Pregnancy (STOP) Guideline, a policy document developed in collaboration with stakeholders to guide procedures and eligibility for safe pregnancy termination. He noted that while the guideline generated public debate and was subsequently suspended, advocacy efforts continued for its reinstatement and implementation.

"We are advocating for policies that ensure women and girls who fall within legally permissible circumstances can access safe reproductive health services without discrimination or unnecessary barriers," he stated.

Stakeholders identified several factors limiting access to s*xual and reproductive health services in communities, including religious beliefs, cultural norms, stigma, fear of judgment by healthcare providers, financial constraints, and inadequate awareness.

Participants stressed that many women and girls avoid seeking professional medical care due to fear of societal condemnation and the high cost of healthcare services, often resorting to unsafe alternatives.

To address these challenges, stakeholders recommended sustained public awareness campaigns, community sensitization programs, engagement with religious and traditional leaders, and stronger collaboration with policymakers.

Some participants also called for the formation of organized advocacy groups comprising community leaders, faith-based organizations, and civil society groups to push for reproductive health reforms and the passage of supportive legislation.

Others advocated increased dissemination of information through flyers, workshops, seminars, and community dialogues to educate residents on reproductive health rights and available services.

The stakeholders further emphasized the importance of creating safe spaces where survivors of r**e, in**st, and other forms of s*xual violence can share their experiences without fear of stigma or discrimination.

Mr. Obinna Okonkwo urged community members to refer women and girls with lived experiences of challenges in accessing reproductive health services to the organizations, saying their testimonies could help influence policy decisions and legislative reforms.

The meeting concluded with a renewed commitment by stakeholders to strengthen community advocacy, raise awareness, and engage decision-makers to ensure women and girls in Lagos State have improved access to s*xual and reproductive health services.

Speaking at the close of the event, Okonkwo thanked participants for their contributions and encouraged them to continue championing reproductive health awareness within their respective communities.

He reiterated that community engagement remains critical to achieving policy reforms that protect the health, dignity and rights of women and girls across Lagos State.

09/06/2026

The rising cost of diesel is crippling businesses - Business man laments ゚

Subscribe to get exclusive benefits:https://www.facebook.com/61580963879295/subscribenowGAHTO, NAPTIP Rescues Trafficked...
09/06/2026

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GAHTO, NAPTIP Rescues Trafficked Nigerian Girls from Mali, Burkina Faso, and Côte d'Ivoire
.. reiterates commitment to combat trafficking networks

No fewer than seven young Nigerian Girls who were allegedly trafficked to Mali, Burkina Faso and Côte d'Ivoire under false pretences have by Nigerian authorities following a coordinated intervention by the National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP) and the Global Anti-Human Trafficking Organisation (GAHTO).

The survivors, who hail from Plateau, Cross River and Edo State, narrated harrowing experiences of deception, exploitation and coercion after being lured with promises of legitimate jobs abroad.

The victims revealed that dozens of Nigerian girls are allegedly working under similar conditions in various locations across Mali, Burkina Faso, and other African countries.

According to their accounts, recruiters and agents promised them employment opportunities in boutiques, restaurants, phone accessory shops, domestic services, and other businesses in Mali and Burkina Faso, respectively.

However, upon arrival, they allegedly discovered that they had been trafficked into prostitution rings and were expected to engage in commercial s*x work to repay debts ranging up to 1.5 million CFA francs.

One of the victims, 22-year-old Sandy Sophia from Barkin Ladi Local Government Area of Plateau State, said she was persuaded by a friend who claimed to be working in Senegal.

Sophia explained that she repeatedly sought clarification about the nature of the job but was assured it was not s*x work.

"I asked countless times if it was prostitution, and they kept telling me it was not. It was only after we reached Burkina Faso that they finally admitted it was prostitution," she said.

Another victim, 19-year-old Rose, a graduate of Plateau State Polytechnic, disclosed that she had hoped to earn money to support her education and family.

"I was told I would be selling in a boutique and helping with cooking. My mother was initially reluctant to allow me to travel because of stories about girls being trafficked abroad, but I was assured it was genuine work. When we arrived in Mali, we discovered it was prostitution," she recounted.

The survivors alleged that whenever they protested or demanded to return home, they were threatened with spiritual consequences, including claims that anyone who refused to comply or failed to repay their debt would become mentally unstable.

Seventeen-year-old Esther, one of the youngest victims, said she was recruited while working in Lagos after being promised a domestic service job. She narrated how she and others eventually escaped with the assistance of a Nigerian man from their community who was living and working in Mali.

Another 17-year-old victim from Cross River State said she and her sister were recruited by a man identified as Peter, who promised them jobs in his sister's businesses abroad. Upon arrival, they were allegedly informed that they would have to engage in prostitution to repay transportation and migration expenses.

One of the survivors, Bless Inode Godwin from Cross River State, said she and other girls were recruited by a man identified as Malik, who assured them they would work in his sister's businesses in Mali. However, upon arrival, they discovered they had been deceived and were instead forced into prostitution in a bar.

The survivors were allegedly informed that they owed millions of CFA francs to their traffickers and were pressured to engage in s*x work to repay the debt. When they resisted, they were reportedly subjected to starvation, threats, and other forms of coercion.

During the handover of some rescued victims to community leaders from Plateau State, the president of the Birom Community Association in Lagos, Julius Bodiacubb, expressed concern over the rising cases of human trafficking affecting young women and called for stronger efforts to combat the crime.

More Reports...

Two Edo Girls Recount the Ordeal of Human Trafficking and Forced Prostitution in Burkina Faso and Côte d'Ivoire Two young women from Edo State, Augusta and Elizabeth, have narrated how they were deceived and trafficked to Burkina Faso and Côte d'Ivoire under the false promise of legitimate employment, only to be forced into prostitution.

Twenty-year-old Augusta, from the Owan area of Edo State, said she was introduced to the trip by a relative who convinced her family that she would secure a better life abroad. She travelled in February 2026, unaware of the true nature of the work awaiting her.

According to her, upon arrival in Burkina Faso, she discovered that she was expected to engage in commercial s*x work. When she refused, she was physically assaulted and pressured to recruit other girls, including her own sister, into the trade.

Augusta revealed that despite generating significant income for her handlers, she was never given proper records of her earnings or debts. She said she was told she owed about 1.5 million CFA francs but was never informed how much she had repaid. She further disclosed that she became pregnant before travelling and endured severe hardship during her stay abroad.

Necessities such as food and water had to be paid for, while threats and intimidation were used to keep victims under control. Similarly, Elizabeth recounted how she accompanied Augusta after being promised legitimate work opportunities in Côte d'Ivoire. However, upon arrival, she discovered that the promised jobs did not exist and that she was also being forced into prostitution.

She described the living conditions as harsh and exploitative, saying she was compelled to surrender most of her earnings to her traffickers while receiving little or no support. Elizabeth, who was also pregnant during the period, said she feared for her life after being threatened and pressured to continue working despite her condition.

Both women said they were never informed of the true nature of the work before leaving Nigeria. They eventually sought help after realising they were trapped in a cycle of exploitation, debt bo***ge, and abuse. With the assistance of sympathisers and anti-trafficking advocates, several of the victims eventually escaped and were rescued. Mr Prosper from GAHTO facilitated their return to Nigeria.

Expressing relief and gratitude, they urged other young women to be cautious of promises of lucrative jobs abroad, warning that such offers often conceal human trafficking and s*xual exploitation networks. "I am very happy to be back home," one of the victims said, adding that she would advise other girls never to accept suspicious travel offers without proper verification.

The survivors appealed to government authorities, law enforcement agencies, and anti-human trafficking organisations to intensify efforts against traffickers who continue to lure unsuspecting young Nigerians abroad with false promises of employment, only to subject them to exploitation, abuse, and forced prostitution.

The rescue operation was facilitated by the Global Anti-Human Trafficking Organisation (GAHTO) following a request from the NAPTIP Benin Zonal Command. The two victims from Benin were officially received by NAPTIP officials upon their arrival in Nigeria.

GAHTO reiterated its commitment to combating human trafficking and rescuing vulnerable Nigerians trapped in exploitation networks across Africa and beyond.

GAHTO urged members of the public, particularly young women seeking opportunities abroad, to thoroughly verify job offers and migration arrangements before embarking on any journey. The organisation also called on families and communities to remain vigilant and report suspicious recruitment activities to relevant authorities.

This report is based on the testimonies of the rescued victims and the information provided by the Global Anti-Human Trafficking Organisation (GAHTO).

Investigations into the activities of the suspected traffickers are ongoing.

For rescue operations and trafficking-related assistance, GAHTO can be contacted through its official channels at +2348050503535 or visit www.gahto.org for more information.
゚ *xtrafficking

https://naomisophyblog.com.ng/gahto-naptip-rescues-trafficked-nigerian-girls-from-mali-burkina-faso-and-cote-divoire/

World Environment Day: Union Bank Executive Says Agricultural Finance Is Nigeria’s Most Critical Climate Action...Says "...
05/06/2026

World Environment Day: Union Bank Executive Says Agricultural Finance Is Nigeria’s Most Critical Climate Action
...Says "Nature has been sending us signals. Our Farmers read them first".

By Mannir U. Ringim (PhD)

As the world marks World Environment Day, the most consequential climate-finance decision Nigeria and much of West Africa can make is closer to home than Baku: how we choose to finance the land and the people who feed us.

Long before the satellite forecasts and the seasonal advisories, the African farmer learned to read the sky. He watched the colour of the clouds, the behaviour of the birds, the first scent of rain on hot ground, and he planted accordingly.

For generations, that knowledge was reliable enough to feed nations. Today, it is faltering not because the farmer has forgotten how to read the signs, but because the signs themselves have changed. The rains that once came in April now arrive in May, or not at all. The harmattan lingers. The river that once flooded every decade now floods twice in five years. Nature is still sending its signals; they have become harder and crueller to read.

Today, the world marks World Environment Day. This year’s theme, “Inspired by Nature. For Climate. For Our Future,” will be examined in Baku and echoed in boardrooms and headlines across the world. It is a worthy conversation, but the people who live that theme most literally will not be in any of those rooms. They are the smallholder farmers of northern Nigeria and the wider Sahel, the rice growers of the Niger basin, the cassava, cocoa, and oil palm households from Cross River to the forests of the coast. It is a Nigerian story, but not only a Nigerian one: the same signals are being read across West Africa, and in the last decade, the reading has grown harder.

I want to make a single argument on this day of World Environment Day, and although it begins in the field, it ends in the boardroom: in our part of the world, agricultural finance is climate finance.

The most direct, most local and most consequential form of climate action available to the region’s financial sector is not a distant carbon market or an offset scheme negotiated abroad. It is the decision to put serious, patient and intelligent capital into the hands of the people working the most climate-exposed asset we possess — our land. Get that decision right, and we address food security, rural livelihoods and climate resilience in a single motion. Get it wrong, and we will keep treating three faces of one crisis as though they were unrelated problems.

The signals from the land
To understand why this matters, it helps to travel the land as those of us in business banking do. Across the Sahel, the desert is not a metaphor; it advances year upon year over farmland that fed families in living memory. Lake Chad — once one of Africa’s great freshwater bodies, shared by Nigeria, Niger, Chad and Cameroon — has retreated to a fraction of its former size, carrying fishing and farming livelihoods with it. In the middle belts, the rains have turned violent and unpredictable, and a single night of flooding can erase a season’s labour and a year’s income.

Along the coast and the eroding river valleys, gully after gully swallows farms, homes and roads. These are not isolated misfortunes; they are the local expressions of a global phenomenon, and the people absorbing them first are the people who feed everyone else.

This is the part of the climate story we too often misfile. We log the late rains under “agriculture,” the flood under “disaster relief,” the rising cost of a meal under “the economy,” and we reserve the word “environment” for tree-planting campaigns. But these are not separate ledgers.

The farmer who cannot plant because the rains failed, the trader who charges more because the harvest shrank, the young person who leaves the village because the farm no longer pays — all are responding to the same signal. In our region, climate change announces itself first as an agricultural event. We will not manage it as an environmental one until we are willing to finance it as an economic one.

A paradox of capital

Here lies a contradiction we have tolerated for far too long. Agriculture employs more people than any other sector in Nigeria and across much of West Africa, and contributes a substantial share of national output. By any honest measure, it is the foundation of the real economy, and yet, for decades, it has drawn only a single-digit share of total bank lending, which is a fraction of its weight in jobs, in food, and in stability. We have built financial systems that are, in effect, under-invested in the very sector that sustains them.

The reasons are familiar to every banker. Agriculture has long been judged too risky, too seasonal, too informal and too hard to collateralise. A farmer’s income arrives once or twice a year, not monthly; his balance sheet consists of a few hectares, some livestock, and a great deal of practical knowledge. No conventional credit model was built to value it. So, capital did the rational short-term thing: it stayed away, or lent briefly and expensively, on terms that suited the lender’s calendar rather than the crop’s.

That caution made sense in a stable climate. In a changing one, it is self-defeating because the farmer who cannot borrow cannot adapt. He cannot buy the drought-tolerant seed, install the modest irrigation that frees him from relying on a single rainy season, or afford the storage that keeps a good harvest from spoiling before the market. We have been asking our most climate-exposed citizens to face the hardest conditions in memory with the least capital available to them. That is not prudence; it is a slow failure of both economics and adaptation, and the bill arrives at every table as more expensive food.

Risk is also a design problem.

If there is good news here, it is that much of what we call “agricultural risk” is not a law of nature. It is a design problem, and design problems can be solved. The past few years have produced a genuinely more sophisticated toolkit, and the institutions willing to use it are finding the sector far more bankable than the old assumptions allowed. It begins with lending that fits the farmer rather than forcing the farmer to fit the facility: cash-flow facilities structured around the crop cycle, disbursing at planting and falling due after harvest.

Value-chain and anchor-borrower models, in which a credible off-taker sits between the bank and thousands of smallholders, solve the scale, collateral, and market access problems at a single stroke. Warehouse-receipt systems let stored grain serve as collateral, so a farmer need not sell everything at harvest, when prices are lowest, merely to raise cash.

Around that core sits an expanding set of instruments: input and mechanisation finance to lift yields; irrigation finance to break the dependence on the rains; cold-chain and storage finance to attack the staggering share of what we grow that is still lost after harvest, losses that are, in their own quiet way, as much an environmental cost as an economic one, since every wasted tonne is water, land, fuel and labour spent for nothing.

Weather-index insurance can pay out automatically when rainfall falls below a threshold, turning an uninsurable risk into a priced one, and the spread of mobile technology and farm-level data — satellite imagery, mapping, digital payment histories — is finally giving lenders an evidence-based way to assess the smallholder they once treated as invisible. None of this is theoretical; each instrument is already in use somewhere in the region today. The task is not to invent new tools but to deploy the existing ones at scale, and with discipline.

Here, agricultural finance and the climate agenda converge, because the instruments that make farming bankable are, almost without exception, the ones that make it resilient. Irrigation is an adaptation. Drought-tolerant seed is an adaptation. Healthier soils, smarter water use, agroforestry that holds back the desert, storage that wastes less — these are not optional “green” extras; they are the difference between a farm that survives a harsher climate and one that does not. The point lands with particular force in West Africa, among the most climate-vulnerable yet least climate-financed regions on earth.

The global conversation has turned decisively to climate finance — Azerbaijan, this year’s World Environment Day host, carried that agenda as president of COP29 — but climate finance is not only something that happens at altitude. Its most grounded form, for us, is the facility that enables a cooperative to drill a borehole or build a warehouse. The local reality is how the global ambition gets delivered.

Shared risk, shared frontier

None of this can rest on the banks alone, and it should not. The risks are real, and the most durable way to manage them is to share them among the actors who each hold a piece of the solution. Governments set the frameworks, build rural infrastructure, and provide the guarantees that make long-tenor lending viable.

Development finance institutions, the African Development Bank chief among them, with their long-standing ambition to feed the continent, bring the patient, blended capital that crowds in commercial lenders rather than out. Insurers price the weather risk that banks should not carry alone.

Agritech firms and aggregators supply data and market linkages. Banks bring structure, reach, governance and capital. Nigeria has tried versions of this before — the Agricultural Credit Guarantee Scheme and the Anchor Borrowers’ Programme among them, and the experience taught us both the promise of public-private agricultural finance and the discipline it demands: such partnerships work only when they are designed with rigour, governed transparently, and judged by outcomes rather than by money disbursed.

For those of us whose responsibilities include the public sector, the most valuable role a bank can play is often not as lender of last resort but as honest broker, aligning the ambitions of government, the capital of development partners, and the needs of the farmer into structures that actually move money to the field, and the prize is larger than risk management.

It is tempting, faced with advancing desert and shrinking water, to speak of the Sahel and the rural North only in the language of crisis. However, that language is incomplete and self-fulfilling. The same regions hold vast arable land, established value chains in grains, livestock and horticulture, and one of the youngest workforces on earth. When a young person can finance an irrigated dry-season crop, or a women’s cooperative can secure inputs and a guaranteed buyer, agriculture stops being a fallback and becomes a future.

That shift — from relief to investment, from managing decline to financing growth — is the single most powerful contribution finance can make to the regions on the climate front line. It is also good business: the young and the underserved are not a market to be pitied, but the largest growth opportunity in African banking.

Where we choose to stand
At Union Bank, this is not a new conviction. An institution that has banked Nigerian communities for more than a century has watched the relationship between people and land change in real time and has come to regard agricultural finance not as a niche or an act of charity, but as national infrastructure — and, increasingly, as climate infrastructure.

The question we put to ourselves is not whether agriculture is worth financing, but how to finance it in a way that builds resilience rather than extends credit, and how to do so at the scale the moment now demands.

The campaign behind this year’s World Environment Day speaks of the signals the Earth is sending us, and the signals we choose to send back. It is an apt frame for a banker. For too long, the signal our financial system sent the farmer was a quiet, discouraging one: you are too risky, too small, too far away to be worth our capital. The farmer heard it clearly, and many of his children left the land. We can now send a different signal.

“For Climate” and “For Our Future” are not phrases to be admired from a distance. For Nigeria and its neighbours, there are decisions to be made at home in how we price risk, where we direct capital, and whether we are finally willing to stand behind the people who have been reading nature’s signals all along.

The most meaningful climate commitment our financial sector can make this World Environment Day is not a statement; it is a willingness to finance the land that feeds us, intelligently and at scale. The moment, as the campaign rightly insists, is now. Now for climate — and, just as urgently, now for the farmer.
Mannir U. Ringim is Executive Director, Business Banking at Union Bank of Nigeria, with responsibility for the Public Sector and the Bank’s Northern, South-South and South-East businesses.

He is versatile in spearheading new business development, cultivating partnerships, and fostering healthy stakeholder relationships, with a focus on driving business growth and achieving revenue milestones.

Mannir’s educational qualifications include a PhD in Economics (focus on Financial Inclusion) from Bayero University, Kano, and Bachelor of Science and Master of Science degrees in Economics from the same institution. He also holds executive certifications from INSEAD Business School in Singapore, Kellogg School of Management in Chicago, and Euromoney in London, reflecting his dedication to continuous growth and excellence. Mannir has been an Honorary Senior Member of the Chartered Institute of Bankers of Nigeria (HCIB) since 2015. ゚

Trade Fair Market Killing: Task Force Chairman Accuses BBA Officials, Demands Justice for Slain Officer...as new facts c...
05/06/2026

Trade Fair Market Killing: Task Force Chairman Accuses BBA Officials, Demands Justice for Slain Officer
...as new facts connected to disputed land, illegal construction, and gunfire surface in the trade fair tragedy.

By Primetime Reports

Fresh revelations have emerged over the violent clash that rocked the Balogun Business Association (BBA) Market at the Lagos International Trade Fair Complex, resulting in the death of a security operative and injuries to three others.

Alhaji Ismaila Bakare, the Chairman of the International Trade Fair Complex Security Task Force, accused officials and associates of the Balogun Business Association of conducting what he called an illegal construction exercise that led to a deadly attack on task force members.

Speaking during an interview on the incident, Bakare recounted how he was directed by the Executive Director of the Lagos International Trade Fair Complex, Mrs. Veronica Ndanusa, to investigate reports of ongoing construction activities within a disputed section of the complex on a Sunday, a day when construction activities are prohibited.

According to him, upon arrival at the site, he discovered workers erecting attachment structures and immediately halted the exercise.

"I saw them putting up attachment structures. I stopped them and confiscated their generator and welding machine. We do not allow anybody to work on Sundays because it is against the regulations of the Trade Fair Complex," Bakare said.

He explained that those involved were instructed to report to the management office on the next working day to retrieve the seized equipment.

Bakare alleged that the workers initially attempted to confront members of the task force but were prevented from doing so.

"They wanted to fight us, but I warned them against any violent action because I was acting on management's directive," he stated.

According to the task force chairman, the situation escalated after the workers allegedly procured another generator and welding machine and relocated to another section of the disputed area to continue construction.

He claimed the individuals involved identified themselves as members of the Balogun Business Association.

"I saw the Chief Security Officer and the Assistant Chief Security Officer of BBA there. They claimed they were working for BBA," he said.

Bakare further alleged that when members of the task force moved to stop the renewed construction activities, they were ambushed by armed men.

"They attacked us. Some carried dangerous weapons. As we tried to escape, gunshots rang out," he said.

The chairman specifically accused a man identified as Afam Ezeakire, popularly known as "Master," of opening fire on task force officials.

"Afam, also known as Master, was the person carrying the gun. He shot one of my men," Bakare alleged.

The victim was identified as Kabiru Jakpata, a member of the task force who later died from gunshot wounds.

"They shot about three people, but one died. The others survived after receiving treatment," he said.

Bakare described the death of Jakpata as heartbreaking, noting that the deceased was the only son of his parents, a husband with two wives and a father of eight children.

"His death is painful. He was the only son of his parents. He left behind two wives and eight children," he lamented.

The task force chairman disclosed that after the shooting, surviving members rushed the injured to the police station within the Trade Fair Complex and reported the incident to authorities.

He added that the Executive Director subsequently contacted the Lagos State Commissioner of Police, prompting security intervention and the sealing of the affected section of the market.

Bakare also claimed that during a meeting with police authorities, the President of the Balogun Business Association, Chief Oscar Paul Ikechukwu Odogwu, acknowledged authorizing the construction activities.

"When we got to the Commissioner's office, Oscar admitted that he directed the people carrying out the work," Bakare alleged.

The task force chairman insisted that the construction exercise was illegal, arguing that it was conducted on a Sunday and on land that did not belong to those carrying out the development.

He further claimed that the disputed land belongs to Mega Rickon Resources Limited and that the workers failed to provide documentation proving ownership of the property.

"What they were doing was not on their land. That is why management directed us to stop the work and ask them to produce documents proving ownership," he said.

Bakare, who has worked at the Trade Fair Complex for about two years, maintained that the actions of the task force were in line with management directives and established regulations.

He called on law enforcement agencies to ensure that all those responsible for the killing are brought to justice.

The incident has continued to generate controversy within the Lagos International Trade Fair Complex, with allegations and counter-allegations emerging from different parties connected to the dispute.

Meanwhile, police investigations into the fatal shooting and the circumstances surrounding the disputed construction project are ongoing.

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