society
The Price of Mocking Brilliance: A Nation that Rewards Mediocrity
The Price of Mocking Brilliance: A Nation that Rewards Mediocrity.
(The Nafisa Abdullahi Scandal).
By George Omagbemi Sylvester | Published by SaharaWeeklyNG.com
On August 28, 2025, the Federal Government of Nigeria staged what it believed was a moment of national pride: the celebration of a 17-year-old girl, Nafisa Abdullahi from Yobe State, who conquered the globe at the TeenEagle Global English Championship in London. What should have been a defining national moment (a victory of knowledge over adversity) quickly degenerated into a spectacle of ridicule when the government handed her a paltry cash reward of ₦200,000.
Yes, ₦200,000. Not a scholarship. Not a guaranteed pathway to higher education. Not even a well-structured mentorship programme. Just ₦200,000, a sum that evaporates before the ink on a bank teller’s slip dries. This was Nigeria’s GIFT to brilliance.
The Arithmetic of Insult.
To appreciate the depth of this insult, one must juxtapose it with Nigeria’s lavish treatment of sportsmen. Just weeks earlier, victorious athletes returning from global tournaments were rewarded with $100,000 each (over ₦160 million). They were celebrated like royalty, paraded before cameras, and their feats were treated as national salvation. Yet Nafisa, who carried the nation’s banner through intellect, was invited all the way from Damaturu to Abuja only to be mocked with a cheque that barely covered the cost of her journey.
Transportation, accommodation and feeding for such a trip would eat deep into the so-called reward. By the time Nafisa and her parents return to Yobe, what is left of this “NATIONAL HONOUR”? It is not recognition; it is TOKENISM. It is not celebration; it is CONTEMPT.
As Nigerian writer Chinua Achebe once warned, “A man who brings home ant-infested faggots should not complain when visited by lizards.” By offering Nafisa ₦200,000, the government brought home the ant-infested wood of mockery and it should not be surprised that lizards of public outrage came crawling.
Spectacle Over Substance.
This ₦200,000 insult reveals something deeper: a governing philosophy that values spectacle over substance. Sports victories provide cameras, applause and quick political mileage. Intellectual triumphs, by contrast, are quieter, less glamorous and yield no instant political dividends. In the theatre of Nigerian governance, INTELLECT is BORING; MUSCLE is MARKETABLE.
History tells us otherwise. Nations do not rise on the strength of athletes; they rise on the foundation of ideas. Japan rebuilt itself after World War II not by producing football stars but by investing heavily in education and technology. South Korea transformed from poverty to prosperity through engineers, scientists and innovators. Singapore, once dismissed as a swamp, became a global giant by treating education as sacred.
Nigerian leaders know these facts but choose to ignore them. As Nelson Mandela rightly said, “Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world.” Yet, in Nigeria, education is treated like an unwanted burden and mocked with crumbs, underfunded in the budget and constantly sacrificed on the altar of political expediency.
The Economics of Shame.
What does ₦200,000 mean in real terms? In today’s Nigeria, it cannot pay a semester’s tuition at a modest private university. It cannot buy a decent laptop and guarantee a year of reliable internet access. It cannot sponsor participation in another international competition without the help of benevolent sponsors. Meanwhile, ₦160 million (the amount lavished on athletes) can pay for a PhD at Harvard, buy a home in Abuja, and still fund a scholarship foundation for dozens of students.
This is not a call to envy athletes. Sports INSPIRE and UNITE, their role is vital; but the DISPARITY is OBSCENE. When muscle is worth 800 times more than brain, what message does that send to Nigerian children? That the pursuit of intellect is a fool’s errand? That the path of books leads only to mockery?
One angry father captured the national mood on social media: “MY DAUGHTER ASKED ME, DADDY, IS IT BETTER TO BE A FOOTBALLER THAN TO BE INTELLIGENT? I had no answer.” That is the generational damage inflicted by Nigeria’s warped reward system.
The Global Contrast.
Elsewhere, intellectual triumphs are immortalized. Malala Yousafzai of Pakistan, who championed education against all odds, became a Nobel Laureate and a global ambassador for learning. India celebrates its top students with scholarships and mentorship opportunities. Rwanda invests deliberately in the education of its brightest minds as part of its national development strategy.
Nigeria, by contrast, throws billions at political allowances, lavish banquets and football matches while mocking intellectual heroes with what amounts to spare change. As Professor Wole Soyinka once lamented, “You cannot give what you don’t have. If leaders lack respect for knowledge, they cannot nurture it in society.”
Tokenism as Policy.
The tragedy is not just the ₦200,000 itself. It is the message behind it; that Nigeria does not consider INTELLECTUAL EXCELLENCE WORTHY of INVESTMENT. This tokenism is symptomatic of a broader disease. Education budgets are slashed. Teachers are unpaid for months. Pupils sit on bare floors in leaking classrooms. Millions of children are out of school, yet those who manage to shine are mocked with crumbs.
This is not accidental; it is deliberate. A society that does not value education is easier to CONTROL, easier to MANIPULATE and easier to EXPLOIT. Ignorance becomes a tool of governance. Such a society is also doomed to stagnation, trapped in cycles of poverty and mediocrity.
What Could Have Been.
Imagine if Nafisa’s victory had been rewarded with a full scholarship to one of the world’s leading universities. Imagine if the government had established an “INTELLECTUAL HEROES FUND” to support young Nigerians who excel on the global stage. Imagine if the President himself had hosted her at Aso Rock, telling every Nigerian child watching: See what books can do. This is the path to greatness.
Instead, Nafisa was handed ₦200,000; less than what a minister might spend on lunch. This is how nations kill dreams.
The Path Forward.
Nigeria must decide what it values. If it values fleeting applause, it will continue to reward spectacle while starving substance. If it values true progress, it must place education at the centre of national life. This requires more than rhetoric. It requires a philosophy shift:
Scholarships for Global Champions ~ Every student who lifts Nigeria’s name on the global intellectual stage must be guaranteed full scholarships and mentorship opportunities.
Creation of a National Education Heroes Fund ~ To support young minds beyond tokenism.
Reordering of National Priorities ~ Budgetary allocations must reflect the centrality of education, not the luxury of politicians.
Cultural Reorientation ~ We must teach children that intellect is not only valuable but sacred.
As the late Kofi Annan once said, “Knowledge is power. Information is liberating. Education is the premise of progress, in every society, in every family.” Nigeria cannot afford to trivialize this truth.
Nafisa: A Shining Light Amid Darkness.
Yet, even in the face of national mockery, Nafisa Abdullahi remains a symbol of hope. She has proven that Nigerian children, though raised in broken classrooms and neglected by the state, can still shine before the world. Her story must inspire others to know that brilliance is priceless, regardless of governmental tokenism.
The shame belongs not to her but to Nigeria; a country that rewards genius with peanuts while lavishing fortunes on spectacle. As history has shown, nations that mock education collapse under the weight of ignorance, while those that nurture it rise to greatness.
The Price of Mocking Brilliance.
On August 28, 2025, Nigeria mocked brilliance with ₦200,000. It revealed to the world not only its poverty of vision but also its hostility to intellect. Nafisa Abdullahi’s triumph could have been a national rallying point for millions of children. Instead, it became a metaphor for Nigeria’s misplaced values.
One day, history will remember that Nigeria once mocked genius with ₦200,000. By then, perhaps, the nation will understand the true cost of its shame.
society
NASIR EL RUFAI AS A THREAT TO NATIONAL SECURITY
NASIR EL RUFAI AS A THREAT TO NATIONAL SECURITY
BY FEMI FANI-KAYODE
Three very serious allegations were made last week by the former Minister of the FCT and former Governor of Kaduna state Mallam Nasir El Rufai.
Firstly that he bugged Mallam Nuhu Ribadu, the President’s National Security Advisor’s phone and is privy to his most sensitive conversations, secondly that the National Security Advisor’s office has imported large sums of dangerous chemical weapons into the country for unspecified purposes and thirdly that there is a conspiracy between the NSA and Governor Uba Sani of Kaduna state, his successor in office, to “destroy him” and “jail him for life”.
I have tried to stay away from the raging debate that followed these comments due to my longstanding friendship and respect for all three parties and their respective families but in view of the latest developments and in the light of these grave allegations I can no longer sit on the sidelines and maintain my silence.
Let me begin by saying that Mallam Nuhu Ribadu, Mallam Nasir El Rufai, Governor Uba Sani and my goodself were closer than brothers during President Olusegun Obasanjo’s Government and we worked closely as a tag team.
Uba Sani took over my old job as Special Assistant to the President on Public Affairs when I was appointed as a Minister, Nasir was my colleague in cabinet and Nuhu headed the EFCC. WE all attended Federal Executive Council meetings and more often than not we were on the same page on most national issues and we presented our cases with candour and vigour without any fear or favour at such cabinet meetings which President Obasanjo graciously allowed us to do.
This was as far back as over 20 years ago!
We were also all very close to President Obasanjo, whom we reverred, and had many private and closed door meetings with him together with a handful of other close associates about how to move his Government and the country forward and how to confront and contain his political enemies and detractors.
We were loyal to a fault, tough, young, hard-working, fearless and filled with zeal and we gave our very best to Obasanjo and his Government in our respective roles.
After we left office we all suffered severe persecution at the hands of President Yar’adua’s administration simply for being “Obasanjo boys” and we literally had to fight for our liberty and lives.
Nuhu and Nasir were compelled to leave Nigeria for fear for their lives whilst Uba and I stayed behind and weathered the very difficult storm.
Those were the most difficult, trying and testing days of our respective lives but thankfully we all pulled through, overcame all the obstacles placed before us and eventually won the day. We came out of it all alive, healthy and well and for that we give thanks to God.
Since those early years much has transpired and there were many realignments sometimes finding us on opposing sides.
Regardless of that our friendship and strong sense of brotherhood endured and remained intact even if we may have publicly disagreed from time to time.
The latest development in the saga of our respective lives are the comments made by Nasir in his interview with Charles Aniagolu of Arise Television on Friday about both Nuhu and Uba which I believe goes beyond the pale and sadly represents a permanent burning of bridges in terms of our brotherhood and collective friendship.
One of the things he said in that interview is that he bugged the phone of the NSA and to this, and much else, I am constrained to offer the following comments as an old friend and a concerned observer.
Permit me to begin by saying that it is likely that it is the same people that tapped the late Brigadier General Uba’s phone and gave the co-ordinates of his location to the terrorists that led to his execution that bugged the NSA’s phone.
It is likely that it is the same people that have enabled the terrorists to kill, abduct, terrorise and abduct our people and brought misery, suffering, tears and carnage to our land that bugged the NSA’s phone.
It is likely that it is the same people whose footsoldiers are creating havoc and bringing chaos to Niger, Kaduna, Kwara, Borno, Kogi, Katsina and other parts of our nation that bugged the NSA’s phone.
It is likely that it is the same people who wish to destabilise our nation, divide our people along ethnic and religious lines and instigate a violent, unconstitutional and bloody regime change that bugged the NSA’s phone.
These non-state actors, agents of destabilisation and terror-enablers are listening to ALL our conversations including those on WhatsApp.
The truth is that until they are brought to justice for their unconciable crimes no-one is safe.
Sadly Nasir El Rufai’s public admission of having a relationship with them and even confessing publicly that he exchanges information with them even though he acknowledged the fact that such a course of action is illegal makes him complicit to their crimes and an accessory after the fact.
If you can boast of bugging the NSA’s phone on national television it makes you a security threat to our nation.
Again if you can preside over the killing of 800 Christians in Southern Kaduna IN ONE DAY during the Christmas season in 2016 and do nothing to bring the perpetrators to book when you were Governor, if you can punish the Christians of Southern Kaduna and deny them their allocations and rights for 8 years, if you can preside over the slaughter of 1000 Shia Muslims IN ONE DAY in Zaria without consequence, if you can insult our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ and the Virgin Mary, if you can call Southern female Youth Corpers “whores”, if you can lock up critics of your Government and preside over the disappearance and murder of traditional rulers like the Agom Adara 111 who you denigrated and humiliated and other critics without consequence for 8 years, if you can seize people’s land, revoke their certificates of occupancy and knock down their homes out of spite and without due process, if you can publicly admit to offering and paying foreign terrorists money and “compensating” them for their losses, if you can accuse Senator Abdul Azeez Yari or Senator Ahmed Sani, both former Governors of Zamfara state, of deserving to be listed as terrorists by the American Congress, if you can turn on your former best friend who is now the NSA and your most loyal supporter who is now the Governor of your state and seek to malign and destroy them for no just cause, if you can turn around and blame the abduction and possible murder of Dadiyata on the former Governor of Kano state instead of accepting responsibility for his disappearance yourself, if you can claim not to have targetted and viciously persecuted Senator Shehu Sani, Audu Maikori, John Danfulani, Luka Biniyat, Steven Kefas, Nasiru Jagaban and countless others violating court orders and without due process simply for criticising your Government, if you can pick up over 100 Islamic clerics in Zaria whilst they were praying after you sacked them and denied them their entitlements and lock them up in prison, if you can pick up and send hundreds of Christians in Kajuru together with their Pastors to prison simply because they were protesting after their traditional ruler was murdered by terrorists, if you can accuse Nigerian Christians of being the ones behind Boko Haram, if you can say that President Goodluck Jonathan had an assasination squad and was planning to kill you, if you can accuse the NSA of importing what is essentially a lethal chemical and biological weapon and what you described as large quantities of “toxic, odourless and colourless poison from Poland” known as thalium sulphate into our country and imply that he has done so for an evil, sinister, nefarious and possibly homicidal purpose, if you can call the Senate President, Senator Godswill Akpabio, a “scumbag” on national television, if you can publicly call Senator Makarfi a former Governor of your state “a thief” with no evidence, if you can treat the former Governor of your state Governor Yero with disdain and contempt, if you can call President Buhari, President Obasanjo, President Jonathan, President Yar’dua, President Tinubu, Vice President Atiku Abubakar all manner of names in the past when it suited your purpose in an attempt to discredit and destroy them and their legacy, if you can say “anyone who fights me ends up dead” and that “even President Umaru Yar’adua who fought me is now in the grave”,
if you can say “when you engage me in a battle, it is either I am dead or you are dead and if you doubt that go and ask Yar’adua”, if you can demolish Justice Bashir Sambo and Alhaji Inuwa Abdulkadri’s homes together with that of countless others simply to satisfy your insatiable appetite for sadism and your pathological inclination for vindictiveness, if you can demolish markets and shops without court orders, if you can sack civil servants and teachers against court orders, if you can consistently treat our President with contempt and disdain and constantly disrespect and pour venom on the person of our Vice President Kashim Shettima whilst you were STILL in the ranks of the ruling party, if you can publicly threaten to send foreign election observers “back to their country in body bags”, if you can say the Northern elders are “paperweights” and that there are “no Northern elders” except for the likes of yourself, if you can publicly ask Governor Mai Mala Buni of Yobe state why yours truly should have been allowed to join the APC when he was the Interim National Chairman of the party in 2021 simply because I lambasted you for failing to protect Christians from the mass murder, genocide and ethnic cleansing that they were being subjected to under your watch in your state, if you can publicly say that every terrorist and insurgent that is killed by the Nigerian military is “a debt that shall be repaid” and if you can say and do so much more than all these atrocities I have listed then I say that you are not only a security risk and threat to the stability of our nation and welfare of our people but also that you have no right to complain about being investigated or being invited and detained for questioning by the security and intelligence agencies.
I went through it for 18 years and was locked up for a total of 9 months over that period of time.
Instead of going on television to say that I had bugged the NSA’s phone and allege a grand conspiracy that the Government of the day had imported chemical weapons to gas their opponents to death I presented my defence and stated my case calmly and cooly in court and in the end I won all four cases and was totally vindicated.
If you know you have done no wrong why can’t you calm down, pray to God, behave in a dignified manner, carry your cross, stop claiming that there is some kind of imaginary and nonsensical conspiracy against you emanating from Kaduna state and the NSA’s office and hope for the same?
If you know you are innocent why all the hot air, nauseating noise, goat-like bleating, delusionary assertions and wild accusations?
Why are you behaving like a snake or a chicken whose head has been cut off?
Do you consider yourself as being above the law?
You are not the first person that the security agencies attempted to arrest at the airport without a warrant or elsewhere and you will not be the first to be invited, arrested or detained and neither will you be the last.
These things have happened to most of us that chose the path of politics for our lives and it has been so since independence. All great leaders worth their salt have been detained, arrested, harassed, investigated, prosecuted and some even jailed at some point in their careers and those that have a clean spirit, whose innocence spoke for them and who are right before God have always prevailed and won back their freedom.
It happened to Sir Ahmadu Bello who was jailed for three months, Chief Obafemi Awolowo who was jailed for three years, President Olusegun Obasanjo who was jailed for three years, President Muhammadu Buhari who was under house arrest for three years, Vice President Alex Ekwueme who was in detention for three years, virtually all the major players in the First and Second Republic (many of whom even lost their lives) and so many others yet they took their plight with grace and an exemplary submission to the will of God like the great men they were and never accused the entire world of conspiring against them.
Neither did they give infantile, puerile and nonsensical interviews implying that the security organs of the state were importing chemical weapons to commit mass murder against opposition figures.
Only guilty men and hardened, unrepentant criminals talk like that and indulge in such rhetoric and it is usually driven by their dark hearts, their uninhibited lust for power, their refusal to accept that they no longer have it, their compulsive and pathological need to continue to display the wickedness and cruelty that they displayed whilst in power and the unintended consequences the innocent blood that they may have either shed themselves or that their agents and associates have shed.
It is a form of madness that trails wicked and cruel men and confirms the words of the Bible which says “there is no peace for the wicked”.
Simply put it is a graphic and unmistakable display of God’s judgement.
I understand your anger and I feel your pain but understand one thing: that divine retribution is real and at this point the best you can do is display a little humility, seek the forgiveness of those you have hurt and beg God for His grace and mercy.
Your case is like that of the Epstein files: the more you look the more horror you see.
Is it any wonder that Ambassador Reno Omokri calls you “the Epstein of Nigeria?”
Permit me to end by reiterating a few of the points I made earlier.
I repeat, you oversaw the massive and unprecedented killing of over 800 Christians in Southern Kaduna in one day in December 2016 and not only refused to go after the perpetrators but also punished the communities that the victims came from.
You treated the people of Southern Kaduna like animals and denied them their allocations and dues for 8 years simply because they were Christians.
You insulted our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ and the Virgin Mary on several occassions, treated your Christian Deputy Governor with contempt and refferred to Christians in the most derogatory terms after you became Governor.
You oversaw the killing of over 1000 Shia Muslims in one day in Zaria and not only oversaw the blinding of their leader in one eye but also the killing of his son, the wounding and arrest of his wife and the dumping of him in a wheelbarrow after which he was detained for 4 years and denied his civil liberties and human rights.
You betrayed your successor in office and sought to destroy him simply because he refused to continue the persecution of Christians and insisted on building bridges between Christians and Muslims and because he gave all the land that you illegally confiscated from your political enemies as a way of punishing them.
Outside of that you indebted the state, borrowed against future revenues, paid massive consultancy fees and indulged in all manner of sordid things that resulted in the state being broke and penniless when your successor took over.
You were accused by the State House of Assembly in Kaduna of stealing billions yet you treated the allegation with disdain and refused to make yourself available for questioning and investigation.
Kindly ponder on all this and make your peace with God before He unleashes the full force of His wrath on your head.
I have been restrained and gentle in this contribution for old times sake.
I may not be so charitable next time round.
Kindly behave and respect yourself and stop behaving like an unrepentant and unrelenting ingrate and pest. The NSA does not have your time and neither does the Governor of your state.
There is one thing I ought to add which is relevant and which explains the contrasting disposition and styles of Ribadu and El Rufai. It may also go a long way to explain the deep-seated hate and envy that the latter has always secretly harboured for the former.
Like yours truly, Nuhu Ribadu comes from a long line of distinguished public servants and enlightened and educated people.
His father, Alhaji Ahmadu Ribadu OON MBE, a pure and full-blooded Fulani man was a Nigerian politician and a diplomat.
During the First Republic, he represented Adamawa East constituency in the Federal Parliament from 1959 to 1966 and held the position of Minister of State of Economic Development in the Government of Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa.
He replaced the erstwhile Minister of Defence Alhaji Mohammadu Ribadu as the representative of their constituency in the cabinet after the latter passed on earlier that year.
Consequently Nuhu was not only born into the corridors of power and is a ranking member of Nigeria’s ultra elite ruling class, though I suspect he is reluctant to admit it, but he also understands and fully appreciates limits of that power and it’s complex nuances.
As a consequence of the circumstances of his birth he was well educated from infancy, familiar with the rudiments and ways of the ruling classes, exposed, civilised, loyal to his friends, cosmopolitan, enlightened, careful with his words, reserved, disciplined, taciturn, tactical, wise, totally detribalised and prefers to operate more behind the scenes than in the open.
These are qualities and virtues that money cannot buy and they make him extreemly effective and very dangerous to his enemies who are mainly criminals many of whom he jailed when he was Chairman of the EFCC.
He is a formidable adversary because unlike Nasir you cannot see him coming and he is far more interested in facing his work and getting his job done than in involving himself in some kind of public press war, bitter vendetta or public controversy. Such things are an anathema to him.
He is a believer in the eventual victory of good over evil which is why he could remain out of Government for 16 years without complaining for one day or expressing any form of bitterness or angst believing that one day his time would once again come.
And in 2023 when he was appointed NSA by President Tinubu that time came.
Since he got there as far as I am aware he has not used that position to intimidate or threaten anyone but instead has focused his attention on solving our security problems and building bridges with our American allies which people like yours truly, at the initial stage, were very uncomfortable with yet he pulled it off!
That is Nuhu: he flees from controversy, he is focused, he is reliable, he is responsible, he is fiercly loyal to his principal the President (some would say to a fault) and he is clear-thinking.
By way of contrast Nasir’s lineage and heritage is not known to me and neither have any of his forefathers, as far as I am aware, been saddled with the responsibility of high public office.
I am told that he hails from a railway compound in Zaria and frankly there is nothing wrong with that because at least he is well educated and well read.
What is evident in his behaviour though is that this unkown lineage and questionable heritage which often comes with those of that ilk manifests in him fully and rather than accept the fact that power is a trust that ought to be wielded with restraint, compassion, decency and decorum he uses it as a tool of vindictiveness and vengeance regardless of consequence.
It is precisely for this reason that people are wary of granting power to such people and instead are more comfortable with those from the ruling class who, more often than not, exercise far more restraint and are mindful of the fact that such power is not only transient but also ephemeral.
They know, from experience, that it never lasts and that there is always a day of reckoning.
They know that It comes one day and it is gone the next and the lesson that one should learn from this, which Nasir has failed to do, is that whilst you enjoy it you had better wield it with equity, fairness, compassion and the fear of God seeking to better the lives of others rather than destroying them.
With this aside I close and conclude my contribution.
May God bless Nigeria.
(Chief Oluwafemi Adewunmi Abdulateef Fani-Kayode, the author of this essay, is a former Minister of Culture and Tourism, a former Minister of Aviation, a former Senior Special Assistant to President Olusegun Obasanjo on Public Affairs, An Ambassador-Designate of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, the Sadaukin Shinkafi, the Wakilin Doka Potiskum, the Otunba of Joga Orile, the Aare Ajagunla of Otun Ekiti and a Legal Practioner.)
society
El-Rufai Turns 66 in EFCC Custody
El-Rufai Turns 66 in EFCC Custody
By George Omagbemi Sylvester | Published by SaharaWeeklyNG
“Former Kaduna governor questioned over ₦432 billion corruption probe as cybercrime charges loom.”
Former Kaduna State governor Nasir El-Rufai spent his 66th birthday in the custody of Nigeria’s anti-graft agency, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), after hours of interrogation over an alleged multibillion-naira corruption probe tied to his eight-year tenure in office.
The development, which unfolded in Abuja on Monday, February 17, 2026, marks one of the most dramatic political moments in recent Nigerian history, as a former federal minister and influential northern political figure now finds himself at the centre of parallel corruption and cybercrime investigations.
According to multiple reports, El-Rufai arrived at the EFCC headquarters in the Jabi district of Abuja around 10 a.m. in response to an official invitation issued by the commission. After hours of questioning, he was detained overnight as investigators sought more time to interrogate him over alleged financial misconduct amounting to about ₦432 billion.
The probe stems primarily from a 2024 report by the Kaduna State House of Assembly, which accused his administration of mismanaging public loans, violating due process in contract awards and leaving the state with a heavy debt burden.
Investigators are said to be focusing on alleged diversion of funds, money laundering, and the accumulation of debts considered unjustified by lawmakers.
An EFCC source indicated that the former governor was grilled for about eight hours before the agency obtained a court order to keep him in custody for further questioning.
His media aide, Muyiwa Adekeye, confirmed the detention, stating that El-Rufai honoured the invitation and remained with investigators after what he described as a “frank and fruitful interaction” with officials.
The central institutions in the unfolding case are the EFCC, which is investigating alleged financial crimes, and the Department of State Services (DSS), which has filed separate criminal charges.
The EFCC investigation was triggered by petitions and the Kaduna Assembly’s findings, which alleged that loans obtained during El-Rufai’s tenure between 2015 and 2023 were either misapplied or executed without due process.
The anti-graft agency subsequently invited the former governor in December 2025 as part of the ongoing probe.
Parallel to the corruption investigation, the DSS filed a three-count cybercrime charge at the Federal High Court in Abuja, alleging that El-Rufai unlawfully intercepted the private communications of National Security Adviser Nuhu Ribadu.
The charge reportedly arose from statements the former governor made during a television interview in which he claimed that the NSA’s phone had been bugged.
Authorities argue that such an act, if proven, would constitute a serious breach of Nigeria’s cybercrime and communications laws and a threat to national security.
The timing of the detention, coinciding with El-Rufai’s birthday, triggered strong political reactions across Nigeria. Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar publicly congratulated him, describing him as “a man of courage and intellect” amid what he called political persecution.
Supporters also gathered around the EFCC headquarters, with reports of protests and clashes with security personnel.
Meanwhile, his son, Bello El-Rufai, a member of the House of Representatives, praised his father’s record as a reformist administrator, framing the detention as a test of character rather than a stain on his legacy.
Available accounts suggest a sequence of events beginning with an EFCC invitation, followed by his appearance at the commission’s headquarters, prolonged interrogation and eventual detention pending further investigations or possible arraignment.
Sources indicate the probe has been ongoing for about a year before the former governor was summoned.
The case is being closely watched for its potential impact on Nigeria’s anti-corruption drive and political stability. El-Rufai is not only a former governor but also a former Minister of the Federal Capital Territory and a key figure in northern political circles.
Anti-corruption scholars have long argued that the credibility of any anti-graft campaign rests on its impartiality. As Nigerian political economist Pat Utomi once observed, “The true test of a nation’s integrity is whether the law applies equally to the powerful and the powerless.”

Similarly, former World Bank president James Wolfensohn famously warned that corruption “diverts resources from the poor to the rich, increases the cost of running businesses, and distorts public expenditures.”
Those principles now frame the public debate around the El-Rufai case: whether the investigation represents genuine accountability or a politically charged confrontation.
As of the time of reporting, El-Rufai remains in EFCC custody, with investigators expected to decide whether to file formal charges in court. The outcome could set a major precedent for how Nigeria handles corruption allegations against former state governors.
For now, the image of a once-powerful political figure marking his birthday inside an anti-graft detention facility underscores the unpredictable nature of power in Nigeria’s evolving political landscape and the enduring question of whether accountability will truly become a national norm.
society
Carry‑On Chaos: Travelers Clash Over Tightened Size Rules in 2026
Carry‑On Chaos: Travelers Clash Over Tightened Size Rules in 2026
By George Omagbemi Sylvester | Published by SaharaWeeklyNG
“As airlines worldwide strictly enforce carry‑on dimensions, social media erupts, passengers incur surprise fees, and industry experts warn that confusion and inconsistent policies are straining the travel ecosystem.”
A growing storm of discontent has erupted across social media platforms, particularly on TikTok, as air travelers from the United States to Europe and beyond grapple with the tightening of carry‑on luggage size enforcement in 2026. What began as a viral video warning about changing baggage measurements has ballooned into a widespread debate over airline policies that many passengers say are opaque, inconsistent and financially punitive.
The spark was a clip shared by TikTok user karenschaler, a screenwriter and travel enthusiast, urging fellow flyers to reexamine their carry‑on bags before their next trip. She insisted that “so many carry‑on bags that used to get through fine are now getting pulled, gate checked and you are being charged,” especially if those suitcases have hard shells, bulky wheels, or extended handles that make them technically oversize.
What most passengers didn’t realize until recently is that this isn’t a new rule implemented by governments, there’s no global treaty or international regulator that set new carry‑on dimensions for 2026. Rather, what’s changed is the degree of enforcement by airlines and how they interpret their own size restrictions, which often include wheels and handles in the measurement.
At the centre of the controversy is the 22 x 14 x 9 inches limit (56 x 36 x 23 cm), a standard carried by many U.S. carriers, including American Airlines and others. Under these policies, the size limit now explicitly counts everything on the bag not just the main compartment, but also the wheels and pull handle. Bags exceeding this, even by fractions of an inch, are being flagged at gates and subjected to surprise “gate‑check” fees that can range from around $35 to $65 or more.
A particularly viral incident that fuelled the debate involved an NHS doctor denied boarding on an easyJet flight because her carry‑on (though marketed as compliant) was deemed too large when measured by airline staff at the gate. That moment, widely shared and criticized online, has given tangible form to passenger frustration.
Experts point to multiple forces behind this shift. Airlines are under growing pressure to reduce boarding times and streamline turnaround operations. Flight delays often are caused by bottlenecks at boarding gates when oversized bags are discovered last‑minute. Stricter enforcement, carriers say, helps ensure that baggage physically fits into overhead compartments and that flights depart on schedule.
Dr. Sarah Rodrigues, an aviation policy expert at the Global Transport Institute, explains: “Airlines are trying to balance operational efficiency with passenger convenience. When policies lack clarity and consistency, you inevitably get confusion and frustration and especially when their interpretation varies from one airport or carrier to another.”
Some carriers, like American Airlines, have even removed rigid bag sizers from gate areas, instead training agents to use discretion when assessing bags, with instructions to “err on the side of the customer” for borderline cases. But that discretion itself is part of the confusion, with travelers unsure what will be accepted at one airport and rejected at another.
On TikTok and Reddit threads, travelers have shared anecdotes of bags that flew without issue in 2025 now being denied in 2026. Common complaints include unclear advertising by luggage manufacturers and many still label products as “carry‑on approved” without noting that airline measurements must account for wheels and handles.
One frequent commenter lamented, “We bought a new bag last year to fit requirements now it’s suddenly not good. This is the biggest scam. Every year the airlines seem to change rules for carry‑ons.” Another quipped, “Did the overhead bins shrink?” encapsulating a sentiment that the rules are arbitrary rather than grounded in real capacity needs.
Travel consumer advocate Mark Jenkins, director of the Airline Passenger Rights Foundation, warns: “When airlines tighten enforcement without clear, unified communication, you disenfranchise passengers. Clarity, not ambiguity, should be the lodestar of airline policy.”
Part of the frustration stems from the sheer lack of global standardization. In the U.S., many carriers still adhere to the 22 x 14 x 9 standard, while some, like Southwest Airlines, maintain slightly larger allowances for now. Other parts of the world feature entirely different rules; some European proposals even aim to mandate free hand luggage for passengers, another layer of policy that can run counter to carriers’ current practices.
The result is confusion among passengers who might (without a global regulatory baseline) find their luggage acceptable on one flight and penalized on the next.
Consumer groups advise that travelers measure their luggage carefully (including wheels and handles) and check airline‑specific policies before booking. In an era where ancillary fees contribute significantly to airline revenue, passengers increasingly find themselves navigating a labyrinth of hidden charges.
Dr. Elizabeth Moreno, a transportation economist, notes: “Air travel is no longer just about the ticket price. It’s the sum of every fee (checked bags, carry‑ons, seat selection) and when airlines alter enforcement without uniform messaging, it erodes consumer trust.”
The carry‑on debate of 2026 reflects broader tensions in modern air travel: operational efficiency versus passenger rights, profitability versus transparency, efficiency versus customer experience. As travelers share their frustrations online and industry policies continue to evolve, one thing remains clear, the skies may be busy, but the policies on the ground need greater clarity, cohesion, and fairness if passengers and airlines are to move forward together peacefully.
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