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MFM Exposes Falsehoods, Confirms Police-Led Arrest of Femi Jimoh

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MFM Exposes Falsehoods, Confirms Police-Led Arrest of Femi Jimoh

 

The Mountain of Fire and Miracles Ministries (MFM) has officially responded to recent online claims made by Mr. Femi Jimoh, a former worker of the Church, who alleged that the Ministry and its General Overseer, Dr. Daniel Kolawole Olukoya, orchestrated his arrest and imprisonment nearly two decades ago. The Church has categorically dismissed these claims as false, deliberate, and malicious attempts to misrepresent history.

In a statement signed by MFM’s Chief Legal Adviser, Mr. Davidson Adejuwon, the Church clarified that the narrative promoted by Mr. Jimoh is “completely untrue, without basis in law or fact, and contradicts police records, court findings, eyewitness testimonies, and Jimoh’s own confessional statements from 2007–2008.” Mr. Jimoh, the Church explained, was not a pastor but a temporary worker in the Press Department, who was dismissed for repeated misconduct, including theft of Church property, financial irregularities, and acts incompatible with the ethical standards of the Ministry.

 

After his dismissal, Mr. Jimoh conspired with accomplices to rob the Church of its First-Fruit offerings—a sacred collection made at the beginning of the year. Eyewitnesses, including Mr. Fatai Adebayo and Mr. Akeem Asalu, confirmed that Jimoh personally recruited them to participate, boasting that his insider knowledge would make the robbery seamless. When participants hesitated, he threatened to find “help elsewhere.” Acting on credible intelligence, the Nigeria Police Force, under the supervision of then DPO Yaba/Iwaya, Mr. Kayode Samuel (Retired Commissioner of Police), placed Jimoh under surveillance. Covert monitoring led to the arrest of Jimoh and his collaborators before the crime could be executed.

Retired DPO Samuel affirmed that he had no contact with Dr. Olukoya or any MFM official during the investigation, stating that the operation was strictly police-led. Reports published in The Nation, The Guardian, and other national newspapers in 2007–2008 also documented Jimoh’s voluntary confessions. He admitted to coordinating a four-man gang, intending to divert Church funds and acquire weapons, citing financial desperation and abuse of his former position.

 

The Church emphasized that it never influenced the arrest, detention, or prosecution of Jimoh. Criminal proceedings were carried out entirely by the Nigeria Police Force and Lagos State Judiciary. Court records show that the defendants were granted bail but failed to perfect the conditions, a fact repeatedly ignored in Jimoh’s recent claims. The Ministry never demanded payment, ransom, or bribes, leaving the responsibility squarely on Jimoh and his sureties.

An archived 2007 Crime Watch report further corroborates Jimoh’s criminal past, confirming his confession to theft and robbery. Recent attempts by Jimoh and his associates to rewrite history, falsely claiming the incidents occurred in 2017, were described by the Church as deliberate misinformation designed to mislead the public.

 

MFM also addressed allegations of spiritual intimidation or manipulation, reaffirming that its doctrines are rooted in holiness, prayer, deliverance, and adherence to the Word of God. The Ministry does not engage in practices intended to harm individuals, and such claims were described as baseless attempts to exploit public sentiment.

 

Under the leadership of Dr. D.K. Olukoya, MFM has expanded to over 100 nations worldwide, maintaining its mission to propagate the gospel, deliver souls from spiritual bondage, and promote righteous living. The Ministry reiterated that Jimoh’s recent efforts to tarnish its image are a failed attempt to generate sympathy through falsehoods.

 

The Church highlighted Jimoh’s pattern of misconduct while in its employ, including repeated warnings, reassignments, and transfers from Warri back to Lagos due to theft and immoral behavior. His own confessions to police investigators confirmed that he masterminded a robbery plot to exploit the Church’s offerings. Today, he presents himself as a victim, attempting to blackmail a Ministry that once invested in his spiritual and personal growth.

 

MFM reaffirmed its commitment to transparency, accountability, and cooperation with law enforcement. It warned that legal action would be taken against any individual or media outlet that deliberately spreads falsehoods about the Ministry or its leadership.

 

In conclusion, MFM stated that while the Church of God will continue to face attacks from both within and outside, truth and integrity will always prevail. The Ministry remains a citadel of prayer, purity, and power—committed to raising end-time soldiers for Christ and defending righteousness in a corrupt world.

 

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Fault Lines in the Temple of Justice: What the Nestoil–Neconde Order Reveals About the Limits of Judicial Discretion

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Controversial Ex Parte Order Rekindles Questions Around Courtroom Impunity

…And How a Fake $5m Bribery Allegation Tried — But Failed — to Tarnish a Chief Judge

The gavel can be an instrument of justice or a hammer of ruin. In Nigeria’s turbulent judicial arena, few recent episodes have ignited as much scrutiny as the ex parte order issued by Justice Isaac Deinde Dipeolu of the Federal High Court, Lagos, in the complex dispute involving Nestoil, Neconde, and a tangled matrix of loan collateral.

What began as a routine commercial disagreement has now evolved into a national conversation on judicial discretion, institutional integrity, and the simmering anxiety around the impartiality of Nigeria’s courts.
Through layers of filings, rebuttals, and political noise, one fact stands out: the court order was so sweeping in scope and so startling in reach that it reopened long-quiet questions about the judge who issued it—questions far larger than the courtroom where they resurfaced.

A Judge Under a Long Shadow

Justice Dipeolu is neither obscure nor new to controversy. Over the years, his name has appeared repeatedly in conversations about unorthodox rulings and contested interpretations of the law. Civil society groups and legal commentators frequently describe his decisions as those that attract unusual appellate scrutiny.

Those concerns resurfaced two years ago when he was compelled to withdraw from the high-profile forfeiture case involving former Central Bank Governor Godwin Emefiele. Rumours—never proven—of financial inducement swirled, and his abrupt exit left a residue of public doubt. Since then, subsequent rulings have been viewed through a harsher lens.

Another storm erupted after his October 25, 2025 order directing Lotus Bank to seize the assets of Unpacked Limited, a firm linked to Feyikemi Abiodun and guaranteed by Oluwafemi Badewole. Analysts criticised the order for technical inaccuracies and procedural lapses. To critics, these episodes formed a pattern: a judge whose discretionary decisions often appeared fluid, unpredictable, and legally fragile.

The Nestoil Order — A Legal Earthquake

The latest controversy centres on Nestoil, a major Nigerian energy conglomerate; Neconde Energy, operator of key OML 42 assets; and a consortium of lenders seeking to enforce loan security rights.

Nestoil had borrowed from several banks, pledging a range of assets as collateral. First Trustees, the security trustee, appointed Senior Advocate of Nigeria Abubakar Sulu-Gambari as receiver/manager after an alleged default—a standard commercial process.

Trouble began when the lenders attempted to expand the collateral pool to include Neconde’s OML 42 interest. But Neconde’s stake in OML 42 was already pledged to a different set of lenders whose consent was required for any second-ranking charge. They refused, making the creation of such a charge legally impossible.

Yet when the matter reached Justice Dipeolu on an ex parte basis, he granted an order allowing Nestoil’s receiver/manager to take over not only Nestoil’s assets, but also Neconde’s office, assets, and OML 42 interest—property over which the Nestoil lenders held no security rights.

Order 5 was the flashpoint:
It authorised the takeover of Neconde’s Victoria Island office, its assets within the court’s jurisdiction, and its OML 42 joint-venture interest—all pending the hearing of a motion on notice.

To commercial lawyers, it was an earthquake masked as routine procedure. The order effectively displaced Neconde’s own lenders, granting control to creditors who held no charge over its assets. It violated the first rule of secured credit:
Collateral follows the creditor who holds the charge—not the one who desires it.

Within days, four of Neconde’s actual lenders applied to be joined in the suit, seeking to dismantle what they described as a legally unsustainable order. Their intervention signalled just how destabilising the ruling was for Nigeria’s commercial environment.

The Question of Judicial Discretion

Ex parte orders are extraordinary tools, granted only in emergencies to prevent irreparable harm. But analysts argue that the Nestoil scenario did not remotely meet this threshold. No evidence suggested that Neconde’s OML 42 interest was in danger of being dissipated. The dispute centred on the validity of collateral—not on an imminent threat.

To critics, Justice Dipeolu’s decision was not merely an overreach; it was an affront to judicial restraint.

When a False Bribery Rumour Enters the Arena

As the controversy intensified, an online rumour emerged claiming that the Chief Judge of the Federal High Court, Justice John Tsoho, had received a $5 million bribe to direct Justice Dipeolu to step aside from the Nestoil case.

The allegation quickly collapsed under scrutiny. Legal experts clarified that the Chief Judge’s directive was a routine administrative step triggered by a petition filed by the Nestoil Group to the National Judicial Council. Standard judicial procedure requires a judge to recuse himself when such petitions are lodged.

Thus, what was portrayed as corruption was simply the judiciary following its internal rules. Observers believe the false bribery narrative was an attempt to distract from the substance of the controversy or shield Justice Dipeolu from scrutiny.

A Judiciary at a Critical Crossroads

Nigeria’s judiciary is already burdened with public distrust—accusations of corruption, inconsistent rulings, and political interference. Cases like Nestoil–Neconde become more than legal disputes; they become symbols of a system wrestling with its own credibility.

When ex parte orders are issued without urgency, when collateral hierarchies are ignored, when judges hesitate to step aside after petitions are filed, the judiciary’s legitimacy shakes.

Yet the system also shows signs of resilience:

Neconde’s lenders challenged the order.

The NJC became involved.

The Chief Judge exercised administrative oversight.

Safeguards exist—the question is whether they are applied consistently.

What Comes Next

Applications to set aside the ex parte order await determination. The NJC petition is still under review. Nestoil lenders, Neconde lenders, and multiple stakeholders continue to press their cases in what has become one of the year’s most closely watched commercial disputes.

But the larger conversation remains:
What are the limits of judicial discretion, and how do we safeguard the integrity of the courts?

Justice Dipeolu’s critics argue that his rulings reflect a troubling disregard for judicial responsibility. His defenders say he merely exercised discretion within the law. But in the Nestoil matter, the facts and the law appear aligned in ways that make the controversy difficult to dismiss as mere difference of legal opinion.

For now, the case stands as a mirror—revealing both the strengths and the fault lines in Nigeria’s temple of justice.

 

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Zamfara Receives Over 1trn From FG In Two Years – Matawalle

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Zamfara Receives Over 1trn From FG In Two Years – Matawalle

‎…Assures End of Banditry Soon

‎Former Zamfara State Governor and Minister of State for Defence, Bello Mohammed Matawalle, has said the state under Governor Dauda Lawal’s administration has collected over one trillion naira, ranging from monthly statutory allocations and bailouts meant for the development of the state and the fight for poverty and hunger.

‎Matawalle made this disclosure on Friday at the state headquarters of the APC in Gusau, Zamfara State capital, while addressing thousands of party supporters and his well-wishers during his three-day visit to the state.

‎The Minister further challenged that, whatever good people of Zamfara saw short of their expectations in the aspect of delivery of dividends of democracy, should make enquiries from the present Governor Dauda-led government, as the Tinubu’s administration has been doing everything possible to ensure the state government is receiving enough funds to make their life better.

‎He lamented that there is not a single local government area out of the other thirteen local government areas of the state, apart from Gusau, the state capital, that benefits a ten billion naira worth project within the two years of the PDP-led government in the state.

‎“Renovations and completion of inherited projects could not in any way justify the spending of over one trillion naira collected from the federal coffers, which was virtually meant for uplifting the state’s economy and change of poor citizens miserable lives to better ones under this era of hardship and insecurity.

‎“Let me at this junction, let you know that, as Minister of State for Defense and son of the soil of Zamfara State, I have done all my best to work with Governor Dauda Lawal against the insecurity bedeviled our dear state, but he refused, only that spent his times working to convince President Tinubu to sack me as Minister of Defense”.

‎Matawalle informed the gathering of the federal government’s fresh efforts to ensure the end of insecurity in Zamfara and beyond, “As I am speaking to you now, the Defence Headquarters has already deployed fresh troops alongside fighting aircraft to finally crush bandits and other criminal elements.

‎“The gallant troops have just launched formidable attacks on bandits’ hideouts and are already gaining ground. Let me also tell you that, immediately after this gathering, I will visit the troops and consolidate the Presidential order on them, that no single bandit must escape this time around”, Matawalle has stressed.

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Ogun Rector appreciates and congratulates Gov.Dapo Abiodun

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Ogun Rector appreciates and congratulates Gov.Dapo Abiodun

 

The pioneer Rector of Ogun state Polytechnic of Health and Allied sciences,Dr.Rasak Akinbo congratulates Gov.Dapo Abiodun for the completion and commissioning of Akute-Ajuwon-Alagbole road today in Ifo local govt area of the state
The Rector who is from iperu-remo but resides in akute ajuwon area congratulated the governor for keeping to his promise when he came to the area years back
He said the Governor is a ‘promise keeper’ who has been transforming Ogun state
He said the road has been neglected by previous administrations despite the fact that Ifo local govt is one of the most populated local govt in the state
The Governor promised to do more as the people of the local govt have always believed in him…he concluded

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