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Instablog9ja

Businessman Shares How The Holy Ghost Led Him To $1M Instead Of Vigorously Pursuing Investors
~4.5 mins read
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Instablog9ja

NAPTIP Alerts Interpol, Mulls 50m Bounty For Speed Darlington
~3.3 mins read

NAPTIP Alerts Interpol, Mulls ₦50m Bounty for Speed Darlington
The National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP) has escalated its pursuit of controversial entertainer Darlington Okoye, popularly known as Speed Darlington, by placing him on an international watchlist and alerting Interpol.
This move follows the artist’s repeated failure to honour summons over a viral video in which he claimed to have had s+x with a 15-year-old girl.
Despite being declared wanted on June 27 for alleged r+pe, cyberb¥llying, and cyberst+lking, Speed Darlington has remained defiant, insisting he committed no crime.
NAPTIP’s spokesperson, Vincent Adekoye, confirmed that the agency is working with the Nigeria Immigration Service, police, DSS, and Interpol to locate and apprehend him. “We have followed the legal process and obtained a court order to watchlist him,” he said.
Officials say that a bounty of ₦50 million may be announced soon for information leading to Okoye’s arrest. “We’re finalizing with the legal department. Once the wanted status matures, we’ll move to the next stage,” a source said.
On its Instagram page, NAPTIP urged anyone with credible information about his whereabouts to call 07030000203 or email [email protected].
In response, Okoye has mocked the agency online, calling the case a publicity stunt. In a video, he claimed, “There is no crime. All I did was speak,” and demanded ₦2.5 million and airfare as an “appearance fee.”
NAPTIP maintains that Okoye had been given multiple chances to appear, with invitations sent for May 30, June 2, and even accommodating his own proposed date of June 26, which he still ignored.
Adekoye warned, “If someone is declared wanted, they become a target globally. Wherever he is, he should turn himself in.”
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Instablog9ja

Trump-Era Memo Targets Naturalized Citizens For Denaturalization, Sparks Civil Rights Concerns
~3.4 mins read

Trump-Era Memo Targets Naturalized Citizens for Denaturalization, Sparks Civil Rights Concerns
A newly released memo from the U.S. Department of Justice under the Trump administration directs attorneys to prioritize civil denaturalization—revoking citizenship from naturalized Americans who committed certain crimes or misrepresented facts during their immigration process.
Published on June 11, the memo identifies 10 priority categories, including individuals linked to war crimes, gang activity, human rights ab¥ses, fra¥d, or lying on immigration forms. It also expands the Justice Department’s discretion to pursue such cases, including those tied to pending criminal charges.
Unlike criminal cases, civil denaturalization does not guarantee the right to a lawyer, and the government faces a lower burden of proof. Immigration advocates warn this weakens due process and risks creating “a second class of U.S. citizens.”
“It’s trying to create a tiered citizenship system,” said Sameera Hafiz of the Immigration Legal Resource Center.
The policy affects some of the 25 million U.S. citizens who immigrated to the country. Critics fear it could be ab¥sed under vague criteria.
On June 13, a judge revoked the citizenship of Elliott Duke, a UK-born U.S. military veteran, for failing to disclose a past conviction for distributing child abuse material.
The memo reflects a broader realignment of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division under Trump. The division has been tasked with ending DEI (Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion) programs, banning transgender treatments, and suing officials who block deportations. NPR reports that 70% of its attorneys left between January and May 2025.
Critics argue the shift abandons the division’s core civil rights mission and thr+atens long-standing legal protections.
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Worldnews

Tunisia Court Sentences Lawyer Critical Of President To Two Years In Prison
~2.1 mins read
Sonia Dhamani, a fierce critic of President Kais Saied, has criticised him for practices against refugees and migrants. A Tunisian court has sentenced Sonia Dhamani, a prominent lawyer and renowned critic of President Kais Saied, to two years in jail, lawyers have said, in a case that rights groups say marks a deepening crackdown on dissent in the North African country. Dhamani’s lawyers withdrew from the trial after the judge refused to adjourn the session on Monday, claiming Dhamani was being tried twice for the same act. The court sentenced Dhamani for statements criticising practices against refugees and migrants from sub-Saharan Africa. Lawyer Bassem Trifi said the verdict was “a grave injustice”. “What’s happening is a farce. Sonia is being tried twice for the same statement,” said lawyer Sami Ben Ghazi, another lawyer for Dhamani. Dhamani was arrested last year after making comments during a television appearance that questioned the government’s stance on undocumented African refugees and migrants in Tunisia. The case was brought under the nation’s controversial cybercrime law, Decree 54, which has been widely condemned by international and local rights groups. Most opposition leaders, some journalists, and critics of Saied have been imprisoned since Saied seized control of most powers, dissolved the elected parliament, and began ruling by decree in 2021 – moves the opposition has described as a coup. Saied rejects the charges and says his actions are legal and aimed at ending years of chaos and rampant corruption. Human rights groups and activists say Saied has turned Tunisia into an open-air prison and is using the judiciary and police to target his political opponents. Saied rejects these accusations, saying he will not be a dictator and seeks to hold everyone accountable equally, regardless of their position or name. Earlier this year, the country carried out a mass trial in which dozens of defendants were handed jail terms of up to 66 years. Critics denounced the trial as politically motivated and baseless. The defendants faced charges including “conspiracy against state security” and “belonging to a terrorist group”, according to their lawyers. Among those targeted were figures from what was once the biggest party, Ennahda, such as the leader and former Speaker of Parliament Rached Ghannouchi, former Prime Minister Hichem Mechichi, and former Minister of Justice Noureddine Bhiri. Tunisia had been celebrated as perhaps the only democratic success of the 2011 “Arab Spring” revolutions, with strong political engagement among its public and civil society members, who frequently took to the airwaves and streets to make their voices heard. The years that followed the revolution, which overthrew long-time autocrat Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, saw the growth of a healthy political system with numerous elections declared free and fair by international observers. But a weak economy and the strengthening of anti-democratic forces led to a pushback, capped off by Saied’s dismissal of the government and dissolution of parliament. Follow Al Jazeera English:...
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