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Passenger jet, Army helicopter collide, crash into River

An American Airlines regional passenger jet and a U.S. Army Black Hawk helicopter crashed into the frigid Potomac River after a midair collision near Reagan Washington National Airport on Wednesday night, officials said.

CBS News reported that at least 18 bodies had been recovered so far, citing a police official.

Two sources told Reuters that multiple bodies had been pulled from the water.
American Airlines confirmed that 64 people were aboard the jet: 60 passengers and four crew members.

Three soldiers were aboard the helicopter, a U.S. official said.
Relatives gathered at the airport said they were getting little to no information from officials about the incident, adding that they were hearing more about the incident from news reports.

One woman told an airport official, “I don’t know if she got on there or not,” in apparent reference to a passenger on the crashed jet.
She then collapsed in tears.

Hamaad Raza told local CBS affiliate WUSA that he was at Reagan airport waiting for his wife.

“She texted me that she was landing in 20 minutes,” he said.

“The rest of my text didn’t … did not get delivered. That’s when I realised that something might be up.

“I’m just praying that someone is pulling her out of the river right now.”
The U.S. Army said in a statement that it could “confirm that the aircraft involved in tonight’s incident was an Army UH-60 helicopter out of Fort Belvoir, Virginia.”

There has not been a fatal U.S. passenger airplane accident since February 2009, but a series of near-miss incidents in recent years have raised serious safety concerns.

In 1982, Air Florida Flight 90 crashed into the 14th Street Bridge over the Potomac River, killing 70 passengers and four crew members.

Only four passengers and one crew member survived.

A web camera shot from the Kennedy Center in Washington showed an explosion mid-air across the Potomac about 8:47 p.m. (0147 GMT) with an aircraft in flames falling rapidly.

PSA was operating Flight 5342 for American Airlines, which had departed from Wichita, Kansas, according to the FAA.

“We’re cooperating with the National Transportation Safety Board in its investigation and will continue to provide all the information we can,” American Airlines CEO Robert Isom said in a video statement.

Police said multiple agencies were involved in a search and rescue operation in the Potomac River, which borders the airport.

Dozens of police, ambulance and rescue units, some ferrying boats, staged along the river and raced to positions along the tarmac of Reagan airport.

Live TV images showed several boats in the water, flashing blue and red lights.
The airport said late on Wednesday that all takeoffs and landings had been halted as emergency personnel responded to an aircraft incident.

U.S. President Donald Trump said in a statement that he had been “fully briefed on the terrible accident which just took place at Reagan National Airport.”

“May God bless their souls,” he added.
“Thank you for the incredible work being done by our first responders. I am monitoring the situation and will provide more details as they arise.”
FAA Administrator Mike Whitaker stepped down on Jan. 20 and the Trump administration has not named a replacement – or even disclosed who is running the agency on an interim basis.
The last deadly major crash involving a commercial airliner in the U.S. was in 2009, when all 49 people aboard a Colgan Air flight died when the plane crashed in New York state. One person also died on the ground. (Reuters/NAN)

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Kaduna train attack: I paid N80 million ransom for my mum, sister’s release–witness

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Kaduna train attack: I paid N80 million ransom for my mum, sister’s release–witness

A masked witness, identified as Prosecution Witness-D (PW-D) on Thursday, told a Federal High Court in Abuja that he paid N80 million ransom for the release of his mother and sister during the 2022 Abuja-Kaduna train terrorists attack .

The witness testified before Justice Inyang Ekwo in the ongoing trial of Mr Tukur Mamu, the kidnap negotiator, who is facing a 10-count terrorism charge.
He said his mother and sister were released alongside two other victims of the attack.

The PW-4 was lead in evidence by the lawyer to the Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF), David Kaswe.
The witness, also identified simply as “D,” said that he was informed at about 8.30 pm on March 28, 2022, that his mother and sister were on the ill-fated train in which passengers were kidnapped, some killed, some injured and some rescued.

He said that the following morning of the attack, he went to Kaduna Hospital where the injured passengers were taken to but he could not find his mother or sister.

He said two weeks after the train attack, he received a call from the kidnappers, who wanted him to speak with a victim, who turned out to be his sister.

He said he communicated regularly with the abductors for about two weeks before they demanded for N200 million ransom each from victims’ relatives.

He said though some paid, the witness said a month after the ransom was demanded, the kidnappers called him through his sister and gave him names of four journalists through whom negotiation could be done.

The PW-D said four journalists’ names and their phone numbers were given to him.

He further stated that he contacted three of the names and they declined.
The witness, however, said among the four journalists, only Tukur Mamu volunteered “to take up the responsibility.”

“Two days later, I received a call from my sister and my sister told me that she was in good shape and that I should not get agitated.”

The witness told the court that his sister informed him that the kidnappers said his mother, sister and some others were not their target.

“She said they were victims of circumstances that they were circumstantial victims that they were not the targets.

“I asked about my late mum and she said they were all doing good,” he said.
He said that while they were struggling to raise the money, one Friday, he received calls from former Chief of Defence Staff, Gen. Lucky Irabor, and former Director General, Department of State Service (DSS), Yusuf Bichi.
He said he was asked to see Irabor in Abuja.
He said he visited Irabor and told him his plights and the little he knew.
He said Irabor instructed him that whatever he discussed with Mamu, he should let him (Irabor) know.
He said Irabor thereafter linked him with a committee set up by the Federal Government to facilitate the release of the kidnapped victims
He said the kidnappers stopped communicating with him after he told them that Mamu had accepted “to take up the responsibility.”
“As soon as they contacted Tukur Mamu, they stopped communicating with us. Every information is from Tukur Mamu.
“We will go to Tukur Mamu and he will tell us they have asked us to pay 100 million each.
“When the negotiation was going on, we had to link Tukur Mamu with the CDS committee.”
He said that on a fateful day, his sister called him that he should go back to Mamu and negotiate.
The witness said he called Mamu but he told him that he had pencilled his name down and would not discussed with him any longer.
“After some people started getting their loved ones out, it got to a stage that kidnappers were no longer talking with CDS committee.
“It should be noted that Tukur Mamu penciled me as government agent. So he never wants to talk to me.”
The witness said he was handicap and approached his (witness) relation who was once Mamu’s boss and the man obliged and intervened.
He said the ransom was then reduced from N200 million to N150 million, to N100 million before they accepted to take N80 million.
He said that in August 2022 when he brought the N80 million ransom in cash to Mamu in his compound in Kaduna, he asked him to convert it to dollar.
The witness said he did and got a total of 118,750 U.S. dollars .
He said two weeks after, Mamu called him for an additional money to make it up a total of 120,000 dollars.
The witness said he took the money to Mamu on Thursday but he was informed by him that the kidnappers had difficulties due to swampy terrain.
He said after Jumai prayer on Friday, the next day, Mamu called to informed that he had established contact with the kidnappers.
“I drove out from Mamu’s compound on a hired gulf car packed with bread and milk as demanded by the kidnappers.”
He said that after about 20 minutes, he received a call asking him to follow a vehicle in front marked 211 and they went towards Binin Gwari.
He said after the town, they stopped and the kidnappers came and brought his mother and sister and the other two victims.
Under cross examination by the defence counsel Abdul Mohammed SAN, the witness said he took the money he brought and a written note from Mamu to the kidnappers.
The witness said he did not know whether the CDS communicated with Mamu because he was not a member of the committee.
He clarified that a former commissioner negotiated with Mamu.
He agreed with the defence counsel that the kidnappers said they needed four journalists that they would pay to do a job for them.
On whether it was the kidnappers that were dictating what should be done, the judge said the court would determine that from the record.
The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the Federal Government had, on March 21, 2023, arraigned Mamu for allegedly aiding terrorist operations in the country.
The Kaduna-based Islamic scholar was further accused of collecting various sums of money in different currencies from families of victims of the train attack, on behalf of the Boko Haram terrorists sect.
FG told the court that investigations revealed that the defendant collected an aggregate sum of $420, 000 from families of the victims, as well as N21 million from another set of families of the train attack.
It further alleged that Mamu concealed funds he earned from services he rendered to the terrorist organisation, in his residence in Kaduna State.
It told the court that the defendant had sometime in 2022, in Kaduna State, received ransom payments in the sum of N500, 000 on behalf of the Boko haram terrorist group, from families of the train attack that were held as hostages.
More so, in the charge that was signed by the Director of Public Prosecution of the Federation (DPPF), Mr M.B. Abubakar, FG added that the defendant exchanged voice note communications with one Baba Adamu, identified as spokesperson of the Boko Haram, in relation to acts of terrorism.

It maintained that the defendant acted in breach of the Terrorism Prevention, Prohibition Act, 2022.
Mamu, however, denied all the allegations.(NAN)

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Lere Olayinka’s bombshel; How Atiku’s rebelion against PDP wrecked Party

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Lere Olayinka’s bombshel; How Atiku’s rebelion against PDP wrecked Party

Lere Olayinka, the Senior Special Assistant on Public Communication and New Media to the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Nyesom Wike, has openly accused former Vice President Atiku Abubakar of instigating a rebellion within the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), which ultimately contributed to the party’s current loss of power.

In an interview on Arise Television, Olayinka argued that Atiku’s actions in 2014 were a key factor in the PDP’s inability to retain control of the nation’s leadership.

He further claimed that Atiku, during his tenure as Vice President, actively worked against the interests of his own party, undermining its unity and stability.

Olayinka’s statements are part of a broader critique of the former presidential candidate’s role in the PDP’s current political challenges.

Olayinka said: “PDP’s issues started in 2003 when Atiku as Vice President of Nigeria frustrated the PDP’s efforts to win Lagos State.

“That was how the problem started. Because we were able to march on in government, people did not notice. The problem went on to the extent that a sitting president, Obasanjo literally had to beg his running mate to be able to pick his second term ticket.

“The problem started, it got to 2007 and Atiku as Vice President of Nigeria under a PDP government formed Action Congress, AC, and contested election as a candidate of AC while still being the Vice President holding PDP’s mandate.

“It went on like that and in 2014, because somebody was so desperate to contest an election and insisted that Jonathan will not have a second term, he led a rebellion and I’m talking about Atiku again, he led a rebellion that took PDP out of power in 2015. If Atiku did not lead that rebellion of 2014, PDP would still be in power now.

“So how did PDP’s problem start? In 2015, Atiku campaigned for APC to take PDP out of power; some people including Wike took the battle of rebuilding the party on their head, they spent their money, time, and took risk at the expense of losing their seat as governor. Wike, Fayose and where was Atiku, he was in Dubai.

“He came back in 2018 and returned to PDP, picked the party ticket and contested but lost the election. After losing an election, what do you do as the leader of the party? You stay back in the country to galvanize support, lead opposition but what did Atiku do? He went to Dubai again and was there for over two years.

“It was after two years that he came back to start writing letter of appreciation to those who worked with him.”

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Govt awards contract for 97 mosque repairs and renovations

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Govt awards contract for 97 mosque repairs and renovations

The Kebbi Government on Thursday says it has awarded contract for the repairs and renovation of 97 mosques across the 21 Local Government Areas of the state.

The State Commissioner for Religious Affairs, Dr Sani Aliyu, made this known while hosting leaders of Islamic groups in Birnin Kebbi on Thursday.

“The contract has specifications for execution of the repairs and renovations, and each local government is expected to repair and renovate at least three mosques.

“Additionally, one mosque will be allocated to each Islamic group for renovation, aside from the three Jumu’ah mosques,” he said.

Aliyu cautioned the leaders to be honest and transparent in executing the contract, saying it was a test of their integrity.

“The sum of each contract varies based on the bill of quantity, and you should be wary of going contrary to the contractual specifications.

“The contract must adhere to due process guidelines, and each mosque selected has been inspected by the due process office,” the commissioner said.

On his part, the Special Adviser to Gov. Nasir Idris on Religious Affairs, Malam Imran Bin-Usman, said that all benefiting mosques must install solar lights with three panels of 100w each among other specification.

Bin-Usman noted that the contract was the first phase, adding that a second phase would follow upon successful completion of the first phase.

He expressed the governor’s confidence in the leaders and urged them to ensure quality and standard repairs and renovation.

“A team of consultants, engineers, and media personnel will inspect the projects to ensure compliance.
“The contract has a two-week execution period, and leaders are expected to study the contractual agreement form before signing.

“The agreement form considers two key issues: the contract amount and the items to be purchased and renovation specifications,” the aide said. (NAN) (www.nannews.ng)

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