News

By Omolara Adasofunjo

The Ogun State House of Assembly has passed a resolution calling on the state government to liaise with the federal government and the military hierarchy to provide an alternative shooting range for the Nigerian Army.

This is to resolve the alleged land encroachment by officers of the Nigerian Army, Sappers Barracks, Ilese, affecting Apunren-Ijebu and other communities.

The resolution followed a report by the House Committee of the Whole, presented by Deputy Speaker, Mrs Bolanle Ajayi.

Mrs Àjàyí moved the motion for it’s adoption, seconded by the majority leader, Mr Lukuman Adeleye, and unanimously supported by members through a voice vote during the plenary presided over by the Speaker, Mr Oludaisi Elemide at the Assembly Complex,Oke Mosan , Abeokuta.

The report revealed that the lingering land dispute between the Nigerian Army and the communities of Apunren – Ijebu and Ijebu -Mushin had persisted for about five decades.

According to the spokesperson of the communities, Retired Major General Odunsi Samson, the dispute originated in 1977 following a military decree establishing barracks across various states in the country.

The report revealed that the Army’s failure to properly document and gazette the reduced land allocation, leading to encroachment on host communities.

The report recommended that the state government should engage senior military authorities to review the decision reached earlier by the panel to prevent further encroachment.

The Speaker directed the clerk of the House to forward the copies of the report to the state governor, federal ministries, and Heads of security formations for necessary action.

Edited by Titilayo Kupoliyi

Foreign

President Donald Trump said the United States will intervene if Iran shoots and kills protesters demonstrating against deteriorating economic conditions in the country.

“If Iran shots (sic) and violently kills peaceful protesters, which is their custom, the United States of America will come to their rescue. We are locked and loaded and ready to go. Thank you for your attention to this matter! President DONALD J.TRUMP,” he wrote on Truth Social on Friday.

Dozens of protesters took to the streets across several provinces of Iran this week, with some demonstrations which turned deadly.

Iranian officials issued a stern warning against US intervention in the country’s internal affairs. Ali Larijani, Iran’s national security chief, said on X that American interference would trigger “disruption across the entire region and the destruction of American interests.” Ali Shamkhani, a close adviser to Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, declared Iran’s national security a “red line.”

“Every hand of intervention that approaches Iranian security…will be cut off with a regrettable response,” Shamkhani said on X.

At least three people were killed and 17 others injured on Thursday evening when protesters stormed a police station in the city of Azna in Iran western Lorestan province, the state-affiliated.

According to report, the protesters clashed with police, threw stones at law enforcement personnel and set cars on fire, adding that, some armed “rioters took advantage” of a protest in the city.

On Thursday morning, at least two people were killed when dozens of protesters clashed with the police in Lordegan county of the southwest Chaharmahal and Bakhtiari Province.

It remained unclear if the casualties were among law enforcement authorities or protesters.

The first known death linked to the protests occurred on Wednesday night, when one member of Iran’s Basij paramilitary force was killed, and 13 others injured in the city of Kuhdasht in Lorestan province, per state-affiliated media. Fars News Agency showed a video of a member of the police force receiving treatment after allegedly being set on fire by protesters.

The Basij is often deployed by the regime to suppress protests.

Twenty people were arrested in the protests, the prosecutor of Kuhdasht said Thursday, according to state-affiliated news agency Tasnim.

Twenty people were arrested in the protests, the prosecutor of Kuhdasht said Thursday, according to state-affiliated news agency Tasnim.

In Tehran province’s Malard county, authorities arrested 30 people for “disrupting public disorder,” according to Fars. The agency cited a county official Mansour Saleki, who said those arrested were “abusing the legal right of citizens to protest”

Despite being so far limited, the protests marked the latest chapter in the growing discontent in Iran, as a population quietly reclaimed public spaces and personal freedoms through uncoordinated acts of defiance.

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CNN/Taiwo Akinola