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Stakeholders Insist GMOs Deprive the Right to Safe Food

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Stakeholders Insist GMOs Deprive the Right to Safe Food

By: Michael Mike

Public Health experts and food sovereignty activists have called on the Nigerian Government to halt the introduction of Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs) into the Nigerian food system, insisting that their use deprive Nigerians the right to “safe food for better life and better future.”

This call was made during an online event organised by Health of Mother Earth Foundation (HOMEF) on Wednesday to mark the celebration of the World Food Day 2024. The event highlighted the implications of modern agricultural biotechnology on the rights of consumers, farmers and of our environment as well as other implications on our food system.

While moderating the event, Joyce Brown, Public Health Expert and HOMEF’s Director of Programme noted that the theme of the World Food Day: “Right to Foods for a Better Life and a Better Future” is so apt and urged the Federal Government to critically review its decisions regarding the use of GMOs in our food system through the human rights lens.

Brown noted that majority of the Nigerian population rejects GMOs due to their economic, environment and health implications; and the government’s continued approval of permits for these products outrightly tramps on the rights of the people.

Speaking further on the issue of rights, the Deputy Director at Environmental Rights Action/Friends of the Earth Nigeria, Barr. Mariann Bassey-Orovwuje, noted that “our socio-economic system doesn’t support the right of consumers to choose as labeling is not effective and consumers can’t tell which products are genetically modified or not by their physical characteristics. Our markets are not designed in ways to differentiate between organic foods and GMOs.”

“Another key rights issue is the fact that farmers have to depend on the biotechnology seed companies season after season for seeds as productivity of GM seeds reduce after the first generation. This undermines the culture of seed saving and sharing among local farmers.” Orovwuje added.

On the right to information, Dr Segun Adebayo, Deputy Director of the Centre for Food Safety and Agricultural Research, highlighted that the processes of GMOs approval in Nigeria is flawed. He added: “It is not sufficient to announce notification of applications on the website of the National Biosafety Management Agency (NBMA) – which many people do not know exists, in their office or in two national dailies. There is no risk assessment report/documents on the NBMA website indicating that proper due diligence is done before these products are released into the environment” The composition of the board of the board of the NBMA – with the presence of key promoters of GMOs including the National Biotechnology Development and Research Agency – and other flaws in the biosafety regulatory system in Nigeria necessitate an urgent review of the NBMA Act.

Dr. Ifeanyi Casmir, a Molecular Biologist also speaking at the event noted that GMOs directly disrupt the rights of peoples to a safe environment which we depend on for food. “Studies have revealed that GMOs designed to pest resistance, increase the dependence on synthetic pesticides which destroy non-target organisms including pollinators and soil living organisms, leading to loss of biodiversity and soil degradation. This has severe implications on food productivity, he added”

Casmir also noted: “the Cry Proteins/toxins produced by the GM crops designed to be pesticides including the TELA Maize, Bt Cowpea and Cotton, disturb rhizospheric and soil eubacterial communities. Furthermore, Bt crops are produced using antibiotic markers which are implicated in increasing cases of antibiotics resistance.”

Speaking on the sustainable, just and healthy alternatives for our food system, Lovelyn Ejim, a farmer and women farmer group leader urged the Nigerian Government to focus on Agroecology which uses ecosystem principles in the management of agriculture systems thereby assuring optimum and sustain-able food productivity while addressing social and economic barriers in food production. She stressed on the need to support the set up of markets for organic products and to focus on achieving food sovereignty through increasing support for smallholder farmers.

Stakeholders Insist GMOs Deprive the Right to Safe Food

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Plateau: five killed in Kwi community reprisal after attack on cattle by Berom Militias

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Plateau: five killed in Kwi community reprisal after attack on cattle by Berom Militias

By: Zagazola Makama

At least five persons have been confirmed killed following a reprisal attack in Kwi community, Riyom Local Government Area of Plateau State, after suspected Berom militias reportedly shot and slaughtered several cows belonging to Fulani herders.

Security sources told Zagazola Makama on Saturday that the initial attack on the cattle occurred around 4:45 p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 30, when armed youths invaded grazing areas in Kwi and opened fire on the herders’ livestock.

According to the sources, more than a dozen cows were killed, while several others sustained gunshot and machete injuries. The incident triggered a swift reprisal later that night, resulting in the deaths of five people within the same vicinity.

“The attackers shot over ten cows and butchered some. In the night, there was a counter-attack that led to the death of five people,” sources said.

Zagazola gathered that the situation has heightened tension in the area, with residents fleeing their homes in fear of further violence.

Troops of Operation Safe Haven and other security forces have since been deployed to the area to restore calm and prevent escalation.

Zagazola recalls that Riyom and neighboring Barkin Ladi local government areas have remained flashpoints of recurrent ethno-communal violence between Berom farmers and Fulani herders, as government of the state failed to contain the crises.

Plateau: five killed in Kwi community reprisal after attack on cattle by Berom Militias

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FCT police rescue 23 foreign nationals, bust kidnapping syndicate

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FCT police rescue 23 foreign nationals, bust kidnapping syndicate

By: Zagazola Makama

Operatives of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Police Command have smashed a major kidnapping syndicate and rescued 23 foreign nationals who were being held hostage in Nasarawa State.

Zagazola Makama gathered from security sources that the operation, carried out by the elite Scorpion Squad led by ACP Victor Godfrey, followed a credible digital intelligence report and marked another major breakthrough in the ongoing effort to rid the FCT and its environs of criminal elements.

The sources said the suspects were arrested on Oct. 22, 2025, around 8 p.m., when the Scorpion Squad stormed Agwan Adamu Ruga Fulani, Zone B, River Side, Ado area of Mararaba, Nasarawa State.

According to the sources, 14 suspected kidnappers were apprehended during the raid, while 23 victims comprising 14 men, eight women, and a child were rescued.

Investigations revealed that the victims were foreign nationals mainly Malians who had been lured into Nigeria under the guise of securing employment but were subsequently abducted and held captive in two fortified two-bedroom apartments.

The police added that the breakthrough came after a formal complaint was lodged on Oct. 21, 2025, by Mr. Dembele Talibe, a 55-year-old Malian national and President of the Diaspora Malians Citizens Organization in Nigeria.

Talibe had reported the disappearance of several Malian citizens who, according to him, had been tricked with false job offers before being held for ransom.

“The kidnappers were demanding ransom payments from relatives of the victims using WhatsApp as their primary communication channel,” the police source said.

Upon receiving the report, the Scorpion Squad swiftly deployed digital tracking systems that led to the identification of the suspects’ hideout. The subsequent raid resulted in the rescue of the victims and the arrest of key members of the criminal network.

Among the rescued were one Cameroonian, one Nigerien, and one Burkinabé national. Items recovered from the scene included mobile phones, cooking utensils, mattresses, and other household items believed to have been used by the suspects.

Highest Police authorities confirmed that investigation was ongoing to apprehend the landlord of the property and other fleeing accomplices.

The operation illustrates the FCT Command’s renewed focus on intelligence-led policing, the use of technology in crime detection, and collaboration with local and international stakeholders to combat cross-border criminal networks.

The successful rescue has also drawn commendation from diplomatic circles and human rights advocates, who hailed the effort as a step toward dismantling transnational criminal enterprises operating within Nigeria’s borders.

FCT police rescue 23 foreign nationals, bust kidnapping syndicate

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Troops eliminate Boko Haram, repel terrorists’ ambush along Bama–Konduga road in Borno

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Troops eliminate Boko Haram, repel terrorists’ ambush along Bama–Konduga road in Borno

By: Zagazola Makama

Troops of the Joint Task Force (JTF), North East Operation Hadin Kai, have repelled an ambush by Boko Haram/ISWAP terrorists along the Main Supply Route (MSR) between Bama and Konduga in Borno State.

Zagazola Makama gathered that the troops, along with members of the Civilian Joint Task Force, were on ambush operations under Operation Desert Sanity IV when they came under enemy contact.

The incident occurred on Oct. 30 at about 7:38 p.m. around the Charlie 5 axis, along the Bama–Konduga road, during a coordinated ambush mission.

It stated that the troops engaged the terrorists believed to have infiltrated from the Geizuwa–Sambisa forest axis and forced them to flee in disarray after a fierce exchange of fire.

“Subsequent exploitation conducted by the troops on Oct. 31 led to the discovery of one terrorist’s corpse within a 3-kilometre radius toward the Sambisa forest axis,” the sources said.

During the mop-up operation, the troops recovered one AK-47 rifle, a magazine containing eight rounds of 7.62mm special ammunition, 90 rounds of 7.62mm x 54mm ball linked ammunition, and four bicycles believed to have been used by the fleeing insurgents.

Sources confirmed that no soldier was injured during the encounter.

Troops eliminate Boko Haram, repel terrorists’ ambush along Bama–Konduga road in Borno

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