7 Top Headlines News Stories Today Nigerian Newspapers (14/06/26)
2026 Contamination Recall: NAFDAC issued a strong public alert regarding the U.S. recall of approximately 90,000 bottles of Children's Ibuprofen Oral Suspension, USP (100 mg/5 mL). The manufacturer, Strides Pharma Inc., initiated the recall following consumer reports of a gel-like mass and black particles in the medication
2. The Federal Government has announced the next stage of recruitment into the Nigeria Immigration Service, NIS, the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps, NSCDC, and the Federal Fire Service, FFS and Nigeria Correctional Service, NCoS. Applicants who sat for the Civil Defence, Correctional, Fire and Immigration Services Board, CDCFIB recruitment test last November are expected to check if they made the shortlist for physical screening.
3. The Nigerian Army says troops of Sector 2, Operation Fansan Yamma, have killed a terrorist, rescued three kidnapped victims, and destroyed a bandits’ camp during ongoing operations in Zamfara. This is contained in an operational report made available to the News Agency of Nigeria on Saturday in Abuja. The report said the operation was conducted on June 12 across communities in Zurmi and Shinkafi Local Government Areas as part of efforts to combat banditry and other criminal activities.
4. A former Head of State, Gen. Abdulsalami Abubakar (retd.), has dismissed claims that Chief MKO Abiola was poisoned, insisting that an autopsy conducted by pathologists from four countries attributed his death to natural causes. The revelations are contained in Chapter 21 of Abubakar’s 264-page, 27-chapter autobiography titled ‘Call of Duty,’ obtained by our correspondent on Saturday at the public presentation of the book and two others at the Aso Rock Villa, Abuja, also Gen. Abdulsalami Abubakar (retd.), said the hours surrounding the death of Gen. Sani Abacha on June 8, 1998, left him with a lingering sense that “something was fishy.” He disclosed that he and the late Chief of Army Staff, Lt-Gen. Ishaya Bamaiyi, were mysteriously locked inside a waiting room at the Presidential Villa for nearly an hour before being informed that the Head of State had died.
5. The protest against widespread insecurity has entered its third day in Nigeria’s capital city. The protesters, who are demanding improved security, blocked a bridge on Karu-Nyanya expressway, which links Nasarawa and Abuja. Wielding placards and chanting anti-government songs, they demanded that the government wake up to its responsibility of protecting lives.
6. Major General Abubakar Rabe (rtd) who died two weeks after he was kidnapped by bandits has been laid to rest. The burial, conducted in Katsina in accordance with Islamic rites, drew family members, senior military officers, government officials and residents, many of whom described the occasion as both solemn and deeply painful. Reacting to the incident, Katsina State Governor Dikko Umaru Radda expressed deep sorrow over the death of the retired general, describing it as a dark moment for the state and a stark reminder of the security challenges facing the country.
7. Kebbi Police Command has dismissed rumours that some schools have been closed due to insecurity. The command’s Police Public Relations Officer, PPRO, SP Bashir Usman dismissed the rumours in a statement on Saturday in Birnin Kebbi.







Comments