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Beirut Explosions: Lebanese Government Steps Down

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Lebanon’s government stepped down on Monday night, less than a week after a massive explosion in Beirut killed more than 160 people and sparked days of violent protests.

Prime Minister Hassan Diab addressed the nation, announcing his resignation and that of his government in the wake of the blast, which he called a “disaster beyond measure.”

In an impassioned speech, Diab berated Lebanon’s ruling political elite for fostering what he called “an apparatus of corruption bigger than the state.”
“We have fought valiantly and with dignity,” he said, referring to members of his cabinet. “Between us and change is big powerful barrier.”

Prime Minister Diab

Diab compared Tuesday’s explosion to an “earthquake that rocked the country” prompting his government to resign. “We have decided to stand with the people,” he said.
Three cabinet ministers had already quit, along with seven members of parliament.

Violent protests erupted outside the prime minister’s office in the run-up to the scheduled speech on Monday evening.

Dozens of protesters hurled stones, fireworks and Molotov cocktails at security forces who responded with several rounds of tear gas. Some demonstrators tried to scale the blast walls outside Parliament Square.

Lebanon was already suffering through its worst economic crisis in decades, coupled with rising coronavirus rates, and the government has been plagued by accusations of corruption and gross mismanagement.

Tuesday’s blast, which damaged or destroyed much of the Lebanese capital and was linked to a long-neglected stash of potentially explosive chemicals, was the last straw for many Beirut residents.

Diab, a self-styled reformer, was ushered into power last December, two months after a popular uprising brought down the previous government. His government is composed of technocrats and had been supported by major political parties, including the Iran-backed political and militant group Hezbollah.
Now the country will be tasked with finding its third prime minister in less than a year, to contend with the spiraling crises Lebanon faces on a number of fronts.

Lebanon’s currency has lost around 70% of its value since anti-government protests began last October. Poverty has soared, with the World Bank projecting that more than half of the country’s population would become poor in 2020. The government had been seen as powerless in the face of a growing banking crisis. The state has not passed a capital controls law, exacerbating the country’s severe liquidity crunch.

The majority of people in the country have been subject to stringent and arbitrary cash withdrawal limits for nearly a year. Meanwhile, billions of US dollars are widely believed to have been withdrawn from Lebanon by the country’s economic elite, further depleting foreign currency reserves.

Lebanon’s financial woes were exacerbated earlier this year by government-imposed lockdowns, designed to stop the spread of the coronavirus pandemic but which also brought the country’s ailing economy to a screeching halt.

Diab’s ministers had repeatedly accused the ruling class of disrupting their plans for reform.
Politicians aligned with the country’s banking elite torpedoed the government’s IMF-endorsed economic program, which had been expected to dig into bank profits.

The protests over the weekend were some of the largest and most violent the city has seen in nearly a year. The city convulsed with anger as protesters occupied several government ministries and threw stones and shards of glass at security forces. Police fired hundreds of rounds of tear gas as well rubber bullets and, in some cases, live fire.

United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres called for a “credible and transparent” investigation into the explosion.
French President Emmanuel Macron hosted an international donors’ conference on Sunday. US President Donald Trump and 15 other heads of state were present, pledging approximately $300 million in aid to Lebanon.

Protesters take over Beirut

Guterres called on the donors to “give speedily and generously” to help the recovery efforts.

(CNN’s Charbel Mallo, Mostafa Salem, Ghazi Balkiz, Jomana Karadsheh, Caroline Faraj and Barbara Arvanitidis contributed to this report.)

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Defending Professional Integrity: Why INEC Chairman Amupitan Deserves Fair Judgment

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By James Aduku Odaudu, PhD

By any objective standard, the recent call by the Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC) for the removal of the Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC)”, Prof. Joash Amupitan is troubling—not just for its content, but for what it portends for Nigeria’s democracy.

At stake is a fundamental principle: should professional work, undertaken years before public appointment, be weaponised to undermine independent institutions? If the answer is yes, then Nigeria risks dismantling the very foundations of competence, fairness, and intellectual freedom upon which democratic governance rests.

The controversy centres on a legal brief authored by Prof. Amupitan in 2020, long before his appointment as INEC Chairman. The brief, commissioned by international organisations, was a professional legal analysis of allegations of mass violence in Nigeria. As a Senior Advocate of Nigeria and constitutional lawyer, Prof. Amupitan was well within his professional remit to offer expert opinion on a matter of international legal concern.
Lawyers, academics, and policy experts routinely produce work that interrogates difficult, even uncomfortable realities. Such work does not automatically translate into personal belief, religious prejudice, or political intent. To argue otherwise is to misunderstand the nature of professional service and to punish intellectual honesty.
If legal opinions are retrospectively criminalised or politicised, then Nigeria sends a chilling message to its best minds: think carefully before you speak truth to power or engage global discourse.

Prof. Amupitan’s appointment was not accidental, nor was it cosmetic. INEC is a constitutionally driven institution whose effectiveness depends on deep legal knowledge, respect for due process, and institutional independence. Prof. Amupitan brings to the office:
 Profound expertise in constitutional and electoral law
 Years of experience in legal scholarship and public policy analysis
 A reputation for intellectual rigour and independence, essential for an electoral umpire

Nigeria does not need a populist at the helm of INEC; it needs a jurist who understands the Constitution, electoral jurisprudence, and the delicate balance between law, politics, and national stability. On these counts, Prof. Amupitan is eminently qualified.

In a constitutional democracy, public officials are entitled to the presumption of good faith until evidence proves otherwise. Since assuming office, Prof. Amupitan has not been accused of electoral malpractice, partisan conduct, or abuse of power. No court has indicted him. No credible evidence has been presented showing bias in the discharge of his duties.
To demand his removal based on conjecture or past professional work is not only unfair—it is dangerous. It lowers the threshold for institutional sabotage and replaces due process with pressure politics.

Ironically, MURIC’s position does more harm than good to the Muslim community it claims to defend. By suggesting that critique of banditry or terrorism is an attack on Islam, the organisation inadvertently projects criminal behaviour onto an entire religious group.

Banditry, insurgency, and terrorism are crimes, not articles of faith. Millions of Nigerian Muslims are victims of insecurity themselves and have no affiliation with violent groups. Any narrative that blurs this distinction reinforces stereotypes and undermines interfaith harmony.
Advocacy should protect communities, not entangle them in criminality by implication.
INEC’s credibility is too important to be subjected to religious or sectional pressure. Once faith-based organisations begin to demand the removal of electoral officials without evidence of misconduct, Nigeria steps onto a slippery slope—one where elections become hostage to religious suspicion rather than constitutional order.

Civil society has a right to speak. But that right must be exercised responsibly, especially when national institutions are involved.

Let INEC Work

Nigeria stands at a sensitive democratic juncture. What the country needs is a calm, focused electoral commission allowed to prepare for credible elections—not a distracted leadership fighting off speculative allegations.
Prof. Joash Amupitan should be allowed to do the job he was appointed to do. He should be judged by his actions in office, not by professional work undertaken years earlier. Anything less undermines fairness, weakens institutions, and politicises religion in ways Nigeria can ill afford.

In defending due process and professional integrity today, Nigeria protects its democracy tomorrow.

Dr James Odaudu, a development administrator and communication consultant, can be reached at jamesaduku@gmail.com and 08057314611 (WhatsApp only)

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Yakubu Mohammed, Newswatch co-founder, dies at 75

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Yakubu Mohammed, co-founder of the defunct Newswatch magazine, is dead.

He was 75 years of age.

Mohammed’s death comes less than two months after the passing of another Newswatch co-founder, Dan Agbese, who died on November 17, 2025.

The late journalist had launched his memoir, ‘Beyond Expectations’, on November 4, 2025.

He was reportedly battling a prolonged ailment before his death.

An official statement from the family was still pending as of press time.

Mohammed, who held a bachelor’s degree in science, was born on April 4, 1950.

He hailed from Ologba in Dekina LGA of Kogi state.

He attended St Joseph’s Primary School, Ayangba, in 1964; Government Secondary School, Okene, between 1965 and 1969; the University of Lagos from 1972 to 1975; and Glasgow College of Technology in Scotland between 1978 and 1979.

His journalism career included stints as associate editor at New Nigerian Newspapers from 1976 to 1980, managing editor of the same organisation in 1980, and deputy editor at National Concord between 1980 and 1982.

Mohammed later served as editor of National Concord from 1982 to 1984 before becoming co-founder and executive editor of Newswatch between 1984 and 1986.

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He was managing editor of Newswatch from 1986 to 1994 and subsequently served as
deputy chief executive officer of Newswatch Communications Limited from 1994.

Mohammed was also a director at Yadara Nigeria Limited and Lastop Limited.

He was a member of the Nigerian Union of Journalists, the Commonwealth Journalists’ Association, and the Nigerian Guild of Editors.

The veteran journalist also served as pro-chancellor and chancellor of the governing council of Ahmadu Bello University.

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Real Madrid sack Xabi Alonso

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In a stunning development, Real Madrid have announced that they have decided to part ways with manager Xabi Alonso with immediate effect.

“Real Madrid CF announces that, by mutual agreement between the club and Xabi Alonso, it has been decided to end his time as first team coach,” the statement from the club read.

Alonso was brought in as manager back in June 2025, replacing Carlo Ancelotti, who left for the Brazilian national team.

Despite showing positive signs during his time at the club, the 44-year-old tactician has largely found things difficult, especially over the past month or two, with injuries, poor results, and dressing room unrest causing problems.

The recent Spanish Super Cup semifinal win over Atletico Madrid was believed to have earned him more time to stabilise things.

But following last night’s final loss to FC Barcelona has prompted the club to act, with Florentino Perez & co. axing the manager.

“Xabi Alonso will always have the affection and admiration of all Madrid fans because he is a Real Madrid legend and has always represented the values ​​of our club. Real Madrid will always be his home,” the statement continued.

“Our club thanks Xabi Alonso and his entire technical team for their work and dedication during this time, and wishes them the best of luck in this new stage of their lives.”

…Appoints Alvaro Arbeloa as Replacement

Minutes after confirming their decision to sack Xabi Alonso, Real Madrid have now announced that former defender Alvaro Arbeloa will replace him as the first-team manager.

“Real Madrid CF announces that Alvaro Arbeloa is the new first team coach,” the club statement read.

A former Real Madrid player, Arbeloa spent seven seasons at the Santiago Bernabeu between 2009 and 2016, making over 200 appearances and winning several trophies and titles.

In 2020, after retiring, Arbeloa returned to the club, joining La Fabrica as a coach. He managed the Infantil A team in the 2020-2021 season, winning the league title, the Cadete A team in 2021-2022, and the Juvenil A team from 2022 to 2025.

As Juvenil A manager, he achieved the treble in 2022-2023 (League, Copa del Rey, and Champions Cup) and the league title in the 2024-2025 season.

Last summer, he was promoted to the position of the Castilla manager, taking over from another club legend, Raul Gonzalez.

In a short time with the reserve team, Arbeloa has done a solid job, enough to impress the management to hand him the keys to the first team.

Arbeloa’s first assignment will come later this week as Real Madrid take on Albacete in the Copa del Rey Round of 16 on Wednesday

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