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Coup Attempt: Gambia Charges Eight Soldiers With Treason

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The Gambian government on Friday charged eight soldiers with treason in connection with an alleged coup attempt last month, a government spokesperson said in a statement.

The government on December 21 said it had thwarted a coup attempt the previous day, and detained some military personnel.

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The eight members of The Gambia Armed Forces were also charged with conspiracy to commit felony, the statement said.

All but one of the suspects were remanded in prison, with Warrant Officer Class Two Lamin Jadama still being sought.

“The Gambia Government declares (Jadama) a fugitive from justice and urges citizens and security agencies both within and outside the jurisdiction to report him to the nearest police or security post”, spokesman Ebrima Sankareh said in the statement.

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On Tuesday, the government charged two civilians and a police officer with concealment of treason and conspiracy to commit a felony in relation to the alleged plot.

Opposition politician Momodou Sabally, a former minister of presidential affairs under ex-dictator Yahya Jammeh, was arrested and later released.

The West African nation last week set up an “investigative panel” to probe the alleged coup and gave it 30 days to report.

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READ ALSO: Man Killed By Gunmen In Anambra, Two Days To His Wedding

On Thursday, in the first details of the coup bid, national security adviser Abubakarr Suleiman Jeng said the plotters aimed to “arrest cabinet ministers and senior government officials to use them as hostages to prevent any foreign intervention.

“They also had plans to retire all senior military officers from the rank of major and above and restructure (the army),” he told reporters in the capital, Banjul.

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The Gambia is a fragile democracy, still scarred by a brutal 22-year dictatorship under Jammeh.

He was defeated in a presidential election in December 2016 by political newcomer Adama Barrow and fled to Equatorial Guinea but retains influential back home.

Barrow was re-elected in December 2021 for a second five-year term.

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AU Helicopter Crashes In Somali Capital – State Media

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An African Union helicopter crashed Wednesday at the airport in the Somali capital Mogadishu with eight people onboard, state media said.

The aircraft was part of the African Union Support and Stabilisation Mission in Somalia (AUSSOM), tasked with fighting the Al-Shabaab militant group.

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The state media agency Sonna said the AUSSOM helicopter, carrying eight people, “crashed during landing at Mogadishu’s Aden Adde Airport this morning after departing Balidoogle”.

READ ALSO:Man Jailed Seven Years For N11.4m Enugu Land Fraud

The fire has been contained, and authorities are assessing the situation,” it said in a post on X.

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Sonna quoted the country’s civil aviation authorities as saying that “flight operations remain normal”.

There were no further details given, but unverified clips and images shared online showed a plume of black smoke over the city.

The AUSSOM mission faces funding difficulties, even as fears of an Al-Shabaab resurgence are stoked by attacks in the Horn of Africa nation.

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Australia Cancels Kanye West Visa Over ‘Heil Hitler’ Song

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Australia has cancelled US rapper Kanye West’s visa over his song glorifying Nazi leader Adolf Hitler, the government said Wednesday.

The 48-year-old musician, who has legally changed his name to Ye, released “Heil Hitler” on May 8, the 80th anniversary of the defeat of Nazi Germany in World War II.

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West — whose wife Bianca Censori is Australian — has been coming to Australia for some time because he has family in the country, Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke said.

READ ALSO:Kanye West’s Website Goes Down After Nazi T-shirt Sales

He’s made a lot of offensive comments. But my officials looked at it again once he released the ‘Heil Hitler’ song and he no longer has a valid visa in Australia.”

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Burke said the rapper’s cancelled visa was not intended for holding concerts.

“It was a lower level, and the officials still looked at the law and said: You’re going to have a song and promote that sort of Nazism — we don’t need that in Australia,” he told public broadcaster ABC.

READ ALSO:Reactions Trail Arrest Of IPOB Leader, Nnamdi Kanu

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Asked if it was sustainable to bar such a popular figure, the minister said: “I think what’s not sustainable is to import hatred.”

But he said immigration officials reassess each visa application.

Australian citizens have freedom of speech, Burke added.

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But we have enough problems in this country already without deliberately importing bigotry.”

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I Was Desperate To Succeed In Music’ — Nigerian Jailed In US For Tax Fraud

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A Nigerian man, Onomen Uduebor, has been sentenced to 40 months in a United States prison for his role in a large-scale tax fraud scheme, which he admitted was driven by desperation to succeed in his music career.

The U.S. Department of Justice, in a statement released on Tuesday, said Uduebor, 39, also known as Onomen Onohi, was arrested in the United Kingdom in September 2023 and extradited to the United States in March 2025. He pleaded guilty in April to conspiracy to commit wire fraud and aggravated identity theft.

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Speaking in court, Uduebor said, “I have read the victim impact statements, and I know an apology is not enough…. I was desperate to succeed in my music career. It is not an excuse, but it is the truth.”

READ ALSO:Court Jails Nine Chinese Nationals For Economic Sabotage, Orders Repatriation

According to the indictment, Uduebor and his co-conspirators created fake emails between February 2016 and April 2017, posing as company executives to trick human resources departments into releasing W-2 tax documents of employees. The fraudsters then used the data to file over 300 false tax returns, seeking more than $1 million in refunds from the Internal Revenue Service (IRS).

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Uduebor personally filed 150 of those returns and tracked the payouts into bank accounts opened in the names of the victims. While the IRS managed to block most of the claims, about $140,000 was paid out—$10,000 of which Uduebor admitted to receiving. He was ordered to forfeit that amount and pay $122,720 in restitution to the U.S. Treasury.

The statement partly reads, “Uduebor admits that he filed 150 of the false tax returns and tracked the refunds and payments to bank accounts that the schemers set up in the names of the victims.

READ ALSO:US court Jails Five Nigerians 159 Years For $17m Fraud

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While the IRS paid out about $140,000 to the fraudsters, Uduebor says he received only $10,000 from the scheme. The IRS was able to seize some of the money back from the conspirators, so the total restitution owed to the U.S. Treasury was $122,720.”

At the sentencing hearing, U.S. District Judge James L. Robart described Uduebor’s actions as significant, stating, “He freely participated in the fraud and had a substantial role in the scheme. Thirty years old is not a young man, and he ought to have known better.”

The statement added that the convict may likely be deported upon the completion of his prison term.

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Uduebor was arrested in the United Kingdom in September 2023. He arrived in the U.S. in March 2025. He pleaded guilty in April 2025. Uduebor will likely be deported to Nigeria following his prison term,” the statement concluded.

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