Metro
18 Slaps, One Mouth Choke, One Push: Politician’s Daughter Bullied at LBIS

A video has emerged showing a student, who has been identified as the daughter of former spokesperson of the Atiku/Okowa presidential campaign, Mr. Daniel Bwala.
The less than two minutes clip, which has gone viral on social media showed a student unleashing series of slaps in cohort with other students, who did nothing to help the bullied student. Among the students was a male student, who was heard saying ‘I spoilt her relationship’, and another, a female, who queried, ‘can’t you talk?’
According to the video, the girl, known as Namitra Bwala, received a total of 18 slaps to her face, choked once on the mouth and pushed once, at both sitting and standing positions. Her assailant, who was also identified as Maryam Hassan, was asking ‘who broke my heart’ while she released the slaps.
Releasing the video on X, formerly Twitter, a user, @omolomo_o, called the attention of the politician-father, who returned to the All Progressives Congress (APC) after Atiku lost the 2023 election, and demand that he takes action, and claim justice for the molested girl.
However, the school, where the incident occurred, Lead British International School, Abuja, has said they on top of the matter, and has reached out to the families involved.
In a statement, with the subject, Addressing the Incident of Bullying at Lead British International School Abuja, LBIS prevailed on the social public to desist from further sharing the offensive video so as to reduce the trauma those involved are going at the moment.
“LBIS appeals to members of the public, especially citizen journalists on social media, to refrain from further circulating the horrendous video of the incident, to protect the minors involved and their families,” the statement read in part.
Metro
Bandits’ Kingpin Bello Turji Releases 100 Captives in Zamfara Fresh Peace Deal

Notorious bandit leader, Bello Turji, has released about 100 captives as part of a renewed peace initiative in Zamfara State.
A counter-insurgency expert, Zagazola Makama, quoted security sources to have said that the release followed ongoing dialogue and confidence-building efforts championed by community leaders under the North West Operation Safe Corridor peace process.
The victims, including men, women, and children, were handed over to local authorities and taken to a hospital for medical examination before being reunited with their families.
A source involved in the negotiations said the release was part of an agreement with Turji’s camp to embrace peace and end hostilities in affected communities.
According to the source, 36 people were initially released, followed by eight others, bringing the number to 46 before the remaining captives were freed, totaling over 100.
The source added that more releases were expected as discussions continued between Turji’s group and mediators.
Authorities said they were maintaining close surveillance to ensure the credibility of the peace process and prevent any group from exploiting it to regroup or rearm.
Metro
Gaidam, Egbetokun, Mohammed, Audi, Ogunsan, Others Headline NAOSNP National Security Conference

The National Association of Online Security News Publishers (NAOSNP) has concluded plans to host the 2025 edition of its National Security Conference and Awards as part of its NAOSNP Week, which started on October 15 with a Sensitization walk in Lagos.
The National Security Conference and Awards, which is the day 4 activity of the week, is scheduled to hold on Tuesday, October 21, at the Ballroom of the Lagos Oriental Hotel, Victoria Island, with the theme, Securing and Safeguarding Nigeria’s Economic Resources: A Call to Serve.
Among special guests expected to the grace the August occasion are the Governor of Borno State, Prof Babagana Zulum; Honourable Minister of Police Affairs, Senator Ibrahim Gaidam; the Inspector-General of Police, IGP Kayode Egbetokun; Minister of Solid Minerals, Dr. Dele Alake, Corps Marshal, Federal Road Safety Corps, Shehu Mohammed; Commandant General, Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps, CG Ahmed Abubakar Audi; Board Member, Lagos State Security Trust Fund, Mr Ayo Ogunsan; Special Adviser (Legal) to the Senate President, Barr Monday Ubani; General Overseer, Mountain of Fire and Miracle Ministries, Pastor Daniel Olukoya among a host of others.
The event, which is billed to kickoff at 10am prompt, will feature diverse lectures, panel sessions and awards of honours to deserving members of the public including the NAOSNP Man of the Year award.
Now in its 5th edition, the NAOSNP National Security Conference and Awards has remained in the forefront of shaping security discourse for the repositioning of the Nigerian Security apparachniks, in preparation to launch forward through intelligence towards tackling and arresting every challenge.
In his charge, the president of the Association, Mr. Oki Samson, noted that the 2025 edition has been streamlined and fine tuned to suit the present narrative of Nigeria’s security challenge, noting that the derivable communique will go a long way to assisting “Our state actors to continue providing the much needed security and safety for the betterment of the country’s economic resources”.
Metro
The Cave of Adulam: The Incubation and the Emergence of True Leadership

By Tolulope A. Adegoke, PhD
“True leadership is not born in the palace, but incubated in the cave. It is there, stripped of prestige and surrounded by the discontented, that a leader learns to build not with power, but with purpose” – Tolulope A. Adegoke, PhD
In the annals of history and literature, certain locations transcend their physicality to become powerful symbols. The Cave of Adulam is one such place. More than a mere geological formation, it stands as a profound metaphor for the crucible of leadership—a place of desperate refuge that paradoxically becomes a nursery for transformation, strategy, and the emergence of a king.
The story, chronicled in the First Book of Samuel, is set against a backdrop of political turmoil. David, the young anointed successor to King Saul, is a man on the run. Once a celebrated hero for slaying Goliath, he is now the target of a jealous monarch’s murderous rage. His flight from the royal court leads him to a place of last resort: the Cave of Adulam.
This was not a chosen headquarters but a sanctuary of necessity. It was dark, hidden, and undignified. Yet, it was here, in this place of perceived defeat, that the most critical phase of David’s leadership development began. The Cave of Adulam represents the essential, often overlooked, stage of incubation that precedes true and sustainable emergence.
The Crucible of the Discontented
The first and most telling event at Adulam is the composition of its inhabitants. The biblical text states:
“Everyone who was in distress, and everyone who was in debt, and everyone who was discontented gathered to him. So he became captain over them. And there were about four hundred men with him.” (1 Samuel 22:2)
This is not the recruitment drive of a conventional leader. David does not attract the elite, the wealthy, or the well-connected. Instead, his first followers are society’s cast-offs—the distressed, the indebted, and the deeply discontented. This motley crew, however, is the raw material from which a new kind of kingdom will be forged.
From Misfits to a Mission-Driven Force:
A lesser individual might have seen only a burden in this collection of broken men. David saw potential. His first act as their “captain” was not to lead them into battle, but to provide for their most basic needs. He secured the safety of his own family there and, later, sought provision for his men from a local landowner, showing a concern for their welfare that Saul had long abandoned for his own troops.
This act of provision transformed a random group of fugitives into a community. Their shared distress became a shared identity, and their loyalty shifted from self-preservation to the man who offered them dignity and purpose. David began the process of reframing their narrative: they were not merely outcasts; they were the vanguard of a new, righteous cause.
The Discipline of Constraint and Strategic Patience
The cave was a place of severe constraint. There was no room for grandstanding, no resources for lavish campaigns. This forced limitation bred a unique form of strategic intelligence. David’s actions immediately after Adulam demonstrate this shift. He moves his parents to the safety of Moab, showing foresight and familial responsibility. He then takes direction from a prophet, Gad, and operates with careful, calculated movements.
Most importantly, the cave incubated the virtue of patience. On two separate occasions (at En Gedi and in the wilderness of Ziph), David had clear opportunities to kill Saul and seize the throne by force. Yet, he refused. The time in hiding had taught him that a crown taken prematurely is a crown built on sand. His famous words, “The Lord forbid that I should do such a thing to my master… for he is the anointed of the Lord,” reveal a leader who had internalized a higher authority than his own ambition.
This restraint, forged in the darkness of the cave, was what distinguished him from Saul. It was a strategic and spiritual patience that would become the bedrock of his enduring legacy.
The Alchemy of Authentic Leadership
Within the confines of Adulam, leadership could not be based on title or ceremony. It had to be authentic. David’s authority was earned through daily acts of courage, wisdom, and compassion. It was here that he began to write, and his psalms from this period (e.g., Psalm 57, Psalm 142) offer a window into his soul.
“I cry out to the Lord Most High, to God who fulfills his purpose for me.” (Psalm 57:2)
These are not the boasts of a warrior, but the laments and prayers of a dependent man. This vulnerability, paradoxically, became a source of immense strength. By acknowledging his fear and placing his trust in a purpose beyond himself, he modeled a resilience that was contagious. His men saw a leader who was both strong and humble, both decisive and dependent. This authentic humanity is what cemented their loyalty, transforming them into the legendary “mighty men” who would later form the core of his army and administration.
The Emergence: From Cave to Kingdom
The men who emerged from the Cave of Adulam were not the same ones who entered. They were no longer a discontented mob but a disciplined, loyal, and mission-focused unit. They were the “Thirty” and the “Three,” heroes whose deeds are recorded with honor. They had been forged in the fires of shared hardship and unified under a leader who had been tested and proven.
David himself emerged not as a fugitive, but as a king-in-waiting. He had learned to lead from the bottom, to value loyalty over status, to exercise power with restraint, and to build a community on a foundation of shared purpose and mutual care. The kingdom he eventually established was, in many ways, an expansion of the principles first practiced in the cave.
Leadership Lessons for the Modern World
The story of the Cave of Adulam is not a dusty relic but a timeless case study in leadership development.
1. Embrace the Incubation Period: True leadership is often forged in seasons of obscurity, failure, or constraint. These are not wasted times but essential periods of preparation, where character is built and vision is clarified away from the spotlight.
2. See Potential in the “Discontented”: The most loyal and innovative teams are often built not from the privileged, but from those who are hungry for change and value the purpose you provide. A leader’s role is to see the champion within the challenged.
3. Lead with Provision and Care: Authority is first granted through acts of service. By securing the safety and well-being of his followers, David earned the right to lead them into battle.
4. Cultivate Strategic Patience: The easy, quick path to power is often a trap. Sustainable leadership requires the discipline to wait for the right moment and to acquire power legitimately.
5. Authenticity Builds Unbreakable Loyalty: Leaders who are transparent about their struggles and grounded in a purpose beyond themselves inspire a depth of commitment that mere charisma can never achieve.
The Cave of Adulam teaches us that the path to the throne room often leads through the cave. It is in the dark, confined, and challenging places that the most resilient and transformative leaders are incubated, ready to emerge not just to claim a title, but to build something that will truly last.
The cave of adversity is not a tomb for ambition, but a crucible for character. It is in the dark, confined spaces of retreat that the light of authentic leadership is first kindled, forged in the fires of shared struggle and strategic patience.
Adulam’s lesson: the crown is not claimed in the sun, but forged in the shadows. For it is only in the cave that a leader learns to see not with the eyes of privilege, but with the vision of providence.
Dr. Tolulope A. Adegoke, AMBP-UN is a Recipient of the Nigerian Role Models Award (2024), and a Distinguished Ambassador For World Peace (AMBP-UN). He has also gained inclusion in the prestigious compendium, “Nigeria @65: Leaders of Distinction”.