Crime
Kano Hisbah declares Jigawa Commissioner wanted for alleged adultery
The Kano State Hisbah Board has declared Auwal Sankara, the Jigawa State Commissioner for Special Duties, wanted for alleged adultery, intensifying a scandal that has gripped two northern Nigerian states.
Sankara was suspended by Governor Usman Namadi last weekend following his arrest by Hisbah operatives on charges of being romantically involved with a married woman in Kano State.
At a press conference on Monday, the Commander-General of the Kano Hisbah Board, Aminu Daurawa, revealed that Sankara was apprehended in an unfinished building, where he was allegedly caught with Tasleem Nabegu, a housewife and mother of two.
The arrest, Daurawa explained, was the result of a surveillance operation initiated after the board received multiple complaints from Nasiru Bulama, Nabegu’s husband.
READ ALSO: New FCT police commissioner Olatunji Disu vows zero tolerance for crime
Bulama had raised concerns about the commissioner’s ongoing illicit relationship with his wife.
Daurawa stated that Hisbah initially sought an out-of-court resolution by summoning both families. However, while the husband honored the invitation, Sankara did not.
Instead, after being briefly bailed by Hisbah, the commissioner escaped from custody, prompting the board to take the matter to court. Hisbah has since declared him wanted and is collaborating with law enforcement to ensure his apprehension.
The case has attracted significant attention, with residents of Kano and Jigawa states closely following the developments.
Commander Daurawa used the opportunity to urge citizens to report any form of illicit activity within their communities, emphasizing the role of Hisbah in maintaining moral standards.
Nasiru Bulama, the woman’s husband, has called on the state government and other relevant authorities to ensure that justice is served, asserting that adultery is a serious crime that must be addressed.
This incident underscores the strict enforcement of Islamic law in northern Nigeria, where the Hisbah Board plays a key role in policing moral conduct. The legal proceedings will likely draw further scrutiny, as the board and the commissioner face off in court.
-
News7 days agoFRSC opens 2026 nationwide recruitment, online applications begin July 3
-
News1 day agoWidow of late investigative broadcaster Kola Olawuyi dies
-
Business5 days agoPressure mounts on marketers as Nigerians demand lower fuel prices amid falling global oil costs
-
Football1 week agoCAF rejects proposal to expand AFCON to 28 teams
-
Business7 days agoMRS slashes petrol price by N50/Litre as Dangote Refinery cuts fuel costs
-
Agribusiness5 days agoRising insecurity threatens Nigeria’s food supply as farming communities abandon farmlands
-
Energy5 days agoNigerians turn to solar as rising diesel costs, unstable grid drive energy shift
-
Business5 days agoThe State House Statement: An Unquantifiable Reputational Damage to the Nigerian Financial Sector

