November 21, 2025 – Nigeria Headlines

1Bandits ‘demand N100m ransom’ per victim from families of abducted Kwara worshippers

Story gist: Bandits abducted worshippers in Kwara state and demanded N100 million ransom per victim from their families.
Left
No major left-leaning outlet from our monitored sources covered this story
Center
Bandits demand N100m each for abducted Kwara church worshippers -Relatives
— Punch Newspapers
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Right
No major right-leaning outlet from our monitored sources covered this story
Bias summary: Left- and right-leaning outlets provided no coverage, omitting any framing from those perspectives. Center outlet Punch Newspapers reported neutrally on bandits’ N100m per-victim ransom demands for abducted Kwara church worshippers, citing relatives without emphasis on tone, causation, or broader implications.

2Your visit to Kebbi, others, will boost troops morale – PDP tells Tinubu

Story gist: Nigeria’s President Bola Tinubu delayed his G20 trip amid a search for 24 abducted schoolgirls in Kebbi State. The PDP told Tinubu his visit to Kebbi and other areas will boost troops’ morale.
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Nigeria’s Tinubu delays G20 trip amid search for 24 abducted schoolgirls
— Al Jazeera
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Center
Your visit to Kebbi, others, will boost troops morale – PDP tells Tinubu
— Businessday NG
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Right
No major right-leaning outlet from our monitored sources covered this story
Bias summary: Left-leaning outlets like Al Jazeera emphasize Tinubu delaying his G20 trip to focus on the schoolgirls’ abduction, highlighting domestic security priorities. Center outlets like Businessday NG report PDP’s statement that the visit will boost troop morale, presenting opposition support. Right-leaning coverage is absent, omitting potential defenses of Tinubu’s leadership or criticism of opposition.

3Nnamdi Kanu’s case highlights religious persecution in Nigeria — US lawmaker

Story gist: A US lawmaker stated that Nnamdi Kanu’s case highlights religious persecution in Nigeria. The lawmaker described Nigeria as facing one of the world’s worst religious freedom crises.
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No major left-leaning outlet from our monitored sources covered this story
Center
Nigeria facing one of world’s worst religious freedom crises — US Lawmaker
— Punch Newspapers
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Right
No major right-leaning outlet from our monitored sources covered this story
Bias summary: No left- or right-leaning outlets covered the story, leaving progressive and conservative perspectives absent. Center outlet Punch Newspapers framed the event through a US lawmaker’s lens, emphasizing Nigeria’s severe religious freedom crisis with strong phrasing like ‘one of world’s worst’ and tying it directly to Nnamdi Kanu’s case to highlight persecution.

4Schoolgirls’ Abduction: Tinubu Directs Matawalle To Relocate To Kebbi

Story gist: Gunmen kidnapped 25 schoolgirls from GGCSS Maga in Kebbi State, Nigeria. President Tinubu directed Matawalle to relocate to Kebbi.
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No major left-leaning outlet from our monitored sources covered this story
Center
GGCSS Maga: Gunmen kidnap 25 girls from Nigerian school in Kebbi state
— BBC
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Right
No major right-leaning outlet from our monitored sources covered this story
Bias summary: Left-leaning outlets absent, omitting potential emphasis on government security failures. Center outlet BBC reports neutrally on the kidnapping event in Kebbi State, focusing solely on the abduction without government response. Right-leaning outlets also missing, lacking coverage of President Tinubu’s directive to Matawalle, which highlights official action.

5UPDATED: Court sentences Nnamdi Kanu to life imprisonment for terrorism

Story gist: A Nigerian court sentenced Nnamdi Kanu to life imprisonment for terrorism.
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No major left-leaning outlet from our monitored sources covered this story
Center
Sentencing Nnamdi Kanu to life imprisonment is irresponsible — Archbishop Onuagha
— Vanguard News
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Right
Why I didn’t sentence Nnamdi Kanu to death – Justice Omotosho
— The Nation Newspaper
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Bias summary: Left-leaning outlets absent, omitting pro-Kanu or anti-government perspectives. Center (Vanguard News) emphasizes criticism, quoting Archbishop Onuagha calling the sentencing irresponsible. Right-leaning (The Nation Newspaper) highlights judicial reasoning, with Justice Omotosho explaining why death penalty was not imposed instead of life term, framing it as deliberate leniency.