Tuesday, June 16, 2026

The bat that weighs the same as a teaspoon of salt – and the biologist who rediscovered it

 


Just after sunrise, a cacophony of whoops and chatter can be heard over the verdant forests of the Afi mountain wildlife sanctuary. Nestled within the Cross River rainforest in south-east Nigeria, and spanning an area about the size of central Paris, the steep sanctuary is a haven for endangered gorillas, drill monkeys, the grey-necked rockfowl – and the short-tailed roundleaf bat.

The Nigerian biologist Iroro Tanshi remembers the moment she first spotted the endangered bat in 2016, during a field expedition for her PhD research. “We were trapping near a roost that night, so we caught a lot of bats,” says Tanshi. But, she adds: “This looked very, very different. Big-eared.” She promptly turned to her identification guide, which revealed that the tiny furry creature she was holding between her fingers was Hipposideros curtus, better known as the short-tailed roundleaf bat, last recorded in the wild in the 1970s.


“That was the moment that changed everything. Actually, there was the catching and the moment of realisation, like: ‘Oh my gosh,’” she says of her breakthrough.

Spurred by this discovery, Tanshi and her small crew of local assistants set up harp traps and mist nets, tracking the cave networks within the Afi sanctuary and the nearby Cross River national park. During their gruelling survey, they found 15 more of the bat species.

The short-tailed roundleaf bat weighs about the same as a level teaspoonful of salt. Unlike large fruit bats, it has relatively small eyes and a large intricately folded nose, which helps it to navigate total darkness through echolocation. It is extraordinarily sensitive to noise and bright lights, so Tanshi typically uses red light during her field research.

“You put it on for a short time and turn it off again to kind of see your way or see the bat that’s hanging there,” she says.

For decades, the species was believed to exist only within specific forest caves in Cameroon and Equatorial Guinea. Thanks to human activities such as deforestation and hunting, all previously documented roosts had been erased by the 2010s. Scientists feared that the species had quietly gone extinct – until Tanshi’s all-important discovery. The small colony she rediscovered around the Afi sanctuary is the only confirmed population of the endangered bat still actively roosting.

However, having rediscovered the bat, Tanshi noticed that most of the attention in the sanctuary went to primates and other large animals, which local people treated with respect.

“People were very familiar with the need to protect nature and conserve these animals,” Tanshi says. “You couldn’t kill those animals in the village without getting reported. But everything else was up for grabs. Regardless of the fact that we were in a protected area, bats were still heavily hunted.”

Historically, bats have been burdened by negative stereotypes, commonly linked to witchcraft and bad omens. Their association with health emergencies, including the Ebola outbreak and Covid, has not helped. “Bats can’t catch a break, sadly,” says Tanshi, who describes the cultural perception of bats in Nigeria as a “complex scenario”. Amid the broader cultural aversion, some Nigerian communities treat the bats as food.

In Abia, a remote village 70km (45 miles) from the Afi sanctuary, the straw-coloured fruit bat is regarded as “normal bushmeat for us, like fish and chicken in other places”, says one villager, Judith Ojong, adding that bats for meat are typically sold in fours for 5,000 naira (about £2.70).

In response, Tanshi, along with Benneth Obitte, another bat specialist, set up the Small Mammal Conservation Organisation (Smacon) in 2016 to champion bats, rodents and other little creatures. The next year they launched the Zero Wildfire Campaign, to combat the destructive blazes that pose another threat to bats.

As part of the campaign, Tanshi and the team at Smacon designed colour-coded alert systems to guide farmers on safe bush burning. To supervise farmers during burning and provide a swift response in the event of an outbreak, Tanshi also formed a group called Forest Guardians. The incidence of wildfires within the forest area has plummeted in the past five years, she says.

In April, Tanshi became one of only six women globally to receive a Goldman environmental award, in recognition of her successful wildfire campaign around the Afi mountain wildlife sanctuary. She was also recently named a National Geographic explorer and has won a Whitley award.

A decade after finding the short-tailed roundleaf bat, Tanshi, a postdoctoral fellow at the Washington Research Foundation, remains enraptured by the hidden diversity in Nigeria’s rainforest and is still amazed at her discovery.

“Something that we thought was extinct was in this beautiful place that nobody goes to,” she says.

By Kingsley Charles, The Guardian


Vidoe - Nigeria says nearly 10,000 former Boko Haram fighters have been reintegrated




Authorities in Nigeria's northeastern Borno State say nearly 10,000 former Boko Haram fighters have now been reintegrated into society under a government-backed rehabilitation and deradicalisation programme aimed at encouraging defections from insurgent groups.

The announcement came as 720 former militants graduated from a rehabilitation centre in Maiduguri, the capital of Borno State, during a ceremony attended by state officials. According to Borno authorities, the latest group brings the total number of former insurgents reintegrated into their communities to 9,680.

The programme forms part of broader efforts by Nigerian authorities to weaken jihadist groups operating in the Lake Chad region by encouraging fighters to surrender and return to civilian life. Images from the ceremony showed hundreds of former militants gathered at the rehabilitation centre, where participants took an oath before being formally discharged from the programme.

Boko Haram's insurgency, which began more than a decade ago in northeastern Nigeria, has killed tens of thousands of people and displaced millions across Nigeria and neighbouring countries. Although the group's capabilities have been significantly reduced by military operations, armed factions continue to carry out attacks in parts of the region.

Borno State authorities say rehabilitation and reintegration programmes remain an important component of efforts to end the conflict and promote long-term stability in communities affected by the insurgency.

Stablecoins gain in Nigeria for cross-border transfers

Nigerians are increasingly turning to U.S. dollar-pegged digital tokens, or stablecoins, to move money ​across borders, as households and small businesses ‌seek cheaper and faster alternatives to traditional channels, the IMF said on Tuesday.

The Fund said what began as a ​niche crypto use has grown into a significant payments ​route, with Nigeria receiving about $59 billion in crypto ⁠inflows between July 2023 and June 2024 ​and accounting for roughly 60% of stablecoin inflows in ​sub-Saharan Africa.

Stablecoins - cryptocurrencies pegged to assets and designed to hold a stable value - have gained global traction, backed in part by support from U.S. President ​Donald Trump.

Their price stability, combined with fast transfers via smartphones ​and digital wallets, has driven rapid adoption in Nigeria, the IMF ‌said.

For users, ⁠they offer near-instant cross-border payments and a way to store value outside a volatile naira currency, effectively bridging crypto markets and traditional finance.

They can also undercut conventional ​remittance channels, where ​sending $200 to ⁠sub-Saharan Africa costs on average about 9% of transaction value, compared with a global average of ​6%, said the IMF, citing World Bank ​data.

However, their rise poses policy ⁠challenges.

Widespread use of dollar-linked tokens could weaken monetary policy by reducing demand for the naira, while shifting ⁠transactions ​to digital wallets complicates oversight ​and raises the risk of illicit flows, the IMF said.

By MacDonald Dzirutwe, Reuters

Nigerian army frees widow of ex-general who died in captivity

 

Nigeria's military says it has rescued the widow of a retired general who himself had died at the weekend while being held by kidnappers.

Maj Gen Rabe Abubakar and his wife Amina were abducted in the north-western state of Katsina at the end of last month.

The military said the kidnappers shot Mrs Abubakar during the rescue operation before fleeing as troops advanced. She is now being treated in a military hospital, a statement added.

One of the couple's daughters, Bilkisu, confirmed the rescue on WhatsApp, posting: "We are deeply grateful to Allah for His mercy and protection. Our mummy has been rescued from the hands of evil by the Nigerian Army.

"We pray that Allah grants her good health, complete recovery, peace of mind, and strength after everything she has been through."

Maj Gen Abubakar's death in custody was thought to have been the result of health complications.

In a statement issued on Monday, the military said the mission to rescue his wife "followed intensified search-and-rescue efforts".

"During sustained offensive operations and pressure mounted on the criminal elements, troops made contact with the bandits... leading to the successful recovery of Mrs Abubakar," said Samaila Uba, the director of defence information.

Uba said the armed forces leadership remained committed to ensuring her full recovery and was providing all necessary support to her family.

He added that troops would continue operations and track down the kidnappers.

No group has said it was behind the abductions. In north-west Nigeria criminal gangs known locally as "bandits" frequently carry out kidnappings for ransom, as well as cattle rustling and attacks on rural communities.

Apart from bandits, militant jihadists have also operated in the region. An alleged militant camp in Sokoto state was the target of a US airstrike on 25 December last year.

On 6 June, a video surfaced online showing the retired general and his wife appealing to the Katsina government to release detained bandits and their livestock in exchange for their freedom.

On Saturday, the state government announced that the Maj Gen Abubakar had died in captivity. Officials said the retired officer's death was linked to diabetes and high blood pressure. His remains were buried later that day.

President Bola Tinubu said he was "shocked" by the general's death and described it as a reminder of the threat posed by armed criminal groups.

By Mansur Abubakar and Makuochi Okafor, BBC

Monday, June 15, 2026

Video - Nigerian on course to decentralize policing system



The Nigerian parliament has passed a constitutional amendment bill aimed at decentralizing the country’s security architecture through the creation of state-level police forces. The long-debated reform now requires approval from at least two-thirds of the country’s state assemblies before it can be forwarded to President Bola Tinubu for assent. Lawmakers say the proposal marks a significant step toward addressing a worsening insecurity situation across the country.