Mon. May 25th, 2026
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By Abiodun John Balogun


In the volatile world of modern geopolitics, criminal underworlds, and intelligence warfare, a single phone call can become a death sentence. There are real-world examples—some buried under layers of secrecy and others exposed to global scrutiny—where innocent lives were lost simply because they answered or received a call from the wrong number. Whether through mistaken identity, surveillance misfires, or gangland paranoia, these stories reveal how technology, trust, and treachery intertwine in fatal ways.

1. The Drone Strike That Killed Bilal al-Berjawi

In 2012, Bilal al-Berjawi, a British-Lebanese man stripped of his British citizenship, was killed in a U.S. drone strike in Somalia. Reports suggest that the U.S. was able to track his location after he made a brief phone call to his wife in London. The SIM card or signal triangulation from that phone call reportedly exposed his location. Though a suspected al-Shabaab operative, the timing of the strike—right after a short call to his spouse—raised questions about the ethics of drone surveillance and the danger of simply using a mobile device in a conflict zone.

2. The Case of Ahmed Zaid Salim Zuhair

During the Iraq War, Ahmed Zuhair, a Saudi national, was reportedly detained and sent to Guantanamo Bay because of contact information found on a mobile phone belonging to a suspected militant. The mere fact that his number appeared in a contact list led to his imprisonment, although no solid evidence was ever presented to prove his involvement in terrorist activities. He was released after seven years, never charged with a crime. One phone call—or even just the digital footprint of a contact—was enough to erase years of his life.

3. Gang Killings in Nigeria Based on Contact Lists

In parts of Nigeria where cultism and gang rivalries run deep—such as areas of Lagos, Port Harcourt, and Benin City—there are reported cases of youths being murdered simply because a rival gang member’s number was found on their phone. One such case involved a 21-year-old student at the University of Benin who was hacked to death after he received a call from a number linked to a rival gang. The assumption? He was leaking information or was a spy. No trial. No chance to explain.

4. ISIS and Syrian Phone Surveillance

During the height of ISIS control in parts of Syria and Iraq, local populations lived under extreme surveillance. A single phone call—especially to a foreign number or a suspicious contact—could lead to immediate arrest or public execution. In Raqqa, a man was executed in the city square after it was discovered he made a call to a relative in Turkey. The charge? Espionage. His real crime may have been homesickness, but the call was enough to warrant death.

5. Wrong Number, Right Target: The Misfire in Pakistan

In 2010, a man in North Waziristan was killed in a drone strike after a phone call linked him to a Taliban commander. Later investigations revealed that the man was not a combatant but had lent his phone to someone who was. That one favor—letting a stranger use his phone—made him a target. His entire family perished in the same strike.


Conclusion: A Call to Reflection

In an age where data is currency and phone metadata can kill, the seemingly innocent act of answering or receiving a call can spiral into deadly consequences—especially in war zones, authoritarian regimes, or gang-dominated territories. These real-life cases are a haunting reminder that technology, while connecting us, also exposes us. Lives have been lost not because of actions, beliefs, or affiliations—but because of contact. In the wrong place, at the wrong time, with the wrong number—one call can become a death sentence.

A stranger comes to you and says help me with only one minute of call from your phone. My phone is dead and I need to call someone urgently, and you, being a nice person, say no problem, take and make the call.
Do you know what you have done? If your phone is used to call someone they want to go and kill or someone they just poisoned and when investigation starts and they have to check who called them last and your number shows up….
Let me break down what will happen to you so that you will learn something today from this.
First of all, you will be arrested for whatever crime because your phone was used to make that call and it will be considered that you know the person that’s why you gave the person your phone and it’s a known deal between both of you.
Secondly, since the inception of Mobile Networks, your phone is your personal property that you will answer for anything that happens on it or through it.
So, for these reasons, you will be arrested and kept in detention until all investigations are
completed. Even if the investigation takes 6 months or 2 years, that means you will be locked up for that period of time over the fact that you just lent someone your phone to make a one minute call.
Do you now see that your good heart that is void of carefulness can lead you to something so bad? *And ignorance of the law is not an excuse before the law.
Don’t be stingy with this information. Share it with your family and friends so they can learn from this.z l
#netlinkinternational

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From Tramadol to Canadian to Exol-5 The New Drug Destroying Nigerian Youths An Investigative Article .From Tramadol to Canadian to Exol-5: The New Drug Destroying Nigerian Youths An Investigative Report on the Shifting Landscape of Substance Abuse in Nigeria Nigeria faces a severe and evolving drug crisis, particularly among its youth. What began with the widespread abuse of Tramadol has progressed through mixtures like “Canadian” to newer pharmaceutical diversions such as Exol-5. This shift reflects deeper issues: easy access to prescription drugs, weak regulation, socioeconomic pressures, and aggressive street-level marketing. NDLEA operations and health studies reveal a public health emergency that threatens an entire generation. Phase 1: The Tramadol Epidemic (2010s–Early 2020s) Tramadol, a synthetic opioid prescribed for moderate to severe pain, became Nigeria’s most notorious street drug. 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