Author: The Nation

  • I will never give up on Nigeria — Gbenga Hashim declares

    I will never give up on Nigeria — Gbenga Hashim declares

    Former presidential candidate Dr. Gbenga Hashim has reaffirmed his unwavering commitment to Nigeria, insisting that surrender is not an option despite the country’s deepening political, economic and security challenges.

    Hashim made the declaration in Abuja during a North Central zonal meeting of the Gbenga Hashim Solidarity Movement, which convened state coordinators from across the region.

    Addressing the gathering, he emphasized that Nigeria’s current realities require steadfast leadership, organised civic engagement, and citizens willing to remain involved rather than retreat into apathy or despair. 

    He warned that abandoning the nation would amount to handing its future to mediocrity, impunity and misrule.

    Hashim stressed that national renewal demands discipline, clarity of purpose, and sustained grassroots organisation, noting that meaningful change is the result of deliberate and collective effort. 

    He urged coordinators to strengthen community-level engagement while upholding accountability, justice and national unity.

    The meeting reviewed the state of the movement across the North Central zone, assessed ongoing mobilisation efforts, and outlined strategies to enhance coordination and expand the movement’s reach within the region.

    Coordinators in attendance reaffirmed their commitment to a vision of Nigeria guided by competence, integrity and inclusiveness, pledging to intensify grassroots organisation and political education in their respective states.

    Reflecting on his personal journey, Hashim recalled his long history of political advocacy, which began at age 14 when he became a supporter of progressive parties of the era.

    Read Also: PDP leadership crisis can be resolved in one week — Gbenga Hashim tells Tanimu Turaki

    “We were not of voting age then, but we pasted posters and sang with excitement,” he said. “As a young boy, I engaged an NPN representative to the National Assembly, who was a family friend, in discussions about economic management based on my rudimentary knowledge of economics and government.”

    He explained that his early activism set him on the path of advocacy for democracy and good governance, a journey that later led to his detention as a political detainee at about the age of 20.

    “Almost 40 years later, we are still standing,” Hashim said. “We will not give up until we see the Nigeria of our dreams, by the grace of God.”

    Hashim also urged members to remind Nigerians, particularly the youth, of the country’s past economic strengths and future possibilities.

    “Tell the people that in 1966 Nigeria’s economy was twice the size of Malaysia’s and bigger than those of Thailand and Indonesia,” he said. “Remind them how Nigeria assembled cars and tractors and produced vaccines at the Yaba Vaccine Centre. Let young people know that jobs through industrialisation are possible, as we had before, and that they are not condemned to a life dependent on palliatives. Tell them about our $4 Trillion plan for economic transformation,” he added.

    The meeting ended with renewed determination among members to strengthen organisation, sustain advocacy and remain firm in the belief that Nigeria can still be rescued through principled leadership and collective action.

  • Police confirm abduction of medical doctor in Edo

    Police confirm abduction of medical doctor in Edo

    Edo State Police Command has confirmed the abduction of a medical doctor and his brother in Edo State.

    It gave names of the victims as Abu Ibrahim Babatunde and Abu Tahir.

    Both men were kidnapped in front of their house at Ibira Camp, Auchi, Edo State, while attempting to open the gate.

    Dr. Abu did his housemanship at the Edo State Teaching Hospital, Auchi.

    Read Also: Police warn politicians against sabotage of Osun LG workers’ resumption

    Edo Police Command spokesman, Eno Ikoedem, said the incident was reported at about 8:30pm.

    Ikoedem said policemen from the Auchi Divisional Headquarters were immediately deployed to the scene in collaboration with vigilantes, Forest Guards, and Community Safety Partnership Volunteers who are well conversant with the forest terrain.

    She said aggressive search and rescue operations within the forest have been ongoing.

    The Edo Police spokesman assured the family and the general public that no stone would be left unturned to ensure safe rescue of the victims.

  • I’m the ‘president general of single mothers’ – Iyabo Ojo

    I’m the ‘president general of single mothers’ – Iyabo Ojo

    Renowned actress Iyabo Ojo has defended single motherhood, dismissing societal stereotypes and emphasising that personal growth, fulfilled children, and stability define success, not marital status.

    Ojo, who raised her children alone from a young age, attributed her achievements to faith in God, resilience, and perseverance.

    She stated that her daughter and son have succeeded, and her life has turned out better than many expected.

    The actress, in a viral video, highlighted the challenges of parenting, citing moments of uncertainty, exhaustion, and emotional strain, but stressed that these can be overcome with faith and determination.

    “There’s confusion in their midst. I’m the president-general of single mothers because my daughter has succeeded, my son has succeeded, and my life is better. When you’re raising children at a young age, you almost run mad. There were times I didn’t know which road to pass. If they told me I’d be a landlady in Lekki, I’d say it was a lie. It wasn’t me, it was God,” she said.

    She also spoke on relationships, stating that both men and women make choices in marriage, and expressed admiration for fathers who actively care for their children.

    “Na man go leave you, na man go marry you. Na woman go leave you, na woman go marry you. Put your faith in God and see whether God will not do it for you. I easily fall in love with fathers that take care of their children,” she added.

  • Niger Govt orders schools in security-affected areas to remain closed

    Niger Govt orders schools in security-affected areas to remain closed

    Several public and private schools in security-affected areas of Niger State will remain closed, even as the state government has approved the reopening of schools in locations deemed safe from January 12, 2026.

    The Niger State Commissioner for Basic and Secondary Education, Dr Hadiza Asabe Mohammed, disclosed this in a press statement, explaining that only schools situated in areas assessed as safe and secure are permitted to resume academic activities. Schools in communities considered unsafe will remain closed until cleared by security agencies.

    She said the decision followed security assessments and consultations with relevant security authorities, with the aim of safeguarding students, teachers and school communities amid persistent insecurity in parts of the state.

    Under the directive, all public and private day and boarding schools in safe areas are to reopen on Monday, January 12. However, both day and boarding schools located in insecurity-affected areas are to remain shut pending further notice.

    Read Also:

    The ministry noted that schools in affected communities will only be allowed to reopen after fresh assessments and formal clearance by security agencies, without providing a specific timeline.

    As part of the reopening process, school authorities in approved areas have been directed to immediately register all returning students and submit the data to the ministry within one week of resumption for monitoring and documentation purposes.

    Local government area chairmen were also instructed to support the reopening by ensuring adequate security in and around school premises in collaboration with security agencies.

    To promote transparency, the ministry said it will publish an official list of public and private schools approved to reopen on January 12.

  • Di’Ja expresses joy after welcoming fourth child

    Di’Ja expresses joy after welcoming fourth child

    Afrobeats singer and songwriter Hadiza Blell, popularly known as Di’Ja, has expressed gratitude for navigating the challenges of 2025, following the birth of her fourth child, a baby boy, on December 29, 2025.

    Sharing maternity photographs on her Instagram page, the singer thanked her loved ones for their support, encouragement and guidance throughout the year.

    Di’Ja celebrated her entry into 2026 as a mother of four, describing the milestone as a blessed new chapter in her life.

    She also reflected on the lessons and personal growth gained over the past year, urging her fans to “be brave in all things” as they step into the new year.

    She wrote, “Still on di matter. Mood knowing you survived everything and every lesson that came at you in 2025, Alhamdulilahi, while pregnant with our 4th child and having him two days ago, on 29th Dec, 2025.

    Read Also: DI’JA: I am shy, awkward

    “Entering 2026 in sha Allah as a mother of 4 and kickstarting what I know is a blessed year ahead is something to be grateful for. Thank you to my Husband, Children, Parents, siblings, in-laws, friends, and extended family for every lesson, good, bad, and ugly; love, support, and guidance during one of the crãziest years.

    “Thank you to all of you for supporting our businesses and being part of our community growth. Be Brave in all things. Happy New Year in advance, and please stay safe out there.”

  • Burna Boy never assisted me with N600,000 – Skales 

    Burna Boy never assisted me with N600,000 – Skales 

    Afrobeats singer Skales has refuted claims that his colleague Burna Boy gifted him N600,000 during his period of financial struggle.

    Skales attributed the rumour to a Burna Boy fan on X (formerly Twitter), stating that the claim was fabricated.

    In a recent interview on the Adesope Live show, Skales expressed his disappointment, saying he had to reach out to the fan, identified as Benny, to understand the motive behind the false narrative.

    “There was a time I had to reach out to a Burna Boy fan on Twitter, I think his name is Benny or something. I asked him what I had done to him to warrant the hate he exhibits towards me.

    Read Also: ‘I lived in a hut, slept on mats’- Skales reflects on challenging childhood

    “He created a fake news that there was a time that I was broke and Burna Boy helped me with N600,000. That never happened,” he said.

    The singer urged his peers to be cautious of overzealous fans and to communicate directly to clarify issues, rather than letting misinformation create tension.

  • Finsbury Heinz awarded AfriSAFE safety honour after 12,000-entry review

    Finsbury Heinz awarded AfriSAFE safety honour after 12,000-entry review

    Nigeria’s Quality, Health, Safety, Environment, and Sustainability professionals (QHSES) from across Africa gathered in Mombasa, Kenya, as Finsbury Heinz Limited received continental recognition for its work in workplace safety and sustainability.

    The company won the AfriSAFE Auditing and Certification Company of the Year 2025 award at the Africa Safety Award for Excellence, an event focused on safety, health, and sustainability practices across the continent.

    The ceremony brought together regulators, safety professionals, policy makers, and private sector leaders from several African countries, highlighting growing attention on workplace safety and governance.

    According to AfriSAFE Chief Executive Officer, Femi Da Silva, the selection process was extensive. He said nearly 12,000 entries from 34 African countries were assessed by reviewers from Africa, Europe, and the United States.

    “Being shortlisted alone is already an achievement,” Da Silva said. “Every finalist reflects strong commitment, measurable impact, and leadership in advancing workplace health and safety across Africa.”

    The award was presented by  Elizabeth Lungu-Nkumbula, President of the Africa Vision Zero Network, an organisation that promotes zero harm in workplaces worldwide. She said the recognition reflects the standards Finsbury Heinz Limited continues to uphold in safety and sustainability practices.

    “This award speaks to consistency, discipline, and influence,” Lungu-Nkumbula said. “Finsbury Heinz has demonstrated what is possible when safety and sustainability are treated as core business values.”

    She also recognised Jamiu Badmos, Managing Consultant of Finsbury Heinz Limited, describing his role in advancing occupational safety systems across industries in Africa.

    In his remarks, Badmos thanked God for what he described as the opportunity to “serve humanity through safety.” He restated his commitment to safetainability, a concept he introduced to combine safety and sustainability into one operational focus.

    He also called on the Nigerian government to sign the Occupational Safety and Health Bill into law, saying stronger legal support is needed to improve workplace safety culture.

    “Africa cannot afford preventable workplace injuries,” he said. “Policy, enforcement, and leadership must work together to protect lives.”

    Industry stakeholders say the award reflects rising expectations for safety standards across African workplaces.

  • Imprisoned by ambition: Peter Obi’s reckless misreading of politics and power

    Imprisoned by ambition: Peter Obi’s reckless misreading of politics and power

    By Sunday Dare 

    If the recent decamping of Peter Obi from the Labour Party to the African Democratic Congress was intended to detonate like a political bombshell, it failed spectacularly. What arrived instead was a dull thud—unremarkable, unsurprising, and terminally familiar. Nothing more. Nothing less. The script had been written long ago, recycled endlessly, and now—ironically—with this latest move, even that script has run out. All smoke. No fire. With his entry into the ADC, the plot does not evolve; it simply ends.

    Mr. Obi used the occasion not for clarity or restraint, but to fling predictable broadsides against a man who dwarfs him in political reach, institutional mastery, and historical consequence—Bola Ahmed Tinubu. This is a President who does not govern by tirade, who does not rely on subterfuge, and who does not court cheap populism as a substitute for policy. Mr. Obi would have been better served by silence than by yet another performance dressed up as conviction.

    What followed was entirely in character. Mr. Obi once again chose provocation over substance—an incendiary display that substitutes indignation for understanding and accusation for evidence. This is not courage; it is habit. It reflects a deeper pathology in Nigeria’s political discourse: performative outrage, permanent campaigning, and the restless hunt for relevance. Mr. Obi has made a career of all three.

    His political trajectory tells the fuller story. From APGA to PDP, from Labour to ADC, Mr. Obi has drifted across parties with the ease of a man unburdened by ideology or loyalty. Political platforms, for him, are conveniences—vehicles to be boarded and abandoned at will. Causes are temporary. Commitments are elastic. There is no enduring belief system anchoring these movements, only ambition in search of the next available ladder.

    This inconsistency was evident even in office. As governor, Mr. Obi perfected a style long on moral posturing and short on durable institutional legacy. He spoke the language of prudence, but left behind little that could withstand rigorous scrutiny. His public persona has always leaned on assertion rather than proof, repetition rather than record. That is not reform; it is rhetorical minimalism masquerading as depth.

    On national issues, the shallowness becomes even more pronounced. Mr. Obi’s commentary on macroeconomic management, federal structure, security, and public finance routinely betrays a thin grasp of complexity. Hard problems are flattened into slogans; structural constraints are moralized into personal failings. This is not analysis—it is sophistry. Noise without knowledge. Certainty without comprehension.

    The 2023 elections exposed these weaknesses brutally. Buoyed by an emotionally charged but politically unserious following, Mr. Obi misread the national climate entirely. He mistook social-media enthusiasm for nationwide structure, online applause for polling-unit presence, and moral grandstanding for electoral arithmetic. Politics, however, is not a vibes-based exercise. It is built on organization, coalition, discipline, and data.

    That absence of seriousness was laid bare in court. In a withering moment, the Supreme Court of Nigeria admonished Mr. Obi for failing to even demonstrate a clear understanding of his own vote tally, while simultaneously disputing the official figures released by Independent National Electoral Commission. To challenge an election without facts, without numbers, without preparation, is not principled opposition; it is political irresponsibility elevated to litigation.

    Underlying all this is an unmistakable deification of self. Mr. Obi’s rush to the presidency was not grounded in democratic credentials of sufficient weight, nor in a coalition patiently built across Nigeria’s diverse political terrain. It was propelled by an inflated sense of personal virtue—the dangerous illusion that moral self-regard alone qualifies one to govern a complex federation. History is unkind to such delusions.

    Read Also: JUST IN: Peter Obi dumps Labour Party for ADC

    Nigeria does not need saints auditioning for office. It needs leaders with gravitas, institutional memory, and a disciplined understanding of power—how it is built, negotiated, and responsibly exercised. These qualities are conspicuously absent from Mr. Obi’s record.

    If a New Nigeria is indeed possible, it will not be erected on insinuation, half-knowledge, and rhetorical arson. It will be built on competence, respect for institutions, and the discipline to distinguish facts from theatrics. Sadly, these remain in short supply in Mr. Obi’s latest outing.

    By contrast, President Tinubu offers focused leadership, measurable outcomes, and time-tested performance forged over decades of political engagement and executive responsibility. Governance is proceeding with intent, not noise.

    In that context, the political horizon is no longer murky. 2027 just got clearer. See you all in 2031.

  • Adekunle Gold becomes first artiste to sell out Wole Soyinka centre

    Adekunle Gold becomes first artiste to sell out Wole Soyinka centre

    Afrobeats singer Adekunle Gold has made history as the first musician to sell out the Wole Soyinka Centre for Culture and the Creative Arts, formerly known as the National Theatre, Lagos.

    The feat was achieved on December 26, 2025, when the singer staged a star-studded concert at the venue, featuring performances by Olamide, Yinka Ayefele and Adewale Ayuba.

    Adekunle Gold filled the 3,560-capacity hall and was subsequently presented with two plaques on January 1, 2026, in recognition of the achievement and the efforts of the management and record label that organised the event.

    Read Also: Simi shows off baby bump in Adekunle Gold’s new music video

    Reacting in a post on his Instagram page, the singer expressed appreciation to his fans, saying: “Thank you all for a great end to 2025. North America is up next. Where should I bring the Fuji experience to?”