Author: The Nation

  • Allwell Ademola, Big Bolaji, Sanku, other celebrities who died in 2025

    Allwell Ademola, Big Bolaji, Sanku, other celebrities who died in 2025

    The Nigerian entertainment industry, particularly Nollywood, has faced a heartbreaking wave of losses in 2025, spanning film, music, comedy, and broadcasting.

    From veteran actors to emerging broadcasters, these deaths have sparked widespread grief among fans, colleagues, and industry leaders, drawing attention to ongoing concerns over health, road safety, and security in the country.

    Here is a record of 11 notable celebrities who passed away in 2025, leaving behind lasting legacies, cherished memories, and profound sorrow:

    1. Actor Asa Koko: He died on January 30, after a prolonged illness lasting over two years. Filmmaker Kunle Afod announced his death on Instagram, paying tribute to the actor known for his contributions to the Yoruba film genre.

    2. Actress Patience “Pat” Ugwu, popularly called “Sugar Girl,” died on February 5 at age 35. Known for roles in films like Lack of Money (2018) and Port-Harcourt Lady (2019), Ugwu was also a fitness coach and beauty entrepreneur.

    3. Veteran actor Columbus Irosanga: Famed for portraying native doctors and a senior lecturer at the University of Port Harcourt’s Theatre Arts Department, passed away on February 6.

    4. Broadcasting pioneer Anike Agbaje-Williams died peacefully on February 26 in Ibadan at 88. She made history as the first face and voice on African television and radio in 1959.

    Read Also: Biola Bayo reacts to sudden loss of Allwell Ademola

    5. Nkechi Nweje: The actress succumbed on March 21st following complications from surgery.

    6. Gospel singer and Pastor Bolaji Olanrewaju, known as “Big Bolaji,” died at 50 on April 19 after a brief illness.

    7. Filmmaker and producer Kayode Peters’ died on June 28 in Toronto, Canada, after a long battle with illness.

    8. Actor Olusegun Akinremi, better known as Chief Kanran, died on August 15. Celebrated for his humor and commanding presence, he left a decades-long legacy on stage and screen.

    9. Comedian Adetola Samad, known as “Sanku,” died on September 1 in a car accident in Oyo State.

    10. 29-year-old Arise TV anchor Somtochukwu Christelle Maduagwu, affectionately called “Sommie,” tragically died on September 29 during an armed robbery at her Abuja home.

    Reports indicate she fell from her third-floor apartment while attempting to escape the intruders.

    11. Actress and producer Allwell Ademola died on December 27. The 49-year-old (as confirmed by her family, correcting earlier reports of 43) suffered a heart attack. Hours earlier, she had shared a video on Instagram praying to see the end of the year, a post that has since resonated deeply with mourners.

    These losses have prompted reflections on the fragility of life in the spotlight and calls for better support systems within the industry. Tributes have flooded social media, with colleagues expressing shock and sorrow. 

  • Group urges court to stop January implementation of new tax law

    Group urges court to stop January implementation of new tax law

    • …court orders substituted service on N/Assembly, AGF, others

    The High Court of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Abuja has been urged to stop Federal Government’s planned implementation of the new tax laws, effective form January 2026.

    The request forms a relief being sought in a suit filed by a group, the Incorporated Trustees of African Initiative for Abuse Public Trust (AIAPT).

    The group argued among others that in view of the controversy surrounding the laws, including allegations of alterations, it was proper for the court to stop the planned implementation until the issues are resolved.

    Listed as defendants in the suit are: the Federal Republic of Nigeria, the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, the Attorney General of the Federation, the President of the Senate, the Speaker of the House of Representatives and the National Assembly.

    Already, the court has granted the plaintiff’s request to be allowed to serve some of the defendants documents relating to the suit through substituted means.

    Justice Bello Kawu, who is sitting as a vacation judge, issued the order while ruling on an ex-parte motion filed by the plaintiff, which was moved by its lawyer, Nnamdi Mba.

    Justice Kawu ordered that court documents meant for the Federal Republic of Nigeria and the President be served on them through the office of the AGF.

    The judge also ordered that court documents meant for the Senate President, the House of Reps Speaker and the N/Assembly should be served on them through the Clerk of the N/Assembly.

    He said such substituted service shall be deemed proper served.

    Justice Kawu however, declined to grant some injunctive reliefs sought by the plaintiff, but ordered it to put the defendants on notice.

    The plaintiff had, in the motion, marked: M/17240/2025 prayed for an order of interim injunction restraining the Federal Government, the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), the National Assembly, or any of its agencies from implementing any of the provisions of the gazetted Nigeria Tax Act (2025), Nigeria Tax Administration Act (2025), the Nigeria Revenue Service (Establishment) Act (2025) or the Joint Revenue Board of Nigeria (Establishment) Act (2025) for any reasons pending the hearing and determination of the motion on notice for interlocutory injunction.

    It had equally sought for an order of interim injunction restraining the President, either by himself or through any agency of the Federal Government created under the gazette Nigeria Tax Act (2025), Nigeria Tax Administration Act (2025), the Nigeria Revenue Service (Establishment) Act (2025) or the Joint Revenue Board of Nigeria (Establishment) Act, 2025) from implementing the provisions of the Acts in any states of the federation where applicable, pending the hearing and determination of the motion on notice.

    Further proceedings in the case has been adjourned till December 31.

  • Toyin Abraham’s “Oversabi Aunty” hits N382 million in cinemas

    Toyin Abraham’s “Oversabi Aunty” hits N382 million in cinemas

    Actress Toyin Abraham’s directorial debut, “Oversabi Aunty,” has achieved a remarkable milestone, becoming Nollywood’s second-biggest film of the weekend in 2025 with a box office earnings of over N382 million in 11 days.

    The film tells the story of a well-meaning but overly involved aunty who tries to fix everyone’s problems, leading to hilarious misunderstandings and touching revelations. 

    The film’s advanced screening on December 18 generated significant buzz among audiences, paving the way for its nationwide release on December 19.

    The film boasts an all-star cast, including Mike Ezuruonye, Efe Irele, and Enioluwa Adeoluwa, among others. 

    Abraham expressed her gratitude to fans, thanking them for their love and support.

    In a post on social media, Abraham wrote, “Honestly, I can’t thank God and you my amazing fans enough. Without your love and support, I am nothing.

    “Achieving this kind of milestone in just 11 days is HUGE for me! What took 3 weeks before, we’ve now done in 11 days. Eshey! Modupe ganni!

    “Oversabi Aunty is still hot and showing in cinemas nationwide. Please go watch it and tell others. It’s not just a movie it’s a super story packed with real life lessons.”

  • Adeleke assents ₦723bn 2026 appropriation bill into law

    Adeleke assents ₦723bn 2026 appropriation bill into law

    The Osun State Governor, Ademola Adeleke on Monday signed ₦723 billion of 2026 appropriation bill into law, vowing to fully implement it with accountability to the people of the state.

    The Nation recalled that the Osun State House of Assembly passed ₦723,454,988,670.00 the budget christened ‘Budget of Economic Transformation’ on December 2025.

    Assenting the budget on Monday, Adeleke accompanied by the Deputy Governor, Prince Kola Adewusi; House Speaker, Adewale Egbedun; the Chief of Staff, Hon Kazeem Akinleye; the Head of Service, Elder Ayanleye Aina and members of the cabinet, said he signed into law the 2026 Appropriation bill to consolidate and expand governance and service deliveries in line with the five point agenda of our administration.

    A statement by his aide , Olawale Rasheed, said Adeleke speaking after the signing ceremony, he said, “The final year of our first term with expanded ambitions to complete ongoing projects and launch new initiatives for the good of our people.

    Read Also: Adeleke slams Reps member Oke over call to deregister Accord Party

    “Our administration has in the last three budget years laid solid foundation for the sustainable development of our dear state. We completed many abandoned projects and launched new ones. We paid billions of naira in pension and salary debt. We targeted workers welfare and approved and implemented payments of promotions arrears and paid many allowances which the previous government neglected.”

    Speaking on the importance of Budget 2026, the governor said his team has resolved to consolidate our achievements across the sectors”, adding that “the year 2026 is a dual year of renewal of mandate and rolling out of a new agenda for the next four years. The consolidation for 2026 is a year of continuation, of further good governance and of continuity for sustainable governance.

    “2026 is a loaded era as an election year when by God and people, our mandate will be renewed. But we should not allow governance to suffer. We must multi-task.

    We promise Osun people full implementation of the new appropriation act. I charge each ministries and agencies to follow the established timelines for the budget execution. We will continue to focus on people’s welfare and complete all ongoing projects and programmes” , the governor posited.

    He expressed profound gratitude to Osun people and residents for their unshaken faith in our leadership, declaring “I am personally overwhelmed by the deep love prayers and support from all segments of our society. This strong goodwill strengthens our resolve to work only for public interest and public good.

    “I won’t disappoint the mass of our people, the artisans, the workers, the labour movement, the youth, the students, the women, our royal fathers and opinion leaders. I remain faithful in service of the people, for the people and by the people.”

  • Sanwo-Olu turning vision, reform, discipline into tangible progress in Lagos

    Sanwo-Olu turning vision, reform, discipline into tangible progress in Lagos

    • By Dr. Dayo Israel

    There are years that pass quietly in governance, and there are years that redefine trajectory. For Lagos State, 2025 belongs firmly in the latter category. It is a year that demonstrated clearly and convincingly what focused leadership can achieve when policy is anchored on vision, discipline, and delivery.

    This year, despite economic uncertainties and urban pressure, Lagos has charted a remarkable path of progress under the leadership of Governor Babajide Sanwoolu. From the bustling streets of Ikeja to the serene waterways of Eko Atlantic, citizens have experienced the tangible impact of landmark reforms, completed projects, and ambitious initiatives. 

    Sanwoolu’s 2025 agenda has not only focused on generating revenue but also on translating it into visible improvements in the daily lives of Lagosians.

    Under the leadership of Governor Babajide Olusola Sanwo-Olu, Lagos has not merely expanded its economy; it has reordered its priorities, accelerated long delayed projects, and laid foundations whose impact will be felt well beyond the present political cycle. This year, Lagos moved decisively from planning to performance, from announcements to outcomes. 

    This is not accidental progress. It is intentional governance. Governor Sanwoolu has moved Lagos From Revenue to Results, Turning Capacity into Capability

    Lagos remains Nigeria’s economic nerve centre, contributing a significant share of national non oil GDP and sustaining one of the highest internally generated revenues in subSaharan Africa. But the defining feature of 2025 is not how much Lagos earned, it is how wisely that capacity was translated into outcomes.

    Governor Sanwoolu’s administration made a deliberate choice to convert fiscal strength into visible, life improving infrastructure, while maintaining macro stability, institutional continuity, and social inclusion.

    Across transportation, housing, health, education, energy, food systems, culture, and youth development, the story of 2025 is one of completion, consolidation, and courageous expansion. A story of Rail Revolution, Redefining Urban Mobility in Africa’s fastest growing megacity. 

    Perhaps no sector better illustrates Lagos’ longterm thinking than rail transportation. In 2025, Lagos continued to consolidate gains from its rail investments while accelerating work on new rail corridors designed to fundamentally change how millions move across our city.

    Our reality is that rail is no longer theoretical in Lagos, it is functional.

    The Lagos Blue Line has now firmly established itself as a backbone of west – east mass transit, easing pressure on road networks, reducing commute times, and improving productivity for workers and businesses. It has moved firmly into operational normalcy, transporting thousands of commuters daily between Marina and Mile 2. For residents along this corridor, commute times that once stretched into hours have been significantly reduced.

    Beyond passenger movement, the Blue Line has decongested major road arteries such as Lagos – Badagry Expressway, Improved productivity for workers and traders, Reduced fuel consumption and emissions.

    The Red Line project running along the Agbado –Oyingbo axis and integrated strategically with the Lagos – Ibadan railway corridor has advanced significantly, connecting densely populated areas and integrating Lagos’ transport ecosystem with national rail infrastructure. 

    The Red Line now move hundreds of thousands of passengers daily, reducing logistics costs, and unlocking new residential and commercial clusters along its route. It has recorded major milestones in 2025, serving densely populated mainland communities. 

    Passenger adoption has grown steadily, validating the state’s longterm bet on rail as the most sustainable solution to Lagos’ mobility challenge.

    But that’s not all. Beyond these, planning and early works on additional rail lines such as the Green Line including corridors linking emerging growth centres signal a government not reacting to congestion, but anticipating population growth decades ahead.

    The economic impact is clear: reduced transport costs, increased labour mobility, lower carbon emissions, and higher urban efficiency.  Transportation policy under Sanwo-Olu is no longer about managing chaos, it is about designing order.

    Sanwoolu is investing in Roads, Bridges, and Urban Renewal, Infrastructure That Solves Problems. 2025 also marked the completion and commissioning of several critical road and bridge projects, alongside aggressive rehabilitation of inner city and arterial roads across Lagos’ five divisions. Importantly, these projects were executed alongside aggressive drainage expansion, addressing perennial flooding and protecting homes, markets, and businesses.

    This Drainage upgrades, flood control projects, and urban regeneration initiatives have helped mitigate the effects of climate related flooding, an existential issue for a coastal megacity like Lagos.

    These are not cosmetic interventions. They are risk-reduction investments, protecting lives, assets, and longterm economic value.

    Governor Sanwoolu continued delivery under the Lagos State Affordable Housing Programme, completing and allocating housing units in multiple locations including Odo-Onosa/Ayandelu, Ibeshe, Sangotedo and Epe axis developments is worth commending. These estates are not merely buildings; they are integrated communities with supporting infrastructure, easing housing pressure and supporting urban expansion in a planned manner.

    In 2025, Lagos deepened investments in healthcare through Upgrading of General Hospitals and Primary Health Centre, Expansion of diagnostic and specialist capacity, and Continued strengthening of the Lagos State Health Insurance Scheme (ILERA EKO). The focus has been on access, affordability, and quality, ensuring that health outcomes improve across income levels. His continued investments in diagnostic capacity and specialist care has reduced the need for outbound medical tourism and improving access for ordinary citizens.

    In education, school rehabilitation, teacher capacity development, digital learning initiatives, improved learning environments across primary and secondary levels and curriculum support reinforced the state’s belief that human capital is the ultimate infrastructure. Governor Sanwo-Olu’s approach treats education as economic infrastructure, recognising its central role in productivity, innovation, and social mobility.

    These investments may not always trend on social media, but they compound quietly and powerfully over time.

    In 2025, Sanwoolu expanded Lagos capacity to Power Productivity. Lagos’ energy strategy this year continued to focus on decentralised power solutions, embedded generation, and public – private collaboration to improve electricity access for households, MSMEs, markets, and industrial clusters. Reliable power remains one of the strongest enablers of job creation and business competitiveness. By prioritising energy reforms, the Sanwoolu administration strengthened Lagos’ position as Nigeria’s most business friendly state. 

    For thousands of MSMEs, the engine room of Lagos’ economy, unreliable electricity is often the single greatest cost driver. By expanding power access through embedded systems and partnerships, the Sanwo-Olu administration has helped Reduce energy-related operating costs, Improve business uptime and productivity, Enhance competitiveness for Lagos-based enterprises

    This is not abstract reform; it is felt directly in markets, workshops, factories, and offices. Building on the passage of the Electricity Act, Lagos has taken concrete steps to assert sub national leadership in power regulation and market development. 

    In 2025, the state accelerated work on establishing a structured Lagos electricity market, laying the groundwork for Independent power producers, Competitive distribution models and Private investment in generation and distribution infrastructure. 

    This reform oriented approach positions Lagos to attract longterm capital into power generation and distribution, critical for sustaining a megacity economy.

    In agriculture, the Lagos deepened its focus on food security and value chain development, supporting local production, aggregation, processing, and distribution. Strategic investments in rice, poultry, aquaculture, and vegetable production combined with logistics and market access have helped stabilise food supply and create jobs, particularly for young people. In a volatile global food environment, these policies are not optional; they are economic insurance.

    Governor Sanwoolu’s administration has been unapologetic about positioning Lagos as Africa’s creative and cultural capital.

    In 2025, Lagos strengthened its global brand through Investment in creative infrastructure, Support for festivals, museums, and cultural districts, Tourism promotion and destination marketing, and Strategic partnerships with global cultural institutions. 

    The result is a sector that generates billions annually, employs hundreds of thousands mostly young people and projects Lagos’ identity confidently to the world.

    This is soft power with hard economic returns.

    As National Youth Leader, I have also been excited about Governor Sanwoolu’s Youth Development and Sports Initiatives, his effort in Preparing Tomorrow’s Leaders Today. Youth focused programmes in skills acquisition, entrepreneurship, digital economy training, and sports development expanded significantly in 2025.

    Sports infrastructure upgrades and talent development pipelines reinforced Lagos’ status as Nigeria’s leading sports hub while youth empowerment initiatives focused on capability building, not tokenism.

    I see firsthand how these investments translate into confidence, competence, and civic engagement among young Lagosians.

    One of the most underappreciated aspects of Governor Sanwoolu’s leadership is his strategic international engagement. Throughout 2025, the governor held high level meetings with foreign governments, development finance institutions, global investors, and multilateral partners. These engagements yielded Memoranda of Understanding (MOUs) spanning Infrastructure financing, Transport and urban planning, Energy transition and renewables, Technology and innovation, Housing and urban development, Climate adaptation and resilience. 

    While MOUs are not ends in themselves, they represent access, credibility, and optionality positioning Lagos to attract longterm capital, technical expertise, and global best practices. In a competitive global economy, cities not countries are increasingly the units of growth. Lagos is clearly playing that game with seriousness and sophistication.

    The Sanwo-Olu administration has continued to strengthen the Lagos civil service through capacity building, welfare improvements, digitisation, and institutional reform ensuring continuity beyond personalities.

    Equally important is the governor’s ability to manage politics without derailing governance carrying along stakeholders, maintaining party cohesion, and fostering stability. Development thrives where politics is predictable. Governor Sanwoolu is arguably the biggest financial supporter of the party in Southwest Nigeria, with the exception of our Father, the President. 

    Governor Sanwoolu’s consistent alignment with President Bola Ahmed Tinubu and the ideals of the All Progressives Congress has ensured synergy between state and federal initiatives. This loyalty is rooted in shared philosophy, not convenience. It has enabled policy coherence, infrastructural alignment, and institutional respect benefiting Lagosians directly.

    The recently presented 2026 Lagos State budget is bold, forward looking, and unmistakably legacy driven. With strong emphasis on infrastructure, transportation, human capital, climate resilience, and economic competitiveness, the budget signals a government preparing Lagos not just for the next election but for the next generation.

    For Lagosians, 2025 is A Year That Changed the Curve. 2025 will be remembered as the year Lagos chose long-term impact over short term applause.

    Let me also use the opportunity to commend Deputy Governor Femi Hamzat who has been a steadfast partner to Governor Sanwoolu, providing unwavering loyalty, strategic counsel, and hands-on leadership across the administration’s ambitious agenda. Dr Hamzat has consistently reinforced the governor’s vision, ensuring that policies translate into tangible results for Lagosians. His dedication, professionalism, and alignment with Governor Sanwoolu’s goals exemplify the kind of teamwork that has powered Lagos’s remarkable progress in 2025, making him not just a deputy but a trusted pillar of the administration.

    Governor Babajide Sanwoolu’s has demonstrated that leadership is about Completing what others abandoned, Starting what the future demands, Governing with discipline, humility, and purpose. 

    Lagos is not perfect. No megacity is. But Lagos is working, learning, and building with clarity about where it is going. That is what leadership looks like. And that is why 2025 stands as a landmark year for Lagos State.

    As Lagos closes out a year of visible delivery, 2026 is shaping up to be the moment when progress becomes part of everyday life for more people. With the rail system moving from early success to wider coverage and efficiency, Lagosians should expect shorter commutes, less pressure on major roads, and a transport network that increasingly works to the rhythm of the city. In energy, the expansion of embedded power projects across markets, hospitals, and business clusters will continue to ease daily frustrations, helping traders, artisans, and small businesses stay open longer and operate at lower cost.

    Infrastructure and housing is expected to remain front and centre in the year ahead. Ongoing road, drainage, and flood control projects are expected to reach completion in more communities, improving safety and liveability, especially during the rainy season. At the same time, additional homes under the state’s affordable housing programme will come on stream, opening new, well planned neighbourhoods and easing pressure on overcrowded areas of the city.

    Perhaps most importantly, Lagosians should expect greater stability and continuity. Many of the partnerships and investment commitments secured in 2025 are expected to translate into real projects on the ground in 2026, creating jobs, strengthening public services, and positioning Lagos for longterm growth. 

    The direction is clear: a government focused not on noise, but on results that touch daily life and endure beyond the moment.

    …Dr Dayo Israel, the National Youth Leader of the All Progressives Congress writes from Kano Street, Ebute Metta, Lagos.

  • 2027: Wike fires warning shot at ‘opportunistic’ politicians in Rivers

    2027: Wike fires warning shot at ‘opportunistic’ politicians in Rivers

    • … says power is not for free

    The Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Minister, Nyesom Wike, on Monday cautioned Rivers State politicians, declaring that last-minute loyalty switches and trendy political slogans will not secure power or party tickets in the lead-up to the 2027 elections.

    Wike while addressing party supporters the former Rivers State governor stressed that true political power is built on credibility, consistency, and grassroots trust not opportunism or convenience.

    According to the Minister; “Power is not given freely. Politics is not a gift. Mandates are earned, defended, and protected. Nobody dashes power”.

    Wike clarified that his tour was purely to express gratitude to supporters, not a campaign kickoff.

    “I did not come here to play politics. I came here for one clear reason: to say thank you,” he said. 

    He added that closing the year without personally appreciating the people would have been ungrateful.

    Reflecting on the 2023 elections, Wike defended his principled stance, saying it was rooted in equity, fairness, and justice.

    He reminded the crowd that while President Bola Tinubu won the presidency with strong Rivers support, the PDP dominated state-level races, proving his camp’s mobilization strength.

    As active politics starts in January, Wike urged supporters to stay vigilant and wait for further directive from them.

    “From January, politics begins. Be prepared. This is not a threat; it is a strategic reality.”

    Reaffirming his unwavering alignment with President Tinubu, he said whatever the President says, know that is exactly where I stand. There is alignment. There is no ambiguity”, he stated.

    Wike also emphasised the need to uphold integrity, warned against breaking agreements or abandoning principles for money.

    “Hard times expose character. You know who stands firm and who only shows up when food is ready” he explained.

    He reiterated his personal responsibility in political choices while thanking Omuma residents for their continued loyalty.

    The Minister further stressed that, “If you choose one direction or another, that is your decision. But understand this clearly, power is not for dash.”

  • Alaafin thanks dignitaries for historic installation of Seyi Tinubu, Yari

    Alaafin thanks dignitaries for historic installation of Seyi Tinubu, Yari

    The Alaafin of Oyo, Oba Abimbola Owoade, has expressed profound gratitude to dignitaries who attended the installation of Seyi Tinubu as Okanlomo of Yorubaland and Senator Abubakar Yari as Baloyin of Yorubaland.

    According to Bode Durojaiye, the monarch’s Director of Media and Publicity, about 65 aircraft landed at Ibadan International Airport, while 25 helicopters arrived in Oyo town, ferrying guests to the grand event.

    The ceremony also welcomed no fewer than 145 members of the House of Representatives, 45 senators, top government officials, captains of industry, leading politicians, and traditional rulers.

    Oba Owoade described the presence of these eminent personalities as a profound honour that illuminated the ceremony with grace, wisdom, and solidarity, turning it into a truly historic and memorable occasion.

    “On behalf of my Royal family and the entire Oyo Kingdom, I extend our deep appreciation for your support and solidarity, which testify to the enduring strength of our traditional institutions and the unity of our people,” the monarch said. “Your presence has honoured us and left us inspired. We pray for your continued health, prosperity, and divine guidance. May God bless you all abundantly.”

  • 2027: APC, PDP structure collapsed for Tinubu in Rivers State – Wike

    2027: APC, PDP structure collapsed for Tinubu in Rivers State – Wike

    • …addresses woman, youths in Etche, Omuma Local Government Areas

    The Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Nyesom Wike, has declared that in Rivers State, members of the All Progressives Congress (APC) and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) have effectively put aside partisan differences to embrace President Bola Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda.

    Wike made the declaration on Monday while addressing leaders, youths, and women from Etche and Omuma Local Government Areas during his visit to the two councils.

    According to the former Rivers State governor, political labels now matter less than unity and collective commitment to development.

    “In Rivers State, APC and PDP have already collapsed into one family, the Renewed Hope family,” Wike said.

    He explained that the collaboration across party lines was driven by shared values, mutual respect, and the desire to deliver dividends of democracy to the people.

    “I don’t want to hear again, ‘I am PDP’ or ‘I am APC.’ What I want to hear is that you are working together. All of us are members of the Renewed Hope Agenda. It is one family,” he added.

    Wike said his visit to Etche and Omuma LGAs was not for political campaigning but to appreciate the people for their longstanding support.

    “We didn’t come for any rally. I am here to say thank you for the support you have given to us over the years. We are not ungrateful people,” he stated.

    He commended the leadership of the two local council chairmen, describing them as central to sustaining unity and political stability in the area.

    “Agreement is agreement. When you agree with people, you must keep it,” Wike said, urging party leaders and elected officials to honour commitments made in the interest of peace and development.

    The FCT Minister stressed that unity remains the key to political and economic progress at the grassroots.

    “When you are united, you get results. When you are divided, you lose,” he warned.

    Wike thanked women, youths, and community leaders for their cooperation and support, noting that the peaceful atmosphere during the visit reflected growing political maturity in the state.

    He said, “This is not a rally. It is simple to say ‘thank you.’

  • Sean Tizzle set to release new single ‘Husband and Wife’

    Sean Tizzle set to release new single ‘Husband and Wife’

    Nigerian Afrobeats singer, Oluwaseun Oluwabamidele, better known as Sean Tizzle, has announced plans to release a new single titled ‘Husband and Wife’ on January 1, 2026.

    Sean Tizzle, who announced this in a statement on Sunday, described the new single as a refined return to his signature sound, infused with romance, warmth, and musical maturity.

    The artist said the new release signals the beginning of a new creative phase for his musical career and promised a steady rollout of music throughout next year.

    He also revealed that he would later in the year release his third studio album, The New Testament, a body of work he described as a reflection of artistic growth, lived experience, and renewed creative direction.

    According to him, the album will blend classic influences with contemporary Afrobeats production, reinforcing his relevance in the evolving global music scene.

    Beyond recorded music, Sean Tizzle added that he is set to reconnect with fans through live performances, with a show scheduled in Lagos this February and performing in major international cities, including New York, Toronto, and London.

  • FULL LIST: Wizkid, Davido lead list of Africa’s most awarded music artists

    FULL LIST: Wizkid, Davido lead list of Africa’s most awarded music artists

    Nigerian music stars Wizkid and Davido have emerged at the top of the list of Africa’s most awarded artists, highlighting the continent’s growing global influence in the music industry.

    According to the latest rankings, Grammy-winning singer Wizkid leads the chart with a total of 197 career awards, making him the most decorated African artist to date. He is closely followed by fellow Nigerian superstar Davido, who has amassed 150 awards across local and international platforms.

    Ghanaian rapper Sarkodie occupies third place with 121 awards, while Nigeria’s Burna Boy follows closely in fourth position with 120 awards. Burna Boy’s tally is expected to increase following recent nominations and wins, reflecting his continued global success.

    Ghana’s Shatta Wale ranks fifth with 115 awards, ahead of compatriot Stonebwoy, who has earned 107 accolades during his career.

    Tanzanian music icon Diamond Platnumz also made the top list with 101 awards, underscoring East Africa’s growing presence on the global music stage.

    Veteran Beninese singer Angélique Kidjo joins the elite group with over 100 awards to her name, while Congolese music star Fally Ipupa rounds out the top nine with 96 awards.

    Here is a list of Africa’s most awarded music artists

    1. Wizkid (Nigeria) – 197 awards

    2. Davido (Nigeria) – 150 awards

    3. Sarkodie (Ghana) – 121 awards

    4. Burna Boy (Nigeria) – 120 awards

    5. Shatta Wale (Ghana) – 115 awards

    6. Stonebwoy (Ghana) – 107 awards

    7. Diamond Platnumz (Tanzania) – 101 awards

    8. Angélique Kidjo (Benin) – 100+ awards

    9. Fally Ipupa (DR Congo) – 96 awards