Author: The Nation

  • Another laurel for Julius Rone

    Another laurel for Julius Rone

    Julius Rone is a man truly born under a lucky star. Throughout his life, he has demonstrated an unwavering dedication to hard work and resilience, setting him apart in his field. Even at a relatively young age, Rone has carved a path toward greatness by prioritizing his ambitions over the frivolities often enjoyed by his peers. Instead of indulging in distractions, he has astutely invested his time and resources into business ventures that are reshaping his trajectory within the oil and gas sector.

    Blessed with a tenacity resembling that of a tiger, Rone currently serves as the Chief Executive Officer of UTM Offshore. He continues to shine brightly in the business world, particularly through his strategic investments in the gas sector, with a focus on exploitation and innovation. At the recently concluded The Sun Newspaper Awards, held at the prestigious Eko Convention Centre located within the Eko Hotel and Suites, Rone was honored with the ‘Investor of the Year’ award.

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    Accompanied by his elegant wife, he appeared on stage with a beaming smile, embodying pride and gratitude. In his acceptance speech, Rone reaffirmed his commitment to Nigeria’s ambitious Floating Liquefied Natural Gas (FLNG) project, positioned at the Yoho field within Oil Mining Lease 104, approximately 60 kilometres off the Niger Delta coast, designed to produce 1.5 million tonnes of LNG annually for export and 300,000 tonnes of LPG for domestic consumption, which his company is actively developing.

    Moreover, Rone is deeply invested in global discussions regarding advancements in the production of liquefied natural gas. Demonstrating his commitment to ongoing dialogue in the sector, he quickly departed for the ongoing World LNG Conference in Doha, Qatar, where he aims to collaborate with fellow industry leaders. Rone’s dedication to both his country and the global energy landscape highlights his role as a trailblazer in the oil and gas sector, marking a significant chapter in his ever-evolving journey.

  • Matthew Tonlagha celebrates 50th birthday in style

    Matthew Tonlagha celebrates 50th birthday in style

    Reaching the age of 50 is a significant milestone, particularly in Nigeria, where the average life expectancy is notably lower. For billionaire business magnate Matthew Tonlagha, the Chairman of Maton Engineering Nigeria Limited, turning 50 is not just a moment to acknowledge; it is an occasion deserving of a grand celebration that resonates through the very fabric of his community. His journey to this momentous age has not been without its challenges, as a harrowing experience in his early life nearly derailed his future. When he was just three months old, an injection of an expired Polio vaccine in Kwara State almost cost him his legs and life. Yet, against all odds, he survived, albeit with a permanent disability. Rather than allowing this to define him, Tonlagha transformed his adversity into strength, using his experiences to motivate others.

    In a departure from the typical lavish parties that many of his affluent peers might opt for, Tonlagha chose to mark this special birthday in a way that would have a lasting impact. His celebration was rooted in a deep love for humanity and philanthropy, aligning with his life’s mission to uplift others.

    The festivities began with an exciting novelty match between the Delta State and Bayelsa State Houses of Assembly, held at the Shell Edjeba field in Warri, where the Bayelsa Assembly emerged victorious. This friendly competition set the tone for the celebrations, emphasizing camaraderie and unity among the attendees.

    Following the match, the celebration escalated into an elegant all-white praise and worship concert at the Mieka Event Centre in Effurun, Warri, Delta State. The event gathered a remarkable assembly of friends, family, and prominent figures from various spheres, including royalty and political leaders. Arriving in his luxurious S60 Pullman Maybach Benz with his family, Tonlagha was greeted by an atmosphere charged with joy and reverence. The concert, a pinnacle of festivity, was not just a personal celebration; it was a heartfelt tribute to his journey and contributions.

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    The event was orchestrated with utmost care by the Executive Director of Fenog Nigeria Limited, ensuring that no detail was overlooked. Supporting the grandeur of the evening, the celebration was broadcast live across major media houses, increasing its visibility and impact. Among the distinguished guests was the Governor of Delta State, Rt. Hon. Sherrif Oborevwori, alongside other notable sons and daughters from the region. Stellar performances came from well-known artists such as Mercy Chiwoh, Lillian Nneji, and IB Quake, adding to the vibrancy of the occasion.

    At the heart of this remarkable event stood Tonlagha’s beautiful wife, Mrs. Esther Tonlagha, the Founder of the EMT Foundation. She played a pivotal role in ensuring that the event was executed flawlessly, from the elaborate decorations to the exquisite catering that delighted the guests.

    Deeply rooted in his heritage, Tonlagha proudly identifies as a native of the Benikrukru Community within the historic Gbaramatu Kingdom in Delta State. His commitment to community development and human empowerment is a testament to his enduring legacy, marking him as a true champion of the Niger Delta. Through his philanthropic efforts and dedication to uplifting those around him, Tonlagha continues to inspire many, embodying the spirit of resilience and positive change.

  • When Ahmed Omilana throws lavish wedding for son

    When Ahmed Omilana throws lavish wedding for son

    Dr. Ahmed Omilana, a prominent physician and entrepreneur based in Lagos, recently orchestrated an impressive wedding celebration for his son, Nurudeen, who married his longtime partner, Adebimpe Adeniyi. The three-day event took place in Lagos and was marked by elegant celebrations, including a beautiful ceremony at Marcellina’s Event Centre in GRA, Ikeja on Saturday, January 31. Prior to this, the couple engaged in a special Arabian-styled Nikkai at the same venue on Thursday, January 29, followed by a lavish traditional engagement ceremony.

    After more than a decade of partnership that began during their studies at Moshood Abiola Polytechnic in Abeokuta, Ogun State, Nurudeen and Adebimpe’s relationship blossomed into a profound love that they further nurtured in the United Kingdom. Recognizing the significance of this milestone, Dr. Omilana was committed to ensuring that the wedding was an extraordinary affair. The extravagant celebrations not only highlighted the family’s status but also underscored Dr. Omilana and his wife Funmi’s dedication to creating an unforgettable experience for their son and his bride.

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    As the Executive Vice Chairman of FitPlus Health Care Limited, Dr. Omilana effectively led the Strategic Plan of Action Committee (SPAC) with thoughtful precision and enthusiasm, ensuring that the wedding reflected his roots in Ibarapa, Oyo State. His dedication to hospitality and cultural heritage was evident through a captivating performance by the Ibarapa-Tapa ensemble.

    The wedding attracted a vibrant mix of socialites and friends, creating an atmosphere filled with joy and excitement. The ambiance was further elevated by a performance from the renowned Fuji music artist, Dr. Adewale Ayuba, which delighted guests from various sectors. Attendees enjoyed an array of gourmet food, vintage beverages, fine cognac, and wines, fostering a spirit of camaraderie and connection.

    The esteemed guest list included notable figures such as HRM Oba Sunday Oyekanmi Titiloye, the Elempe of Tapaland; AVM Abubakar Suleh; Hon. Seyi Jakande, Chairman of Odi-Olowo/Ojuwoye LCDA; Hon. Lateef Adebare, Chairman of Ibarapa North LCDA; Alhaji Musiliu Akinsanya, National President of the National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW); as well as Hon. Rasaq Olusola Ajala, who served as Chairman of the wedding reception.

  • Kestin Pondi celebrates

    Kestin Pondi celebrates

    High Chief Kestin Ebimorbowei Pondi is a prominent political figure renowned for his significant contributions to the Oil-rich Niger Delta region of Nigeria. As the Managing Director of Tanita Securities, Pondi has not only demonstrated exceptional leadership and business acumen but has also shown a profound commitment to community support and development.

    On February 4th, as he celebrated his birthday, Pondi embraced the spirit of generosity and empowerment by launching his second business and empowerment grant initiative aimed at youth and entrepreneurs. In the inaugural edition of this program last year, he awarded 5 million Naira to 40 beneficiaries, marking a significant impact on their entrepreneurial journeys. This year, he expanded the initiative, providing business grants to 50 deserving individuals, reflecting his dedication to fostering economic growth and innovation in the region.

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    In addition to the business grants, Pondi also distributed 1,000 bags of rice to various communities across Delta State as part of his birthday celebrations. This act of kindness not only alleviated some of the immediate food insecurity but also reinforced his reputation as a compassionate leader who prioritizes the welfare of his community.

    Pondi, a trained engineer, is dedicated to creating sustainable opportunities for the youth in Delta State. He has ambitious plans to reach out to 60 entrepreneurs next year, with the aim of promoting job creation and financial independence. His vision is to cultivate an environment where young people can thrive, contribute to the economy, and build a better future for themselves and their families. Through these initiatives, Kestin Pondi continues to leave an indelible mark on his community, embodying both entrepreneurial spirit and social responsibility.

  • Queen of Africa Reality TV show to position African women at the centre of leadership

    Queen of Africa Reality TV show to position African women at the centre of leadership

    Africa is redefining how women’s leadership is celebrated with the launch of ‘Queen of Africa,’ the continent’s first reality television show dedicated to spotlighting African women as leaders, changemakers, and cultural ambassadors.

    Designed as a continental platform for visibility and impact, ‘Queen of Africa’ brings together 54 women—one from each African nation—to compete for the historic title of Africa’s First Lady. The initiative is convened by King Jerry Nrialike, President of the Uto Umuokpu Anambra Association in the United States, and marks a bold shift from conventional pageantry to purpose-driven representation.

    Queen of Africa is organised by LFC international production limited, Uto Umuokpu Anambra, USA women association and Christian Ruart fashion group NYFW experience.

    At its core, Queen of Africa is built to address long-standing gender imbalances by creating a platform where African women are evaluated not by appearance, but by leadership capacity, vision, and social influence.

    Speaking at the official launch, King Jerry Nrialike described the motivation behind the project as deeply rooted in empowerment and inclusion.

    “Women have long been marginalized due to cultural and societal barriers. Our goal is to empower women, especially those who need it most. This platform is about creating real opportunities for women to lead, inspire change, and foster unity across the continent.”

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    Open to women between the ages of 25 and 40, the competition adopts a transparent selection process that combines national nominations with public participation from both African and global audiences. Contestants will be assessed on merit, leadership qualities, and votes, with the eventual winner holding the Queen of Africa title for a two-year reign.

    Beyond the title, the winner will receive a $50,000 cash prize, a branded vehicle provided by Innoson Motors, and international recognition as a continental ambassador for African women and leadership.

    King Jerry Nrialike, Executive Producer and Director of the show, said Queen of Africa was intentionally designed to go beyond entertainment, positioning it as a catalyst for social development.

    “Queen of Africa is a movement aimed at breaking the glass ceiling and accelerating women’s development across Africa.”

    The reality show will be streamed across multiple digital and social media platforms, ensuring accessibility and global reach while allowing African women to tell their own stories through lived experiences, culture, and leadership journeys.

  • Olympia: Alpha and Jam Africa makes claim for world’s biggest billboard

    Olympia: Alpha and Jam Africa makes claim for world’s biggest billboard

    Alpha and Jam Africa has unveiled Olympia, described as the largest mixed-format advertising board in the world.

    It is located beside the Wole Soyinka Centre for Art and Culture, fo rmerly known as the National Arts Theatre, in Lagos, Nigeria.

    The media group said the project marks the first phase of its three-year programme to develop ultra-large billboard infrastructure across 10 cities globally.

    Speaking on the significance of the installation, the firm said Olympia was conceived not merely as an advertising structure but as a landmark development within Nigeria’s evolving outdoor advertising space.

    Strategically positioned along the Eko Bridge corridor, the site sits on one of Lagos’ busiest transport routes.

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    Alpha and Jam Africa estimates that over 11,000 vehicles pass through the axis hourly, while the Lagos Blue Line rail system conveys more than 250,000 passengers daily between Marina and Mile 2.

    The structure is also visible from the Alaka Interchange and Third Mainland Bridge.

    Olympia features a hybrid design combining large-format static and digital advertising. It consists of two landscape static panels measuring 100 by 30 metres each, alongside a 30 by 4-metre portrait LED digital screen.

    According to the company, the configuration allows brands to deploy both long-term static messaging and dynamic digital content simultaneously.

  • Nigeria past and present: What is the way for the future?

    Nigeria past and present: What is the way for the future?

    By Idowu Adewara

    Nigeria is a country that has never lacked potential. What it has lacked is the discipline, leadership, and collective will to turn that potential into a prosperous reality for most of its people. Both our past and our present moment confront us with the same question: Will we finally learn from experience, or will we continue recycling the same mistakes in new forms?

    A look into the past shows that Nigeria did not begin as a carefully negotiated national project. Its creation in 1914, through the amalgamation of diverse ethnic, cultural, and religious groups, was driven largely by colonial administrative convenience rather than shared identity or consensus. British colonial governance prioritised extraction over development, centralised authority over participatory governance, and obedience over citizenship. Institutions were designed to serve imperial interests, not to foster accountability or national cohesion.

    At independence in 1960, Nigeria inherited these structures without sufficiently reimagining them. The early post-independence years, marked by political instability and ethnic rivalry, quickly gave way to military rule. For decades, the military dominated Nigeria’s political life, interrupting democratic learning and weakening civilian institutions. Decision-making became highly centralised, dissent was suppressed, and accountability was treated as optional.

    Perhaps the most consequential development in Nigeria’s political economy was the discovery and exploitation of oil. The oil boom of the 1970s presented a historic opportunity to transform infrastructure, education, and industry on a grand scale. Instead, oil became both a blessing and a curse. It fuelled corruption, and the neglect of agriculture and manufacturing, sectors that had once sustained broad-based livelihoods. While oil revenues promised prosperity, they entrenched a rent-dependent economy. Productivity, innovation, and taxation were side-lined as the state became reliant on oil proceeds. Successive military and civilian administrations treated the nation as a dispenser of oil rents rather than a platform for productive enterprise and social investment. This culture elevated proximity to power over competence and replaced genuine economic planning with routine federal allocations.

    The return to civilian rule in 1999 raised hopes for a new chapter rooted in constitutionalism, accountability, and growth. More than two decades later, democracy has survived, but it has yet to mature into a system that reliably delivers security, justice, and opportunity for the average Nigerian.

    Elections remain high-stakes contests, frequently marred by vote-buying, low turnout, and a dangerous mix of apathy and cynicism. Institutions meant to check power, including the courts, legislatures, and regulatory agencies, too often bend under political pressure, patronage, or chronic underfunding. The result is a steady erosion of public faith in the rule of law.

    Public office, rather than being widely viewed as a platform for service, is commonly perceived as a route to personal security and enrichment. This perception has shaped a leadership culture that prioritises political survival over stewardship. Policies change with administrations, long-term planning is sacrificed for short-term advantage, and public trust continues to weaken.

    Yet leadership failure alone does not explain Nigeria’s condition. Civic culture has also suffered. Years of disappointment have bred apathy and resignation. Dysfunction is increasingly seen as normal, something to be endured rather than challenged. Elections are approached with low expectations, civic engagement is irregular, and accountability is often demanded selectively, if at all.

    This mutual disengagement, with leaders governing without genuine accountability and citizens retreating into survival mode, has produced a fragile social contract. The state does little to earn trust, while citizens feel little obligation beyond navigating the system for personal survival.

    The consequences are now evident. Nigeria’s young people, among the most talented and energetic in the world, increasingly view emigration as the most viable path to dignity and opportunity. Professionals leave not only in search of better wages but also in search of systems that function. Those who remain frequently contend with underemployment, frustration, and a growing sense of alienation.

    Economically, the country struggles to diversify in any meaningful way. Infrastructure gaps persist, education systems underperform, and poverty remains widespread despite decades of substantial revenue inflows. Social divisions are deepened by insecurity, inequality, and mistrust. Morally, there is a creeping fatigue, a sense that little truly changes, regardless of who holds power.

    Perhaps the greatest cost is the erosion of national belief. When citizens no longer trust that effort will be rewarded or that institutions will protect them, society becomes transactional, brittle, and vulnerable to breakdown.

    Scholars of nation-building consistently argue that unity cannot be decreed. It must be earned through inclusive governance, equitable distribution of resources, and institutions that protect all citizens, not just those with connections. Where injustice is a daily experience, ethnic and religious identities become defensive shelters rather than components of a shared civic identity.

    Breaking this cycle requires action on three interconnected fronts: leadership reform, institutional rebuilding, and renewed civic responsibility.

    First, leadership must be redefined. Nigeria does not merely need new leaders; it needs a new understanding of leadership itself. The country must move from personality-driven politics to institution-driven governance, where rules are clear, consequences are real, and public office is centred on service and measurable outcomes. Leadership should be understood as stewardship, not entitlement. Competence, integrity, and continuity must replace patronage and improvisation. Sustainable development cannot rest on individuals alone; it depends on strong, enduring institutions.

    Second, institutions must be rebuilt deliberately. Strong institutions create predictability, fairness, and trust. This demands policy consistency, respect for the rule of law, and an end to selective enforcement. Education, healthcare, security, and the judiciary must be insulated from political interference and treated as national priorities rather than bargaining tools. Local governments must also be strengthened as genuine centres of development, enabling citizens to hold leaders accountable at the closest level to their daily lives.

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    Third, and most importantly, citizens must reclaim their role. Research on nation-building is clear that sustainable progress depends on active citizens who demand better, participate constructively, and hold leaders accountable beyond election day. While anger at bad leadership is justified, it is necessary to confront an uncomfortable truth: no corrupt politician acts alone. Rigged elections involve compromised officials and voters who sell their votes. Inflated contracts require collaborators in the private sector. Every bribe offered has someone willing to accept it. A nation cannot be repaired solely by those in power if those outside power have withdrawn from collective responsibility.

    Nigeria’s history explains its present, but it does not excuse it. The past may have shaped the foundations, but the future will be determined by choices made now, by leaders who choose to govern with vision and by citizens who refuse to accept dysfunction as destiny.

    Nigeria’s challenges are serious, but they are not unique. Other nations with troubled histories have rebuilt themselves through deliberate leadership, institutional reform, and active citizenship. What is required is not blind optimism, but disciplined hope anchored in responsibility, sacrifice, and sustained effort.

    The task before Nigeria is not to search endlessly for saviours or to romanticise the past. It is to commit to the slow, demanding work of nation-building. History has brought Nigeria to this point. What comes next will depend on whether leadership rises to its duty and whether citizens choose engagement over resignation.

    Only then can Nigeria begin to move from a nation that merely endures to one that truly works.

    •Adewara is a fellow of the Lateef Jakande Leadership Academy.

  • Sallau: A worthy ambassadorial nominee

    Sallau: A worthy ambassadorial nominee

    Sir: Following the recent successful screening of ambassadors-designate comprising 64 career and non-career ambassadors recently by the Senate Committee on Foreign Affairs, the stage is now set for President Bola Tinubu to post them to their various countries of assignments.

    One indisputable fact is that at this stage of Nigeria’s history is that the country cannot play second fiddle in the international arena. Rather, promoting the country’s national interest- trade and investment, cultural, political and defence should top the agenda.

    To put it differently, President Bola Tinubu foreign policy focus rests on four pillars, referred to as the 4-Ds, namely Democracy, Development, Demography and Diaspora. The core focus areas and strategies – economic diplomacy, aims at rebranding Nigeria as a prime investment destination, regional leadership (ECOWAS), in the form of actively addressing political crises in neighbouring countries like Niger and promoting peace in the sub region, global partnerships which is about strengthening ties with the US, EU, China, and the Middle East for mutual economic benefits and utilizing foreign relations to maximize national interests, including leveraging spaces in the Sahel; and repurposing foreign partnerships to fund local human capital development, such as health and education initiatives.

    One career diplomat who is acquainted with this is Ambassador-designate Hamza Mohammed Sallau. He is not just one of the newly announced ambassadorial nominees representing Niger State, but he is a man whose character speaks louder than titles.

    Sallau has built many years of an outstanding professional career in the Nigerian Foreign Service. Before his recent nomination by President Tinubu, he had been actively serving Nigeria in Qatar, quietly representing the country with professionalism and dignity.

    I can never forget what he said to me during one of my interactions with him, which left a lasting impression on me. He said, “Always do the right thing. It does not matter if every other person is not doing it.” That single statement captures the kind of man he is: principled, disciplined, and guided by integrity.

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    Sadly, many people in public office today treat fellow citizens poorly, forgetting the responsibilities that come with leadership. That is not the case with Hamza. His humility, respect for people, and sense of service distinguish him in a system where such qualities are often rare.

    I am among those Nigerians who do not particularly admire the way Nigerian politics is played. However, seeing Sallau’s name on the list of career ambassadorial nominees gives me hope that all is not lost.

    For Nigerians in the diaspora, we know that having the right people serve as our ambassadors is crucial. Ambassadors are the first point of contact, the image, and the voice of the nation abroad. Appointing career professionals with proven integrity, like Sallau, is a meaningful step toward restoring Nigeria’s international image.

    To me, Sallau is more than an ambassadorial nominee. He is evidence that integrity, professionalism, and service still matter and that Nigeria can still be represented by the right people.

    One can only wish him all the best and hope he will continue to represent and serve the country and its diaspora community in the right way, in any country he finds himself. To the other career nominees who have faithfully served Nigeria in the diaspora, I pray they all have the strength to continue on the right path.

    •Emmanuel Chukwuebuka Ibe, Doha, Qatar.

  • Toni Kan’s classy COVID-19 chronicle

    Toni Kan’s classy COVID-19 chronicle

    The name Toni Kan has, for decades, moved with ease across the landscape of literature. Poetry, literary fiction, short stories and biography. There are few genres he has not entered, and fewer still that he has not impacted with his distinctive voice. His book, ‘Riding the Storm’, bears quiet but convincing testimony to his range. In it, his versatility is not announced, but revealed, page by page, in the confidence of a writer who has mastered many forms and knows exactly when and how to use them.

    Though not a novel, it unfolds with the confidence and sweep of one. Drawing on his gifts as a poet, novelist, short story writer and biographer, Kan tells the story of Africa’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic using the tools of literary fiction: scene, character, tension and momentum. What emerges is a narrative that reads less like a policy chronicle and more like a carefully structured human drama, one shaped by urgency, uncertainty and the weight of responsibility at a moment when the world seemed to be coming apart.

    The book moves, in most cases, as a novel would, following people rather than abstractions, decisions rather than statistics. At its centre are four figures, three men and a woman, whose paths converge at the height of the crisis: Strive Masiyiwa, John Nkengasong, Benedict Oramah and Vera Songwe. And there is South African President Cyril Ramaphosa playing a key supporting role.

    Kan introduces them not as distant power brokers but as individuals already marked by earlier battles, especially Africa’s encounter with Ebola, and therefore unusually prepared for what was to come. When the pandemic bares its fangs, the reader is shown where each of them is, what they are doing, and how swiftly their worlds are reordered by a threat that respects no borders.

    The author lays bare how Masiyiwa, an industrialist and philanthropist, was drawn into a continental role that requires speed, persuasion and moral clarity. He shows us how Nkengasong, the scientist who operates from the nerve centre of Africa’s public health infrastructure, had to translate data into strategy while racing against time. We are shown how Oramah brought the language of finance into a space dominated by fear and scarcity, mobilising capital as a life-saving instrument. And the book unveils how Songwe, who is grounded in development economics, treated the crisis as a health emergency that is also an economic and social reckoning. Together, they form the backbone of the story, not as committed actors navigating impossible constraints.

    The book shows Nkengasong as a man accustomed to urgency. As head of the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, he is portrayed as both scientist and translator, turning epidemiological complexity into continental coordination. The pages linger on his early days of the crisis, when data was scarce, testing capacity uneven, and fear moved faster than facts. Nkengasong’s challenge was not merely to understand the virus, but to persuade governments to trust a shared framework of response. His voice carried the authority of science, but also the burden of history. Africa had long been spoken for in global health conversations. Here, he spoke for himself and for a continent unwilling to be managed from afar.

    We see that where Nkengasong provided legitimacy, Masiyiwa supplied momentum. The book treats his appointment as African Union Special Envoy on COVID-19 not as a ceremonial gesture but as an admission: bureaucracy alone would not move fast enough. Masiyiwa’s instincts were shaped by markets and systems, not protocols.

    Because systems require money, and this is where Oramah’s role deepens the narrative. The book portrays him as operating in a quieter register, away from press briefings and televised summits. As head of Afreximbank, Oramah understands that solidarity without financing is performance. Vaccine deals demanded guarantees, credit, and risk absorption at a scale few African institutions had ever attempted. Through the African Vaccine Acquisition Trust, Oramah’s bank became the hinge between aspiration and execution. The book is clear-eyed here: without Afreximbank’s balance sheet, Africa’s pooled procurement strategy would have collapsed under the weight of its own ambition.

    If Oramah handled the numbers, Songwe, the book shows us, handled the horizon. Her chapters seem the most reflective in the book, concerned less with the next shipment than with the next decade. As Executive Secretary of the UN Economic Commission for Africa, Songwe is shown persistently widening the frame, refusing to allow COVID-19 to be treated as a temporary disruption. For her, vaccine access was inseparable from economic dignity. The book credits her with asking inconvenient questions: What does recovery mean if manufacturing remains external? What does resilience look like if health security depends on charity? Songwe’s contribution lay in connecting emergency response to structural reform, in reminding leaders that survival without transformation is merely postponement.

    Around them move other characters, aides, technocrats and political leaders, including Ramaphosa, whose support and authority reinforce the collective effort.

    Kan pays attention to these supporting roles, showing how large outcomes are shaped by coordination, trust and persistence rather than lone brilliance. He also draws clear lines between past and present, reminding the reader that Africa’s relatively swift and coordinated COVID-19 response did not emerge from nowhere, but was built on institutional memory, hard lessons and relationships forged during earlier epidemics.

    From Kan’s telling, we see that pandemics do not arrive with instructions, that they arrive as rupture of routines, of borders, of certainty.

    Read Also: How Nigeria’s festive season is fuelling a silent health crisis

    We see that COVID-19 did not simply test Africa’s health systems; it exposed the scaffolding beneath power, coordination, and trust. This book understands that truth, and it is why it resists the temptation to count ventilators or tally infection curves. Instead, it follows people. And through their intersecting paths, it tells a story about leadership under siege at the heart of which is a quiet insistence that Africa’s COVID-19 response was not improvised heroism but deliberate construction.

    We see less a tale of saviours than of builders, working to assemble something the continent had barely quite possessed before: a functional architecture of collective action.

    In telling this important story, Riding the Storm becomes more than a record of events. It is a meditation on leadership under pressure, on Africa’s capacity for self-organisation, and on what it means to act decisively when history accelerates. Kan’s prose allows the reader to feel the anxiety of the early days, the urgency of closed-door negotiations, and the quiet triumph of systems that held when many expected them to fail. It is this human, narrative-driven approach that gives the book its power, transforming a global catastrophe into a story of agency, collaboration and continental resolve.

    What further gives the book its weight is how it vividly paints how the roles of the major and minor characters interlock. None of them, the author shows, could have succeeded alone. Science without logistics would have stalled. Procurement without financing would have failed. Financing without economic vision would have been shortsighted.

    My final take: It takes a village for most causes to succeed. Let’s learn to cooperate rather than compete. Let’s learn to pool resources together than pulling resources apart. Together, we can do more. Apart, we will do less.

  • Arewa and the burden of dependency

    Arewa and the burden of dependency

    Sir: The persistent rise in poverty across Northern Nigeria has become too visible, too widespread, and too uncomfortable to ignore. Despite years of government interventions, donor-funded programmes, and repeated political promises, the economic condition of many communities in the region has shown limited improvement. While poverty is a national problem, its intensity and social manifestations in Arewa compel a deeper, more honest examination beyond policy failures and leadership deficits.

    One critical factor sustaining poverty in Arewa is the region’s high dependency ratio: a large population of unemployed, underemployed, or economically inactive adults relying on a small number of productive individuals for survival. This pattern has normalised dependence and weakened incentives for self-sufficiency.

    In many towns and old cities across the North, families are familiar with the daily presence of individuals who depend on routine assistance for food, school fees, medical bills, and emergency needs. What often begins as a humane act of support gradually becomes an inherited obligation. As children of middle-class families grow into employment, the responsibility quietly transfers to them, expanding to include extended relatives and, in many cases, the children of earlier dependants.

    These demands are not symbolic. They can consume a significant portion of monthly income, sometimes exceeding 10 per cent, in an economy already strained by inflation and rising living costs. While similar practices exist in other parts of the country, the scale and permanence of dependency in many northern communities distinguish it from elsewhere.

    Helping others is noble, and no society survives without mutual support. However, what is troubling is how little the condition of beneficiaries changes over time. Decades pass, and the same families remain dependent, with new generations added to the cycle. Poverty becomes inherited, normalised, and quietly institutionalised.

    Two major obstacles sustain this dependency structure. The first is the concentration of responsibility on a single individual. In many extended families, one person shoulders almost all financial obligations: from school fees and medical care to wedding trousseaus and naming ceremonies. This arrangement offers social protection to the provider, shielding them from social pressure. Yet it is a fragile system. When the “big wall” weakens—through job loss, illness, retirement, or death—the entire structure collapses, often plunging families into crisis.

    The second challenge is the absence of deliberate strategies to end dependence at family and community levels. Daily alms, food handouts, and small cash gifts may relieve immediate hardship, but they rarely create lasting change. Many well-meaning individuals give generously without plans to help beneficiaries become self-reliant. The obsession with sharing small sums among many often weakens impact. Distributing N50,000 among 10 people may satisfy social expectations, but it rarely empowers anyone.

    Read Also: Nigeria, World Bank push for jobs, growth

    There are no quick fixes to problems rooted in social behaviour and cultural norms. Still, practical steps can be taken at individual, family, and community levels. First, underemployment must be addressed by encouraging income diversification rather than perpetual assistance. Families should begin asking difficult but necessary questions: if the main provider is unavailable, who steps in? This reflection can inspire deliberate efforts to replicate skills, businesses, and income sources within households and extended families.

    Second, there is an urgent need to equip young people with practical, modern skills that enable them to compete beyond low-paying government jobs. The heavy reliance on public sector employment in the North has contributed significantly to underemployment. An average government salary can barely sustain a household, often forcing workers to remain dependent on extended family support.

    Some families and communities are already experimenting with solutions—organising in-house training programmes, skill workshops, mentorship sessions, and even funding small start-ups through internal competitions. Such models, if adopted widely, could reduce dependency and restore dignity.

    Third, communities must rethink how zakat and sadaqah are administered. Pooling resources for targeted empowerment—rather than spreading them thinly—can transform lives. While this approach is socially difficult given the number of the needy, it offers a sustainable path out of poverty for at least some, who can then support others.

    Poverty in Northern Nigeria is not an unsolvable problem. While individuals cannot replace the role of government, communities are not powerless. By rethinking dependency, redefining charity, and investing in skills and productivity, Arewa can begin to reverse a cycle that has endured for far too long.

    •Abdulhamid Abdullahi Aliyu, Abuja.