Category: Campus Life

  • Students lament brutality in FUTO

    Students lament brutality in FUTO

    A final-year student at Federal University of Technology Owerri (FUTO), Joy Chinaza, was allegedly subjected to dehumanising treatment on campus by members of a security volunteer group. Students, however, called for the intervention of school authorities to forestall a recurrence. ELINT EERIE (FUTO) reports.

    The Federal University of Technology, Owerri (FUTO), long regarded as a citadel of academic excellence, is currently facing a dark reckoning. Beneath the surface of lectures and laboratory practicals, a culture of paramilitary impunity has allegedly taken root, culminating in a harrowing night of violence that has left a 500-Level student physically scarred and psychologically shattered.

    On the night of January 8, 2026, Joy Chinaza, a final-year student, was allegedly abducted, assaulted, and subjected to “dehumanising torture” at the hands of Man O’ War officials. The incident, which spanned nearly five hours of terror, has exposed a systemic breakdown of discipline within the campus security volunteer group and a blatant disregard for student rights.

    The Locked Gates of Hostel C

    The ordeal began with a mundane administrative discrepancy. According to established hostel protocols widely known to residents, the gates of Hostel C are locked at 8:00 pm and reopened briefly at 8:30 pm to allow late-returning students access to their rooms.

    On this particular Thursday, Joy and her friend, Peculiar, returned from the FUTO market at approximately 8:20 pm. They joined a growing crowd of students waiting outside the gate, confident that the 8:30 pm reopening would proceed as usual.

    However, 8:30 pm came and went. Then 9:00 pm . By 9:24 pm, the gates remained firmly bolted.

    “I told my friend to call the Man O’ War girl sitting at the ‘Flag Out’ station,” Joy recounted. “She was discussing with a fellow official and completely ignored us. When students started pleading, calling her ‘sister’ and begging her to open the gate because it was late, she responded sarcastically that we hadn’t even asked if she was in possession of the key.”

    This dismissiveness sparked a verbal altercation. Joy, being the most vocal in demanding their right to entry, became the primary target of the officials’ ire.

    Contradictions and Escalation

    The situation intensified when the unit’s Second-in-Command (2IC), identified as Ihechi descended from the hostel. While the gates were finally opened, Joy was singled out and prevented from entering.

    In a move that appeared to be  justification for the delay, Ihechi claimed the reopening time had been moved to 9:30 pm. However, investigation revealed a different story, there was no  official change in timing.

    Despite Joy’s attempts to de-escalate the situation by stating she understood and “it wouldn’t happen again,” the verbal friction turned physical. A female official named Blessing allegedly lunged at Joy, striking her in the chest and tearing her cloth.

    Witnesses, including Peculiar, described a chaotic scene where Joy attempted to defend herself, only to be overwhelmed. “Ihechi was dragging Joy by her hair,” Peculiar noted. “When I tried to intervene to separate them, male Man O’ War officials physically restrained and pushed us back.”

    The Forceful Abduction

    As the crowd of students grew more vocal in their protest, the Man O’ War command structure shifted from crowd control to what can only be described as a tactical abduction.

    Initially, male officials on motorbikes attempted to force Joy to follow them to their “base”- a dark, secluded area. Joy, fearing for her safety, refused, stating she would only discuss the matter in the well-lit front area of the hostel.

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    The standoff took a more ominous turn when a female official from Hall D, identified as Stephanie, arrived on the scene. Witnesses described her brandishing a “pipe and a cutlass,” inciting other officials to “bundle” Joy and take her away to be beaten.

    An hour later, a Man O’ War Hilux van sped into the hostel area. Approximately eight officers jumped out.  Joy was dragged toward the vehicle. She clung to the hostel gate in a desperate attempt to stay in the safety of the public eye, but officials allegedly hammered on her hands and fingers to force her to lose her grip.

    “They bundled me, hitting my hand… the girl from Hall D was hitting and dragging my hair,” Joy said. In a chilling detail of the psychological abuse, Joy pleaded to use the restroom during the struggle. The officials reportedly told her to “urinate on your body.”

    The van sped off, leaving the residents of Hostel C so incensed that they reportedly broke the hostel gate in a futile attempt to pursue the vehicle and rescue their fellow student.

    Torture at Tetfund Hostel

    Joy was taken to the Tetfund Hostel, which that night served as a makeshift interrogation and torture chamber. A resident of Tetfund, speaking on condition of anonymity, confirmed that the screams of a female student were audible throughout the building during the late-night hours.

    Once inside,  Ihechi, allegedly began a systematic assault. Joy was ordered to sit on the floor while Ihechi delivered “rounds of slaps,” striking both of Joy’s ears simultaneously, a technique known to cause permanent hearing damage.

    The officials then demanded that Joy perform a “fall like a palm tree” (a grueling physical punishment). Joy informed them that she had recently undergone an appendix operation and that such physical strain could lead to life-threatening complications.

    Her pleas fell on deaf ears.

    “They told me to squat, and then another round of kicking, slaps, and beating followed,” Joy recounted. “Ihechi was matching [stomping] on my ear and head. Blessing was slapping my ribs. I kept telling them about my operation, but they didn’t care.”

    The climax of the violence involved the use of industrial pipes. Stephanie, the official from Hall D, reportedly took a pipe and began flogging the 500-Level student. The officials allegedly taunted her, stating they would not stop until they saw her cry.

    The N2,000 “Medical Bill” and the Cover-Up

    At approximately 12:03am, the Unit Commandant, Benedict Chiagoziem, arrived. Despite Joy’s visible wounds and the blood on her hands, Benedict’s initial reaction was to ask what had happened.

    Benedict sent Joy N2,000 via bank transfer at 12:45 am.  The transaction narration read: “Medical bill.” The intimidation did not end with the physical violence. Benedict allegedly sent Joy “disappearing messages” on social media, urging her to “die the matter” (drop the case). He reportedly warned her that if she chose to fight, she should be ready for a long battle and threatened her with expulsion from the hostel.

    The current stance: silence and adjournment

    The FUTO Students’ Union Government (SUG) Judiciary attempted to intervene, scheduling a sitting on January 14, 2026. However, in a move that signalled a lack of accountability, the Man O’ War officials failed to appear. The case has been adjourned, leaving the victim and the student body in a state of frustration.

    The Commander, Benedict, is reportedly “upset” that video evidence of Joy’s wounds has gone public, preferring that the matter be settled “behind media and public scrutiny.”

    The arrest of a journalist

    The culture of silence the Man O’ War sought to enforce was challenged by the FUTO Students Society of Journalists (FSSJ). However, the unit’s response to media inquiry was not dialogue, but further violence.

    On January 15, 2026, after days of “abortive” attempts to secure an interview, FSSJ journalist Michael Ugochukwu was finally invited to meet with the Commander-in-Chief (C-in-C), Benedict. It appeared to be a breakthrough in the investigation; instead, it was a trap.

    Upon arrival, Benedict reportedly ordered Michael’s immediate arrest. In a startling attempt to weaponise the student government, Benedict claimed the SUG President had ordered the journalist’s detention. This claim was debunked when SUG President Christopher Bukas later met with Michael and Benedict. He denied giving any such order to the commander’s face.

    The Man O’ War officials proceeded with the detention. Michael, later accompanied by the President of FSSJ, Wisdom Eziechile, was taken to the command base.

    Violence in the Guardroom

    At the command base, the atmosphere turned toxic. While the journalists remained calm, Benedict reportedly “raged,” subjected them to  questions.

    The situation turned physical when Benedict ordered Michael to be thrown into a guardroom. Two officials shoved the journalist into a cell and ordered him to sit on the bare floor. When Michael questioned the legality and necessity of sitting on the floor, he was allegedly struck with two heavy slaps across the face. Physical and bodily examination now indicate that Michael’s eardrum has been severely damaged by the assault.

    The Dean of Student Affairs, Prof. C.E Orji in  a phone call with Michael, called for calm among the student body. He assured the press that “drastic actions” would be taken in the coming week to address the conduct of the unit.

    This incident is not an isolated flashpoint but appears to be part of a documented pattern of Man O’ War aggression on FSSJ. In early 2024, top personnel of the association  were also beaten by the group.

    The recurring theme is one of a paramilitary body that views itself as being above the university’s disciplinary laws, operating with a mandate of “might is right.”

    The SUG’s  stance

    The Student Union Director of Welfare, Comr. Mercy Johnson, expressed the union’s commitment to the case, stating that the executive arm is working to ensure full accountability.

    This was echoed by the SUG President, Comr. Christopher Bukas, who officially acknowledged the brutalisation of the victim by Man O’ War personnel. Bukas revealed that following preliminary discussions with the parties involved, a roundtable session will be held to finalise the union’s response. He further pledged to implement a strict Code of Conduct for the paramilitary group to curb further human rights abuses on campus.

    Joy Chinaza’s ordeal is a stain on the fabric of the FUTO community. That a 500-level student could be abducted by her juniors, beaten despite a known medical condition, and then offered a pittance of N2,000 for her trauma is an indictment of the current security climate on campus.The transition from hostel gate disputes to the physical assault of a journalist in a guardroom reflects  a paramilitary unit’s distressing actions.

    As the marks on Joy’s skin begin to fade, the psychological scars remain. The question remains: will the university ensure that justice is served?

    FSSJ will continue to monitor the promised “drastic actions” and the upcoming roundtable for justice.

  • Students to Abiodun: intervene on insecurity

    Students to Abiodun: intervene on insecurity

    • By Adekunle Gbadebo,

    Student leaders, stakeholders, and community leaders across Ogun State have called on Ogun State Governor, Dapo Abiodun to intervene in the worsening security situation in the Isara, Ipara, and Ode communities that host  student populations of Gateway ICT Polytechnic Saapade.

    A  statement jointly signed by Director of Special Duties National Association of Nigerian Students and Chairman, Gaposa Students Stakeholders Forum(GSSF), Olatunji Idowu Alexander, Vice President Special Duties National Association of Polytechnic Students, Comr.Amosun Ebunoluwa David, Sectary General Association of Southern Nigeria Students(ASONIS), Comr. Megbowon Olusola Ezekiel  and Coordinator of National Youth Council of Nigeria (NYCN) Remo North Local Government, Comr. Akinneye Ayomide Oluwaseyi, called for swift intervention of the state government,Inspector General of Police,Mr Kayode Egbetokun and the Ogun State Police  Command.

    “We seek the intervention of the authorities over the recent and concurrent spate of robberies targeting student communities, armed assailants have operated with alarming boldness invading homes, ambushing commuters, and terrorising young Nigerians whose only “crime” is the pursuit of education. These attacks are not isolated incidents; they form a disturbing pattern of violent criminality that has left students traumatised, injured, and fearful for their lives.

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    “Most distressing is a recent attack in which students were brutally assaulted, sustaining gunshot wounds and machete injuries to the head, stomach, legs, and other vital parts of their bodies.

    “These victims were rushed to Babcock University Teaching Hospital, where emergency care was administered. Yet, in a tragic twist that compounds the injustice, hospital bills exceeding one million naira were left for the students and their families to bear, despite appeals to school management.

    At a time when compassion and institutional support were expected, families were confronted with crushing financial burdens alongside the anguish of life-threatening injuries.

    “Accordingly, we demand the declaration of the Isara, Ipara, Ode axis as a security flashpoint, warranting special safety operations; deployment of reinforced police patrols, including night patrols, stop-and-search operations within the bounds of the law, and rapid-response units stationed strategically across student-dense areas.

    “Joint security tasking involving the Nigeria Police Force, local vigilante groups under proper supervision, and community intelligence structures to dismantle criminal networks operating in the area.

    Installation of surveillance infrastructure which includes street lighting, CCTV coverage at critical points, and emergency call lines accessible to students.

    “Clear engagement with educational institutions to establish student safety desks, emergency protocols, and coordinated responses to threats.

    Humanitarian intervention to support victims of recent attacks, including medical bill relief and psychosocial care, in recognition of the state’s responsibility to protect its residents,” they said.

  • Varsities collaborate to address challenges

    Varsities collaborate to address challenges

    • By Tayo Alhassan,

    The Lagos State University of Education (LASUED) on Monday said it was partnering with the Penn State University in the United States to address educational challenges, and boost global education collaboration.

    The Vice Chancellor, LASUED, Prof. Bidemi Lafiaji-Okuneye, made this known at the institution’s main campus in Oto-Ijanikin.

    Prof. Lafiaji-Okuneye said  the partnership was discussed during the meeting, which was followed by the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU).

    She said that the MoU aimed at strengthening partnership in education, research, and innovation.

    “This collaboration is anchored on a shared belief that education thrives when institutions transcend borders, exchange ideas freely, and work collectively to solve global and local challenges.

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    “The MoU before us establishes a robust framework for cooperation in pedagogy, faculty and student exchange, collaborative research and leadership development.

    “Also mentorship, entrepreneurship training, and the sharing of educational resources and technologies,” she said.

    The VC  said that its partnership with Penn State University was not an isolated event, but a natural progression of the commitment to internationalisation and academics.

    “This MoU is more than a ceremonial document. It is a living instrument that will foster joint research addressing educational, social, and developmental challenges.

    “It will enable academic mobility and cross-cultural exchange of faculty and students.

    “It will strengthen leadership, governance and strategic management capacity; support innovation, entrepreneurship, and workforce readiness in a rapidly changing global economy,” she said.

    She said the institution was particularly excited about the opportunities the partnership presented.

    “It presents for knowledge co-creation, comparative educational research, and the development of globally informed teaching practices that benefit both our institutions and our societies.

    “We look forward not only to signing this MoU, but to activating it through tangible programmes, measurable outcomes, and enduring professional relationships,” the VC said.

  • EkoUNIMED set for maiden convocation

    EkoUNIMED set for maiden convocation

    • By Igbang Juliet Ikedie,

    The Vice Chancellor of Eko University of Medicine and Health Sciences (EkoUNIMED), Ijanikin, Lagos, Prof.  Gbadebo Awosanya, has announced that the institution will hold its convocation ceremony on January 29, 2026, marking the graduation of its first set of medical doctors.

    Awosanya made this known on Monday during a pre-convocation press briefing held at the university’s main campus in Ijanikin, Lagos.

    The VC  explained that the briefing was organised to formally inform the public about the forthcoming convocation and to highlight key milestones achieved by the university since its establishment.

    He disclosed that EkoUNIMED was granted a licence to operate in December 2016 and admitted its pioneer students at the 200-Level into medical-related programmes, including Medicine and Surgery and other basic medical sciences.

    The VC  noted that the university currently runs programmes from the 100-Level and has a student population of over 500. He added that EkoUNIMED is adequately staffed with qualified academic personnel and is well equipped with modern laboratories, lecture halls, hostels, and learning facilities.

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    He added that the university operates two campuses, with its main campus located at Ijanikin, Lagos, while efforts are ongoing to expand its academic and infrastructural capacity.

    The don  also revealed that the institution is currently listed among recognised medical schools globally and is awaiting a response from the Educational Commission for Foreign Medical Graduates (ECFMG) in the United States. He explained that this recognition would enable EkoUNIMED graduates to sit for foreign medical examinations and pursue postgraduate training or professional opportunities outside Nigeria where necessary.

    On academic expansion, he  disclosed plans to introduce a Bachelor of Science (B.Sc.) programme in Nursing, subject to verification and approval by the National Universities Commission (NUC) and the Nursing and Midwifery Council of Nigeria. He added that the university also plans to introduce programmes in Radiography and Medical Laboratory Science, as well as establish its own teaching hospital to enhance clinical training.

    On affordability, the don said the university was founded by Chief Dr. Hammed Ibrahim Ayodele as a way of giving back to society. He explained that although EkoUNIMED is a private institution, its tuition fees are structured to be among the most affordable compared to other private medical universities in the country  to make medical education accessible to Nigerians.

    He also explained that the name “Eko” reflects the founder’s deep-rooted Lagos heritage and cultural identity, noting that the founder is a traditional Lagosian who holds his heritage in high esteem.

    The VC confirmed that the convocation ceremony will be preceded by a convocation lecture to be delivered by a former Governor of Lagos State and former Minister of Works and Housing, Mr. Babatunde Raji Fashola, SAN. The lecture is entitled:  “Medical Education: Yesterday, Today and the Nearest Future.”

    He added that the university maintains academic affiliations and linkages both within and outside Nigeria, while reaffirming EkoUNIMED’s commitment to producing competent medical professionals through quality teaching, strong institutional standards, and continuous improvement.

  • YABATECH Rector harps on skills, industry partnership

    YABATECH Rector harps on skills, industry partnership

    • College seals training deal
    • By Sanusi Opeyemi,

    The Rector of Yaba College of Technology (YABATECH), Dr Ibraheem Abdul, has reiterated the college’s  commitment to producing industry-ready graduates, stressing that skills acquisition, not paper qualifications alone, now defines success in the modern workplace.

    Abdul stated this during a high-level engagement and signing of a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) between YABATECH and John Basil Mandilas Foundation at a forum that brought together academic leaders and industry experts.

    He described the partnership as a milestone that aligns perfectly with YABATECH’s core mandate of empowering students with practical, market-relevant skills before graduation. According to him, the collaboration will kick-start a structured HVAC-R  (Heating, Ventilation and Air Conditioning) training programme through the Mandilas Modulus Academy, combining classroom instruction with hands-on industrial exposure.

    “As an institution, our vision is clear: by the time our students graduate, they must be fully trained, competent and confident to function in the world of work. This initiative aligns seamlessly with that vision because today, it is no longer about certificates alone, but about what you can do with your hands and your mind,” he said.

    He explained that the selected students for the pilot phase would undergo one month of intensive classroom training followed by two months of industry-based practical experience, a structure he described as a model for bridging the gap between theory and practice.

    The rector further disclosed that YABATECH would add value to the partnership by providing certified quality assurance assessors who would help align the Modulus Academy curriculum with the National Skills and National Professional Skills Qualifications frameworks, ensuring global relevance and local compliance.

    “We are intentional about partnerships. Through our Centre for Linkages, Partnerships and International Relations and the Career Development Centre, we aggressively seek collaborations that will benefit our students and also support our partners. This relationship with Mandilas Group is designed to be symbiotic,” he added.

    Abdul also highlighted YABATECH’s long-standing legacy, noting that the college, now in its 79th year, shares a similar heritage with Mandilas Group, which is marking about 75 years of engineering excellence. He described the partnership as a “timely union” focused on securing the future of the next generation, whom he fondly referred to as the institution’s “diamonds.”

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    “Our goal is to polish these diamonds to the highest standards so that they become a reference point of excellence in the industry and society,” he said.

    Emphasising attitude and work ethics, the rector noted that beyond technical competence, students must imbibe positive values early through exposure to real work environments. He expressed confidence that the collaboration would instil professionalism, discipline and a strong work culture in participating students.

    He reaffirmed the college’s readiness to expand the partnership into other technical areas, including mechanical and electrical engineering, while aligning training with global skills frameworks and competence-based certifications.

    “We are committed to making this relationship a success,” he said. “Together, we can build graduates who are not only educated but fit for the world of work, capable of driving industrial growth and national development.”

    The Executive Vice Chairman of Mandilas Trust Company Limited, Ola Ayo-Adeloye, described the partnership as a practical response to Nigeria’s urgent need for skills-driven education and sustainable industrial growth.

    “This collaboration is founded on a shared belief that education, when aligned with practical application, becomes one of the most powerful drivers of national development,” she said.

    She noted that the Mandilas Academy was structured to complement YABATECH’s strong academic foundation by providing students with hands-on training, industry-aligned certifications and exposure to modern HVAC-R technologies, ensuring graduates are not only academically sound but confident, competent and workplace-ready.

    She thanked the  rector, governing council and staff of the school for embracing the partnership, noting that the collaboration represents a model capable of delivering lasting value to students, industry and the nation at large.

  • Don restates commitment to research,others

    Don restates commitment to research,others

    • By Temitayo Seidu,

    A Professor of International Economic Relations at Baze University in Abuja, Dr Mahmoud Alfa has reiterated his commitment to academic research on economic development and international policy, shaping young minds and mentoring future leaders.

    In his drive for impact, he played a role in drafting Nigeria’s climate change legislation and shaping renewable energy strategies that brought solar power to schools and health centres across northern Nigeria.

    In the public sector, he has served as a political economy adviser to the World Bank on Nigeria’s power sector recovery programme. He has led governance reform initiatives under DFID and Adam Smith International. He has advised state governments on budget reforms, infrastructure policy and energy development.

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    On leadership, the don noted that quality representation anchored on competence, credibility and results is quite important, adding that a leader should understand the dynamics of policy and the power of strategic investment.

    The don  who stressed that academics can provide quality representation in the country said: “I am not here because of ambition alone. I am here because I believe Kogi East deserves a new kind of representation. One that understands policy. One that attracts investment. One that speaks with credibility in Abuja. And one that never forgets the people at home.”

  • Still on the new tax laws

    Still on the new tax laws

    • By LaBode Obanor

    Pay more for what? It is a question asked quietly in market stalls and loudly on social media, whispered in offices and debated in living rooms across Nigeria and its diaspora. It cuts through official explanations, press briefings, and glossy policy documents with stubborn clarity. As the Nigerian government rolls out a sweeping new tax reform agenda, urging citizens at home and abroad to be more compliant, more attentive, and ultimately to pay more, this single question refuses to go away.

    On the surface, the government’s objective sounds reasonable. Nigeria needs revenue. A growing population, coupled with a strained economy and expanding social needs, demands a more efficient and modern tax system. Few serious observers dispute this. However, what has unsettled many Nigerians is not the idea of taxation itself, but the premise that citizens should contribute more to a system that has yet to demonstrate, in clear and tangible terms, what it does with what it already collects.

    This skepticism is not born of ignorance, civic laziness, or a coded appeal to evade tax. It is the voice of a population shaped by experience. Nigerians have learned, often the hard way, to be cautious when asked to sacrifice more for a country that has struggled to translate revenue into visible public value.

    To be fair, the new tax law is not without merit. On paper, it is ambitious and, in some respects, progressive. It consolidates outdated statutes, broadens the tax base, introduces exemptions for low-income earners and small businesses, and seeks to modernise collection in an economy increasingly shaped by digital activity and informal labour. Without question, these objectives are defensible. Some are even necessary. But tax policy does not exist in isolation. It must be relational, and Nigeria’s central challenge is not the absence of sophisticated tax law, but the erosion of trust between the government and its citizens.

    For decades, Nigerians have been told that sacrifice today will yield dividends tomorrow. Yet tomorrow has remained stubbornly out of reach. Our roads remain treacherous, electricity supply remains unreliable, public hospitals remain under-resourced, and schools, from primary to tertiary levels, struggle amid chronic underinvestment. Politicians announce record budgets, but citizens experience little more than record hardship. Year in year out, the level of suffering increases, reaching a state of fatigue. In this context, skepticism toward new tax demands is not an attempt to subvert it, but a rational civic behaviour in a system burdened by a severe trust deficit.

    At this point, the debate stops being about revenue and becomes about legitimacy.

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    Taxation, at its core, is not merely a fiscal instrument geared towards encouraging economic activities. It is a social contract. Citizens surrender a portion of their income in exchange for security, infrastructure, and the collective goods that make social life possible. In societies where this exchange is visible and consistent, compliance follows naturally. People are willing to pay because they see reciprocity. They see what their tax naira is doing. However, where the effects are absent, enforcement steps in, often clumsily, and at great political cost.

    Nigeria’s tax-to-GDP ratio, estimated at roughly 10–11 percent, is frequently cited by officials as evidence that the country is undertaxed, especially when compared to African and OECD averages. But many Nigerians see the issue differently. In their eyes, the problem is not low tax payments, but a return deficit. Taxes are collected, yet services remain scarce, uneven, or completely inaccessible. Nigerians provide for themselves basic services and infrastructure that are typically the responsibility of the government.

    Individuals and businesses rely heavily on private generators for power, they sink boreholes or wells to get clean water, communities and neighbourhoods depend on local vigilance groups and neighbourhood watch for security and protection, they organise or pool resources to build or rehabilitate rural feeder roads, their major avenue for healthcare is usually private and often expensive clinics, the only reliable education they can access is private expensive schools for their children, they organise their own system of trash, solid waste, and sewage, on and on Nigerians  continue to do these things for themselves with the government playing little or no role. Revenue enters the system, but its outcomes are difficult to trace in everyday life.

    This disconnect explains the resistance now confronting the reform. Despite sustained media appearances by government officials attempting to clarify the law’s provisions, public acceptance has remained limited. Nigerians, by nature, are not opposed to paying taxes or paying more for anything. They have done so, directly and indirectly, since the country’s founding. What they oppose is paying into a system where money disappears into a bureaucratic fog, resurfacing only as press releases and promises. Overinflated budget figures do not count as outcomes. Appropriations are not services. Without measurable, lived impact, they are indistinguishable from waste.

    The central question remains unanswered: what, exactly, should citizens point to and say, this is what our taxes built?

    The danger here is not abstract or philosophical but practical and immediate. A tax system that expands enforcement without restoring legitimacy will, assuredly, invite resistance. Compliance extracted without consent will breed evasion, entrench informality, and deepen citizen withdrawal from the state. What begins as a revenue challenge can quickly metastasize into a crisis of governance. And this is what the Nigerian government doesn’t want. However, this is what they will get because history offers little mercy to governments that confuse coercion with authority.

    Nigeria has seen this before. Aggressive tax collection strategies that ignore socioeconomic context tend to fall hardest on those least equipped to absorb economic shocks such as the informal traders, artisans, market women, and small-scale entrepreneurs. These groups already bear heavy indirect burdens through inflation, currency instability, and inadequate infrastructure. When they are then required to demonstrate formal compliance within a system they perceive as unreliable or unresponsive, frustration deepens.

    If the government is serious about rebuilding confidence, accountability must move from rhetoric to structure. Transparency cannot remain a slogan. It must become operational. Citizens do not need more speeches about reform. They need traceability. They need to see, in plain language, where tax revenue goes and what it produces. Which roads were fixed this quarter? Which hospitals were equipped? Which schools were renovated? At what cost, and on what timeline?

    Measures such as public dashboards that link revenue to specific projects, independent audits presented in accessible formats, and local service benchmarks that allow communities to track progress should be in place as part of the reform. At a minimum, these mechanisms are prerequisites for voluntary compliance in a democratic society.

    Government officials often contend that accountability mechanisms are already in place. On paper, this may be accurate. Yet accountability that citizens cannot see, access, or independently verify does not garner trust; it instead fosters suspicion. In the absence of visible evidence, people default to doubt because experience has conditioned them to be cautious. Thus, the heavier burden, therefore, rests with the government. Citizens have obligations, but governments must first earn the confidence they seek to command. That confidence is built through transparent spending, verifiable results, and disciplined governance that demonstrably serves the public good.

    Nigeria’s tax reform still has a chance to succeed. But success will depend on whether it repairs the broken relationship between the government and its citizens. Until that happens, the question “Pay more for what?” will continue to echo across the country. And until the government can answer it with evidence rather than assurances, reform will remain on shaky ground.

    . Obanor wrote in from UNILAG

  • A commitment to citizens’ prosperity

    A commitment to citizens’ prosperity

    • By Bunmi Obakoya

    The recently enacted tax reforms have continued to spark nationwide discussion, cutting across political, economic, and social spheres. Given Nigeria’s decades-old tax framework, the heightened attention is hardly surprising.

    Economic analysts and public commentators have weighed in extensively, offering diverse perspectives. Beyond the noise, however, several seasoned voices have stepped forward to provide measured and forward-looking insights.

     Nigerians should approach the reforms with optimism, it  is a transformative policy shift with long-term generational benefits.

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    I fully understand the anxiety and concerns being expressed.  Such reactions are natural, especially considering that many Nigerians are unfamiliar with reforms of this scale.

     The driving force behind the policy is the government’s focus on sustainable prosperity and the socio-economic well-being of citizens.

    A simple review of ongoing projects across the country shows a deliberate commitment to infrastructure development aimed at improving livelihoods and economic growth.

    Reflecting on the broader picture,  on a philosophical note: “After the rain comes the sunshine.”

    • Obakoya wrote in from Unilag

  • The inspiring art of sculpting

    The inspiring art of sculpting

    • By Adejuwon Temitope

    The legacy of the  late Nigerian master sculptor Reuben Ugbine continues to resonate across generations and continents, as his family and the wider creative community celebrate a life devoted to art, culture, and national heritage.

    Born on November 24, 1956, in Anponya, Ghana, to Nigerian parents, Reuben Ugbine emerged as one of Nigeria’s most respected sculptors, renowned for preserving and interpreting indigenous culture through monumental and figurative works. Drawing inspiration from folklore, traditional life, and communal values, his sculptures became visual narratives of the Nigerian experience.

    Ugbine discovered his talent for wood carving while at Warri Secondary School, a passion that shaped his academic and professional path. He went on to refine his craft at Auchi Polytechnic and later Yaba College of Technology, where he earned a Higher National Diploma (HND) in Sculpture, distinguishing himself for technical excellence and cultural depth.

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    In 1982, Reuben Ugbine pioneered a distinctive terracotta figurative style, rooted in storytelling and traditional symbolism. This approach would become a defining element of his practice.

    By 1987, he had committed fully to life as a professional artist, joining Creative Hands in Benin City, where he worked extensively with materials such as ebony, iroko, and terracotta, producing works celebrated for their detail, emotion, and authenticity.

    His art gained international recognition, with exhibitions spanning Nigeria, London, and South Africa, and his works finding homes in prestigious collections. In 2018, his sculptures were acquired by the British Museum, cementing his status as a globally recognized Nigerian artist. Among his most notable public commissions are the iconic “Eagle on Eggs” sculpture for Niger State and the sculptural gates of the Federal Polytechnic, Bida.

    Beyond his studio practice, Reuben Ugbine played a significant role in shaping Nigeria’s art ecosystem. He was an influential member of the Society of Nigerian Artists (SNA) and the Guild of Professional Fine Artists of Nigeria, contributing to the growth and professionalization of the visual arts sector.

    Reuben Ugbine passed away on September 6, 2021, in Benin City, Edo State, leaving behind a powerful artistic legacy that continues to inspire artists, scholars, and cultural institutions.

     Speaking on the significance of his father’s life and work, Karo Ugbine described the journey as one of responsibility and tribute.

    “My father’s sculptures were more than objects; they were the heartbeat of our culture,” he said. We are committed to nurturing new talents, preserving his works, and ensuring that his contribution to Nigerian and global art history is never forgotten.”

    Reuben Ugbine stands as an iconic sculptor, celebrated for his unparalleled and original artworks that resonate with deep cultural significance. Each piece is a testament to his mastery, offering more than mere aesthetics: they preserve history and embody a legacy of profound artistic impact. Owning one of Reuben’s sculptures means bringing a piece of timeless art and cultural heritage into your space.

    He added: “Through his masterful wood carvings and terracotta sculptures, my father preserved culture, told stories, and inspired audiences across the world, from Nigeria to the United States of America and the United Kingdom.I am honored to continue his legacy—supporting new talents and keeping his memory alive. This tribute celebrates a life devoted to art, heritage, and lasting impact.”

    As Nigeria continues to assert its cultural voice on the global stage, the life and art of Reuben Ugbine stand as a timeless reminder of how creativity can preserve identity, tell stories, and connect generations across borders.

  • Why We Need a New Specialist for the Nigerian Patient

    Why We Need a New Specialist for the Nigerian Patient

    • By Kola A. Oyediran and Sunday Odeleke

    If Nigeria were a patient walking into a clinic today, the initial presentation would be paradoxical. The patient is massive—the “Giant of Africa”—standing tall, boisterous, and bursting with visible energy. But a trained eye would spot the tremors immediately. The patient is sweating profusely, breathing shallowly, and complaining of chronic fatigue despite constant consumption.

    For decades, we have shuttled this patient between hospitals, attendedto by various specialists:

    • The Political Scientist prescribed Democracy, but the patient remains weak.
    • The Economist prescribed Subsidy Removal and Forex Reforms, but the fever only spiked.
    • The Engineer prescribed Infrastructure, yet the patient collapses on the few good roads we have built.

    We have been treating the symptoms, not the underlying pathology. It is time we consulted the specialist we have ignored for 60 years: The Demographer.

    Demography is not merely about counting heads during a census. It is the clinical science of human populations—analyzing their structure (age and sex), their movement, and their trajectory.

    Similar to human being, a nation must pass through specific stages of population change to achieve stability. If we treat Demography as the primary physician, we can finally read the vital signs of our national health accurately. And right now, the doctor’s report is terrifying.

    The Chief Complaint: A Paradox of Wealth and Poverty

    Every Nigerian knows the symptoms of our national illness. You see them in the go-slow on the Third Mainland Bridge, where thousands of productive hours burn away in traffic. You feel them in the heat of inflation in the market. You hear them in the stories of friends selling their cars to buy a one-way ticket to Canada, the UK, or South Africa in search of greener pastures.

    We are a country of paradoxes. We have the largest economy in Africa, yet we host some of the world’s poorest people. We have millions of able-bodied youths, yet we import almost everything we consume.

    Why?

    The answer lies in simple physiology: The body of Nigeria has grown faster than its heart (the economy) can pump blood.

    Nigerian population curve has consistently outpaced our economic productivity. When a body outgrows its heart, the result is heart failure. The Political Economist will tell you this is a failure of leadership. The Demographic Physician will tell you it is a failure of structure.

    The X-Ray: Reading the Pyramid

    When a physician needs to understand a hidden fracture, they order an X-ray. For a country, that X-ray is the Population Pyramid.

    To the untrained eye, a population pyramid is just a chart. To the Demographer, it is a diagnostic map that reveals the hidden structural stress on a nation.

    As shown in the comparison above, if you look at the X-ray of a developed country like Japan or Germany, you see a column or a vessel—narrow at the bottom and consistent to the top. This indicates an older, stable population with fewer dependents.

    Now, look at the X-ray of Nigeria. You see a perfect, wide-based pyramid.

    • The Base: A massive foundation of millions of children (0–14 years).
    • The Middle: A struggling, pinched waistline of working adults.
    • The Top: A tiny peak of elderly people.

    The Diagnosis: This wide base indicates a Median Age of roughly 18 years. This means half of all Nigerians are teenagers or children. While politicians like to call this our “future strength,” a doctor calls it Acute Dependency Syndrome. The working “waistline” is simply too thin to support the massive weight of the children at the bottom.

    The Pathology: The Heavy Backpack

    Let us examine the lab results for a crucial marker: the Dependency Ratio.

    In economic physiology, this ratio measures the stress placed on the productive cells of the body. To understand it, imagine the national economy is a man walking up a steep hill.

    In a country like South Korea or China, that man is carrying a small handbag. The vast majority of the population are adults who work and feed themselves. They are net contributors; they add muscle to the climb.

    In Nigeria, that same man is strapped to a 100kg backpack.

    For every 100 working-age Nigerians (those lucky enough to find employment), they must support nearly 80 to 90 dependents. These dependents—mostly children—require food, school fees, healthcare, and clothing, yet they produce zero economic output.

    The Metabolic Consequence This explains why your personal finances feel strained. It explains why the government is perpetually insolvent. It is not just corruption (though that is a cancer of its own); it is simple biology.

    No runner can win a marathon carrying a refrigerator on their back. We are structurally exhausted because our “demographic metabolism” is consuming all our caloric energy just to keep the dependents alive, leaving zero reserves for muscle growth or infrastructure investment.

    The Symptoms: Why the Patient is Bleeding

    If we ignore the X-ray (the population structure) long enough, the symptoms eventually become impossible to hide. In Nigeria, these symptoms are manifesting in three critical ways.

    Symptom 1: The ‘Japa’ Hemorrhage

    In medicine, a hemorrhage is the rapid loss of blood from a damaged vessel. In Nigeria, we are bleeding our most vital cells: our professionals.

    According to recent data, over 4,000 doctors emigrated in 2024 alone. In the last two decades, we have lost nearly 19,000 physicians.

    As the chart above demonstrates, the disparity is lethal. The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends a safety standard of 1 doctor for every 600 patients. In Nigeria, we are sliding toward a ratio of 1:5,000.

    The Biological Cause: Why are they leaving? It is a biological rejection. When a host body (the nation) cannot nourish its cells (the citizens), the cells migrate to survive. Our doctors, engineers, and tech talents are not unpatriotic; they are simply responding to a primal survival instinct. They are transplanting themselves into host bodies—like the UK, Canada, or the US—that have the metabolic capacity to sustain them.

    Symptom 2: The Youth Bulge as Inflammation

    A Youth Bulge sounds positive, like a muscle developing. But in physiology, if a muscle has no bone to attach to, it becomes a mass—a tumor.

    Every year, our universities and polytechnics release roughly 500,000 to 600,000 graduates into the labor market. However, the economy creates only a fraction of the jobs needed to absorb them.

    As the chart above highlights, the gap between “graduates produced” and “jobs available” is widening annually. What happens to the surplus?

    • Underemployment: Masters degree holders riding Okada or driving Uber.
    • Cybercrime: The pivot to Yahoo Yahoo as a vocation.
    • Militancy: Recruitment as foot soldiers for bandits or insurgents.

    In medical terms, this is systemic inflammation. A large population of idle, frustrated young men creates the perfect breeding ground for social unrest. The insecurity in the North-East and North-West is not just an ideological war; it is a demographic crisis fueled by idleness. This insecurity is spreading like wildfire, exploited by unemployed youth who have turned to kidnapping for survival.

    Symptom 3: Infrastructure Organ Failure

    Have you ever wondered why, despite building new roads and buying new transformers, the lights still go off and the traffic still jams? It is because the patient is growing faster than the treatment.

    If Lagos State builds a road for 10 million people, by the time the road is finished, the population has grown to 12 million. We are playing catch-up with a runner who is faster than us. Our infrastructure organs—power, water, transport—are in a state of chronic failure because demand eternally outstrips supply. We are trying to hydrate a patient who is dehydrating faster than we can pour the water.

    The Prognosis: 2050 is Tomorrow

    One of the superpowers of the Demographic Physician is the ability to see the future. The stock market is unpredictable; demography is not. We know exactly how many 25-year-olds will be looking for jobs in 2050—because they were born last week.

    The World Bank recently projected that Nigeria will add another 130 million people by 2050. We are on track to become the third most populous country on Earth, overtaking the United States, but squeezed into a landmass the size of Texas.

    The Doctor sees two possible futures (Prognosis) for this patient:

    Prognosis A: The Miracle Recovery (The Dividend) This is the path taken by the Asian Tigers (South Korea, Taiwan, etc.). They turned their youth bulge into a Demographic Dividend. How? They reduced their family size drastically. This lowered the backpack weight. Suddenly, families had extra money to save. The government had fewer children to educate, so they improved the quality of education. These educated youths flooded the factories, and the economy boomed. If Nigeria takes this path, we become the industrial engine of the world.

    Prognosis B: The Terminal Decline (The Bomb) This is the path of the Demographic Disaster. We continue to reproduce at current rates (a fertility rate of over 4.0). The population doubles, but the economy does not. Poverty deepens. The inflammation of youth unemployment turns into an explosion of civil war or total state collapse. The Giant of Africa becomes a bedridden invalid, dependent on foreign aid just to feed its children.

    The Prescription: The Bitter Pill

    A diagnosis is useless without a treatment plan. The Demographic Physician has written a prescription. It is not sweet. It requires discipline. But it is the only way to save the patient.

    1. The Preventive Medicine: Family Planning

    We need to have a hard, honest conversation about family size. This is not a conspiracy by the West to reduce our numbers; it is simple economics. In the North, where cultural and religious sensitivities are high, we must frame this correctly: Child Spacing is Child Survival. We must empower our women. When a girl stays in school until age 18 or 20, she naturally chooses to have fewer, healthier children.

    • The Dose: Government must make contraceptives free and accessible, not just in Abuja, but in every Primary Healthcare Centre (PHC) in every village.

    2. Education as a Vaccine

    We are currently feeding our youth junk food education. We hand out certificates that have no value in the market. We need a vaccine against unemployability. This means pivoting from Grammar Schools to Technical and Vocational Education (TVET). We need fewer sociologists and more welders, coders, agronomists, and solar technicians.

    • The Dose: Declare a state of emergency on the curriculum. If a degree does not lead to a skill, it is a receipt, not a qualification.

    3. Economic Physiotherapy (Job Creation)

    You cannot tell a patient to exercise if they have no muscles. We cannot tell youth to work hard if there are no factories. The government must perform drastic physiotherapy on the economy to move it away from the oil drip. Oil is lazy money—it employs very few people. Agriculture and Manufacturing are muscle money—they employ millions.

    • The Dose: Priority must be given to stabilizing the power sector. The absence of electricity stifles manufacturing, which in turn kills job creation and turns the youth bulge into a demographic time bomb. To address this, our energy mix must evolve beyond hydropower to include a constellation of renewable sources like wind and solar. We must capitalize on regional comparative advantages; for example, deploying wind and solar infrastructure in the North-West and the Oke-Ogun region of the South-West.

    Conclusion: The Doctor is Waiting

    The Demographic Physician is standing by the bedside. The chart is in hand. The warning lights are blinking red.

    Nigeria is not destined to fail. But biology is ruthless. It does not care about our Giant status, our Afrobeats, or our jollof rice. It only cares about the balance between mouths to feed and hands to work.

    We have a choice. We can take the medicine—embrace family planning, revolutionize education, and industrialize our workforce—and walk out of this hospital as a global superpower. Or, we can ignore the doctor, keep popping painkillers, and wait for the heart attack that is sure to come.

    The patient is still breathing. But for how long?

    Dr. Kola Oyediran is a trained Demographer, Social Statistician, and Global Health Specialist based in the Washington, DC, USA and Sunday Odeleke is a US-based public commentator.