Category: Wednesday

  • Raise IT budgets for courts, Police efficiency

    Raise IT budgets for courts, Police efficiency

    The commendable success of the police in tracking and arresting the participants in the despicable armed robbery and home invasion which led to the occupant falling from the balcony rather than face a terrible ordeal and certain death caused by young aggressive very evil men. It is reported that some were arrested en route another robbery. Thank goodness or we could now be reporting on another murder. Congratulations to the police everywhere!

    Only the police will be able to tell us, after interrogation, how long they have been robbing and killing without being detected, investigated seriously or detected or even arrested during their years of criminal existence in and around Abuja and Zamfara. Hopefully, this interrogation will lead to further arrests and solving of other older unsolved cases. Could this be because past victims did not have the massive social media and mainstream media reach and political backlash leverage surrounding the wickedly motivated attack and murder of or sadly deceased ARISE TV journalist?

    We know that the nation is facing under-policing made worse because the police is severely overstretched with a sizable percentage of active service personnel allocated to ‘VIP GUARD DUTY’, some guarding handbags while elsewhere for example seven were killed in a Kaduna attack in the last few days. It would be a resounding achievement by the police and army if the attackers of these more recently murdered Fellow Nigerians, the  latest ‘Kaduna Seven’, as yet unnamed and without social media clout, are also arrested ‘with immediate effect’ by a similar police and military operation.

    Too many crimes are let go unless the victims’ relations escalate the matter and often have to fund parts of the investigation process themselves. Exactly how much is allocated to each police station for crime reporting and investigation. In most cases even paper and pen are required from the victim’s family for writing statements and ‘transport money’ moving around is standard. This brings down the value of our many well trained highly capable hard-working police in the eyes of the citizenry. We must make adequate provisions for all police to do their best work in all their cases and not just for certain cases.

    Nigeria is supposed to be recruiting 30,000 new policemen and women. There are many stories swirling around the coming of state police and ‘local knowledge’ benefits and the ‘political abuse/private state governor or LGA chairman’s army’ dangers. We await the political conclusion and subsequent positive results on both issues -recruitment and state police.  

    But then we are still in Nigeria, a country in which judges are still forced to personally record cross-examination and opinions in handwriting in court when most of the rest of the world has stenographers, computers, in court live video recordings and even INSTANT SPEECH-TO-TEXT FACILITIES – available on your phone now! These are to quickly accumulate and confirm accuracy of case-related legal information transmission. Is there a conspiracy against modernising the court system in Nigeria?

    Is there a group that wants to keep justice slow and unsteady with cases taking years, some up to 20-30 years?  We are in a country with 200,000-250,000 lawyers and many more at the cutting edge of international law practice while living abroad and with approximately 700 SANs. In spite of this massive legal brain power, the citizens suffer under the agonisingly slow court system clearly demonstrating ‘JUSTICE DELAYED IS JUSTICE DENIED’. There are annual hugely expensive NBA meetings all dedicated to assessing and improving the self-acclaimed ‘Learned Profession’, though many other professions dispute the justice and legality of this ‘self-crowning with cerebral excess’.

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    The citizens expect, no demand, a unity between the traditional red, silk and black robes and assorted wigs, seen in court, to spearhead modern police station legal procedures and a smoother, more efficient, less daily expensive court recording procedure backed by the NBA. Many lawyers are in the National Assembly, NASS, and the corridors of political power and can collectively improve the judiciary budget.

    The judiciary budget is for an independent branch of government and should advance the cause of justice delivery nationwide, not just in Abuja.

    The training of personnel or recruitment of IT staff and computerisation of evidence taking  for all police stations and courts across Nigeria should be top of the agenda of the Tinubu government, state governments and LGAs, Body of Benchers, judges committees, SAN and NBA.  The citizens are tired of waiting for ever for justice.

    In contrast politicians always get what they want. The politicians get the police as guards, needed by the rest of us. The politicians get quick decisions on election matters at special short-lived  ‘Election Tribunals’ while citizens’ cases take years ‘or till death’. Politicians have ridiculous multi-million naira monthly incomes while the citizens get a pittance as minimum wage.   IT IS TIME THE CITIZENS GOT BETTER RECEPTION IN POLICE STATIONS, SHORTER TIME IN COURT AND ANOTHER FREE AND FAIR ELECTION LIKE 1993.   

    For too long Nigeria has tolerated, fought, lost gallant personnel and JTF members and witnessed resurgence of Boko Haram, bandits, terrorists and some violent herders with poorly sustained repercussions and many rehabilitation strategies copycatting but outdoing the Nigeria Delta militants settlements programmes.

    We must curb these dangers before the election for 2027-2031 when the police will again be spread too thinly to counter the evil political elements strategizing now to fight Nigeria and INEC, with ballot rigging and violence.

    Nigerian citizens@65 deserve better!

  • Killing democracy one lie at a time

    Killing democracy one lie at a time

    I have listened to many an opposition politician cry to high heavens that President Bola Ahmed Tinubu is destroying democracy by turning Nigeria into a one-party state, because some Governors defected from the Peoples Democratic Party to the All Progressives Congress to which the President belongs. One of the proponents of one-party-state even took a leap into prophecy: President Tinubu wants to rule forever!

    Not one of them provided any evidence of pressure on the defecting Governors by the President, only speculations and innuendoes. Nor did any Governor complain of pressure as each of the defectors gave reasons for their action. Proponents of one-party-state are willing to deprive the defecting Governors of freewill, of the ability to make their own independent decision. Yet, the proponents themselves are in one or the other of the 19 registered political parties in Nigeria, many of them having defected from one party to the other, some several times! Their hypocrisy is further illustrated by their continuing effort to recruit more members from other parties into their own.

    The point here is that this phantom of a one-party-state is yet another political gimmick to undersell our democracy by portraying it in bad light, all in the attempt to incite voters against President Tinubu, preparatory to the 2027 general elections. It all started in 2022 as preparations were underway for the 2023 elections. Candidates used a variety of tactics, including false allegations of certificate forgery, corruption, drug trafficking, exploitations of ethnic and religious tensions, allegations of electoral malpractices, exploitation of electronic voting failures, and baseless legal challenges. Throughout the campaign, social media were mobilised to spread misinformation, disinformation, trolls, and manipulated images, all to discredit Tinubu and delegitimise his election. The concerted attack on INEC was a strategy to achieve this goal. To be sure, INEC did have its shortcomings during the election.

    Nevertheless, there was nothing about the election that could have changed the overall results. The outcome of the unanimous verdict of the Supreme Court, in which judges directly chastised the petitioners for the baselessness and frivolity of aspects of their cases, further highlighted the validity of the election. Of course, the petitioners turned around to insinuate that the judges were bought, all of them. By the time the election and litigation were over, all major institutions had been discredited.

    The misinformation about the person and candidacy of Tinubu and outright lies about various aspects of the 2023 elections prepared the grounds for two major developments that followed the presidential election. One, foreign media bought into the lies and further propagated them. Some supporters of a losing candidate even went to the White House in Washington, DC, to protest the Nigerian presidential election results. They thus pushed election denialism to then President Joe Biden, whose opponent had used similar tactics to deny his own election. It was easy for Biden and Western leaders to see through the shenanigans of Nigerian election deniers.

    Two, the exploitation of the Muslim-Muslim ticket by Christian candidates, their supporters, and Christian religious leaders laid the foundation for false claims of genocide against Christians. The escalation of conflict over land in the Christian South, accompanied by herdsmen clashes with farmers over grazing land, worsened the narrative. But domestic proponents of the narrative knew too well that Muslims were also killed in large numbers in the Muslim North, where conflict rages between land and cattle owners, involving banditry and kidnapping for ransom. But what the world knows is what we portray about ourselves in the media.

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    One consistent negative portrayal of ourselves is in the economic sector. So much negative propaganda about the economy is spewed that it is hard to believe that Nigeria could survive. It is as if President Tinubu came to destroy the economy, while he has been doing the best possible to revive it by following the road not taken (see Bamidele Ademola-Olateju, Follow Who Know Road, The Nation, October 15, 2025). True, the tripartite measures he had taken to revitalise the economy—removal of fuel subsidy, unification of the exchange market, and overhaul of the tax system—came at a cost to consumers. Nevertheless, the coast is gradually clearing. There is an interesting irony here. While political opponents see a dying economy, foreign observers—the World Bank, the IMF, and rating organizations—see a revamped economy on the way to full recovery. This is one area where statistics truly don’t lie: the Naira has stabilised, fuel cost is at least 50 percent cheaper than it was at the peak of the crisis of fuel subsidy removal; inflation is down by over 30 percent of its peak; and food prices are coming down gradually.

    However, nothing better illustrates the desire of political opponents to destroy our democracy than their insistent call for a military take-over. It’s a call they have been making since the election results were announced. The cancellation of 65th independence anniversary celebrations last October gave room for their conspiracy theory that the cancellation was to avert a military take-over. The same people who would have chastised the government for celebrating in austere times quickly turned to a phantom military coup.

    Incidentally, the ongoing disciplinary action against some army officers for various offenses provided the leeway for their conspiracy theory. It took the Defense Headquarters to deny coup rumours trolling online. It explained (1) that the investigation of some officers was to instill discipline and professionalism, rather than in reaction to a coup plot and (2) that the cancellation of the anniversary celebration was to allow President Tinubu to attend a “strategic bilateral meeting”, which he indeed attended, and has since returned.

    There is no doubt that a military coup would have been the death of democracy as it was for over 30 of the 65 years of independence, when the constitution was suspended and full dictatorship was established. Why detractors of President Tinubu would want that situation to reoccur is beyond sanity. Assuming that many of their social media supporters had no idea what military dictatorship looked like, it is a shame that the elders among them who know are willing to cut their nose off to spite their face.

    It will be more profitable as the next election season approaches for our politicians to focus on policies and solutions to national problems than to keep destroying our democracy by lying about it.

  • Libraries + Computers +AI= 21st C Education

    Libraries + Computers +AI= 21st C Education

    As we celebrate the girl-child and remember the Chibok Girls, now women, held in captivity, we must ensure that all qualified girls register for the next election. It is their right and required to help right any wrong done them when growing up. New INEC chairman, Prof Joash Amupitan, please empower the millions of 2019-2027 14–18-year-olds who will have matured to voting age by 2027.

    Education is facing a tsunami change in information dissemination strategies with the advent of Artificial Intelligence, AI. Unfortunately, too many Nigerian students, now adults were cheated of library books throughout school life. Millions including teachers have never held a novel, encyclopaedia or a proper dictionary.

    Now the Federal Ministry of Education, UBEC and other government education agencies are jumping the void of no books and no libraries and no grants to buy books across the school spectrum. Just like with the cell phone, our education system appears to at last be going digital. Hurray and can one go without the other or should they go together- a good library system and a good computer, IT/AI system?

    Digitalisation of public schools with integration of Interactive Smart Boards spearheaded by the minister, Tunji Alausa is the way forward. The education tsunami is not partisan. Our children are not partisan; they are entitled to education, period!

    Just last week Governor Seyi Makinde launched a program to train 18,000 teachers on the use of teaching materials including tablets. Hopefully the teachers will receive their tablets and the tablets will not be stolen by criminals or taken back or diverted by supervising civil servant. We need regular weekly inventory checks. If this tech/AI project works and materializes along with other programmes nationwide, perhaps our youth will also leap onto the present wave of computer-powered knowledge sweeping the world. AI is being taught to kindergarten (KG) students in villages across China and even Vietnam with emphasis on science, technology, engineering, and mathematics, STEM, and AI. PhD graduates teach KG and primary school in many Western countries. Many of our KG and primary school teachers are not fit for purpose. Nigeria and its officials must take such giant leaps in education to catch up.

    As we stand on the brink of opportunity to leap into the new world of AI, it is worth remembering a similar time in history. In 1998 at Educare Trust at Brick House we set up the first Educare Trust Youth Exhibition Centre and put the first public access computer in the hands of the children of Ibadan with a computer then donated by Tunji Adepeju of Project Link. It was amazing then to see those children, now 35–45-year adults, gather around in wonder to navigate the new beast of technology presented to them. They cautiously typed their name and their faces lit up in huge smiles of wonder as they were surprised to see the letters appear on the computer screen. The rest they say is history. But it was never enough and government did not jump on the bandwagon to make its army of students in public schools computer literate then or even at this time -30+ years later.  As years went by, we trained over 8,000 youth in IT and many others indirectly. Nigerians are still waiting for the youth centres so desperately needed in each ward nationwide. Hopefully they will be part of the Ward Development Strategy promised by the Tinubu government.

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    There is a security and a power problem in most schools and these problems must be addressed if IT tablets and smart white boards are to replace or complement chalk and blackboards in public schools. Solar is the solution. Education strategies cost money and great moral willpower often lacking in politicians and governance structures.  Government must pursue this effort to its logical end- the empowerment of our teaming youth trapped in schools which are too often not fit-for-purpose. 

    Every youth in, or out of school, is the child of a mother with went through the agony of ‘The Labour War-d’, risking and giving their lives, so that the child would live to today. For tomorrow, the child needs good modern education today. Yet today we as government and private sector provide too little, too late support for those youth in unfortunate circumstances; private school facilities and teacher skills are fat better. Of course, some youth will excel even in public education because they are naturally brilliant. But a good education, like good governance, is also the right of underserved and underfunded students. Not everyone, rich or poor, is born brilliant.  Nigeria should use private and public sector partnerships to jump into the future, today. 

    The jury faces bitter conflict between the need for a library vs the need for computers. Most schools have neither but they should have both. They are equally essential in today’s education tapestry and equally valuable and not mutually exclusive stepping stones to a level playing field of educational knowledge empowerment. Schools need computers and also libraries with government bought Nigerian authored books.

    Some governments have policies to prevent parents contributing voluntarily to improve facilities in schools. This is taking politics too far into the classroom. Even the richest schools worldwide ask parents to contribute, so the poorest schools cannot meet international teaching levels if they are denied the huge input of volunteer parents into the ‘School Needs List’ that every school should have. We must stop this education treachery.  

  • Tinubu’s pardons: When mercy offends the self-righteous

    Tinubu’s pardons: When mercy offends the self-righteous

    When President Bola Tinubu announced clemency and pardons for 175 individuals – including posthumous gestures to figures like revered Nigerian nationalist Herbert Macaulay, General Mamman Vatsa, and the Ogoni Nine – the usual storm of outrage was triggered.

    Social media moralists, opposition opportunists, and even some well-meaning commentators cried foul. “Selective justice”, “outright injustice” some said; others dismissed it as “a political move.” Many scoffed at the symbolism, asking what good a pardon does for the dead. A popular joke online was “who will pardon the president?”

    As more details of the beneficiaries were released, critics lighted upon the case of one Maryam Sanda who, five years ago, was convicted of stabbing her husband Bilyaminu Bello, to death over a domestic dispute. This was clearly a tragedy that had torn immediate and extended families apart. The wounds are still raw as is clear from the emotional statement released by victim’s family denouncing the government’s action.

    For now, we may not know what made Sanda’s case so compelling that the committee chose her as a beneficiary given the gravity of her offence and the time spent so far in jail.

    But in a climate of intense cynicism and partisanship, the usual suspects have piled on the president as though he, personally, spent months wading through the 40,000-plus inmate population, just to favour a select group of convicts. Beyond mischief-making, the critics are yet to make a convincing case of how showing mercy to these people benefits Tinubu politically.

    Let’s be clear, this whole process is rooted in law – specifically, Section 175 of the 1999 Constitution, which grants the President the prerogative of mercy. The Presidential Advisory Committee on Prerogative of Mercy is chaired by the Attorney-General and Minister of Justice, Lateef Fagbemi. It has as members eminent lawyers, jurists and representatives of the following: Nigeria Police Force, Nigerian Correctional Service (NCS), National Human Rights Commission (NHRC), Nigerian Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs (NSCIA) and Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN).

    They reviewed nearly 300 cases, interviewed over 100 inmates, and made recommendations. The final list included 82 inmates granted clemency, 65 whose sentences were reduced, and seven death-row inmates whose sentences were commuted to life imprisonment.

    Among them were two living former convicts and 15 deceased ones who received posthumous pardons – including some whose names carry the weight of history: Macaulay, the nationalist branded seditionist by the British colonial government; Major General Vatsa, executed in 1986 on a treason charge; and the Ogoni Nine, whose execution under Sani Abacha remains one of the darkest moments in Nigeria’s history.

    It’s easy to forget that the prerogative of mercy exists precisely because justice, however well-intentioned, is never perfect. Courts can make mistakes. People have spent decades in jail only to have their convictions overturned. And even where guilt is established, punishment without redemption breeds bitterness, not rehabilitation.

    Clearly, imprisonment isn’t just about paying the price for crime it also aims at rehabilitating convicts. Little wonder the name Nigerian Prison Service (NPS) was changed to Nigerian Correctional Services (NCS) – highlighting this higher goal.

    Critics who call this president’s action a political stunt overlook a few basic realities. For one, the committee’s criteria were clear: age, terminal illness, exemplary conduct in prison, evidence of remorse, and recommendation by correctional officers. Many of the beneficiaries are poor, forgotten people – men and women who have spent time behind bars, often for minor offences, and who have long ceased to pose any threat to society. Some were convicted in their teens and have grown old behind bars. For them, clemency isn’t politics; it’s mercy long delayed.

    Periodic acts of mercy are not indulgences; they are necessary pressure valves in an overburdened justice system. It’s no coincidence that every democratic government since independence has exercised this power at one point or another. Former President Olusegun Obasanjo did. Umaru Yar’Adua did. Goodluck Jonathan did. Even Muhammadu Buhari – not exactly famous for sentimentality – did.

    In November 2002, Obasanjo pardoned 80 secessionist soldiers who fought against Nigeria during the 1967-1970 Civil War. On October 1, 2004, he showed mercy to 62 convicts. In March 2013, Jonathan pardoned his former boss, Diepreiye Alamieyeisegha, who had been jailed for two years for embezzling state funds. At the time of his arrest in September 2005, British Metropolitan police found about £1million in cash in his London home.

    All over the world presidential pardons are often controversial. Former U.S. presidents Bill Clinton and Joe Biden got many tongues clucking by granting clemency to relatives and dodgy characters. Donald Trump hasn’t been a slouch either in this department. Still, the tsunami-like criticism that has greeted Tinubu’s action just seems overdone.

    We can put that down to our selective outrage. We are perfectly fine when governors release prisoners during festive seasons, but become irate when the President does same on a larger scale. When our preferred political figures, “freedom fighters” and secessionist leaders are jailed, we demand mercy and beg for their release – even when their guilt is yet to be established in court or innocence proven. When the same mercy is extended to others, we sneer.

    Take the posthumous pardons. Some have dismissed them as empty symbolism – too little, too late. But it matters. Pardoning Herbert Macaulay or the Ogoni Nine isn’t about rewriting history; it’s about acknowledging it. It’s a way of saying: yes, the state once erred, and we recognise that injustice now. That has moral value. It’s an act of national memory – a small but significant gesture toward reconciliation.

    In a country where successive governments have buried their mistakes rather than confront them, such acts should be welcomed, not mocked. We cannot, on one hand, demand that Nigeria reckon with its colonial and military pasts, and on the other, scoff when it takes even a modest step toward that reckoning. That’s hypocrisy, plain and simple.

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    There’s also the criticism that some of the pardoned, like former House of Representatives member Farouk Lawan, don’t deserve mercy because their offences – in this case, bribery – represents the rot in our politics. Fair enough. But mercy was never designed for the innocent alone. The guilty, too, are human. If the law gives room for clemency, it’s because society recognises that punishment can correct but should not dehumanise.

    Those who worry that such gestures undermine deterrence misunderstand the balance between justice and mercy. Clemency doesn’t erase guilt; it acknowledges transformation. It says: “You have paid enough.” And that message, when applied transparently, strengthens rather than weakens the moral authority of the state.

    Of course, there’s always the danger of abuse – of political allies being rewarded under the guise of compassion. Nigeria has seen that before. But the answer to possible abuse is not to abandon mercy altogether. It is to ensure transparency, clear criteria, and a functional justice system that works fairly from the start.

    If anything, Tinubu’s move was balanced. It wasn’t a blanket amnesty. It mixed the symbolic with the practical, the famous with the forgotten. It reached backward into history and forward into the present. That’s not cynicism – that’s an attempt at a moral statement.

    We might also consider what kind of society we want to be. One obsessed with punishment, or one capable of compassion? For all our public displays of religiosity, we are quick to condemn and slow to forgive. The same people who chant “Lord have mercy” on Sundays become self-appointed hangmen by Monday. Yet no nation ever healed when obsessed with vengeance.

    In the end, the outrage over these pardons says more about us than about the President. We distrust power so deeply that we can no longer recognise sincerity when it appears. We assume every gesture has a hidden motive, every policy a sinister plot. That cynicism, understandable as it may be, sometimes blinds us to what is plainly good.

    Tinubu’s pardons will not fix Nigeria’s justice system. They won’t end overcrowded prisons or erase the wounds of the past. But they are a small reminder that mercy, too, has a place in governance.

  • Free ectopic pregnancy & CS; ID Politicians

    Free ectopic pregnancy & CS; ID Politicians

    Happy World Teachers Day. May we empower, equip and pay them to better win the education war.  Amen.

    Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN pledges to introduce clean naira notes. Good. Hopefully the good work of the Tinubu government and governor of CBN, Yemi Cardoso and his team to service proper mechanisms for proper use of available funds, naira and dollar, and the efforts to prevent fraud in the supply and service chains like customs and the oil sector, will also improve the value of the clean notes.

    At the behest of the Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu of Lagos State, the bank moguls, often rightly vilified for their greed, collectively released N60b of funds earned from Nigerian citizens’ money in the very profitable bank balances of trillion naira-a-year banks for the refurbishment of the Wole Soyinka National Theatre. Hurray for Sanwo-Olu’s wisdom in choosing to leverage on and actually create a Mega-Public Private Partnership. This is most likely the largest in Nigeria and the way forward. Congratulations to the bank moguls and all involved. However, the curse of most government projects and some in the private sector is poor maintenance.

    Hopefully, having expended such a huge sum in resuscitating the WS National Theatre, these same bank moguls have an adequate maintenance blueprint. We have just refurbished the multibillion-naira Lagos-Ibadan Expressway and already, as reported recently in this column, a chronic lack of political will and civil service supervision and maintenance has resulted in thousands of islands of weeds and grass growing along the concrete barrier. Shame!

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    The Nigerian Medical Association, NMA, Society of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, SOGON, and women’s groups should together fight the danger of death from ectopic pregnancy. Hospital frontline staff and administrators should be ordered to release ‘GUIDELINES FOR ECTOPIC PREGNANCY CASES’. Ectopic pregnancy patients bleed inside, not outside. No blood is seen by the staff to alert them to the serious situation. The patient can deteriorate very quickly, within five minutes and collapse and die while the staff are selfishly haggling with the patient or the family over the patient’s insurance or ability to pay. Even with money some patients are turned away to avoid ‘inconvenience to the staff or hospital’. Maybe the staff want to close or are just coming on duty.

    No medical service with the capability to perform emergency surgery should be allowed to reject such patients. The patient has a high chance of dying while being conveyed to another hospital which also could also reject her if she arrived alive. That second rejection will almost certainly be a death sentence. When I was in practice, I introduced the 15-minute rule for ectopic pregnancy patients. It meant that from diagnosis in the casualty or clinic, to rushing the patient to theatre for knife-on-skin, it should not take more than 15 minutes.

    Some patients’ families will run away, deserting the patients resulting in zero hope of recovering the funds expended on surgery. It is also true that sometimes the medical personnel are unfairly and wrongly burdened by conviction or compassion, with raising the ‘lost’ surgical funds.

    Unknown to readers, many doctors throughout the country and probably widely in the developing world, pay towards drugs, investigations and surgery procedures for many needy patients, rather than have those same patients abandoned, refused admission or discharged to suffer and even die because they were financially challenged. Delay in ectopic pregnancy care is a death sentence. Period. 

    We heard a lot around a ‘FREE CAESARIAN SECTION’ policy.  Hurray! We await its introduction to help level the financially uneven delivery ground for what is the ‘MOST DANGEROUS DAY IN THE LIFE OF A WOMAN AND CHILD’ in the ‘LABOUR WAR-D’. Why not decisively deal politically with these twin maternal medical emergencies at the beginning and end of the pregnancy spectrum and introduce a ‘free caesarean section and free ectopic pregnancy for those who cannot afford them’?

    When implemented countrywide, ‘FREE CAESARIAN SECTION & FREE ECTOPIC PREGNANCY FOR THOSE WHO CANNOT AFFORD THEM’, will bring comfort to millions of families, noting that 70% of the citizenry are poor. It is a worthy investment in the health service delivered to women and in families especially when we consider the amount of money stolen as attested to by the huge sums for which many politicians are taken to court for by ICPC and EFCC, even if they are not convicted due to technical and other loopholes.  

    For years it has been advocated that Nigeria should have adopted a warlike stance against Boko Haram and its fellow terrorism travellers years ago. It did not and now we are facing a serious low and high tech, including terrorist drone, escalation. Certainly, Nigeria should adopt a much more warlike attitude to acknowledge the cost in our millions displaced, injured and killed and our security heroes past who have fallen fighting Boko Haram since 2009. A warlike footage must cut cost of politics, including the ludicrous cost of political forms for the coming elections and diverting such funds to the military and psychological defeat of the terrorists.  

     A warlike stance against Boko Haram and other terrorists can only become a reality if we take seriously the combined past and present plight of our dead and more than five million Internally Displaced Persons. We demand a new pressure group – ‘INTERNALLY DISPLACED POLITICIANS’ – IDPOL- made up of politicians who cannot go back home, because of terrorism and Boko Haram. Nigeria must defeat terrorism, Amen              

  • Towards a new Nigeria

    Towards a new Nigeria

    There have been many suggestions on how to build the Nigeria of our dream beyond the rhetoric of politicians, who promise to build bridges where there are no rivers. The Nigeria I have in mind is one where the constitution meets the people’s aspirations, by providing a workable federation structure and processes of governance that take the diversity of the country into account. It should be a constitution that provides opportunities for self-fulfillment for various groups, thereby making separatist agitations undesirable. What is still unclear is a word picture of how such a new Nigeria might look like.

    While, despite liars and saboteurs, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has been working hard to stabilise the country through globally acclaimed economic reforms, the debate rages on the kind of Nigeria he should aim at building. There are two major suggestions.

    The constitutional approach

    The constitutional approach has been the default approach, with two distinct groups leading the advocacy. One group argues that there really is nothing wrong with the 1999 constitution (as amended). The problem, they argue, is with the implementation. The country would be fine if only political actors respected the constitution they swore to obey. True, the constitution is flouted here and there, but that is only part of the story.

    The other group argues that the constitution is so flawed that it must be thoroughly reviewed. Once the constitution is amended properly, they argue, all our problems will be solved. However, despite many attempts at reviews, including two major constitutional conferences, the constitution stays flawed.

    There are far too many problems with the constitution, two of which are paramount. One, it lacks legitimacy, because it was a military imposition, which adopts the American presidential system in appearance but not in details or in practice. It was an attempt to give an acceptable face to the unitary system of government first imposed by the military after the notorious coup of 1966 and then codified into the 1979 constitution.

    However, a close look at the 1999 constitution shows how far away it is from the American model. For example, the American constitution guarantees relative autonomy of the 50 federating states, including control over their own local governments, resources, education, agricultural activities, elections, and police for security. The 1999 constitution does not guarantee such level of autonomy to the 36 states and even recognizes 774 Local Government Areas, thus raising questions about their status as political units and complicating the power of states to control them. Moreover, the distribution of the LGAs is far from the realities on ground. For example, Osun and Ondo states have comparable populations, but Osun has 30 LGAs, while Ondo is given only 18!

    Two, the 1999 constitution over-concentrates power in the federal government, by giving the centre exclusive control over education (via UBEC, JAMB, NUC, NBTE, TETFund, and so on); elections; domestic security via unitary police; and many others. The constitution also gives the centre a greater share of resources as well as control over the sharing of resources generated by the federating states.

    Dr. Joe Abah succinctly outlines the negative consequences of over-centralisation of power and resources in a recent lucid essay (see Rebuilding Nigeria through devolution and decentralisation, The Daily Times, October 1, 2025). They include wasteful spending; corruption; and impunity. Worse still, states depend on monthly federal allocations, leading citizens to overlook states and blame the federal government for everything. This is the dilemma faced by the Tinubu administration, which continues to be blamed, despite providing states with more than double their previous allocations.

    The devolution approach

    The devolutionists believe that the present arrangement has three major shortcomings. One, the structure of the federation is so unworkable that a new arrangement is needed that provides the incentive for federating units to look inwards rather than to the federal government for sustenance. Less than half of the existing 36 states could be regarded as viable in that sense. Many of them are unable to pay the new minimum wage, while also owing salary and pension arrears.

    Two, it is imperative that power and resources devolve from the centre to the federating units in order (a) to encourage the federating units to manage their affairs more productively and empower their residents to strive for self-fulfillment; (b) to allow the federal government to concentrate on its core duties of national defense, economic policy, and citizen welfare; and (c) to shift the blame game from the federal government to the federating units, thereby making both more accountable to the people.

    Two tasks must be accomplished to achieve these goals. First, the federating units have to be delineated into manageable entities, while reducing the expensive overhead costs the present 36-state structure entails. Moreover, the new units must be empowered to manage their own affairs for reasons well articulated by Chief Bisi Akande, himself a fervent advocate of devolution of powers and resources: “Federating units or subsidiary units are usually the theatre of action. That is where you have the land, the forests, the farms, the schools, the hospitals, the manufacturing industries, and even the roads and the citizens, together with daily economic and social activities.”

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    There are two competing suggestions on what the federating or subsidiary units would look like. One group advocates a return to the old regions. The advocates of this approach tend to be older citizens, who grew up during the old parliamentary system in which three or four regions were the subnational governments. Critics of this approach cite the large but unequal size of the old regions and the trapping of minority populations within them.

    The other group advocates the reconstitution of the present six zones into federating units. Among the advocates of this approach are internationally recognised administration and governance experts, including Dr. Abah and Professor Adamolekun, who has even authored a book on the subject (see Reflections on Governance and Development in Nigeria, published in April 2025).

    However, the above task is not achievable unless the constitution makes it possible. Hence, the present constitution must be replaced by one in which the citizens are invested, and which changes the structure of the federation into one in which the present zones are the federating units. The zones would become states, to be known by their geographical nomenclature as Southwest, South-south, Southeast, Northeast, North Central, and Northwest or by some other agreed names. Each state will decide on what to do with the various units within it. However, there should be relative uniformity in the nomenclature. In the United States, for example, the political unit immediately below the state is the County. However, subunits of counties are known by various local names.

    A critical aspect of the new constitution should be the allocation of resources. Dr. Abah has suggested a 20-30 percent share for the federal government, while the subnational units receive 70-80 percent. I align with Professor Adamolekun’s suggestion of 35:65 share as in the 1963 constitution.

    As indicated at the beginning, state allocations have more than doubled because of President Tinubu’s economic reforms. Yet the evidence of the bonanza is scanty across many states. Unless steps are taken to make the subnational governments more responsible and accountable, it will be difficult to sustain the gains of the reforms. A devolved federation along the lines suggested above is sorely needed to make the subnational governments more responsible and accountable, while making “life more abundant” for the citizens, in the words of the sage, Chief Obafemi Awolowo.

  • What verdict on Mahmood Yakubu’s decade at INEC?

    What verdict on Mahmood Yakubu’s decade at INEC?

    Like most of his predecessors as chairman of Nigeria’s Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Prof. Mahmood Yakubu, has been the recipient of acidic criticism over the handling of elections under his watch. He, more than most, having stepped into the saddle against the backdrop of unprecedented political change.

    He was appointed in 2015 by President Muhammadu Buhari who, along with his All Progressives Congress (APC), had pulled off the hitherto unthinkable feat of toppling an incumbent president. The losing Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) is yet to come to terms with its defeat, and spent the last ten years blaming the commission for its woes.

    But that’s understandable given that no one ever loses elections in Nigeria; it’s always down to INEC’s ‘rigging’. Even no-hoppers indulge in this national pastime of blaming the umpire. Way back in the Second Republic, the hapless chairman of the electoral body, retired Justice Victor Ovie-Whiskey, famously retorted that he would faint if he saw N1 million in cash. This was in reaction to unending allegations that he and his team had been bought off by the then ruling National Party of Nigeria (NPN).

    To that extent, no one should be too shocked by the Yakubu-bashing, nor swallow hook, line and sinker ever accusation against the election management team.

    This is not to say that the current commission, or its previous incarnations have delivered perfectly on their mandate. I doubt whether there’s any national institution for which that sort of generous claim can be made. While there’s much to be criticised, sometimes the criticism is way over the top; devoid of the generosity of spirit which acknowledges where progress has been made and innovations introduced.

    Over the last decade, our elections have evolved from the dark days when the primary beneficiary the 2007 election, late President Umaru Yar’Adua, shockingly admitted that the process that threw him up was fundamentally flawed. For all the attempts by the aggrieved to paint the chairman as a devil in professorial garb, no one can say that the Yakubu period ever plumbed the scandalous depths of 18 years ago.

    And that’s saying a lot, given that aside the general elections of 2019 and 2023 the commission under him also managed countless by-elections in that 10-year space. Virtually all parties – from the largest to fringe ones – at some point emerged enjoyed the feeling of being victors: in some instances in places where their triumph was considered an upset.

    A case in point is the narrow defeat of APC and its candidate, Bola Ahmed Tinubu, in Lagos, a place long considered his impenetrable fortress. In those instances, the victors would hail the commission to high heavens whilst the losers would curse them to the pits of hell.

    This October, the curtain is set to be drawn on Yakubu’s decade-long leadership. But we must not forget that his tenure was not just about elections, it also involved transforming the institution and reforming the way our polling processes are managed – getting them aligned with global best practices.

    Take away controversies about particular election outcomes and fair-minded persons cannot but admit that the Yakubu years have been transformative. Those with short memory forget that once upon a time ballot box-snatching and other Stone Age malpractices were consequential in determining electoral outcomes.

    Today, with the embrace of technology, much of those abuses have become redundant. So much so that on polling days citizens can now track emerging results from polling units up to ward level and beyond on INEC’s portal same day.

    One key achievement for which his time would be remembered is continuity and institutional stability. This is down to the fact that he’s the commission’s first chairman to have served two consecutive terms. In that period he oversaw the largest number of elections ever conducted in this country – two general elections, 19 governorship polls, hundreds of bye-elections, and three FCT council elections.

    To guarantee enduring institutional memory, he initiated Nigeria’s first Election Museum to preserve the nation’s democratic history. He regularised election dates, creating certainty and predictability. Improved investment in modernised election infrastructure resulted in the building of State Collation Centres across the federation and initiation of a new INEC Headquarters in Abuja.

    You cannot discuss Yakubu’s legacy without talking about the Commission’s embrace of technology. Two key items have become household names in political discourse. The Bimodal Voter Accreditation System (BVAS) with fingerprint and facial recognition was introduced in place of the flawed manual processes. Equally, the INEC Result Viewing Portal (IReV) came into being, allowing Nigerians to view polling unit results in real time.

    Technology has also revolutionised voter registration through IVED and ABIS, eliminating 2.7 million fraudulent registrations. Digital portals for candidate nomination, party agent registration, observer accreditation, and media access are now available. In a first on the African continent, INEC has introduced the Artificial Intelligence Division, with an eye on the future of election management.

    Other achievements of the Yakubu tenure include expanding the Voter Roll by institutionalising Continuous Voter Registration (CVR). This has created year-round opportunities for people to register. Since the introduction in 2017, over 23 million new voters have been added.

    In the face of persistent calls for legal and regulatory reforms, the Commission worked with the National Assembly to deliver the landmark Electoral Act 2022, heralding electronic transmission of results and stricter party regulations.

    He would be remembered for making inclusion a core part of his agenda with the establishment of the Department of Gender & Inclusivity to give structure and voice to representation. Quota slots were reserved for women in senior management, breaking long-standing barriers.

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    Also introduced were assistive voting devices like Braille ballots and magnifying lenses. He created and implemented legal frameworks for Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) to vote, safeguarding rights even in times of crisis. To actually walk his talk, persons with disabilities were hired within INEC.

    Deepening of stakeholder engagement has been achieved through quarterly consultations with political parties, civil society, security agencies, and the media. A Code of Conduct for security personnel on election duty, ensuring professionalism in the field has been introduced. Partnerships with traditional rulers, faith leaders, and the National Peace Committee have contributed to a more peaceful electoral process.

    Yakubu’s impact has been felt in the area of electoral diplomacy and regional leadership. He revived and presided over ECONEC (ECOWAS Network of Electoral Commissions), positioning Nigeria as a hub of electoral thought leadership. He has also driven solidarity and peer-learning missions across West Africa, providing technical, material, and moral support to sister commissions.

    Demotivated staff can become a danger to electoral credibility as they become vulnerable to manipulation by politicians and parties. Understanding this, the INEC boss has addressed staff development and welfare by introducing merit-based promotions and gender quotas for directors, rewarding excellence; rolled out welfare packages: hazard allowances, bonuses, medical aid, and funeral grants; built a crèche for nursing mothers, supporting staff with young families; instituted Long Service Awards and Staff Recognition Nights.

    As he departs from a seat which many have dubbed a poisoned chalice, INEC’s low key, self-effacing chair can look back with pride at the technology-driven, reform-oriented, and people-focused institution he’s leaving behind. Perhaps with time he will get the credit he deserves for laying the foundation for deeper public trust in the integrity of our elections.

  • Why many university graduates are jobless these days

    Why many university graduates are jobless these days

    Whenever I reflect on graduate joblessness these days, I cannot but recall the good old days when there were more jobs than graduates. My employment history reflected the spirit of the times. Upon my completion of secondary school education at Olofin Anglican Grammar School, Idanre, the School Principal, the late Mr. Titus Adeola Oke, gave me a hybrid employment to teach literature in form two and also assist him in his office, even before the West African School Certificate examination results were released.

    Years later, after completing my degree in English at the University of Ife, a job was waiting for me at the same secondary school. However, by September of that same year, I was called back to Ife to start my university teaching career. These early encounters with the job market were replicated over and over again throughout my career. I was headhunted for all my teaching and research positions at home and abroad. The truth is that every graduate I knew at that time had a job waiting for him or her somewhere. With only five or six universities in Nigeria at that time,  there were more job openings than there were university graduates to fill the vacancies. What is more, a number of my contemporaries in secondary school, who did not go to the university, aquired enough transferable skills and self discipline to study via correspondence tuition to become accountants, lawyers, and what have you, and they eventually rose to the top of their professions.

    Of course, the population has exploded since my undergraduate days, and higher education institutions have mushroomed out of control. Today, there are 307 universities and 812 Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) institutions in Nigeria, according to latest figures from the National Universities Commission and the National Board of Technical Education, respectively. The TVET institutions include 194 polytechnics; 32 Colleges of Agriculture; 131 Colleges of Health Sciences; 154 Colleges of Nursing Science; 181 Innovation Enterprise Institutions;153 Technical Colleges; and 98 so-called Specialised Institutions. Altogether, there are 1,119 higher education institutions in the country, churning out hundreds of thousands of students every year.

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    It is estimated that 50 percent or more of graduates from these institutions today are unemployed or underemployed. There are many factors responsible for this unpleasant outcome. First, the unplanned multiplicity of higher education institutions has produced graduates far more than available jobs.

    Second, many factories and manufacturing industries, which are major employers of labour, have been shutting down in response to a slowing economy, high interest rates, poor or inadequate infrastructure, and insecurity.

    Third, educational standards have been on the decline due to numerous factors, including inadequate staffing, poor remuneration and incentives, lack of necessary equipment and facilities, decrepit infrastructure, and over-population of teaching spaces and labs.

    Fourth, institutions have not been keeping their curriculums relevant to the needs of the job market. To complicate matters, today’s graduates are hardly equipped with proper career orientation, which often makes it difficult for them to find a suitable job that matches their qualifications.

    Fifth, our graduates are victims of a skills gap. In other words, there is a serious mismatch between the skills and competencies our graduates have and the skills employers need for job vacancies. Such skills or competencies should normally be identified at the beginning of a class lesson, a lab work, or a workshop so that students are keyed into them. Students also should be trained on how to transfer skills from one area of knowledge to another in order to solve a new problem or adapt to a new job situation.

    I noticed this knowledge gap in my encounter with some graduates while conducting a workshop for teachers of English in a secondary school. I was astonished that a graduate of English had difficulty reading, understanding, and teaching a literature textbook outside the ones she studied before as a student. I also came across a graduate of statistics, who lacked the basic skills to assist in the analysis of data obtained in an opinion poll.

    Sixth, many Nigerian graduates are not sufficiently computer literate for today’s job market. They complete their education without adequate computer skills beyond the use of the telephone and social media Apps. They can use of Google to search for answers to homework assignments all right or hack into other users’ data for fraudulent purposes. But they lack basic knowledge of how computers work and can hardly use productivity software. That is why today, the integration of technology, especially Artificial Intelligence (AI) and automation, even in knowledge-based sectors, is displacing workers and contributing to graduate unemployment.

    Finally, and I blush each time I must repeat this: Most Nigerian graduates lack basic communicative skills in English, the official language, and the language of white-collar workplaces. This is especially true of graduates of public universities and even worse for polytechnic and other TVET graduates. Sometimes, I wonder whether English was their medium of instruction at all or how they succeeded if it was!

    I must add, however, that the various problems discussed above are not peculiar to Nigeria. These same factors also account for graduate unemployment across the globe. Nevertheless, the problems vary from country to country. So is the rate of unemployment. For example, on the one hand, university graduate unemployment rate is relatively high in the United States, where the rate is now about the same as the unemployment rate for those without university education.

    On the other hand, university graduate unemployment in Britain and the European Union is lower than that of the United States, with significant variations from country to country. A major reason for the difference is in the alignment of skills acquired in European universities and the job market.

    What is important for Nigeria is to tackle these problems headlong. President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has taken several major steps in this direction. First, he put a seven-year moratorium on the establishment of universities in the country to halt the overproduction of university graduates. The moratorium should be generalised across all higher education institutions. Besides, a thorough survey of all higher institutions in the country should be carried out with a view to closing failed institutions or merge failing ones with more successful or bigger institutions in order to consolidate resources.

    Second, President Tinubu has ordered the final revision and implementation of secondary education curriculum to better prepare students for entry into higher educational institutions.

    Third, he ordered a focus on TVET education, with attention on skills acquisition. Under the astute management of Professor Duke Okoro, the Rector, the young Federal Polytechnic, Orogun, Delta State, has invested in skills acquisition and skills transfer from the beginning, which enabled the institution recently to win first place in national engineering competition on “Applying Engineering Solutions to Tanker Explosion and Fire Outbreak.”

    But a lot more still needs be done. The remuneration of teachers across the education sector is long overdue for upward revision in light of current economic realities. There should be more effort on job creation through greater investment in infrastructure beyond road construction. More attention should be given to power and water supply as well as recreational facilities.

    The need to enhance security is also critical to attracting investment and creating a path to reindustrialisation. Still more effort should be made to make state and local goverments more responsible for education.

    Finally, it is necessary to inject new blood into the civil service and encourage old hands to retire quietly. This is one way to initiate changes in existing civil service culture with all its problems, while also creating jobs for new graduates.

  • 44th OLUBADAN; Nigeria @ 65: Great education expectations

    44th OLUBADAN; Nigeria @ 65: Great education expectations

    As we celebrate the enthronement of Oba Rashidi Adewolu Ladoja, aged 81, as the 44th Olubadan of Ibadanland and absorb his call for an Ibadan State, let us appreciate his personal journey through life from being poor to becoming a brilliant mathematics student to becoming senator and Oyo State governor in 2003. His dream as governor was to have 30 students a class; he himself had 26 students in his own class in school. He took his dream, as governor of Oyo State to Abuja.

    Sadly he did not serve as governor long enough to carry out his plan and Oyo State is the worse for it, all these years later even today. The then Governor Ladoja had his tenure truncated and he was removed due to the then reigning political evil of the day which placed presidential whims and caprices over and above the will of the people. The public domain is unaware if there was any presidential regret for the removal, but Oba Ladoja is certainly having the last laugh due hopefully to his God-given longevity, the righteousness of his case, and the unjustified quantum of political evil dealt him just for being naturally kind-natured. We wish Kabiyesi Rashidi Ladoja a long, exponentially progressive and peaceful reign. Amen.

    One thing government must take up is that we must teach that not everyone who wants to set up a stall or trade or even run a keke or an okada in every market can have that privilege or be accommodated in 2025. There is no longer space for everyone. Nowhere in the world can 50 tri-cycles (keke), 100 commercial motor-cycles (okada) and 500 traders be squeezed into existing spaces. They should be enumerated, given numbers and allocated spaces. Move the excess elsewhere, like in other areas. The encroachment of the unlimited traders with their baskets and wheelbarrows on the road lanes and keke lines strangles Ibadan at various points like the entire Mokola, Bodija, Agodi and Mapo areas making movement a nightmare in daylight and endangering even our children. Perhaps methods of numbering and allocation of spaces need to be revisited and updated to make better use of the amazing new roads in Ibadan to help speed up traffic and stop the unnecessary traffic jams. The inability of the authority to maintain two functioning lanes through the above markets, and the ease with which the police on duty ignore the need to open such roads daily makes things worse.     

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    Happy 65th Birthday Nigeria. It is difficult to be happy when so many Fellow Nigerians have been senselessly killed by terrorists and herders, also terrorists actually, and other individuals and groups who use murder of innocent unarmed citizens and sometimes armed and uniformed service personnel for no just cause. At this time of celebration, we are reminded, if we have forgotten, by our government at the Africa Union, that we still have 10+million children out of school in a country which started free education 60 years ago.

    Let us re-ask ourselves why a country like ours has over 10 million out of school children in spite of its God-given wealth. Let every thief in Nigeria, rich or poor, political or contractor or civil servant or ‘uniform’ or Bank and CBN beneficiary, accept responsibility for being the direct cause of those 10m+ out of school children. They must accept full responsibility for the consequence of their collective past and perhaps ongoing nefarious activities of depriving those 10m of schooling.   Ten million is a big army of youth to grow to adulthood without education. This is a recipe for state destruction in 10 years or more.

    Surely, we can all see the simplest, easiest and cheapest solution is to have a ‘MASSIVE 10 MILLION IN SCHOOL PROGRAMME WITH AFTERNOON CLASSES THE EXISTING CLASSROOMS RUNNING TWICE DAILY WITH EXTRA SETS OF TEACHERS OR EXTRA PAY FOR EXISTING TEACHERS’.

    Citizens are disgusted that the accused Ondo Church terrorists’ lawyers put forward a plea for bail. Do our lawyers not know that murder and any accusation which attracts the death penalty do not qualify for bail? Do they not get taught that in Law School? An appeal for bail in this horrendous circumstance appears like a strategy at time-wasting, a popular legal exercise in legal futility and a marked disrespect for the dead. It is also a rude slap in the face of the Fellow Nigerian citizens and relations who survived the deadly vicious attack which was calculated to mutate a simple Sunday church service into a terrorist funeral fire and a national tragedy.       

     Are we to suffer at the hands of yet another cabal in our long search for fuel self-sufficiency? We all get stopped abruptly and without any road safety concerns every day by union workers taking toll money from all passing commercial vehicles. One would have thought they would move to cashless payments but that would expose their true wealth. The face-off in the petroleum industry is really an eye opening event as it exposes the players for what they stand for and what they stand against. Please examine the case and ask who is really on the side the Fellow Nigerians as we celebrate Nigeria @ 65. The answer will make you think twice or thrice.

    Happy Birthday Nigeria @65. May you not suffer forever. Amen, 

  • NOA:  Teach MAINTENANCE; ‘2026 No Corruption Year’ please 

    NOA:  Teach MAINTENANCE; ‘2026 No Corruption Year’ please 

    Lagos and Ibadan have road sweepers and they do a good job though we pray they are paid at least minimum wage. The new improved Lagos-Ibadan Expressway is the cause for concern before it falls back into the weed-growing decay it was before the 15+year restructuring. An incorrupt, efficient, effective, continuing and supervised maintenance culture should prevent it lest it raises its ugly head again.

    After this costly reconstruction, there must be a specific Lagos-Ibadan Expressway daily maintenance contract among the thousands, of compulsory, recurrent expenditure maintenance contracts of federal and state and local governments.  There are urgent things needed to repair the neglect, deliberate and misguided in Nigeria. Most of those things are not expensive, or even nuclear physics. They are the simple things that make countries great.

    MAINTENANCE & SUPERVISION ARE THE EASIEST THINGS TO INSTITUTIONALISE AND THE FOUNDATION FOR MAKING COUNTRIES GREAT. Without realising it, we in Nigeria were adequately taught by our colonial masters the ‘METHODOLOGY, MONITORING AND VALUE OF MAINTENANCE & SUPERVISION’ but we see ‘maintenance and supervision money’ as stealable, corruption-compliant, budgetary allocations designed to be stolen. WE SHOULD TAKE FORWARD SOME GOOD FROM THE BAD OLD COLONIAL DAYS. The Nigerian Civil Service inherited the routine daily, monthly annually, up to the multi-year ‘Repairs and Painting’ maintenance advance appointments filing system that guaranteed maintenance strategies in the 60s long before computers.

    For example, our three different government quarters when my father was a doctor in the 60s and 70s in Yaba, Lagos, were repaired and repainted and inspected by a supervisor every seven years without begging, prompting or bribing. After Nigeria took power, they began to skip the maintenance and supervision date and eventually stopped maintenance visits but the budgetary allocations continued. Corruption and its cost and consequence. 

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    The secret of the success of good governance countries is obvious. Visit their airports, schools, hospitals, government and private offices and especially toilets. They carry out continuous daily maintenance and supervision which are a cost-effective way of managing and spreading resources and making structures last longer. They enunciate the generally practiced good habit of maintenance and supervision. The political class apparently needs to be reminded about the ‘good old POTHOLE FREE days’ of the very basic but highly effective Public Works Department. The PWD khaki shorts army of men with a tripod of sticks with a red flag and wheelbarrow of tar in a boiling kettle patrolled and filled potholes before those same potholes became car wreckers and killers. Now we let the potholes grow for years, destroying all traffic, before an overpriced and under-executed road poorly supervised contract is awarded. 

    With serious National Orientation Agency, NOA help, we must authorise and teach, our millions of children and youth in our primary, secondary and all tertiary institutions as well as politicians and managers of public spaces like markets, garages and stadia, the value, importance and necessity of ‘Maintenance & Supervision’ in the new school curriculum, just implemented for the year 2025/2026, in tertiary course material and as moral responsibility of politics and polices.  We must practice what we teach.

    No country seeking development or claiming good government can allow its primary flagship highway to succumb to dirt and time-accumulated debris. Imagine corn or bush growing on the cement? Has any supervisor reported this? Our Lagos-Ibadan Expressway requires that the cumulative 240km of double road lanes be cleared along all water drainage holes. The contractors who applied for and were awarded the contracts need to be called to order and made to become responsible to make Nigerians proud when plying the expressway.  These contractors, who are Missing In Action (MIA) in the ‘Maintenance and Supervision War’ in Nigeria,  must be made to know there is a new sheriff in town heading federal roads who cares for maintenance and insists on responsible maintenance contract execution  and reporting countrywide. They must be closely supervised with daily and weekly reports sent to the directors of highways authorities for censor and action.

    It is easy to clear the roads of dirt and grass. Only irresponsibility allows grass to grow on roads made of tar or cement. Many years ago, this column suggested a way of increasing employment and improving incomes around the country by dividing such roads into five or 10km segments for local communities to recruit local cleaners through contracts given at the local traditional and administration level. Meanwhile the zonal and national directors of works at LGA, state and federal levels must reverse past failures. Erring contractors can easily be identified by their unkempt roads or are they protected so much that  Nigeria is condemned to dirty unmaintained roads.

     At last Nigeria is planning to make solar panels. We have wasted our sun, just as we wasted our opportunity to produce petrol and lost to corruption the income from the over 50 silent petroleum products Nigeria never benefited from when refining was done abroad. Who got that ‘petroleum by products’ money over the last 40 years? Over many years due to corruption, poor maintenance and inefficiency in the petroleum sector, this has cost trillions and even lives.

    In 2025 approaching 2027, Nigerians need a ‘2026 Maximum ‘No Corruption’ Service’ from their political, contract, civil service, banking leaders who have traditionally selfishly and criminally placed personal family and political party funding greed above the desperate child, citizen and country needs.

    Let 2026 be the ‘2026- NO CORRUPTION YEAR’!