Category: Opinion

  • Can judiciary save council system in Anambra?

    Can judiciary save council system in Anambra?

    By Chekwube Nzomiwu

    Another opportunity has beckoned for the judiciary to resolve the prolonged impasse in local government administration in Anambra State. Since 1999, Anambra State has witnessed only two democratic transitions at the local government level. Within the same period, there were transitions to five democratically elected administrations at the state-level under different governors. The governors were Chinwoke Mbadinuju (May 1999 to May 2003), Chris Ngige (May 2003-March 2006), Peter Obi (March 2006-March 2014), Willie Obiano (March 2014-March 2022) and Professor Charles Soludo (March 2022 till date). All these administrations had their democratically constituted legislative arms, comprising elected members of the House of Assembly who make laws for the state.

    But, at the local government level the opposite is the case. Rather than conduct election to elect chairmen and councilors for the 21 councils and 326 wards in the state, respectively, governors preferred to run the local government administration with handpicked officials, in contravention of the law and a subsisting judgment of a competent court, which held that the state government cannot impose leaders on the local government areas.

    Section (7) 1 of the 1999 Nigerian Constitution (as amended) guarantees a local government system by democratically elected councils. The constitution further imposes a duty on the state government to ensure the existence of such democratically elected local government. In Anambra State in particular, the Local Government Law of 1999, provides for the establishment, structure, composition, finance and functions of the local government councils, and for related purposes.

    It will be recalled that the Federal High Court Enugu, in a landmark judgment on suit no. FHC/EN/CS/90/2005, declared that the Anambra State Government has no power to appoint officials to govern local government areas. Justice A. L. Allagoa entered the judgment on September 26, 2006, in favour of an activist and politician, Dr. Ifeanyichukwu Okonkwo, who was the sole plaintiff in the matter.

    The judge held that by the combined effect of Section 7 (1) and 318 (i) (c) of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, the Governor of Anambra State has no power for appointment and approval of caretaker management committee, or in whatever name so called, to administer respectively, the 21 Local Government Council Areas in Anambra State.

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    Dr. Okonkwo had complained to the court that he was being denied the right guaranteed him in the African Charter on Human and Peoples Right, Cap A, 9 Articles 13 (1) 24; 28 and 29 (2) of the L.F.N.2004 vol. 1, to participate in his domestic government in Idemili South and the third tier of government – the Local Government Council – which Section 7 (1) of the 1999 Constitution decreed.

    In his judgment, Justice Allagoa held that the Anambra State law providing for caretaker committee is inconsistent with Section 7 (1) of the Constitution. “Looking at the provision literally, it is clear that the constitution of the local government by democratic system is guaranteed by the constitution itself. The constitution then imposed a duty on the state government to ensure the existence of such democratically elected local government,” Allagoa said.

    He further made it clear that the powers of the State House of Assembly under Section 7 (1) of the Constitution, to legislate concerning local government councils, clearly did not include power of the state government to appoint caretaker committee to run local government. Consequently, the court ordered the 2nd, 3rd and 4th respondents – the Governor of Anambra State, Anambra State House of Assembly and Commissioner for Justice, Anambra State – to pay the sum of N5million as exemplary damages to the plaintiff. The defendants complied with the judgment and it subsists till date.

    Eighteen years after the judgment, governors in Anambra State continue to run local government administration with undemocratically elected officials, wearing the garb of transition committees. The last local government election in Anambra State was held eleven years ago at the twilight of the Obi administration in November 2013. Incidentally, it was the only council polls held during the eight years of Obi administration, which ran the councils with transition committees.

    Piqued by the obstinacy of the governors, Dr. Okonkwo recently dragged Soludo and three of his predecessors to the Federal High Court, Awka Division, over alleged use of undemocratically elected officials to run the councils. In the fresh suit brought through originating summons, he is requesting for nine consequential reliefs/directing orders, premised on the interpretation of the previous judgment of the court in suit no. FHC/EN//CS/2005, delivered on September 26, 2006.

    Listed as 1st to 8th defendants respectively in the latest matter are the Federal Republic of Nigeria, Governor of Anambra State, Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice, Anambra State, and Anambra State House of Assembly. Others are former governors, Ngige, Obi, Obiano, for themselves and on behalf of their transition chairmen and councilors, and Mr. Livinus Onyenwe for himself and on behalf of transition chairmen under the Soludo administration.

    Besides redefining local government administration in Anambra State, the suit has wider implications. For instance, having acted contrary to the constitution which they swore to uphold, the governors risk being barred by the court from contesting election or occupying public office or seeking for re-election under the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. In particular, the suit constitutes a threat to the second term ambition of Soludo.

    The plaintiff is also asking for an order to compel the 2nd to 8th defendants to render public account before the court, of all funds, illegally expended by them or agents and privies, during their respective administrations, while executing their illegal and unconstitutional usurpation of offices at the local government council areas in Anambra State, by tampering with public funds, excluding salaries and allowances of local government council employees and workers expenditure. If the court grants the orders, it will serve as a deterrence to governors from usurping the functions of the councils and scare people away from accepting illegal council appointments. It will equally encourage the conduct of local government election.

    The plaintiff is further asking for an order, directing the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th and 8th defendant to publish before the Honourable Court, the FAAC Allocation to the respective 21 local government areas in Anambra State from 2006 to 2024. This will improve accountability in the councils.

    In addition, he is urging the court to order the 1st respondent (the Federal Republic of Nigeria) to put into the effect the unanimously passed resolution of the Senate, asking the Federal Government to halt the statutory allocation of funds to local government area councils, where chairmen and councilors were not democratically elected. Chief Okonkwo demanded for exemplary damages of N100billion in his favour, against the 2nd to 8th defendants. 

    The case will impact positively on the traditional institutions and town unions in Anambra State, which have been bedeviled by crisis as a result of imposition of leaders, giving rise to grassroots autocracy and financial malfeasance. The plaintiff wants an order nullifying/setting aside all the purported directives, financial expenditures, presentment of “Igwe elects” by town unions to chairmen of transition councils, and issuance of certificates of recognition to them as His Royal Highnesses (H.R.H) for government recognition, purportedly made by the illegal and unconstitutionally constituted caretaker/transition committees with effect from September 26, 2006 by the 2nd to 8th defendants, having not been democratically elected.

    • Nzomiwu writes from Awka, Anambra State.

  • It’s Army’s duty to wage war on poverty through Òguń Complex

    It’s Army’s duty to wage war on poverty through Òguń Complex

    The Army is the most disciplined and technically skilled institution that can carry out the task of laying our railway foundations for industrialization, which it will then protect with weapons that it makes. Instead of activists yearning for Shango’s Justice to throw out corrupt politicians, they should prompt the army to build the railways and military industrial complex, regardless of the party, person in power. Strictly economic, nothing political. Prince Justice Faloye writes

    Since returning to democracy, we have been in search of the right political systems and economic ideologies to bring prosperity to our people, but the political class have shown little or no solutions of how to attain the Prosperity of the Industrialized world. Some disgruntled politicians and citizens often wish that the army takes over after shambolic elections or economic mismanagement. Army coups swept out post independence democracies across Africa, and ruled for decades until it became obvious that they had no business with politics and governance.

    Recall back in history, George Washington, the largest slave owner became a soldier to protect the local slave economy from British colonialists, while Alexander Hamilton, a soldier, is the acknowledged father of USA big business. Following the mid 1800s railroad boom, the iron merchants turned to building skyscrapers with the surplus iron, before finally using it to build armoured plates for the Navy and armoured vehicles. The First World War caused widespread public discontent that the USA had been dragged into what was essentially a European Colonial War, and led to the 1934 Senator Gerald Nye Senate Committee Hearings that showed that the Navy and Army were the main salesmen of arms makers that dragged the USA into war to sell their munitions.

    In what is known as Peace Dividends, the production plants of war goods incorporated producing consumer goods, consumer cars alongside armoured vehicles, radios with radar among other things which brought a long period of prosperity and employment by what was aptly named the Industrial Military complex. Not only in USA has the military been at the economic foundation of nations, as the British Empire was built on the efficiency of turning slave ships into battleships. This was known as Mercantilism whereby nations used their army to back their businessmen to takeover natural and human resources.

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    In actual fact, the prosperity of Eurasian empires dating back to Babylon was based on war economics. Starting with brutal war with no ideology during the Age of Aries/Ogun 2000BC to 1AD, it evolved in the Age of Pisces/Olokun to using religious dogma to disguise the military grabbing of resources, which eventually led to racist dogma of enslaving Africans to build the Western global economy. At the end of the 350 year slave based economy came colonization that led to the First World War, and the start of the Industrial military complex of turning war goods into consumer goods. It followed by the Second World War when production facilities of fighter jets were adapted for passenger jets and air travel, before the Cold War and its military intelligence became computer technology and the internet, the current economic growth driver.

    California, currently the world’s fifth largest economy, was a desert that first attracted people during the short-lived 1848 Gold Rush, whose fortunes were turned around by the airborne military industrial complex. Its clear skies and huge expanse of land was conducive to testing of airplanes and siting of huge factories that employed millions of people. Its Peace Dividend was Hollywood. With the advent of computer technology, the military industrial complex built the Silicon Valley which also worked with Hollywood, it’s Chief marketer. In time, California became the most populous and richest USA state with a GDP of nearly $4 trillion. Texas also became second richest due to the relocation of the military industrial complex facilities there.

    The most pronounced use of the army to build an industrial military complex is the Peoples Liberation Army, which built the Chinese railways that stimulated industrialization to liberate their people from poverty. So did South Korea’s General Park Chung Hee. Unfortunately unlike other races, African national armies evolved from slave/colonial armies used to suppress their peoples, and after independence used to protect neocolonial interests. Nigeria’s army originated from the 1863 Lieutenant John Hawley Glover’s Constabulary Force, largely composed of freed Hausa slaves, primarily established to protect the Royal Niger Company and push British colonialism. After the defeat of Benin Empire, it was consolidated in 1900 into the Royal West African Frontier Force (RWAFF), before finally becoming the Nigerian Army in 1956. Despite becoming national armies in Nigeria and Ghana, key soldiers were recruited to protect Western neocolonial interests and sometimes overthrow their national democratic governments.

    Due to their misconceptions, the armies never saw themselves as the liberators of their peoples, especially by building their own industrial military complexes that would not only make them truly independent but provide employment and prosperity. Initially the Nigerian army bought its arms from about 13 different nations. However, in 1964 the Nigerian army set up the Defense Industries Corporation of Nigeria, which became more functional with the 1967 Civil War, assembling other nations weaponry like AK 47. Overtime, it produced more weapons and even started building furniture for the civilian populations. So one wonders that if it knew that it could make profit from consumer sales, why not develop the whole industrial military complex?

    Coloniality of knowledge robs us of the philosophical foundations of what the army and industrial complex is about. The loss of indigenous African civilization knowledge robs us from knowing the Ogun philosophy that shows the evolution of Ogun (iron) from the blood (iron) carrying oxygen and other nutrients to make our body function properly, to the use of iron tools for both Agriculture and War. Now, Ogun is to lay iron rails to every locality to stimulate heavy manufacturing of both industrial and defence goods to share the huge overhead costs.

    General Obasanjo, probably the most pro-development head of state, went about Operation Feed the Nation, instead of Operation Industrialize the Nation, which should have been done through the army. As a politician, he established Transcorp as a massive investment vehicle to build an industrial complex, but it takes more than investment, and requires political will which civilians can’t summon. The army is Ogun, and only Ogun can beget Ogun. In Yoruba philosophy, the army has no business with Obatala governance and Olokun politics, the army’s job is simply to lay economic foundations, and the first step had been taken with the establishment of DICON. Since defense industries needs consumer industries to share overheads, the army should present plans of how to lay iron rails across Nigeria in record time like the Peoples Liberation Army, and unless we don’t want our army to be self sufficient would politicians obstruct them.

    At present, only China can build railways and unfortunately our political class is tied to the West that would sabotage Chinese involvement, therefore left to the politicians we will wait another generation through nepotistic contracts. The Army is the most disciplined and technically skilled institution that can carry out the task of laying our railway foundations for industrialization, which it will then protect from internal and external saboteurs with weapons that it makes. Instead of activists yearning for Shango’s Justice to throw out corrupt politicians with his Ogun axe made by foreigners, they should prompt the army to build the railways and military industrial complex, regardless of the party or person in power. Strictly economic, nothing political.

    Our two North-South railways will become a grid by laying three East-West railways – Lagos-Calabar, Ilorin-Yola and Sokoto-Maiduguri in three years. Government and public institutions are not good managers of business, so once the infrastructure are built it must be privatized, and either the army builds the rest to fill up the 9 box grid or the privatized companies and state governments can build the feeder routes to every corner. Railways provide the highest return on investment of USA industries at 50.93%, and could bring close to $100b annually to Nigeria, in addition to the fact that it has the highest income and employment multiplier effects across the economy. For every Naira or person employed in the railway it stimulates N20 and 20 new jobs in agriculture, car manufacturing and other heavy manufacturing, logistics, freighting and other new sectors. Being the largest contraption of Iron and Chemicals, it will multiply tenfold the combined contribution of a mere 1.6% that iron and steel, plastic and rubber, and electrical and electronics currently make to the economy.

    Since President Tinubu’s hands are tied by the West from doing business with China, especially on economic liberating infrastructure, the army should leave chasing terrorists and bandits to the politicians that should restructure, decentralize and specialize the police force, and instead focus on building an industrial military complex through Defense Industries Corporation (DICON) with plan for 10,000 kilometers of railways to employ millions and liberate us from poverty.

    •Faloye, President ASHE Foundation, Afenifere Deputy Publicity Secretary, is an Economist and author of The Blackworld Evolution to Revolution.

  • Ekiti as an amazing story

    Ekiti as an amazing story

    By Funmilola Olarewaju

    In the past few days, videos of market women leaders, aka Iyalojas, in Ekiti State moderating the prices of goods in the markets within their jurisdictions have been trending. According to reliable information, the genesis of the viral video was a call made by the First Lady of Ekiti State, Olayemi Oyebanji appealing to the Iyalojas to prevail on their members to bring down the cost of goods. Oyebanji was also reported to have had a meeting with female chiefs, urging them to intervene.

    It didn’t stop there! The State Commissioner for Industry, Trade and Investment, Tayo Adeola summoned a meeting of Heads of various associations, ranging from the market women to the road transport workers, petty traders and canteen owners, where she also urged them to bring down the cost of goods and services. “That’s what led to the viral videos. Even the transporters reduced their fares.”

    ‘Aríse laríkà. Aríkà baba ìrègún’ (Opportunity to do a good deed gives the doer the opportunity to lay them to heart, and to count them is the chief basis for seeking reward for them secretly or indirectly). From Education to Health; and from Agriculture to Culture and Tourism, it is important to note that the Biodun Oyebanji-led government in Ekiti State has been doing a lot and the results have been showing! Only recently, the governor reportedly paid N546.9m as WAEC/SSCE fees to support 16,269 Secondary School Students in the state.

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    In the power sector, Oyebanji’s efforts on stable electricity supply have been yielding results even as the African Development Bank recently approved the sum of $110,000 to fund the State Power Reform Plan. From reports, Ekiti is also working with other states and the country to ensure state, regional and national operationalization of the new Electricity Act 2023. Many more in this important sector!

    In 2023, during the inauguration of a facility in Aramoko-Ekiti, Oyebanji was said to have promised to donate a well-equipped maternity complex to Aramoko-Ekiti General Hospital in memory of his late mother. The facility is now almost ready for inauguration. Coincidentally, the governor was born in the hospital 56 years ago.

    It needs to be noted that Ekiti under Oyebanji has become an amazing story of faith, determination and success, but then, the biggest room in the world is the room for improvement. For instance, during their time, the Obafemi Awolowos, the Ahmadu Bellos and the Nnamdi Azikiwes prepared the pupils for the world which they saw clearly! Nigerians also used to know Ekiti with his many professors. Now, it is as if all Ekiti professors have relocated to the Eastern part of the country. Once upon a time, the North was described as an educational disadvantaged state but now, power has also changed hands with jealous rage. Though it’s not the fault of the present government, the strategic aim for Ekiti should revolve around reclaiming its pride of place.

    To become great in life, the battleground is education. The basic thing therefore is not just talking about education but the right type of education that can give Ekiti sons and daughters the wherewithal to be competitive while not allowing other sectors to suffer. To this end, it behooves the government to focus on building an education system that can make the state competitive in the years ahead, starting from the nursery school. In other words, any forward movement over the next 10 to 20 years must start with revamping the public primary school curriculum and building an economy with a focus on 18 years’ time to make the pupils competitively prepared for a different world from the world that we know. Why? A 4-year-old in 2024 will be bound to face a competitive world of artificial intelligence and robot technology in the Year 2034.

    Since the road cannot close on the man with a cutlass, it will also be in the interest of Ekiti to localize the new electricity format by getting public private sector-driven investment into, and up the ante of, especially the renewables to attract private investments to produce electricity upgrid.

    While commending the governor for the palliatives he recently rolled out to the residents, it’s also advisable that he looks inward for ways to improve productivity. Enough of resting on Abuja for handouts! In view of this, training the youth groups to take their destinies in their hands won’t be out of place.

    Ekiti under Oyebanji must also look in the direction of building industries based on the new technology: technology hubs and agro-processing plants. The government has to be focused on building an economy that will be relevant for tomorrow and an economy that will not destroy the future of tomorrow. Of course, all these are achievable if the security mindfulness of the state is watertight.

    On the economic front, it is believed that Ekiti has given much needed support and cooperation to the governor. Give it to Oyebanji, he has also been able to manage the entire power bloc in the state very well. Added to this is that he’s doing what an average civil servant in Ekiti State wants! So, while it would be extremely needed for Ekitis to help their state reach the expected end of its noble visions, it is also expected of the governor to make the best combination of the human and natural resources available to the state, coupled with its unique homogenous nature, to make a difference.

    For Oyebanji to make Ekiti a template for others to copy, he must continue to look beyond the current challenges by fetching water in preparation for the season of thirst. One sure way of achieving this is the 12-point relief economic programme unveiled by the government “to alleviate the hardship being experienced by the people of the state in the face of the current global economic downturn”. The reintroduction of ‘Owo Arugbo’ is also a step in the right direction while opportunities for investment in the agriculture sector should be encouraged to ensure food security.

    Accept it or not, the governor’s decision to reintroduce the construction of 5 kilometres of roads per Local Government will be a game changer in grassroots development. Since Ado-Ekiti – Akure dualization, being undertaken by the Federal Government, is billed to terminate at the endpoint of the flyover bridge, it therefore means that the contractor handling the Ado-Ekiti – Ikere-Ekiti axis must mobilize to site and hold his end of the bargain for the overall purpose of easing traffic congestion. Attention must also be paid to the Phase 2 of Ado-Ekiti – Iyin-Ekiti – Igede-Ekiti – Aramoko-Ekiti – Itawure Road since it’s of economic value. Also in this class are the dualization of the road leading to Afe Babalola University, the iconic Ring Road project and the rehabilitation of the adjoining roads to the section of Old Garage. The flyover bridge will add to the aesthetic beauty of the capital city as well as create economic activities around the area.

    Oyebanji is doing well in terms of governance but, politically, he may need to up his game in the days ahead because ‘the enemy and the evildoer are within close proximity.’ The governor needs to be very decisive and keep his team intact.

    Finally, kudos to the governor, who, till date is the only product of Ekiti State University (EKSU), formerly known as Ondo State University, Ado Ekiti, to be a governor and the first alumnus of the school to be a visitor to the school, for displaying statesmanship! Congratulations on his incredible success and wishing him all the best on his way to his 2nd Term!

    ● Olarewaju wrote from Osogbo, Osun State.

  • Socioeconomic benefits of Lagos-Calabar coastal project

    Socioeconomic benefits of Lagos-Calabar coastal project

    By Funke Cole

    Ideas, they say, rule the world and I daresay, great ideas are indeed a sine qua non for socioeconomic growth and development anytime, any day! Any wonder that one of the common denominators and defining values of the President Bola Tinubu administration is its penchant for conceptualising as well as executing bold ideas?

    The Lagos-Calabar coastal project is one of such bold ideas that has been undertaken by the Tinubu government. Originally conceived by former President Goodluck Jonathan and later reviewed by the immediate past administration of Muhammadu Buhari, the 700-kilometre Lagos-Calabar coastal highway, which will traverse nine states including Lagos, Ogun, Ondo, Delta, Bayelsa, Cross River, Akwa Ibom, Rivers states, will be a game-changer of some sorts.

    In the views of some project managers who have assessed the enormity of the Lagos-Calabar highway, they spoke in unison about the significance of the project as a major driver of the much touted blue economy, which, in their estimation, will boost the nation’s foreign direct investment.

    Experts’ opinions on the positive impacts of the project upon completion are as revealing as they are overwhelming because they speak to all-round socioeconomic development along the corridors with Nigerians as the sole beneficiaries as the project will unlock economic opportunities and open new corridors for trade, tourism, and industries.

    Firing the first salvo, the Minister of Works, Senator David Umahi, during a roundtable discussion in Lagos with businesses, stakeholders, and communities that the Coastal Road project will affect, said a lot will certainly give.

    The civil engineer said: “The Lagos to Calabar coastal road is a national asset at a time when Nigeria seeks to attract more investments into the economy. The federal government has adopted the engineering, procurement, construction, and financing model with 30% counterpart funding.”

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    He further said that the coastal road would have two spurs that would link up with the north of Nigeria to further integrate the region with the south in terms of movement of people, goods and services.

    Responding to concerns raised on the bidding process, Umahi said that Hi-Tech Construction Company was engaged to execute the project based on its track record in the Eko Atlantic Wall project, which has saved Victoria Island, Lagos from ocean surge, and the execution of the Dangote-tax credit Oworonsoki-Oshodi-Apapa expressway through reinforced concrete construction.

    He added that Ahmadu Bello Way, Victoria Island, Lagos, is the zero point for the 700km coastal road project connecting nine states.

    “The sections for this coastal road project include Ahmadu Bello Way to Lekki Deep Sea Port, Lekki Deep Sea Port to Ogun/Ondo boundary, Calabar to Uyo, Port Harcourt to Bayelsa, Bayelsa to Ondo. This project will unlock economic opportunities and open new corridors for trade, tourism, and industries,” the minister explained.

    On the right of way, along with the proposed demolition of structures and buildings, he clarified that the over the $150 million Landmark Event Centre and its adjoining business structures are safe except for the beach resort, which would be affected by the coastal road project. He appealed to the royal fathers, political leaders, communities, businesses, and stakeholders whose properties and investments have been marked on the right of way to work with the Federal Government to achieve a win-win situation.

    “We will compensate businesses affected along the right of way for the Lagos to Calabar coastal road project at the Federal Government-approved rate. We are also looking at redesigning and realigning the project to accommodate the genuine concerns raised by stakeholders. The project has also been developed with provisions for the rail track in the middle,” he added.

    Umahi said that a committee would be established to examine the environmental impact assessment report on the project, which would comprise representatives from coastal royal fathers, politicians, and businesses along the corridor.

    According to him, the project is valued at $11billionn (N15 trillion) , has an eight-year timeline and is expected to be completed by 2031.

    The first phase of the new 700km highway that will run through the nine coastal states is the 47.47km section beginning from Victoria Island. It has five lanes on each side of the dual carriageway and a train track in the middle.

    The superhighway is being built by Hitech Construction Company. Part of the funding will be sourced by Hitech, the contractors.

    Economic analysts have revealed that the completion of the first phase of the project alone could increase the size of Lagos State economy by 50 per cent because of the connection to Lekki Deep Seaport and the Lekki economic corridor where Dangote Refinery and Petrochemical Complex is situated alongside other multinational industries.

    Also speaking on the benefit of the coastal road and how it will transform the economy of Cross River State, the state Commissioner of Information, Erasmus Ekpang, in a press statement, said the state government is overwhelmingly grateful to President Tinubu for embarking on the project decades after the necessity for the coastal road had been muted.

    The highway, according to the commissioner, “will serve as a catalyst to transform the economy of Cross River state for optimum impact. I want to applaud President Tinubu for the political will to translate this lofty dream into a concrete reality.

    “This coastal highway is going to be a game changer for the socio-economic status of Cross River. It is bound to add value to our rich agricultural produce while enhancing the profit base of local farmers. The benefits in the value chain are unimaginable,” he said, adding that the highway would boost the tourism economy of Cross River.

    “When completed, the road will also boost tourism traffic to our unique tourism sites by attracting an unprecedented number of tourists, given the thrills and frills synonymous with road travel,” he explained.

    Echoing similar sentiments, Chairman of the All Progressives Congress in Cross River, Alphonsus Eba was effusive with praises to President Tinubu, who, according to him, has fulfilled a key aspect of his campaign promises to the people of the state.

    “President Tinubu has once again demonstrated that he is a man of his word by keeping to his promise. When Senator Ben Ayade voiced this request during the presidential campaign in Calabar, he knew the economic importance of the road.

    “Nothing is more gratifying at the moment than the cheering news of the commencement of the highway. This is a huge boost to the current drive of Governor Bassey Otu to alter the socio-economic narrative of our state. The highway is bound to ensure our rapid transformation in all facets of economic development by driving traffic of investors and tourists,” he said.

    –Cole, a public affairs analyst writes from Lagos

  • Bobrisky and tax reforms in Nigeria

    Bobrisky and tax reforms in Nigeria

    The charade of Nigeria is never-ending! Only recently, one of Nigeria’s best-known cross-dressers, Idris Okuneye, alias Bobrisky, was arrested on charges of abusing banknotes. He was later convicted and sentenced to six years in prison. Not long after, popular socialite, Pascal Okechukwu, aka Cubana Chief Priest, was also arrested for alleged naira abuse and he’s already being prosecuted. Nigerians wait to see how events unfold!

    In the considered opinion of this writer, jailing Bobrisky is, to say the least, amusing! It’s too pedestrian! As things stand, Nigeria’s revenue target reportedly stands at N18 trillion. Of course, that’s pathetic! Where things work, the target should be nothing less than N50 trillion. So, the country needs revenue, certainly not by Nollywood sideshows but by passing an Unexplained Source of Income Act.

     For God’s sake, why pick Bobrisky and what does the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission ((EFCC) want from him? Well, if the arrest was to teach the self-styled cross-dresser some lessons of life, then, that’s a different story. Otherwise, it was a mere distraction and whoever mooted the ideas in the first place did not deserve our claps.

    If we are talking about the debasement of the naira and what ought not, what the EFCC needs is not whether people spray money or not. Yes, Bobrisky was spraying naira! But what happens next? In other climes, Bobrisky would never be banned for disdainfully soothing his ego. In countries like the United Kingdom and Sweden for example, if one goes to an ‘Owambe’ party and spices it up recklessly with pounds or euros, that’s one’s business! If one even likes, one can invite King Sunny Ade and ‘Professor Master General’ Kollington Ayinla to England to treat one’s audience to the melodious tunes of ‘Ijo Yoyo’. Nobody cares! But the consequence is that a tax bill awaits one immediately the party is over! In other words, what the government does is to invoke the Unexplained Wealth Orders (UWOs) 2017. By implication, the Nigerian government doesn’t need to pass a law restraining the people from ‘spraying’ naira notes. It only needs to ask some pertinent questions relating to the defaulter’s sources of wealth vis-à-vis his or her tax returns. Unfortunately, Nigeria’s government agencies are either too lazy or are not sincerely interested in generating revenue for the government.

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    If we are serious about fighting corruption in Nigeria, what we need is not some showboating. Nigeria doesn’t have to reinvent the wheel! So, instead of running round and round in circles, wasting so much time doing nothing, what’s needed is a surgical operation on the economy. The real issue is that Nigerians are not paying taxes and that’s why they are always ‘spraying’ money rashly. If we have the Unexplained Source of Income Act in Nigeria, which we ought to have had about 30 or 40 years ago, no Bob would have attempted to risk his waist on our naira notes because he perfectly understood the consequences. 

    This brings us to another sideshow a la Yahaya Bello! The fact that the immediate past governor of Kogi State is evading arrest from lawful authorities is symptomatic of a country without functional laws; and that’s unacceptable! It is because it has happened and nothing ever happened thereafter that it is now happening, because nothing will eventually happen! After all, once upon a time in Nigeria’s chequered history, one Nyesom Wike shielded one Rotimi Amaechi from lawful arrest and nothing happened! So, what’s the big deal? Could we have contemplated the former Governor of Wisconsin in the USA evading arrest? Even former President Donald Trump submitted himself to investigation and he’s currently having his day in court. So, who is Yahaya Bello and what’s special about the ‘ta-ta-ta-ta’ inventor? Shouldn’t Nigeria, at least, for once, be spared of pantomimes fooling around?

    Remember Alphonse Gabriel Capone, aka Scarface, the American gangster, businessman and boss of the ‘Chicago Outfit’! Remember also Eliot Ness, the brilliant, incorruptible American Prohibition agent and leader of ‘The Untouchables’! In his time, Capone killed a lot of people, including the Saint Valentine’s Day Massacre, but he didn’t leave any trace that could lead to his arrest for murder. He was also making millions of dollars without declaring tax returns. On Ness’s advice, Capone’s accountant was dragged into the case. On October 18, 1931, Capone was convicted after trial and jailed for income tax evasion, not murder, on November 24, 1931.

    The heart of the matter is that these are tax issues! So, the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) should have asked Bello the sources of his wealth vis-à-vis his tax returns. Pure and simple! In sane climes, the EFCC itself should be nothing more than a desk in the police force, just like the Fraud Office in England; and Nigeria would have been spared the rigour of the creation and duplication of the functions in the Ministries, Departments and Agencies. As a matter of fact, the Fraud Office operatives are more technically competent than the EFCC can ever be!

    At a time like this, it’s better Nigeria faces the real issue; and the real issue is that super-rich Nigerians have not been paying taxes. Let’s face it, the day Nigeria gets serious, she will catch up with the developed nations within 15 years. For instance, the EFCC is accusing Bobrisky and Cubana of naira debasement, there are lots of wedding activities across the country, even as we speak. Has the EFCC prepared its operatives for the onerous task of even arresting prospective naira abusers? Has the Commission ever asked how some Nigerians get brand new, untouched notes while those who run legitimate accounts are starved of even the old ones? If one may also ask, how do our Point of Sale (PoS) system operators source the wares for their ventures?

     President Bola Tinubu is the head of the government. Again, this where he has to act before things get out of hand! If he truly wants to reform the country, this is the time to do so. But if he wants business to continue as usual, then good luck to him and good luck to Nigeria! So far, so good, a lot of his policies are right and are on the right path! Definitely, the criminal subsidy removal is painful; he should have thought about it better and come up with better ideas about how to mitigate its effects! The merging of the foreign exchange rates was also traumatizing. But it should be applauded! At least, the naira is now coming down and the speculators now know how far they can go! Going forward, let Tinubu go the whole hog! From the look of things, Nigeria is a one-party state, as most of the National Assembly members are from the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), which makes his job easier. Therefore, let the president lobby the National Assembly to enact the Unexplained Source of Income Bill, modeled on the UWOs which was introduced into the United Kingdom legislation under the 201 Criminal Finances Act. 

     Except we want to be economical with the truth, tax evasion is feasible when the system allows for it! All the more reason Tinubu should empower the FIRS by making it the pivotal figure in revenue generation. Those who earn more should pay more and the charade of over-taxing the poor to pay the rich should come to an end. With the passage of the Unexplained Source of Income Act, the government will generate more revenue, especially from those who are currently evading taxes. It is really annoying that Nigeria keeps taxing the poor while ‘blessing’ the rich with tax holidays.

    May the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world, grant us peace in Nigeria!

  • Quirks, knots of estate planning in blended families

    Quirks, knots of estate planning in blended families

    By Bukola Seun-Oloruntuga

    Estate planning for blended families presents a unique set of challenges, often requiring careful consideration and tailored solutions to address the complexities that arise from the intersection of various family dynamics.

    Let me illustrate these challenges and their solutions with a hypothetical story.

    As the family came together through the union of Amaka and Kunle, both bringing children from previous marriages, the complexities of their unique family structure became apparent during the estate planning process.

    Kunle, having significant pre-existing assets, and Amaka, with her estate, encountered the challenge of determining how to distribute their wealth among their children.

    This challenge highlighted the need for transparent communication and bespoke planning to address the financial well-being of their new family.

    Expectations from each set of children added another layer of complexity.

    Kunle’s children expected they would inherit his wealth, while Amaka’s children hoped to secure their mother’s assets.

    The potential for resentment and conflict among the siblings underscored the importance of clear communication and transparent planning.

    Striking a balance between the financial needs of the surviving spouse and the desire to leave a legacy for all children presented yet another dilemma.

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    The Smiths also grappled with providing for the surviving spouse and ensuring their estate plan included all their children.

    Additionally, the legal rights of stepchildren, who might not have automatic inheritance rights without a legally binding estate plan, raised concerns.

    To address these challenges, the Smiths sought professional help to develop a comprehensive plan.

    This plan included a well-structured will and trust that clearly outlined the distribution of their assets, open and honest communication with all family members to manage expectations, provisions for the surviving spouse while safeguarding the inheritances of each set of children, and legal mechanisms to ensure stepchildren had defined rights to inherit.

    Indeed, managing fair distribution among beneficiaries in a blended family requires a nuanced approach, and trusts and other estate planning mechanisms can play a crucial role in achieving this balance.

    Let’s explore some of the ways to use these tools.

    In a blended family, trust can help to specify asset distribution among surviving spouses and children from different marriages.

    For instance, a parent may create an irrevocable trust designating assets for the benefit of their biological children, safeguarding these assets from the claims of the surviving spouse’s beneficiaries.

    Another mechanism is the limited liability company.

    LLCs can hold and manage some assets, providing a mechanism for shared control and decision-making among family members.

    This structure will allow for the integration of assets from different sides of the family while offering a platform for open communication.

    The Smiths can also consider specific bequests to ensure that certain sentimental or valuable items go to their intended beneficiaries.

    This is particularly important in blended families, where there might be items of significance to different family members.

    Lastly, we have life insurance policies.

    With a life insurance policy, either spouse can provide financial support for the surviving spouse and children.

    Spouses in a blended family can ensure that the proceeds from their life insurance policies are distributed according to their wishes by thoughtfully designating beneficiaries.

    In conclusion, blended families can create comprehensive estate plans by combining tailored mechanisms that ensure fair distribution and promote family harmony and understanding.

    It is crucial to work with a professional to navigate the complexities and legal intricacies involved in achieving these objectives.

    ● Seun-Oloruntuga, a lawyer who specialises in estate planning, is also a career and executive coach. She can be reached at bso@morecraftlaw.com

  • Not so, Mr. President, Nigeria must first love her citizens

    Not so, Mr. President, Nigeria must first love her citizens

    By Banji Ojewale

    The security and welfare of the people (of Nigeria) shall be the primary purpose of government— The Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria

    In 1976, the military regime of Olusegun Obasanjo sought to stir the patriotic instincts of our young citizens by decreeing the National Pledge into our lives. It must be recited in all Nigerian schools, the junta said. The general’s martial mind given to governing by fiat and force led him through only one route to patriotism: a mental enslavement of the boys and girls through feeding on the pledge would lead, willy-nilly, to their loyalty to the state and its agents and agencies. If they voiced it out many times over the years, their impressionable minds would give way to deeds of loyalty and love for the land, even if they were under an oppressive, objectionable and off-putting government.

    I challenged that position in an article I published in the Daily Times of October 1, 1976. My argument was that the government wasn’t entitled to demand honour from a citizen it didn’t honour. In a society of representative order, a contract was at work whose intrinsic iron-cast rules must be obeyed by both parties, I said. I took a great deal of my submissions from the classical works of Thomas Hobbes, John Locke, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, three faces of petty-bourgeois philosophy and Karl Marx and Friedrich Engel, the duo who finally deepened the essence of statehood and society as a treaty in which rulers exist at the pleasure of the ruled and not the other way. The state derives its authority and legitimacy from fulfilling an inviolable ‘oath’: to seek, above all other pursuits, the ‘’security and welfare’’ of its citizens. The state doesn’t first ask the people to be loyal to it. The country, through its loving, caring and welfarist drive, would set the pace; then would follow, automatically, a citizenry ready, not only to abide by the good laws of the land, but also to be prepared to lay down their lives in defence of their leaders and the country. Leaders and agents of government, selfless ones, must first love the people, for the latter to desire to appreciatively love the former. It’s very much like the Scriptural insight: “We love him (God), because he first loved us.’’ It’s a binding deal between two consenting associates. Each coadjutor must throw something into the relationship. The state must not be a preying, praetorian parasite; none of the parties must be a spectator and lord of the manor either.

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    But in the Nigerian union, we’ve had a false, flawed and frosted pledge since 1976: I pledge to Nigeria my country. To be faithful, loyal and honest. To serve Nigeria with all my strength. To defend her unity, and uphold her honour and glory. So help me, God.  What’s the pledge asking the country to do here? Where is the place of the state in this pledge? What’s its input? What’s the state offering to deserve these sacrifices from the people? It’s not giving free education and free health to all at all levels. There’s no employment for most of our people. Nor is the state giving the citizens such other basic needs as all-round security, protection for the vulnerable and guarantees to allay our anxieties about the future, immediate or long-term.

    These were concerns that crossed my mind following President Bola Tinubu’s charge to Nigerians as they marked the close of 2024 Ramadan. He pleaded with his compatriots to show more love to their country than they do to others. Tinubu was reported to have “emphasised the need for Nigerians to prioritize the exhibition of love for their country.” The president said: “The resilience and sacrifice that we have shown during these months should be preserved. Be a kind and cheerful giver. We must love our country more than any other country, because that is the only one we have. We must continue to protect the integrity of our government and leadership.”

    Our president didn’t fail in the task of exploiting the occasion to call us to loyalty and nationalism. All those in political authority do so. They seek the abiding partnership and cooperation of the people, both those who voted for them or against them. Once in power after the ballot, the government, whether a coalition or a winner-takes-all one, becomes the father-figure of all. Partisan specks and identities recede and give way for utilitarianism to take charge. They don’t go the path of Muhammadu Buhari, Tinubu’s predecessor, who raised parochialism to scary levels with a strange sharing formula of the ‘spoils of office’. 97% would go to those who electorally swept him into power, with 5% left for those who didn’t.

    But while our leaders can’t be questioned for urging the people to love the fatherland, we’re also legitimately compelled to draw their attention to what comes first in the inexorable dynamics of statehood. We must remind them that they and the people are bonded to a contract undergirded by the Constitution they swore to honour. The document telegraphically states what must be prioritized: the security and welfare of the people shall be the primary purpose of government.

    We overthrow the Constitution when we ask a people denied their constitutionally guaranteed rights to release their love and loyalty to the state. We can see the result of these deprivations everywhere. Millions of Nigeria’s school-age children are roaming the streets, raising shadow families and feeding the palates of crime godfathers. We have tens of millions of our citizens sliding into extreme poverty, a point where presidential homilies and clerical sermons would amount to gibberish. The atmosphere is further fouled and charged with tension when those calling for patriotism and sacrifice are not promoting ascetic lifestyles required of true leadership. Nigerians don’t see servant-leaders. They see government and its principals and their cronies getting richer than the people they are expected to serve selflessly. They hear of removal of fuel subsidy and the promise of gargantuan savings dropping into government coffers meant to lead to the upgrade of the living standards of the citizens. Instead, there’s more hardship, worsened by a regime of death-carrying palliatives.

    This isn’t ideal government and governance because as John Ruskin, English art critic and writer of the 19th Century said, “The first duty of government is to see that people have food, fuel and clothes. The second, that they have means of moral and intellectual education.”

    These are the needs to be provided Nigerians ahead of asking us to give our love and loyalty. To be sure, love isn’t unconditional in relationships. When the governed are cherished by their governor, leaders wouldn’t labour over long speeches and motivational talk and radio-TV jingles to persuade us to sacrifice for the land in moments of national crisis.

    • Ojewale is a writer and journalist in Ota, Ogun State, Nigeria.

  • That unfortunate invasion of Agodi secretariat

    That unfortunate invasion of Agodi secretariat

    By Adewuyi Adegbite

    The invasion of the Oyo State Government Secretariat, Agodi, by some hooded disgruntled elements under the aegis of one of the Yoruba liberation movements on Saturday, April 13th,  is condemnable and unfortunate. The armed hoodlums invaded the secretariat, overpowered the security men attached to the place and lowered the flag of the Federal Republic of Nigeria at the state House of Assembly complex and replaced it with their own Yoruba Democratic Republic flag.

    When one considers the effrontery of these misguided elements, one would see them as confused people, because what they did was a treasonable. The possibility that they didn’t know the implications is a conjecture. It is a fact that those who did this before have never been successful, hence the likelihood that they lacked a sense of history is another thing; or they just wanted to call attention to themselves – attention that will lead them to perdition.

    The question is how could a set of rag tag fighters with a few guns, cutlasses and charms  take over the government in Ibadan and believed they had declared secession from Nigeria? These people have to be pitied by all right thinking persons.  One of the reasons for the birth of Yoruba separatist movement is the domination of the nation by a section of the country. Today, power has shifted to Yoruba land and as a result, the agitation has reduced to bare minimum. The leaders of Yoruba separatist movements like Professor Banji Akintoye and Chief Sunday Adeyemo, popularly known as Igboho, who were exiled have returned home and working towards how the present Federal Government would assuage the feelings of the separatist movements in all corners of the nation through inclusive governance. It is  disgusting that this happened when a Yoruba man is the president of the Federal Republic. If these people were thinking right, they should have employed peaceful means to present their grievances to the government instead of resorting to armed insurrection. Yoruba leaders including traditional rulers, separatist movements leaders and majority of Yoruba people have  condemned the action of the miscreants and shown they are on their own.

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    Until few years ago, when anti-social elements like herdsmen, kidnappers and bandits invaded Yoruba land and drew the hands of the clock of peace of the region back, the region was the most peaceful and thriving. Shall we say these few miscreants want to throw the region into turmoil? It is heartwarming that the insurrection has been defeated and the miscreants are cooling their heads in detention waiting for trial , the outcome of which would serve as deterrent to others in their shoes.

    Meanwhile, it is high time the government of Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu rose up to the occasion as one of the  most prepared presidents Nigeria has had by implementing policies that would rekindle the love of the nation in the consciousness of many Nigerians who have lost hope in their fatherland. Aside the seeming domination by a section of the country, which was real during the immediate past administration, lack of opportunities to achieve one’s potentials in Nigeria as experienced by many youths, cluelessness on the part of leaders at all levels to turn things around, insecurity of lives and property, disillusion about what the future holds and many more are at the root of self-determination movements or separatist groups troubling the peace of the nation.

    If the truth is to be told, Nigerians are passing through excruciating agony due to the economic policies of the present government, which in any way is not its making. The past administrations have sent the nation into Siberia economically through all sorts of policy summersaults, including over-borrowing from lender nations and international financial institutions, which has thrown Nigeria into a financial mess.  The effects of the years of economic catastrophe is now rearing their ugly heads when a go-getter assumed the mantle of leadership. There is no doubt that rebranding the economy as Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu is doing would be accompanied by hardship, but the policies in this wise should be with human face, knowing full well that the masses bearing the brunt of years of economic brigandage are not the creators of the mess. 

    For promising youths and few adults seen in the video of the Ibadan invasion, including a lady, to bite the bullet the way they did, knowing full well the implications of their action, show how far a disgruntled people can go. I would advise the government of Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu that, despite the fact that the action of these miscreants is a test of statesmanship for him as national leader, he should before starting their trial send them to a psychiatrist home to ascertain their sanity. No sane person should have carried out such action.

    • Adewuyi Adegbite writes from ayekooto05@gmail.com

  • A model of citizen civic responsibility

    A model of citizen civic responsibility

    By Mon-Charles Egbo

    This is not the best of times for Nigeria.  Every socio-economic index is a pointer that Nigeria is at its lowest level. Governments at all levels and citizens across religious, ethnic and even political divides are unanimous that Nigeria deserves better than its present status.

    Unarguably, the primary responsibility of governments is the welfare and safety of the citizenry. But a government or a nation is what the citizens make of it. In other words, Nigeria’s problem has since shifted from leadership deficit to followership failure, otherwise, how can a government deliver on its mandate when the people deliberately alienate themselves from the scheme of things?

    No one seemingly recognizes their fundamental rights and privileges and obligations to fellow citizens, the immediate community, and the country at large.

    However, in most cases where they pay attention to their rights, they ignore their responsibility to others. It is this absence of civic responsibility that has continued to undermine Nigeria’s efforts at attaining a just, virile and prosperous economy and democracy.

    But, what is civic responsibility? It is simply “a socially good behaviour to perform” towards a nation’s ordered social and economic development. It is a veritable tool in the hands of the citizenry to actualize the country of their dream. And whereas civic duty is mandatory, civic responsibility is only morally compelling yet easy to perform. Sequel to weak institutions, civic duties can be evaded without consequences, but the repercussions of citizens’ failure to discharge their civic responsibilities are enormous.

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    Succinctly put, civic responsibility, closely related to philanthropy, is all about freely giving back to society. It is about love for the country and fellow citizens. It is about selfless service to humanity. It entails doing what will inspire the government or leadership to deliver optimally on its mandate, to the advantage of the people and society. It is about patriotism and national interest. It is a global best practice.

    To further underscore the importance of citizens’ civic responsibility, the Senate at its consideration of a motion on the recent killing of Nigerian Army personnel in Okuama community, Delta State, among others, urged “the Federal Government to embark on enlightenment campaign to sensitize the public on their civic responsibilities as it affects their relationship with security agencies.”

    Also, in yet another motion on the challenges of out-of-school children in Nigeria, the Senate called on critical stakeholders to trigger “the national consciousness through sensitization and advocacy on the importance of education to the growth and development of our country and the benefits of having majority educated population.”

    Empirically, in the same manner that the legislature connects the people to governance, civic responsibility connects the citizens to the government. It facilitates popular participation in the scheme of things as it empowers citizens to demand accountability from governments and also challenge underperformance or anti-people policies at all levels and tiers of governance.

    For instance, when people do not participate in choosing their leaders or express interest in guiding governments to performance, how then do they expect democratic dividends such as a stable economy and enhanced security?

    Again, how do the masses expect national development when they downplay patriotism and nationalism, or withhold their due respect to fellow citizens and constituted authorities?

    Furthermore, why will the government not be negligent to the masses; or why will corruption, incompetence and high magnitude of wastage in governance not fester when citizens are steeped in apathy and hostility towards the government?

    Worse still, family values are today in very short supply owing to the failure of parents to be models to their children just as most religious leaders have unfortunately deviated from moral grooming of the faithful.

    In the face of the foregoing, how does Nigeria become influential to regain its place among the comity of nations? How will the world respect Nigeria’s voice when her citizens are mostly willing tools in the hands of her detractors? There is a high number of ‘enemies within’. There are fifth columnists who are resolute in their conspiracy to derail and undermine the country.

    For instance, at a time when President Bola Tinubu is making frantic efforts at attracting external investors and the recent parliamentary outburst by the President of the Nigerian Senate, Godswill Akpabio, in Switzerland is still reverberating the world over, some compatriots are dutifully, albeit ignobly, engaged in negative narratives about the country, particularly on the social media. Perhaps for political expediency, they are willfully de-marketing Nigeria, which suggests that they are yet to come to terms with the fact that politics has since been over and given way to governance. Sadly, this  is Nigeria’s greatest challenge of the moment.

    Nonetheless, there is still a ray of hope. It is quite reassuring to see a Nigerian who in a rare display of courage and patriotism has taken up the gauntlet for a place among the league of a few others who are persuaded that a new Nigeria is possible.

    Unlike the already prominent Chief Executive Officer of Air Peace, Allen Onyema, who deployed aircraft to evacuate Nigerians who were stranded and endangered during the xenophobic attack against them in South Africa in 2019, a relatively unknown Citizen Tersoo David Ukechir, the Chief Executive Officer of Tetwood Ltd., has continued to demonstrate that unconditional love for the country is strategic to national growth and development. As his modest contribution aimed at jumpstarting an innovative consciousness drive, he has been traversing the length and breadth of the country evangelising on patriotism and nationalism. This he passionately does by deploying a billboard messaging strategy across the country. Some of the messages of his advocacy include: ‘This Is The Only Country You Have, Do Not Condemn It,’ ‘Do Not Curse Nigeria,’ ‘Together, Let Us Make Nigeria Work Again!!’ ‘Support President Tinubu.’

    Like the biblical “lone voice in the wilderness,” Ukechir is actively complementing, if not challenging, the concerned organs of government in galvanizing positive consciousness among Nigerians towards prosperity. The thrust of his message is that Nigerians should embrace attitudinal change and value reorientation, always resist the temptation to wish the country evil, as well as shun every act of sabotage. Also, he admonishes Nigerians to dispassionately believe in the capability of the government of the day to get it right this time with citizens’ support and cooperation.

    There is no better way to discharge civic responsibility at a time like this! However, it is worth emphasizing that ‘support’ in this context is not absolute. It is a two-way action. When you demonstrate support to the government for doing good, you are invariably saying that underperformance of any kind is unacceptable. In other words, governments are to be commended and criticized when necessary. This must be noted for fairness and objectivity!

    There is a significant takeaway from this mission signed up to by Citizen Ukechir. It is selfless and devoid of partisan considerations, because the elections are since over. It is purely altruistic, borne out of love for the country and also not affiliated to a particular section of the country or individuals. Yes, it is broad-based and self-funded, understandably as a corporate social responsibility programme.

    But because a palm cannot make a clap, there is certainly a limit to the overall productivity. As such, Citizen Ukechir deserves to be complemented by others, and then be encouraged by the government to sustain this patriotic campaign. The media, clergy,  professional bodies and civil society organizations are hereby invited to offer him the necessary platforms for success. There is a need for concerted efforts to massively amplify and internalize the advocacy messages. This is imperative if indeed we desire a better Nigeria. Similarly, it is an open challenge to the government of the day if truly it is committed to providing leadership towards a Nigeria that works for all.

    In the interim, may we always be inspired to “ask what you can do for your country,” being conscious that a country and its government are what the citizens make of them. It is only in this that “the labours of our heroes past shall never be in vain.”

    • Egbo is a parliamentary affairs analyst

  • Combating insecurity in the North

    Combating insecurity in the North

    By Nuhu Ribadu

    Northern Nigeria faces a daunting array of insecurity issues that are deeply rooted in socio-economic, political, ethnic, and religious tensions. At the core of Northern Nigeria’s insecurity is the pervasive issue of banditry, which has significantly evolved from its historical origins. Initially integrated into the societal structure, banditry has now transformed, becoming more violent amidst the advent of modern weaponry and the crumbling of traditional social structures.

    Beyond banditry the rise and spread of Islamist insurgencies, notably Boko Haram and its offshoots like Islamic State in West Africa Province (ISWAP), have also contributed to an insecure environment. Originating as a critique against Western education, these groups have profoundly altered the security and socio-political landscape of Northern Nigeria in the last decade and a half, intertwining with local banditry to deepen the region’s crisis. Another critical area of focus is the intensifying herder-farmer conflicts, driven by climate change, land degradation, and the subsequent competition for dwindling resources. This longstanding discord has now taken on ethnic and religious dimensions, exacerbating regional and indigene-settler divides. Unchecked religious preaching and deep-seated historical grievances have helped fuel a cycle of violence, adding layers of complexity to the security situation.

    Alongside this, an alarming rise in arms and drugs trafficking significantly compounds regional insecurity, with intricate cross-border networks facilitating illegal imports. This proliferation of weaponry has not only amplified the regions conflicts but also poses significant challenges to peace and stability efforts.

    To address this the Nigerian government’s Renewed Hope Agenda blends kinetic actions with socio-economic initiatives; underscoring the importance of community engagement and state cooperation within Northern Nigeria as critical to building peace. Under the leadership of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu and the ruling All Progressive Congress (APC) government, we are actively working and will continue to do more.

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    A comprehensive approach to addressing Northern Nigeria’s security challenges is needed. This includes an integrated strategy that combines military, political, and socio-economic efforts, underlines the importance of cross-border cooperation, enhances youth empowerment and the strengthens local institutions. To do this the necessity of inclusive dialogue, prevention measures, and regional support to ensure security and stability is paramount.

    Northern Nigeria’s insecurity threats

    Nigeria faces insecurity challenges across all six geopolitical zones. This insecurity takes various forms, including insurgency, terrorism, communal clashes, banditry, kidnapping, and piracy, and is fuelled by deep-rooted socio-economic, ethnic, and religious tensions. The Northeast has been particularly affected by the insurgency led by Boko Haram and its offshoot, ISWAP, resulting in a severe humanitarian crisis that has seen millions displaced and widespread destruction. The Northwest faces challenges with banditry and kidnapping, where armed groups attack rural communities, causing significant loss of lives and displacement. Whilst the North-Central zone, or Nigeria’s Middle Belt, has experienced farmer-herder clashes driven by land disputes and environmental degradation, resulting in casualties and increased inter-communal tensions. What is clear is that Northern Nigeria is faced with a multifaceted tapestry of insecurity issues, each interwoven with the thread of history yet starkly impactful in today’s socio-political climate.

    Banditry: A Persistent Historical Scourge

    Banditry in northern Nigeria has a deep historical foundation that extends well beyond the current crisis. Historically, banditry was not just a matter of criminality but deeply woven into the socio-economic and political fabric of the region. The British conquest of the Northern Protectorate in 1903 and the subsequent amalgamation with the Southern Protectorate in 1914 were partly motivated by the desire to curb armed banditry and enhance regional security.[1] This era was characterised by widespread banditry, including armed robbery and community plundering, which influenced the decision to amalgamate. Although economic motives often dominate discussions about this amalgamation, the need to improve security, especially in the largely ungoverned Muslim North, was a significant factor. Lord Lugard, the first Colonial Officer of the Protectorate, experienced numerous confrontations with armed bandits who used ambush tactics with devastating efficiency, underscoring the security challenges of the time.

    Lugard’s encounters in areas like Nupeland, Kano, and Borguland, where he was wounded by bandits, highlighted the region’s precarious security situation.[3] In 1911, bandits in the Zamfara region ambushed Kano traders, killing about 210 people and stealing goods worth £165,000.[4] Additionally, persistent harassment, intimidation, and raids on herdsmen and traders around Kwatarkwashi in 1911 caused significant economic damage to the province. The collaboration between Zamfara communities and bandits from both Nigerian and present-day French territories facilitated these crimes, turning the region into a criminal haven.

    The colonial administration’s response, which included stationing armed policemen along strategic routes in Sokoto Province to ensure security and collect caravan tolls, represented an early attempt to manage rural banditry.[5] However, cross-border crimes continued in the post-colonial period, worsened by civil wars and insecurity in the wider West Africa region. The smuggling of Small Arms and Light Weapons (SALWs) across porous borders has further perpetuated violence and banditry in both rural and urban areas. The prevalence of these weapons continues to pose significant security challenges, impacting the stability and development of the region.

    The shift from historical banditry to the current crisis is marked by this growing availability of modern weaponry, the erosion of traditional social structures, and worsening economic hardships. Unlike historical banditry, which may have had elements of honour or community defence, contemporary banditry is characterised by greater violence and less discrimination in targeting victims. Today’s bandits are less likely to strictly adhere to ethnic or familial lines, though some groups may still invoke these connections.

    The phenomenon of banditry in the northwest predates the intercommunal conflict of the early 2000s and 2010s. Cattle rustling, a long-standing form of banditry in Northern Nigeria, involved nomadic and semi-nomadic groups engaging in livestock theft that was orchestrated by organised families or clans that passed down raiding techniques and routes through generations. Nonetheless, the ranks of bandits swelled significantly in the 2010s, partially as a result of increased ethnic tensions between Hausa and Fulani communities. Bandits exploited the grievances of herders, recruiting those who felt compelled to protect their lives, lands, and herds. Cattle rustlers like Buharin Daji and Kundu, for instance, conducted recruiting exercises in 2011 and 2012, and were successful in enticing young, predominantly Fulani men, with promises of cash, cows, and women. Alongside recruitment a number were simply coerced into joining their ranks.

    Other Fulani individuals took up arms to defend themselves but came to view criminal activity as the best or only means of financing this self-defence. A group of four closely aligned bandit commanders in Zamfara claimed they resorted to cattle rustling in 2011 to acquire weapons for self-defense following attacks on their communities by local vigilantes’ group, known as Yan Sa-kai.[6] They justified their actions as a necessity, though others pursued banditry purely for profit. Some repentant bandits have admitted to joining bandit groups to reclaim rustled cattle, while others have expressed dismay over unnecessary killings of both Fulani and their cattle. These concerns are exacerbated by the worsening impact of ethnic profiling and vigilante justice. The distinction between economic necessity—”I must rustle some cattle to buy guns to defend my people from Yan Sa-kai”—and economic opportunism—”The more cattle I rustle, the more guns I can buy, becoming more powerful and wealthy”—is subtle. Many herders who initially took up arms for self-defence have since become hardened criminals.

    The conflict in the north remains dynamic and mobile. The base of operations for bandits in the northwest can shift rapidly. Additionally, gangs often collaborate with other bandit groups to conduct attacks far from their camps, driven by both opportunity and necessity. For instance, bandit Dogo Gide, usually based in the Birnin Gwari forest straddling Kaduna and Niger states, targeted distant Birnin Yauri in Kebbi state for a mass kidnapping in July 2021, as many schools closer to his camps had closed due to banditry. Bandits typically move on motorcycles but also utilize waterways, especially during the rainy season, to transport themselves and their weapons via canoe.

    Zamfara stands as the epicentre of banditry, albeit local government areas (LGAs) within Sokoto, Kebbi, Katsina, Niger, and Kaduna that border Zamfara are also severely affected. For example, Sabon Birni, Isa, and Rabah, Goronyo in eastern Sokoto, bordering Zamfara’s Shinkafi LGA, have been among the hardest hit. In the Birnin Gwari region in western Kaduna high levels of violence are linked to its forest networks extending into Zamfara.

    Banditry is also evolving, with groups have expanded their operations to include kidnapping for ransom, a highly profitable tactic that fuels their activities. In a significant strategic shift, the abduction of school children has become a favoured method for bandits, notably highlighted by the audacious kidnapping of the Kankara schoolboys by Auwalu Daudawa in Katsina state in December 2020. Since these incidents, the kidnapping of school children has become a potent weapon, with the most recent being the kidnapping in Kuriga, Kaduna state in March 2024.

    Estimates suggest there are over 300 bandit warlords, each commanding at least 50 fighters operational across different regions of Northern Nigeria. Like in the pre-colonial era, kinship and community ties continue to play significant roles in banditry, with bandit groups often operating within defined ethnic or kinship lines, forming bandit families or clans. These groups rely on extensive networks of informants, safe houses, and community support to evade authorities or rival factions. The loyalty within these families and the code of silence among community members have made it challenging for authorities to effectively combat banditry.

    The importance of a bandit leader extends beyond mere strength and the size of their forces or weaponry; it also hinges on the prowess of their affiliated musicians and the popularity of their songs.  Most bandit kingpins, locally known as “Kachalla,” boasts special songs attributed to them, contributing to their myth and aura. Hausa speaking Nigerians in their 40s and above will undoubtedly be familiar with the songs of Kassu Zurmi, Gambu and other musicians who served as praise singers to bandit families and noted kingpins in  the past. Today, this trend has continued with the emergence of a new breed of bandit-musicians, including figures like the late Surajo, Adamu Ayuba, Hammadu, Makaho, Mal. Jika, and Maigari -the latter three all hail from Dunburum in the Zurmi LGA of Zamfara state. These bandit-musicians play a pivotal role in the banditry ecosystem, with their songs serving as a measure of a bandit kingpin’s power and influence.

    The menace of banditry, while historically entrenched in the socio-economic fabric of Northern Nigeria, has undergone a significant transformation. Previously confined to local skirmishes and cattle rustling, modern-day banditry in the region has escalated into a lucrative and deadly operation. This involves kidnapping for ransom and large-scale violence that destabilises entire communities. This evolution reflects broader socio-economic despair and a governance vacuum, realities that have allowed bandits to grow their tactics and access the sophisticated weaponry. To this end addressing banditry today requires not only a security response but also an understanding and addressing of its deep-rooted causes.

    Islamist insurgency: A transformative force

    The Islamist insurgency in Northern Nigeria, spearheaded by groups like Boko Haram and its offshoots including ISWAP has dramatically reshaped the region.  Founded in 2002 by Mohammed Yusuf, Boko Haram initially targeted Western education and aimed to implement Sharia law, seeking to establish an Islamic state in Nigeria. But following Yusuf’s death in 2009, under Abubakar Shekau’s leadership, Boko Haram escalated its campaign, launching widespread attacks against the government, security forces, and civilians.

    Ansaru, which emerged from Boko Haram in 2012, and ISWAP, which formed in 2016 and pledged allegiance to ISIS, represent significant fractures of the original movement. These groups have not only perpetuated the conflict but also broadened its scope from the Northeast across to the Northwest and North-Central zones of Nigeria, intertwining with local banditry and exploiting community grievances. This complex web of insurgent activity, coupled with efforts to embed within local populations and even collaborate with bandits, has fuelled a devastating humanitarian crisis marked by mass displacement and severe socio-economic disruption. The Boko Haram insurgency has directly and indirectly caused the deaths of tens of thousands of Nigerians and the displacement of millions, significantly hindering socio-economic development and altering the security, socio-economic, and geopolitical fabric of the region.

    The growth of interactions with the other insecurity challenges across Northern Nigeria is a concerning trend. In the northwest, a region already troubled by bandit groups, there is an emerging cooperation between these bandits and terrorist groups, often involving financial exchanges, in states such as Zamfara, Niger and Katsina. This collaboration, particularly around the sharing of resources but also around local terrain knowledge, poses a risk of escalating the current insecurity. For instance, the train attack in Kaduna in March 2022 was a joint operation between a Boko Haram faction and the late Ali Kawaje, a prominent bandit warlord. But Boko Haram factions are not alone in this approach. Ansaru and ISWAP’s strategies have also included providing support against bandits in exchange for community allegiance and operating in strategic locations like Dandume, Birni Gwari and the Shiroro axis. This multifaceted insurgency landscape, marked by potential for both cooperation and infighting among groups, not only has immediate impacts for residents, but significantly complicates efforts to address insecurity in Northern Nigeria.

    Herder-Farmer conflicts: Deepening divides

    The age-old conflict over scarce resources between nomadic herders and settled farmers has intensified in North-Central states such as Kaduna, Benue, and Nasarawa, exacerbated by climate change, population growth, and land degradation. These clashes are no longer mere resource disputes but are increasingly interpreted through lenses of ethnicity and religion, adding layers of complexity to an already volatile situation. In this way the conflicts in the North-Central states of Nigeria are emblematic of a broader crisis facing the country, where environmental, economic, and societal pressures converge to fuel violence.

    Historically, the relationship between nomadic herders and settled farmers was symbiotic. Herders’ cattle would graze on leftover crops from farmers’ fields, providing manure for the next planting season. But the historical migration patterns and pastoral livelihoods are now in direct conflict with modern agricultural practices and land use policies, leading to recurrent violence and community ruptures. Furthermore, this relationship has been strained by climate change, population growth, and land degradation, which have led to a reduction in available grazing land and water resources. These environmental stressors have pushed herders to migrate further south into more fertile farming lands, leading to conflicts with local farmers.

    Often referred to as Nigeria’s “food basket,” Benue has been at the epicentre of herder-farmer clashes. The state government’s attempt to mitigate these clashes through legislation – the anti-open grazing law – has led to further polarisation with herders viewing such policies as existential threats to their way of life. In Kaduna state, the conflict has seen an alarming rise in violence, with numerous attacks attributed to armed herdsmen against farming communities. The situation is further complicated by the state’s diverse ethnic and religious makeup, turning disputes over land into sectarian violence, with devastating effects on community cohesion and security.

    Herder-farmer conflicts are increasingly framed in ethnic and religious terms, with herders mostly being Fulani Muslims and farmers belonging to various ethnic groups and predominantly Christian. This framing has escalated the conflicts, making them harder to resolve as they now encompass identity and existential concerns. Northern Nigeria’s rich tapestry of religious and ethnic diversity has long been both a source of cultural wealth and a catalyst for tension. But in recent years, religious divides have intensified, frequently exacerbated by political actors, leading to violent outbreaks. The indigene-settler divide, a contest over rights and privileges anchored in historical land and identity claims, has the potential to stir social and political unrest.

    Rooted in colonial legacy, the distinction between “indigenes” – those considered native to a particular locality – and “settlers” – people who, despite having lived in the area for generations, are regarded as outsiders – fuels disputes over access to land, resources, and political representation. This dynamic has led to repeated and deadly clashes, in places like Plateau state, between indigene farmers and settler herders over land.

    Although the high-profile religious riots that characterised the last three decades in Northern Nigeria have decreased, emerging patterns of violence represent a new frontier of religious tension. These incidents underscore the volatile nature of religious sentiments and the potential for conflict. Linked to this, the proliferation of media platforms allows individuals to broadcast messages without oversight, contributing to a climate of intolerance and misunderstanding. This issue highlights a broader challenge within the Nigerian religious landscape, where inflammatory rhetoric can circulate freely, heightening tensions and sometimes leading to violence.

    Understanding the drivers: A multifaceted analysis Factors driving insecurity include:

    Land Use Disputes: The escalation of farmer-herder conflicts to unprecedented levels in recent years is partly due to conflicting land tenure systems. Traditional land distribution methods clash with formal government-granted rights, leading to widespread disputes.

    Changing Livelihoods and Climate Change: Diminishing arable land and water resources, exacerbated by inefficient farming practices, desertification, and erratic rainfall, force herders’ southwards, sparking conflicts with farmers over dwindling resources.

    Reciprocal Radicalisation: The stigmatisation of Fulani herders contributes to a cycle of violence, where negative perceptions between farmers and herders in different regions reinforce a spiral of escalating conflict.

    Security Sector Challenges: Inadequate security force capacity and professionalism, marked by under-resourcing and excessive force, undermine efforts to combat insecurity. The military and police, stretched thin and sometimes outgunned, often resort to heavy-handed tactics, exacerbating tensions.

    Access to Arms: Despite laws against unauthorised arms possession, the circulation of SALWs is rampant, with Nigeria accounting for a significant proportion of all SALWs in West Africa.

    Corruption and Injustice: Perceived injustices and corruption, filtered through ethnic, religious, or regional biases, fuel inter-communal conflict and insurgency, pushing communities toward extra-legal measures for self-protection.

    Regional overspill: Nigeria’s proximity to fragile states and the existence of numerous unofficial border crossings facilitates the movement of insurgent groups and bandits, compounding security challenges.

    These multifaceted insecurity issues confronting Northern Nigeria are intricately linked to the region’s low Human Development Index (HDI) scores, which encapsulate vital dimensions like education, health, and economic opportunities. This connection underscores a cyclic relationship where underdevelopment fuels violence, and vice versa, emphasising the intricate nature of the challenges faced.

    The educational disparities between Northern and Southern Nigeria play a significant role in the dynamics of radicalisation in the region. Lower literacy rates and school enrolment figures in the North, as reported by UNICEF and the World Bank, highlight a crucial challenge in access to and the quality of education. For instance, adult literacy rates as low as 40 per cent in certain Northern states starkly contrast with rates above 80 per cent in many Southern states.[8] Similarly, net primary school enrolment rates in the South approach 80-90 per cent, while in the North, they can dip as low as 50-60 per cent. The Northwest region has three of the four states with the lowest literacy rates in the country.[9] Conflict is reinforcing these educational divides as one million Nigerian children are estimated to be out of school due to insecurity in the northwest alone.[10] Such disparities are further exacerbated by gender, with many girls in the North not attending school due to various socio-economic and cultural barriers.

    This educational gap not only restricts economic opportunities but also heightens susceptibility to extremist ideologies. Groups like Boko Haram, have effectively exploited these vulnerabilities by offering alternative narratives that promise belonging, purpose, and sometimes financial benefits. Their ideology fundamentally opposes Western-style education, drawing on the educational inequities to fuel their narrative and recruit followers. Addressing these educational disparities is critical in countering radicalisation and fostering a more stable and prosperous environment in Northern Nigeria.

    Limited access to healthcare and the resultant population discontent in Northern Nigeria are closely linked to the region’s overarching instability. Similar disparities are observed in health outcomes as highlighted by UN data and reports from the World Health Organization and UNICEF. Life expectancy in the North lags significantly behind the South, with figures as low as 50 years compared to the South’s average of around 60 years. This divide is further deepened by child and maternal mortality rates in the North, which are nearly double those observed in the South. The scarcity of medical professionals exacerbates these health challenges. According to a report by The ICIR, Nigeria has an average of about four doctors per 10,000 people, a figure that, despite being the highest in two decades, falls short of the WHO’s recommended ratio of one physician for every 600 persons.

    Finally, stark economic disparities between Northern and Southern Nigeria manifest in various forms, including GDP per capita, income levels, and employment opportunities, creating a fertile ground for the recruitment into violence. According to the National Bureau of Statistics, Northwest Nigeria contains some of the poorest states in the country. As of 2019, each northwestern state has a higher poverty rate than the national average of 40.1 per cent, with Sokoto having the highest rate in the country: 87.73 per cent of the state’s population live in poverty. Its reports also illustrate that unemployment rates in the Northern regions can exceed 20 per cent, a stark contrast to the more industrially diverse and economically vibrant Southern regions, where unemployment rates hover around 10-15 per cent.

    The scarcity of livelihood opportunities becomes a pivotal factor driving individuals, especially the youth, towards armed groups and criminal networks. These groups exploit the economic vulnerabilities by offering financial incentives, making economic desperation a potent catalyst for individuals to join their ranks. A possibility that is aided by the availability of arms in the region, with gunrunning having evolved into a significant business operation.

    The illegal arms market in Northern Nigeria has seen a marked increase in demand and supply. The economic incentives are significant, with prices for firearms and ammunition varying widely based on type according to sources. For instance, the cost of a single bullet can range from N2,000 to N5,000, while high-calibre weapons such as AK47 rifles and rocket-propelled grenades are traded for anywhere from N1.5 million to N5 million. This price variability has catalysed a geometric rise in individuals participating in the arms trade, particularly in the Northwest, which is home to rampant criminality.

    Traffickers have developed sophisticated networks to transport illegal arms into and across Nigeria, deploying innovative methods to circumvent security checks. Concealment tactics range from hiding weapons within vehicles’ compartments, to using animals or canoes for border crossings, to disguising arms amidst legitimate cargo, such as agricultural products, to avoid detection.

    The proliferation of illegal firearms not only fuels the ongoing insecurity but also complicates efforts to restore peace and order. This issue is further complicated by corrupt elements within society and the international scope of these trafficking networks. As Northern Nigeria grapples with this escalating crisis, a multifaceted approach that includes tighter security measures, regional cooperation, and addressing the root causes of demand for illegal arms is imperative.

    Confronting the Challenges

    The administration of His Excellency President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, in its Renewed Hope Agenda, provided a holistic framework that seeks to comprehensively address various aspects of insecurity. This agenda includes provisions for bolstering security forces, implementing community-based security initiatives, promoting socio-economic development, and fostering inter-communal dialogue to address grievances and foster reconciliation. Through the Renewed Hope Agenda, the government aims to tackle the underlying causes of insecurity by addressing issues such as poverty, unemployment, social marginalisation, and ethnic tensions. By implementing targeted interventions and reforms, the government seeks to create an environment conducive to peace and stability in Northern Nigeria.

    President Tinubu was also deliberate in appointing northerners to top security positions, aiming to involve those with proximity to the issues in the crafting of solutions. The role I hold, of National Security Adviser, is a demanding job that requires dexterity, hard work, and consensus building across security and political structures. The figures we met in terms of both attacks and casualties when assuming office in May 2023 were deeply concerning. In 2022 alone Nigeria witnessed four major terrorism attacks: the attack on the Abuja-Kaduna train, an attack on the Guards Battalion in Abuja, the Kuje Prison attack, and another at a church in Owo, Ondo state. Meanwhile, many roads across the country, such as the Abuja-Kaduna, Zaria-Kano, and Lagos-Ibadan roads, were unsafe due to daylight operations by criminal elements.

    Since the coming of this administration, we have not seen any organised terrorist attack. Roads hitherto unsafe for commuters, for instance the Abuja- Kaduna , Zaria-Kano are today secure for travellers at anytime of the day. We are not out of the woods yet, but we have made serious progress in pushing down casualty figures and depriving miscreants access to weapons and free movement. Since assuming office, we have also successfully freed over a thousand individuals, many of whom were villagers held captive for as long as two to three years. We successfully secured the release of abducted students from the Federal University of Gusau and school children from Kuriga without paying ransom.

    Our non-kinetic strategies and approach are driven by evidence. We have strengthened the administration of criminal justice by reopening trials of Boko Haram terrorism suspects detained in Kanji and other locations across the country and prosecutions are now underway in eight different courts. Concurrently, we have significantly reduced the proliferation of arms nationwide by blocking the flows and arresting gunrunners. With new appointments at the National Centre on Small Arms and Light Weapons (NCSALW), we are poised to launch even more robust initiatives.

    On the kinetic front, the Nigerian military is conducting numerous operations targeting insurgent groups like Boko Haram and bandits operating in Northern Nigeria. Operations such as Operation Hadin Kai, Operation Safe Haven, Operation Whirl Stroke, Operation Hadarin Daji, and Operation Sahel Sanity have been launched to root out insurgents and criminals from their strongholds, dismantle their networks, and restore law and order in affected areas. The federal government has also established joint task forces comprising military, police, and other security agencies to coordinate efforts and enhance operational effectiveness in tackling insecurity. These task forces collaborate to conduct raids, patrols, and targeted operations aimed at disrupting the activities of insurgents and criminal elements. Nigeria has also bolstered border security measures, particularly along its porous borders with neighbouring countries, to prevent the infiltration of insurgents, weapons, and illicit goods. It has also prioritised intelligence gathering and sharing as a crucial component of its kinetic efforts to address insecurity in the region. Enhanced intelligence capabilities, include surveillance, reconnaissance, and information gathering, enable security forces to identify and neutralise threats more effectively. These efforts have been notably successful, with military personnel delivering the elimination of high-profile bandit leaders such as Ali Kawaje and Boderis,. They have also successfully disrupted existing cells of criminal terrorists, further securing the region and diminishing threats to public safety.

    The Nigerian government is also focusing more on counterinsurgency strategies aimed at winning the hearts and minds of local populations. In doing so we can isolate insurgents from their support base and prevent the recruitment of new members. These strategies involve engaging with communities, providing humanitarian assistance, and promoting reconciliation and deradicalisation programmes. Infrastructure development, job creation programmes, improved education and healthcare services, and efforts to tackle poverty and inequality are also critical parts of this approach.

    The emphasis on non-kinetic efforts alongside kinetic strategies marks a significant recognition that achieving peace in conflict zones extends beyond military might to include sustained and cooperative engagement across various sectors.  In line with this understanding, a pivotal meeting convened in March at the Office of the National Security Adviser in Abuja, saw the participation of 15 Northern Governors as well as service and intelligence chiefs. The agenda of this meeting was dedicated to formulating strategies to tackle the pressing security challenges in Northern Nigeria. A significant outcome of the discussions was the consensus on the necessity of transcending mere territorial dominance to also focus on winning the hearts and minds of the populace, thereby fostering a holistic approach to reinstating peace and stability in the region.

    Central to these discussions was the acknowledgment of the critical role that grassroots and regional initiatives play in complementing government efforts. Among strategies highlighted were the reform of the Nigerian Police Force, enhancement of local policing capabilities, implementation of peace-building programmes, and promotion of dialogue and reconciliation fora. Additionally, educational campaigns designed to counter violent extremism are increasingly being recognised as pivotal components of the broader strategy to restore peace. These initiatives collectively represent a multidimensional approach aimed at addressing the underlying causes of conflict and building a foundation for long-term stability in Northern Nigeria.

    Building on the analysis of current efforts and challenges, a roadmap for the future to ensure sustained progress in tackling insecurity in Northern Nigeria would include the following:

    A more integrated approach that combines military, political, and socio-economic strategies. This entails aligning security operations with efforts to address underlying grievances, such as poverty, unemployment, and marginalisation.

    Enhancing cross-border cooperation to address transnational threats effectively and disrupt the flow of illicit arms and goods across borders.

    Investing in youth empowerment and education is essential to prevent radicalisation and mitigate the appeal of extremist ideologies. This includes providing access to quality education, vocational training, and economic opportunities for young people in Northern Nigeria.

    Strengthening the capacity of local institutions to govern effectively and address community grievances. This involves empowering traditional and religious leaders, local governments, and civil society organisations to play a more active role in conflict resolution and peace-building efforts.

    Promoting inclusive dialogue that involves all stakeholders, including marginalised communities, to foster a holistic and durable peace. This entails creating spaces for meaningful participation and representation of diverse voices in decision-making processes.

    Prioritising prevention and resilience-building measures can help mitigate the risk of future insecurity. This includes early warning systems, community policing initiatives, and programs to address the root causes of conflict and violence.

    Engaging regional neighbours to support efforts to secure and stabilise the region.

    Conclusion

    In conclusion, it is crucial to emphasise that the complex web of insecurity engulfing Northern Nigeria is influenced by a blend of socio-economic, ethnic, and religious factors. Insights from historical examinations of banditry, the rise and growing impact of Islamist insurgencies, and the deep-seated conflicts between herders and farmers illustrate how insecurity has been exacerbated by a troubling increase in arms trafficking. To effectively address these issues, a comprehensive and cohesive response is required. The ultimate solution to the problem, however, has to be multifaceted, one that marries military, political, and socio-economic strategies with robust cross-border cooperation and deep community engagement.

    By championing an integrated strategy that equally prioritises prevention and the building of resilience, we hope to attain a pragmatic roadmap towards achieving stability and prosperity in Northern Nigeria. This comprehensive approach, aimed at mending the socio-political fabric of the region, sets a new precedent for addressing deep-seated security issues through collective determination, strategic action, and a commitment to inclusive governance.

    Nuhu Ribadu is the National Security Adviser (NSA).

    This is the text of the convocation lecture presented at the Usmanu Dan Fodiyo University, Sokoto at the 38th, 39th, 40th & 41st Combined Convocation Ceremony held at the University Auditorium, Main Campus, on Thursday, 18th April, 2024.