Category: Commentaries

  • Blood on their hands

    Blood on their hands

    Three notable Nigerians were cut down by hit-and-run drivers within a span of 11 days in October 2025. Those killings freshly raised the question of safety enforcement on the country’s highways and responsibility of motorists to the safety of other road users, especially pedestrians.

    A prominent labour activist, Abiodun Aremu, a retiring director in Lagos State Government service, Serifat Talabi, and a lecturer at the Federal University Lokoja (FUL), Emmanuel-Olowonubi Oluwakemi, were fatalities of hit-and-run incidents that caused outrage among members of the public, yet with no known measures of justice for the victims and redress for their relations till date. Reckless driving, weak road safety enforcement, vehicles that are not roadworthy and dilapidated condition of roads are among factors largely blamed for road mishaps in the country.

    It was on Sunday, October 12, that Aremu, an ace unionist and Secretary of the Joint Action Front (JAF) was hit by a speeding vehicle while crossing the road to his house in Ota, Ogun State, at about 6p.m. Eyewitnesses said the 65-year-old was rushed to a nearby hospital where doctors battled to save his life but without success. Aremu was reputed as a committed revolutionary and was until his death deeply involved in labour activism, youth education and pan-African solidarity causes. His killing sent shockwaves through the nation’s labour and civil society circles.

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    On October 18, the Lagos State Civil Service was thrown into mourning following the killing of Serifat Talabi, who until her death was the Director of Procurement at the Lagos State Residents Registration Agency (LASRRA). Talabi was knocked down by a hit-and-run driver on the Lagos–Ibadan expressway close to the Redemption City in Ibafo, Ogun State, just four days before her retirement and 60th birthday. She had already sent out invitation cards for her birthday thanksgiving and retirement ceremony scheduled for October 22, and her killing upended preparations for what would have been a double celebration of life’s glorious accomplishments. Her colleagues described her as a humble, dedicated worker whose sudden death left the entire agency in shock.

    Barely a week after Talabi’s killing, another tragedy threw the FUL community into mourning as a trailer crushed Oluwakemi, a lecturer in the Department of Theatre Arts, to death on Felele Road, Lokoja, the Kogi State capital. The late lecturer was reportedly returning home when the accident occurred near a location notorious for frequent crashes, just days after the university held its 9th convocation ceremony. Oluwakemi was fondly called ‘Mama Theatre Arts’ by her students, and her killing reignited concerns over safety on the highway axis where a number of students and commuters have lost their lives owing to reckless driving and heavy-duty vehicles flouting traffic regulations.

    The hit-and-run drivers have blood on their hands, but relevant authorities also need to double up regarding safety enforcement on Nigerian highways. It sucks that those killer-drivers may have effectively gotten away with their heartlessness.

  • Save Kwara’s Ekiti Local Govt. from bandits’ siege

    Save Kwara’s Ekiti Local Govt. from bandits’ siege

    • By Awe Babatunde Pilgrim

    Sir: I write to draw the urgent attention of the government and all relevant security stakeholders to the increasing spate of bandit attacks in Ekiti Local Government Area of Kwara State, particularly in the border communities adjoining Kogi State. The once peaceful Osi–Eruku road has unfortunately become a death trap for residents, travellers, and commuters, as bandits have turned the area into their operational base.

    In recent months, scores of attacks have been recorded along this axis, leaving several people dead, injured, or missing. The most recent incidents occurred on Saturday, November 8, when an evangelism bus was ambushed, and again on Monday, November 10, when another group of travellers were attacked, resulting in many injuries. Sadly, some victims from previous attacks remain in captivity, and the trauma this has caused in our communities cannot be overemphasized.

    It is disheartening that the poor state of the Osi–Eruku road has further worsened the situation, making it easier for criminals to lay ambush and evade security patrols. The bad road network, coupled with inadequate security presence, has emboldened these marauders to carry out their nefarious activities unhindered.

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    I therefore call on all relevant authorities, the Kwara State government, the Ekiti Local Government Council, the Kwara State Police Command, the Department of State Services (DSS), the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC), and the Operation Harmony Security Task Force to urgently intervene and restore peace and safety to the area.

    Likewise, the Federal Ministry of Works and the Kwara State Ministry of Works and Transport should take immediate steps to rehabilitate the Osi–Eruku road and other adjoining routes that have become havens for criminal elements.

    We also appeal to the Senator representing Kwara South, the member representing Ekiti/Irepodun/Isin/Oke-Ero Federal Constituency, and the Ekiti State House of Assembly member to use their good offices to facilitate federal and state-level attention to this pressing issue.

    Security is the foundation of development. If nothing urgent is done, the situation may degenerate beyond control, putting the lives and livelihoods of innocent citizens at further risk. The people of Ekiti Local Government Area deserve to live in peace, travel freely, and go about their daily activities without fear.

    •Awe Babatunde Pilgrim,

    awexin@gmail.com

  • Secularism, forgotten key to Nigeria’s security

    Secularism, forgotten key to Nigeria’s security

    • By O. Odunuga, mni

    Sir: For over six decades, Nigeria has battled one wave of insecurity after another—terrorism, communal violence, kidnappings, and banditry—each more brutal than the last. Yet, despite the heavy military budgets and endless reforms, peace remains elusive. The reason may lie deeper than politics or firepower; it is our failure to free the Nigerian mind from foreign religious control and embrace genuine secularism.

    The religions that dominate Nigeria today—Christianity and Islam—did not emerge from within our soil. They were introduced through conquest, trade, and colonial subjugation. Both faiths came with moral promises but also political baggage. They arrived not merely as spiritual paths but as instruments of foreign influence, dividing communities that had once lived under shared indigenous values.

    Colonial administrators quickly recognized the power of religion to control minds. They exploited Christian and Islamic loyalties to establish hierarchies that served imperial interests. After independence, Nigerian politicians inherited these divisions and weaponized them. The result is a country where religious identity often dictates political alignment, employment, and even access to justice.

    Today, religious sentiment has become a dominant force in public life. Political campaigns are launched from pulpits. Government funds sponsor pilgrimages. Security forces sometimes hesitate to confront extremists who claim divine mandate. This blurring of lines between faith and governance weakens the moral authority of the state.

    When the state kneels before religion, national security becomes secondary to sectarian loyalty. Soldiers see themselves as defenders of faith rather than defenders of the republic. Public officials fear religious backlash more than constitutional accountability. And citizens, indoctrinated from birth to see their religion as the ultimate truth, become easy tools for manipulation by extremists and politicians alike.

    Secularism is not atheism. It is the simple principle that governance should serve all citizens equally, without favour or prejudice to any religion. In a truly secular society, the law—not scripture—defines right and wrong; the constitution—not clergy—guides policy.

    Ironically, Nigeria’s own constitution already hints at secularism, yet the state behaves as though it is tethered to the mosque and the church. Until the government completely withdraws from religious sponsorship, the country will continue to experience moral confusion and divided loyalties.

    True secularism would strengthen national unity. It would free security institutions from the silent pressure of religious influence. It would also empower education to nurture critical thinkers instead of dogmatic followers. A citizen trained to think critically is harder to radicalize, and a soldier loyal to the constitution is harder to corrupt.

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    Long before foreign religions arrived, African societies—including Nigeria’s—had moral systems grounded in justice, community, and respect for life. The Yoruba concept of iwa pele (good character), the Igbo idea of omenala (customary balance), and the Hausa principle of mutunci (human dignity) provided ethical compasses that guided behaviour without imported doctrines.

    These indigenous systems valued social harmony and accountability more than abstract theology. They bound people to the land, the ancestors, and the community. Reconnecting with these home-grown philosophies can help Nigerians rediscover a sense of belonging that transcends religious labels.

    Nigeria’s insecurity will not end through bullets alone. It requires a cultural and philosophical awakening—a shift from foreign dependency to national self-awareness. That shift begins with secularism: separating religion from governance and reviving indigenous moral frameworks that prioritize peace, justice, and reason.

    If Nigeria truly wants to defeat extremism and reclaim stability, it must stop fighting wars inspired by foreign ideologies and start rebuilding a moral order anchored in national identity. Only then can Nigerians see one another not as Christians or Muslims, but as citizens bound by shared destiny.

    In the end, the path to lasting peace does not lie in the mosque or the church, but in the human conscience guided by reason and justice. That is the essence of true secularism, and Nigeria’s best hope for security.

    •O. Odunuga, mni

    <alaye2000ng@gmail.com>

  • Bumper harvests: Why Nigerian farmers are not smiling

    Bumper harvests: Why Nigerian farmers are not smiling

    • By Lawal Dahiru Mamman

    Sir: Nigeria has always been an interesting case study. Over the last two years, citizens have lived through austerity. Government officials, whenever handed the microphone, have often likened the experience to that of a child who must first endure the prick of a needle before receiving the protection of a vaccine.

    At the macro level, things appear to be taking shape. The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) recently reported the highest Net Foreign Exchange Reserve (NFER) in over three years. According to the April report, the figure marked an increase from $3.99 billion at the end of 2023, to $8.19 billion in 2022, and $14.59 billion in 2021.

    Analysts say this reflects a substantial improvement in the country’s external liquidity, reduced short-term obligations, and renewed investor confidence. The naira, which had been on a steep downward path toward N2,000, has rebounded to around N1,400—its strongest level in months—as it rallies against the dollar in both official and parallel markets.

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    It is on track to end the year on a firm note, buoyed by the growing forex reserves. Additionally, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) reported that Nigeria’s headline inflation rate dropped to 18.02 percent in September, while also announcing an increase in its Consumer Price Index (CPI)—a measure of the change in prices paid by consumers for a basket of goods and services.

    The Gross Domestic Product (GDP) has also recorded a growth rate of 3.13 percent, particularly following the rebasing exercise. Despite these improvements, the common argument remains that such progress has not truly trickled down to the micro level.

    Most recently, however, food prices in markets across the country have begun to decline—particularly for rice, a staple that holds a special place in Nigerian households. While consumers have welcomed the news with relief, there is a flipside: farmers are crying out.

    In truth, while lower prices delight the markets, they have left many farmers struggling to recover their investments. The government attributes the decline to increased local production through its interventions. Although the federal government opened a window for zero-duty importation of food items, the Minister of State for Agriculture and Food Security, Aliyu Sabi Abdullahi, insists that the fall in prices is due to large-scale agricultural investments under the National Agricultural Growth Scheme (NAGS) Agro-Pocket programme.

    Farmers, however, tell a different story. They argue that the massive importation of food items has crashed local prices and left them counting heavy losses. This is why, as a nation, we must proceed with caution. In reality, low prices can discourage cultivation—especially in a period of high input costs—threatening future harvests and deepening food insecurity.

    There must be balance between food security, farmers’ prosperity, and government intervention. Farmers should be supported through affordable credit, agricultural extension services, and guaranteed market access. The distribution of fertiliser to smallholders and the deployment of new tractors to Agricultural Mechanisation Service Centres will further help to reduce production costs and increase efficiency.

    The current situation presents a clear dilemma. While lower prices may bring short-term relief to consumers, prolonged losses could cripple agricultural productivity and strengthen dependence on imports—placing Nigeria’s food future at risk.

    In all that we do, we must choose our approach carefully. Do we import food items to slash prices and win temporary public approval, if indeed such imports are genuine? Or do we double down on domestic production to achieve true self-sufficiency—especially in crops we can grow ourselves?

    We must choose our pill carefully. Agriculture was once abandoned for oil, and we paid dearly for importing refined products while neglecting local refineries. Now that there is renewed interest in cultivation, we must not repeat the same mistake.

    •Lawal Dahiru Mamman,

    Abuja.

  • National Library headquarters: Time to finish what we began

    National Library headquarters: Time to finish what we began

    Sir: Standing before the magnificent Qatar National Library recently, I felt a rush of pride—and a deep ache. Pride, because nations that honour knowledge light the path for their people. Ache, because for 44 years, I have longed to stand before our own completed National Library of Nigeria headquarters in Abuja and take the same photo with my country’s name behind me.

    In 1981, inside the conference room of National Library branch at 227 Herbert Macaulay Street, Yaba, Lagos, I watched—spellbound—as the late architect, Olawale Adeleye, unveiled the scale model of the new National Library headquarters building. I was a young accountant then, among colleagues and senior management staff who shared the same electricity of hope. When I later processed the cheque for the concept design, it felt like signing a promise to the future: a place where every Nigerian, young or old, could access the best of human thought.

    History, however, had other plans. With the relocation of the Federal Capital to Abuja in 1991, the project had to be reimagined and moved. Years passed. In 2006, construction in Abuja was awarded, and for a moment it seemed the dream had breathed again. Then funding gaps, changing priorities and the familiar turbulence of administration-to-administration handover pushed the project into limbo. The unfinished structure now sits in our capital’s central district—within sight of iconic buildings—reminding us not of what we have achieved, but of what we have postponed.

    This is not a story of blame. It is a rallying cry. A National Library is not just another office block. It is a civic temple of learning; a sanctuary for students and teachers; a home for authors, researchers, and entrepreneurs; a safe harbour for our collective memory. It anchors reading culture, strengthens education outcomes, and signals—to ourselves and to the world—that Nigeria invests in knowledge as a strategic asset.

    The good news is that we are not starting from zero. The structure exists. Momentum can be rekindled. And recent gestures of goodwill—such as philanthropic mobilization efforts led by Senator Oluremi Tinubu, First Lady, and other prominent Nigerians—prove that when we appeal to the better angels of our nature, support appears. Let us be blind to politics and clear-eyed about purpose. This is a nonpartisan task worthy of every citizen, institution and friend of Nigeria.

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    Here is what we can do—now:

    1. Create a transparent completion fund. Let private philanthropists, corporate bodies, alumni associations, publishers, tech firms, and ordinary citizens contribute to a ring-fenced account with independent oversight, clear milestones, and public dashboards.

    2. Adopt-a-component. Diaspora groups, states, and companies can fund specific floors, reading rooms, children’s libraries, digital labs, or accessibility features. Name the spaces after donors who help finish them.

    3. Mobilize the knowledge economy. Partner with universities, ed-tech start-ups, publishers, and telecoms to equip a world-class digital library.

    4. Fix a date—and keep it. Announce an achievable opening timeline with quarterly progress reports. Nigerians will rally when they can see progress.

    5. Invite the public in. As sections are completed, open them in phases—children’s and exam-reading rooms first—so the building begins serving Nigerians while the final touches continue.

    We have delayed long enough. Let’s finish what we began. We did it for the National Mosque, National Ecumenical Centre, National Theatre, even for private presidential libraries. Let us do it for the National Library as well. One day soon, God willing, I hope to stand—not in Doha, but in Abuja—smiling for a photo beneath the completed sign: National Library of Nigeria Headquarters.

    •Olufemi Bayode, olufemibayode@yahoo.com

  • Mr President: Beware of old traps in new disguises

    Mr President: Beware of old traps in new disguises

    Sir: There comes a time when a leader must listen not only to praise-singers but to truth-tellers.

    Mr. President, Nigeria today stands at a delicate crossroads, both internally and internationally. The recent designation of our country as a Country of Particular Concern (CPC) by the United States has opened a new chapter of global scrutiny. If not carefully managed, it could become a tool of political manipulation, designed by those who wish to mislead for selfish gain.

    History has a habit of repeating itself when its lessons are ignored. The same web of deception that unseated President Goodluck Jonathan is being spun again, only this time with different actors and new disguises.

    Mr. President, you were part of the movement that replaced Jonathan in 2015. You know the script. And yet, some familiar traps are being quietly reset.

    The U.S. designation of Nigeria as a Country of Particular Concern is not just a diplomatic tag, it is a strategic test. How your government handles it will shape both your image abroad and your credibility at home. Already, opportunistic politicians are exploiting it for cheap popularity, while religious extremists are inflaming emotions. But, Sir, Donald Trump did not accuse Islam; he spoke against terrorism. Those now beating the drums of war against America might well be the very people America seeks to expose.

    We must be wise. Nigeria cannot afford reckless confrontation. We have not even defeated bandits in 20 years, shall we then threaten America, a nation that fights with satellites, drones, and robots?

    Their goal is to lure your administration into a diplomatic misstep, just as they did with Jonathan before 2015.

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     Be wary of those urging you to turn your back on America and seek refuge in Russia or China. They present themselves as patriots, but many are merchants of dependency. Both Russia and China are pursuing their own interests, not Nigeria’s.

    It is widely alleged that China’s illegal mining in Nigeria is protected by armed militias. Even more disturbing are allegations that Chinese interests have been arming bandits and terrorists to safeguard their illegal operations, bleeding Nigeria while pretending to be partners in development.

    Russia, for all its power, could not shield its allies, not Iran, not Syria, from American strikes. Their promises often come wrapped in debt, dependency, and quiet domination. Nigeria must remain strategically independent: cooperating with all, submitting to none. Our diplomacy should serve Nigerian interests, not foreign ambitions.

    Mr. President, never let your second-term ambition weaken your war against insurgency. The moment politics begins to dictate security, insecurity becomes a tool of politics. Demonstrate commitment to ending terrorism, not managing it. Modernize intelligence coordination and empower the military to act decisively.

    No nation can survive when violence is funded from within. Nigeria’s greatest danger is not the gun in the forest but the pen in the office that writes the cheque for destruction. You must order the arrest and prosecution of all those who sponsor, fund, or protect terrorism, no matter their region, religion, or political connection. Justice must be blind to sentiment if peace is to be genuine.

    Your Excellency, the enemies of progress have changed their costumes but not their mission. They will approach you as advisers, allies, and loyalists, yet their true intent is to weaken your government, divide your allies, and turn the world against you.

    Lead with clarity.

    Listen with caution. Act with courage. And remember: the greatness of a leader is not measured by how long he rules, but by what endures after he is gone.

    •Nasiru Jagaba,Kwassam Ward, Kauru Local Government Area, Kaduna State.

  • Alarming rise of ethnic and religious discord

    Alarming rise of ethnic and religious discord

    Sir: It is truly heart-breaking to witness how deeply divided Nigerians have become along ethnic, regional, tribal, and religious lines, especially across social media platforms. What was once a space for connection and ideas exchange has increasingly turned into a battlefield of hate, bias, and intolerance. This growing polarization is alarming, and one cannot help but wonder how we got here as a people.

    Many of these divisions appear to stem from years of indoctrination, whether from local influences, places of worship, or manipulative political narratives. The result is a generation conditioned to see one another not as compatriots, but as rivals divided by faith, language, and geography.

    The current level of disintegration we are witnessing on social media today is far beyond what Nigeria ever experienced in the past. Those of us who grew up in the 1980s and 1990s can recall a time when, despite our differences, we still held a collective sense of pride and love for our country. Patriotism was not just a word; it was a way of life. We respected one another, valued our diversity, and saw our unity as our greatest strength.

    Today, however, the story is different. On social media, one can hardly make an honest or factual statement without being attacked, not for the merit of the idea expressed, but for one’s name, religion, or region of origin. Opinions are no longer judged by logic or truth but by tribal and sectarian affiliations. It has become a toxic cycle that weakens our social fabric and distracts us from the real issues that demand our collective attention.

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    Even in moments of external aggression or national tragedy, rather than standing together, some wish harm upon other regions or celebrate the misfortunes of fellow Nigerians. This is not who we are meant to be.

    What we need now, more than ever, is unity, genuine unity built on mutual respect, understanding, and love for one another and for our nation. Our diversity should be a source of strength, not a weapon of division.

    Much of the disunity we see today is rooted in ignorance, poverty, and the failure of leadership. When citizens are educated, empowered, and provided with basic social amenities, they become less susceptible to manipulation by divisive elements. Let us therefore prioritize education, equity, and justice. Let the government lead with honour, transparency, and empathy. A united Nigeria is still possible if we all commit to rebuilding trust, healing wounds, and placing love for the country above all else.

    •Iliyasu Haruna Bala, Jabi, Abuja.

  • Obasa’s journey of grace and grind from Agege to Alausa

    Obasa’s journey of grace and grind from Agege to Alausa

    By Adeshina Oyetayo

    The distance between Agege and Alausa is just about six kilometres. Barring the ubiquitous Lagos traffic snarls, it would take a mere 10 minutes or less to drive from one end to the other. However, in outlook, opportunities for growth, quality of life, and other socio-economic indices, the gap between the two places is as wide as the Grand Canyon.

    Until a few years ago, Agege was a boisterous, gritty neighbourhood where it was easier for a young man without direction to lose his way than to succeed. Alausa, by contrast, is calm and orderly—a middle-class neighbourhood where life seems bright and beautiful. It also houses the seat of the Lagos State Government, where decisions shaping Nigeria’s economic powerhouse are made.

    Thus, transitioning from the tough streets of Agege, with its self-reinforcing poverty traps and systemic barriers, to becoming a power broker in Alausa is no small feat. It takes exceptional grit, grind, and grace. That is why the story of Rt. Hon. Mudashiru Ajayi Obasa, Speaker of the Lagos State House of Assembly, remains a testament to uncommon perseverance and purpose that will continue to inspire and resonate through the ages.

    Obasa’s rise and relevance in the politics of Lagos State reads like that of the intrepid mushroom that pierces the motionlessness of earth, pushing relentlessly, through faint form, till the hour of fertility strikes. From an early age, he pounded against oblivion with defiant rhythm, immersing himself in grassroots politics in Agege, and he was entrusted with key leadership roles including, among others, serving as zonal chairman, executive committee member, and campaign committee chairman.

    When the time came, the Lagos State University, LASU, law graduate contested and won election into the Agege Local Government Legislative Council as a Councillor in Ward E and went on to serve as Deputy Leader. That was between 1999 and 2003. At the end of that stewardship, Obasa contested and convincingly won his election into the Lagos State House of Assembly on the platform of the Alliance for Democracy (AD) to represent Agege Constituency 1 in 2003.

    His constituents have re-elected him in successive election cycles, and he is currently in his sixth term as a legislator. At the inauguration of the Eighth Legislative Assembly in 2015, Obasa was unanimously elected as the speaker; a feat he repeated at the Ninth and 10th Assemblies. By 2027, he would become arguably the longest-serving state legislator in the country and the longest-serving Speaker of the Lagos State Assembly.

    And he has repaid that trust implicitly reposed in him by his constituents with the massive, mouth-watering infrastructures he has attracted to Agege that have rejuvenated the look and feel of the area, which many now fondly call Mini London. There is hardly an untarred road in the entirety of Agege, thanks to Speaker Obasa. Significantly, there is a new flyover at the hitherto chaotic Pen Cinema junction that has improved traffic management and increased the value of real estate in Agege and neighbouring communities.

    Indeed, that flyover has reduced the travel time between Agege and Alausa, just like Obasa’s story has made it clear that an Agege-bred can rise to the acme of their career if they dared to dream. That is why he invests heavily in his people in the area of improved access to education, entrepreneurship, healthcare, security, and grassroots and youth empowerment, among others.

    On Tuesday, November 11, Obasa turns a year older. Though not a landmark birthday worthy of any celebration, if you have walked in his shoes, survived many political landmines and outright treachery, you would understand that this particular birthday calls for the grandest celebration and thanksgiving. Indeed, he has so many reasons to be thankful.

    Earlier in the year, precisely on January 19, Obasa was abruptly ‘removed’ from office by his colleagues in the House of Assembly, the same Assembly he had led over the past decade with unparalleled distinction and diplomacy.

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    Though he was out of the country when the purported removal was orchestrated on the floor of the House that he had orbited for the past 22years, he hurriedly returned home to reclaim his mandate. Obasa was quoted in several media reports that he was not against being removed as Speaker, which he said was not a family title, but that things should be done legally and constitutionally.

    After several interventions by well-meaning elders of the party and President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, Obasa was reinstated on March 3, bringing an end to the most turbulent 49days ever experienced in the assembly and, by extension, the state. A federal high court would later declare that the action of January 19 was illegal, unconstitutional, and null and void. The court also nullified the proceedings and resolutions of the Assembly held on that day. Instructively, this incident happened in the very year he celebrates his 10th anniversary as Speaker.

    During a plenary sitting last June, members of the Assembly unanimously lauded Obasa’s ‘sterling leadership, legislative depth, strategic foresight, and firm protection of institutional integrity over the last decade’, concurring that it is no easy feat to serve as a speaker for this long, especially within the challenging political landscape of Lagos State.

    They also variously described his tenure as progressive, prodigious, and impactful while proposing to establish a legislative institute and an annual legislative awards ceremony to commemorate the milestone. The lawmakers reckoned that Speaker Obasa deserves all the plaudits that come his way for, especially, elevating the Lagos State House of Assembly “to be the leading light and pathfinder for Nigerian and African Legislatures.”

    And for his riveting contributions, achievements, and steadfast devotion to the socio-economic prosperity and progress of the state, and the welfare and developmental needs of the people, which have become a considerable part of the success story of Lagos State, no day in his life should go without being celebrated.

    As friends and associates, colleagues and party faithful fall over themselves in celebration of this legislator par excellence, there is an undercurrent of posers whether the ‘Agege Boy’ will hearken to the call to transfer his legislative and political ingenuity to the Governor’s Office, Alausa, in 2027. Time, as always, will tell. For now, let the bourbon and bubbly froth over while the ‘birthday boy’ bobs and weaves in exultation for clocking another year on firma.

    • Oyetayo is special adviser on Research, Media, and Documentation to Speaker of Lagos State House of Assembly,  Mudashiru Obasa

  • Checkpoints on border routes

    Checkpoints on border routes

    Multiple checkpoints are a menace on Nigeria’s border corridors. We have the word of stakeholders in Southwest corridors to illustrate that.

    Ogun State House of Assembly recently called on police leadership to scale down 52 checkpoints erected on the Idiroko-Owode route, decrying the situation as oppressive and detrimental to the socio-economic wellbeing of residents and commuters in the border communities. The assembly made the call in a resolution, following a motion by member representing Ipokia/Idiroko state constituency.

    The member, Bisi Oyedele, had said the proliferation of police checkpoints on the route subjected residents, motorists and traders to daily extortion, intimidation and unnecessary delays. He noted that checkpoints along the 20-kilometre stretch increased from about 20 to 52 within weeks, saying: “A trip that should ordinarily last 20 minutes now takes almost two hours due to endless interceptions by security officers who often demand bribe from drivers and traders. Transporters are most affected, paying up to N1,000 per stop – a situation that has led to losses, protests and even a temporary local transport strike recently witnessed.” He added: “The proliferation of checkpoints has crippled local businesses, increased transport fares and worsened the prices of goods and essential commodities in Ipokia Local Government and environs. Perishable goods now get damaged in transit due to unnecessary delays, while traders are forced to factor illegal payments into the cost of their wares, making life increasingly difficult for ordinary citizens.”

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    The assembly, in deliberations presided over by Speaker Daisi Elemide, deplored the multiplicity of checkpoints, describing the conduct of some officers manning them as abuse of authority. Its resolution urged Ogun police commissioner to reduce the checkpoints to a reasonable number as would yet guarantee security without inflicting hardship on innocent citizens. It also called on Governor Dapo Abiodun to engage the police command so to address the matter swiftly. The house further resolved to transmit the motion as a petition to the Senate President, House of Representatives Speaker, Police Inspector-General and the National Security Adviser for investigation and necessary action at the federal level.

    Barely a week earlier, the Controller, Seme area command of Nigeria Customs, Wale Adenuga, said multiple checkpoints along Lagos-Badagry expressway were tarnishing the country’s image. Speaking at a stakeholder engagement with security agencies, traditional rulers, community representatives and business partners in Seme, he added that Customs would not rest until the checkpoints are reduced to the barest minimum  on the corridor. “The time wasting along Lagos-Badagry expressway is disturbing. You will see many vehicles queueing for checking by security operatives. It is embarrassing to see as many as 10 Immigration, 20 Police and 15 Customs checkpoints doing same work along the expressway.” He added: “We need  to tell ourselves the bitter truth. The more we facilitate legitimate trade, the better for our country. When trade thrives, crime reduces.”

    Those testimonies say it all.

  • Nigeria: Time to reload

    Nigeria: Time to reload

    By Matthew Hassan Kukah

    Dr. Reuben Abati is 60. This means he is much younger than our dear country Nigeria. However, his accomplishments in this very short period of time is one of the reasons why I am proud of what our country will still achieve, what my friend, Dr. Kayode Fayemi has described as Nigeria’s unfinished greatness. However, looking back, we must admit that standards have fallen in terms of what young Nigerians achieved before now especially in the area of the media. Remember the debonair, pacesetting Okpanam born, Chris Okolie who, at the age of 26, founded the scintillating Newbreed Magazine. Nduka Obaigbena followed by starting The Week at the age of 23. Peter Enahoro edited the Daily Times at the age of 24. Ernest Ikoli edited the Daily Times at a tender age. Anthony Enahoro was 26 when he moved the motion for Nigeria’s independence. Joseph Tarka entered the House of Representatives at the age of 26. So, when did the discount hunters come from? What happened? Today, an over 30 year old man or woman will have great difficulties becoming an Editor. Is the problem with the system or with the youths? Whatever it is, it is settled that a generation must seize its moment or lose history’s tide.

    Shakespeare says so in Julius Caesar:

    “There is a tide in the affairs of men,

    Which, taken at the flood, leads on to fortune;

    Omitted, all the voyage of their life

    Is bound in shallows and in miseries.”

    (Act IV, Scene iii)

    2: To reload is to start afresh. Nigeria’s “reload” must begin in the mind — a moral and imaginative renewal. In Milton’s Paradise Lost, we are told that “The mind is its own place, and in itself

    Can make a heaven of hell, a hell of heaven.” There are very many reasons why Nigeria must re-load. A marksman reloads for many reasons. First, he may have failed in his first attempt. May be the gun was not loaded. Maybe the gun was loaded but he was not good enough. Or, perhaps his object moved. Whatever may be the reasons for failure, you re-load and hope to correct the mistakes you may have made. You then go ahead to try again. Hitler was a lucky man. The 42 attempts to kill him all failed. No matter how many times we fail, we must continue to try.

    3: I encourage us to reload because missed targets offer us opportunities to rethink and recreate new options and opportunities. Francis Bacon said so: “He that will not apply new remedies must expect new evils; for time is the greatest innovator.” No matter how much one loves this country, we cannot explain away all the opportunities we have missed. Although we cannot turn back the hands of time, as they say, even a bad clock is right twice a day. However, we can at least attempt to journey together as pilgrims of hope, learning from the mistakes of the past and seeking to dream new dreams. National greatness lies in identifying and correcting past mistakes, not focusing on recrimination and self-flagellation.

    3. Nationalism, it is said, requires memory, and memory requires reverence. Nineteenth Century Canadian poet and journalist, Joseph Howe, had a counsel here: “A wise nation preserves its records, gathers up its monuments, decorates the tombs of its illustrious dead, repairs its greatest structures and fosters national pride and love of country by perpetual references to the sacrifices and glories of the past.” The Chinese celebrate their one-year long march that covered about 6000 kilometers. The Voortrekkers Monument in Kwazulu Natal, South Africa, stands as testimony of the victory of the 464 Afrikaaners who, on December 16th, 1836 (known as the day of the vow), defeated over 20,000 Zulus at the Battle of the Blood River and took over the land! July 4th is America’s independence day because that is the day that the Declaration of Independence was adopted. Thanksgiving Day celebrated on the last Thursday of every November, draws inspiration from the first action by the pilgrim fathers and their local Indian population way back in 1621. Normandy Day is marked every June 6th every year to remember the military operations that ended with the defeat of the Nazis. These events often re-enkindle memories that help to inspire and reinforce nationalism. Edmund Burke in ‘Reflections on the Revolution in France’ wrote that “People will not look forward to posterity who never look backward to their ancestors.” Nationalism is a tree that must be watered. Can you name one single event that Nigerians get excited about?

    4. Nigeria is a nation of paradox; a nation of greatly gifted people full of potential, yet we are a mass of people mired in disillusionment. Why? We look at our politics and we wonder, will we ever get it right? What stories, myths or memories does Nigeria have to inspire patriotism among us? Which sacrifices and labours of our leaders past can we draw inspiration from? Nigeria has become a country permanently on a boiler plate of self-doubt and almost self-abnegation. A country at war with itself. We think about the endless border wars, the severe fracture even in social networks and we wonder, when will we all live in peace among ourselves? When will we create minimum standards of welfare that will ensure that we can take the basic things of a good life for granted. For example, safe maternal and infant maternal environments, ending hunger and destitution, basic standard of education for all our children? We ask, when will the almost 60,000 abandoned projects spread across Nigeria ever be completed? Given the staggering rate and range of our economic hemorrhage through illicit financial flows, we ask ourselves, when will we achieve some level of economic equilibrium? With citizens retreating into the womb of ethnicity, with religion becoming the source of inspiration for violence and death, our questions are many and all-encompassing with very little answers. It is an open question whether can successfully reach a finishing line. Perhaps, in the end, we have to come to terms with the fact that there are really no final destination in the dream of nations. In the end, it is more a question of holding together and believing that no matter the turbulence, our eyes are still set on the dreams of building a united nation.

    5: Perhaps we may need to ask questions such as, where did all go wrong? Or was it wrong from the beginning? If so, which beginning? We know that every modern country today has its own peculiar history. None has been free from the savagery of conquerors, oppressors, or enslavers. If we are to start from the beginning, we will have to start from the Garden of Eden. Yet, even there, no sooner had God placed the first two human creatures Adam and Eve in the garden than trouble started over obedience to just one commandment. The first family had only two children, yet, with no external provocation from any neighbour, the first murder took place. Here, we draw the first lesson that, living together even as a family has its challenges. A peaceful Nigeria should be measured not by the absence of problems, rather, the existence of platforms that enable citizens to feel a sense of fairness.

    6: Nations live with the oxygen that they draw from the myths of identity, myths of great men and women who came before. The myths are often constructed around their struggles. They become the vehicles for legitimation and validation, their memories inspire sacrifice and pride. Telling and re-telling them inspires the next generation and they become embedded in memory and often form part of what is called, civil religion. These myths and the telling of them help to inspire the next generation which often passes them to the next generation. This is what Moses meant when he enjoined the people of Israel to remember the word of God; when you sit in your house, when you walk by the way, when you lie down, and when you rise. You shall bind them on your hands, and between your eyes. You shall write them on them on the doorpost of your house (Dt. 6: 7-8). Every country today speaks about the dreams or the visions of its founding fathers, those men and women whose sacrifices brought them to where they are. Some of these men and women have been elevated almost to the status of demigods. Legitimacy of certain decisions has to be aligned to the thinking of these great men and women. Myths and anthologies are often deployed to ensure that their lives continue to inspire the nation. Today, think of the lessons of the great Nelson Mandela.

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    7: When the United States of America speak of their founding fathers, they refer to; Benjamin Franklin, George Washington, John Adams, John Jay, Alex Hamilton, Thomas Jefferson. Despite his fame, Abraham Lincoln is not considered a founding father as he came much later. Their memories are sustained against the backdrop of the myths constructed about them over time. These founding fathers gave the country the Declaration of Independence (1776) and wrote the nation’s Constitution (1878. Independence came after almost a hundred years. However, the inspiration for what forms the foundations of America values derives from multiple sources.

    8: Primarily, the Bible formed the furnace upon which all the inspiration of the founding fathers was hammered. Along with the Bible was the inspiration derived from philosophers like Plato, Aristotle, Jock Locke, Thomas Hobbes, Montesquieu, Immanuel Kant, Jean Jacques Rosseau, Augustine, Thomas Aquinas, Thomas Paine among many others. These philosophers propounded different theories about life, death, society, government, peace, war and justice. They debated the role of the state, ensuring individual safety and the pursuit of happiness. Was society above or beneath government? People like John Locke believed that society was more important than government and that the business of government was to protect the freedom of the individual, hence the notion of limited government.

    9: Issues of freedom, the individual and government have dominated politics. For example, how much of human freedom can the state take from the individual and for what? Rosseau, due to the circumstances of his personal life, feared freedom and believed that more power should be in the hands of the state. Ceding much power to the people could lead to anarchy and mob violence. The Leviathan, as he called the state, should be given so much power that it can enjoy unlimited protection. Left on his own devices, Rosseau argued, individuals could descend to a state of nature where, unrestrained, life could be nasty, brutish and short. Philosophers like Immanuel Kant share Rosseau’s sentiments because he argued for total obedience to the state’s authority on the grounds that either way, it was better to have even a bad state with bad laws than to have no state and no laws! Successive governments in the United States have revolved around these values.

    10: The 1630 sermon of John Winthrop, first Governor of the Massachusetts Bay colony, an English Puritan lawyer provided the foundation for the development of these moral sentiments on which the founding fathers would continue to build. It was in the sermon that he conceived of the new colony as a city on the hill, drawing inspiration from the exhortation of Jesus that a city set on a hill cannot be hidden (Mt. 5:14). Drawing from Prophet Micah, he enjoined his people in the sermon to act justly, love tenderly and to walk humbly with our God. These sentiments account for the deep moral fibre of the American polity. Today, these sentiments formed the moral foundation for such expressions in the American public psyche as: In God we Trust, Manifest destiny, God’s own country,

    11: Subsequently, after the war, the Declaration of Independence evokes these emotions when it said: We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed. Today, America holds these values and vision with near sacredness. They provide the guardrails for ensuring the preservation of the vision of their founding fathers. They account for the near sacredness attached to the Constitution. Taken together with the principles of separation of powers, they have made the country the most powerful nation on earth, whatever may be the controversies of the moment.

    12: The Chinese on the other hand have built their civilization and by extension the social and political fabric of their country around the philosophical teachings of Confucius, the 5th century Chinese philosopher. The Analects, the collection of some of his teachings read like the Book of Wisdom in the Bible. For example, in what sounds almost like the golden rule, Confucius says, Never impose on others what you will not choose for yourself. Drawing from Confucius, the Chinese have developed their politics around what is called, the Doctrine of the Mean. The philosophy of the mean enjoins people to avoid excesses and extremes, to seek balance and moderation. Using the pendulum as a model, this teaching assumes that extremism should be avoided while balance and equilibrium should be sought. Virtue is what helps to manage these extremes. This is why, even though China is a multiparty Democracy, it has ensured that its so-called Democracy functions within the boundaries of doctrine of the mean, seeing opposition as an extreme from the mean.

    13: Many people will be surprised to hear that China can claim to have a multiparty political system. Yes, they do. These parties are little surrogates who survive on the basis of what the Chinese Communist Party, CCP, calls, multi-party cooperation and political consultation under the leadership of the CCP. Yes, China is a multi-party country and there is even one party called, China Democratic League. The only right that these parties have is the right to accept the supremacy of the CCP. We can go on and on about other countries around the world. The point here is that every country has its history.

    14: So, coming to our country Nigeria, the question now is, who are our founding fathers? What was the founding philosophy? What is it about their lives that we can hold up to for inspiration today? As a former British colony, Nigeria’s history of growth and development reads quite differently. Written largely in the smoke-filled rooms of British subterfuge, some of these intrigues have been well documented in very many books. The Harold Smith Story: A Squalid End to Empire tells part of this gory story. Dele Ogun’s A Fatherless People demonstrates how Nigeria came to be an ideological orphan, lacking in a source of moral authority for its national development. Mr. Ogun speaks eloquently about things that might have been in our politics, had the British not done all they did to manipulate outcomes to favour northern Nigeria. We are still paying the price. “Who controls the past controls the future; who controls the present controls the past” (George Orwell:1984).

    15: In form and content, we have remained what the British sculpted of us. For example, while in the United Kingdom as a student, Mr. Obafemi Awolowo had fallen under the spell of Fabianism. This left-wing group made up of Socialists who congregated around its philosophy would later become the launch pad for the Labour Party. The Fabian Society founded the London School of Economics and Political Science in 1895. It inspired such legendary leaders like Jawaharl Nehru and Lee Kwan Yew, 50 former Heads of States and 20 Nobel Laureates. Such a man like Awolowo, inspired by the Labour Party would naturally have struck anxiety to Harold McMillan of the Conservative Party who was then the British Prime Minister as Nigeria prepared for independence. Mr. Nnamdi Azikiwe, having been exposed to the radical politics of the United States (itself a former British colony) posed a similar threat. These explain the maneuverings that ensured that neither of these two emerged to lead Nigeria after independence.

    16: Today, we all recall the anecdotal account of the imagined conversation between Nnamdi Azikiwe and the Sardauna regarding the future of the country. As it went, Nnamdi Azikiwe pleaded with Sardauna that they should sink their differences in other to build a united nation together. The Sardauna was said to have told Nnamdi Azikiwe that it was more important to understand the differences rather than forgetting them. The difference between forgetting and remembering still haunts us till date. Today, these three key leaders were unable to reconcile their differences and find areas of agreement beyond merely struggling for independence. Even at that, the famous crisis around the date for Nigeria’s independence between the three, the debate between the Sardauna’s as soon as possible position and the famous Tony Enahoro’s motion for independence in 1956.

    19: For example, in the case of India, the British bowed to pressure from the Muslim minority and decided to create Pakistan for the Muslims. Nigerians vehemently rejected this choice and pooh-poohed against what they called then, the Pakistanisation of Nigeria. The Minority ethnic groups in the Middle Belt and in Southern Nigeria were suffocating from the asphyxiating chokehold of the dominant ethnic groups in the north, east and west. In response to their pleas, the British set up what they called, a Minority’s Commission in 1958 to enquire into the fears of Minorities. Their brief was to listen to the fears of these minorities and figure out how to allay them. The creation of the Mid-West in 1963 was not done in good faith because the real idea was to reduce Chief Awolowo’s influence in the region. The fears of the northern Minorities over the threat to their cultural and religious identity were ignored because the northern region claimed that their fears would be addressed. When we look back now, we must ask, could things have been different from what they are today?

    20: As we prepare to re-load, what are the key issues for today? There will of course be as many answers as those that are asked. I will try to conclude by identifying just three or so key areas that I believe we need to focus on. First, is the problem of national cohesion which has remained, as I have said elsewhere, an illusion. Our coat of arms loudly proclaims, Unity & Faith, Peace & Progress. I leave you to rank which of these ideals we have been able to achieve. We have neither unity nor faith, neither peace nor have we made progress commensurate with our opportunities. I am not about to offer you the answers, but what I wish to do here is to say, if we are to re-load, what must we do differently? Our inability to successfully achieve any of these ideals is what we now call insecurity. To that extent, it is plausible to argue that our insecurity is the result of our lack of unity and faith which have made peace and progress impossible. To re-load, I propose we look at five key themes

    21: First, what is the future of our Constitutional Democracy? Ours has been a severely flawed Democracy by every stretch of the imagination. I do not know if we can find consolation in the fact that the crisis around Democracy is itself an international malaise. If it is any consolation, a recent Pew Foundation survey examined the state of Satisfaction and Dissatisfaction with Democracy around the world. The revelations show that Canada, France, Germany, Greece, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, South Korea, Spain, Sweden, the United Kingdom and the United States, all registered a median of 64% adults saying they are dissatisfied with Democracy while 35% said that they were satisfied. Only two African countries are measured in the survey and they are, Kenya and South Africa which both registered between 58% and 63% dissatisfaction and against 42% and 33% satisfaction respectively. On dissatisfaction with Democracy, it is interesting that India ranks the highest with 23%, followed by Sweden which is 25%.

    22: In a Washington Times article on the 24th October, 2025, titled, Democracy Faces a Crisis of Faith, Dr. Fareed Zakarias concluded that: Fifty years ago, people doubted their governments. Today, they doubt each other. The next democratic revival will not come from clever managers or technocratic reforms. It will come from a rediscovery of trust—the invisible rule that makes all others possible. Until we can believe again that the referee is trying to be fair, we will keep shouting ‘Ref, you suck!’ at our own democracy— and then wonder why the game no longer feels worth playing.

    23: Democratic reversals should be seen as temporary and we must work hard to renew our peoples’ faith in it, despite its many flaws. With all its flaws, our commitment to Democracy as a people is irreversible as we can see from the cold reactions to the recent news of a purported military coup. This same coldness is seen in the lack of enthusiasm about the Sahelian states of Niger, Mali and Burkina Faso. What we need to do is to think more seriously about the nature of the choices and the processes that drive Democracy. Here, I mean Political Parties and Electoral Management Bodies.

    24: There is a lot of talk about the need for free, fair and credible elections. It is however important to note that although free, fair and credible elections are necessary, they are not sufficient to guarantee or deliver on good governance and what we have come to loosely refer to as dividends of Democracy. For example, on July 29, 1981, the world stood still as millions around the world were glued to the television as they watched Prince Charles and Lady Diana get married at St. Paul’s Cathedral in London. It was, you would say, with the pomp and pageantry, one of the greatest events of that year, and, a fairytale marriage made in heaven as they say. Fifteen years later, precisely on August 28, 1996, the marriage ended in divorce! So, outcomes are often not determined by processes.

    25: The challenge to our Democracy is the conduct and lack of honesty and sincerity by the political actors who have come to see politics as a ladder that can be used to ascend to higher office. Electoral malfeasance has been inserted into the process. Accountability still remains a serious problem. However, one of the most troubling problems is the issue of the culture of defections by elected officials who are often driven by a sense of opportunism and the need to be close to honey pot of power. We will not resolve these matters merely by moral appeal. Amendments to our electoral laws must go beyond merely tinkering with the laws. The amendments in the laws must identify, isolate and target certain remedies. I will use two examples from Ghana to illustrate the point.

    26: Under the Ghana Election Commission for example, once you cross the carpet, you lose your seat and elections in which the defector cannot contest, must hold within 42 days for a replacement. Second, the Speaker of the Parliament is appointed by the President not elected by the House. The appointment can come from even outside the political parties. In this way for example, the idea that defectors must write to the Speaker can be remedied.

    27: The second issue is what to do with the Constitution or the spirit of Constitutionalism, the secular scriptural text that must provide moral guidance for the affairs of state. Largely, Constitutional Amendment has become a project and a ritual of each National Assembly. In a provocative Memo, my friend, Olisa Agbakoba has likened the process as merely repairing a cracked foundation with patches. In his view, 25 years of Constitutional tinkering has produced no transformation. The result is that Elections occur, but power remains concentrated. Parties exist, but without genuine ideological differentiation. A Constitution governs but without federal substance. His proposals, he argues, if accepted can see Nigeria itself with a budget of N500 trillion Naira capacity. He proposes that his project should form the basis for interrogation of candidates in the 2027 elections.

    28: Although I am persuaded by the strength of the argument, his arguments focus on assumptions that do not address realistically, the nature of the field of play. The questions for the 2027 elections may not be exhaustive, but they mistake the cause for the consequence. We are supposed to ask all candidates, if they will deliver on the enlisted items. All the 10 questions start with, Will you…? It is like asking a groom on the altar, will you love this woman, will you be faithful to her? Of course this is the easy part and he will naturally simply tick yes in all the boxes. Elections are a process and they are different from governance. A wedding is a ceremony. It is not a marriage. The real part is living out the words uttered. And here, Agbakoba’s thesis should focus not on asking the “will you” question, but the “how” question. The text also does not address the resistant nature of the landscape that is suffused with such cultural anomalies as Democracy sitting side by side with traditional institutions, especially given that today, in the northern states, at least, they are already taking a chunk of local government resources. It is an exceptionally well written memo and should provoke a conversation. If it is not to be a mere talkshop, Dr Agbakoba must define the processes of his team selection.

    29: What leaders do we need, who do we need, where and when? It is tempting to ask if the age of the strong man, the dictator, the autocrat, the one who brooked no nonsense, the one whose word was law are gone. The answer is no, because in the words of Anne Applebaum in her book, ‘Autocracy Inc: The Dictators who want to Rule the World’, says, there is a network of dictators who share common interests and not common ideology. Nowadays, autocracies are not run by one bad guy but by sophisticated networks relying on kleptocratic financial structures, a complex of security services, military and paramilitary, police and technological experts who provide surveillance, propaganda and disinformation.

    30: We need a Judiciary that spends less energy on becoming what Chidi Odinkalu calls a Selectorate which topples the will of the people. In the book, ‘The Selectorate: When Judges Topple the People’, Prof Odinkalu argues that: “the judiciary has evolved from constrained arbiters over political disputes to unconstrained determinants of the location and site for the mandate of to rule…the Judiciary has relocated the site of electoral legitimacy from voters to judges and from the ballot box to the court room.”

    31: The judiciary needs to be extricated from the tangled web of politics. There is need to find the means to make the judiciary focus more on securing the rights to justice for our people. Nigeria needs another arm of the judiciary dedicated to delivering Justice to the politicians and their parties. We need a more robust engagement between the Bar and the Bench in extending the frontiers of Justice to our people. Bodies like the National Association for the Advancement of Coloured People, NCAAP, and recently, the Black Lives Matter Movement have all demonstrated that with activist Judges of the Supreme Court such as Thurgood Marshall, the ‘Notorious’ Ruth Bader Ginsberg all of blessed memory, the frontiers of Justice can be extended.

    32: Nigeria needs a mapping programme that tries to use effective intelligence to forecast and geolocate its strategic place in the world. So far, we seem to have no roadmap for positioning ourselves and helping to lift up Africa. All this idea of government by marabouts, shamans, all this blood of sacrifice of protective gear against enemies, slaughtering of cross bred cows, donkeys, camels, cats with three legs, one eye, no tail, black tongue and so on will not cut it.

    32: Nigeria needs to address the issues of values, the kind of values that could have helped to find a moral balance in our chaotic social world. Asian politicians, intellectuals and businessmen have sought to embed these teachings in their fabric of their society. The Chinese, are inspired by the teachings of Confucius. These teachings focus on family, respect for elders, obedience to cultural norms, etiquette, moral uprightness and virtue and contribution to social harmony. Indians on the other hand, for the Indians, their moral orbit revolves around the Mahabhrata and the Upanishad which constitute some of the theology around Buddhism, Jainism and Hinduism. The Japanese concept of seppuku is based on the notion of shame. This is what drove Roh Myu-hun to take his own life in 2009 when he was accused of corruption. Asian scholars and statesmen such as Amartya Sen and Mohammed Mahathir have debated the idea of Asian values in contrast with those of the west. For example, some countries have argued that rather than dwelling on Gross National Product as a way of measuring development, they propose a measurement of Gross National Happiness, GNH as a basis of development. These debates are important for framing and laying down long lasting development strategies that ensure that mere infrastructures do not replace human beings.

    33: For us in Nigeria, our political life is bereft of African cultural input, largely because of the way we approached western civilization and modernity. Today, the idea of Ubuntu (I am because you are) has been bandied as a way of defining who we are as Africans. This is in sharp contrast to the xenophobia that has been the hallmark of life in South Africa. African politics has tended to shy away from a rigorous and scientific review of what we consider to be our culture. Rather than rigorous scholarship, African politics tends to lapse into the dark world of shamanism, sorcery, charms, where the marabouts hold sway through their incantations.

    34: To re-load our politics, Nigeria needs to rethink how to rescue our country from the clutches of the dark forces of all forms of extremist ideologies. If Nigeria does not confront the demon of weaponized religion, we may have no country because those who weaponize religion are a greater danger to the religion itself. Nigeria must be a country of one people under one law. To this end, I again appeal to the President. He went to court to cure the injustice that has encouraged corruption in regards to the funds of Local Government Councils. He should go to the Supreme Court to seek a proper interpretation of the implications of the adoption of Sharia Courts in the 12 northern states. Victims of the manipulation of religion constitute over 90% of believers. The encircling steps of the angels of death and doom are here. We have been calling and crying for years. Northern Christians raised these issues before independence, but political expediency by the British colonial state denied them fair hearing. Now, this demon has come back to haunt us. If Nigeria does not kill the dragon of religious extremism, it will be only a matter of time before we become a larger Gaza. Supremacists who hide under religion must have no place in our social and political life. The time to deal with this problem is now, the place to start is here. So, thank you, President Donald Trump for the blowout and throwing an unexploded hand grenade our way. I hope we have a chance to act before it explodes. All Nigerians must walk tall and confident through the length and breadth of this great land.

    • Excerpts from keynote address delivered at the 60th birthday celebration of Dr Reuben Abati at the National Institute for International Affairs, Victoria Island, Lagos on 7th November, 2025.