Category: Comments

  • Making 2027 elections impossible to rig

    Making 2027 elections impossible to rig

    SIR: Every election since 1999 has combined innovation with betrayal. The pattern is painfully consistent: a new technology arrives with fanfare, inspires brief confidence, then collapses under elite interference. Manual voting gave way to the Permanent Voter Card, which reduced impersonation but pushed manipulation to collation centres.

    The Smart Card Reader curbed multiple voting, yet rigging re-emerged in result transmission. BVAS proved that accreditation could be verified but IReV showed that the final tally could still be captured by opacity. The failure to upload results promptly wasn’t a technical glitch, but a structural opportunity for manipulation. Each hour between the polling unit and the central collation became an ungoverned space where trust evaporated.

    Despite progress, vulnerabilities plaguing Nigerian elections include (i) result transmission delay in which data is tampered with before it reaches public view; (ii) collation time gap, where figures mysteriously change during manual aggregation in politically charged rooms; (iii) data hierarchy trap and legal ambiguity, where courts treat digital evidence as inferior to paper; (iv) logistics failure, which remains the most convenient form of voter suppression; and (v) judicial exhaustion loop, where election petitions drag for years, turning justice into a postscript.

     Electoral malpractice is really a crisis of structural empathy. The same spirit that keeps citizens queuing for passports or drivers’ licences fuels manipulation at the ballot. It is a system that rewards delay, prioritises discretion, and weaponises confusion.

    To rebuild credibility, the new INEC chairman, Prof Joash Amupitan, must move beyond administrative reforms toward structural vetoes — systems that make fraud mathematically impossible where code, not conscience, guards the vote.

    Instead of paper copy, INEC should make digitally captured, geo-tagged, time-stamped image of each result sheet, the final and irrefutable record of the vote. Once the presiding officer signs and uploads it, the data should be encrypted and publicly mirrored. Any subsequent entry that differs from it by more than a small margin must be automatically rejected by the system.

    Historically, late arrival of materials has been the quiet weapon of manipulation, particularly in opposition strongholds. To end voter suppression by chaos, introduce a logistics predictability index that publishes a real-time dashboard showing the delivery status of sensitive materials nationwide. If index drops below 95% in any state 12 hours before the election, the chairman can trigger a limited, surgical postponement only for the affected Polling Units, not the entire state.

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    INEC, in collaboration with the National Assembly and the judiciary, must legally elevate encrypted polling-unit data as the primary evidence in court. Paper forms should serve only as backup. That single legal shift will end the practice of arguing over forged forms when the digital truth already exists. Once data becomes law, petitions become shorter, cheaper, and factual.

    Many politicians fear transparency because they equate it with exposure. The chairman’s genius must lie in persuasion — framing transparency not as punishment but as protection. For winners, it validates victory. For losers, it guarantees justice. In that symmetry, reform becomes risk insurance for both sides.

    The gospel of “do not rig” has never worked because it assumes virtue. The new creed must be: you cannot rig. When honesty becomes the path of least resistance, integrity stops being moral heroism and becomes logical self-interest.

    Nigeria can lead Africa’s democratic renaissance if INEC locks every transaction from accreditation to announcement into an immutable, publicly auditable chain. At that moment, the Nigerian election will stop being an act of faith and become one of evidence.

    Amupitan’s mandate is not to run a cleaner election. It is to end the human discretion. The question is no longer “Can we trust INEC?” but “Can INEC design a system that does not require trust?”

    Encrypted uploads, geo-tagged result images, public dashboards already exist. What remains is the moral courage to automate integrity. If he succeeds, the next election will not depend on divine luck or elite restraint but on an architecture so transparent that corruption becomes structurally impossible.

    • Lekan Olayiwola, lekanolayiwola@gmail.com
  • Pension revolution for the Japa generation

    Pension revolution for the Japa generation

    SIR: In recent years, Nigeria has witnessed a powerful wave of “Japa” – skilled workers, young professionals and entrepreneurs leaving in search of greener pastures abroad. At the same time, the rise of hybrid and remote work means many Nigerians remain globally connected: working for foreign firms, earning in dollars, or living partly abroad while attached to Nigerian employers. These diasporans represent a huge potential for foreign investment back into the country that remains largely untapped.

    The National Pension Commission (PenCom) recently issued a landmark Guideline on Foreign Currency Contributions under the Contributory Pension Scheme (CPS), allowing Nigerians abroad and foreign professionals in Nigeria to contribute in U.S. dollars. This is a major step – not only aligning Nigeria’s pension system with global realities but offering a new vehicle for preserving value and boosting the Naira by attracting fresh dollar inflows.

    Under the new regulation, eligible participants – Nigerians living or working abroad, expatriates in Nigeria paid in foreign currency – may remit their pension contributions only in U.S. dollars, channelled into dedicated foreign currency Retirement Savings Accounts (RSAs). For diaspora Nigerians, the remittance path runs through Non Resident Nigerian Ordinary Accounts (NRNOAs), while those in Nigeria earning in foreign currency must use domiciliary accounts linked with their Pension Fund Administrator’s (PFA) custodian bank. PFAs will invest such contributions in a distinct “Dollar Fund”, focusing on dollar denominated assets such as Eurobonds, supranational bonds, and U.S. backed instruments. Contributors may withdraw benefits in dollars or optionally convert to Naira at prevailing rates at retirement or earlier, subject to the withdrawal rules provided. The rationale is to stabilise pension value for globally mobile workers, hedge currency risk, and open the Nigerian pension system to wider global labour pools.

    One of the most compelling benefits of this reform is its potential positive effect on the Naira. Remitted dollars into these RSAs mean fresh foreign currency flows into the banking and pension ecosystem. As more Nigerians abroad choose to channel part of their income home via pension contributions, the cumulative effect may ease foreign exchange scarcity, reduce pressure on the Naira, and promote outward investment in local productive assets. In other words: while the CPS traditionally operated in Naira and was exposed to devaluation risk, the new dollar denomination offers a natural hedge. For contributors, this means greater value preservation; for Nigeria, it means stronger external currency inflows and enhanced credibility of the pension industry.

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    The reform solves a long standing gap. For many years, Nigerians earning abroad were effectively excluded from automatic participation in the CPS because contributions in Naira meant currency loss, conversion hassle and remittance drag. Meanwhile foreign professionals in Nigeria had to navigate multiple pension options. By opening a clear pathway for dollar based contributions, PenCom makes the CPS truly inclusive. The broader workforce – diaspora Nigerians and international talent – now have a simple, regulated vehicle to secure retirement savings in a globally transferable currency. This helps expand coverage, deepen capital markets and give Nigeria a competitive pension proposition.

    However, despite its good intentions, it all comes down to implementation – the existing local scheme is still struggling to gain acceptance, and its full potential continues being undermined by misinformation and under-education. The PFAs, PFCs and PenCom will have to ramp up their education and advocacy locally because the people abroad will be heavily dependent on the opinions of their family and friends in Nigeria in making these decisions. In addition, the operators need to find creative ways to capture the hearts and pockets of the diaspora market that is out there.

    For Nigeria, this reform is a signal that the pension industry is evolving to match the modern world of remote work, global mobility and integrated savings. By embracing dollar contributions, PenCom is sending a message: Nigeria’s CPS is no longer just a domestic scheme – it is open, globally competitive and investor friendly. If stakeholders collaborate thoughtfully – PFAs educating participants, banks facilitating smooth remittances and regulators ensuring transparency – the reform has the potential to become one of the most transformative in the industry’s two decade history.

    • Omagbitse Barrow, FCA,  Abuja.
  • Sarkozy goes to jail

    Sarkozy goes to jail

    Former French President Nicolas Sarkozy about now has spent a week in jail, part of a five-year sentence for criminal conspiracy to obtain election campaign funds from Libya. The rightwing leader of France from 2007 to 2012 made history as the first former head of a European Union country and French post-World War leader to serve time in prison. His journey from presidency to jail is a thriller.

    Sarkozy, 70, arrived at La Santé prison in Paris on Tuesday, 21st October, to begin serving his sentence in solitary confinement. He had walked out of his home in a plush area of the French capital earlier in the day, hand-in-hand with his supermodel-turned-singer wife Carla Bruni-Sarkozy, and headed for a police car that fetched him to prison. As he was being driven to the notorious 19th-Century prison, he again protested his innocence. Posting on X, he wrote: “I have no doubt. Truth will prevail. But how crushing the price will have been. With unwavering strength I tell you (French people), it is not a former president they are locking up this morning, it’s an innocent man.” He added: “Do not feel sorry for me because my wife and my children are by my side… But this morning I feel deep sorrow for France humiliated by a will for revenge.”

    It was one last opportunity for the former president to be heard by the public before entering into prison. Reports said he is being held in solitary confinement for his own safety in a cell that measures about a nine-square-metre. The cell in the prison’s isolation wing, where he will have no contact with other prisoners, has a toilet, a shower, a desk, a small electric hob and a small television for which he reportedly has to pay a monthly fee of 14 €uros, plus the right to a small fridge. He has no mobile phone, only a security-controlled phoneline that allows him contact with his lawyers and family members. He has the right to receive information from the outside world and is entitled to two family visits per week. Sarkozy will be able to leave his cell for one hour a day, to walk in an interior courtyard with the opening to the sky protected by wire mesh. Three prison guards must accompany him when he leaves his cell.

    A court in Paris had, last month, convicted the former president of criminal conspiracy to obtain funds from the regime of late longtime Libyan ruler Muammar Gadhafi to fund his 2007 presidential campaign. The court said Sarkozy, as a presidential candidate and then interior minister, used his position from 2005 to 2007 to foster corruption “at the highest level” by sourcing millions of €uros from Gadhafi. Sarkozy denied doing anything wrong and was cleared of personally receiving the money, but he was convicted of criminal association with two close aides who were indicted for obtaining secret campaign funds from the Libyan strongman. The two men, in 2005, held talks with Gadhafi’s agents at a meeting arranged by a Franco-Lebanese intermediary named Ziad Tiakeddine. (Tiakeddine died in Lebanon shortly before Sarkozy’s conviction.)

    The ex-president appealed the conviction, and under French law he is yet deemed innocent. But the court ruled that he must start serving prison time before his appeal gets heard in view of the “exceptional seriousness of the facts.” He contests both the conviction and the judge’s unusual decision to incarcerate him pending appeal. “I will continue to denounce this judicial scandal,” he wrote on X as he headed to jail. His lawyers said on Tuesday they had filed an immediate appeal for his release, but judges have up to two months to process the request. Those familiar with the French justice system say the  court could order Sarkozy’s release under judicial supervision, or he could be placed under home arrest with an ankle tag. But the court could also decide against letting him out of prison if, for instance, it deems his being in jail the only way to prevent evidence tampering or witness intimidation.

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    Ahead of going to La Santé prison, Sarkozy gave a series of media interviews in which he waxed defiant. “I’m not afraid of prison. I’ll keep my head held high, including at the prison gates,” he told an outlet. He said he had asked for “no privileges” in his treatment behind bars. The former president told another outlet he had packed family photos and three books, as permitted by prison rules for the first week. “I’m bringing The Count of Monte Cristo and two volumes of the biography of Jesus by Jean-Christian Petitfils,” he explained, adding that he’d been advised to also take earplugs. “At night you hear lots of noise, shouting, screaming.” He further stated: “My life is a novel and this ordeal is now part of it. They wanted to make me disappear, but this will make me be reborn.”

    Sarkozy apparently had the sympathy of French governing authorities, only they couldn’t help him against judicial authority. Few days before heading to prison, he was received at the Élysée Palace by incumbent President Emmanuel Macron, a centrist, who told reporters “it was normal that on a human level, I should receive one of my predecessors in that context.” Quizzed about the verdict against Sarkozy, Macron said it was not his role to comment on, or criticise judicial decisions. “Nevertheless, it’s normal that the image of a president being imprisoned…may provoke comments,” he also said, adding: “We must distinguish emotion, including the legitimate emotion of relatives and part of the country… and the proper functioning of justice.” Following the verdict last month, the presiding judge in the criminal conspiracy trial received death threats from unknown people, which Macron publicly called out as “unacceptable.”

    In further indication of official support for the ex-president, Justice Minister Gérald Darmanin said he would go to visit him in prison as part of his role in ensuring Sarkozy’s safety and proper functioning of the jail. “I cannot be insensitive to a man’s distress,” he added. Reports later last week also cited the interior ministry saying two policemen will be posted at the prison to guard Sarkozy. But a top magistrate warned against the risk of “hindering justice” and undermining the independence of the judiciary. “The goal for everyone must be serenity, to allow justice to truly rule independently…free from any pressure,” the magistrate said.

    With the Sarkozy verdict, France beamed a searchlight on a longstanding practice of French leaders cash-cowing Africa for political funding. This practice largely encouraged the culture of corruption of leaders that has bedevilled the continent. But Sarkozy is only a scapegoat, he is by no means the only one who engaged the tack. Other French leaders did. Sarkozy’s hard luck could be because he defaulted on the basic understanding in his deal with Gadhafi, for which allied parties came after him in quest for revenge.

    According to reports, Gadhafi struck the financing deal with Sarkozy’s men in the hope of buying support to clean up his international image and improve diplomatic relations with the West. The largesse might have remained secret if the ex-president honoured the pact to support Gadhafi diplomatically, but he defaulted during the Libyan crisis of 2011 that led to the strongman’s overthrow and killing. Sarkozy’s government voted in the United Nations Security Council for global intervention in Libya’s civil war and sent troops to fight against Gadhafi’s army in support of the country’s transitional government. Following Gadhafi’s death, his son, Saif al-Islam, felt betrayed and spilled the beans about Libya’s funding of Sarkozy’s 2007 election victory; he, indeed, demanded a refund. His disclosure triggered a spate of interrogations and confessions, among them Tiakeddine’s confession that he conveyed money from the Gadhafi regime to Sarkozy’s camp. The allegations persuaded the French justice department to open an investigation, upon which the ex-president was found guilty of corruption and sentenced to imprisonment.

    Literature abounds on how French leaders induced African rulers to funnel money from the continent for financing their political projects. The Sarkozy saga lends fresh credence to the narrative and should provoke societal soul searching in France that would at least dissuade such practice henceforth, if old cases would not be revisited. Meanwhile, the world has a lot to learn from the French about equity before the law and fierce independence of the judiciary. Nigeria could do with that lesson.

    • Please join me on kayodeidowu.blogspot.be for conversation.
  • Political wards as building blocks for national development

    Political wards as building blocks for national development

    • By Vincent O. Akinyosoye

    The Nigerian politico-administrative setup can be harnessed for development planning in the country. There are seven layers of politico-administrative domains with distinct political representatives/caretakers and geographical delineation. At the apex is the nation as a geographical domain with the president as the caretaker. There is the state as a domain under the care of the governor. We also have the senatorial districts with the senator as the representative, and the House of Representatives with the member as the caretaker.

    Then at the state level, we have the House of Assembly member as the representative, followed by the Local Government Council with the chairperson as the caretaker, and finally, the political ward domain with the councillor as the caretaker. This setup is like the organic setup of the human body, which is made up of distinct organs of cells working together to make the human body function as a whole.

    Political wards are the basic foundation on which the country’s governance is based, and like the human body, with different organs, a collection of political wards make up a Local Government Area (LGA). In the same fashion, a collection of LGAs make up a state and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT). Each state has three senatorial districts with the FCT having a single senatorial district. This explains why the upper house of the National Assembly, the Senate, has 109 members. A senatorial district is made up of many LGAs, but fewer than the LGAs in each state. The House of Representatives are delineated based on population so that their numbers vary from five in Bayelsa and Nasarawa states to 24 in Lagos and 44 in Kano states. The House of Representatives has 360 members. Each state House of Assembly has members from each LGA, so that they vary in size of membership, ranging from eight members in Bayelsa State to 44 in Kano State. Each Local Government Council has members from each ward, which vary in number from LGA to LGA. On the whole, there are on average 11 wards per LGA. There are 8,809 wards according to the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), which are used as registration centres for elections in the country. The ward is the political and administrative unit closest to the households where people live and work. Therefore, each one of us belongs to a ward. It is the closest quasi-administrative entity that harbours the household as a family or group of individuals or an individual on its own. The political ward can therefore be harnessed as a building block for national economic development under the bottom-up approach to development.

    Bringing development to wards can enhance the welfare of people, and the level of development at each ward can be used to assess or evaluate governance periodically.

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    The reasoning behind this bottom-up approach is that urbanisation of wards is key to the development of the nation. In terms of political engagement, all mobilisations start in the neighbourhoods of wards where people live and vote. Therefore, it is our origin and our destiny. If wards are liveable and all shades of economic infrastructure (electricity, roads, for example), social infrastructure (portable water, education, health), and institutional (government organs) are fully functional, the nation will be laying the seed of development.

    The creativity of the people in the wards will be unleashed as they blossom to create employment and income, which the government can harness for tax generation. The welfare of the people will be enhanced. Therefore, if we are to make wards the centre of our Sustainable Development Goals agenda, the change being championed by the present administration will be easier to achieve.

    The understanding of the development process in most developing countries, Nigeria inclusive, has always been based on orthodox development theories, which tend to support a strong central or federal government with large-scale expenditures and investments in all areas of human endeavours, from food production to investment in manufacturing, including oil refineries, as well as the provision of all forms of infrastructure. This top-down approach to development may be necessary at the incipient stage of the development process, but as the economy matures, this model has to change. The fundamentals of the economy will need to change, and governance has to be organised from the bottom up to ensure an inclusive development. This is the core message of this treatise on transforming Nigeria’s political wards into the building blocks for sustainable national development.

    A major challenge in the traditional development process is the lack of inclusiveness, that is, how to coordinate people at the household or link political wards with power at the centre. People are now beginning to realise that the government at the top has become too large and too distant to allow for any meaningful participation of all in the development process. This new development process can be organised formally by making the wards agglomeration centres of economic, political, and administrative activities. This way, Nigeria will be managed from the 8,809 wards, which will be connected to a governance web for development. This novel approach to development will also allow the democratic process to grow as the people at this grassroots level (wards) will be able to interact and relate with their political representatives; the councillors, state House of Assembly members, House of Representatives members, up to the senators. This interaction is required because societal problems that constantly confront people manifest at the wards level. It is at this level that insecurity, irregular supply of electricity, absence of motorable roads and potable water, as well as dysfunctional primary schools and health centres are felt the most by the citizens.

    The president and governors pontificate at the top, but the people in the wards pick the garbage. It is leaders at the wards level that should matter to the people the most. Being leaders at the wards, they understand the terrain, the mentality of the people, their idiosyncrasies, problems, and needs. They are the best to articulate issues at the wards to the political class at the higher levels. These wards councillors could network with their colleagues at the local government, state, or federal level, collaborate, and probably form a council of wards leaders as an involuntary national network with local chapters to champion the course of wards.

    Although, wards may be different ecologically and in terms of resource endowments, they resemble one another functionally and infrastructurally. They are the smallest domains of administration and the closest form of administration to the people, but they are traditionally under the weight of a dysfunctional local, state and federal administration. All that is needed is to turn these wards into political and economic nodes to become the focal points for development because they all have similar societal problems to contend with.

    A bold suggestion, washing out of the foregoing exposition that will make the wards the bedrock of socio-economic development is to find a way of managing them in a secular way devoid of any political, ethnic and other interferences. That is, secular in a purely administrative sense and independent of party politics, pious activities, ethno-centric beliefs and traditional institutions. This way, the management of wards will start with the assemblage and management of statistical information that will be regularly and administratively collected. Such information will include both numeric and non-numeric statistics or facts about the ward. This exercise will be formalised by creating in each of the 8,809 wards, a Political Ward Management Desk (PWMD) which will manage an integrated information management system in the office of the councillor in the ward. The system will house information on individuals and all economic, social and institutional activities at the ward level which can be organised cumulatively for national development planning.

    • Akinyosoye is a retired professor of Applied Economics and Data Management and pioneer Statistician-General of the Federation and CEO of National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).
  • A call for continuity, consolidation, and national renewal

    A call for continuity, consolidation, and national renewal

    • By Ojo Emmanuel Ademola

    In our nation’s pivotal journey, a defining moment approaches: will the people choose continuity over chaos and consolidation over confusion? Nigerians are urged to trust President Bola Ahmed Tinubu for a second term—not just as a political move, but as essential for economic sustainability and national renewal.

    The data before us:

    The data we’re examining goes beyond statistics; it reflects the spirit of a nation in transition. It embodies leadership under pressure and highlights a presidency tackling deep-rooted challenges through bold reforms. These figures represent sacrifice, resilience, and a government committed to overcoming obstacles in the pursuit of national renewal.

    We must reject the role of partisan spectators when examining this data. As guardians of Nigeria’s future, it’s our duty to interpret these metrics with discernment and strategic foresight. Increases in oil production, decreases in forex backlog, and trade budget expansions reflect our commitment to reform. Likewise, spikes in inflation or debt should be seen not as failures, but as necessary turbulence on our path to stability.

    Nigeria is currently navigating through significant changes and challenges. The Renewed Hope administration is addressing a complicated economic landscape by focusing on structural reforms instead of temporary fixes. This approach requires the collective patience, support, and collaboration of all citizens who aspire for a brighter future.

    Let’s take a moment to explore the facts, not through the lens of fear, but with unwavering faith. Let’s approach them not with cynicism, but with a strong sense of conviction. Within this data lies an incredible blueprint for a nation that is being transformed, reawakened, and strategically positioned for greatness. Let’s embrace this journey with optimism and excitement!

    Economic indicators: A testament to strategic recovery

    Under President Bola Tinubu’s leadership, Nigeria has seen a positive shift in its daily oil production, increasing from 1.4 million barrels per day to 1.8 million barrels per day. This improvement is a promising sign for the country’s energy sector. However, it is important to address the inflation rate, which has risen from 28.9% to 33.2%, suggesting that we are navigating a period of transition. On a more optimistic note, foreign reserves have increased from $32.9 billion to $34 billion, reflecting enhanced financial stability. The recent economic developments indicate a positive shift in the market, highlighted by the successful clearance of the $7 billion forex backlog, which facilitates smoother foreign exchange operations. Notably, the unemployment rate has decreased from 5% to 4.1%, reflecting an encouraging trend in job creation. Additionally, there has been a remarkable increase in the trade budget, rising from N44.7 billion to a substantial N7.46 trillion, demonstrating a strong commitment to enhancing trade activities. Alongside these changes, the GDP growth rate has improved from 2.7% to 3.46%, indicating an overall strengthening of the economy.

    In a notable shift, fuel importation has seen a significant drop from 66 million litres per day to just 14 million litres. On a more encouraging note, interest rates have decreased from a high of 30.9% to a more manageable 26.25%, offering some relief to borrowers. Meanwhile, the exchange rate has risen slightly, moving from N1,300 to N1,400 per dollar, which may open the door for reassessing and adjusting economic policies. Additionally, the national debt has escalated from N32.37 trillion to N70 trillion, underscoring the challenges ahead and emphasizing the need for ongoing restructuring efforts by the government. This complex landscape calls for innovative solutions and resilience within our financial framework.

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    The recent economic analysis reveals significant changes in the landscape, marked by a remarkable reduction in the Ways & Means figure from N22 trillion to N2 trillion. This illustrates notable improvements in sectors such as oil production and employment, although challenges remain in areas like inflation and national debt. Overall, the presidency has succeeded in stabilizing key macroeconomic indicators and has begun laying the foundation for more profound reforms in trade, production, and fiscal discipline. Critical developments, including the clearing of forex backlogs, a decrease in fuel importation, and an increase in trade budgets, indicate substantial structural shifts rather than mere cosmetic changes.

    Beyond the numbers

    President Tinubu’s first term has effectively laid the foundation for a transformative economic agenda, setting the stage for a second term focused on healing and growth. Building on these strong foundations, the next phase should strategically prioritize interconnected areas that can drive sustainable development.

    To achieve agricultural sovereignty, the administration can capitalize on reduced fuel imports to enhance mechanized farming and stimulate rural agro-industries. Additionally, expanding digital infrastructure is paramount, as increased broadband access and the creation of tech hubs can unleash youth innovation and bolster the nation’s global competitiveness.

    Educational reform will also play a critical role, aligning curricula with 21st-century skills and emphasizing vocational training to boost national productivity. Strengthening healthcare systems is essential, particularly through local pharmaceutical production and improved access to primary healthcare services.

    Establishing a strong security framework is essential for consolidating intelligence, enhancing community policing, and improving border control to protect economic gains. Progress in these interconnected sectors requires continuous, clear, and courageous leadership for sustainable advancement.

    A call for discernment in 2027

    As Nigeria gears up for the pivotal 2027 election cycle, it’s crucial for citizens to stay alert against the rising tide of homiletic propagandists. These individuals—some pastors, imams, and tribal influencers—often wrap political agendas in the guise of religious messaging. They inundate our pulpits and social media platforms with partisan sermons, masquerading as divine mandates.

    It’s vital to resist being drawn in by spiritual theatrics that could ultimately drown out the very change we seek and hinder the blessings we’ve been hoping for. Let’s stay discerning and united in pursuit of a brighter future! Let us not abort a process that is just beginning to bear fruit. Let us not gamble with our future by resetting the clock prematurely.

    President Tinubu has shown the will to reform, the wisdom to recalibrate, and the resilience to withstand storms. What he needs now is time—time to consolidate, time to deepen, and time to deliver.

    Nigeria finds itself at a critical juncture, facing a choice that transcends mere elections—it is a matter of existential importance. The call to action is directed to all Nigerians, regardless of age, region, or faith, to support President Tinubu for another term. This appeal is grounded not in politics, but in the desire for a brighter future for the nation. The emphasis is on advancing collective purpose over individual gain, prioritising the country’s soul and integrity. With a focus on data-driven decision-making and a shared vision, the hope is for Nigeria to rise and thrive.

    • Prof. Ademola is professor of cybersecurity and information technology management.
  • The thrill of independence

    The thrill of independence

    • By Abdu Rafiu

    There is something that is thrilling about independence which triggers a feeling of upliftment. It is an upswelling of a deep sense of freedom, even though it is not every time that independence and freedom are one and the same. One can see that independence is not always connected with freedom, deep within us. One is a means to an end, for example, and not the end by itself. I will come to it presently. The thrill helps one to see, share and swing in the enrapturing  experience of Alhaji Babatunde Jose, now of blessed memory, on the night of Nigeria’s Independence Day. He wrote:

    “As the clock struck mid-night, they took their positions on the dais and watched the lowering of the Union Jack (British Flag) and the hoisting of the Nigerian Flag…and so ended 100 years of British rule…100 years of colonial bondage…And I am happy. And I am sobbing…”

    That was the classic impressionistic reporting by Alhaji Jose, the exceptionally gifted editor and newspaper administrator extra-ordinary, the one and only managing director/chairman of the Daily Times. He filed his report from the Race Course, years later renamed Tafawa Balewa Square. The report was appropriately bylined Babatunde Jose, Editor, Daily Times Newspaper on 01 October, 1960. For those of us privileged to have passed through his hands, his mentorship and his exemplariness on how to be a leader, in our magic kingdom and empire, the largest newspaper organization in Africa South of the Sahara are simply exceptional. On momentous occasions, joyful as Independence Day, devastatingly sad as the bloody Dimka coup, Alhaji Jose would mount the typewriter himself in the Newsroom. The report he filed and his thoughts on the lowering of the Union Jack cannot but evoke sweet nostalgic memories. For the campaigners and freedom fighters, for the generality of Nigerians it was dream come true. School children marched through the streets to gather on fields designated for the great Day, waving the Green-White-Green National Flag to blow away the Empire Day and to welcome the dawn of Independence and freedom in their land.

    The Prime Minister, Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, said in his triumphal tone: “Today is Independence Day. The First of October 1960 is a date to which for two years Nigeria has been eagerly looking forward. At last, our great day has arrived, and Nigeria is now indeed an independent sovereign nation. We are grateful to the British officers whom we have known, first as masters, and then as leaders, and finally as partners, but always as friends.” That was 65 years ago.

    What were the dreams, what was the vision of the nation’s founding fathers and their lieutenants in the field of battle? Have the promises held aloft been realised over the years? Why are we still in the doldrums? Newspaper editorials and political pundits did justice to this in the run-off to last Wednesday, the anniversary day, the day of the re-enactment of the thrills of 01 October, 1960. Political leaders of different hues did broadcast or issued statements, the kernel of which, as accustomed, hammered on the Eldorado in the offing and the plea for peace and cooperation. In spite of the failings, the anniversary every year rekindles sweet memories, especially seeing school children in a march past, and soldiers and policemen doing likewise and, in addition, saluting the National Flag in state capitals.

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    Overtime, President Bola Tinubu has gained confidence and pose, away from tentative steps of his early days in office. As he spoke on Wednesday he exuded warmth and confidence, evidently because he has a list of concrete achievements of his Administration this time to brandish before our gaze, but first what the country has achieved in general. The speech was beautifully put together, uncluttered with tired clichés of the past. It was inspirational, too. Hear him:

    “For decades, the promise of our Independence has been tested by profound social, economic, and political challenges, and we have survived. While we may not have achieved all the lofty dreams of our forebears we have not strayed too far from them. In 65 years since our independence, we have made tremendous progress in economic growth, social cohesion, and physical development. Our economy has experienced significant growth since 1960.

    “Although it is much easier for those whose vocation is to focus solely on what ought to be, we must recognize and celebrate our significant progress. Nigerians today have access to better education and health care than in 1960.  At Independence, Nigeria had 120 secondary schools with a student population of about 130, 000. Available data indicate that, as of year 2024, there were more than 23,000 secondary schools in our country. At Independence, we had only the University of Ibadan and Yaba college of Technology as the two tertiary institutions in Nigeria. By the end of last year, there were 274 universities, 183 Polytechnics, and 236 Colleges of Education in Nigeria, comprising Federal, State and private institutions. We have experienced a significant surge in growth across every sector of our national life since Independence—in healthcare, infrastructure, financial services, manufacturing, telecommunications, information technology, aviation and defence, among others.

    “Our country has experienced both the good and the bad times in its 65 years of nationhood, as is normal for every nation and its people.” Tinubu spoke of the civil war and political storms and efforts to build a “more perfect union in which every Nigerian can find better accommodation and find purpose and fulfillment.”

    As for his Administration, President Tinubu said although he inherited what he called near-collapsed economy flowing from decades of fiscal policy distortions and misalignment; he has rolled up his sleeves to redirect the economy by embarking  on fundamental reforms through channeling money “to fund education, healthcare, national security, agriculture, and critical economic infrastructure, such as roads, power, broadband, and social investment programmes…As a result of the tough decisions we made, the Federal and State governments, including Local Governments, now have more resources to take care of the people at the lower level of the ladder, to address our development challenges.”

    Pledging to work and justify the confidence reposed in him, the President said: “I am pleased to report that we have finally turned the corner. The worst is over, I say. Yesterday’s pains are giving way to relief. To further soothe nerves, he reeled out what his Administration has achieved in specific terms, what he attributed to the reforms as follows: Gross Domestic Product grew by 4.23 per cent, outpacing the 3.4 per cent the International Monetary Fund (IMF) projected; inflation dropped to 20.12 per cent and the administration is working to bring food cost down. There is record-breaking rise in non-oil revenue to over N20trillion as of August; last month alone, the government raised N3.65trillion, 411per cent higher than what was raised in May. Debt service-to-revenue ratio has gone down markedly from 97 per cent to 50 per cent. For him, according to his score-card, things are looking up. “We have paid down the infamous ‘Ways and means’ advances that threatened our economic stability and triggered inflation,” he said. The external reserves rose to $42.03 billion last month, the highest, he said, since 2019. Nigeria trade export rose by 44.3 per cent in the second quarter of the year N7.46 trillion ($4.74 billion). Goods manufactured in Nigeria and exported jumped by 173 per cent with non-oil component accounting for 48 per cent. This time Tinubu came on broadcast stage loaded and waving a glowing record of achievements. The hope glitters that these will manifest in tangible effect at the micro level. Indeed, he spoke proudly of Nigeria being an exporter of Aviation Fuel, credit one must state to Dangote Refinery.

    However, be that as it may, an anniversary cannot detract from reflection and thanksgiving as parts of its essence. As it is in the lives of all human beings, that we are travellers, a country is on a journey also. An anniversary provides the opportunity for reflection, opportunity to look back: How has this journey fared. That is what Tinubu just did on Wednesday. Then, a resolution ensues for renewed striving to attain the goal. For human beings, that goal is fulfilling the purpose of life. For a nation, it is to facilitate the attainment of that goal, through guaranteeing the right environment for the unfolding of talents and abilities, the environment for ennoblement, love, honour and dignity, otherwise all the exertions will come to nothingness. As it is said: “What does it profit a man to gain the whole world, but lose his soul!” We are also told: “Man shall not live by bread alone, but by the words that proceedeth from Word of the Lord.”

    Part of the contemplation would involve asking if independence and freedom are vehicles for the attainment of that goal. Contemplation of the Independence and Freedom thus becomes germane. Independence is not being dependent, whether as a nation, community or a human being. It is a state in which a nation is not dictated to. It is in a position, even if influenced by experiences and lessons learnt from other lands, to take its own decisions thought to be in its interest, and own that decision. It is in a position to take its destiny in its own hands. The nation can plan its life—political or economic without external interference. It can plan to fashion out its own means of protection and secure its borders.

    An independent nation would be free to make its own laws and regulations. Among such laws would be those that guarantee freedom of thought, of speech, freedom of assembly, of movement, freedom to own property and the laws must guarantee fundamental human rights. There can be expansion of such rights by going into a collaborative working or entering into an alliance with other countries and signing treaties with them. To protect their citizens and see to their wellbeing, nations post ambassadors to other lands. So important, therefore, is independence that it enjoins a nation to own allegiance to no other land but to its citizens.

    The independence, however, is a means to an end; it is not an end in itself. That end is free will. The laws which are a feature of independence only serve as guarantees for free will which constitutes an inalienable and inherent essence and property of a human being, the human spirit which is the real man. Any wonder, therefore, that a government can constrain the exercise of freedom only for a while. In the end the spirit will triumph. Over millennia, nations have fought wars; communities have gone into battle in defence of freedom. But then there are restraints to freedom. For there not to be restraints, there would be chaos and confusion. It is not infrequent that we hear it said: “Your freedom ends where mine begins.” We cannot use our freedom to harm others. The immovable limit to freedom is encapsulated in the statement by the Lord when He said: “Do unto others as you would want done unto you.” He also admonished us mankind: “Love thy neighbour as thyself.”

    As it is human beings, so is it with nations. A country cannot in exercise of its freedom invade another country. It may wish to from the point of view of independence but it is forbidden by international sanctions. National laws are consequences of debates among legislators as I discussed last week. The legislators may have come under the external influences such as from constituents, friends, experiences or practices from other nations. The external impressions may have arisen from learning, from reading journals, reading of newspapers, and magazines, or watching television, videos or listening to radio. In these days of social media, internet susceptibility to external impressions is real. All these assail the brains. Thus, the brains receive these for internalization by individuals. The internalization requires that the impressions are passed down for sorting, weighing and examining by the spirit which has as its handmaiden the free will in the modern world of imbalance between the frontal brain, the cerebrum and the small brain, the cerebellum also known as the hind brain, however, the spirit is unable to sift, sort, weigh and examine. And so the laws are not infused with the loftiness that is its inherent quality. Thus what passes as law today is largely the product of the frontal brain. And the laws are passed by show of hands: The ‘yeas’ have it! 

    The spirit is a non-material consistency, totally alien to material in which it sojourns. It can make contact with the outside world only through its body which is material. The brain, on the other hand, is wholly material even if it is more ethereal than any other part of the body. The order is for the spirit to be assisted by the frontal brain which is of material consistency with materials it has gathered using its own instrument, the intellect. The spirit is to take the decision while the intellect carries them out. The spirit has its own freedom of choice called the free will. The more the frontal brain is consulted the more weakened the free will gets, and the situation gets to the point the faculty of free will is totally forgotten. And without the input of the spirit all manner of aberrations ensue. Because the spirit is not called upon to make decisions it is unable to unfold its abilities. And so is it that the law becomes fulfilled; what we use develops and what we don’t use atrophies. In the unfolding of the abilities of the spirit we develop the essence of true love, compassion, helpfulness, patience, understanding, gracefulness, refinement, polish, beauty and love of beauty, humility, kindness and nobility of spirit. And there you are:  A true human being. He stands there radiant, confident, unhampered, healthy and full of joy in worshipful adoration of the Most High, the Almighty. All these cannot happen without the spirit, in the exercise of free will, living and swinging in the Laws of Nature, the Divine Laws. Without the familiarization of oneself with them and obeying them, no man is free, for without inner freedom a man is a slave even if he were a king or an  emperor. He is dependent! There can be no true independence without freedom as its foundation, and freedom not based on the exercise of free will soon leads to unfreedom, indeed, enslavement. The ultimate freedom of man, therefore, lies in the inner freedom!

    • This article was culled from www.radiatingthetruth.com
    • Abdu Rafiu is a renowned editor, newspaper manager and respected elder of journalism.
  • Infrastructure: The game changer for economic growth

    Infrastructure: The game changer for economic growth

    • By Augustine Udoh

    Infrastructure plays a vital role in the economic development of a nation. It encompasses the fundamental physical structures and facilities necessary for economic activity, including transportation networks, communication systems, energy generation and distribution, and water and sanitation systems.

    A well-developed infrastructure is essential for driving economic growth, improving living standards, and enhancing the overall quality of life. The boast of developed economies is premised in the systems, structures and standards of their infrastructures.

    The Role of Infrastructure in Economic Development

    1. Facilitates Trade and Commerce: Infrastructure such as roads, bridges, ports, and airports enables the efficient movement of goods and people, facilitating trade and commerce both domestically and internationally. This, in turn, stimulates economic growth and development.

    2. Attracts Investment: A modern and reliable infrastructure is a key factor in attracting foreign investment. Investors are more likely to invest in countries with well-developed infrastructure, as it reduces the risks and costs associated with doing business.

    3. Improves Productivity: Infrastructure such as energy and water supply systems, and communication networks, are essential for businesses to operate efficiently. A reliable infrastructure enables businesses to increase productivity, reduce costs, and improve competitiveness.

    4. Enhances Quality of Life: Infrastructure such as healthcare facilities, education institutions, and public transportation systems, improves the overall quality of life for citizens. This, in turn, can lead to increased economic productivity and growth.

    5. Supports Innovation and Entrepreneurship: A well-developed infrastructure can support innovation and entrepreneurship by providing access to modern communication systems, transportation networks, and other essential facilities.

    The Impact of Poor Infrastructure on Economic Development

    1. Increases Costs: Poor infrastructure can increase the costs of doing business, making it difficult for companies to operate efficiently and compete in the global market.

    2. Reduces Competitiveness: Inadequate infrastructure can reduce a country’s competitiveness, making it less attractive to investors and hindering economic growth.

    3. Limits Access to Basic Services: Poor infrastructure can limit access to basic services such as healthcare, education, and clean water, reducing the quality of life for citizens.

    4. Hampers Economic Growth: Inadequate infrastructure can hamper economic growth by reducing the efficiency of economic activity, increasing costs, and limiting access to markets.

    Nigeria’s Progress in Infrastructure Development

    The President Bola Tinubu administration has embarked on several ambitious infrastructure projects aimed at driving economic growth and development. Some notable initiatives include:

    – The Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway, a legacy project for the Tinubu Administration, which aims to improve connectivity and facilitate trade and commerce along the coastal regions of Nigeria.

    – The Second Niger Bridge project, which aims to ease traffic congestion and improve connectivity between the eastern and western parts of the country.

    – The Lagos-Badagry 10-lane project with the rail line incorporated into it aims to connect the country to other West African countries which invariably shall impact positively on commerce.

    – The railway modernisation project, which aims to revive Nigeria’s rail network and provide a more efficient mode of transportation for goods and people.

    – The renewable energy initiatives, which aim to increase access to electricity and reduce dependence on fossil fuels.

    These initiatives demonstrate the government’s commitment to improving the country’s infrastructure and driving economic growth.

    Conclusion

    Infrastructure plays a critical role in the economic development of a nation. A well-developed infrastructure is essential for driving economic growth, improving living standards, and enhancing the overall quality of life.

    The present administration has made significant progress in infrastructure development, and it is essential to continue investing in modern and reliable infrastructure to support economic growth and development.

    Recommendations

    1. Increase Investment in Infrastructure: Governments should increase investment in infrastructure development, including transportation networks, energy generation and distribution, and water and sanitation systems.

    2. Improve Maintenance and Upkeep: Governments should prioritise the maintenance and upkeep of infrastructure to ensure that it remains functional and efficient.

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    3. Encourage Private Sector Participation: Governments should encourage private sector participation in infrastructure development through public-private partnerships and other innovative financing models.

    4. Develop Sustainable Infrastructure: Governments should prioritise the development of sustainable infrastructure that is environmentally friendly and resilient to climate change.

    5. Savings from subsidy removal should benefit largely the nation’s infrastructural development.

    6. We will love to see government efforts in the provision of Affordable Housing for the teaming population. Also, intentional rural area development is strongly advised.

    By prioritising infrastructure development and investing in modern and reliable infrastructure, government can drive economic growth, improve living standards, and enhance the overall quality of life for her citizens.

    • Udoh is an estate surveyor & valuer based in Lagos
  • Nigeria’s capital gains tax reform: between fairness and investment deterrence

    Nigeria’s capital gains tax reform: between fairness and investment deterrence

    • By Olanrewaju M. Lassise-Phillips

    Introduction: Beginning January 2026, Nigeria’s capital gains tax (CGT) regime will take a new turn. Under the revised framework, capital gains will no longer be taxed at a flat rate of 10%, but instead at the rate applicable to each taxpayer’s income tax. For corporate investors, especially foreign entities, this means CGT could rise to as high as 30% — effectively tripling the tax burden on disposals.

    The Policy Intent: The government’s stated goal is to promote equity and align with global practice. In many jurisdictions, capital gains are taxed at or near income tax rates to prevent arbitrage and ensure fairness between capital and trading income. Nigeria’s policy designers also appear motivated by a desire to expand the tax base and capture revenue from high-value exits, particularly by non-resident corporations.

    The Policy Reality: However, the new framework diverges sharply from the global models it seeks to emulate. While many developed economies combine higher CGT rates with compensatory reliefs, Nigeria’s reform provides only narrow, sector-specific concessions.

    Under the Tax Reform Acts, 2025:

    • Reinvestment relief applies only where proceeds from share disposals are reinvested in acquiring other Nigerian company shares within the same year of assessment;

    • Threshold-based exemptions protect small investors, that is, individuals with disposal proceeds under N150 million and total gains under N10 million may be exempt;

    • Corporate reorganization and merger reliefs remain in limited cases; and

    • Offsetting of losses against gains is now permitted, but there is no broad rollover relief, no deferral provision, and no preferential long-term gain rates.

    In effect, the reform borrows international tax rates without adopting the accompanying relief architecture that cushions long-term investors.

    Read Also: Police arrest IBBU student over alleged cybercrimes against Bago

    Economic Implications: For a developing economy that relies on private and foreign capital, the policy may inadvertently deter investment. Divestment is not an act of abandonment but an essential phase in the capital cycle — one that frees up liquidity for reinvestment. When exit costs become excessive, investors hesitate to enter.

    The practical challenges are also noteworthy. Determining applicable rates for non-residents, valuing assets in volatile exchange conditions, and ensuring consistent enforcement could complicate compliance and discourage reinvestment. In an environment where predictability already ranks low in global investment indices, such complexity may further undermine confidence.

    The Way Forward: Nigeria’s reform ambition is commendable, but alignment with global norms should be holistic — not limited to tax rates. To achieve fairness without discouraging capital, policymakers should consider:

    • Expanding rollover and deferral reliefs to all qualifying reinvestments.

    • Introducing incentives or lower rates for long-term holdings.

    • Providing transitional arrangements for ongoing investments.

    • Streamlining administrative rules for non-resident taxpayers.

    Without these refinements, the reform risks being seen less as modernization and more as a deterrent to investment mobility.

    Conclusion: Nigeria’s capital gains tax reform reflects an important policy ambition but exposes a deeper challenge — the tendency to transplant foreign models without domestic calibration. True reform lies not in imitation but in adaptation: designing rules that are equitable, enforceable, and consistent with the realities of a developing investment landscape.

    • Lassise-Phillips, the immediate past Chairman, Tax Appeal Tribunal Lagos Zone 1 (2018 – 2024) and a legal practitioner, writes in from Lagos. 
  • Can Africa move up the critical mineral value chain? The hard truth behind a familiar chorus

    Can Africa move up the critical mineral value chain? The hard truth behind a familiar chorus

    • By Obert Bore

    As China opens its doors wider to African exports, extending duty-free market access to all 53 diplomatic partners on the continent, the announcement was met with applause in ministerial corridors from Nairobi to Niamey. For many, the new policy represents another chance for Africa to claim a greater share of the value generated from its abundant mineral wealth.

    But beneath the celebratory rhetoric lies a stubborn question: Can African nations realistically move up the critical mineral value chain?

    Despite decades of calls to “move up the value chain,” the reality on the ground remains largely unchanged. Most African countries that are exporting critical minerals including lithium, cobalt, copper, graphite, bauxite, and manganese, still extracted and exported in raw or semi-processed form, primarily to China. Chinese companies like Huayou Cobalt and Sinomine Resources continue to dominate the downstream processing and refinement stages.

    The ambition to industrialize is not new. It has become a familiar refrain in political and development circles repeated at every major mining conference and development forum. But ambition alone is not enough. Across the continent, the core ingredients needed to build refining capacity remain scarce: reliable electricity, sufficient water supply, and a technically skilled workforce.

    Take Zimbabwe, for example. The government’s recent decision to ban the export of lithium concentrates by 2027 aims to spur domestic processing and value addition. But this policy faces serious constraints. Zimbabwe’s lithium operations already contend with frequent power outages and severe water shortages. Refining just one ton of lithium requires more than 50,000 liters of water, a daunting figure in a region with limited water availability. Without major infrastructure upgrades, scaling local processing remains unlikely.

    Read Also: African tax chiefs unite to enforce fair taxation for the wealthy

    Even if these infrastructure challenges were addressed, Africa still faces a dominant competitor in China. The Chinese government has spent decades building its industrial capacity, investing in massive refining capacity, subsidizing energy and water costs, and nurturing a skilled technical labor force. Today, China commands nearly every stage of the global critical mineral supply chain. In places like the DRC and Mozambique, Chinese firms extract African ore and capture most of the downstream value.

    Some believe regional integration might offer a solution. By pooling mineral resources, energy, and skilled labor across borders, African nations could create more viable processing hubs. Institutions like the Southern African Development Community (SADC) and the African Union have already developed frameworks such as the Green Minerals Strategy to support this vision.

    But in practice, nationalist agendas often get in the way of regional cooperation.

    While the logic of integration is sound, the political will to share benefits across borders remains weak.

    Cost competitiveness also presents a major hurdle. Even if Zimbabwe could process lithium for $50 per ton, Chinese producers, bolstered by government subsidies, might deliver the same output for $45. Global buyers are likely to follow the lowest-cost option, reinforcing China’s dominance.

    Is there a realistic path forward for Africa? Possibly, but it starts with setting pragmatic goals. Instead of trying to replicate China’s full industrial capacity, African countries with significant reserves might focus on midstream activities such as producing battery precursor chemicals or assembling battery components. These areas demand less intensive infrastructure and could still create jobs and retain more value locally.

    But this shift requires more than policy announcements, it demands a candid assessment of current capabilities and coordinated planning across players and countries with significant resources. Until leaders confront the gap between ambition and capacity, Africa’s mineral wealth will continue to enrich others.

  • BAO: Beating best brand?

    BAO: Beating best brand?

    By John Ekundayo

    “If people believe they share values with a company, they will stay loyal to the brand.” – Howard Schultz, former CEO, Starbucks

    What is branding? What distinguishes a branded product or service? How can you and I depict and differentiate one brand of product or personality from another, in business or politics? These and some other questions are likely to pop up as someone reads and reflects on the topic of this essay. In a recent article published in the Nation newspaper, the author provided a precise premise to the subject of branding. He stated, inter alia: “In organizations, a brand is synonymous with the name, design, symbol, or any other feature that distinguishes a firm’s products or services from those of its competitors and creates a unique identity in the minds of customers … Walter Landor, renowned brand designer, opined that “products are made in a factory but brands are created in the mind.” This author concurs with this statement in toto! Presently, with Governor Biodun Abayomi Oyebanji (BAO) in the saddle for 3 years, most followers in the political landscape of Ekiti can identify values of humility, compassion, generosity, and doing what he says he will do (integrity), with BAO; and summing all these up is that the are ready to vote him in again as their Governor for the 2nd term. This sits and situates pretty well with Howard Schultz, former CEO of Starbucks, who succinctly stated: “if people believe they share values with a company, they will stay loyal to the brand”.

    BAO: Building blocks

    “A brand is a voice and a product is a souvenir.” –  Lisa Gansky

    Ab initio, Oyebanji stepped out on the 16th of October 2022 with Ekitikete in mind. He did not take faulty and faltering steps of dealing with people based on their political leaning or party affiliation. BAO, as popularly called by adherents and admirers, places a high premium on people. He, in the prism, of human resource experts and scholars, view Ekitikete as the greatest resource in the leadership – followership dyad. In the colour, content and context of Ekiti, where he was involved in the creation of the state rubbing minds then with statesmen, traditional rulers and elders, he knows, first hand, the sociology of Ekiti people. In addition, having served in previous administrations of the erstwhile Governors – Otunba Adeniyi Adebayo and Dr John Kayode Fayemi – he has apparently comprehended the nuances of governance more than any player in the political arena of Ekiti presently. Moreover, it will be inadequate, without expiscating Biodun Abayomi Oyebanji’s (BAO) leadership approach or style, to conclude that he is a novice or starter in the political emancipation of the Land of Honour – Ekiti. Aare Afe Babalola, one of the founding fathers of Ekiti, sometimes in 2024, while attesting to BAO’s giant strides in all sectors, was down to earth in succinctly stating: “It pains me that you didn’t become governor of Ekiti much earlier than now … However, this governor is doing a yeoman job.”

    BAO: Breeding and boosting inclusion

    Saliently and succinctly stated, the humane and humble personality of BAO starting from inception of his administration till date is laudable and loud for all to bear witness. His exemplary laced with inclusive leadership style has warmed him into the hearts of most Ekitikete, especially those who will by now be in opposing or adversarial camps firing and fighting against his return to office. In this vein, the people with special needs have a voice in the government. Mr. Governor has paid uncommon attention to people living with disabilities in the state by appointing a specialist, Princess Adetoun Agboola, as the Special Adviser of Special Education and Social Inclusion in the Executive Council of Ekiti State, to nurture them. In addition, Mr. Governor, shunning publicity, during his birthday, always directs all his friends and family members to channel whatever gifts they intend offering him to his ‘friends’ – people living with disabilities. This is seemingly unique and uncommon in the corridor of power, especially in the context of Nigeria!

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    By and large, without gainsaying it, his style has garnered great gains for the ruling party – All Progressives Congress (APC) – in the state and national level, taking cognizance of the fact that the Ekiti Gubernatorial election coming up on the 20th June 2026 is the first off season election preceding the presidential election of 2027! In essence, the APC must get it right in dotting the i’s and crossing the t’s. It is on the heels of this that the National Working Committee (NWC) of the party should be lauded for acting swiftly in granting BAO a clean bill of health to contest the June 2026 election whilst disqualifying two other contenders, who failed to satisfy the minimum prerequisites to becoming the party’s candidate. As yours sincerely was stating while appearing on the TVC News Breakfast edition of Saturday, 11th October 2025, that any missteps to the contrary by the highest administrative organ of the party, the NWC, could result in litigation that may negatively affect and/or afflict the gubernatorial quest of the APC in Ekiti. 

    BAO: Boasting best brand?

    Remarkably, from the outset of his administration, he mouthed the shared prosperity mantra as the social contract he signed with Ekitikete. This is encapsulated in the 6 Strategic Actionable Pillars of his administration. In this vein, he directed the Office of Transformation and Service Delivery (OTSD), over which this essayist superintends to scrutinize work plans of Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) before adoption into the budget. The work plans should be in sync with the 6 Strategic Pillars of his administration, namely: (1) Youth Development and Job Creation; (2) Agriculture and Rural Development; (3) Human Capital Development; (4) Infrastructure and Industrialization; (5) Arts, Culture and Tourism; and (6) Governance.

    Presently, BAO’s administration is 3 years in office. Is the BAO brand speaking? There are at least nine roads awaiting commissioning in diverse locations of the State during this 3rd anniversary celebration, among which is the construction of the Ado Ekiti Ring Road (Phase 1). Moreover, there are 5 General Hospitals already renovated and retrofitted with state of the arts equipment and facilities. These are located in Ifaki, Ilawe, Ayede, Efon Alaaye and Okemesi – all spread across the 3 Senatorial Districts of Ekiti State. In addition, as we speak there are about 5,000 young farmers engaged in farming under the Bring Back the Youth into Agriculture programme of the incumbent administration. The BAO’s administration expended, and is still expending, huge and humongous resources on Agribusiness involving land clearing (up to 4,000 hectares), tractorization, subsidized farming inputs and extension services. The output was mass harvest of farm produce flooding the markets, whilst the outcome is that for the first time Ekiti is adjudged to have the lowest food price index in the south west of Nigeria. Oyebanji is bringing back the hey days of the late sage, Chief Obafemi Awolowo, to Ekiti State. There are 3 Renewed Hope Dormitories earmarked for commissioning for young farmers located in Eporo, Iyemero and Ikere. This author as the head of the Project Subcommittee of the 3rd Anniversary led other critical stakeholders round these projects and others due for commissioning. These dormitories are designed and equipped with common rooms possessing cable television and other ancillary facilities to attract and retain the young minds on the farms. Kudos to the Honourable Commissioner of Agriculture and Food Security, Mr Ebenezer Boluwade, and his team for working in tandem with the agreed work plan with OTSD.

    On top of these laudable feats, God has been gracious to give Ekiti unprecedented peace in Ekiti. This is not without the yeoman’s traversing and conversing with relevant organs of government and critical stakeholders in Abuja handling the security architecture of the country. It is no fluke that with less than 9 months to the next gubernatorial election, the Land of Honour is embracing and enjoying all round peace and progress. BAO’s leadership style is really boosting uncommon confidence among Ekitikete and making BAO’s brand unbeatable in the political landscape of Ekiti. This is the first time that peace is boosting progress in the trajectory towards prosperity!

    BAO: Bracing Best Brand!

    “If you don’t give the market the story to talk about, they’ll define your brand’s story for you.” – David Brier, author and brand identity expert.

    In construction engineering, bracing is the utilization of structural elements, which may be permanent or temporal in nature, to stabilize a building or structure with the aim of resisting lateral forces from wind, seismic activity or some other external loads. In essence, when engineers make use of bracing it is to prevent the building from buckling, cracking, deflecting or collapsing, as the case may be.

    It is a truism that many of the achievements of the BAO’s administration have been adjudged as mostly under-reported to the chagrin of some of us who are critical and core stakeholders in the Ekiti project. Any wonder, David Brier, celebrated author and brand identity expert, opinionated thus: “If you don’t give the market the story to talk about, they’ll define your brand’s story for you.” It is high time Governor Biodun Abayomi Oyebanji (BAO) invested more in robustly publicizing or disseminating the good works of his administration in order to forestall any denigrator to diminish and denounce his good works. He needs not be told to blow his trumpet in this day and age of internet technology taking cognizance of the fact that ‘internet does not forget.’ The indecorous mien of some unscrupulous business people and politicians is even the raison d’etre for protection and preservation of one’s brand, be it in the marketplace or in the political arena. This is in sync with the assertion of Warren Buffet, American investor and philanthropist who stated inter alia: “It takes 20 years to build a reputation and five minutes to ruin it. If you think about that, you’ll do things differently.” Going forward, and as we approach the gubernatorial election of 20th June 2026, it is high time, BAO, in depicting his brand as the best among the seeming motley of contenders, attempted in altering the status quo ante by propagating more media presence befitting his transformational strides in Ekiti – the Land of Honour!

    Engr. (Dr.) John Moyo Ekundayo, is the Special Adviser/Director General on Transformation and Service Delivery, to the Ekiti State Governor. He writes from Ado Ekiti. He can be reached via +2348030598267 (WhatsApp) or email address: jekundayo@ekitistate.gov.ng