Category: Discourse

  • Building a circular Nigeria: Converting plastic waste into opportunity

    Building a circular Nigeria: Converting plastic waste into opportunity

    By Samuel Okafor

    Across Nigeria’s bustling cities and growing peri-urban communities, the signs of progress are everywhere – expanding markets, rising consumption, and a youthful population driving demand. Yet this growth brings with it a familiar challenge: plastic waste.

    From busy Lagos streets to the creeks of Niger Delta, discarded packaging often clogs drains, litters markets, and seeps into waterways, threatening livelihoods and ecosystems alike.

    Nigeria generates an estimated 2.5 million tonnes of plastic waste each year, with less than 10 per cent effectively recycled.

    Across West Africa, more than 80 per cent of plastic waste remains mismanaged, posing risks to public health, biodiversity, and coastal economies. But amid these challenges, a quiet transformation is underway, driven by collaboration, innovation, and policy reform.

    Private sector leadership

    The private sector is increasingly at the forefront of efforts to address Nigeria’s plastic challenge. Not only through corporate initiatives but by shaping the systems that make circularity possible.

    One of the most notable of these collaborations is Food and Beverage Recycling Alliance (FBRA), a coalition of forward-looking companies accelerating sustainable waste management in the country.

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    Established as the first Producer Responsibility Organisation (PRO) in Nigeria, FBRA advances Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) and ensuring  producers and importers of packaged goods take responsibility for the post-consumer stage of their packaging materials.

    Through partnerships with government regulators like National Environmental Standards and Regulations Enforcement Agency (NESREA), FBRA is driving the institutionalisation of EPR in Nigeria. Its advocacy and technical support have informed development of national policies, standard operating frameworks, and recycling models that are replicated across sectors.

    Driving impact together

    FBRA’s strength lies in collective responsibility. Its member companies are not only funding and expanding recovery systems but also building scalable solutions that make recycling work in the real world.

    Across the value chain, organisations are investing in aggregation networks, supporting collection agents, developing recycling infrastructure, and creating demand for recycled materials, turning plastic waste into economic opportunity.

  • 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

  • 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.

  • Trump wrong to put Nigeria on Country of Particular Concern list

    Trump wrong to put Nigeria on Country of Particular Concern list

    By Mustapha Isah

    The US president, Donald Trump has issued a threat to take military action in Nigeria over what he sees as the persecution of Christians. He has accused the Nigerian government of not doing enough to prevent radical Islamists from carrying out what he refered to as genocide against Christians.

    Trump even claimed that Christianity is facing an existential threat in Nigeria. He warned that the US military would invade Nigeria and deal a severe blow the Islamist radicals responsible for the killing  of Christians in Nigeria if the Nigerian government doesn’t do something fast about it.

    The US President’s claim of Christian genocide in Nigeria is completely wrong. His threat of military action in Nigeria is based on a false premise . Framing Nigeria’s current security challenges as driven by religion is way off the mark.. Christians, Muslims, animists and atheists have all be victims of insecurity in Nigeria.

    The Boko Haram insurgency started in Borno State in 2009 under former President Umar Musa Yar’Adua. He did his best to curtail them until he passed away. The subsequent governments of former President Goodluck Jonathan and Muhammadu Buhari battled the insurgents , in the best way they could. Infact, under Buhari, bandits emerged terrorising the north west and north central zones. These groups do not have respect for the religious affiliation of their victims. It is on record that Boko Haram insurgents have attacked several Mosques and killed thousands of Muslims in Borno, Yobe , Kano and Adamawa, while bandits have decimated hundreds of Muslims in Zamfara, Sokoto and Niger States. If the motive of the insurgents and bandits is  to wipe out Christians as alleged by Trump, why are they also killing Muslims? This is to show that their motive goes beyond religion. The aim of the Islamic terrorists is to set up a Muslim theocratic  enclave in northern Nigeria and are determined to crush anyone who opposes them, Christians and Muslims alike.

    When you claim that there is genocide against Christians in Nigeria, the impression being created is that no Christian is safe in the country. The US government’s framing of the violence in Nigeria as Islamists killing Christians oversimplifies a complex situation.The motives for violent attacks in other areas such as Benue and Plateau States are different. The fertile land in Benue is an attraction to the nomadic herders resulting in conflicts between sedentary farmers who are Christians and the Fulani herders who are Muslims  . A slightly different scenario is playing out on the Plateau where the conflict is between the indigenes who are Christians and the Muslim Fulani settlers. The Plateau situation is largely about land grabbing.Farmers have destroyed herds of livestock worth millions of naira  , and sometimes killed herders in retaliation for the destruction of their crops.

    There shouldn’t be a debate as to whether Muslims or Christians are being killed in Nigeria. No innocent life should be cut short by any violent group. It is the responsibility of the government to protect the life of every Nigerian. Humanity is diminished when life is lost unjustly. In spite of the defective nature of the 1999 consideration ( as amended) , it recognises the fact that the number one priority of government is the protection of life and property.

    No nation is completely immune from violence. The US  itself experiences attacks on places of worship including Churches, Mosques and Synagogues. But the perpetrators of such heinous crimes are swiftly brought to justice. But why is it so difficult for the government in Nigeria  to bring the perpetrators of the killings justice?

    The administration of President Bola Tinubu has made appreciable effort in  dealing with the security situation he inherited.

    The Global Terrorism Index, an acclaimed international organization has reported a drop in terror attacks in Nigeria. Our gallant military is decimating the insurgents and bandits. More than 13,500 terrorists have been killed, over 17,000 suspects arrested and 9,800 abducted individuals rescued in the last two years.

    Leaders of terror groups and bandits are being arrested and some sent to meet their maker. Some leaders of the Ansaru terror group have been apprehended and are facing prosecution.

    Those responsible for the attacks on the Owo Catholic Church in Ondo State and the recent killings in Yelwata in Guma Local Government Area of Benue State have been arrested and have been arraigned in court to face justice. But more needs to be done.

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    President Tinubu has expressed his commitment to defeat terror. He recently told the new service chiefs that Nigerians expect results from them,  rather than excuses, in the fight against insecurity. The Federal Government has also said it was open to receiving the support international partners in the fight against insurgency and banditry, but based on mutual respect.. It is obvious that Nigeria needs international assistance to defeat terrorism. The Federal Government should seek assistance from willing foreign partners.

    Nigeria is a sovereign nation. It’s territorial integrity must be respected by all , including the United States. It  will be a violation of the United Nations charter for the US to carry out any attack on Nigerian soil without the express authorization of the government. The US can assist in defeating terror through intelligence sharing, training of our military, provision of military software and hardwares, but definitely not through threats.

    President Tinubu whose wife is a Christian, who handed over mission schools to their original owners , instituted a Christian annual thanksgiving of  the Lagos State civil servants, promoted religious harmony when he was the Governor of the state cannot be associated with religious intolerance  or  targeting of  Christians. He has repeatedly vowed to uphold the principle of freedom of religion as enshrined in Nigeria’s constitution.

    The government should see Trump’s threat as a wake up call to re-double efforts in the fight against insecurity in Nigeria.

    Nigerians should not allow Trump’s introduction of religion into our security challenges to divide them.. They should instead rise up as one as support the government and our security agencies to defeat terrorism.

    Isah, FNGE, is former President, Nigerian Guild of Editors .

  • Securing Nigeria through town–gown partnership

    Securing Nigeria through town–gown partnership

    By Kayode Egbetokun

    Let me speak first as a citizen before I speak as the Inspector-General of Police. I am deeply concerned about the moral and mental state of our country. This gathering is not just another academic conference; it is an awakening. It calls our minds to think differently, listen deeply, and act wisely. I look around and see the officers who protect and the lecturers who teach are in this hall. The elders who advise and the youths who will inherit tomorrow are also here. Seated among us are our revered traditional rulers; custodians of wisdom, culture, and community harmony; whose moral authority still commands peace where the law sometimes cannot reach. The journalists, chroniclers of truth, whose pens and voices help shape national perception and hold power accountable. And let us not forget the entrepreneurs and business leaders who drive our economy, the artisans and traders whose hands sustain daily life, the clergy who guide our moral compass, and every citizen whose choices shape our collective destiny. Together, we all have a part to play in building the Nigeria we desire, a nation secured not by force alone, but by the united will of its people.

    The truth is that a nation’s first line of defence is not its army; it is its people; educated, disciplined, and united by the rule of law. A belief is formed long before a shot is fired. A notion comes before a bomb is made. Truth is surrendered before peace is broken. That is why gatherings like this matter. They speak not only to the noise of our times but to the conscience of our country. By hosting this summit, LASUED has shown rare vision. You have reminded us that universities are not just repositories of knowledge; they are refineries of the national conscience. So, we are not only here to discuss the police; we are here to discuss peace itself. For safety is not merely the absence of crime; it is the presence of justice, knowledge, and trust. Insecurity is not just a policing problem; it is a societal one, rooted in the failure of values, education, and civic discipline.

    When ideals crumble, ignorance rises. When people stop trusting, fear spreads. That is why the dialogue between the town and the gown is not ceremonial; it is existential. The patrol van and the classroom are fighting the same war: one battles ignorance, the other its consequences. One opens the mind; the other protects what the mind has built. When the teacher and the officer walk together, crime loses shelter. When ideas and enforcement work together, peace begins to take shape. As we deliberate today, let us remember this truth: Nigeria’s future will not be secured by guns, but by brains and moral discipline.

    SECURING NIGERIA THROUGH THE TOWN–GOWN PARTNERSHIP

    The Town–Gown Partnership must no longer be viewed as a conversation between the Police and the universities alone. It must evolve into a national doctrine of collaboration; a model that binds every sector of our society together under a shared mission of peace, progress, and prosperity. The “town” represents the vibrant energy of our people,  the markets, the media, the palaces, the mosques, the churches, the workshops, the farms, the boardrooms, and the communities that pulse with the daily rhythm of Nigeria. The “gown” represents the knowledge powerhouses, our universities, research centres, think tanks, and professional institutions that create ideas, technologies, and policies to shape the future. When these two realms merge; the practical wisdom of the town and the intellectual capital of the gown, a nation moves from reaction to prediction, from survival to innovation, from suspicion to synergy. This partnership must therefore extend to every sphere of national life:

    • Between government and academia, to design policies rooted in evidence and measurable impact.

    • Between security agencies and communities, to transform policing from enforcement to partnership.

    • Between business and education, to turn research into enterprise and create jobs for our youth.

    • Between religious institutions and civic leaders, to rebuild moral capital and social discipline.

    • Between media professionals and educators, to promote truth, tolerance, and national cohesion.

    • Between traditional institutions and modern governance, to blend wisdom with law and heritage with innovation.

    No nation develops in isolation. The mind of the university must engage with the realities of the street; the hands that build must learn from the heads that think. It is in this handshake between knowledge and experience that national strength is born. Every sector has a stake; and a role. The teacher shapes conscience; the cleric nurtures morality; the entrepreneur drives productivity; the artist awakens national spirit; the journalist protects truth; the technologist creates solutions; the traditional institutions remain the custodians of our cultural heritage promoting peaceful coexistence and the Police, standing at the moral centre of it all, protect the peace that allows every other sector to thrive. If Nigeria must stand secure, then our strength must not lie in silos but in synergy, where every citizen, every scholar, every faith, every trade, and every tongue becomes part of one shared security network.

    This is the true meaning of the Town–Gown Partnership: a whole-of-society covenant where knowledge serves humanity, and humanity protects knowledge. It is not just a collaboration; it is a national rebirth. We must, therefore, build a Nigeria where innovations in the universities positively shape the operation of government, where government funds the innovation of the gown, where business applies the findings of research, where media amplifies only the truth and sinks falsehood and where the Police safeguard the environment that makes all these possible. Because the defence of a nation is not its army, it is its unity of purpose. The most advanced weapon any country can possess is the partnership of its people. And the surest foundation of peace is not the wall that divides us, but the bridge that connects us.

    THE MORAL FOUNDATION OF SECURITY

    It is pertinent to know that no security plan can succeed where the conscience of a nation is asleep. Our laws may punish crime, but only morality prevents it. The true battle for peace begins not in the streets, but in the soul of a people. When values collapse, violence follows. When conscience weakens, corruption takes root. When truth becomes negotiable, trust disappears. A society cannot legislate its way out of moral decay; it must educate and elevate its way out. That is why the classroom and the pulpit must never grow silent. They are our first police stations of the mind. They shape the way citizens think before the law ever restrains how they act. The teacher and the cleric are our earliest peacekeepers, forming conscience, building empathy, and nurturing the discipline that makes security sustainable. Every act of crime begins first as a thought. Every act of violence begins first as a belief that right and wrong no longer matter. So when we speak of the Town–Gown Partnership, we are also speaking of a moral partnership, between education and ethics, between learning and living right.

    Our institutions of learning must therefore teach more than skills; they must teach citizenship. They must graduate not only job seekers, but nation builders. And our religious institutions must preach not only salvation, but civility; not only faith, but fairness. Security without morality is policing without purpose. That is why the Nigeria Police Force, under my leadership, has continued to emphasize professionalism, human rights, and ethical conduct. Because when a Police officer stands for integrity, he becomes a teacher in uniform, a moral example of the justice he enforces. Let us, therefore, rebuild the moral foundation of our nation, one classroom, one family, one pulpit, one police station at a time. For it is only when conscience returns to the centre of our national life that peace will find a permanent address in Nigeria. But moral strength must now meet modern strategy. The threats we face today demand both conscience and competence.

    UNDERSTANDING THE MOMENT: HOW INSECURITY IS CHANGING

    Distinguished guests, Nigeria, like many nations, is facing a complex and evolving security environment. Today’s threats are faster, smarter, and harder to detect. We now battle crimes that move as swiftly as data, criminals who hide not only in forests, but behind firewalls. A single keystroke can inflict more damage than a bullet. A viral post can ignite violence faster than a match can light a flame. A lie repeated a thousand times can tear apart an entire community overnight. This is the new frontier of danger: fast, connected, and merciless. We face multiple layers of insecurity, insurgency and banditry in some regions, the growing menace of kidnapping for ransom across state lines, the plague of cultism and drug abuse among our youth, the rise of cybercrime, and the growing influence of misinformation online. The Nigeria Police Force, under my command, has embraced one truth: we cannot fight 21st-century crime with 20th-century tools. That is why we are undergoing the most profound transformation in our modern history; from a reactive, enforcement-driven institution to a proactive, intelligence-led, technology-driven, and community-focused Police Service. We are expanding our cybercrime units, modernizing our forensic labs, deploying drones and data analytics, and investing heavily in human capacity. Our goal is simple, to stop crimes before they happen, rather than chase them after they occur. But technology alone cannot build trust. Algorithms do not inspire communities. Real security is born out of relationships and this is where academia, the gown, becomes an indispensable ally.

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    THE WAR OF FALSEHOODS: TRUST, TRUTH, AND NATIONAL SECURITY

    In this new age of connectivity, perhaps the most dangerous weapon in our society is not the gun, but the lie. Misinformation has become a silent bomb; it does not destroy buildings; it destroys trust. A single false post can cause chaos faster than a bullet can travel.

    Today, misinformation stands among the most potent threats to peace and stability in our society. With just one false narrative, an entire community can be thrown into turmoil. The Nigeria Police Force has been one of the worst hit. Every day, manipulated videos, distorted stories, and unfounded allegations spread across social media, painting the men and women who risk their lives for this nation as villains instead of protectors. These falsehoods don’t merely wound reputations; they erode public trust, discourage cooperation, and make the job of policing infinitely harder. When citizens begin to doubt those who secure them, the fabric of collective safety begins to tear apart. A society cannot fight crime with suspicion; it must fight with unity and shared truth. Some of these campaigns are not innocent mistakes. They are deliberate attempts by enemies of the state; masquerading as activists or influencers,  to discredit the security establishment and weaken national resolve. They thrive on confusion, feed on division, and seek to make citizens see their protectors as their persecutors. That is why we must confront misinformation as a national security threat; not with censorship, but with civic education, digital literacy, and transparent communication.

    The truth remains that the Police cannot succeed without the trust and support of the people. In every democracy, effective policing depends on partnership, because security is not enforced; it is co-created. Here in Nigeria, the leadership of the Nigeria Police Force has continued to do its utmost to build public confidence and earn the trust of the people through openness, accountability, and community engagement. Yet, our sincere efforts are constantly undermined by enemies of the state who hide under the cloak of activism, spreading misinformation and throwing spanners into the machinery of our work. Their actions do not strengthen democracy; they weaken it. They do not build trust; they destroy it. And by doing so, they make policing more difficult and fuel insecurity in our nation. Let me state categorically: we are not deterred. We remain steadfast in our mission to build bridges of trust, earn the confidence of the people, and foster genuine collaboration between the Police and the communities we serve. Because when trust is broken, fear grows, but when trust is built, peace follows.

    REIMAGINING SECURITY THROUGH KNOWLEDGE: THE KNOWLEDGE–COMMUNITY PHILOSOPHY

    For too long, the classroom and the community have worked in parallel lines; learning separately, serving separately. It is time to bridge that divide. The police safeguard the streets; the university safeguards the nation’s intellect. The police know what happens; the scholar knows why it happens. The solution to national security lies somewhere between the “what” and the “why.” Imagine criminology departments collaborating with Divisional Police Officers to design predictive crime models. Imagine psychology scholars working with our intelligence units to understand radicalization. Imagine engineering students developing surveillance solutions for the Force, and sociologists using data to guide our community dialogue programmes. That is the true essence of the Town–Gown partnership, not ceremonial collaboration, but shared innovation. Nigerian universities must become think-tanks for public safety, and the Nigeria Police Force must serve as a living laboratory for applied research. When knowledge and law cooperate, peace endures. The Town–Gown Partnership is, at its heart, knowledge in uniform and wisdom in motion.

    BUILDING THE PARTNERSHIP: TURNING RESEARCH INTO REALITY

    Esteemed participants, to make this partnership concrete, I propose five pillars:

    1. Data-Driven Policing: Convert police operational data into predictive models that identify crime hotspots before incidents occur. Let data, not speculation, guide deployment.

    2. Youth Behavioural Studies: Partner with universities to understand why young people drift toward cultism, extremism, and crime, and to design evidence-based interventions.

    3. Cybersecurity and Digital Ethics Education: Develop joint digital literacy and cyber defence programs. Let young people not only connect, but also defend.

    4. Community Conflict Management Frameworks: Build new models of community dialogue and restorative justice to strengthen trust between citizens and police.

    5. Public Trust Evaluation: Engage universities to measure public perception and the impact of police reforms; ensuring accountability and responsiveness.

    We invite student researchers, innovators, and social scientists to walk with us. When young minds become part of policing, they cease to be bystanders, they become builders of peace. Security is not a task; it is a culture. Where education fails, crime begins. Where morals collapse, violence thrives. Where communities stop caring, insecurity grows. That is why our national renewal must start from the family, the classroom, the faith centre, and the media space. Lagos offers a model of success,  where government, security, and academia collaborate closely. The partnership between the Lagos State Police Command, the State Government, and institutions like LASUED has enhanced community participation and rapid response. Let us institutionalize such efforts nationwide;  through Campus Security Partnership Desks where students, police, and administrators meet regularly to anticipate and address threats.

    Every crime statistic hides a story, a family that lost direction, a youth who lost purpose, or a community that lost compassion. Real security is not achieved by punishment alone but by restoring hope. Empathy must walk side by side with enforcement; and every police action must defend the dignity of human life.

    CONCLUSION: WHEN KNOWLEDGE STANDS GUARD

    Distinguished ladies and gentlemen,

    Nations are not secured by walls or weapons; they are secured by wisdom. They are sustained by people who think deeply, act bravely, and serve faithfully.

    If we succeed in forging this partnership, then history will record that when darkness threatened our land, it was not the sound of gunfire that answered, it was the sound of understanding. Let this moment, right here at LASUED, be remembered as the dawn of a new security renaissance — one born not of fear, but of faith; not of suspicion, but of shared purpose. I see a Nigeria where the police patrol with empathy, the youth dream with discipline, and our universities light the path with innovation. I see a nation that learns its way to peace, teaches its way to progress, and thinks its way to greatness.

    Because when knowledge stands guard, ignorance retreats. When communities unite, criminals scatter. And when truth takes the microphone, falsehood loses its audience. So today, I call on every scholar, every officer, every citizen — let us rise together. Let us build a nation where the pen and the uniform no longer stand apart, but side by side, defending one flag, one faith, one future.

    Egbetokun Ph.d., NPM, Inspector-General of Police delivered this keynote address at the third security summit of the Lagos State University of Education, Oto-Ijanikin themed: Strengthening the partnership between town and gown in the age of insecurity.

  • 50 facts that make UNILORIN fantastic at 50

    50 facts that make UNILORIN fantastic at 50

    • By Mahfouz. Adedimeji

    When the Federal Military Government decided to establish the University of Ilorin in 1975, the government was mainly concerned about enhancing the capacity of Nigerians in sync with the vision behind the Third National Development Plan. Nothing would have suggested then that the university seedling would blossom some 50 years after to a formidable oak in the global university ecosystem, a model for other universities.

    As many colours make a rainbow a delightful spectacle, there are many facts that make the University of Ilorin tick, all etching it in gold. As the University marks its golden jubilee with events and activities, including the conferment of distinguished ambassadorial awards on its 50 alumni and it’s 40 convocation ceremonies, a sneak peek into facts that make the University a fantastic phenomenon is desirable. What 50 facts make the better by far university phenomenal at 50?

    Blasts from the Past

    Beginning with historical facts, it is appropriate to note that the University of Ilorin started as a College of the University of Ibadan, the first University in Nigeria, which also began as a College of the University of London at inception in 1948 (1). The first principal of the University College, Ilorin, was Prof. Takena Tamuno, who was appointed in September 1975 after which he served briefly till December 1975 when he became the Vice Chancellor of the University of Ibadan (2). The second principal and first Vice Chancellor of the University was Prof. Akin Akinkugbe, former Dean of the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Ibadan, who later became Vice Chancellor of Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria (3). The University started from a chalet at No 5, Forest Road, GRA, Ilorin, where the administrative work of the institution commenced in March, 1976 (4). Other pioneer principal officers were the Registrar, Mr Olu Daramola; the Bursar, Mr. I. A. Oyawoye; and the Librarian, Mr B. A. Oni-Orisan with Engr R. A. Imohiosen being the Director of Works (5).

    A section of the Kwara State College of Technology was given by the new Military Governor, Brig. Gen. General Innih, to serve as the temporary site in 1976 (6) while the University became an autonomous institution in 1977 (7). With a land mass of 15,000 hectares, the University is not only the largest in Nigeria but also “the largest university permanent site in all of Africa”, according to Akinkugbe in his 2010 autobiography, Footprints & Footnotes (p.126) (8). The University started with 200 students who resumed on October 23, 1976 (9). It began as an international university as two pioneer students were foreigners, paving the way for the emergence of the University as one with the highest enrolment of international students in Nigeria years later as acknowledged by the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) (10).

    The acclaimed better by far University started with three Faculties under the distinguished Deanships of Prof. O. Awobuluyi of Arts, Prof. J. O. O. Abiri of Education and Prof. M. O. Olofinboba of Science (11). The 200 pioneer students were 61, 108 and 31 respectively in the Faculties of Arts, Education and Science (12). While postgraduate studies started at the University in 1978 with two students in the Faculty of Science, the Postgraduate School was only established on November 8, 1983 (13). The University Library was opened in 1976 and restructured in 1977 with its initial holdings being 7,314 books, 594 journals made up of 1,500 volumes and 63 government publications (14). The current main University Library was built on the Permanent Site in 1990 (15).

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    Current Crosscurrents

    At 50, the University of Ilorin has 16 Faculties which are Agriculture, Arts, Basic Clinical Sciences, Basic Medical Sciences, Clinical Sciences, Communication and Information Sciences, Education, Engineering and Technology, Environmental Sciences, Law, Life Sciences, Management Sciences, Pharmaceutical Sciences, Physical Sciences, Social Sciences, and Veterinary Medicine (16). With over 100 academic Departments in the given Faculties, the University offers the widest range of academic programmes in Nigeria (17). It is the only public university in Nigeria that has recorded two decades of interrupted academic calendar, a development that can be traced to the year 2000 under the Vice Chancellorship of Prof. Oba Abdulraheem (18). The University has been the most sought after in Nigeria for more than a decade (19).

    Meanwhile, other facts include the leadership roles of the University in spearheading the establishment of associations like the Association of West Africa Universities (AWAU), Consortium of Six African Universities (U6+) and Consortium of Eight Universities in Kwara State (KU8+) among others (20); being the first Nigerian University to emerge the overall winner of National Tertiary Admission Performance Merit (NATAP-M) awards of JAMB in 2024 and 2025 under the Vice Chancellorship of Prof. Wahab Egbewole, SAN (21); and emerging as a most prolific producer of Vice Chancellors, the only Nigerian university to produce three Vice Chancellors in a year, which happened in 2024 when it produced the Vice Chancellors of the African School of Economics (The Pan-African University of Excellence), Abuja; Kwara State University of Education, Ilorin; and University of Applied Science, Engineering and Technology, The Gambia (22).

    Besides, UNILORIN produced the Vice President of the Association of African Universities (AAU) in Prof. Shamsudeen Amali, the seventh Vice Chancellor (23). It is the first Nigerian university to produce the President of the Association of Vice Chancellors of Nigerian Universities (AVCNU) and AAU at the same time as recorded in Prof. Emeritus Is-haq Oloyede, CON, the eighth Vice-Chancellor (24). It is also the first Nigerian university to be ranked among the best 20 universities in Africa in 2011 (25) and the only one to be consistently ranked best in Nigeria for many years by international ranking agencies (26). It is equally the first to introduce Computer-Based Test for screening students in the Nigerian university system in 2008 (27) and the university with the first Student Union to utilise e-voting as a way engendering electoral integrity and transparency, first experimented in 2012 and perfected 2013 under the Vice Chancellorship of Prof. Abdulganiyu Ambali, OON (28).

    In the media domain, UNILORIN is the first Nigerian university to establish a weekly newsletter that has run consistently for more than one and a half decades (Unilorin Bulletin) (29); the first to establish a campus radio station that operates 24 hours a day, seven days a week (UNILORIN 89.3 FM) (30); one of the few with an online Television Channel (UNILORIN TV) (31); one with the highest engagement on the social media culminating in an award in that category in 2025 (32); and the first Nigerian university to win the New Telegraph’s outstanding university award in 2023 under the Vice Chancellorship of Prof. Wahab Egbowole, SAN (33).

    Better by far, Best by standard 

    In academic excellence, the University takes the lead being the only university that won three out of 17 slots in Nigerian Universities Doctoral Thesis Award Scheme (NUDTAS) awards in 2008/2009, a feat repeated in 2010, 2011 and 2012 joint editions (34). The University equally filed the highest number of patents – 20 – in 2024 (35); it has been a consistent high performer in winning National Research Council (NRF) grants (36) and is acknowledged to have the highest research output in Scopus-indexed journals in Sub-Sahara Africa (37). It is the first university in Nigeria to have a Centre for Peace and Strategic Studies (38), the first to have Laboratory to Product Centre (LABTOP), established under the Vice Chancellorship of Prof. Sulyman Abdulkareem (39), as well as many innovative centres. It has the highest number of PhDs in any Law Faculty in Nigeria (40) and it is the most prolific at producing Senior Advocates of Nigeria (41), producing the first SAN Vice Chancellor in Northern Nigeria in Prof. Wahab Egbewole, the current Vice Chancellor (42).

    Moreover, the University is a bastion of sporting excellence, the first to host the West African University Games in the 21st century (43), holding the Guinness World Record of the Longest Mathematics Lesson of 31 hours, 42 minutes and 57 seconds achieved by a student in 2025 (44). It holds another Guinness world record as fastest five skin fade haircuts by anyone in the world through another student in 2024 (45) and it is the first Nigerian university ever to host the official Guinness World Record verification exercise (46). It has contributed many successful athletes and footballers to the country.

    At large, UNILORIN is a university with one of the highest institutional collaborators with active MOUs with over 100 institutions (47), its Teaching Hospital is the largest in Northern Nigeria (48) where the first open heart surgery in Sub-Sahara Africa was performed and successful separation of conjoined twins was done (49). It produced a public officer who grossed the highest newspaper editorials in the Nigerian university system in contemporary history as was done for Prof. Emeritus Oloyede when he attained 70 (50).

    So many are the fascinating facts about UNILORIN that mentioning 50 is just acknowledging a negligible fraction. Happy golden anniversary to the better by far University!

    • Prof. Adedimeji is ambassador of Unilorin and vice chancellor of African School of Economics (Pan-African University of Excellence), Abuja.

  • Balancing privacy, protection: place of integrated intelligence

    Balancing privacy, protection: place of integrated intelligence

    • By Jonas Ahl

    For an executive travelling the Lagos–Ibadan expressway, or heading from Lagos down the Badagry–Lekki corridor, or taking the Enugu–Port Harcourt (via Aba) route, danger has never been far away.

    The familiar threat of roadside ambush looms, but it is only half the story. A malicious email, a deep-fake message, or a manipulated social-media post can strike just as suddenly, sometimes to set up a physical attack. Attackers are no longer choosing between physical and digital; they are combining both.

    Nigeria cannot afford to treat digital, cyber and physical security separately. Convergence is here. Today we operate in an integrated threat intelligence environment – the ability to merge digital signals with field data in real time – must become the new baseline for protection and investment.

    This echoes findings in the World Security Report 2025, as one in three (33 per cent) of Nigerian security chiefs say they have experienced increased threats of violence directed at executives, while 55 per cent cite rising risks of civil unrest and activism.

    This is based on insights from 2,352 security leaders in 31 countries, including 58 security chiefs from Nigeria and 174 in total from Sub-Saharan Africa.

    The World Security Report 2025, commissioned by Allied Universal®, the world’s leading provider of security and facility management services, and its international business, G4S, also reveals nearly 90 per cent of Nigerian companies plan to increase their physical security budgets — the highest rate globally, yet more than half admit they lack access to real-time intelligence to anticipate or prevent incidents. The contradiction is clear: spending is rising, but foresight remains elusive.

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    That shortfall carries a national cost. When the Nigeria Customs Service’s ICT platform was recently hit by a cyber attack, port operations across the country ground to a halt. Cargo clearance stalled, agents incurred losses, and the delay confirmed that a single cyber breach can paralyse a physical supply chain. It was a stark warning: resilience in one domain means little if the other remains exposed.

    As cybersecurity expert Loveth Odozor recently warned, kidnappers now exploit social media and mobile data to identify and track victims, turning personal digital footprints into real-world vulnerability. This blurring of the lines underscores why proactive, integrated intelligence is essential.

    True protection now requires both visibility and speed. When physical security, guards, patrols, checkpoints are complemented by digital and social monitoring, organisations can identify threats early and scupper attacks before they unfold. Integrated intelligence allows companies to connect the dots between an online post, a data breach, and real-world violence.

    That future is within reach, but only if we treat intelligence as a shared, protected asset. The threats are evolving together; our defences must too.

    For Nigeria’s firms and investors, the benefit of such integration is unmistakable: fewer costly disruptions, steadier operations, and stronger credibility among partners who see forward-looking resilience rather than reactive crisis management.

    Despite the evidence, progress remains slow. Many organisations still run their physical and digital security teams in strict separation, rarely sharing insights. Budgets favour what is visible; guards, fences, vehicles, while less visible but crucial systems like AI-assisted monitoring and data analytics remain under-funded.

    To close the gap between ambition and preparedness, Nigeria’s many successful companies should consider sharing information between their different departments and utilise security providers that know how to obtain and use risk-related intelligence to protect their clients’ operations, travel and managers.

    Nigeria has a wealth of opportunities and many businesses want to operate here, giving careful consideration to how they can best protect their people and operations is essential and has to be grounded in intelligence.

    •Ahl is managing director of G4S Nigeria

  • Beyond Greylisting: Why Nigeria’s crypto gamble will shape its financial future

    Beyond Greylisting: Why Nigeria’s crypto gamble will shape its financial future

    • By Wahab Elias and Oluwole Ololade Adeosun

    Getting off the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) Grey List is a genuine reform success — and one that deserves recognition. Greylisting had raised the cost of doing business, discouraged investment, and signalled governance weakness. FATF’s decision to remove Nigeria from enhanced monitoring restores a measure of credibility, but it remains a fragile victory. The harder work begins now.

    At the heart of that challenge lies crypto and digital-asset oversight. While FATF’s Recommendation 15 on virtual assets was not what landed Nigeria on the grey list, it became central to the country’s commitments for exiting it. Nigeria’s experiment with crypto regulation has been episodic, fragmented, and shaped largely by a security mindset. To sustain reform momentum, digital finance must be treated not as a compliance afterthought but as a test of financial sovereignty.

    Between 2017 and 2020, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) tolerated crypto informally while the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) studied how to classify it. Then, in 2021, the CBN abruptly barred banks from servicing crypto exchanges — a move that ushered in an era of “shadow regulation.” A year later, the SEC released its first digital-asset guidelines and promised a sandbox regime, but no firm has yet graduated from that experiment. By 2023, the banking ban was partially lifted, though still without new licences.

    Today, three institutions dominate the space: the CBN, the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), and the Office of the National Security Adviser (ONSA). The SEC remains the statutory regulator under the Investments and Securities Act 2025, but it lacks the operational heft to make that authority meaningful. Sociologically, this oscillation reflects a familiar Nigerian pattern — where authority is personalised and discretion replaces discipline when formal systems are weak. From a market-governance perspective, such fragmentation erodes compliance and confidence, discouraging long-term capital.

    Since 2021, Nigeria has governed crypto through circulars, bans, and quiet reversals. Banks were told to block exchanges — and later told to unblock them. Telcos restricted unlicensed platforms; users responded with VPNs and offshore brokers. This stop-start approach bought time but undermined trust, pushing activity off-grid and out of regulatory reach. The consequences have been predictable: more volatility, capital flight, and deep uncertainty about whether Nigeria is open for innovation or still improvising.

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    The most dangerous outcome has been the explosion of peer-to-peer (P2P) trading. What began as a technical workaround has become a main channel for illicit finance. FATF classifies unhosted P2P transactions as the highest-risk corridor for money laundering, terrorism financing, and election-season slush funds. Thousands of brokers now operate through messaging apps, settling via informal transfers or gift-card swaps. The mix of anonymity, speed, and zero oversight attracts both speculators and bad actors. Unless policy shifts before the 2027 elections, these networks could become the preferred rail for dark finance. Reducing their appeal is not censorship — it is financial hygiene. The remedy is straightforward: make the regulated path cheaper, faster, and safer than the unregulated one.

    The Approval-in-Principle regime (ARRIP) was meant to bridge that gap — a sandbox for innovation under supervision. In practice, it has become a holding pattern. The SEC administers it in name but lacks the resources to enforce timelines or graduate participants. Meanwhile, the CBN plans to launch a Digital Finance Supervision Unit next year, linking bank rails, tax reporting, and prudential oversight. From an accounting-governance perspective, this could provide the missing bridge between innovation and accountability. If successful, it could turn ARRIP from fiction into framework. If not, it will confirm Nigeria’s habit of drafting regulations faster than it can implement them.

    South Africa’s formal registration of crypto service providers has built credibility. Kenya’s early permissiveness followed by crackdowns created instability. Ghana’s cautious diplomacy built trust but delayed clarity. Nigeria risks combining the worst of all three — costs without credibility, and restrictions without stability.

    The path forward demands discipline, not invention. Nigeria’s financial regulators must act as partners, not rivals: the CBN, FIRS, and ONSA need to coordinate their mandates and speak with one voice. Transparency, not transactional decision-making, is the foundation of trust; backroom directives only weaken both compliance and confidence. Substance must replace slogans — the focus should be on building reliable systems for lawful digital finance while closing the loopholes that invite abuse. What the country needs is not another acronym or policy promise, but a framework that truly works.

    Nigeria’s fintech users are resourceful and resilient, yet resilience is not the same as trust. Without credible oversight, innovation drifts offshore, capital escapes, and the naira suffers. FATF delisting has bought time but not immunity. The true measure of reform will be Nigeria’s ability to design a regulatory architecture that is both innovative and enforceable — one that curbs illicit flows before politics weaponises them. Beyond greylisting lies a tougher mission: ensuring that digital finance serves Nigerians, not the shadows.

    • Elias is Professor of Sociology at Lagos State University, and Adeosun is Managing Director of Chartwell Securities and President of the Chartered Institute of Stockbrokers, write on governance, regulation and the future of Nigeria’s financial system.
  • China 15th 5-year-plan and future of China-Africa cooperation

    China 15th 5-year-plan and future of China-Africa cooperation

    • By Tunde Rahman

    In 1985, the American magazine Newsweek reported that the number of high-rise buildings in Shanghai, China’s biggest commercial city, could be counted on the finger tips.

    By 2005, 20 years later, when I had the first opportunity to visit Beijing and Shanghai as part of China-Africa Editors’ Delegation touring that Asian country, skyscrapers had become a common feature of the entire landscape of China. China had become a huge construction yard. There was visible economic boom. 

    Today, although China now faces significant economic headwinds, with growth moderating in the face of structural constraints, including declining working age population, diminishing returns on investment, and slowing productivity growth, it remains, nonetheless, one of the largest global economies. 

    According to a report by the World Bank Group, the country’s real Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth – a common measure of economic activity and size –slowed from double-digit annual increases during the 2000s to 5.3% in this year’s second quarter. China continues to be a major global trading partner, regardless, ranking as the world’s second-largest economy, only behind the United States.

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    China’s monumental development was not a chance occurrence. It came by deliberate, continuous and consistent planning. China has continued to plan, and doing so comprehensively.

    Just last week, the Fourth Plenary Session of the 20th Central Committee of the Communist Party of China took place in Beijing. Held from October 20-23, 2025, at that session, China unfolded its 15th five-year development plan.

    As we gather today to discuss the future of Africa-China cooperation in the context of China’s 15th Five-Year Plan, it is important to first enumerate some of the highlights of this new five-year plan (2026-2030), the significance of the bilateral relationship between China and Africa (with particular reference to Nigeria), and its potential for mutual benefit.

    China’s 15th five-year plan highlights a few thematic priority areas, which include economic transformation, digital economy, global economic governance, and the Belt and Road Initiative that has been a cornerstone of China–Africa cooperation. This present plan emphasizes high quality development, focusing on technological innovation, green development and economic restructuring.

     On digital economy, the plan prioritises digital infrastructure, artificial intelligence and data-driven industries. With regard to global economic governance, China aims to play a more active role globally, promoting free trade and investment.

    The five-year plan, no doubt, offers unique opportunities for Africa. This is in terms of infrastructural development, industrialization, partnership in boosting agriculture and technological innovation. China’s expertise in infrastructure development can help bridge Africa’s infrastructure gap, promoting economic growth and development, and creating opportunities for job creation and economic diversification.

     At present, the partnership between China and Africa has recorded remarkable achievements in the past five years.

    And these gains in various fields are evident. For instance, at the Forum on China–Africa Cooperation Beijing Summit held last September, President Xi Jinping announced zero tariff treatment on products with 100% tariff lines for all least developed countries having diplomatic relations with China, which include 33 African countries.

    Indeed, contrasts are bound to be drawn in contemporary global affairs, particularly in relation to President Donald Trump’s imprudent tariff regime and its negative disruption of global trade.

     In June this year also, China extended the zero-tariff treatment to cover 100% of tariff lines for all 53 African countries that have diplomatic ties with China.

    From January to July 2025, China’s imports from Africa’s least developed countries reached 39.66 billion USD, with a year-on-year increase of 10.2%. 

    This strikes a resonant chord in Nigeria, where the Lekki Deep Seaport stands glowingly to China’s credit. The Blue (Rail) Line built by a Chinese company provides green and convenient public mass transportation to Lagos residents. Across Africa, China’s infrastructural imprints are just as phenomenal.

    Major projects built by Chinese enterprises, such as Morocco’s Noor III and II Concentrated Solar Power Project and South Africa’s De Aar Wind Power Project, have illuminated millions of homes across Africa, helping in the path to sustainable growth and development. 

    China’s new energy vehicles are also rapidly entering the African market, offering new options to improve urban air quality.

    These are commendable. But Africa needs more if China, like a true friend of Africa that it is, genuinely wants to leapfrog the continent’s development.

    However, there are identifiable obstacles that pose serious challenges to China-Africa cooperation. These deserve to be addressed and should not be glossed over. I will now dwell on these challenges.

    Firstly, the huge debt Africa owes China is a major problem. As of 2020, Chinese lenders accounted for approximately 12% of Africa’s external debt, which has grown more than fivefold since 2000, reaching $696 billion. Between 2000 and 2023, Chinese financial institutions extended 1,306 loans, totalling $182.28 billion, to 49 African countries and seven regional organizations. Africa needs to ensure that the debt levels remain sustainable, while China also needs to consider debt restructuring or forgiveness.

    Secondly, Chinese industries in Africa must prioritize environmental and social impact assessments. China must rein in her companies to ensure they operate in ways that enhance environmental safety. Indeed, global environmental problems cannot be solved without China’s engagement. 

    Given its size, China is central to many regional and global development issues. Admittedly, China is not the main source of historical cumulative emissions. Yet, according to the World Bank, China today accounts for nearly a third of annual global carbon dioxide and 30% of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions – with per capita emissions now surpassing those of the European Union, and on par with the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development average. 

     Thirdly and closely related to this is the issue of local content. African countries must prioritize local content development, ensuring that projects benefit local communities. The trend, in most cases, is that Chinese companies operating in Africa come with their technology and their workforce in tow. China, as Africa’s true friend, should support and facilitate technology transfer and capacity building.

    Now, what does the future hold for China-Africa cooperation? What are the new prospects for collaboration in the next five years? 

    To strengthen collaboration, there must be enhanced dialogue between China and Africa, which will help address challenges and identify new opportunities.

    Africa and China also need to diversify cooperation areas to sectors including culture, education and tourism.

    One other important area of support from China is in the implementation of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) to enhance intra-African trade and investment. Importantly, Africa and China can collaborate on global value chains, promoting trade and investment.

    Both continents should also prioritize green and sustainable development, addressing climate change and environmental degradation.

    In conclusion, the 15th Five-Year Plan presents opportunities for Africa-China cooperation in infrastructure development, industrialization, agricultural cooperation, and technological innovation. China has demonstrated capacity in these areas.

    We actually don’t have to think long and hard to establish where this leap is apparent. Deepseek, Chinese AI models, have broken the monopoly of Western tech giants through open-source modes, initiating an “AI democratization” process. 

    The supply of China’s advanced and practical technology also helps in bridging the digital and artificial intelligence gaps, thus further empowering African industries and people, providing them transformative power to aid development.

     China parades green transition solutions, which can support a long-term future for Africa’s sustainable development. While it possesses the world’s richest green resources such as solar and wind power, Africa also remains one of the most vulnerable regions to climate change. China should actively share green transition solutions with Africa in order to truly help the continent.

    Therefore, by addressing the challenges and prioritizing mutual benefits, China and Africa can strengthen their partnership in ways that promotes technology transfer, sustainable development and shared prosperity.

     With the sufficient will, these challenges are surmountable. The prospects offer a huge cause for optimism. And the future of China-Africa relations can only blossom further.

    It may sound clichéd, but I’d like to round off this remark with that time-honoured Chinese saying, which speaks to the value of resilience as it does the China-Africa relationship: “A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step”. 

    May I say that President Bola Tinubu of Nigeria is prepared and ready to take that important next step in advancing the partnership between Nigeria and China based on mutual trust and shared prosperity!

    • Rahman is an aide to President Bola Ahmed Tinubu
  • Nigeria’s commitment to religious freedom, security must not be ignored

    Nigeria’s commitment to religious freedom, security must not be ignored

    By Olufemi Soneye

    The recent decision by the United States to classify Nigeria as a “Country of Particular Concern” has stirred global attention, but it also risks overlooking significant reforms and security gains currently underway in Africa’s largest democracy. While Nigeria faces undeniable security and religious-tolerance challenges, the narrative is incomplete without acknowledging the deliberate steps the Tinubu administration has taken to uphold religious freedom, protect communities and restore stability.

    Since assuming office, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s administration has treated national security and unity with urgency. Renewed counter-terrorism operations have disrupted major insurgent networks across the Northeast, while intensified intelligence-led deployments in the North-Central region continue to reduce farmer-herder clashes. In the Northwest, coordinated military offensives are degrading bandit networks, and enhanced maritime security in the Niger Delta and Gulf of Guinea has significantly reduced piracy and oil theft, safeguarding both lives and national assets.

    Beyond security operations, the government has strengthened community-reconciliation programs and socio-economic interventions to address the root causes of conflict. Humanitarian support for displaced persons has expanded, interfaith dialogue platforms have been reinforced, and community policing frameworks are being enhanced. Importantly, the rights of Nigerians to freely worship, whether Christian, Muslim or of other faiths, remain guaranteed and actively defended, with the President consistently affirming that no citizen’s safety or religious liberty should be compromised.

    At the same time, the administration has implemented economic reforms that may be unpopular in some quarters, yet are necessary to reset the economy after years of structural strain. Fuel subsidy removal, exchange-rate alignment and stricter fiscal discipline are intended to stabilise the macro-economic environment, attract investment and lay a foundation for sustainable growth. In such a delicate phase, a designation of this nature risks unsettling investor confidence and placing additional stress on an economy that is fragile but recovering.

    Conversations with officials and policy experts in Washington, where I have previously served, reveal that documentary and video evidence, along with direct engagement with victims and advocacy groups, informed the United States Government’s decision. Whether one agrees with Washington’s conclusion or not, its position is based on intelligence assessments and survivor testimonies. Nigeria must therefore respond with clarity and confidence. What Nigeria confronts is persistent terrorism, and few nations have invested as many lives, resources and political effort in fighting violent extremism and protecting religious communities.

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    Nigeria’s vibrant civil society, independent media remain important instruments of accountability.  International partners, including the European Union and the United Nations, have recognised Nigeria’s renewed commitment to inclusive governance and rule of law.

    Nigeria welcomes constructive international engagement. To this end, government should deepen dialogue with Washington, share intelligence, carefully review the evidence cited and provide additional context on verified terrorist activities affecting communities of all faiths. Cooperative engagement, rather than isolation, will help ensure mutual understanding and prevent misrepresentation of the realities on the ground.

    Labels of this nature can embolden extremist narratives, unsettle markets and undermine ongoing reforms aimed at building a safer and more prosperous nation. The United States remains a strategic partner, and sustained engagement based on mutual respect and shared democratic values remains essential. Nigeria’s path forward requires collaboration and dialogue, particularly at a time when reforms are beginning to yield gradual progress.

    Nigeria acknowledges its challenges and is addressing them with resolve and reform. The nation’s future will be determined not by external labels, but by continued domestic progress, constructive diplomacy and genuine international partnership.

    •Soneye is a Nigerian media entrepreneur and communications strategist. He served as Chief Corporate Communications Officer of NNPC Ltd