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  • FULL SPEECH: Tinubu addresses NASS in commemoration of 2025 Democracy Day

    FULL SPEECH: Tinubu addresses NASS in commemoration of 2025 Democracy Day

    ADDRESS BY PRESIDENT BOLA AHMED TINUBU, GCFR AT THE JOINT SESSION OF THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY IN COMMEMORATION OF DEMOCRACY DAY, 2025 THURSDAY, 12TH JUNE 2025

    Protocol:

    With profound honour, I stand before this joint session of our National Assembly; a parliament that embodies the will of the Nigerian people.

    2. Today, as I entered this grand edifice built from the sweat and toil of our democratic yearning, my heart stirred. It was a blend of accomplishment and resolve.

    3. I felt a sense of collective accomplishment when I realised how far we had come as a nation. Since 1999, democracy has risen from the ashes and destitution of military rule to take its rightful place as the only mode of governance of our resilient and beloved people.

    4. With every footstep I took through these hallowed halls up to the moment I now stand before you, I remembered that we still have much further to go.

    5. To achieve this progress, we sought an elective office to lead this nation forward. Thus, I hereby affirm before our Merciful and Almighty God and all men my resolve to do all that I can to safeguard and build our democracy as the Divine hand intends for us to do.

    6. Since 2018, we have celebrated Democracy Day on this day; to commemorate the sacrifices of the men and women who fought to restore democratic governance to Nigeria.

    7. Let me pay tribute to former President Muhammadu Buhari for reaching back into history to rectify a national misdeed by making June 12 Democracy Day and by officially acknowledging Chief Moshood Kashimawo Olawale Abiola and his running mate, Babagana Kingibe, as the victors and thus duly elected President and Vice President respectively of Nigeria after the June 12, 1993 elections.

    8. Year by year, election after election, every time we debate instead of battle, discuss instead of fight, and argue instead of destroy, we preserve the institutions of democracy. More importantly, we weave the culture of democracy into the very fabric of our nation.

    9. Whilst Chief MKO Abiola is June 12’s central figure, we must not forget the long list of those who equally deserve to be called heroes of Nigerian democracy.

    10. We must celebrate the courage of Alhaja Kudirat Abiola and Pa Alfred Rewane, both of whom were murdered by agents of military repression. We also remember the many civil rights activists, journalists, and politicians imprisoned, exiled, tossed aside, tortured and beaten by the military regime.

    11. We remember Chief Anthony Enahoro, Commodore Dan Suleiman, Chief Abraham Adesanya, Ayo Adebanjo, Chief Gani Fawehinmi, Balarabe Musa, Ganiyu Dawodu, the journalist Bagauda Kaltho, and Commodore Ndubuisi Kanu. I mention these names not to exclude or degrade the profound contributions of anyone else, but to illustrate, through these few heroes, the universality of our pursuit of democracy.

    12. The struggle was never the province of any one group or section of the country, it was pan-Nigerian in its conception and will be even more pan-Nigerian as we strive to perfect it.

    13. It is fitting that I come to this chamber. You are the authors of the people’s law, and I must be their faithful implementer. While we may not always agree, we must forge a way to work together because this is what democracy demands of us. I pledge myself to this cooperation and ask that you do the same for the good of our people.

    14. Mr. Chairman, the National Assembly has acted to uphold democratic ideals at every critical moment in our national history. In 2006, the 5th National Assembly protected our democracy against an unseemly third-term bid that would have ripped our constitution apart. In 2010, the National Assembly, through the doctrine of necessity, opened the door for then-Vice President Goodluck Jonathan to become the acting President following the illness of his predecessor.

    15. Even under the military, the National Assembly tried to protect our democracy. After General Abacha took over power on November 17, 1993, and dissolved the National Assembly, some of us, led by Senator Ameh Ebute, the Senate President in the 3rd Republic, defied the General and his goons to reconvene in the Old Parliament Building in Lagos. We were jailed for our defiance.

    16. On behalf of a grateful nation, I commend your invaluable role in lawmaking, oversight, and constituency representation.

    17. At this point, I plead for your indulgence so that I may put a terrible rumour to bed.

    18. To those who ring the alarm that the APC is intent on a one-party state, I offer you a most personal promise. While your alarm may be as a result of your panic, it rings in error. At no time in the past, nor any instance in the present, and at no future juncture shall I view the notion of a one-party state as good for Nigeria. I have never attempted to alter any political party registration with INEC. Equally, my friends, we cannot blame anybody seeking to bail out of a sinking ship even without a life jacket.

    19. Look at my political history. I would be the last person to advocate such a scheme. In 2003, when the then-governing party tried to sweep the nation clean of political opposition through plot and manipulation, I was the last of the progressive governors standing in my region.

    20. In all their numbers and false grandeur, they boasted of ruling, not governing, Nigeria for the next half century or more. Where are they now?

    21. Yet, I stood alone. My allies had been induced into defeat. My adversaries held all the cards that mortal man could carry. Even with all of

    that, they could not control our national destiny because fate is written from

    above. A greater power did not want Nigeria to become a one-party state

    back then. Nigeria will not become such a state now.

    22. The failed effort to create a one-party state placed progressive political

    forces on a trajectory to form the APC. It put me on the trajectory which has

    brought me before you today. I dare not do such a favour to any political

    adversary by repeating the same mistake of political overreach.

    23. A one-party state is not in the offing. Nor should it ever be. That said,

    we would be guilty of political malpractice if we closed the door on those from

    other parties who now seek to join the APC and I sincerely welcome our

    party’s newest members from Delta and Akwa Ibom States led by Governor

    Sheriff Oborevwori and Pastor Umo Eno and other members of this National

    Assembly.

    24. Political parties fearful of members leaving may be better served by

    examining their internal processes and affairs rather than fearfully conjuring

    up demons that do not exist. For me, I would say try your best to put your

    house in order. I will not help you do so. It is, indeed, a pleasure to witness

    you in such disarray.

    25. We must welcome and accept the diversity and number of political

    parties just as we welcome and embrace the diversity of our population. Our

    efforts must never be to eliminate political competition but to make that

    competition salutary to the national well-being by working across the political

    aisle whenever possible.

    26. One area in which democracy calls us to work together, whether in the

    legislative or executive branch, whether in this or other political parties, is

    that of economic and social development.

    27. Upon assuming office, my team and I moved to reform our ailing

    economy. We introduced fundamental reforms to correct structural

    imbalances that prevented maximum growth.

    28. We are already seeing results. GDP grew by 3.4 per cent in 2024, with Q4 hitting 4.6 per cent, the highest quarter of growth in over a decade.

    Inflation is easing gradually, steadying the price of food staples like rice and

    beans. Our net foreign reserves have increased fivefold, and the Naira

    exchange rate has stabilised. Our balance of payments position is positive;

    our sovereign credit rating is improving as we continue to promote oil and

    non-oil exports. States now do not need to go about borrowing to pay

    salaries.

    29. In less than one year, over one hundred thousand Nigerians, including thirty-five thousand civil servants, have benefited from affordable consumer credit through the Nigerian Consumer Credit Corporation (CREDICORP), enabling them to purchase vehicles, light up and improve their homes and purchase life essentials. This July, we will launch a bold new initiative to empower four hundred thousand young Nigerians, including youth corpers, with consumer credit.

    30. We are committed to giving more opportunities to young people through job creation and skills development. Through such programs as NELFUND, we are investing in education, vocational training, apprenticeships, and internships to ensure our youth are job-ready and

    future-ready.

    31. In addition, we have embarked on an ambitious project to lay fibre optic cables across the nation, a transformative step toward bridging the digital divide and fostering greater connectivity. This initiative promises not only to enhance the speed and reliability of internet access but also to revolutionize how businesses operate, how students learn, and how communities stay connected. By extending this critical infrastructure, we are empowering entrepreneurs, enabling digital education, and providing the tools for our youth to compete in a globalized world.

    32. Our “Nigeria First” policy will further enhance progress as we consolidate market-driven growth. The improved economic performance is encouraging and validates the soundness of our policy measures. Our medium-term growth target remains an economy growing at a 7 per cent clip with a stronger manufacturing base. We must learn to produce and grow most of our food and we are on the path to achieving food sovereignty.

    33. These and other reforms have placed the economy on a more rational footing where critical decisions regarding large-scale investment can now be made.

    34. I ask you, the legislature, to join me as we enter the second half of our term to put forth innovative legislation that further encourages industrial development and job creation in our urban centres while also drafting laws that improve food security and production.

    35. To further underpin our economic vision, we introduced a comprehensive Tax Reform Package, a vital component of our economic re- engineering. I am deeply grateful to both chambers for your thorough consideration and deliberation of these bills, and I look forward to signing them into law soon.

    36. Again, your collaboration across party lines on these bills has been a model of democratic partnership.

    37. As elected leaders, we must continue to do more to make real the dream of Nigeria’s political and economic democracy.

    38. We must be vigilant in expanding the political space. We must always value dialogue over dictatorship, persuasion over suppression and rights over might. Be tolerant and broad-minded in your legislative action regarding speech and civil liberties.

    39. Do not be afraid to hear an unkind word spoken against you. Some of the best advice a politician gets sometimes comes from his most ferocious opponents. We dare not seek silence because the imposed silence of repressed voices breeds chaos and ill will, not the harmonics of democracy in the long term.

    40. While malicious slander and libel should not go unattended, no one should bear the brunt of injustice for merely writing a bad report about me or calling me names. Democracy requires a fair degree of tolerance for harsh words and stinging insults. Call me names, call me whatever you will, and I will still call upon democracy to defend your right to do so. Mr. Senate President, Mr. Speaker, Distinguished Senators and Honourable Members.

    41. Our nation is not perfect, but it is strong. Our democracy is not invincible, but it is alive. And this means our dream of a prosperous, happy nation is still within reach and worth fighting for.

    42. Mr. Chairman, Nigeria is at an inflexion point, undergoing structural and fundamental change toward a secure future.

    43. Our administration is fully committed to boosting the economy’s productive base. Through investment in critical infrastructure, roads, expansion of port operations, rail, and power we are creating a new environment in which industry and manufacturing can thrive. Our tax and fiscal policy reforms will streamline tax administration and eliminate burdensome and multiple taxes enabling our industrialists and entrepreneurs to operate in a more conducive environment.

    44. Governance must work and deliver value to the people. As part of our tax reforms, we have provided small businesses with an exemption and established the Office of the Tax Ombudsman to ensure transparency and protect taxpayer rights. Digital tools now help us track performance and reduce waste. The Diaspora Bond and Non-Resident BVN are bringing

    Nigerians abroad into the national development fold.

    45. In line with my promise during my New Year address to the nation, I recently appointed the board of directors of the newly established National Credit Guarantee Company. The company backed with 100 billion naira in initial capital; with BOI, which, by the way, is performing very well in supporting SMEs, NSIA, CreditCorp, and MOFI as stakeholders, will play a significant role in transforming the nation’s industrial landscape and reducing

    corruption.

    46. National Security is the foundation of peace and progress. We have intensified security operations to reclaim communities from criminals and terrorists. We are better at coordinating intelligence, and inter-agency cooperation has improved. Our highways are safer, and we invest in technology and training to secure every inch of this country.

    47. Let us take this opportunity to thank the men and women of our Armed Forces for their bravery in service of the nation. Their selfless dedication to protecting our sovereignty and ensuring the safety of citizens should serve as an inspiration to us all. As we celebrate the progress of our democracy, we must not forget the pivotal role they play in safeguarding our freedoms. For their courage and commitment, they deserve not only our gratitude but

    also our continued support, prayers and recognition.

    48. Fellow compatriots, our achievements are not the work of one man. They are the result of a collective effort to make possible the Nigerian Dream. Yet, the journey is not over. We must work even harder to translate broad macroeconomic gains into tangible improvements in the lives of ordinary Nigerians. We must stay the course, reject cynicism, and believe Nigeria can and will rise again.

    49. As we mark a twenty-sixth year of unbroken democracy, it is right to honour those who have made sacrifices in the past, braving all the odds and the guns to ensure we have a regime of democracy in our country.

    50. In this light, I announce the conferment of the posthumous national honour of CFR on Kudirat Abiola, the heroine of the June 12 struggle.

    51. I also confer posthumous national honours on Shehu Musa Yar’Adua (GCFR), Prof. Humphrey Nwosu (CON), Rear Admiral Ndubuisi Kanu (CON), Alhaji Balarabe Musa (CFR), Pa. Alfred Rewani (CFR), Bagauda Kaltho (OON), Chima Ubani (OON), Dr. Beko Ransome-Kuti (CON), Alao Aka Bashorun (CON), Chief Frank Kokori (CON), Emma Ezeazu (OON), Bamidele Aturu (OON), Fredrick Fasehun (CON), Professor Festus Iyayi (CON), Dr John Yima Sen (OON), Alhaja Sawaba Gambo (CON), Dr. Edwin Madunagu (CON), Dr. Alex Ibru (CON), Chief Bola Ige (CFR), Pa. Reuben Fasoranti (CFR), Sen. Ayo Fasanmi (CON), Sen. Polycarp Nwite (CON) and Dr. Nurudeen Olowopopo (CON).

    52. I also confer national honours on Prof. Wole Soyinka (GCON), Prof. Olatunji Dare (CON), the journalist and journalism teacher; Kunle Ajibade (OON); Nosa Igiebor (OON), Dapo Olorunyomi (OON), Bayo Onanuga (CON), Ayo Obe (OON), Dare Babarinsa (CON), Bishop Matthew Hassan Kukah (CON), Senator Shehu Sani (CON), Governor Uba Sani (CON), Barrister Femi Falana, SAN (CON), Prof. Shafideen Amuwo (CON), Barrister Luke Aghanenu (OON), Senator Tokunbo Afikuyomi (CON), Hon. Labaran Maku (OON), Dr. Tunji Alausa (CON), Mr Nick Dazang (OON), Hon Abdul Oroh (OON), Odia Ofeimun (CON), Seye Kehinde (OON), Barrister Felix Morka (CON) Barrister Ledum Mitee (CON), Hon. Olawale Osun (CON), Dr. Amos Akingba (CON), Prof. Segun Gbadegesin (CON), Mobolaji Akinyemi (CFR), Dr. Kayode Shonoiki (CON), Prof. Julius Ihonvbere (CON), Prof. Bayo Williams (CON), Sen. Abu Ibrahim (CFR), and Sen. Ame Ebute (CFR).

    53. Additionally, I confer the national honour of CON on Uncle Sam Amuka Pemu, a legendary journalist and publisher who remains true to his lifetime calling as he marks his 90th birthday tomorrow, June 13.

    54. Furthermore, I also confer posthumous national honours on Ken Saro Wiwa (CON), the leader of the Ogoni Nine and his fellow travellers, Saturday Dobee (OON), Nordu Eawo (OON), Daniel Gbooko (OON), Paul Levera (OON), Felix Nuate (OON), Baribor Bera (OON), Barinem Kiobel (OON), and John Kpuine (OON). I shall also be exercising my powers under the prerogative of mercy to grant these national heroes a full pardon, together with others whose names shall be announced later in conjunction with the National Council of State.

    55. Finally, it is my great privilege to now decorate the presiding officers of the National Assembly with the National Honours earlier conferred upon them last year:

    Presiding National Assembly Officers

    Senator Godswill Obot Akpabio, GCON – SENATE PRESIDENT

    Rt. Hon. Abbas Tajudeen, PhD, GCON – Speaker

    Senator Jibrin Ibrahim Barau, CFR – DEPUTY SENATE PRESIDENT

    Rt. Hon. Benjamin Okezie Kalu, CFR – Deputy Speaker

    56. In conclusion, let us rededicate ourselves to the ideals of June 12; freedom, transparent and accountable government, social justice, active citizen participation, and a just society where no one is oppressed.

    57. Happy Democracy Day, and may God continue to bless the Federal Republic of Nigeria and protect our troops.

    Bola Ahmed Tinubu, GCFR

    President, Commander-in-Chief of The Armed Forces,

    Federal Republic of Nigeria

  • BREAKING: Tinubu vows to uphold, advance democracy in Nigeria

    BREAKING: Tinubu vows to uphold, advance democracy in Nigeria

    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has reaffirmed his commitment to strengthening democracy in Nigeria, pledging to do all within his power to protect and promote democratic values.

    Read Also: Team Nigeria celebrates June 12 at Ikeja under-bridge, endorses Tinubu for second term

    He made this promise during his State of the Nation address at a joint session of the National Assembly in Abuja, held to commemorate Democracy Day.

    Details shortly…

  • Heavy security at NASS as Tinubu addresses joint session

    Heavy security at NASS as Tinubu addresses joint session

    The National Assembly Complex was placed under tight security on Thursday morning ahead of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s scheduled address to a joint session in commemoration of Democracy Day.

    As early as 6 am, a significant deployment of security operatives had taken positions across the sprawling complex. 

    Personnel of the Nigeria Police Force, Department of State Services (DSS), and other security agencies were seen conducting rigorous security checks on vehicles and individuals seeking access to the premises.

    Tinubu is expected to deliver his address by 12 noon as part of the Democracy Day celebrations, which marks the historic June 12, 1993 presidential election widely regarded as Nigeria’s freest and fairest poll.

    The atmosphere at the National Assembly was a mix of anticipation and alertness. 

    Staff, journalists, and lawmakers passed through multiple layers of security screening, with sniffer dogs, bomb-detection equipment, and handheld scanners in operation.

    Entry and exit points were cordoned off to control movement, while tactical units patrolled strategic locations around the premises.

    Security officials confirmed that the measures were preemptive and intended to ensure the safety of the President, lawmakers, and other dignitaries expected at the session.

    “We are coordinating across all relevant agencies to ensure a safe and orderly event,” said a senior DSS operative who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

    Joint patrol teams could be seen moving in formation across the complex, occasionally stopping to scan for possible threats.

    Inside the House of Representatives chambers, the venue for the event, plainclothes operatives mingled discreetly with protocol staff, adding another layer of surveillance.

    Despite the heavy security, there was no reported disturbance. The mood remained calm but closely monitored, with security operatives maintaining constant radio communication.

  • Wike: Tinubu’s performance has shattered coalition gang up

    Wike: Tinubu’s performance has shattered coalition gang up

    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s performance has dismantled the gang-up by opposition politicians to form a coalition against him.

    Minister of Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Nyesome Wike said this yesterday during the inauguration of Arterial Road N16 in Katampe District, Abuja.

    It was the second day of the inauguration of projects undertaken by the FCT in two years.

    The President inaugurated the completed stretch of Shehu Shagari Way, linking the Nnamdi Azikiwe Expressway to Wole Soyinka Way through Katampe and adjoining districts.

    The project, which includes a major interchange and access roads, is part of the Abuja master plan stalled for years before being revived under Wike’s leadership.

    President Tinubu emphasised that his administration will continue to prioritise service delivery and national development over political grandstanding.

    He said: “We will continue to build; we will continue to serve the people, no matter how much the naysayers pursue their politics.

    “We did not ignore this project. We did not worry about protests. The government has played its part.”

    Describing the project commissioning as a milestone, President Tinubu added: “This project represents more than a stretch of asphalt. It affirms our commitment to urban transformation under our Renewed Hope Agenda.

    “What was once missing as a link is now a modern, functional and durable infrastructure.”

    He praised Wike’s leadership and collaborative approach to delivering the project.

    President Tinubu stressed: “Once again, I commend Wike and his team. He could not achieve this alone without collaboration as a team builder and a team player. You have proved that teamship is the hallmark of good leadership,” President Tinubu said.

    The President said he would deploy infrastructure as a tool for national growth, social inclusion, and economic transformation.

    He said: “Infrastructure is not a luxury; it is a necessity. It is the bedrock of national competitiveness, growth, social integration and economic opportunity.”

    President Tinubu noted that Nigeria’s future lies in its ability to connect cities, communities, and industries with world-class infrastructure.

    He added: “There is no way industrialisation will flourish without good roads. The government is also investing in roads, rail, power, healthcare, education and digital infrastructure.

    “This corridor was underdeveloped for years, despite its central role in the Abuja master plan. Today, that narrative has changed.

    “This road will ease traffic congestion around Central Abuja and improve connectivity to developing districts.

    “It will stimulate housing and business growth while serving as a foundation for future city integration.”

    President Tinubu urged residents and stakeholders to take ownership of the new road and preserve it as a community asset.

    He said: “The road belongs to the community and citizens of Abuja and us as the federal government. I urge you to protect it and use it wisely.”

    The President thanked the FCT community for its cooperation during the road construction, including those who were relocated to make way for the project.

    He said: “Thank you very much for the cooperation. We thank the Minister of FCT too for relocating your community with peace and good compensation.”

    Wike: coalition killed

    Wike said President Tinubu’s infrastructural development has killed the coalition moves by the opposition.

    He vowed to continue to support Tinubu’s Administration.

    Wike said: “Some people, whatever you do, will not be happy; many of them were born not to be happy.

    “Under Tinubu, contractors now have confidence in the government. Your good work has killed the coalition in Nigeria.

    “Mr. President, let me first of all convey the happiness and appreciation of the people of the city. I’m sure that when you came down from the vehicle, you saw how people were happily praising you.

    “That’s to tell you they appreciate and recognise the good work you are doing. There are some people, whatever you do, they will never be happy.

    “They were born not to be happy, and so there is nothing you can do about it. But those who appreciate, who are happy, you can see how elated they are.

    “Let me let you know that this road was awarded by your administration. It is not one of those projects that were inherited.

    Read Also: Tinubu woos Wike, says APC will welcome ex-Rivers governor

    “Having worked with you for a few years, I’ve seen how passionate you are about contracts and abandonment of contracts.

    “This job was awarded by the Federal Executive Council last September, and we flagged off this project in October.

    “I told the contractors, listen, I don’t want to hear complaints. Whatever it takes you to do your job, do it. If I pay you during the rainy season, you must work during the rainy season.

    “If I pay you in the dry season, you must work in the dry season. I don’t want to hear that, oh, the rain was too much.

    “Return the money so that we can keep it. After the rain, we can pay you. You can’t keep our money when we have paid you, then you say it is raining, no. Send our money back.”

    The minister added: “I’m quite elated. Initially, I was sceptical about the contractor CGC until you appointed us sometime in August 2023.

    “The road from the Presidential Villa to Asokoro, that interchange, I couldn’t believe that we can have it and it was done by the CGC. Everybody saw how that place was. So I started having that confidence in them.

    “I told CGC, are you sure that Mr. President will commission this (N16) road project in his second year in office? They said yes. I said: Are you sure? They said yes.

    “Should I include it as part of the project to be commissioned? They said yes. I said, see, don’t look for my problem. Now you have made a promise, you have to keep to the promise.

    “Let me tell you one thing you have done Mr. President, that has created confidence in contractors today. This road stopped somewhere.

    “As I speak to you now, companies and contractors are competing among themselves for us to just award the job.

    “Most of them have gone and started without even giving them the initial mobilisation. That is confidence-building. And that’s what we’ve created.

    “I want to thank the management of CGC. Not one contract that is awarded under the FCT would be abandoned.

    “By the time you do your third year in office next year, you will see that virtually all the contracts awarded under you as the president and the chairman of the Federal Executive Council will have been completed to the glory of God, and no contractor will be left unpaid. They know that in my dictionary, there’s no variation. So if I don’t have the money, I tell them, hold on! No pressure.

    “So I’m happy. This road again leads to all the judges’ quarters, the Court of Appeal, the Federal High Court, and the Federal Capital Territory High Court. By the grace of God, I don’t know the particular day where that will be commissioned. But I know that they have finished it and the judges’ quarters are almost ready.

    “Your Excellency, we cannot thank you enough to have the opportunity to be part of this goings-on in the country. I hardly watched some stations but sometimes, I don’t know how spiritually I was touched to just tune and start watching. This morning, I was touched and was watching. I didn’t know that people can be in pain. I didn’t know. And now I know there are such people that are pained. My duty now is to make sure to continue to give them high blood pressure. As ‘e dey pain them, e go dey sweet us’. As e dey sweet us, e go dey pain to them. That’s my job. I’ll be happy every time, moving, laughing. And then they will be there fighting and shouting and killing themselves.

    “So, Mr. President, we want to thank you that we are part of this, what is going on, the revolution that’s going on. Your good work has killed the coalition. I was thinking that truly, there would be a coalition. So, I told my people, make sure that every national television must hook in so they can see what’s happening every day.

    “If they turn to ADBN, they’re watching Mr. President. If they turn to TVC, it’s Mr. President. If they go to Channels, Mr. President. If they go to NTA, Mr. President. Even the one I don’t watch, Arise, it’s Mr. President.

    “So, they have no choice, and they must watch it and watch it for 17 days. There is nothing they can do.

    “Sir, Abuja people say I should tell you, please, they are happy. Coalition is bound to fail, and it has failed.”

    President woos Wike to APC

    President Tinubu invited Wike to join the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    He said the ruling party would welcome him into the fold with open arms because of his impressive performance as a member of FEC.

    “We have somebody in Nyesom Wike. He’s not a member of my party—not yet. But the day he changes his mind and registers with the progressives, we will welcome him. Because we will enjoy him in singing, ‘as e dey pain them, e dey sweet us,’” President Tinubu said.

    Wike, a Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) chieftain, served as governor of Rivers State between 2015 and 2023. He was appointed as minister by the President in 2023.

    President Tinubu has publicly showered praises on the minister for fighting the huge infrastructure deficit in Abuja.

  • President marks June 12 with maiden State of Nation address

    President marks June 12 with maiden State of Nation address

    The anniversary of the historic June 12 1993 presidential election will be marked today in a special way.

    This day, now Democracy Day, will witness the maiden state of the nation address to Nigerians through their federal lawmakers.

    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu will stand before a joint session of the Senate and the House of Representatives to speak on how the polity is faring.

    Business mogul Chief Moshood Abiola won the election and widely acknowledged to be free and fair. But it was annulled by the military  government of Gen. Ibrahim Babangida.

    The year after, having struggled to get his mandate Chief Abiola declared himself president at Epetedo in Lagos.

    He was arrested, detained, put on trial for treason. He died in custody on July 7, 1998.

    President Muhammadu Buhari declared Abiola President posthumously on account of his victory which was denied, and awarded him, again  posthumously, the highest national award of Grand Commander of the Federal Republic (GCFR).

    He also declared June 12 as Democracy Day to replace May 29.

    So as not to reduce the value attached to the state of the nation address, the Federal Government said there will be no military parade today.

    In a statement, Abdulhakeem Adeoye, on behalf of the Director of Information and Public Relations, said there will be no ceremonial parade this year, however, the celebration will include two key public engagements by the President.

    The statement reads: “At 12 noon, President Tinubu is scheduled to attend a Joint Session of the National Assembly at the National Assembly Complex.

    “This special sitting will serve as a symbolic affirmation of the synergy between the Executive and Legislature in nurturing Nigeria’s democratic system.

    “There will also be a Public Lecture on Democracy, to be held at 4pm at the State House Conference Centre, Abuja, with the theme: “Consolidating on the gains of Nigeria’s democracy: Necessity of enduring reforms.”

    Clerk to the House of Representatives, Yahaya Danzaria, told representatives in a memo on June 8, that the President is expected to arrive at the National Assembly at about noon.

    House spokesman Akintunde Rotimi gave a breakdown of the President’s engagement during his visit.

    Rotimi said: “The leadership and honourable members of the House of Representatives will participate in a special joint sitting of the National Assembly on Thursday (today), June 12, 2025, to commemorate this year’s Democracy Day.

    Read Also: State of nation: Tinubu in hurry to fix Nigeria, says Arewa Think Tank

    “This development was formally conveyed to members via an internal memorandum issued by the Clerk of the House of Representatives.

    “The special joint sitting is scheduled to hold at the House of Representatives Chamber, National Assembly Complex, commencing at 11am, with preliminary proceedings ahead of the arrival of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu at 12 noon.

    “The theme for this year’s celebration is: ‘26 years of democracy: Renewing our commitment to national development.”

    “President Tinubu is expected to attend the occasion as special guest of honour and will deliver a Presidential Address to the joint sitting.

    “The programme will also feature goodwill messages from former presiding officers of the National Assembly and the conferment of national honours on select legislators by Mr. President.

    “This joint sitting represents a significant moment in Nigeria’s democratic journey. It underscores the pivotal role of the National Assembly in safeguarding democratic values, fostering accountability, and advancing national development over the past 26 years of uninterrupted civil rule.

    “The House of Representatives urges all Nigerians to embrace the spirit of Democracy Day as a time for reflection, renewed patriotism, and commitment to building a more inclusive, prosperous, and united nation.”

  • The many lives of June 12

    The many lives of June 12

    • By Olatunji Dare

    To military president, Ibrahim Babangida, who was compelled by circumstances beyond his control to stage the presidential election of June 12, 1993, ostensibly the final act of his transition programme that had been eight years in the making, the poll was so shot through with bribery, coercion, intimidation and manipulation that it could not be countenanced as a test of the people’s will.

    He was forced to make a ragged, tearful retreat from office and from power by the nationwide protests.

    To Ernest Shonekan, head of the misbegotten Interim National Government that was charged with supervising the poll, it should be regarded as having passed into “the dustbin of history.”  In the end, it was Shonekan himself who was swept into that receptacle.

    To Clement Akpamgbo, officially Attorney-General and Secretary for Justice (ha) but in fact the regime’s forensic cardsharper, the election was a crime, and anyone who invoked it stood to be charged with treason.

    I know of one young man who felt sorely tormented that Akpamgbo, being chair of the Body of Benchers, was going to be the presiding personage at his Call to the Bar, and that he was supposed to regard him as a model.

    General Sani Abacha, who ended Shonekan’s pretence of being a Head of Government after 93 turbulent days, called the election a “watershed” and then set about to muddy and pollute the waters, only to expire in an orgy of concupiscence.

    In his Inaugural Address, President Olusegun made not the slightest allusion to June 12.  In his tenure spanning eight years, he could not bring himself to mention MKO Abiola’s name in public – Abiola, the winner of the annulled poll.  But every anniversary of June 12 helped keep that day and its epochal outcome splendidly in focus.

    Obasanjo would designate May 29, the day he took office as an elected civilian president, as Nigeria’s Democracy Day.  It was as if June 12 never happened. True believers in June 12 were unmoved. The day refused to go away.  Indeed, the harder they tried to erase it, the more tenaciously it clung to our consciousness.

    It was probably this tenacity that led Gani Fawehinmi, the redoubtable attorney and crusader for democracy and human rights, whom nobody ever accused of humbug, to declare that June 12 was a “spiritual force” that one dared to suppress at one’s peril.

    And then, a president from the North produced by a coalition of progressives from the Southwest and the North, yielded to pressures to accord June 12 its rightful place in Nigeria’s history.  Thus ended May 29’s sham pretence of being the symbol of the democratic will of Nigerians.

    And in double-quick time, June 12 was proclaimed Nigeria’s Democracy Day and declared a public holiday. With his release from a secret pact he had been forced to make with the Babangida regime and its powerful confederates, Humphrey Nwosu, chair of the national electoral body that conducted the election, published the official results that confirmed what had been known 48 hours after the poll.

    Abiola won decisively on every front and across Nigeria. He was no longer the “presumed winner” of the poll.  He was the uncontroverted winner and an authentic martyr of democracy, who refused to bargain away the people’s mandate for release from prison and privations of the shabbiest kind, this man of commanding presence who had lived in splendour and empowered hundreds of his compatriots to do the same, a person of storied kindness and compassion and legendary philanthropy.

    Sooner or later, a sturdy lie that was sown and watered and nurtured begins to wither from attrition, unable to withstand the relentless battering of countervailing facts.

    So it has been with the June 12 election and the elaborate scaffolding of falsehoods and obfuscations built around it.

    Read Also: Democracy Day: Soludo to speak on national rebirth at June 12 ‘Platform’

    Its calculating protagonist is nothing if not alert to the arc of history.  Sensing that his version of the events of that tumultuous period was becoming increasingly tenuous and that he was about to be unmasked as a reprobate unworthy to be called an officer and a gentleman, he changed tack abruptly.

    Several years ago, without any mental discomfort, Babangida told an interviewer that the June 12 election he annulled was the fairest and freest Nigeria had ever known and that it was completely devoid of violence.  So free and fair, he might have added, that it had to be annulled to protect a public that was not equipped to process it!

    And at every opportunity, he affirmed the true election outcome, maintaining however that it had to be annulled, even as he washed it clean of a battery of malpractices he had recited as justification. It was a monumental volte face, executed without regret or contrition.

    He reserved his peroration for the launch of his memoir, A Journey in Service, on February 20, 2025. The volume and the occasion, I contend, were designed more to monetise June 12 than to enrich history and public discourse. Even before a full accounting is done, the book has already gone down as the greatest money spinner ever produced between two covers. And how he milked it!

    Only certified gushers in the oil field can generate so much wealth at such velocity, but there, one must reckon with the muck and the dangers of life on the rig and the tax man.

    Babangida’s memoir spouted cash faster than the speed of sound. A handful of grateful contractors and beneficiaries plonked down N16 billion in a matter of minutes.

    The Naira is no longer what it used to be, but N16 billion is a great deal of money in any economy. It is bigger than the annual budget of all but a handful of states in Nigeria.

    All the reasons Babangida had solemnly advanced for the annulment – the “security reports,” the “tremendous negative use of money,” resort to tribal and religious incitement, he finally admitted, were manufactured through and through.

    “We now know better,” he said.

    What did he know, and when did he know it?

    If Babangida knew that all along and still went ahead to annul the election, then he has the blood of hundreds who were killed during the June protests on his head and the pains and privations of the thousands who lost limbs and livelihood on his conscience.

    The annulment, then, was not a historic mistake. It was, and remains, a historic crime.

    If he came to know what he now admits only much later, then he stands guilty of wilful and sustained deception that plunged a nation on which he had foisted himself into a convulsion from which it is yet to recover.

    • Dare contributed this piece from Caledonia, Michigan.
  • Tinubu to Wike: APC ready to welcome you

    Tinubu to Wike: APC ready to welcome you

    President Bola Tinubu on Wednesday declared that the All Progressives Congress (APC) is open to receiving the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Nyesom Wike, into its ranks.

    Tinubu made the remark while commissioning the Arterial Road N16 (Shehu Shagari Way) from Ring Road One (Nnamdi Azikiwe Way) to Arterial Road N20 (Wole Soyinka Road), along with several other roads in the Katampe District of Abuja.

    Read Also: Tinubu to Wike: ignore busybodies, continue the good works

    “With Wike, the APC will continue to be in a joyous mood, while our opponents will keep writhing in pain,” the president said.

    Details shortly…

  • Tinubu addresses Nigerians, joint NASS Assembly on Democracy Day

    Tinubu addresses Nigerians, joint NASS Assembly on Democracy Day

    The Federal Government has released the official programme of events for the 2025 Democracy Day celebration scheduled for Thursday, June 12.

    According to a statement by the Inter-Ministerial Committee on Democracy Day, this year’s celebration will begin with a national broadcast by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu by 7:00 a.m 

    The President’s address is expected to highlight the progress of the nation’s democratic journey, ongoing reforms under the Renewed Hope Agenda, and the government’s commitment to sustaining democratic values.

    The statement, which was signed by Abdulhakeem Adeoye, on behalf of the Director of Information and Public Relations on Wednesday, also said there will be no ceremonial parade this year, however, the celebration will include two key public engagements by the President.

    At 12 noon, President Tinubu is scheduled to attend a Joint Session of the National Assembly at the National Assembly Complex. 

    This special sitting will serve as a symbolic affirmation of the synergy between the Executive and Legislature in nurturing Nigeria’s democratic system.

    Read Also: Democracy Day: Soludo to speak on national rebirth at June 12 ‘Platform’

    There will also be a public lecture on Democracy, by 4:00 pm at the State House Conference Centre, Abuja, with the theme:“Consolidating on the Gains of Nigeria’s Democracy: Necessity of Enduring Reforms.”

    Media coverage for the Villa event will be managed by State House correspondents. 

    The statement also specified that media houses attached to the State House and interested in live coverage must submit the names of their Outside Broadcast (OB) crew and correspondents to the Directorate of Information and Public Relations before 3:00 p.m. today (Wednesday).

    The statement called for professional coordination and timely logistics for media personnel seeking access to the events.

    This year’s Democracy Day holds added significance as it marks the second such celebration under President Tinubu’s administration, and comes amid a renewed national conversation on democratic reforms, constitutional amendments, and efforts to deepen national unity.

    Democracy Day, officially marked on June 12 each year, commemorates the historic 1993 presidential election, widely regarded as the freest and fairest in Nigeria’s history. 

    The election, presumed to have been won by the late Chief M.K.O. Abiola, was annulled by the military regime, triggering years of civil agitation that ultimately culminated in the restoration of democratic rule in 1999.

  • National Assembly mulls extension of 2024 budget capital vote

    National Assembly mulls extension of 2024 budget capital vote

    The lifespan of the capital vote component of the Federal Government’s 2024 budget is set for extension.

    Senate Leader Opeyemi Bamidele gave this hint yesterday, saying this is necessary to ensure full implementation.

    Bamidele said: “We have to sit and assess the full implementation of the 2024 budget.

    “We will further extend the capital expenditure timeline while ensuring that the 2025 budget is fully implemented.”

    The National Assembly, before the passage of this year’s budget, extended the implementation of the capital expenditure for the 2024 budget till June 30, this year.

    The planned further extension might have been a result of the inability to fully implement the capital vote.

    Last December 18, the National Assembly extended the implementation of the 2024 Budget by six months.

    Senate President Godswill Akpabio, speaking at the 2025 Budget presentation by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, said the 2024 Budget had achieved a 50 per cent performance rate in capital expenditure and 48 per cent in recurrent expenditure.

    “Your Excellency, we have noted the 2024 Budget performance.

    “Given this great achievement, we have deemed it necessary to extend the life span of the 2024 Budget to June 30th, 2025.

    “The enabling law for this extension will soon be placed before you for your assent as a testament to our appreciation for the great performance of the budget, ensuring that we build upon your momentum,” Akpabio had said.

    Bamidele, in a statement by his media adviser, Gboyega Akinsanmi, also spoke on the need to institutionalise a presidential address every June 12 in recognition of its historical significance.

    The Senator said: “We are hoping to bring a bill soon to institutionalise the President’s address on June 12 because of its historical importance.

    “There can’t be a better time to address the nation through the parliament than on June 12, especially since it is a joint sitting.”

    President Tinubu is slated to address the Federal lawmakers at a joint sitting tomorrow.

    Read Also: NASS to initiate Bill to swear-in President-elect in Legislative Chamber

    Bamidele said the proposed legislation would also seek to designate the National Assembly  Complex as the venue for future presidential inauguration.

    He added: “We are hoping, in that bill, to ensure that the swearing-in of the next President and Commander-in-Chief, who we believe is President Tinubu, will be held within the arcade of the National Assembly.”

    June 12 was declared Democracy Day as a replacement for May 29 by President Muhammadu Buhari.

    The historic election won by Chief Moshood Abiola and annulled by Military President Ibrahim Babangida was held on June 12, 1993.

    May 29, 1999, is the anniversary of the return to civil rule after 13 years of military.

    Bamidele said a bill to make the presidential address at the National Assembly on June 12 mandatory will be proposed.

    The Senator, who is the Vice Chairman of the Constitution Review Committee, acknowledged that the constitution amendment has been slow.

    However, he assured Nigerians that the process is ongoing, adding that it will bear fruit.

    Bamidele said the committee is approaching the final stage of its work and planning to hold public hearings at zonal levels.

    He said the public hearings would lead to a joint public hearing coordinated by the House of Representatives and the Senate.

    He stressed: “We have done almost 70 per cent of the work before going public.

    “Before the end of the third legislative year, we intend to complete the constitutional amendment process.”

  • No going back on infrastructure upgrade, says Tinubu

    No going back on infrastructure upgrade, says Tinubu

    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu yesterday reaffirmed commitment to the revival of critical infrastructure across key sectors to stimulate economic growth and national development.

    He spoke at the inauguration of the rehabilitated International Conference Centre (ICC), which the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Minister, Nyesom Wike, renamed as President Bola Ahmed Tinubu International Conference Centre in Abuja.

    The President described infrastructure renewal as the cornerstone of his Renewed Hope Agenda (RHA) and modern infrastructure as “the backbone of a thriving economy.”

    He said: “Through the RHA, we are determined to renew infrastructure across the key sectors of this country; transportation, healthcare, education, energy, and urban development.

    “Because we understand that modern infrastructure is the backbone of a thriving economy in an inclusive and progressive society.”

    The President noted that the transformation of the ICC is emblematic of a broader national vision to position Nigeria as a central hub for continental trade, diplomacy, and global partnership.

    “The International Conference Centre is part of our country’s larger vision to become a hub for regional diplomacy, continental trade discussions, global partnerships, and many more thoughtful, well-outlined goals that reflect our Nigerian First philosophy,” Tinubu added.

    He praised the FCT minister for delivering on his promise to rehabilitate the conference facility, the president urged Wike to remain focused in the face of criticism and public distractions.

     “Don’t pay attention to the busybodies and the bystanders, whatever they say. Continue with your good work. You are a transformational leader; you have the foresight, the vision, and determination to succeed,” he told Wike.

    Recounting his disappointment when he previously visited the ICC for the ECOWAS Parliament Conference, the president described the state of the facility then as “very dirty, disorganised, and as not habitable.”

    According to him, he asked the FCT minister whether the condition of the building truly reflected Nigeria’s values and dignity.

    “Have we sunk this low?” the President recalled asking, only to be assured by Wike that the facility would be transformed.

    “And today, I am very happy,” Tinubu declared, praising the quality of the rehabilitation work.

    Read Also: Politicians exploiting Nigeria’s ethnic, religious fractionalization – Bishop

    “Today, we are not talking about renegotiation, we are talking about rehabilitation. We are talking about quality, commitment to detail and good work”, he said.

    Commending the broader significance of the refurbishment, the President described it as a symbol of the national ethos of self-belief, progress, and renewal.

    “Whatever might be wrong today is a sign of a good thing that we are correcting. We are reflecting, renewing our hope, and believing in ourselves — in what we can do, in what Nigeria can be: the greatest nation on earth”, he said.

    Closing his remarks with a blend of humour and policy clarity, the President issued a firm directive on the upgraded edifice: “You must obey what the landlord says. You want to use this place, you got to pay for it.”

    On arrival the President tour the facilities of the complex that was built in 1991.

    Senate President Godswill Akpabio commended the FCT minister for the renovation and the President for his approval to upgrade the facility to world-class standard.

    Akpabio said: “The marvelous and performing minister of the FCT and his Minister of State, Dr. Mariya Mahmoud.

    “Mr. President, in law, we say the act speaks for itself. We came last year to inaugurate the first sitting of the ECOWAS Parliament. Parliamentarians came from all parts of West Africa. It was a monumental embarrassment. We managed to get a small generator working. This place was dark. This place was in a total state of disrepair.

    “And you were shocked. You turned to me and said, “Is this what we are showcasing to West Africa? And then the Minister came and said, ‘I didn’t know it was like this’. Right there, he vowed to you that next time you set your feet in this international conference center, the story will be different.

    “But permit me to commend the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, my dear brother. I don’t know which contractor handled this, but I can imagine it must be the usual. I’m just guessing because I saw their quality when I entered.

    “Mr. President, the renovation, rehabilitation, and transformation that we are witnessing in the ICC is what we are bringing to this country, whether people like it or not. The Nigerian Parliament is very proud of you. We are proud of the fact that we do the budgeting, we give the approvals, and you do the execution. But you have put on your thinking cap and you are very determined to leave Nigeria better than you met it.

    “It starts from here. I said it before in Lagos, and I will repeat myself, that a journey of a thousand miles begins with a step, and that is the step we are taking here.

     “I understand that you have also honored the Nigerian Parliament, as one of the halls is named after another transformative Senate President, in the person of Senator Godswill Akpabio. May I tell you; we are very appreciative. The Parliament is appreciative.

    “There is also another hall named after His Excellency, the Speaker of the House of Representatives. And then, just beside him, is another hall named after the current Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justice Kudirat Kekere-Ekun.

    “What are you trying to imply? You are trying to say that the three arms of government – the Executive, the Parliament and the Judiciary – are working together for the total transformation of Nigeria under President Bola Ahmed Tinubu. And for this, I say thank you to you.”

    Wike said the ‘Bola Ahmed Tinubu International Conference Centre’ is a world-class structure requiring constant maintenance.

    He noted that anybody that would use the renovated ICC must be ready to pay irrespective of his or her status.

    The minister said: “Because of your leadership, you gave a marching order, this is not the quality to show that Nigeria is the Giant of Africa. Today, this Bola Ahmed Tinubu International Conference Centre can match any other international conference centre anywhere. But what I want to appeal to Mr. President, because I know that pressure will come, how do we sustain this?

    “I want to let everybody know – whether you are a Ministry or an agency, you want to use this? You have to pay something. That is the only way it can be sustained. There is nothing like my brother or my sister going to have a wedding. If you want to use such a beautiful place like this, then you must drop something.

    “This place was being handled before by a politician. They gave it to a politician and he killed the place and when we tried to do work, the politician had to go to court to stop it from carrying out this rehabilitation that you are seeing today.

    “So, if you are not the kind of person that you are, we would not have succeeded in doing this work. Pressure came from left, right and centre and you said go ahead and rehabilitate that place and we thank God for his leadership. Our problem is leadership. When you have the right leadership, things will get done and that is what you have shown today.”

    At the ceremony were senior figures in government such as¬ Deputy Senate President Jibrin Barau and Chief of Staff to the President (CoS) Femi Gbajabiamila, among others.