Category: Politics

  • Presidency berates Sowore over planned ‘Free Nnamdi Kanu’ protest

    Presidency berates Sowore over planned ‘Free Nnamdi Kanu’ protest

    The Presidency has lashed out at Omoyele Sowore over his plan to stage a protest march to the Presidential Villa, Abuja for the release of detained leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), Nnamdi Kanu.

    Sowore is the publisher of the online news outlet, Sahara Reporters and was the presidential candidate of the African Action Congress (AAC) in the 2023 elections.

    In a post on his verified X handle, @aonanuga1956, Special Adviser to the President on Information and Strategy, Mr. Bayo Onanuga, described Sowore as “an anarchist masquerading as a rights activist,” accusing him of attempting to incite disorder under the guise of a protest.

    Sowore announced that the #FreeNnamdiKanuNow demonstration would hold on October 20 at 7 a.m., calling it a “historic” protest to press for Kanu’s release.

    Reacting, Onanuga said the move was a deliberate attempt to undermine the rule of law, warning that the IPOB leader’s ongoing trial on charges of treason must be allowed to run its lawful course.

    Read Also: Tinubu grants Herbert Macaulay, Vatsa, 173 others presidential pardon

    “You are nothing more than an anarchist masquerading as a rights activist. You very well know that Nnamdi Kanu is facing trial for treason, and yet you want to cause a breakdown of law and order by mobilising for a protest. Is this the kind of revolution you envisage for Nigeria, where the rule of law will be violated and your idea of justice would be the law of the jungle?” the presidential aide wrote.

    Onanuga also criticised former Vice President Atiku Abubakar for expressing support for the planned protest, describing his stance as opportunistic and irresponsible for a statesman of his standing.

    “I am surprised that ex-VP Atiku Abubakar, who is always opportunistic, has supported the planned mob action. As a statesman, he should know better that matters of justice are not resolved on the streets but in the law court,” he said.

    The presidential spokesman reaffirmed that while the judicial process in Kanu’s case may appear slow, the administration remains committed to due process and the rule of law.

    “While the wheel of justice can sometimes be grindingly slow, partly caused by Kanu’s lawyers, Nnamdi Kanu will eventually get the justice he deserves for his alleged transgressions,” Onanuga added.

  • Last two standing Ondo PDP lawmakers join APC

    Last two standing Ondo PDP lawmakers join APC

    Two lawmakers from the opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Ondo – Hon. Oladiji Oguntudo and Hon. Raymond Oluwatoyin Daodu – have defected to the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC).

    Oguntudo, who represents Akure South Constituency I, and Daodu, the Deputy Minority Leader representing Akoko South West Constituency I, announced their defection during Thursday’s plenary session of the Ondo State House of Assembly in Akure.

    The Nation report that the defection of the two lawmakers from the PDP to the APC makes it a total of 26 legislators dominating the House of Assembly with no opposition.

    Read Also: UPDATED: Council of state backs Tinubu’s nominee, Prof. Amupitan as INEC chairman

    Speaker Olamide Oladiji presided over the plenary.

    Their defection came a month after the duo resigned from the PDP, citing leadership tussles and deepening internal crises within the opposition party.

    In their separate resignation letters, the lawmakers explained that their decision to join the ruling APC followed extensive consultations with family members, constituents, and political leaders, who advised them to align with the state’s governing party.

    Before their defection, Oguntudo and Daodu were the last remaining PDP members.

    Welcoming the new members, Speaker Oladiji commended their decision, expressing optimism that their defection would further strengthen the APC’s numerical advantage in the House.

    He lauded President Bola Tinubu’s leadership and described the development as a welcome boost for the ruling party in the state.

    The Speaker also praised Governor Lucky Aiyedatiwa for his progressive governance, urging the defectors to contribute meaningfully to the party’s growth and collective success.

  • Successor may be within my team – Makinde

    Successor may be within my team – Makinde

    Oyo Governor Seyi Makinde said he may consider putting forward an individual from within his team as successor in the 2027 elections.

    Justifying the decision, the Governor said although the final decision on who take over after him lies with the people, suggesting a candidate from within his team, who would have been evaluated to have good understating of all that his administration is doing will be a sure path to a building on the roadmap for sustainable development beyond 2027.

    Read Also; Tinubu grants Herbert Macaulay, Vatsa, 173 others presidential pardon

    The Governor spoke on Thursday at the Stakeholders’ Consultative and Engagement Meeting on the 2026 Budget at the Ogunlana Hall, International Conference Centre, University of Ibadan.

    He said: “If we put anybody forward in our team, what it means is that we have evaluated that individual. It wouldn’t be about the individual per se. If within the team, we have a roadmap for continued development of Oyo State 2027 and beyond and we have people within that team that have already bought into it, that would be the best path forward.

    “Having said that, the decision on who would be the next governor rests with the people of Oyo State. We will make our own submission to the people, because Oyo State has gone beyond stunt politics. Maybe it used to happen in the past. Now, Oyo State people will ask you questions.”

  • Amupitan will restore public confidence in electoral system – Northern Ethnic group

    Amupitan will restore public confidence in electoral system – Northern Ethnic group

    The Northern Ethnic Nationalities Forum (NENF) has expressed confidence that President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s appointment of Prof. Joash Amupitan (SAN) as the Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) would restore public confidence in the electoral process.

    The group also described his historic appointment as a significant step toward strengthening Nigeria’s democratic institutions.

    A statement on Thursday in Abuja by the Chairman of NENF, Dr. Dominic Alancha, said the appointment reflects a commitment to meritocracy and national inclusiveness.

    Read Also: UPDATED: Council of state backs Tinubu’s nominee, Prof. Amupitan as INEC chairman

    The statement reads: “As a Forum believes he will steer the Commission with independence, transparency, and excellence at a time when our democracy requires bold, ethical, and visionary leadership.

    “The Northern Ethnic Nationalities Forum also wishes to express profound gratitude to President Bola Ahmed Tinubu for making this strategic and commendable choice, as well as to the Council of State for their endorsement and support of Prof. Amupitan’s nomination.

    “This decision demonstrates a clear commitment by the current administration to electoral reform, national unity, and competent leadership across all arms of governance.

    “We believe this appointment will inspire confidence among Nigerians, particularly the youth, and the organised civil society and serve as a catalyst for a more credible, technologically advanced, and peaceful electoral process in the years to come.

    “We are especially proud that this appointment reflects the Federal Government’s recognition of the deep well-being of talent and integrity that exists within the North-central region and among its diverse ethnic nationalities. Prof. Amupitan stands as a shining example of the excellence that our region contributes to national development.

    “As stakeholders in the democratic project, we call on all Nigerians—regardless of region, ethnicity, or political affiliation—to support Prof. Amupitan, as he embarks on this crucial national assignment.

    “Once again, we congratulate Prof. Joash Amupitan, and we assure him of our prayers and unwavering support in his quest to reposition INEC as a truly independent and trusted institution.”

  • You lack morality to pontificate on ex-minister Nnaji, Onoh upbraids Atiku

    You lack morality to pontificate on ex-minister Nnaji, Onoh upbraids Atiku

    The former southeast spokesman to President Bola Tinubu, Denge. Josef Onoh has told former vice President Atiku Abubakar his commentary on the resigned minister for Innovation Science and Technology, Chief Uche Nnaji was a hypothetical outburst lacing in morality.

    Atiku had condemned the Federal Government over the certificate forgery allegation against Nnaji, saying that what should have been a national shame was disguised as voluntary resig­nation.

    Onoh in a statement in Abuja said Atiku’s statement was a tirade against President Tinubu and his administration, adding that Atiku exhibits desperate political ploy and grotesque display of hypocrisy.

    He accused Atiku of an ugly past and ethical lapses that would make any true patriot recoil in disgust.

    “How dare you pontificate on moral crises, while your past reeks of scandals that have repeatedly stained Nigeria’s public trust? The audacity is breathtaking. As a private citizen with no stake in the corridors of power you invited moral burden, you lack the moral authority, nay, the basic integrity, to lecture anyone on deception or accountability. Your words are not a clarion call for justice; they are the hollow echoes of a perennial loser grasping at straws to distract from his own irrelevance.

    “Let us dissect your sanctimonious statement with the cold precision it deserves, grounded firmly in the immutable provisions of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (as amended). You feign outrage over Mr. Nnaji’s voluntary resignation, claiming it masks a national shame and that he should have been summarily dismissed and prosecuted, yet, you conveniently ignore that President Tinubu’s swift acceptance of the resignation barely 72 hours after credible investigative reports surfaced, demonstrates precisely the accountability you pretend to champion,” Onoh admonished.

    He stated that under Section 147(1) of the Constitution, the President has the unfettered discretion to appoint and remove ministers at his pleasure, subject only to Senate confirmation for appointments,, which placed no constitutional bar against resignation as a dignified exit.

    He said that the President’s action aligns with the ethical imperatives of public service outlined in the Fifth Schedule, Part I (Code of Conduct for Public Officers), which emphasizes integrity and avoidance of conflicts that erode public confidence.

    He stressed that Nnaji’s prompt exit, prompted by a thorough media investigation, revealing discrepancies in his University of Nigeria, Nsukka (UNN) degree and NYSC certificate, upholds the public service code which the University of Nigeria confirmed that Nnaji never graduated, and NYSC disavowed his discharge certificate—facts that triggered his resignation on October 7, 2025, without the need for protracted drama.

    “You demand prosecution? Fine, let the wheels of justice turn. The Criminal Code Act (applicable in southern Nigeria, including Enugu where Mr. Nnaji hails from) under Sections 465-467 criminalizes forgery of official documents, punishable by up to 14 years imprisonment. The Penal Code (northern equivalent) mirrors this in Sections 362-366. Additionally, the Fifth Schedule, Part I, Paragraph 11 mandates asset and credential declarations, with breaches constituting ‘misconduct’ under Paragraph 3(d), including false declaration of assets and liabilities.

    Read Also: UPDATED: Council of state backs Tinubu’s nominee, Prof. Amupitan as INEC chairman

    “If investigations by the EFCC or ICPC—agencies you once undermined—uncover intent, prosecution will follow, as it should for any public officer. But your selective amnesia is telling: Where was this zeal when your own allies forged paths through similar shadows? President Tinubu’s administration has not condoned forgery as state policy. It has enforced accountability, unlike the Obasanjo era you helped orchestrate, where scandals festered under your watch.

    “Now, to the heart of your hypocrisy: You smear President Tinubu as a man of questionable identity and alleged forgery, dredging up the Chicago State University (CSU) saga as if it were unresolved. The facts bury you here. In October 2023, following a U.S. court order you yourself petitioned for, CSU released President Tinubu’s full academic records, confirming he enrolled in August 1977, majored in Accounting, and graduated with a Bachelor of Science in June 1979.

    “The university’s registrar, Caleb Westberg, deposed under oath that the replacement certificate Tinubu submitted to INEC matches CSU’s 1979 format, as verified against seven contemporaneous diplomas. Section 131(1)(d) of the Constitution requires presidential candidates to be educated up to at least School Certificate level or its equivalent—a threshold Tinubu not only meets but exceeds, as affirmed by CSU’s official transcripts and the Supreme Court’s dismissal of your petition in October 2023.

    “Your contradictory claims under oath are fiction; the records show consistency in identity (Bola A. Tinubu) and attendance. The U.S. Supreme Court denied your appeal in 2024, closing this chapter. To persist is not advocacy—it’s defamation, prosecutable under Section 375 of the Criminal Code for false statements calculated to injure reputation.

    “But oh, Atiku, the mirror you shatter reflects your own fractured visage far more cruelly. You, who accuse others of institutionalizing falsehood, stand as a monument to corruption that the Constitution abhors. Recall the Fifth Schedule, Part I, Paragraph 2: “A public officer shall not put himself in a position where his personal interest conflicts with his duties. You embodied this breach repeatedly. In 2006, as Vice President, a Senate ad-hoc committee indicted you for diverting over $145 million from PTDF funds to private interests, recommending prosecution—a grave violation of Paragraph 3(c) on bribery and corruption.

    “The EFCC, under Nuhu Ribadu, declared you unfit for public office, echoing the Code of Conduct Tribunal’s mandate under Paragraph 18(1) to punish such “misconduct” with dismissal or bans. You fled to Dubai, only returning when political winds shifted.

    “Fast-forward to 2010: A U.S. Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations report exposed how your wife, Jennifer Douglas, laundered over $40 million in suspect funds into U.S. banks during your VP tenure—funds traced to Nigerian public coffers.

    “This implicated you in money laundering, contravening Section 15(1) of the Money Laundering (Prohibition) Act and the Constitution’s anti-corruption ethos in Section 15(5). You were even linked to a bribery scandal that imprisoned U.S. Congressman William Jefferson, per the same report.

    “Your 2023 presidential bid unearthed more rot: Whistleblower Michael Achimugu’s recordings revealed you boasting of siphoning N100 million from the Ecological Fund Office via Special Purpose Vehicles (SPVs) like Marine Float Limited—classic embezzlement under Section 308 of the Penal Code. HEDA petitioned the EFCC and CCB for probe; Festus Keyamo sued you at the Federal High Court (FHC/ABJ/CS/84/2023) to compel investigation. Even your son-in-law, Abdullahi Babalele, dodged money laundering charges in 2020 for funneling $140,000 to influence elections—echoes of your playbook. And let’s not forget the 1984 suitcases scandal: As Customs Area Comptroller, you waved through 53 undeclared suitcases of cash at Murtala Muhammed Airport, a blatant breach of fiduciary duty under the Code of Conduct.

    “These are not whispers; they are documented indictments, Atiku. The Constitution’s Fifth Schedule, Paragraph 12, requires allegations of such breaches to go to the Code of Conduct Bureau—yet you evaded scrutiny time and again, shielded by political patronage. You call for an independent investigation into the FEC’s credentials, starting with Tinubu? Pot, meet kettle. The DSS’s clearance of nominees, including Nnaji, is a procedural lapse we own and have corrected—but your demand reeks of sabotage, not sincerity. Section 146(b) allows the President to fill vacancies swiftly; Tinubu has, appointing a substantive replacement without delay. Your pattern of sour grapes— from 2007 (when EFCC barred you) to 2023 (when you lost fairly)—exposes this as electioneering theater, not statesmanship.

    “Nigerians see through you, Atiku. While President Tinubu builds on his verified credentials to steer Nigeria toward renewed hope, you peddle division from the sidelines. Retract your baseless smears, or better yet, submit yourself to the EFCC for the probes you dodged. Only then might your voice on morality ring less like a forgery itself. The Constitution demands better—from all of us. It starts with silencing hypocrites and statesman turned salesman like you,” Onoh berated.

  • Over 500 PDP, NNPP members defect to APC in Jigawa

    Over 500 PDP, NNPP members defect to APC in Jigawa

    No fewer than 500 members of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP) have defected to the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) in Sakwaya Ward, Dutse Local Government Area of Jigawa State.

    The mass defection, which added to the growing wave of opposition members joining the APC across the state’s 27 local government areas, was celebrated by party supporters.

    Receiving the new members, Special Adviser to the Governor on Labour Matters, Comrade Abdullahi Tsoho Garba, reaffirmed the administration’s commitment to citizens’ welfare and the consolidation of Governor Malam Umar Namadi’s development agenda.

    Garba highlighted the governor’s inclusive approach to governance, emphasizing progress in infrastructure, human capital development, and service delivery — all aimed at building a prosperous Jigawa State.

    He assured the defectors of continued access to the dividends of democracy under the Namadi administration.

    READ ALSO; Prof. Amupitan: 10 quick facts about new INEC chairman

    Also speaking, the member representing Dutse Constituency in the State House of Assembly, Hon. Tasiu Soja, welcomed the new entrants and pledged equal opportunities and fair treatment within the party.

    Speaking on behalf of the defectors, former PDP chairman of Sakwaya Ward, Malam Danazumi Yakubu, said their decision was driven by Governor Namadi’s purposeful and people-centered leadership.

    “We joined the APC to contribute our quota to building a prosperous Jigawa under Governor Namadi’s realistic 12-point agenda. The mission is on the right track, and we don’t want to be left behind,” Yakubu stated.

    Prominent among the new APC members are PDP stakeholder Alhaji Garba Dankwashan (Sarkin Fawa), Ward Secretary Abdulrahim Zobiya, Women Leader Hajiya Mariya, Youth Leader Kabiru Jidawa, and the polling unit chairmen of Gadarawa and Sabon Gari.

  • Obidient Movement congratulates Amupitan on appointment as INEC chairman

    Obidient Movement congratulates Amupitan on appointment as INEC chairman

    Supporters of Peter Obi, the 2023 Labour Party presidential candidate, have congratulated Professor Joash Amupitan on his appointment as the new Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    The group, under the aegis of the Obidient Movement, expressed optimism that Amupitan’s leadership would usher in a new era of credibility and transparency in Nigeria’s electoral process.

    In a statement jointly signed by Yunusa Tanko, National Coordinator, and Nana Kazaure, Director of Strategic Communications and Media, the movement commended President Bola Tinubu for the appointment and extended its warm felicitations to the new INEC chairman.

    READ ALSO; Prof. Amupitan: 10 quick facts about new INEC chairman

    “As we reflect on the experiences of past INEC chairmen, we are hopeful that your tenure will mark a significant milestone in the electoral history of Nigeria,” the statement read.

    “We look forward to reforms that will enhance the credibility, freedom, and fairness of our elections, particularly as we approach the 2027 General Elections.

    “We wish you a successful tenure and pray for God’s guidance and protection as you navigate the challenges of this critical office. Congratulations once again, and we look forward to a new era of electoral excellence under your leadership.”

  • Crisis in Oyo APC is over, chairman declares

    Crisis in Oyo APC is over, chairman declares

    The Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Oyo State, Alhaji Olayide Abas, has expressed confidence that the long-standing internal crisis within the party, which has hindered its return to power since 2019, will soon be resolved.

    Abas assured that stakeholders across the party are now committed to working together to rebuild a stronger and more united progressive front in the state.

    Speaking at the party’s Secretariat in Oke-Ado, Ibadan, the APC chairman noted that conflicts are natural in any human organisation and are often the result of interactions, competition, and differing interests.

    He added that the true measure of leadership lies in the ability to effectively manage such inevitable crises, stressing that this capacity determines a party’s growth, cohesion, and eventual electoral success.

    He said, “In Oyo APC today, we have gone through a lot in the last seven or eight years and the beautiful thing now is that we have got to a point where virtually everyone is saying ‘enough is enough’.

    READ ALSO; Prof. Amupitan: 10 quick facts about new INEC chairman

    “We had a Leadership Summit on Tuesday and its outcome reflected a bright future of hope, unity and progress for our great Party in the state. The Summit was well attended by invited dignitaries from across the state and it signalled a new beginning with a promise of huge success.

    “I must appreciate Party leaders such as; His Excellency Chief Iyiola Oladokun, Chief Akin Oke, Senator Ayo Adeseun, Sen. Brimo Yusuf, Alhaji Fatai Ibikunle among other stakeholders as well as all the members of the Peace Advocates (a group of eminent APC leaders in the state) for their contributions to the success of the Summit which rekindled the spirit of togetherness, love and service in our people as evident in the feedback generated during and after the programme.

    “We have carried out series of reconciliation efforts since I assumed office as the state chairman late last year and the results are manifesting. 

    “Even the Summit which we organized successfully on Tuesday was sponsored by eminent party members who wanted the best for the APC in the state and the next thing is for us to set up an Implementation Committee for the resolutions reached at the summit to see the light of the day while efforts are being put in place to organize an expanded Stakeholder Meeting as soon as possible with a view to bringing everyone on board.”

  • Adeyanju commends Tinubu on appointment of new INEC chairman

    Adeyanju commends Tinubu on appointment of new INEC chairman

    Human rights activist and lawyer, Deji Adeyanju, has commended President Bola Ahmed Tinubu for the nomination of Professor Joash Ojo Amupitan (SAN) as the new chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    In a statement issued on Thursday, Adeyanju described the appointment as a reflection of the President’s recognition of competence and inclusiveness, noting that Professor Amupitan is the first indigene from Kogi State’s minority Ijumu community to be appointed to the position, representing the north-central region.

    READ ALSO; Prof. Amupitan: 10 quick facts about new INEC chairman

    He said the nominee’s distinguished record as a Professor of Law and Senior Advocate of Nigeria makes him a fitting choice to lead the electoral body at a crucial moment in the country’s democratic journey.

    “I must admit that I had expected the President to appoint someone from his immediate circle or from Osun State, but this decision comes as a pleasant surprise,” Adeyanju said.

    He lauded President Tinubu for making a merit-based appointment and expressed optimism that Professor Amupitan would bring integrity, professionalism, and reform-driven leadership to INEC.

  • Nnaji: Tinubu not aiding corruption, cover ups – Onoh

    Nnaji: Tinubu not aiding corruption, cover ups – Onoh

    The former Southeast spokesman for president Bola Tinubu Denge. Josef Onoh, has refuted the allegation by the Africa Democratic Congress (ADC) that the presidency aids cover ups for corruption.

    The ADC allegation arise from the former Minister for Innovation Science and Technology Chief Uche Nnaji, who resigned his appointment on Tuesday following certificates forgery allegation.

    The ADC painted a picture of the President’s sympathy for criminality weak response to integrity breaches, claiming that his acceptance Minister Nnaji’s resignation signals a troubling pattern of dishonesty within the APC. 

    But Onoh said that the ADC position amounts to political mischief, egregious and desperate attempt by a fringe opposition party to score cheap points amid their own irrelevance. 

    “Let me first clarify the timeline and substance of the Uche Nnaji affair, which the ADC conveniently glosses over in their rush to judgment. Uche Nnaji, nominated as Minister of Innovation, Science and Technology, faced scrutiny during his Senate confirmation hearings over discrepancies in his academic credentials. 

    “In a display of the self-correcting mechanisms inherent in our democratic institutions, verifications by the University of Nigeria, Nsukka (UNN) and the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) revealed that the certificates presented were not issued by these bodies. Crucially, Nnaji himself acknowledged this in court filings, demonstrating candor rather than concealment.

    “Rather than stonewall or defend the indefensible, a tactic all too familiar in opposition circles, Nnaji proactively tendered his resignation. President Tinubu, in line with his administration’s zero-tolerance stance on impropriety, accepted the resignation without delay. This was not a quiet shuffle or a backroom deal; it was a public affirmation that no one was above the law. 

    “Therefore, the ADC’s assertion that this acceptance gives an impression of sympathy is a figment of the party’s imagination untethered from reality. On the contrary, it underscores the President’s efficiency in removing unfit elements from public office, preventing further embarrassment to the nation.

    “To label this as a ‘cover-up’ is not just hyperbolic; it is defamatory. President Tinubu did not ‘let off the hook’ any official, he excised a problem at its root. The resignation itself triggered the necessary institutional reviews, including potential referrals to investigative bodies, all operating independently of the executive. This is governance that acts decisively, not one that drags the nation through protracted spectacles for political theater,” Onoh clarified.

    On the constitutional prerogative and the President’s authority in ministerial appointments and removals, Onoh rebuked ADC’s indignation, ignoring the clear delineations of power in Nigeria’s 1999 Constitution (as amended), which vests the president with explicit authority over the executive branch. 

    He quoted that under Section 147(1), the President “may, in his discretion, assign members of his administration to departments or ministries,” implying the corollary power to remove them when exigencies demand.

    “This discretion is not absolute but is bounded by the principles of good governance and accountability, which President Tinubu has consistently upheld.

    “Furthermore, Section 11 of the Third Schedule Part I, outlines the Senate’s role in confirmation but does not mandate executive retention post-confirmation if new facts emerge. The President’s acceptance of a resignation is a legitimate exercise of executive prerogative, akin to the “pleasure doctrine” under Section 141, which allows ministers to hold office at the President’s pleasure.”

    Onoh maintained that by accepting Nnaji’s resignation, President Tinubu invoked this authority to safeguard public trust, not evade it, noting that the Supreme Court affirmed such discretion in cases such as the A.G. Federation v. A.G. Lagos State (2013), emphasizing that executive actions in personnel matters must be reasonable and not arbitrary—criteria met here through prompt, transparent handling.

    He said that he ADC’s demand for the President to “take a tougher stance” beyond resignation betrays their misunderstanding of separation of powers, because the executive appoints and removes and does not prosecute. 

    Read Also: Nnaji’s resignation: A lesson in honour

    “That remit belongs to the judiciary and independent agencies like the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and the Independent Corrupt Practices Commission (ICPC). President Tinubu’s administration has empowered these bodies—evidenced by over 5,000 convictions under his watch since 2023—rather than micromanaging them for partisan gain.

    “Legal Framework on Forgery: Due Process Over Lynch Mob Justice, which presumably might be 

    The core of the ADC’s accusation hinges on forgery, a serious offense under Nigerian law. Yet, their portrayal of the President’s response as enabling impunity flies in the face of statutes that prioritize investigation over the presumption of guilt. Forgery is criminalized under Sections 465–467 of the Criminal Code Act (Cap. C38, LFN 2004), which defines it as making a false document with intent to defraud, punishable by up to 14 years imprisonment. For public officers, **Section 22 of the Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offenses Act, 2000** imposes additional liabilities for false declarations in official capacities.

    “However, conviction requires due process: investigation, arraignment, and trial, as enshrined in **Sections 35–36 of the 1999 Constitution**, guaranteeing fair hearing and presumption of innocence. 

    “The ADC’s call for immediate prosecution “if found guilty” conflates resignation with absolution—a strawman they erect to attack the President. Nnaji’s resignation does not immunize him; it merely shifts him from public office to private citizen status, where agencies like the EFCC can pursue charges unencumbered by executive privilege.

    “President Tinubu has a proven track record of referring such matters for prosecution. Recall the swift EFCC indictments in the Betta Edu and Halima Shehu cases earlier in 2025, both involving APC appointees. In Nnaji’s instance, reports indicate that the Attorney-General’s office has already flagged the file for review by relevant agencies. This is not “letting corrupt officials off the hook”—it is allowing the law to take its course, free from executive interference. 

    “The ADC’s alternative—executive-orchestrated “tough stances”—would violate **Section 4(8) of the Constitution**, which limits legislative oversight to appropriation, not prosecutorial direction.

    “Moreover, the ADC’s hypocrisy is glaring. As a party with its own history of internal scandals, including unresolved allegations against its leadership in the 2023 elections, they lecture on integrity from a glass house. Nigerians deserve better than opposition tantrums that erode institutions for fleeting headlines.

    “The ADC’s claim of a ‘troubling pattern’ of certificate scandals under the APC is a tired trope, selectively amnesiac about opposition figures who have faced similar scrutiny. President Tinubu’s credentials were rigorously vetted by the courts, including the Supreme Court in Buhari v. INEC (2008) and subsequent election petitions, affirming his eligibility. Under his leadership, the administration has digitized credential verification for all appointees via the National Identification Number (NIN) integration, a reform lauded by the World Bank in its 2025 Governance Report.

    “This is a government that has recovered over ₦2 trillion in assets through anti-corruption drives and implemented the Steve Oronsaye Report to prune bureaucratic bloat—actions that have saved billions. The Uche Nnaji episode is an aberration corrected swiftly, not a systemic flaw. By contrast, the ADC’s silence on their own governance failures, most especially within their party that they can’t control, speaks volumes.

    “In Conclusion, Trust in Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda

    Fellow Nigerians, especially in the Southeast where I proudly served as APC spokesman, the ADC’s statement is a smokescreen for their electoral frustrations. 

    “President Tinubu is not sympathetic to criminality; he is resolute against it, guided by constitutional fidelity and legal rigor. The Uche Nnaji resignation was a masterclass in accountable leadership: remove the unfit, empower institutions, and let justice prevail.

    “I call on patriotic Nigerians to reject this partisan noise and focus on the Renewed Hope Agenda—delivering infrastructure, security, and economic revival. To the ADC: Bring evidence, not echoes. To President Tinubu: Your steadfastness inspires us all.

    “Should further details emerge warranting investigation, rest assured the administration will act decisively. But for now, let us celebrate a president who governs by the book, not by the ballot’s bitterness,” Onoh said.