Category: Southwest

  • Lagos council legislative arm to write Sanwo-Olu on chairman’s resignation

    Lagos council legislative arm to write Sanwo-Olu on chairman’s resignation

    The Agege Legislative Arm in Lagos State has announced the receipt of a resignation letter from the incumbent Executive Chairman of the Council, Alhaji Tunde Azeez, saying the correspondence would be communicated to the State Governor, Babajide Sanwo-Olu.

    It was earlier reported on Wednesday that Hon. Azeez resigned on failing health grounds after transferring power to his Vice Chairman, Hon.AbdulGaniyu Vinod Obasa about two months ago to embark on medical leave.

    Speaking to newsmen at a press briefing attended by all the seven councillors, the leader of the legislative arm, Hon. Haruna Adeshina, acknowledged the receipt of Azeez’s letter on behalf of his fellow councillors.

    Adeshina declared that the councillors unanimously commended the Council Chairman’s decision to turn in his resignation letter to enable him, attend to his health. 

    “We commend Hon. Tunde Azeez profoundly for this decision to relinquish his chairmanship position and not hold on to power at the detriment of the development of our community,” the leader said.

    Read Also: Sanwo-Olu, others seek continental battle against human trafficking, ritual killings

    He added that the final decision on the matter lied with the State Governor, Babajide Sanwo-Olu.

    “While AbdulGaniyu Vinod Obasa still remains as the Acting Chairman of the Council, we are in the process of sending Hon Azeez’s resignation letter to our supervising ministry, the Ministery of Local Government for onward transmission to Governor Sanwo-Olu for his consideration, in line with the provision of the constitution” the Council leader stated.

    In attendance at the media briefing were immediate-past Council Chairmen of Agege Local Government and Orile Agege Local Council Development Area, Chief Ganiyu Kola Egunjobi and Pastor JS Babatunde.

  • ‘Stop rejoicing over Nigeria’s challenges’

    ‘Stop rejoicing over Nigeria’s challenges’

    Lagos State chapter of the All Progressives Congress (APC) has cautioned the 2023 presidential candidate of the Labour Party (LP), Mr Peter Obi, not to rejoice over Nigeria’s challenges. 

    The party in a statement yesterday in Ogba, Lagos by its spokesman, Seye Oladejo, said: ‘’Lagos APC has observed the latest grandstanding by Peter Obi following the U.S. designation of Nigeria as a “country of particular concern.” True to form, Obi once again attempted to turn a sensitive national issue into political theatre, rather than demonstrate statesmanship.

    ‘’Even more telling is that it uncharacteristically took him some time to respond. For a man always seeking microphones and hashtags, his sudden silence was deafening – until well-meaning Nigerians began to publicly question it. It has become clear that Obi did not speak out of patriotic instinct, but out of public pressure and fear of further exposing his double standards.

    ‘’When Obi finally spoke, the nation saw what we expected – too little, too late, and too predictable. His reaction lacked sincerity, urgency and any semblance of a unifying spirit.

    ‘’A man who claims to desire national leadership should not require public reminders to speak when his nation’s image is at stake. Leadership is proactive, not reactive and certainly not driven by online agitation.’’

    READ ALSO: No religious persecution in Nigeria, Tuggar insists

    He said real leaders defended their country in difficult moments,

    adding that statesmen balanced criticism with dignity and national pride.

    ‘’But Peter Obi appears content only when Nigeria is under pressure, believing every challenge for the nation is an opportunity for his political resurrection. That is not patriotism. It is sour politics born from electoral heartbreak.

    ‘’Nigeria’s security problems did not start yesterday – they were inherited. President Bola Ahmed Tinubu is confronting them with courage and strategy: Strengthening military command and intelligence structures.

    Deploying modern technology and platforms. Re-energising regional and global security collaboration. Tackling the economic roots of insecurity through bold reforms.’’

    He said while serious leaders were working, Obi and his online choir were rehearsing 2023 grievances and clinging to foreign commentary for political oxygen.

    ‘’Obi must decide whether he stands with Nigeria or with his ever-shrinking echo chamber of bitterness and resentment. No serious nation is built on the politics of

  • Oyo govt begins demolition of structures

    Oyo govt begins demolition of structures

    Following the expiration of 14 days ultimatum given to traders and owners, Oyo State Government yesterday began the demolition of illegally-built structures, including shops, kiosks, etc. on roadsides, setbacks and walkways across Ibadan.

    The development followed an eviction notice served on the affected owners on October 13, which lapsed on Monday.

    This is besides a reminder notice, which was communicated to the concerned traders last week, serving as a period of grace for them to do the needful.

    However, following the expiration of the grace period, Oyo State Rule of Law Enforcement Authority (OYRLEA), in collaboration with other sister agencies, on Monday proceeded with the demolition of the illegal structures on the road setbacks and walkways.

    Other agents involved in the exercise included officials from the Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources, Oyo State Road Management Authority (OYRTMA), Environmental Task Force Officials, Nigeria Police Force, Amotekun Corps and other state security operatives.

    The Joint Enforcement Team led by DCP Francis Ojomo (Rtd) and the Chief of Staff to the OYRLEA Chairperson, Mrs Iyabo Akinbode, started the demolition and evacuation from Airport Junction, en route to Alakia-Adegbayi, towards Old Ife Road, to remove structures as iron containers, erected and mobile kiosks, as well as goods and other illegal structures.

    Commenting on the exercise, OYRLEA Chairperson, Justice Aderonke Aderemi (Rtd.), said OYRLEA, in its core responsibilities, must ensure a sane, clean and safer environment at all times.

    READ ALSO: Abba Kyari denies ownership of property linked to him

    She said the enforcement to uphold the Rule of Law needed to be intensified, adding: “Our environment ought to be welcoming and safe for investors, thus appealing to all and sundry. This has always been the desire of our people-oriented governor, Seyi Makinde, on whose mandate we operate.’’

    She noted: “The evacuation of illegal structures and containers on the road setbacks and walkways on these routes, ahead of the inauguration of the International Airport, remains a must, subsequent to an eviction notice earlier served, and importantly, the sensitisation and awareness jingle on radio stations.

    “Acting on the state government’s directive, roadside traders and those selling in containers on Airport Road, Old Ife Road and Onipepeye areas of Ibadan have exhausted the grace to relocate their trades within the stipulated period of time, hence a continuum of the eviction.’’

  • Fear grips Osun PDP over Wike’s comment on Adeleke

    Fear grips Osun PDP over Wike’s comment on Adeleke

    Fear has gripped Osun State chapter of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), following recent comments by the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Nyesom Wike, over the party’s national leadership crisis.

    The comments have cast doubt on Governor Ademola Adeleke’s chances of getting the party’s proper nomination for his 2026 re-election bid.

    Wike, featuring on a national television on Monday night, was asked if the PDP would have a candidate in 2026 Osun and Ekiti state governorship elections.

    He said the party was in ‘danger’.

    Said he: ‘’Ask the governor of Osun, Adeleke, ask him. He came to see me and I told him, what are you doing? That you (Adeleke) are in danger. I don’t like people who are not truthful. Ask the governor of Osun, the dancing governor, ask him whether I never called him to ask that do you see the implication, do you see the danger you are running into? Ask him. What he tells me? There is this spirit in governors that I can do it all, I can do magic.”

    Wike’s comments have sent jittery to Adeleke and PDP camp in Osun State, as party chieftains and leaders are fretting over the development.

    A PDP leader, Adewale Adegbite, said: “You can listen to the comment made by Wike. Are we not done for as a party for the 2026 governorship election? Our party is united and ready to face the election next year, but the latest development may affect our preparation.”

    READ ALSO: Abba Kyari denies ownership of property linked to him

    Another top PDP leader, who craved anonymity, said: “Adeleke has been in talks with factions within the party to secure proper nomination. He has discussed with Wike and Makinde, and we hope the crisis will be resolved.”

    However, Osun PDP, through its Director of Media, Oladele Olabamji, speaking with The Nation yesterday, dispelled the rumoured jittery in the party ahead of the primary election.

    Reacting to Wike’s comment, he said: “We don’t foresee any danger. As far as we are concerned in PDP, Governor Adeleke has begun his process of nomination, which we all know. The process will be completed without any issue, I can assure you.’’

  • Aregbesola’s caucus seeks Osun ADC governorship ticket

    Aregbesola’s caucus seeks Osun ADC governorship ticket

    The caucus of the National Secretary of African Democratic Congress (ADC), Rauf Aregbesola, has demanded that the 2026 governorship ticket of the party be zoned to Osun West Senatorial District.

    A statement by the caucus named Omoluabi Progressives, through its Publicity and Organising Secretary, Abosede Oluwaseun, said the caucus resolved that ADC should zone the governorship ticket to Osun West Senatorial District at a meeting in Ilesa, attended by supporters of the caucus from 332 electoral wards.

    READ ALSO: No religious persecution in Nigeria, Tuggar insists

    She said: “The meeting featured the formal welcoming of new members from political divides, including the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). Some former members of the defunct, The Osun Progressives (TOP) also officially returned to their political root.’’

    She said meeting was attended by the Chairman of ADC Membership Mobilisation, Revalidation and Registration Committee, Kamil Mudashir, who visited Aregbesola.

    Abosede said: “In his address, Ogbeni hailed members for their dedication to building the movement and announced that the apex body of Omoluabi Progressives had resolved to present a formidable aspirant from Osun West Senatorial District for the December 12 ADC primaries, to demonstrate unity and strength.”

  • Aiyedatiwa presents staff of office to new Olu-Oke of Oke-Igbo amid protests

    Aiyedatiwa presents staff of office to new Olu-Oke of Oke-Igbo amid protests

    Ondo State Governor Lucky Aiyedatiwa has presented the instrument of appointment and staff of office to Oba Akintoye Felix Adeoye as the new Olu-Oke of Oke-Igbo in Ile-Oluji/Oke-Igbo Local Government.

    The ceremony, held yesterday in Oke-Igbo, took place amid protests by the Kuole Oloje Ruling House, which rejected the nomination of Prince Adeoye of the Are Kugbaigbe Ruling House, describing the government’s decision as “unacceptable.”

    The protesting family cited a pending appeal at Ondo State Court of Appeal over a previous High Court judgment that had favoured the Are Kugbaigbe Ruling House in the kingship dispute.

    Speaking during the presentation, Governor Aiyedatiwa said the event marked the end of a “long-drawn traditional and legal tussle” that had left Olu-Oke stool vacant for years.

    He recalled that the vacancy followed a court judgment that nullified the appointment of the late Oba Babajide Lawrence Oluwole, declaring that he was not a descendant of Are Kugbaigbe Ruling House and directing that the next monarch should emerge from that lineage.

    READ ALSO: Abba Kyari denies ownership of property linked to him

    According to the governor, the Chieftaincy Declaration registered in 2019 by the deposed monarch was rendered null and void by the court, thereby restoring the native laws and customs of Oke-Igbo as the valid basis for the selection process.

    Aiyedatiwa urged the new monarch to see his ascension as a call to service and an opportunity to promote peace and unity in Oke-Igbo.

    “Kabiyesi, you are now a father to all. Forget the acrimony of the past and do not use your position to victimise perceived opponents or rivals. I pray that Oke-Igbo will witness peace, growth and development during your reign,” the governor said.

    He appealed to other contenders and their supporters to accept the new monarch, stressing that “the interest of Oke-Igbo must be placed above personal interests.”

    Commissioner for Local Government and Chieftaincy Affairs, Alhaji Amidu Takuro, hailed the governor’s adherence to due process in the selection of traditional rulers.

    He said the state Executive Council  approved Oba Adeoye’s appointment on October 27, after confirming its conformity with Oke-Igbo’s customs and traditions.

    However, the Kuole Oloje Ruling House, through its Secretary, Prince Kolawole Adelabu, faulted the government’s decision, insisting that it was their turn to produce the next monarch.

    “Without mincing words, it is the turn of Kuole Oloje Ruling House to present a candidate to fill the vacant stool left by the late Oba Olu Babajide, the Gbangbala I, who hailed from the Are Kugbaigbe Ruling House,” Adelabu said.

    He said the stool had always rotated among the five ruling houses in Oke-Igbo – noting that the late Oba Oluwole Timothy Fasawe, from the Odo Eleyowo Ruling House, preceded the deposed monarch.

    Adelabu accused the state government of “politically manipulating” the process in favour of the Are Kugbaigbe Ruling House, despite their turn having elapsed, and said the decision violated the rotational principle recognised in the state gazette.

    He disowned some individuals allegedly acting on behalf of the family in court, stressing that they were not authorised to represent the Kuole Oloje Ruling House.

    Adelabu, therefore, appealed to the state government to refrain from presenting the staff of office to Prince Adeoye, pending the outcome of the case before the Court of App

  • Nigeria’s Aderonke Atoyebi shines in Denmark, named ISCA role model of the year

    Nigeria’s Aderonke Atoyebi shines in Denmark, named ISCA role model of the year

    Nigeria’s Arabinrin Aderonke Atoyebi has etched her name on the global stage after being crowned the International Sport and Culture Association (ISCA) Role Model of the Year in Copenhagen, Denmark, a recognition that celebrates her tireless work in using sports as a vehicle for empowerment and inclusion.

    The biennial ISCA Awards honour individuals and organisations that harness sports and physical activity to promote social change and community development worldwide. 

    This year’s edition drew nominations from several countries, recognising exceptional figures who have turned the power of sport into tools of transformation.

    Atoyebi’s consistent advocacy for gender equality, youth development, and social inclusion has positioned her as a leading light in Nigeria’s sports-for-development movement. 

    Her initiatives have shown how sports can serve as a unifying force, building bridges of hope, education, and empowerment, particularly for young women.

    As part of the recognition, she received a €3,000 (about $3,200) cash prize and international visibility associated with the prestigious honour.

    Expressing her gratitude after receiving the award, Atoyebi dedicated the recognition to her team and supporters.

    “This award means a lot to me. It’s a testament to the hard work my team and I have put in over the years. 

    “Being recognised on such an international stage proves that no effort toward positive change ever goes unnoticed. It motivates me to keep pushing boundaries and reaching more girls who need hope and opportunity,” she said.

    Her global recognition underscores Nigeria’s expanding footprint in the world of sports and social impact. 

    Atoyebi’s story now serves as a rallying call for young African women, a reminder that with passion, persistence, and purpose, they too can rise to shape a more inclusive and equitable world.

  • Steve Babaeko is IAA’s VP/ Area Director, Africa

    Steve Babaeko is IAA’s VP/ Area Director, Africa

    The International Advertising Association (IAA) has announced the election of Steve Babaeko, Group CEO and Chief Creative Officer of X3M Ideas, as Vice President and Area Director, Africa, on its Global Board.

    IAA is the world’s most influential network uniting marketing communications and media professionals.

    Babaeko will spearhead the IAA’s mission across the African continent, driving growth, amplifying African voices in global marketing conversations, and fostering stronger collaboration among practitioners, brands, and creative communities.

    “Africa is bold, creative, and bursting with potential. It’s time the world took notice and I am here to help make that happen,” said Babaeko. “This is more than a

    title; it’s a commitment to build bridges between markets, minds, and movements. Together, we can create a stronger, more connected global marketing community.”

    As VP and Area Director, Africa, Babaeko succeeds Mrs. Norkor Duah of Ghana, who provided years of visionary and strategic leadership that significantly expanded the IAA’s

    footprint across the continent. Building on her legacy, Babaeko aims to accelerate the association’s presence in emerging African markets, strengthen industry representation,

    and ensure that Africa’s creative energy resonates more powerfully on the global stage.

    Read Also: Hundreds of PDP members join APC in Oyo

    Babaeko’s election marks another milestone in a career defined by creativity, advocacy, and leadership. A former two-term President of the Association of Advertising Agencies of

    Nigeria (AAAN) and a Visiting Fellow at Henley Business School, UK, he has championed initiatives that empower the next generation of African marketing professionals while positioning African creativity as a global force.

    Under his leadership, X3M Ideas has grown from a Nigerian startup into one of Africa’s fastest-growing independent agency networks , with offices in South Africa, Zambia,

    Kenya, Congo Brazzaville, Dubai, and London and remains the only Nigerian and West African agency to

    have won a Cannes Lions Award.

    “The IAA has always stood for global collaboration and the advancement of marketing communications. Steve’s appointment embodies our belief that Africa is a critical voice in

    shaping the future of our industry,” said Frederik Borestrom, World President and Chairman of the IAA Global Board.

  • Magazine debuts to spotlight Africa’s trade innovators, entrepreneurs

    Magazine debuts to spotlight Africa’s trade innovators, entrepreneurs

    A new business publication, Traxis Magazine, has made its debut in Lagos with a bold mission, to tell the untold stories of Africa’s emerging trade champions and connect indigenous entrepreneurs to global investors.

    The magazine, described as a first-of-its-kind trade publication, aims to bridge the visibility gap for local businesses contributing to Nigeria’s and Africa’s economic growth. It was unveiled at a colourful event that brought together entrepreneurs, investors, and industry players committed to reshaping Africa’s trade narrative.

    Speaking at the launch, the Editor-in-Chief and Publisher, Ijeoma Okonkwo, said Traxis Magazine was birthed out of a desire to give visibility to hardworking entrepreneurs whose innovations often go unnoticed.

    “I’ve seen businesses thrive during exhibitions and trade shows but lose momentum afterward due to lack of visibility and access to funding. Traxis was created to amplify their stories and connect them to opportunities beyond Nigeria’s borders.” Okonkwo said.

    According to her, the magazine focuses on businesses that are “100 percent indigenous”, those sourcing raw materials locally and adding value through homegrown innovation.

    “Nigeria is a blessed nation with untapped resources. Many entrepreneurs are transforming these resources into products of global standard. Our goal is to tell their stories, attract investors, and open new markets for them,” she added.

    Okonkwo explained that Traxis Magazine will not be sold on newsstands but distributed strategically in places that attract high-value networks, such as embassies, airports, airlines, and luxury hotels, where investors and decision-makers can encounter the featured businesses.

    “We’re also partnering with airlines to feature business documentaries on in-flight entertainment systems, ensuring that global audiences see what Africa is capable of,” she said.

    Read Also: Hundreds of PDP members join APC in Oyo

    Among those who shared their entrepreneurial stories at the launch was Princess Adeyinka, founder and Chief Happiness Officer of Happy Coffee Nigeria, a homegrown coffee solutions brand.

    “It’s important for African women to see role models building strong, indigenous businesses. Nigeria is a blessed country with enormous potential. Despite personal losses and challenges, I believe in building the Nigeria of our dreams. No one else will do it for us.”she said.

    Adeyinka urged Nigerian entrepreneurs to “show up for their dreams,” describing business building as “a serious battle that requires mental and psychological preparedness.”

    Also speaking, Mr. Chibueze Obinwanne, co-founder of The Milk Booster, shared his experience running Nigeria’s first breast milk bank.

    “We help mothers who struggle with lactation to access safe breast milk for their babies,” he explained. “When we started, people were skeptical, but after three years, Nigerians are embracing the idea. We’ve seen an improvement in breastfeeding rates since 2017, and we can do more with better support.”

    Obinwanne, however, listed inadequate power supply, poor cold-chain logistics, and lack of funding as major challenges facing their operations.

    “Sometimes, I have to drive long distances just to deliver milk to a baby in need,” he said. “We need more collection centres across the country. If you have excess breast milk and live in Lagos or Abuja, you can reach out, your donation can save lives.”

    The launch of Traxis Magazine marks a new effort to highlight Nigeria’s entrepreneurial spirit and reposition African trade stories for global attention.

    By giving visibility to businesses that are transforming local resources into global products, Traxis hopes to fuel a renewed sense of confidence in Africa’s trade potential, one story at a time.

  • Dear Mr. President, please do not let this 15% import tariff punish Nigerians again

    Dear Mr. President, please do not let this 15% import tariff punish Nigerians again

    • By Rotimi Matthew, Abuja

    Mr President, Nigerians have walked with you through a season of fire. They have endured subsidy removal, foreign exchange shocks, inflation that eats wages before payday, and reforms that have stretched household budgets to their breaking point. They did so because you asked for time — time to rebuild, to reform, to restore.

    Now, after this difficult year of sacrifice, the government has confirmed that it will introduce a 15 per cent import duty on petrol and diesel. Mr President, this decision risks turning faith into fatigue. It is not reform, it is relapse — and it could undo the fragile trust Nigerians have placed in your leadership.

    A Policy Born of Misdirection

    According to the leaked memorandum from the State House dated October 10, 2025, the new tariff is framed as a “market-responsive import framework” meant to “safeguard local refining capacity and stabilise the downstream market.” But Nigerians are not fooled by the language of protection when its result is punishment.

    This tariff, applied to the Cost, Insurance, and Freight (CIF) value of imported fuel, will raise the landing cost of petrol by roughly N150–N175 per litre. That means the average pump price could surge toward N970 or more per litre, a direct hit to every household, every transport operator, every food vendor, every generator owner.

    This policy claims to “protect local refineries,” but the reality is different: it protects one refinery, the Dangote Refinery, at the expense of an entire nation. The refinery, which currently supplies only about 22 million litres daily, cannot meet Nigeria’s 50 million-litre daily consumption. So the rest will still come from imports — but now, imports that must bear a punitive 15 per cent tax, ensuring Dangote’s petrol looks cheaper, even when it isn’t.

    That is not protectionism; it is manipulation dressed as policy.

    Inside that closed circle lies the new “fuel cabal,” a collection of powerful businessmen who have aligned themselves with the refinery to dictate who lifts petrol, who gets access, and at what price. The market, which deregulation was meant to free, is now being redesigned for control.

    We are told this tariff will “stabilise the market.” But, as history teaches us, monopolies do not stabilise; they suffocate. In cement, sugar, and now fuel, the pattern remains the same: establish dominance, then block rivals through state-backed regulations. What we are witnessing is not industrial policy — it is industrial capture.

    Every Naira added to fuel prices ripples across the economy. Transport fares rise by 20–30%. Food prices follow. Inflation deepens. The middle class shrinks further. The poor lose what little dignity inflation has not already taken. And all this, in the name of protecting an investor who built a “state-of-the-art” refinery but cannot yet supply half the country’s needs.

    Economic policy is not a courtroom for the powerful to plead for privilege. It is a covenant between the government and the people. And that covenant is broken when policy tilts toward a single enterprise.

    Why Protection Does Not Build Efficiency

    When global oil markets faced deregulation, from the United States to South Korea, competition — not tariffs — built resilience. Local refiners had to innovate, not lobby for protection. In the 1980s, American refiners survived the global glut not because of tariffs, but because the market forced them to be efficient, invest, and adapt. South Korea’s chaebols, initially sheltered, became efficient only after the state opened competition and removed protectionist crutches.

    If a refinery built with global expertise and billions in investment cannot compete without government shields, then what is it offering Nigerians? The same Nigerians who have already indirectly funded infrastructure through public concessions, waivers, and policy privileges now face a second tax — at the pump.

    The psychological compact between citizens and the state depends on fairness. When people believe that one man or one company is being favoured at their expense, they stop seeing reform as progress. They see it as betrayal.

    Read Also: Hundreds of PDP members join APC in Oyo

    Economics of Everyday Suffering

    Mr President, economic theory often hides its human cost. But behind every fuel price increase lies a family’s rationed meal, a trader’s collapsed margin, a farmer’s unaffordable transport. The sociology of hardship is cumulative — people can absorb one reform, perhaps two, but a third breaks faith.

    Nigerians are patient, but patience is not infinite. Inflation, currency devaluation, and insecurity already weigh heavily. A 15 per cent tariff on fuel is not a correction — it is cruelty wearing the mask of economic reform.

    Those who drafted this proposal insist the tariff is “not revenue-driven” but “corrective.” Yet every indicator shows that the correction benefits one player. The refinery’s own petrol, as of October 20, lands at N929.72 per litre — more expensive than the N802.44 landing cost of imported petrol.

    If local refining is truly efficient, why must it be shielded from competition? Why must the public pay a premium to protect inefficiency? The promise of local refining was cheaper fuel, not controlled pricing.

    Even more troubling, reports confirm that the Dangote Refinery itself has imported cargoes of gasoline in recent weeks, claiming they were “blending components.” If the nation’s premier refinery must import finished products, how then can it claim protection from import competition? Is it a refinery, a blender, or both?

    The contradictions are too loud to ignore.

    An Appeal to Conscience and Common Sense

    Mr President, Nigerians are not asking for perfection. They are asking for fairness. They are asking that your reform legacy not be hijacked by those who trade influence for policy.

    You have often spoken of restoring Nigeria’s credibility in the eyes of investors, citizens, and the global community. That credibility depends not on who we protect, but on what we protect — fairness, transparency, and competition.

    You fought cabals before; Nigerians remember. They trusted that you would never allow another to rise under your watch, this time cloaked in refinery smoke. The test is here again.

    Viable alternatives exist to protect both the refinery and the community: Promote competition instead of protection by permitting multiple refiners, importers, and marketers to operate simultaneously. Increase transparency by making the cost structures and local refiners’ production capacities publicly accessible. Implement a phased approach, applying tariffs only when domestic supply exceeds dependency on imports. Conduct independent assessments, empowering the FCCPC and NMDPRA to verify if the refinery’s pricing aligns with global standards standards.

    Mr President, every leader is tested by the counsel he keeps. Those urging this tariff are not protecting your legacy; they are protecting their leverage. They are not serving Nigeria; they are serving themselves.

    If this tariff goes forward, it will not only raise prices but also fuel resentment. It will feed the belief that government exists to protect the powerful, not the people.

    You still have the chance to prove otherwise. The Nigeria you promised, open, competitive, compassionate, begins not with the policies we announce, but with the ones we refuse to endorse when they betray the people’s trust.

    Respectfully submitted,

    • Rotimi Matthew is Policy and Governance Analyst, Abuja