Tag: Chukwuma Soludo

  • Soludo’s blow on Monday’s sit-at-home

    Soludo’s blow on Monday’s sit-at-home

    Sir: The reopening of the Onitsha Main Market on a Monday, for the first time in about five years, marks a significant and symbolic moment for Anambra State. Beyond the excitement it generated among traders and residents, the development represents a decisive step in the right toward reopening the state’s economy and strengthening its revenue base after years of disruption caused by the sit-at-home phenomenon.

    This bold move was championed by the Anambra State governor, Charles Chukwuma Soludo, following the closure of the market for one week. The action was taken as a response to the persistent failure of traders and business owners to open their shops on Mondays over the years, a trend that had gradually crippled commercial activities and weakened confidence in public safety.

    Despite threats and warnings issued by some non-state actors, urging traders to stay away from the market, the call was largely ignored. Traders defied fear and opened for business, drawing admiration from many within and outside the state. Their courage sent a strong message that economic survival and collective progress must not be held hostage by intimidation.

    Sustaining this progress is critical. Over the years, the sit-at-home order has severely affected businesses, academic activities, healthcare access, and daily movement of people. Many traders stayed home not out of agreement, but out of fear of attacks. Ending this cycle requires consistency, courage, and clear leadership from the government.

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    Beyond reopening markets, Governor Soludo must ensure the provision of watertight security, not only in and around major markets every Monday, but across the entire state. A visible and effective security presence will further boost the confidence of traders, business owners, workers, and residents to go about their legitimate activities without fear.

    As confidence grows, economic activities will naturally rebound. Increased commercial operations will improve internally generated revenue, create jobs, and restore Anambra’s reputation as a major commercial hub in the Southeast. Security and economic revival must go hand in hand for the gains to be lasting.

    This initiative should also serve as a model for other southeast governors. A coordinated regional effort to end the sit-at-home practice will ensure that the entire region reopens for normal business activities every Monday, reducing losses and restoring social stability across states.

    Finally, non-state actors must come to terms with the reality that the people of the southeast are tired of disruption and economic hardship. The path forward lies in peace and dialogue, not coercion and fear. Enough of the sit-at-home on Mondays; the region must move forward.

    •Tochukwu Jimo Obi, Obosi Anambra state.

  • Sit-at home: Soludo’s solution faces test Monday

    Sit-at home: Soludo’s solution faces test Monday

    • We’ll resume Monday trading if security is guaranteed – Traders

    • Educators, business people relive ordeal flouting order

    • Sit-at-Home enjoys no legitimacy – IPOB counsel

    • How Enugu overcame fears, broke Monday boycott

    All eyes are on Anambra State as the controversy stirred up following the one week closure slammed on Ontisha Main Market by Governor Chukwuma Soludo, over the traders Monday Sit-at-Home protest, rages on.

    Monday, February 2, 2026, will be a moment of truth for both the governor, and traders at Onitsha Market following the former Central Bank Governor’s hardline position that the Sit-at-home order started by the proscribed Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) must cease to be obeyed in any part of the state under any guise.

    The day will be a time to test if the governor’s directive will be adhered to by the traders who have expressed willingness to open for businesses if adequate security is guaranteed.

    It is also a day to show if Soludo will match his words with action by rolling everything in his government’s arsenal to deal with criminal elements who take pleasure in unleashing incalculable and unimaginable havoc on innocent citizens for defying the Sit-at-Home order.

    A meeting between Soludo and the Onitsha Main Market stakeholders on Thursday, ended with the traders promising to end Monday Sit-at-home if the government provides them with enough security.

    They told Soludo that what they did was not disobedience to his directive; rather fear of their lives at the hands of the gunmen.

    The leadership of the Market, in the interactive session, was led by the chairman, Chijioke Okpalugo with other members of the Executive, at the government’s Light House in Awka,

    While speaking, Okpalugo, said traders were prepared to commence Monday trading as usual in support of Soludo’s one Anambra, while appealing for enough security to guarantee the safety of the traders and the goods.

    They requested for visible security architecture and organized motor park to facilitate movement of goods of the customers, while also demanding for punishment to those who enforce Sit-at-home in the Market

    The governor was blunt in telling them that all markets and shops in Anambra State must remain open on every working day, including Mondays.

    He maintained that the era of sit-at-home-induced market closures was over, stating that   Igboland and Anambra state must move forward.

    “For those shouting “show me the law where you can close our shops”, I want to say that they should be ready when I show it to them. I will also show them the law that empowers me to revoke that market and use it for whatever is better for the state.

    “I can revoke that market, pay compensation to people who have private structures there, and use it for even an annex of Agunechemba Security if I like.

    “I hope that push will not come to shove, but in the next two weeks, we will start recertification. A lot of people want shops in that market, so if you are not ready to open shops, go elsewhere. We will revoke your shops and give them to people who are willing to open” Soludo said

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    He specifically presented a “renovate or rebuild” option for the market, offering either a complete redevelopment into a modern trading hub or a comprehensive overhaul of existing structures.

    He insisted that business activities must continue irrespective of the option chosen.

    Soludo described the enforcement of the sit-at-home as a criminal enterprise no longer connected to the agitation for the release of Mazi Nnamdi Kanu, dismissing claims that the order was linked to the detained IPOB leader.

    “It is not linked to Mazi Nnamdi Kanu. He does not support the sit-at-home. If it doesn’t happen in Umuahia, his hometown, why Onitsha and Nnewi? Soludo asked

    He assured traders of an overhaul of the state’s security architecture around markets, pledging that Anambra’s commercial centres would be protected from harassment and intimidation from the hoodlums

    Genesis of fresh trouble     

    The fresh trouble started when the governor, on Monday paid an unscheduled visit to the biggest market in sub-Saharan Africa and discovered that despite his warnings and pleadings to stop the Sit-at-home on Mondays that the market remained closed.

    He eventually closed it for one week, promising it will be extended to one month if the traders failed to resume coming Monday, declaring, “enough is enough”.

    Protest erupted the following day. The crowd of traders that went on rampage was infiltrated, it was discovered. They could not do much because Soludo had sent troops of red eyed security operatives to the market

    Some of the traders stormed the government Light House (Government House) in Awka to pour their hearts out. Soludo was not moved.

    Innocuous as the protest appeared, observers said the politics of Sit-at-home by traders isn’t ordinary.

    The Sit-at-home situation, introduced by the outlawed indigenous people of Biafra IPOB, led by jailed, Mazi Nnamdi Kanu in 2021, has become another thorn in the flesh of Ndigbo.

    Before then, Mondays were days traders from across Ghana, Cameron, Togo, Benin, Niger, Ivory Coast among others visit the major markets in Igboland to purchase goods, but that idea died about six years ago, no thanks to IPOB’s senseless killings and kidnappings.

    The Biafra agitators turned themselves into monsters every Monday, trying to enforce the Sit-at-home on the citizenry and the fear grew.

    Opposition politicians came into the fray, using the momentum to challenge the government until their families were roped in and some of them were killed, including their loved ones.

    Though, it was believed that IPOB was hijacked at a time, even when it’s leader, Nnamdi Kanu had allegedly, disengaged from the Sit-at-home, but the monster he created, continued.

    The Monday Sit-at-home has crippled the vibrant Southeast economy, yet, the leaders of these states had been helpless.

    Those leaders in different states, including Anambra, created different security outfits to compliment the conventional ones, all to no avail.

    The supposed separatist group metamorphosed into “unknown gunmen” maiming, killing the police, military, kidnapping, burning government facilities and vehicles etc.

    But today, the tide has shifted.  Soludo has brought what looks like solution that comes with fury.

    But the governor’s position didn’t go well with the people many of who wondered if the state helmsman is oblivious of the mindlessness of the enforcers of the sit at home order.

    A teacher, Anulika Okonkwo who resides in Onitsha but teaches in a school in Awka described a trip to Awka from Onitsha on Mondays as scary.

    She said, “First is the fear of the unknown gunmen. Having heard or watched on social media where gunmen killed people and destroyed properties during sit at home on Mondays, once you board a vehicle, you’re already gripped with fear, praying nonstop till you get to Awka.

    “Secondly are the limited vehicles on the road to convey you from Onitsha to Awka.

    “Many drivers have cancelled their work on Mondays due to the deadly behaviour of the gunmen on these days, making it difficult to see bus easily available to Awka.

    “Thirdly is the cost of transportation. On Mondays, transportation is very expensive compared to other days. From Onitsha to Awka is almost doubled of the price.

    “More worrisome is the time factor. Due to insufficient vehicles which lead to high cost of transportation, arriving Awka late becomes a normal thing on Mondays.”

    Another teacher in one of the schools in Ihiala area of the state who preferred anonymous complained about the availability of students and pupils on Mondays.

    “Even when the teachers come to school on Mondays, the students would not be available to be thought as parents have refused to release their children because of insecurity in the state.

    “Besides, those of us in the remote villages find it difficult transporting ourselves to school on Mondays as a result of limited vehicles.

    “Above all is the fear of insecurity in the state. Most of us are afraid of going to school on Mondays because of fear of insecurity,” she said.

    A trader in Onitsha Market, Augustine Onyema, who hails from Imo state, described Soludo as one who hates people’s progress.

    The angry 52 year old woman lamented that some of their colleagues lost their lives, while some others were kidnapped for not obeying Sit-at-home in the past.

    Another trader, Mr John Chuma Nwosu, who contested the November 8 governorship election on the platform of African Democratic Congress, ADC, described Soludo sledgehammer on the traders as hasty.

    According to him, “when a tsetse fly perches on your scrotum, you quickly learn that not all problems can be solved with force and sledgehammer. Wisdom, patience, and tact often achieve what brute action cannot”

    “When he made that decision of closing the life line of Ndigbo for days, it became immediately clear that he had misjudged the moment.

    “The sit-at-home phenomenon was largely organic and, by all indications, was gradually losing steam. What he required was sustained dialogue, diplomacy, confidence-building, and strategic engagement—not a sudden action that risked inflaming tensions and punishing innocent traders.

    “No state government has administratively ever shut Otu Nkwo Onitsha. Markets are not mere clusters of stalls; they are living institutions that sustain families, communities, and entire regional economies.

    “Decisions affecting them must, therefore, be measured, consultative, and humane” Nwosu said

    Also, Alphonsus Obi from Anambra state debunked the allegation by Soludo that majority of those who Sit-at-home are not from Anambra state.

    For Mrs Chiamaka Ezebilo, it remains a shock why the state government would be ordering them like school children.

    The woman admitted that majority of the traders are sympathetic to the IPOB leader, because according to her, “he’s the only one speaking the minds of Igbo and challenging government anywhere.

    Regrettably, some of the traders are equally, members of IPOB, the reason, they continue to observe the Monday Sit-at-home, despite all the threats from government

    According to the 61 year old woman,” we opened during the Christmas to join the season’s sells.

    Personally, I’m not a member of any group; I don’t come out on Mondays because those killing people in this state use it as decoy to perpetrate their devilish act.

    However, the leadership of the market described the government’s action as a welcome development.

    The chairman of the market, Chijioke Okpalugo, hailed Soludo, saying his action was to rescue them from the hands of the hoodlums and helping the traders. It was his opinion.”

    Soludo threatens to demolish market

    On Wednesday, Soludo, addressed select newsmen at the government House, where he threatened to demolish the entire market and reallocate the shops if the trend continues.

    Soludo told them that the market belongs to the government, adding that as the governor, he takes decision on it.

    The commissioner for Information, Dr Law Mefor, while speaking with The Nation, said the administration of Soludo is not against Biafra as being speculated by certain individuals, but the rascality or the armed struggle that has been the issue.

    He noted that when it was tried before, it set the region 50 years back, saying that the decision by Soludo is sacrosanct.

    “What we’re seeing in Anambra is economic sabotage. Anambra is losing billions of naira every Monday, including the traders themselves. Why are they not doing sit- at -home in Nnamdi Kanu’s place?

    “70% of people doing sit at home are not from Anambra. Let them go do it in their own states” Mefor said.

    Mr Tony Okafor, a senior journalist and commentator on public affairs, said he saw anger and determination on Soludo’s face and body language, while standing in the sun listening to him

    Okafor said, “For over one hour, we stood under the scorching sun, right in front of the Governor’s Office at the Light House.

    Pens, telephones, notepads and recorders in hand.

    “Yet, no one complained. No one shifted restlessly. Everyone listened—with rapt, almost solemn attention—to what felt less like a press briefing and more like a sermon in the sun.

    “I watched Governor Chukwuma Soludo closely throughout that hour, jotting down not just his words but his demeanour.

    “Even when he attempted a smile, it was dry—strained. The kind that tells you the mind is fixed elsewhere.

    “One did not need a mind reader to decode it: internally, the governor was angry and, more importantly, resolved to fight the sit-at-home menace to its logical conclusion.

    “Soludo stated firmly that there would be no going back on the decision to shut Onitsha Main Market over traders’ continued refusal to open on Mondays.

    “What is playing out, he said, is nothing short of economic sabotage. Listening to him, one sensed that the phrase was not chosen for effect, but for accuracy.

    “As he spoke, his voice remained steady. No shouting. No theatrics. Just controlled anger—perhaps more unsettling than rage itself.

    “He reminded everyone that throughout the yuletide, markets opened from Monday to Saturday, and often even on Sundays, without incident.

    “So why the sudden fear? If Mondays are unsafe, why are people attending meetings, exercising in stadiums, and moving freely on those same days? Why, he asked pointedly, is the focus on markets—especially Onitsha Main Market?

    “Under the burning sun, his conclusion hung heavily in the air: this is not about insecurity; it is about orchestration.

    “Then came the warning. If traders persist in defiance, shop ownership could be revoked.

    “If push comes to shove, the government could take total possession of the market—even demolish it and rebuild according to a new plan.

    “As these words landed, Soludo’s tone never rose. That calm delivery, in that heat, sharpened the message. He sounded less like a man issuing threats and more like one outlining inevitabilities” Okafor wrote.

    IPOB contradicts self, asks traders to ignore Soludo

    The Media Officer for IPOB, who goes by the name, Emma Powerful, had raised a statement before now, urging traders to ignore the government.

    Prior to this period, IPOB had called for the cancellation of the sit-at-home order and distanced itself from anything that had to do with it.

    At some points IPOB had accused jailed Simon Ekpa of enforcing sit-at-home order despite cancellation.

     The group, prior to this time maintained that reports linking it or its security outfit, Eastern Security Network (ESN), to the attacks on people who failed to obey the sit-at-home were false.

    In one of the statements released by Emma Powerful, IPOB said: “We the Indigenous People of Biafra, IPOB, under the leadership of Mazi Nnamdi Kanu, wish to tell Governor Chukwuma Soludo of Anambra State that IPOB is not responsible for the criminality in Southeast, including Anambra State,” the statement reads.

    “The Governor should know that our enemies are committing atrocities using our name in their desperation to blackmail IPOB.

    “It is a certain Simon Ekpa and his criminal gang called autopilots that are carrying out threats against people’s lives because of non-existent Monday sit-at-home are criminals, kidnappers and robbers.

    “These people disturbing the peace of our people are not IPOB members. They should be treated as criminals. IPOB doesn’t shed blood. We are a peaceful movement.

    “We wish to reiterate once again that IPOB has cancelled Monday sit-at-home order and anybody or group enforcing the relaxed order is neither from IPOB nor from IPOB volunteer group. Any governor in the region who deemed it fit to stop non-existent Monday sit-at-home order in the region is free to do so.

    “Anyone caught adding to the pain of our people in the name of enforcing Monday sit-at-home order will be treated like the enemy that he or she is.

    “Why should such unpatriotic elements be inflicting pain on our people and dragging our image to the mud? IPOB remains a non-violent movement and our peaceful approach for Biafra restoration has not changed.”

    Contrary to the above position it held in the past, IPOB brazenly supported the Sit- at- home protest embarked upon by the traders during the week. The group’s inconsistencies saw it warning that further action by Soludo could trigger bloodshed in the state. It is a danger signal.

    Emma Powerful wrote: “IPOB seeks no confrontation with the Governor or the Anambra State Government, but we demand respect for the wishes of the masses.

    The voice of the people is the voice of God – (vox populi, vox Dei) – a principle well-known to the Governor as a professor.

    “When the great people of Anambra, the first sons of Igboland and the origin of the Igbo race, demand action toward the unconditional release of our leader, Mazi Nnamdi Kanu, it is the divine speaking through them.”

    Monday sit-at-home enjoys no legitimacy – IPOB’s lead Counsel

    Sir, Ifeanyi Ejiofor, the lead Counsel for IPOB, says the Monday sit-at-home enjoys no legitimacy, reiterating that his position on that has never changed. 

    According to him, “I have consistently maintained that the continued “enforcement” of a directive that no longer exists, kept alive solely through threats, rests on no ideological premise, no legal footing, and certainly no moral authority.

    “It is against this backdrop that the decision to shut down the Onitsha Main Market must be interrogated with sobriety, proportionality, and an unflinching fidelity to the rule of law.

    “Collective punishment of traders and law-abiding citizens, who are themselves hostages of fear, cannot, and must not, masquerade as security policy. It is neither strategic nor just.

    “Security governance, if it is to deserve the name, must be precise, intelligence-driven, and squarely targeted at the actual architects and executors of violence.

    “To shutter an entire economic nerve centre in response to criminal threats is to punish productivity while emboldening lawlessness.

    “Any response that collapses the distinction between criminality and commerce risks achieving the perverse: legitimising the tactics of violent actors while penalising innocent enterprise” Ejimofor said

    Another lawyer, Uchechukwugemezu Okafor, told The Nation that he had not seen any law that empowers government to compel business people to open their shops

    He said, “I am yet to know of any law that empowers government to compel traders to open their shops. In a free-enterprise society, government cannot arbitrarily command traders when to open their businesses.

    “Ordinarily, traders are free to decide when and how to conduct their enterprises. This freedom flows from constitutionally guaranteed rights to property, occupation, and movement.

    “The limited power government may exercise is regulatory—for instance, prescribing general market hours such as opening by 8:00 a.m. and closing by 6:00 p.m.—purely for order, safety, and administration” Okafor said

    They argue that the traders have every right to challenge the action of Soludo anywhere, but ruled out the act of violence on the matter.

    Though, Soludo’s approach is being hailed by the majority, but few others, especially, opposition see it from the prism of waking the sleeping lion.

    It had been established in the state that any time such statements are made, the hoodlums invade the state from all angles.

    But this time, Soludo seems like a man possessed, having given the hoodlums enough time. It is the time for the security operatives, including Agunechemba and Udo Ga Achi to show strength.

    The governor doesn’t show sign of a weakling this time, some people have ‘nicknamed ‘ him (Obiakpor – meaning the man of steel). It’s time for the traders to get up and be counted.

    The next time the lion of Isuofia roars, the devastating effect will be heavier. Soludo frowns when it matters most, but his subtle smile is more dangerous than his squeezed face.

  • Soludo’s triumph, Obi’s humiliation

    Soludo’s triumph, Obi’s humiliation

    As this column predicted before the November 8, 2025 governorship election, Chukwuma Soludo, an economics professor, won with a healthy margin. He did better than that; he won with a landslide – all the local governments and nearly all the wards. The performance was so commanding and clearly so one-sided that it left no one in doubt who was the winner and who were the losers. The media looked out for how both the Labour Party (LP), often associated with former Anambra governor Peter Obi, and the African Democratic Congress (ADC), now inextricably linked with former vice president Atiku Abubakar, would perform. Both did very poorly, the LP more shockingly so. The ADC, which took only 8,208 votes out of 595,298 votes cast, was a non-starter, and is likely to remain a non-starter in every election nationally henceforth. But Mr Obi, down to his polling unit which his candidate lost to the All Progressives Congress (APC), proved surrealistically inexistent. The LP candidate, George Moghalu, secured a meager 10,576 votes.

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    Overall, Prof. Soludo took 422,664 or 71 percent of the votes, a ringing endorsement of his style, capacity, and campaign. He and many of his supporters interpret the unalloyed endorsement as also a total repudiation of Mr Obi, the Teflon politician and former LP presidential candidate. With coruscating wit, the victorious governor dismissed Mr Obi’s politics, adding that even though LP leader was not on the ballot, he lost his polling unit in Agulu Ward 11. Hundreds of kilometers away in Lagos, some busybody APC politicians sarcastically counselled Mr Obi to abjure his presidential ambition and go home and rest because his time was over and had lost his so-called Midas touch. Mr Obi may have become irrelevant in Anambra for obvious reasons, but nationally, especially as he embarks on cobbling together a sizable political platform on which to run for president, his dismissal may be premature. Those who support him are not discerning or discriminating. They love him, down to his flaws which they find masochistically endearing. Should he eventually get a platform on which to run for office, no matter how flimsy or tenuous it is, they will flock to his side and give his campaign fresh oomph. He will of course not win, and indeed cannot conceivably win, but his obsession has never been about winning. To him, politics is an inscrutable game, and only he can disentangle it.

  • JUST IN: Soludo receives Certificate of Return

    JUST IN: Soludo receives Certificate of Return

    Governor Chukwuma Soludo of Anambra State has officially received his Certificate of Return from the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), confirming his victory in the recently concluded gubernatorial election.

    The certificate presentation formally validates Soludo’s mandate to continue leading the state for another term.

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    His re-election is seen as a reflection of the confidence Anambra voters have in his administration, which has prioritized economic growth, infrastructure expansion, and social development since he assumed office.

    In a symbolic moment captured in photos, Governor Soludo is seen receiving the certificate, signifying not only his electoral triumph but also the beginning of preparations for his second term in office.

  • My victory means elections getting better, says Soludo

    My victory means elections getting better, says Soludo

    • Tinubu: his re-election testament to visionary leadership
    • Governors hail ‘deserved victory’

    Following his overwhelming success in Saturday’s election, Anambra State Governor Chukwuma Soludo declared that the manner of his victory means that elections are getting better in the country.

    He alluded to the peaceful and credible poll, his massive win and the improved turnout as evidence of the improvement in the electoral process and the outcome.

    He described President Bola Ahmed Tinubu as a true democrat for providing a level playing field in the contest.

    He dedicated himself to service delivery, saying he would move from gear three to four in his second term performance.

    Soludo spoke in his hometown Isuofia, Aguata Local Government Area, shortly after he was declared the winner by the Returning Officer (RO) and Vice Chancellor of the University of Benin, Prof Edoba Omoregie.

    Jubilant residents and people from other parts of the state thronged his home to celebrate the result in which he swept into a landslide win across all 21 local government areas.

    He won in 320 out of the 326 electoral wards in the state, scoring 72 per cent and amassing 422,662 votes.

    All Progressives Congress (APC) candidate Prince Nicholas Ukachukwu came a distant second with 99,445 votes.

    Young Progressives Party (YPP) candidate Paul Chukwuma garnered   37,753 votes to secure third position.

    His Labour Party (LP) counterpart, George Moghalu, scored 10,576 votes as the fourth, and John Nwosu of the African Democratic Congress (ADC) secured 8,208 votes.

    The remaining eleven candidates performed abysmally.

    Soludo said: “This is a moment to say congratulations to the Anambra People. Four years ago, we were elected with 112,000 votes, but this time you spoke loudly with your votes. This is a show of solidarity and a very emphatic statement.

    “Out of 326 wards, we lost only six wards, and we won the entire 21 local governments, and that is a very emphatic statement.

    “We are in partnership with people at all levels in the state, and we are matching on to gear four. We are in gear three as it were, and we are moving to gear four. Thanks to the  Anambra people for renewing our employment.

    “We thank Mr President, he has proven to be a very good democrat. I thank the new INEC chairman (Joash Amupitan).

    “It was his first outing, and as the saying goes, you don’t get a second chance to make a first impression, and you have proven that with this election. Every election year is getting better and better in Anambra.

    “Except for a few cases, I think the election was very fair and credible. I thank the ICT (Information Communication Technology) section of INEC, as of Saturday night, they had uploaded up to 99 per cent of the results, and we already knew where the election was going.

    “To my brothers (other contestants), I say, we were 16, and obviously, only one person will win.

    “We have had fun, we have fought, but we will still meet at functions at weekends and share drinks the Anambra way.

    “I extend a hand of fellowship to you, and we will work together to make Anambra better.

    “For me, we will work for the Anambra people, and no minute is lost. Ours is an assignment with a deadline.” 

    Soludo expressed regret that, despite the heavy security witnessed during the election, some miscreants killed an APGA councillor in Owerre-Ezukala, Orumba South Local Government Area.

    After speaking, Soludo hit the floor dancing with his family members, APGA chiefs and supporters.

    Tinubu hails Soludo

    President Tinubu and the Nigerian Governors Forum (NGF) congratulated Soludo on his victory.

    The President, in a statement he personally signed, said Soludo’s overwhelming victory has made him the third governor in the state’s political history to win a second term.

    He hailed the governor for bringing discipline, grace, brilliance, and a fresh perspective to governance in Anambra.

    He urged him to be magnanimous in victory and seek the cooperation of his opponents.

    Tinubu said: “I must also congratulate the people of Anambra State, the security agencies and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) on the peaceful and successful conduct of the governorship election.

    “Professor Soludo’s re-election is a testament to his visionary leadership and the significant progress the state has made under his guidance.

    “Governor Soludo, the Solution, has demonstrated that indeed knowledge is power and that academic principles can be applied in serving the people, undergirding accountability, transparency and prudent management of people and resources.

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    “I visited Anambra State in May this year, where I inaugurated some projects executed by the Soludo administration.

    “I highlighted the good thinking behind the landmark projects being embarked upon by Mr Solution. That experience is indeed remarkable and will remain indelible in my mind.

    “I commend Governor Soludo for bringing discipline, grace, brilliance, and a fresh perspective to governance in Anambra. Under him,  Anambra is living up to its motto as the Light of the Nation.

    “I urge Governor Soludo to be magnanimous in victory and to seek the cooperation of his opponents in the just-concluded elections.

    “I assure Governor Soludo of my unwavering support, and I look forward to continued collaboration between Anambra and the Federal Government.

    “The victory of the opposition All Grand Progressives Alliance in the election again demonstrates the vitality of our political system and the fact that victory for any progressive and hardworking leader can hardly be encumbered or denied.

    “I must also thank the new INEC Chairman, Prof Joash Amupitan, and his team for conducting what observers have described as a credible election, based on the reports I have received thus far.

    “I charge the commission with maintaining the standards and further improving its performance, so we can continue to strengthen and deepen our electoral system.”

    NGF: Soludo’s re-election deserved

    A statement by the Governors  Forum said: “The clear margin of victory underscores the popularity of the governor and his programmes among Anambrarians.

    “We are confident that this deserving victory will enable His Excellency to consolidate on his great achievements across different sectors.

    “We also congratulate the people of Anambra and all the stakeholders on the orderly and peaceful conduct of the election — another proof that Nigerians have fully embraced democracy and rule of law as a choice form of governance.

    “We also commend the INEC and the security agencies for the orderly electoral process so far,” Chairman of the forum, who doubles as Kwara State Governor AbdulRahman AbdulRazaq, said.

    Opposition parties reject results

    Opposition political parties, including the APC, LP and ADC, rejected the outcome, alleging widespread irregularities, vote buying, intimidation, and violence.

    APC candidate, Nicholas Ukachukwu, said he was still collating information on the conduct of the election.

    He alleged that a building belonging to a female APC supporter in Anambra East Local Government Area was burnt down for her loyalty to the party.

    He also claimed that several vehicles belonging to APC supporters were vandalised during the campaigns.

    “We are still collating data on the election. My major concern is the burning of the house of one of our supporters despite intimidation and harassment,” Ukachukwu said.

    ADC state chairman Patrick Obianyo described the results as “a joke,” while the party’s candidate, Nwosu, called the election “a ruse and total subversion of the people’s will.”

    He alleged massive vote buying, saying voters were openly induced with cash ranging from N3,000 to N20,000.

    “This was not an election but a cash bazaar – a national embarrassment and a loss for democracy,” he said.

    ADC National Publicity Secretary Bolaji Abdullahi said the exercise “undermined the essence of democracy,” accusing the incumbent and his party of engaging in “cash-for-votes” in violation of the Electoral Act.

    The party also faulted security agencies and electoral officials for their “visible inaction” during the poll.

    LP candidate Valentine Moghalu decried the alleged absence of the party’s logo on the ballot paper and reported cases of intimidation and violence.

    “There were cases of vote buying and missing result sheets. One of my key supporters was beaten in Idemili North. INEC failed, and security agencies did not live up to their assurances,” he said.

    Anambra State Resident Electoral Commissioner Queen Agwu dismissed the allegations of vote buying as “mere rumours,” urging those making the claims to produce evidence.

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) said three people were arrested for vote buying.

    It said the suspects were arrested in Njikoka, Awkuzu and Dukonukofia.

    “They will be charged as soon as investigations are concluded,” the commission stated.

    The Police Service Commission (PSC) commended the Police for what it described as an “above-average” performance during the election.

    PSC monitoring teams reported professional and orderly conduct by officers across the state, noting peaceful voting in areas visited.

  • Group endorses APGA candidate, donates N2m to re-election campaign

    Group endorses APGA candidate, donates N2m to re-election campaign

    A group known as Leaders With Vision Initiative has endorsed the re-election bid of Governor Chukwuma Soludo ahead of the November 8 governorship election in Anambra State.

    The group’s coordinator, Ifeanyi Oge, announced the endorsement during a courtesy visit to the governor at Light House, Awka, where members also presented a N2 million cheque as their contribution to Soludo’s campaign fund.

    Oge said the group was prepared to mobilise support for the governor across the state, adding that the donation was part of its commitment to promoting the ongoing development efforts in Anambra.

    “The governor has demonstrated capacity in governance over the past three years, and we believe continuity will help consolidate the gains already achieved,” Oge stated.

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    He also highlighted some of the administration’s initiatives, particularly the ‘1 Youth, 2 Skills’ programme, which he said had provided training and empowerment opportunities for many young people in the state.

    “The programme has reached a large number of beneficiaries, including non-indigenes, and is helping to reduce youth unemployment,” he added.

    In his response, Governor Soludo thanked the group for its support and voluntary contribution, assuring that his administration would continue to pursue policies that promote accountability and inclusiveness.

    “This election is unique because many groups and individuals are showing their support through voluntary contributions without demanding anything in return,” the governor said.

    “We remain committed to providing responsible and responsive governance that benefits both indigenes and residents of Anambra State.”

    The Deputy Governor, Dr Onyekachukwu Ibezim, and other government officials attended the event.

    Members of the group who accompanied Oge included Nwanba Stephen, Gabriel Obiagwu, Lady Chioma Onwe, and other executives of the Leaders With Vision Initiative.

  • ‘Remain vigilant against election rigging’

    ‘Remain vigilant against election rigging’

    The flag bearer of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) in the forthcoming governorship election in Anambra State, Governor Chukwuma Soludo has cautioned against any attempts to subvert the people’s will through electoral malpractice ahead of the November 8 governorship election.

    Speaking at a campaign rally in Amawbia, Awka South Local Government Area, yesterday, Soludo urged members of the APGA and supporters to remain vigilant and defend their votes.

    “They want to rig the election, but we are ready and waiting. Anambra will not be taken backward,” he declared.

    The governor described the ongoing APGA campaign as a grassroots revolution driven by the people, unlike any other political movement previously witnessed in the state or the country.

    “The APGA campaign is now a people-owned movement. I don’t know of any other state in Nigeria where the people themselves have taken over the campaign. This is unprecedented,” he stated.

    Soludo thanked the people of Awka South for their massive turnout and steadfast support, describing the rally as a powerful display of public confidence in both his administration and APGA’s vision for the state.

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    Highlighting his administration’s achievements, the governor noted significant progress in education, infrastructure, security, and human capital development, stressing his commitment to transforming every part of Anambra.

    “We are developing our communities so rapidly that soon, some people may hardly recognize their own villages because of the scale of transformation taking place,” Soludo said.

    He expressed special appreciation to the youths and students of Awka South, who voluntarily donated N515,000 in support of the campaign — a gesture he described as symbolic of genuine grassroots backing.

    Soludo also commended the Traditional Medicine Practitioners in the area for contributing N3 million to the campaign, acknowledging their role in preserving authentic indigenous healing practices.

    At the same time, he reaffirmed his administration’s commitment to cracking down on fake traditional healers and others promoting destructive superstitions that mislead young people.

    “We love and respect genuine traditional medicine practitioners — those who heal with herbs and roots — not those deceiving our youths with false promises of instant wealth through charms and ‘okeite’.

    We will not allow such harmful influences in Anambra State,” Soludo warned.

    The flag bearer of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) in the forthcoming governorship election in Anambra State, Governor Chukwuma Soludo has cautioned against any attempts to subvert the people’s will through electoral malpractice ahead of the November 8 governorship election.

    Speaking at a campaign rally in Amawbia, Awka South Local Government Area, yesterday, Soludo urged members of the APGA and supporters to remain vigilant and defend their votes.

    “They want to rig the election, but we are ready and waiting. Anambra will not be taken backward,” he declared.

    The governor described the ongoing APGA campaign as a grassroots revolution driven by the people, unlike any other political movement previously witnessed in the state or the country.

    “The APGA campaign is now a people-owned movement. I don’t know of any other state in Nigeria where the people themselves have taken over the campaign. This is unprecedented,” he stated.

    Soludo thanked the people of Awka South for their massive turnout and steadfast support, describing the rally as a powerful display of public confidence in both his administration and APGA’s vision for the state.

    Highlighting his administration’s achievements, the governor noted significant progress in education, infrastructure, security, and human capital development, stressing his commitment to transforming every part of Anambra.

    “We are developing our communities so rapidly that soon, some people may hardly recognize their own villages because of the scale of transformation taking place,” Soludo said.

    He expressed special appreciation to the youths and students of Awka South, who voluntarily donated N515,000 in support of the campaign — a gesture he described as symbolic of genuine grassroots backing.

    Soludo also commended the Traditional Medicine Practitioners in the area for contributing N3 million to the campaign, acknowledging their role in preserving authentic indigenous healing practices.

    At the same time, he reaffirmed his administration’s commitment to cracking down on fake traditional healers and others promoting destructive superstitions that mislead young people.

    “We love and respect genuine traditional medicine practitioners — those who heal with herbs and roots — not those deceiving our youths with false promises of instant wealth through charms and ‘okeite’.

    We will not allow such harmful influences in Anambra State,” Soludo warned.

  • ADC frowns at purported donations for Soludo’s campaign

    ADC frowns at purported donations for Soludo’s campaign

    The governorship candidate of the African Democratic Congress (ADC) in Anambra State, Mr John Nwosu, has expressed concern over reports of purported donations made by some communities to Governor Chukwuma Soludo and his party, the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA), ahead of the November 8 governorship election.

    Speaking in Awka, Nwosu described the development as troubling, raising what he called serious questions under Nigeria’s electoral laws, as well as moral and ethical concerns.

    “I’m aware of reports that some groups and towns have made humongous donations to Governor Soludo and APGA in purported support of his campaign,” he said. “Such donations raise genuine concerns about compliance with the Electoral Act, morality, and the rule of law.”

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    He stressed that while individuals are free to support candidates of their choice, any form of quid pro quo arrangement—such as inflated contracts or kickbacks disguised as campaign donations—would amount to corruption and criminal subterfuge.

    The ADC candidate also decried reports suggesting that some local government councils were contributing financially to the governor’s campaign despite what he termed poor performance and limited evidence of grassroots development.

    “If cash-strapped local governments are donating millions to the governor’s campaign, that is a charade and a blatant display of official dishonesty,” Nwosu said. “At no time in Anambra’s political history have we witnessed such open desperation to manipulate the voting public.”

    Nwosu further argued that Governor Soludo’s administration does not enjoy the people’s support and has not earned a second term.

    “Governor Soludo does not deserve re-election based on his record,” he added. “Those who sell their votes are selling their patrimony, freedom, and future.”

  • Tinubu to commission project in Anambra May 8, says Soludo

    Tinubu to commission project in Anambra May 8, says Soludo

    Anambra Governor Chukwuma Soludo has announced the visit of President Bola Tinubu to the State to commission some projects

    He made the announcement while addressing the workforce at Dr Alex Ekwueme square during the May Day celebration

    He said the President will be in the state on May 8 for project commissioning.

    “The President will be visiting Anambra State to officially commission some of the completed projects this administration has executed so far within a space of three years in office.

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    “This is a proved that my administration is forging a partnership that works.

    “I urge you all to give him a resounding welcome, Soludo said

    Anambra chapter of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) and the Trade Union Congress (TUC), commended the Governor for implementing N82,000 new minimum wage for workers, though it was reduced to N70,000 after deductions

    They also appreciate the Governor for approving N10,000 non-taxable award to pensioners.

    The union’s joint address was read by the TUC chairman in the state, comrade Chris Ogbonna.

  • Soludo and criminal native doctors

    Soludo and criminal native doctors

    It would have been utterly absurd to expect that Governor Chukwuma Soludo of Anambra State will easily wage a decisive war against native doctors either of the genuine or criminal hue. Not with the pervading fear of the touted supernatural and diabolical powers associated with practitioners of that trade. The so-called supernatural or occultic powers of native doctors are enough to frighten the most hardened to contemplate engaging in any fight against them.

    When Soludo braced up for a decisive war against the evil dimensions of that business, he must have fully prepared himself for a risky and daunting engagement. He had during his 2024 Public Service Lecture stirred some controversy when he accused native doctors of helping criminal elements by preparing protective charms for them.

    “Diabolical native doctors are part of the forces aiding and abetting criminality in the state. They encourage and deceive hoodlums by preparing different kinds of protective charms. … Kidnappers are kept in the shrines of some of the native doctors showing that they work-hand-in-hand with the criminals” he had declared. He then vowed to root them out of the confines of the state.

    Soludo’s declaration of war against native doctors though visionary and pragmatic, appeared to have stirred the Hornets’ nest especially from the camps of practitioners of the trade. While it was seen as a difficult but worthwhile crusade against the evils associated with the trade, signs of opposition soon emerged from the ranks of genuine practitioners of that business.

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    They reasoned that the governor’s speech was guilty of overgeneralisation as it failed to make a distinction between genuine and criminal native doctors. The state commissioner for information, Law Mefor, had to quickly issue a statement to correct the wrong impressions read into that speech.

    According to him, the governor ‘never declared war on all native doctors but rather the doctors involved in criminal activities’. He said investigations by some concerned citizens had confirmed Soludo’s position that some native doctors are involved in preparing charms for kidnappers, armed robbers and are believed to be behind such evil practices as human sacrifice for money and protection. The state government said that these diabolical rituals have given rise to the belief in such practices as Ego-Mbute (access to money in huge quantities), Yahoo Plus and idolatry. The war is to root out diabolical practices and has nothing to do with genuine traditional medicine or native doctors who are truly serving God and humanity, Mefor further clarified.

    The devilish and evil practices pointed out by the governor for which he vowed to battle criminal native doctors are real and serious. Reports from across the country speak of the pervasiveness of such practices and the large patronage they enjoy especially among the youths. The belief in supernatural powers or the occultic prowess of native doctors to change the fortunes of people seeking easy access to quick money or power is responsible for the flourishing of such practices as ritual killings for money and human sacrifice.

    The story of our youths arrested across the country with human parts for ritual purposes speak eloquently of the degenerate level of the evil practice. Within the last two weeks or so, there have been three instances of such cases in the media space involving ordinary Nigerians including native doctors either caught in the process of selling human parts or about to dispose them in very questionable circumstances.

    And in all these instances, criminal native doctors feature very prominently either by direct involvement in human killings or receiving human parts for the preparation of concoctions touted capable of enhancing the fortunes of their customers.

     In Nasarawa State, a purported gospel singer who later described himself as a Cryptocurrency trader Timileyin Ajayi was arrested when he went to dispose of the decapitated head of a 24-year old youth corps lady he had killed in his apartment.

    Twins who double as carpenters and native doctors were caught in Ogun State for allegedly killing a sex worker who they had lured into their apartment for ritual purposes. They were arrested by the state police command while trying to sell the parts of their victim. In their confessional statements, they confirmed selling the parts for between N20,000 and N100,000.

    Yet, the Oyo State police command arrested and paraded a suspected ritualist, Mohammad Adekunle for allegedly killing and selling human parts in Ibadan. Four other people were equally arrested for buying different parts of the human body from Adekunle for money ritual. This is just a tip of the iceberg in the illicit trade in human parts that go on around the country with no signs of abating.

    When Soludo vowed to root out criminal native doctors from the shores of Anambra State, he must have been seriously worried by the evil practices associated with that trade. But it is going to be a hard task given the esoteric and mystic nature of the trade.

    The first challenge on his way is how to differentiate between the genuine traditional practitioners and the fake and criminal ones. The Traditional Medicine Practice Act 2000 established the traditional medicine practitioners’ council to register practitioners, licence them and regulate the preparation and sale of herbal medicines and provide for related matters.

    With the copious roles assigned to the council by the Act, it would appear Soludo will have no problem sieving the chaff from the wheat. It may be tempting to assume that all registered native doctors or traditional medicine practitioners will not get involved in evil machinations given the fact of their registration. But this is a highly limited view on the issue.

    Because of the secret, esoteric and mystic nature of the trade, you find that even the registered ones sometimes indulge in practices that do not lend themselves to empirical assessment. It is not uncommon to find them indulging in practices that promote the supernatural and the spiritual. But that is not to say there are no genuine ones amongst them producing herbal medicines with known therapeutic efficiency.

    But how many native doctors across the country find themselves within this list? What you find around the country is a coterie of shrines and worship places decorated in very frightening apparels. What goes on in those shrines and so-called sacred places is anyone’s guess. Yet, you get to hear well placed Nigerian speak of the desecration of sacred shrines and all that.

    A lot of Nigerians believe in the efficacy of the supernatural and the mysterious. They share beliefs in witches and wizards, and their powers to inflict harm on people. These beliefs are sustained and reinforced by the activities of native doctors and sundry religions. That is why you find people flock to any new church or shrine that is touted with the powers of miracles. So, the war against criminal native doctors must factor in the gullibility of our people to these belief systems. Criminal native doctors thrive in their illicit trade because of the greed and the criminal mind of their customers to procure through other means the good things of life that come with hard work and trust in the powers of the almighty God.

    That appears the real challenge in the war against criminal native doctors. Ritual killings or human sacrifice for money cannot thrive if people do not believe in them. So, we must get to address the psyche of the average Nigerian to achieve lasting results.

    There is another challenge emanating from some definitional issues in the Act setting up the traditional medicine practitioners’ council. The Act defined “practitioner” to mean a traditional medicine practitioner whose practice uses herbs and any other natural products.

    It also defined “Traditional Medicine” as practices based on beliefs and ideas recognised by the community to provide healthcare by using herbs or any other naturally occurring substances.

    While the definition of practitioner stated clearly the confines of the trade- using herbs and natural products, that of traditional medicine injected some complications into the trade. It spoke of practices based on beliefs and ideas recognised by the community to provide healthcare. Though it talks of herbs and other naturally occurring substances, issues of beliefs and practices may not really translate in practical items.

    There are spiritual and supernatural dimensions to them. That is the type of complications that may impinge negatively in the task the Anambra State government has set for itself. It is going to be a hard nut to crack. It is not just a problem peculiar to Anambra State but a national problem sustained and patronised by the high, the mighty and the powerful. Those usually arrested are the couriers and small fries. And like in other areas of high-stake criminality, their sponsors and patrons never get to be caught.

    Soludo has brought the mischief of criminal native doctors to the fore. But as worthwhile as the war against such criminality is, only a holistic perspective to it will achieve meaningful results. There has to be a national approach to it or whatever progress recorded by the state government will pale into insignificance.