Tag: Nigeria

  • Post-colonial culture in Nigeria

    Post-colonial culture in Nigeria

    The vast majority of Nigerian after the amalgamation in 1914 continued to live their lives as before without noticeable change traceable to the imposition of colonial rule.  The most noticeable outcome of amalgamation was the gradual extension of the Beit-el mal (native treasuries) first introduced to the North by Sir Fredrick Lugard to the rest of the country beginning in Yorubaland and Benin.  The attempt to extend this to the acephalous Igbo societies by creating ‘Warrant’ chiefs where there were no traditional rulers met with failure. The economic implication of this system was the levying of taxes in the names of native rulers who were now made to enjoy political and economic power out of tune with pre-colonial tradition and culture. 

    Resistance to this imposition did not succeed in the face of superior physical force in the hands of the colonial administration.  Rebellion and revolts were shot down by the use of soldiers and Nigerians were cowed and made to face the responsibilities imposed by modern mode of governance which involved payment of taxes as a passage of citizenships rite.

    The colonial phase of Nigerian history witnessed rapid economic changes, building of railways roads and ports and even aerodromes.  Gradually our people were sucked into the western economic, political and social vortex.  With this came increasing contact between our people and the outside world.  Nigerian soldiers fought in two World Wars first between 1914 and 1918 in theatres in Togo, the Cameroons and East Africa.  Some naval ratings were even sent all the way to Palestine. 

    The Second World War saw more extensive use of our soldiers in the Ethiopian campaigns against the Italians and in Burma against the Japanese.  The involvement of our troops in these global cataclysms had serious political consequences. The weakening of the British in a changed world hastened the process of decolonization.  This process was hastened by the rise of African nationalism and the emergence of political parties each of which in different ways fought for the political emancipation of our country.  The growing political awareness led to cultural nationalism and the cry to “boycott all boycottables” that is to say Africans should go back to their cultural roots by jettisoning imported names and taking on native names.  This was particularly the case among the descendants of Nigerian repatriates from Sierra Leone resident in Lagos. They cast away their European and Hebrew names thus David Brown Vincent took an African names of Mojola Agbebi, Edmund Macaulay became Kitoyi Ajasa, Joseph Pythagoras Haastrup became Ademuyiwa Haastrup, Jacob Henry Samuel became Adegboyega Edun. Their examples were later to resonate with Azikwe and Awolowo when they dropped their biblical names of Benjamin and Jeremiah respectively. 

    The wearing of African clothes became fashionable.  Lugard would in his grave have approved this development unlike what he condemned in 1914 when he described educated natives as the “trousered Negros of the coast dressed in bond street attire, who send their laundry abroad every other week for dry cleaning”.  In this changed cultural preference, the cultural gap between southerners and northerners in Nigeria began to close. Northerners never abandoned their babanriga for western suits and in most cases stuck to their languages especially the Hausa language rather than taking to English.  This was to be their undoing in a   world in which English was the lingua franca.  This cultural recrudescence also led to greater interest in the study of Nigerian languages literature and history.  The vanguard in this regard was provided by the University of Ibadan which by the eve of independence in 1960 began to develop new curricula for students in liberal arts and the social-sciences as well as adapting the physical and biomedical sciences for the African environment.

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    The so-called Africanisation gathered pace in the civil service, the church and the judiciary and it was only a matter of time before Africans began to occupy the commanding heights of the economy and the politics of Nigeria and this had its cultural dimension in African pride and the assertion of what was called the “African personality”.

    The post-colonial cultural development

    With independence in Nigeria came a rising tide of expectations.  People wanted increased prices for their primary produce like cocoa, groundnuts, palm kernel and palm oil as well as cotton, rubber, hides and skins on which post-independence Nigerian economy depended.  The various governments of Nigeria tried to meet the expectation of the people but they were not always successful.  With the decline in producer price of farm produce, there was increasing migration of the youth to swell the urban conurbation of Lagos, Ibadan, Kano, Kaduna, Jos, Maiduguri, Benin, Aba and Port Harcourt.  The cities therefore became melting pots of cultures. The various governments particularly the one in the western part of the country spent vast sums of money from accumulated funds of the marketing boards on social welfare schemes such as education and health and urban planning and renewal.  The cities became more attractive to the youth who left the dreary existence of the villages for the cities in what has been appropriately described as rural-urban migration phenomenon.  With too many people in the cities, the infrastructure could not cope and there began a gradual and slippery slope to a situation of urban decay and dilapidation. Crime increased and there was a corrosion of values everywhere.  Money became the most desirable object without consideration of how it was acquired.  Bribery graft, fraud and corruption alien to our culture have become the order of the day.  This phenomenon was accentuated and exacerbated by the incursion of the military into governance.  Force was seen as a veritable instrument of success.  There has been growing culture of aggression in Nigeria and a noticeable breakdown of the culture of respect for elders and others.  Some have ascribed this decline to exploding population which has led to increased competition for resources and jobs particularly among the people.

    Nigerian fraudulent practices have even gone international with advance fee fraud and drug and human trafficking being increasingly, associated with Nigerians.  Surprisingly or perhaps because of the prevailing hardship, the religion of Islam and Christianity have witnessed revival.  The orthodox aspect or traditions of these religions are increasingly challenged by sometimes extremist or even millenarian tendencies sometimes leading to a clash of votaries of these religions. Sometimes the battle-line as in the North of Nigeria is between the traditional Islamic religion and groups preaching a Shiite form of Islam in a largely Sunni milieu.  Among the Christian orthodox traditions such as the Catholics and Protestants have seen huge erosion of membership who now troop to the so-called Pentecostal churches.

    Founding of churches have become big business and many of the churches have gone beyond what orthodox Catholic and Protestants missions used to do in terms of establishment of schools and hospitals.  Some now have housing estates where the ordinary lives of the people are rigidly controlled.  Pentecostalism shares much in common with Islam in the sense that it is not just a religion but a way of life.  This has radically affected the culture of Christians, particularly as it affects marriages, child naming and burials.  The absence of government has also been replaced by the role Pentecostal churches play in the lives of Nigerians.  Some now provide educational facilities from kindergarten to universities.  This is also being emulated rather slowly by Muslims in a struggle for the souls of the people.  Religion has become so fundamental in the lives of Nigerians that the role of men of God and Mallamai has become much pronounced. 

    Nigerians from their external appearances and what they say appear to be very religious.  This however is not reflected in the morality and behaviour of the people.  There is therefore a feeling of superficiality in the religious cultures of our people.  The churches and mosques are full every worship day and even political leaders have appropriated God while continuing with their nefarious looting of the state and national exchequers. 

    The culture of insincerity perfidy and religious perversion is everywhere.  Syncretism in our religious belief has led many observers to say our religion is skin deep, yet the culture of religious confrontation occasioning mass slaughter of the innocents has become a recurring decimal in Nigeria.  The culture of religious intolerance is sometimes fed by events outside our shores with many Muslim youth either out of frustration or fad are being found to support the call for Jihad against non-Muslims or those Muslims who are seen to be deviating from Islamic orthodoxy.

    While all this is going on there is also the effect of globalization on Nigerian culture.  Our economy is open to the rest of the world and with this openness come the importation of all kinds of things namely wine, food, films, educational materials and other things promoting particularly western culture.  It is not unheard of nowadays to hear calls for gay rights that would have been met with the worst kind of reaction in the past.  The modes of dressing of the youth even the kind of English spoken are pitifully American.  The dot.com generations have also exploited computers to perpetrate fraud internationally.  Nigerians like other people in the globalised world are not immune to the spread of pornography and even paedophilia and other kinds of sexual perversion unheard of in times past.

  • Nigeria’s reward systems in crisis

    Nigeria’s reward systems in crisis

    • By Oluwole Ogundele

    Leadership from the family stage to the national level is a serious engagement. It is about fine-grained service to society. By this token, a leader is a public servant of huge dimensions. That is to say, that robust service to the followers, is a pre-condition for the sustainable socio-economic development of a country or system.

    Similarly, the led must play their own roles by embracing constructive criticisms, devoid of partisanship or moral bankruptcy. In this regard, giving information to the relevant authorities is a task that must be accomplished at all costs. Some privileges and/or allowances are given to leaders through the lens of the constitution (written and unwritten). This arrangement is made with a view to cushioning the effects of their extra-ordinary service to the people. However, these privileges become poisonous when leaders fail to perform optimally. Again, a disequilibrium is created, thereby paving the way for a series of crises.

    It is too easily forgotten especially in Nigeria that the political authority across the board, is not a platform for threatening, cutting down and belittling the ordinary citizens, as if they are a group of sub-humans. Therefore, it is very disheartening whenever our leaders decouple from us, often due to bad advice and/or haughtiness on a monumental scale. Leadership without commensurate service to the citizens is tantamount to parasitism. This can be understood against the backdrop of the fact, that the citizens are the producers of the wealth of Nigeria. Top government officials as well as members of the National Assembly have no good reason to continue to shortchange Nigerians, who are now majorly diminished due to economic hardship or financial toxicity.

    The distribution patterns of the public wealth by ‘the powers that be’ are clearly lopsided. In other words, the Nigerian reward systems lack symmetry. It is a pity, that most university academics including professors (robust knowledge producers) are living from hand to mouth, in a country so richly blessed with natural and cultural resources. I’m humbly appealing to PBAT to begin to overturn these absurdities in the interest of peace and progress. The existing order (embedded in reactionary ideologies) which implies that the politicians must take everything, has to be dismantled through a revolution by education. A child that says that his mother should not sleep, would also remain awake.  This is one of the age-old, time-tested Yoruba epistemologies. No leader or follower is an exclusive preserve of wisdom.  Everybody is in a school.

    Wages/salaries and allowances of workers need to be increased given our current inflation-ravaged economy.  Desperately poor citizens are a big threat to society. Currently, most Nigerians have lost their weight without taking slimming pills. Food shortages and high cost of living are leading to very poor public health.  Poor nutrition is an invitation to ill health especially in the face of outrageously high hospital bills. Death is now very cheap! Who says that Nigeria is not gradually becoming a hell on earth? 

    However, the foundation of this hellish space was laid much earlier. But President Tinubu must do something about it urgently.   It is submitted here, that poor public health slows down national economic development.  

    When government workers across the board are paid reasonable wages and allowances, all other categories like carpenters, electricians, plumbers and food stuffs sellers benefit tremendously.  Their financial statuses improve. Rate of crimes and criminality necessarily drops. Indeed, Nigeria will not enjoy peace or political stability when the ordinary people are desperately poor and hopeless, as the government looks the other way. The Nigerian working class does not need to protest or go on strike before their salaries are reviewed upward.  Empathy and mutuality of respect are serious principles that our leaders must embrace.

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    In my opinion, it is most unacceptable that the Nigerian university staff members are getting the lowest salaries and allowances in the entirety of West Africa. This disturbing situation did not start today. However, this current government has to change the narrative with immediate alacrity. Our leaders have to listen to the voice of reason. It is not an act of weakness to listen to the led. No basis for an ego trip! The government has to learn from the past so as to succeed.   ASUU (Academic Staff Union of Universities) members have to be motivated in order to put in their best. This is a global reality that cannot be contested. Those European and American governments paying good salaries to their intelligentsia are not stupid. They know that human capital development is critical to sustainable economic progress.

    Nigeria has enough resources to make every hard-working citizen reasonably comfortable. But sadly enough, most of our politicians are busy ravaging the country’s collective corn field like a bunch of baboons. I’m still wondering how our political class members are able to sleep in the face of agonies of the toiling masses.

    Hedonism has become a fetish for these special Nigerians who behave as if they are going to live forever. Moderation, responsiveness, responsibility and fiscal discipline that characterise the British and American political landscapes, do not exist in Nigeria.  A dangerous signal is being sent to the youth who are growing up in this corruption-laden environment.  Aside from the issue of genetic inheritance, every human is largely a product of his social geography.

    Certainly, Nigeria is in dire need of socio-cultural revolution capable of re-connecting us with the age-old African epistemologies or values in a critical way. One of these values and value systems is enshrined in the concept of giving and taking on the basis of mutuality of respect. Succinctly put, the culture of caring and sharing between the leaders and the led, has to be creatively exhumed. Thus, for example, most owners of cleaning or sanitation companies around, are worker-unfriendly. After using their connections here and there to get contracts, they usually end up giving (in many instances) as low as #15,000 monthly to a cleaner. The “powerful” business man goes home every month with millions of naira.

    This is one of the major reasons why insecurity and all kinds of prostitution go on unabated in Nigeria. Extreme poverty dehumanises. Immorality now reigns supreme as a coping strategy. President Bola Ahmed Tinubu should focus more than hitherto on the current situation, in order to pave the way for sustainable progress in Nigeria. There is no doubt that he inherited this mess, but a new platform can still be created for posterity to celebrate the Jagaban of Nigeria. 

    Change beyond the domain of rhetoric must begin now. The existing reward systems have to be overturned as quickly as possible. In the final analysis, sustainable economic development will be a wild goose chase in the face of unprecedented material poverty and hopelessness. Leadership by example, is of the essence. Nigerians (with the exception of the political class members and their business associates) are groaning more than ever before, despite the fact, that they are the producers of the wealth of the country. Even the cerebral university professor is not spared. What a country!    

    •Professor Ogundele is of Dept. of Archaeology and Anthropology, University of Ibadan.

  • NES urges Nigeria, others to transform agriculture, trade, energy

    NES urges Nigeria, others to transform agriculture, trade, energy

    The Nigerian Economic Society (NES) on Tuesday urged Nigeria and other African countries to transform agriculture, trade, energy in other to attain sustainable economic growth.

    It, however, insisted that the countries are not in deficit of talent, ideas, or entrepreneurial grit but they are lacking in translating them to tangible improvements in the lives of their citizenry.

    NES President, Adeola Adenikinju, made this known in a press briefing in Abuja on Tuesday.

    According to him, Africa’s external socio-economic environment remains uncertain amidst lingering global trade tensions and geopolitical shocks.

    He stressed that projections of various institutions, suggesting economic growth for Nigeria and the continent still falls short of what is needed to truly improve living standards of citizens, adding that one in every three persons continues to live below the poverty line.

    “Yet the data show that our region is positioned to witness significant economic growth in the coming years. The data also show that our economic and social prosperity requires more than macro stability. 

    “It requires sectoral transformation in our core growth sectors like agriculture, trade, and energy, and it requires social protection systems that are well designed. If we hold those two truths together, we can design pathways for social and economic prosperity that are both ambitious and realistic.

    “Nigeria and Africa are not short of talent, we are not short of ideas, we are not short of entrepreneurial grit. The real challenge is not the absence of good policy ideas, but the difficulty of translating them into tangible improvements in people’s daily lives,” he said. 

    Speaking further, Adenikinju said that the 66th annual conference of the Society, scheduled to hold from September 8 to 11 2025 will identify practical pathways to economic transformation and social inclusion, mindful of the shifting global landscape that shapes the economy.

    He explained that the theme of the conference, Rethinking Africa’s development’ means shifting from a paradigm predicated on volatile commodity cycles and aid dependence toward one anchored in investment, diversification, and institutions that deliver. 

    “It means embracing regional integration not simply as a diplomatic project but as a concrete way to reduce costs for businesses and expand consumer choice. It means, among others, the courage to reform when it is difficult, coupled with the humility to protect the most vulnerable while reforms take time to yield fruit.

    “We will offer clear insights and actionable recommendations for policymakers, researchers, and practitioners through the recommendations that will be adopted at the end of the conference. 

    “These recommendations will speak directly to the pressing questions of our time: how to secure macroeconomic stability, how to unlock diversification and competitiveness, how to build resilience in the face of shocks, and how to ensure that economic growth translates into shared, inclusive prosperity.”

  • Nigeria, Colombia target aviation, trade deals

    Nigeria, Colombia target aviation, trade deals

    Nigeria and Columbia are working towards partnership in aviation, trade and cultural exchanges.

    These are the highlights of the bilateral meeting between Colombia Vice President Francia Márquez and Vice President Kashim Shettima in Abuja yesterday.

    The South American who is on a three-day visit to Nigeria, met with President Bola Ahmed Tinubu in company of Shettima after their meeting.

    The President assured the Colombia leader that he would implement the agreements that were reached at her meeting with the Vice President. 

    Mrs Márquez described Nigeria as “the land of our ancestors,” expressing delight at leading Colombia’s delegation on the landmark visit.

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    She identified aviation, visa facilitation, political consultations, cultural exchange, and trade as priority areas for partnership.

    She also highlighted Colombia’s interest in direct flights between both nations and expressed commitment to working with Nigeria to advance social justice, gender equality, and inclusivity.

    Márquez praised Nigeria’s leadership role in Africa and noted that the African Union’s growing influence on the global stage would bolster cooperation between Latin America and the continent.

    The bilateral meeting was attended by Chief of Staff to the President, Femi Gbajabiamila; Minister of Foreign Affairs, Yusuf Maitama Tuggar; Finance Minister and Coordinating Minister  of the Economy, Wale Edun; Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment, Dr. Jumoke Oduwole and Minister of Women Affairs and Social Development, Imaan Sulaiman-Ibrahim.

    Tinubu told the Colombia delegation that global economic realities require nations to look beyond traditional alliances and forge new bonds of cooperation for mutual prosperity.

    The President said: “I believe the Vice President and his team have done the job. Our business opportunities with Colombia have already been enhanced. I support every aspect that you have agreed on.

    “Particularly for Colombia, the agreement we entered with Brazil can easily be replicated in aviation, and our diplomatic relations can be enhanced. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs will accelerate that”.

    Nigeria and Brazil opened up air links and trade opportunities during Tinubu’s visit last week.

    The President urged Colombian business leaders to seize the vast investment opportunities in Nigeria’s oil and gas industry, as well as in agriculture.

    According to him, Nigeria’s young and expanding population provides not only a huge market but also a capable workforce that can drive industrialisation and economic growth.

    Shettima, who co-chaired the Nigeria–Colombia Bilateral Meeting and Business Forum, said the visit by his Colombian counterpart would help rekindle historical ties between Africa and Latin America disrupted by centuries of slavery and colonialism.

  • Nigeria, Taiwan chart part on integrated city planning

    Nigeria, Taiwan chart part on integrated city planning

    Taiwan’s Representative and Head of Mission in Nigeria, Andy Yih-Ping Liu, has called for stronger collaboration between government regulators, construction companies, architects, and city planners to ensure safer infrastructure and sustainable development in Nigeria.

    Speaking at the 2025 Annual General Meeting of the International Real Estate Federation (FIABCI) Nigeria in Lagos, Liu stressed the need for professional standards in construction and urban planning, noting that Nigeria and Taiwan have already begun working together in this regard.

     “Real estate is not just about housing or commercial buildings; it is about city planning that integrates good transportation, safe housing, and a quality living environment,” Liu said. “Taiwan’s experience can help Nigeria, especially in countering natural disasters like flooding.”

    Drawing parallels between Taiwan’s typhoons and Nigeria’s flooding challenges; Liu emphasized the importance of emergency response collaboration. He noted that government regulation, quality building materials, strict monitoring, and regular inspections were critical to preventing building collapse and ensuring long-lasting infrastructure.

    He urged Nigeria to strengthen its regulatory framework, combining local experience with international best practices, while stressing the need for effective implementation through public-private partnerships.

     “FIABCI provides a platform for both public and private sectors to work together. Beyond discussions, proposals must be taken to the National Assembly to develop strong legal frameworks that can be enforced,” he added.

    Liu highlighted Taiwan’s success in education-driven development, which created a skilled workforce and reduced illiteracy to below 2per cent. He suggested Nigeria could adapt similar long-term strategies to strengthen its human capital for national growth.

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    He further pointed to existing ties between FIABCI Nigeria and Taiwan, describing them as a “bridge” for knowledge-sharing and cooperation. He also acknowledged Nigeria’s First Lady, Senator Oluremi Tinubu, for endorsing closer partnership between the two countries.

     “Taiwan and Nigeria are very different—Nigeria has abundant natural resources, while Taiwan has learned to thrive despite natural disasters. By sharing experiences, both countries can help each other avoid mistakes and build stronger futures,” Liu said.

    ….Nigeria Chapter President, FIABCI-Nigeria, Akin Opatola, said the Annual General Meeting is significant for a few reasons. First, it is the very first AGM under his administration since he assumed leadership of FIABCI Nigeria in July 2025. That alone makes it a milestone. Second, it comes right after the successful hosting of the FIABCI World Congress. And third, it is symbolic because of the continued partnership with Knight Frank—an organization that represents excellence, leadership, and ethics, values that mirror everything real estate stands for.

     “We also use this forum to celebrate Knight Frank’s new graduates who joined the industry just a month ago. It’s our way of acknowledging their contributions and welcoming them into the profession. In addition, we are inducting about 20 new FIABCI members who successfully passed the rigorous recruitment process. Our membership remains exclusive—fewer than 200 in Nigeria despite 53 years of presence—because of the high standards we uphold”. Opatola said their induction, complete with lapel pins from France and registration on the FIABCI app, reflects commitment to excellence.

    According to Opatola, the World Congress, held for the first time in Nigeria and Africa, was another historic milestone adding that it brought together over 125 international participants and provided a platform for cross-pollination of ideas and best practices. We explored topics such as smart cities, with insights from Nigeria’s Eko Atlantic project, speakers from the UNITED Arab Emirate (UAE), and perspectives from Indonesia, which is planning a new capital city to address Jakarta’s urban challenges, the Chapter President said.

    Feedback from the Congress was overwhelmingly positive. Delegates were impressed with Lagos’ infrastructure, safety, and hospitality. The event featured golf, plenary sessions, city tours, and rich cultural experiences. Government support was strong—though President Bola Ahmed Tinubu couldn’t attend, he was represented by senior officials, while notable speakers such as former Vice President Yemi Osinbajo delivered impactful keynotes on sustainability, smart cities, and ESG. His contribution resonated so well that international participants are now inviting him to future global events, Opatola explained.

    He said the Congress also projected a positive image of Nigeria and the real estate sector, generating interest from countries like Uganda, Rwanda, and Madagascar, who are now considering setting up their own FIABCI chapters.

     “Our message to new inductees is clear: uphold the code of practice, be active, pay dues, and participate fully in councils and elections. FIABCI is unique because it cuts across the entire value chain—lawyers, bankers, architects, valuers, brokers, and more—ensuring a rich mix of expertise and perspectives”, Opatola stated.

    Looking ahead, we are keen to learn from international partners such as Taiwan. For example, their integrated industrial park model, currently being replicated in Lekki with the free trade zone, shows how Nigeria can leverage foreign models for rapid industrialisation. That zone already guarantees 24-hour electricity, world-class infrastructure, and seamless business operations—proof that such concepts work, he said.

    We are also preparing for a trade mission to Italy in the coming weeks, continuing our commitment to connect Nigeria with global opportunities, he added.

    On Public-Private Partnerships (PPP), the Nigerian Chapter boss said: “I cannot overstate their importance. Nigeria cannot achieve large-scale development with government resources alone. Infrastructure projects like the proposed Fourth Mainland Bridge demonstrate how PPP can bridge funding gaps, with investors recouping through long-term tolling while government focuses on other priorities” adding PPP remains the most viable path to sustainable growth, especially in real estate, housing, and infrastructure.

  • Nigeria: Standing tall for an independent bar

    Nigeria: Standing tall for an independent bar

    Chief Abdul-Ganiyu “Gani” Oyesola Fawehinmi, GCON,  a Nigerian foremost human rights crusader, legal titan, and pro bono advocate, had publicly earned the ‘Senior Advocate of the Masses’ (SAM)  sobriquet before he was grudgingly awarded the title of Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), the summit of legal practice in the country. Gani died in September, 2009 at 71, but his legacy lives on. In this article, Prof. Chidi Odinkalu recalls part of Gani’s relentless pursuit of justice and laments that “lack of independence is a congenital design flaw … of Nigeria’s legal profession,”requiring urgent redress, citing the SAN award as an example.

    By Chidi Anselm Odinkalu

    In 1981, Chief Gani Fawehinmi was already 16 years at the Nigerian Bar and one of its brightest stars. He had also become a pioneer in the enterprise of legal publishing and a breakout litigator. One decade earlier, Gani had served as national publicity secretary of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA).  Among lawyers of his generation or, in fact, any other active at the Bar, few could claim to be more accomplished.

    The rank of Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), the hallmark of excellence in legal practice in Nigeria, was a mere six years old at the time. Then, as now, the Legal Practitioners Privileges Committee (LPPC) was the statutory body established to consider and determine eligible applicants for the rank. As always, it was chaired by the Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN). By any measure, Gani Fawehinmi was more than eligible to take the rank in 1981.

    However, instead of sending him to the LPPC,  the then-Attorney-General of the Federation, Richard Akinjide, a SAN since 1978 and eighth on the all-time list of SANs, sent Gani to the Legal Practitioners Disciplinary Committee (LPDC) for a supposedly high professional crime of daring to announce the existence of a path-breaking law reporting enterprise in which he was engaged. As the Attorney-General of the Federation, Akinjide happened to sit on the LPPC and was also the chair of the LPDC. Vocational or institutional independence for the legal profession was alien to this design.

    The complaint against Gani seemed pre-determined. So, he sued. When Candide Ademola Johnson, Chief Judge of Lagos State, ruled in Gani’s favour at the first instance, Akinjide’s LPDC was unhappy. They appealed to the Federal Court of Appeal (as it was called then) and lost. An implacable LPDC appealed to the Supreme Court. Four years after Gani first sued, in July 1985, the Supreme Court tossed out the appeal of Akinjide’s LPDC with a unanimous judgment in Gani’s favour.

    With a case pending before the courts over the lawfulness of the plan by the legal establishment to throw the kitchen sink at him, Gani was frozen out of consideration for elevation to the rank of SAN. His credentials were irrelevant. Indeed, it was rumoured with more than a modest whiff of credibility that he was approached with an offer to concede the legal proceedings in return for a favourable consideration for elevation to the rank. He reportedly declined.

    By the time the Supreme Court decided the case in July 1985, the cast of actors had changed, and the issues became even more interesting. At the end of September 1983, Akinjide ceased to be the Attorney-General of the Federation and also departed as the chair of the LPDC. When the Supreme Court handed down its judgment in July 1985, the LPDC chair was Chike Offodile, then Attorney-General to military ruler, Muhammadu Buhari.

    By then, Gani was already deep in another battle with the legal profession on how to approach Gen. Buhari’s military and anti-corruption tribunals. The NBA asked lawyers to boycott them; Gani refused. The month after the Supreme Court rendered its judgment in Gani’s favour in 1985, the Buhari regime was overthrown.

    Bola Ajibola, the new Attorney-General of the Federation, was the president of the Bar whose call on lawyers to boycott the military tribunals went unheeded by Gani. Unsurprisingly, when Gani’s name came up the following year for consideration for the rank of SAN, it ended up in the bin. In September 2001, more than two decades after he emerged as perhaps the most eligible to take the rank, Nigeria’s legal and political establishments yielded ground and finally conceded the rank of SAN to Gani Fawehinmi.

    Gani’s is the most obvious and most willful exclusion from the rank, and for political reasons. He is by no means the only one.  Alao Aka Basorun, a former president of the NBA, and Kanmi Isola Osobu, the late lawyer to Afrobeat icon Fela Anikulapo-Kuti, were two others apparently passed over due to their ideological leanings.

    Political reasons similarly explain why former Attorney-General of the Federation, Olu Onagoruwa, was passed over for the rank until 2014, when he was too unwell to attend the investiture.

    Among the living, former Attorney-General of Lagos and former Chair of the Body of Benchers, Hairat Balogun; Ayo Obe; and Jide Ogundipe are three examples of outstanding litigators whose exclusion from the SAN rank casts aspersions on any claims to objectivity in the decision-making process for its conferment.

    When, therefore, he claimed in a release on 18 August 2025 that the conferment of the rank of SAN “is not a political appointment, nor is it an executive patronage”, former General Secretary of the NBA, Olumuyiwa Akinboro SAN (who is also running to be the next president of the Nigerian Bar), indulged in both historical inaccuracy and factual revisionism. He was wrong on both claims and he knew it. Mr. Akinboro’s beef was with the requirement for the State Security Service (SSS) to screen candidates for elevation to the rank of SAN.

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    It is worth noting what Mr. Akinboro chose not to see. First, the requirement for the screening by the SSS is contained in the Guidelines for the Conferment of the rank of SAN made in October 2022 by then CJN and Chair of the LPPC, Olukayode Ariwoola.

    Second, those Guidelines specifically required the screening to be conducted respectively by three agencies: the Independent Corrupt Practices Commission (ICPC), the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), and the SSS. Mr. Akinboro could not be bothered to acknowledge that these were rules made by the CJN; nor did he notice that they also required the EFCC and the ICPC to do the same.

    Third, Mr. Akinboro justified his intervention with an emotive appeal to the need not to compromise the rank of SAN and to preserve the “independence of the courts”. Perhaps he did not know that the rules on judicial appointments made by the National Judicial Council (NJC) also require that a recommendation for judicial appointment from the Judicial Service Commission shall be accompanied by a “report by the Department of State Security (sic) on the suitability of the candidate for appointment to a Judicial Office supported by verifiable facts on which the report is based.” The agency referred to here as “Department of State Security” is the same one that the SAN Guidelines call SSS.

    Mr. Akinboro sees nothing wrong with candidates for judicial appointments going through the same process, which he says intrudes into the independence of the SAN application process. Apparently, to him, what is bad for the rank of SAN is good for the judiciary.

    These ebullitions from Mr. Akinboro and his ilk do not come from a place of principle. It is not about the independence of the legal profession, nor is it about a commitment to professional excellence. Instead, these kinds of views seek assurances of privilege for a few procured at the expense of the many and all under the convenient artifice of “independence” of the legal profession.

    Interestingly, this occurs in the week that the NBA begins its annual general conference in Enugu, Eastern Nigeria, under an ironic theme: “Stand Out; Stand Tall.” A Bar and a legal profession that lack independence cannot stand out or stand tall. An independent legal profession would have challenged the Ariwoola Guidelines promptly in 2022 rather than wait three years to misrepresent their import for cheap politics. In any case, a CJN would not be the person making the rules for the quality mark of an independent Bar.

    Independence of the legal profession is not a privilege handed out on a platter. It is fought for. Lack of independence is a congenital design flaw in the institutions of Nigeria’s legal profession. For the record, regimes of exceptionalism such as that advocated for by Mr. Akinboro, do not advance the cause of independence. That is not to say that independence is not a desirable goal. Rather, it is an acknowledgement that Nigeria’s legal profession is nowhere near that goal. Identifying the steps required to get there could usefully preoccupy the NBA when it meets in Enugu this week.

    • Odinkalu, is a lawyer and a teacher, Odinkalu can be reached at chidi.odinkalu@tufts.e

  • Nigeria’s cultural taste for poverty

    Nigeria’s cultural taste for poverty

    Sir: Not long ago, a news report showed Nigerian children writing the West African Senior School Certificate Examination, WASSCE late into the night with nothing but candles and torchlight. For many, it was just another story. For me, it was a mirror into Nigeria’s future, 20 to 30 years ahead. Because what enters into the minds of children shapes the society they grow into. And if darkness and struggle are normalised today, then hardship and mediocrity will be normalised tomorrow.

    In most societies, that image alone, children studying by candlelight, would be enough to shake a nation, to trigger reforms, to provoke outrage. But in Nigeria, it barely caused a ripple. Why? Because we have developed what I call a cultural taste for poverty.

    You wonder why senators and governors appear hardened, behaving like tin gods, forgetting the mandate of their positions and lacking empathy for the poor. It is because they too were raised in an environment where suffering was normalised. “If it was normal for me to hold position, then why shouldn’t it be normal for you to suffer? God will do your own”. That is the silent philosophy guiding much of our leadership and even our everyday lives.

    Look around and you would see it everywhere. A power outage lasting days is met with resignation. And when electricity suddenly returns, people shout, “Up NEPA!” as though electricity supply for a few hours is a gift, not a right. When supply stays on for 10 hours straight, we marvel, “They are really trying.” Trying to supply us with darkness? This is how low the bar has been set.

    The same applies to governance. A senator facilitates a project, funded not by his sweat but by taxpayers’ money and suddenly his name is plastered across the project as if it were a personal favour. We cheer, we clap and we thank him. Yet the truth is this, he has only carried out a duty for which he was elected. Nothing more.

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    This culture of lowered expectations has crept into every corner of our national life. We celebrate the bare minimum. We glorify survival over prosperity. We see the worst of situations and call it normal. And so we remain stuck.

    Nigerians have accepted incompetence as the order of the day. Leaders fail woefully at their duties, yet rather than hold them accountable, we explain away their failure, “What if he didn’t do it?”, “At least he is better than the last one.” It is this resignation that emboldens mediocrity. Any rogue can ride roughshod over us, loot resources, neglect the people and still find admirers who clap for him just for occupying office.

    Bad leadership no longer shocks us, it has been normalised into the national psyche. We endure obnoxious taxes, infrastructure decay and high price for fuel in an oil-rich nation. We buy transformers, energise it for distribution companies to charge us, we pay for services never rendered, we live in insecurity and yet the collective outrage is weak. Many have quietly accepted this cultural taste of poverty as a way of life. We no longer expect excellence, we no longer demand accountability and so we are governed by the worst among us.

    But Nigeria cannot continue this way. We must rise above this culture of poverty and mediocrity. We must refuse to normalise suffering and incompetence. We must begin to demand more, not just from those who govern us, but from ourselves as citizens. A nation is built not by what it tolerates, but by what it refuses to accept. Until we cultivate a taste for excellence, empathy and prosperity, Nigeria will continue to recycle the same failures. But the day we reset our values is the day Nigeria begins to rise.

    •Dayo DaSilva, (arpa, amncs) dsv123ng@yahoo.com

  • The problem with Nigeria

    The problem with Nigeria

    By Austin Orette

    Is President Bola Tinubu the cause of Nigeria’s problem? Some time ago, I wrote that I did not endorse Tinubu because he will reduce the misery index of Nigeria. I did not endorse him because he will stop corruption and other ills that plague the Nation. I did not endorse him because he is a saint. The only reason I supported him was that of all the candidates, he was the only one with the sagacity to push Nigeria from the status quo of mediocrity.

    So far so good, I am not disappointed. He is doing so well. He has ruffled the feathers of the impostors who assumed that Nigeria belongs to them.

    The Tax Bill is our ticket to restructuring. I have always believed that the federation cannot progress unless those who believe in unitarism are excommunicated from the bus of progress. They will call Tinubu many names, but he will go down as the author of New Nigeria. We will all be equal in this federation.

    I want to live in a country where there is fiscal justice. I want to be certain that the tax that comes from my boozing is not used to sponsor hajj for those who will destroy the establishment of those who sell beer. There is the case of the oil. I am from the Niger Delta. We need 60 percent of the oil and no Sheik from outside the region should tell us what to do. We don’t tell them how to pray. Why are the ports in Niger Delta not operational? We had Koko Port, Warri Port and Burutu Port. We were a country.

    My people are tired of applying for visa to clear goods in Lagos. We are tired of staying in a place that has so much federal money thrown at it but cannot manage to come up with sensible urban and housing policy.

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    A visit there is a journey of chaos. What are the senators doing? Can they work harder and give the Niger Delta the Dangote Deal? Dangote is in Nigeria with his own refinery and ports. What is next for him? With the way things are going, he might end up with his own currency. Who says monopoly doesn’t pay?

    Nasir El-Rufai has been popping up lately, threatening the president with electoral misfortune. Can you imagine the effrontery? He became a governor with Almajiri votes and he did nothing for them. These people think they own Nigeria. Where was he when Buhari filled every position with his and his wife’s relatives?

    Restructuring means you spend and manage what you produce. It is the law of the farm. You reap what you sow and don’t raise your livestock in another man’s garden without any compensation. There is Mr. Peter Obi who thinks the road to the presidency is through educating the Almajiris. If it didn’t work for Goodluck Jonathan, why do you think it will work for him?  El-Rufai is no fool. He has the Almajiri votes locked up.

    The solution is to ship the Almajiris to my village. We have highly motivated mothers who will adopt them and turn them into lawyers, engineers, doctors and respectable members of our society. The almajiris are orphans with living parents who don’t care. We can care for them in my village. With 60 % derivation, the sky is our limit. After they come of age and have become very educated, we will send them to the North to recolonise the North.

    We need home grown colonizers in the North.  They will bring progress faster to the North than the Fulani who are in a race to return to the 7th century.

    Now they will accuse me of asking them to turn their hearts away from the gods of Saudi Arabia to the gods of my village. Who knows, some of them might become educated Imams and not hypocrites who hide Ogogoro in their prayer kettle and underage girls, under their agbada. They will not be hypocrites. This will bridge the gap in the distribution of graduates during NYSC.

    Peter Obi should address this. Why should states that have so many Almajiris and no graduates have more NYSC graduates serving than states that are producing graduates? We must correct this Dangote equation. Obi should learn from Tinubu. You don’t placate bullies. We are on the way to a new Nigeria, the end of serfdom. The cacophony all over the place is beginning to be louder than Biafra. The halls of academia have just been opened in Southern Zaria and El-Rufai is apoplectic.  He cannot even comprehend that Nigeria can grow beyond one school of aviation. He is inviting Nnamdi Kanu to Dinner and wants to review Nnamdi’s notes. These are interesting times to be alive in my dear country, Nigeria.

    We will end up with a federal government that does not baby sit any region. We must have a government that does not rob Peter to pay Paul. No region should become bloated and lazy with excess fat. Those who are addicted to that feeding bottle should be weaned. That is true federalism and equality.  Are the Fulani and Biafrans against this? They are five and six. Don’t let their recriminations fool you. They have one agenda.   They are one and the same side of a bad coin.

    Dr Orette wrote in from Houston, Texas, USA

  • Nigeria at TICAD9: Forging a stronger partnership with Japan

    Nigeria at TICAD9: Forging a stronger partnership with Japan

    When Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba addressed African leaders and multilateral development partners who converged on the port city of Yokohama at the just-concluded 9th Tokyo International Conference, he was clear about the impending mission.

    Delving into the summit’s history, which started in 1993 as his launching pad, the Prime Minister said the idea of TICAD was founded on the basic principles of African ownership of her growth and development priorities, even as it seeks cooperation and international partnership. 

    He underscored the importance of mutual understanding, indigenous solutions, and collaborative efforts for Africa’s development.

    As the host, he outlined his government’s focus on private sector-led sustainable growth, youth and women’s empowerment, and regional integration while speaking on the theme: “Co-create innovative solutions with Africa.”

    At the head of the Nigerian delegation was President Bola Tinubu, who had embarked on a whirlwind of diplomatic shuttles and engagements in the last two years, making the voice of Nigeria loud and strong on how the country and the rest of Africa should engage the world. 

    During his intervention at the plenary session on ‘Peace and Stability’, President Tinubu underscored the importance of security to the economic growth and the collective prosperity of Africans and Nigerians in particular, stressing that Africa would remain mired in underdevelopment and consigned to a mere footnote in global affairs if conflicts and insecurity are not effectively tackled.

    While reaffirming Nigeria’s readiness to partner with Japan and other global development agencies to co-create solutions that address the development challenges of his country and the rest of Africa, President Tinubu declared that inclusivity, diversity, and the rule of law, which are essential ingredients for economic growth, are already entrenched in Nigeria’s social and political fabric.

    He described the current momentum of the Nigerian Armed Forces’ fight against terrorists and other forces of destabilisation as a springboard for national development and stability.

    Decrying how conflicts and poor management of political differences undermine the much-needed progress in Africa, President Tinubu referenced the economic reforms his administration is spearheading in Nigeria as a pointer to the revitalisation that is possible with the right investments in critical infrastructure, institutional reforms, and collaboration with civil society and international partners to improve the living standards of all citizens.

    Calling for a new approach and fresh thinking in conflict resolution in Africa, President Tinubu acknowledged how a new model of mediation buoyed by economic considerations is resolving the decades-long civil war in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

    “We should be under no illusions about the scale of our task. But neither should we underestimate the successes we have had. In the past, competition for resources has weakened states and triggered conflict. Now, we see mediators directly linking outcomes to investment in Congo. It is working and underlines the need for fresh thinking in everything we do to deliver peace and stability,” he said.

    In his well-received intervention, President Tinubu appealed to the government of Japan, the 5th largest economy in the world, for a more impactful investment in job-creating sectors of the Nigerian economy and in the rest of African countries, market-driven cooperation and partnerships that will eliminate poverty among the teeming population, rather than the hackneyed appeals for aid and handouts.

    President Tinubu seized the opportunity to call on Japan to support the campaign for reforms in the United Nations’ organs, especially the United Nations’ Security Council, to give African countries a greater voice.

    “It is the view of Nigeria that Africa’s quest for fair and equitable representation in the UN Security Council is a just and fair demand. Indeed, Africa deserves two seats in the Permanent Category, with all its prerogatives and privileges, including the Right of Veto. Africa also deserves additional seats in the non–permanent seat category of the Security Council, as encapsulated in the Ezulwini Consensus and the Sirte Declaration.”

    While laying out the new template for cooperation between Japan and Africa, Prime Minister Ishiba emphasised that locally rooted solutions that leverage the advantages of both Japan, the 5th largest economy in the world, and Africa, with a vast and vibrant young population, are essential for economic growth and development.

    The Prime Minister appealed to African countries to assist Japan as it grapples with the challenges of a declining population and shrinking agricultural land.

    “In 75 years from now, the population of Japan would have been halved. In the local communities, the population continues to decline; this is one big challenge Japan is facing. All agricultural land is being reduced, another major challenge for Japan. There is another potential in Africa: a growing young population, but for the power of young people in Africa to flourish, you need to create a manufacturing industry and create employment, which is very important. Solving challenges is not a one-way street. I would also like Africa to lend its strength to solving Japan’s challenges.”

    In addressing the problem of poverty and unemployment, Japan promised to work with African leaders to make the continent the next growth centre and build the capacity of youth and women to be employable.

    “Recognising this, we will implement human resource development for 300,000 people over three years. Through the “AI and Data Science Human Resource Development and Africa Economic Growth Initiative,” we will develop 30,000 AI industry personnel in Africa over three years,” the Prime Minister said.

    As part of the TICAD9 commitment, Prime Minister Ishiba announced investments in Africa’s health sector based on the “Investment Promotion Package for Sustainable Health in Africa.” The Universal Health Coverage (UHC) Knowledge Hub will be established in Japan this year, and the development of 35,000 health and medical personnel will contribute to achieving UHC in African countries. He unveiled Japan’s mission to support Africa’s vaccine supply through contributions of up to $550 million over the next five years to Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance.

    According to Prime Minister Ishiba, Japan started Kaizen training in Tunisia to boost industrialisation and improve the productivity of Africa’s manufacturing sector. This has now been expanded to 41 African countries. To date, the number of Kaizen trainers has reached 1,400, contributing to productivity improvements at 18,000 companies that generate employment for 280,000 people. Through this Kaizen approach, companies’ productivity in the 41 African countries has reportedly improved by more than 60%.

    Promising to do more to expand the manufacturing base in Africa and access to finance, the Prime Minister added, “We will nurture and expand the industrial ecosystem between Japan and Africa. We will advance “Japan Africa Co-Creation for Industry,” an initiative in which African startups and Japanese companies jointly develop industries. In terms of finance, we will strengthen the functions of the “Enhanced Private Sector Assistance for Africa,” a collaborative framework between Japan and the African Development Bank, expanding it to a maximum of $5.5 billion. We will mobilise $1.5 billion in public-private impact investment, using Japan International Cooperation Agency’s Private Sector Investment Finance as a catalyst.”

    Beyond the African-wide initiatives and the private sector funding assistance through the African Development, Nigeria’s participation at TICAD9 recorded major milestones and tangible results that will further accelerate progress already being made in key sectors of our economy, especially in the power and health sectors.

    Specifically, the Minister of Power, Adebayo Adelabu, led Nigeria’s power sector delegation to conclude negotiations and activation of several Japan-backed energy projects and had productive engagements with top equipment manufacturers.

    One of the power projects is the Lagos-Ogun Power Transmission System Improvement, which is designed to improve the wheeling capacity and grid stability and enable the connection of industrial customers on the corridor. There is also the partnership between the National Power Training Institute (NAPTIN) and JICA to enhance Vocational Training Delivery for the power sector. The third power project is the Distributed Access Through Renewable Energy Scale-up, for which $190 million has been provided.

    Speaking on the outcomes of his sideline engagements at TICAD9, Adelabu said, “We’re engaging with Toshiba and Hitachi facilities tied to upcoming grid infrastructure, and with Japan’s Transmission and Distribution Corporation and Energy Exchange to share best practices and loss-reduction strategies. The signed project includes technical training and loss reduction; the equipment is installed at NAPTIN in Abuja. We’re activating a $190M JICA renewable energy facility, complementing Nigeria’s $750M World Bank clean energy fund under Mission 300. We are also finalising plans to commission three JICA-funded substations in Apo and Keffi (FCT) and Apapa (Lagos), delivered via a $32M Japanese grant. This is moving from agreement to action, planning to implementation and promise to results.”

    Also, on the sidelines of the conference, Minister of Solid Minerals, Dr Dele Alake, and his team had a productive meeting with the officials of the Japan Organisation for Metals and Energy Security (JOGMEC). JOGMEC pledged to devise plans to encourage Japanese mining companies to invest in Nigeria’s mining sector. President of JOGMEC, Mr. Michio Daito, acknowledged that Nigeria’s rich mineral resources are well known globally, but Japanese mining companies need more information to make investment decisions.

    He raised issues about power generation for industries, tax incentives, labour, duty waivers, free trade zones, and entry and exit conditions. Noting that Japanese mining firms rely on JOGMEC to make investment decisions in foreign countries, Daito requested information on the state of infrastructure that supports mining.

    Dr Alake highlighted the reforms of President Bola Tinubu’s administration, especially monetary policy, tax, and fiscal policy reforms, which have made the business environment more stable and conducive.

    Acknowledging the industrial nature of the Japanese economy and the role of electric technologies, Alake said Nigeria would be critical to Japan’s needs for processed minerals to drive its economy.

    He encouraged JOGMEC to invest in the extraction and processing of its mineral needs in Nigeria before exports to Japan in line with the administration’s policy on local value addition.

    Addressing other investment concerns, Dr Alake rated the Nigerian workforce as one of the best in the world because of high literacy and education levels. He assured the investors that the Tinubu administration had embarked on critical infrastructure projects in rail, road, and water transportation to support industries.

    “In terms of economies of scale, producing and processing the critical minerals you need in Nigeria is cheaper and more profitable as the production costs are lower, the Minister said.

    The minister informed the Japanese government of Nigeria’s new electricity law, which allows industries to generate their own power and manage their own needs.

    A major interesting element of TICAD9 was the elevation of cultural diplomacy and people-to-people connection to higher pedestal with the naming of the city of Kisarazu as the Hometown for Nigerians by the Japan International Cooperation Agency under the “JICA Africa Hometown.”

    JICA, in a ceremony on Thursday, August 21, also named the cities of Nagai in Yamagata Prefecture the Hometown of Tanzania, Sanjo in Niigata Prefecture the Hometown of Ghana, and Imabari in Ehime Prefecture the Hometown of Mozambique.

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    Under this initiative, the government of Japan aims to further strengthen existing relationships with the four African countries by connecting municipalities with the four countries in Africa.

    Nigeria’s Charge d’Affaires, Mrs. Florence Akinyemi Adeseke, also the Acting Ambassador to Japan, and Mr. Watanabe Yoshikuni, the Mayor of Kisarazu, received the certificate from JICA naming Kisarazu the Hometown of Nigeria.

    In all, Nigeria had a great outing at TICAD9, with President Tinubu leading the charge and representing Nigeria at the highest level of government, signifying a strong bond between Nigeria and Japan. The biggest takeaway from the conference is Japan’s commitment to collaborate in co-creating solutions to development challenges in Nigeria and the rest of Africa, as well as inspiring a win-win partnership.

    -Ajayi is Senior Special Assistant to President Tinubu on Media and Publicity

  • Seven tips on how to handle difficult tenants in Nigeria

    Seven tips on how to handle difficult tenants in Nigeria

    As a Nigerian landlord, one of your greatest wishes is to have calm and responsible tenants, the kind who pay rent on time, maintain your property, and respect house rules.
    But reality doesn’t always work that way. Sometimes, you end up with tenants who pile up unpaid rent, throw loud parties, or turn your property into a dumpsite.

    Dealing with such tenants can be stressful, but it doesn’t have to drain your energy or ruin your investment. With the right approach, you can protect yourself, your property, and your peace of mind.

    Here are seven practical strategies to manage difficult tenants effectively

    1. Set clear boundaries from day one

    Most landlord tenant problems arise because expectations were never properly communicated. Always begin with a solid tenancy agreement that spells out:

    *Rent amount and payment deadlines

    *Rules on noise, pets, and guests

    *Property maintenance responsibilities

    *Consequences for default or damage

    When boundaries are clear, you have a legal reference point if disputes arise, saving you from endless arguments.

    2. Put everything in writing

    *Never rely solely on verbal agreements. Keep records of:

    *Rent receipts

    *Warning letters and notices

    *Photos or videos of property condition

    *Text messages, emails, or chat conversations

    Proper documentation gives you solid evidence if you need to involve lawyers, housing authorities, or even the police. It also strengthens your position in court should eviction become necessary.

    3. Communicate firmly, calmly, professionally

    It’s easy to get frustrated with a troublesome tenant, but shouting rarely solves anything. Instead:

    *Stay calm and stick to facts

    *Address the issue directly

    *Suggest solutions without insults

    For example: Instead of saying “You’re careless and irresponsible,” say, “Our agreement requires rent to be paid by the 5th, but it’s now the 20th. How can we resolve this before further action?”

    This way, you remain in control of the conversation.

    4. Explore mediation before eviction

    Sometimes, bad behavior stems from personal struggles loss of a job, financial hardship, or ignorance of the rules. Before rushing into eviction:

    *Try having an honest one-on-one discussion

    *Involve a neutral third party

    *Consider community dispute resolution services

    Mediation can save legal costs, reduce property damage risk, and in some cases, improve the landlord tenant relationship.

    5. Enforce consequences consistently

    If a tenant constantly breaks rules, follow through with agreed penalties. Whether it’s late payment fees, written warnings, or legal notices, consistency is key. If you’re lenient once, tenants may assume you’ll tolerate repeat behavior.

    6. Know when to involve legal authorities

    Some tenants won’t change despite multiple warnings. At that point, don’t hesitate to seek legal help. Familiarize yourself with Nigeria’s Tenancy Laws, or consult a lawyer to guide you through the eviction process. Acting within the law protects you from unnecessary backlash or countersuits.

    7. Learn and screen better next time

    Every difficult tenant is a lesson in disguise. Reflect on what went wrong:

    *Did you skip background checks?

    *Was your tenancy agreement too vague?

    *Did you rush to fill the vacancy without proper screening?

    Next time, improve your process by:

    *Requesting references from past landlords

    *Verifying employment or income sources

    *Conducting interviews to sense attitude and character

    Prevention is always better than cure. A little due diligence now can save you years of stress later.