Tag: Nigeria

  • To mend, not tear apart

    To mend, not tear apart

    Nothing about 2026 feels incidental. Nigeria does not step into it so much as it drifts here, bearing the weight of a previous year that refused to end quietly.

    The country arrives with receipts folded into its pocket—grievances, catastrophes, breakthroughs and aspirations—each rustling to fate’s torrid leash.

    This is not a threshold crossed cleanly. It is a season entered with the gait of a people who have learned to listen for danger and opportunity at the same time.

    Politics hums beneath ordinary speech, turning casual conversations into coded rehearsals. Every movement of Nigerians and the state seems angled toward a reckoning that lies a year ahead.

    The 2027 elections have leaked into the present, colouring legislation and inspiring alliances. Some of these have been accentuated as “betrayal” by supporters of Rabiu Kwankwanso, who label his longtime ally and Kano Governor Abba Yusuf’s switch from the New Nigeria People’s Party (NNPP) to the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC). But Camp Yusuf claims political self-preservation.

    Lest we forget Rivers Governor Sim Fubara’s frantic lunge for survival by dumping the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) to hoist the APC flag in the State House. Fubara joined APC, not out of love or ideological sympathy, but with the hope of quashing threats from his estranged political godfather and FCT Minister Nyesom Wike and a State Assembly bent on impeaching him.

    Forget politicians seeking self-preservation; our survival as a nation is critically tied to this year, 2026. But do Nigerians sense this instinctively? A republic can feel when it is being tested, after all.

    This is the year when institutions reveal their efficiency depths, perhaps. Habits, hardened over decades, will surface under pressure. The reflex to litigate politics, manage dissent instead of listening to it, and celebrate reforms faster than outcomes can mature, will meet a citizenry whose patience has thinned into hostile scrutiny.

    On hostile scrutiny, the jury perpetually decides against the run of political and social realities. Thus, the inclination of large segments of the populace to imagine the worst about Nigeria despite undeniable flashes of progress across crucial sectors.

    Amid palpable tension, the ruling party, APC, enters the year psyched with ambition yet plagued by unease. Size, in Nigerian politics, has never guaranteed coherence. It breeds factions, competing centres of gravity, and rival interpretations of loyalty. Party congresses loom, and with them the familiar permutations: parallel meetings, disputed delegates, and consensus discovered after dissent has been buried. Courts, once again, will be invited to settle quarrels that party execs and ideology fail to resolve.

    Opposition politics moves differently, less encumbered by incumbency yet equally haunted by fragmentation. Economic pressure has given opposition language an edge it lacked in easier years. Inflation, transport costs, and food prices no longer sound like abstract failures. The impact is felt in kitchens and registers at bus stops and fuel stations.

    Whether opposition figures cohere into a credible alternative matters less, for now, than the fact that competition itself has grown volatile. The certainty of outcomes has thinned as opposition politics, once strategised and choreographed, now improvises with guerrilla tactics.

    Inside the National Assembly, re-election anxiety influences behaviour as legislators listen more closely to party structures than to public mood. Oversight softens, and controversial bills travel faster than persuasion ever could. The logic is simple: survival first, principle later.

    This atmosphere makes law itself feel provisional. Nowhere is this clearer than in the arguments surrounding taxation. The tax reform laws have exposed a deeper crisis than statutory interpretation. Civil society question process as lawmakers dispute texts. The Presidency distances itself even as the chair of the tax reform committee offers clarification. Each political actor attempts to project authority, yet the real issue lies elsewhere.

    Trust becomes scarce in the Nigerian clime, especially when citizens suspect that laws can shape-shift between passage and publication. Taxation ultimately thrives on belief; thus, compliance may congeal to resentment and even sabotage, if distrust persists. This is the terrain 2026 inherits.

    Through it all, the economy splays into the year bearing bruises. Subsidy removal, currency volatility, and inflation have morphed from economic shocks to social conditions. Small businesses have collapsed and those that haven’t remain locked in an intense struggle against doomsday contingence. As households learn resilience, the government’s mantra of hope remains disciplined and insistent. Nigerians would rather “hope” translates to relief.

    The proposed 2026 federal budget stands at roughly N58.18 trillion, ambitious in scale yet constricted by obligation. Debt servicing alone consumes N15.52 trillion, and the deficit is projected at about 4.28 per cent of GDP. Nigeria’s public debt, reported at N152.4 trillion by mid-2025, shadows every promise made at the podium.

    A vast federal budget, heavy debt service obligations, and a persistent deficit sketch a portrait of ambition under constraint. Public debt figures require governments at all levels to demonstrate that borrowing translates into tangible improvement. As the pressures of reform travel downward, impacting citizens already stretched thin, anger will not stem solely from hardship.

    Read Also: Mass poverty endangering survival of Nigeria’s Democracy — OAU Professor

    Nigerians have endured difficulty before; what stings is asymmetry. Sacrifice preached downward the economic totem pole, while insulation persists above. Calls for citizenry endurance must be matched by ruling class restraint. Evidence of transparent accounting and governance will matter more than rhetoric.

    Yet, cynicism persists through an unrelenting stream of discontent in the civic sphere. Social commentary is rife with the narratives of doomsayers: politicians, activists, and frustrated elites lustful for power or its fruits. These voices rage with venom, amid insecurity, spewing defeatism and prophesying Nigeria’s inevitable collapse. Behind their calls for change, subsists self-interest; the bitter taste of being left out of the corridors of influence. They are neither patriots nor prophets, but casualties of their unfulfilled desires. And the youth, in their vulnerability, have become their prey.

    Any youth that emulates them will simply burden himself with disillusionment and perpetual cynicism until he can ill afford the luxury of dreaming. It’s about time Nigerians dumped cynicism and embraced enduring optimism. The love of country, though seemingly inconsequential in the grand scheme of things, resonates louder than the critic’s flamethrower words.

    The Good Nigerian does not look for scapegoats. He does not sneer from the sidelines, unwilling to engage unless conditions are perfect. He understands that patriotism is not in the cynical condemnation of everything but in the conscious, deliberate acts of sacrifice that improve the polity one gesture at a time.

    Imagine the speed with which fuel stations increased the pump price of petrol from N735 – N750 per litre to N839 – N850 per litre; how nice it would be if they could rapidly effect price cuts when fuel price plummets.

    Nigeria’s problem is not entirely shortcoming in governance but the absence of goodwill among the citizenry. The political elite did not fall from outer space or descend from the heavens; they are products of Nigerian homes, schools, worship houses and neighbourhoods. If we demand better leadership, we must, first, become better citizens.

    More Nigerians could learn to emulate perhaps the Hausa tricycle driver who, in March 2025, scrawled on his tricycle: Ramadan Discount: From N200 to N100 per Drop. He did this while prices of fuel and food staples skyrocketed.

    This year, and onward, Nigeria needs more men and women who’d rather give than take; who would rather mend than tear apart; who would rather chart the path to a brighter tomorrow than wail in the darkness and curse the times from a soapbox.

  • Nigeria, Türkiye to fast-track trade, energy, defence ties — Tinubu

    Nigeria, Türkiye to fast-track trade, energy, defence ties — Tinubu

    President Bola Tinubu says Nigeria and Türkiye have agreed to fast-track cooperation in trade, energy and defence to boost jobs, investment and shared prosperity.

    The President disclosed this on Tuesday via his official X handle during his ongoing State Visit to Ankara, Türkiye.

    Tinubu said discussions with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan focused on deepening bilateral relations and delivering tangible economic benefits for citizens of both countries.

    “President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and I reaffirmed our shared ambition, which speaks directly to jobs, investment and opportunity for our people,” the President said.

    He said both leaders agreed on the need to expand trade volumes and remove structural barriers limiting business growth between Nigeria and Türkiye.

    “We are creating a clear pathway to a five-billion-dollar trade volume between Nigeria and Türkiye,” Tinubu stated.

    The President described the talks as practical and forward-looking, driven by mutual interests and shared regional and global responsibilities.

    “Our conversations were practical and forward-looking: trade and investment, energy, education, defence cooperation, peace and security,” he said.

    Tinubu announced the establishment of a Joint Economy and Trade Committee to drive implementation of agreements and attract fresh investments.

    “The creation of a Joint Economy and Trade Committee will unlock new flows of capital,” the President noted.

    He said the committee would also support industrial growth, technology transfer and stronger private sector participation.

    Tinubu welcomed President Erdoğan’s acknowledgement of Nigeria’s ongoing reforms, especially in the energy and investment sectors.

    “I welcome President Erdoğan’s recognition of Nigeria’s reform momentum, particularly in the energy sector,” he said.

    The President said the renewed confidence reflected Nigeria’s commitment to transparency, stability and sustainable economic growth.

    “We are determined to build an economy that works for everyone, including the most vulnerable,” Tinubu added.

    On regional security, Tinubu reaffirmed Nigeria’s responsibility to promote peace and stability across Africa.

    Read Also: Tinubu not first President to stumble – Onoh

    “Nigeria will continue to play its role in peace and stability in Africa,” the President said.

    He said Türkiye’s expertise in counter-terrorism and defence cooperation would strengthen collective responses to emerging security threats.

    “Türkiye’s experience and readiness to cooperate in training, intelligence sharing and counter-terrorism strengthen our resolve,” he stated.

    Tinubu said nine bilateral agreements were exchanged at the end of the meetings between both leaders.

    The agreements cover defence, education, media cooperation, diaspora policy, trade facilitation, social development and institutional collaboration.

    “Nigeria remains open for serious partnership. Open to trade without barriers, ideas, skills and investment that create value and shared prosperity,” he said.

    Tinubu reaffirmed Nigeria’s commitment to inclusive growth, peaceful coexistence and active global engagement.

    “We are building an inclusive economy. We are strengthening peace. Nigeria will continue to engage the world with confidence and clarity,” Tinubu said.

    (NAN)

  • Nigeria, Turkiye target $5b trade, pact against insurgency

    Nigeria, Turkiye target $5b trade, pact against insurgency

    • Nine bilateral agreements signed
    • Joint Economy and Trade Committee established

    In a renewed push to deepen economic and strategic ties, Türkiye and Nigeria have set their sights on a $5 billion bilateral trade volume.

    The two countries have also expressed commitment to a joint battle against insurgency in Nigeria and the Sahel region.

    Presidents Bola Ahmed Tinubu and Recep Tayyip Erdogan met in Ankara yesterday to recalibrate relations between the two influential emerging economies.

    President Erdogan reaffirmed Türkiye’s commitment to the ambitious trade target during a joint press briefing with President Tinubu, who is on a state visit.

    He said discussions toward achieving the goal had already begun and would be driven by new institutional frameworks agreed by both sides.

    The Turkish leader said the planned establishment of a Joint Economy and Trade Committee would unlock fresh opportunities to expand and support Turkish investments in Nigeria, describing the mechanism as critical to attaining the $5 billion benchmark.

    Erdogan also praised President Tinubu’s investment-friendly posture, noting that the presence of several Nigerian ministers and senior officials in Ankara underscored Nigeria’s seriousness about economic engagement.

    Last week, Shell Petroleum Development Company (SDPC) acknowledging the President’s reforms and investment-friendly Administration, pledged to invest $20billion.

    A statement by Presidential spokesman Bayo Onanuga on the joint news conference by both leaders quoted Erdogan as saying: “Today (yesterday), we conducted a comprehensive review of our relations with the esteemed president and his delegation in the fields of trade, investments, energy, education and defence industry.

    “Firstly, we see that we have significant potential in the fields of trade and investment. In today’s meetings, our commitment is to the target of a $5 billion trade volume, and we discussed the steps that need to be taken.

    “We also discussed opportunities to support our investments in Nigeria. We believe that the Joint Economy and Trade Committee, which we agreed to establish today, will be instrumental in this regard.”

    The Turkish President further commended President Tinubu’s ongoing reforms in Nigeria’s energy sector, which he said had contributed to economic restructuring.

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    He expressed optimism that cooperation between the Turkish Petroleum Corporation and Nigerian counterparts would deliver tangible results.

    On security, Erdogan pledged Türkiye’s support for Nigeria’s fight against terrorism, particularly in the Sahel region.

    “Terrorist organisations emerging, particularly in Africa’s Sahel region, unfortunately, pose a threat to the peace of the entire continent.

    “We stand by the friendly people of Nigeria in their fight against terrorism under the leadership of President Tinubu,” he said.

    He added that both leaders explored avenues for closer cooperation in military training and intelligence sharing, noting Türkiye’s readiness to share its experience in counter-terrorism.

    Turkey had been battling insurgency for more than four decades.

    The country fought against the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), which led to the death of over 40,000 people.

    The PKK eventually surrendered after intensified military pressure, drone strikes, and a call from its leader, Abdullah Öcalan, to end the 41-year conflict.

    “In fact, today, we addressed opportunities for closer cooperation in the fields of military training and intelligence.

    “We stated that we are ready to share our country’s significant experience in the fight against terrorism.

    “Also, I believe that we will soon see positive outcomes from the meetings that Nigerian officials will hold with our leading defence industry companies during this visit,” Erdogan said.

    President Tinubu expressed appreciation to Türkiye for its openness and willingness to collaborate in promoting global freedom, stability and prosperity.

    He stressed the importance of building an inclusive economy that caters for vulnerable groups.

    He praised President Erdogan for being “willing to collaborate, willing to help, willing to work together to promote freedom, stability and shared prosperity across the world.”

    “What is very important to the countries being discussed: trade, business, no restrictions, giving opportunity to those who are ready to learn, work and prosper.

    “How do we build an inclusive economy together? How do we reform and get vulnerable people involved in the economy? How do we ensure peace in the world?” President Tinubu asked.

    The President reaffirmed Nigeria’s commitment to peace and stability in Africa despite regional instability, noting that both leaders discussed joint efforts to counter terrorism.

    “We discussed efforts against terrorism. We discussed how to defeat agents of destabilisation,” he said.

    President Tinubu also commended Erdogan’s role in advancing global peace, particularly his interventions in Somalia.

    At the conclusion of the bilateral meeting, officials of both countries exchanged nine agreements.

    These included agreements on cooperation in diaspora policy and defence cooperation; a joint declaration establishing the economy and trade joint committee, and an agreement on halal quality infrastructure.

    Others were agreements on cooperation in higher education, media and communication, education, cooperation between the Republic of Türkiye’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, diplomacy academy, and Nigeria’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs and foreign service academy; and cooperation between Türkiye’s Ministry of Social Services and Nigeria’s Ministry of Women Affairs and Social Development.

    The trade volume between the two nations is about $2 billion.

    While Türkiye exports aircraft, machinery, iron and steel and chemical products, Nigeria exports crude oil and agricultural products to the country.

    ‘Tinubu’s Türkiye visit strategic, not routine’

    Special Adviser to the President on Policy Communication, Daniel Bwala, described President Tinubu’s state visit to Türkiye as strategic and highly consequential, dismissing claims that it is a routine foreign trip.

    Speaking with reporters on the sidelines of the visit, Bwala said the trip was undertaken at the invitation of the Turkish government, a gesture he said underscored Nigeria’s growing diplomatic influence under President Tinubu.

    He noted that President Tinubu’s stature as a former Chairman of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) Authority of Heads of State and Government, as well as Nigeria’s strategic importance on the continent, shaped the level of reception accorded him.

    “The President of Nigeria is a person of influence in Africa, and Nigeria itself plays a strong role on the continent.

    “With the breakthroughs we are recording in the economy, security and governance, this visit carries significant weight,” Bwala said.

    He explained that the state visit formally commenced on Tuesday with a series of engagements aimed at exploring areas of mutual interest, particularly defence, security and economic cooperation.

    Bwala explained that key ministers accompanying the President are scheduled to hold bilateral meetings with their Turkish counterparts to deepen collaboration across critical sectors.

    He also highlighted President Tinubu’s growing international standing, saying his leadership has helped to reinvigorate Nigeria’s diplomatic relations globally, including renewed engagement with major partners such as the United States.

    Citing recent diplomatic engagements with the United Arab Emirates, Bwala said the Türkiye visit builds on Nigeria’s renewed momentum on the global stage.

    He emphasised Türkiye’s strength in defence and security manufacturing, noting its relevance to Nigeria’s security needs, while pointing out areas where Nigeria has also supported Türkiye over the years.

    Describing the engagement as “a meeting of shared interests,” Bwala said both countries stand to benefit from the visit, assuring that details of specific agreements and outcomes would be made public at its conclusion.

    Presidency dismisses stumble as minor incident

    The Presidency described President Tinubu’s stumble during a reception in Ankara as a minor and inconsequential incident.

    Onanuga said: “The President stepped on a metal on the floor, which made him lose his balance. This is not a big deal, except for those who want to make mischief out of the fleeting incident.”

    He stressed that the incident was neither serious nor disruptive, adding that the President remained unharmed and continued with his official schedule.

    “It was a mere stumble, thank God, not a fall,” he added.

  • Nigeria’s Back-to-Farm initiative

    Nigeria’s Back-to-Farm initiative

    • By Felix Oladeji

    Sir: Speaking at the 56th Annual Meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Vice President Kashim Shettima highlighted the federal government’s Back-to-Farm initiative as part of Nigeria’s strategy for restoring agricultural livelihoods and strengthening food security. The programme was framed as evidence of Nigeria’s commitment to rural recovery and sustainable development. Yet beyond the symbolism of international visibility lies a more urgent responsibility: translating policy promises into measurable improvements for displaced farmers at home.

    The Back-to-Farm initiative seeks to provide displaced farmers with agricultural inputs, access to capital, and institutional support to enable their return to productive farming. Coming amid rising food inflation, insecurity, and widespread displacement, the programme represents a necessary intervention in a long-running crisis that has weakened Nigeria’s food systems and deepened rural poverty. In many conflict-affected regions, abandoned farmlands, disrupted supply chains, and reduced yields have become defining features of everyday life.

    Under the initiative, beneficiaries are expected to receive seedlings, farm tools, mechanisation support, and access to credit facilities. On paper, this promises a pathway from dependency to self-reliance. However, Nigeria’s history of agricultural interventions urges caution. From the Green Revolution of the 1970s to more recent schemes, many well-intentioned programmes have faltered due to weak implementation, corruption, and poor monitoring. If Back-to-Farm is to succeed, it must break decisively from this legacy.

    Accountability must therefore be central to the programme’s design. Transparent beneficiary selection, community-based oversight, and independent evaluation mechanisms are essential. Without these safeguards, the initiative risks becoming another politically convenient announcement that delivers limited tangible impact.

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    Equally important is market integration. Increased production alone does not guarantee improved livelihoods. Farmers must be connected to reliable markets, storage facilities, transport networks, and agro-processing hubs. Without such linkages, surplus produce may rot while rural incomes stagnate. The initiative must therefore be embedded within broader value-chain development strategies that ensure farmers can secure fair and stable returns on their labour.

    Technology and extension services also have a critical role to play. Digital platforms can provide real-time information on weather patterns, pricing trends, and best farming practices. Revitalising agricultural extension systems will help smallholders adapt to climate variability and improve productivity. These investments are not luxuries; they are prerequisites for sustainable rural transformation.

    Security remains a foundational condition. Farmers will not return to their lands if they remain exposed to violence and extortion. Thus, Back-to-Farm must be complemented by credible security reforms that prioritise rural protection, community policing, and justice delivery. Agricultural recovery cannot thrive in an atmosphere of fear and lawlessness.

    Financing will further determine the programme’s longevity. While government funding is essential, strategic partnerships with private investors, development agencies, and financial institutions can expand the initiative’s reach. Blended finance models, microcredit schemes, and results-based grants can help transform short-term assistance into long-term resilience.

    Beyond economics, the initiative represents an affirmation of dignity. Farming in Nigeria is not merely an occupation; it is a cultural inheritance and a social anchor. Restoring displaced farmers to productive land is an act of national reconstruction. It signals that rural citizens matter, that development is not confined to urban centres and that food producers are central to national prosperity.

    However, inclusion must be intentional. Women and youth, who form the backbone of agricultural labour, often face structural barriers in access to land and credit. If Back-to-Farm is to fulfil its promise, it must deliberately integrate these groups into decision-making and resource allocation processes.

    By presenting the initiative at Davos, the Nigerian government has elevated agricultural recovery to the level of global performance. This visibility brings opportunity for investment, partnerships, and technical support but it also brings obligation. International audiences will measure Nigeria not by speeches but by outcomes. Failure to deliver will erode credibility; success will enhance trust.

    Ultimately, the initiative can become a cornerstone of Nigeria’s food security strategy if it is anchored in accountability, institutional coherence, and local participation. Seed distribution and credit access must be matched by governance reforms, security improvements, and market development. Only through such an integrated approach can agriculture become both a means of survival and a driver of inclusive growth.

    •Felix Oladeji,

    Lagos.

  • Nigeria’s mines of blood

    Nigeria’s mines of blood

    Sir: It is a blood-curdling aberration that in Nigerian mines where minerals should be mined and minded, blood often flows. More damning is the reality that a country rich beyond measure in minerals is reluctant to clean up its often bloody mines.

    On January 22, gunmen attacked and killed about seven miners at a mining site in Kuru, Jos South Local Government Area of Plateau State. According to the reports, they arrived at the mine and started shooting indiscriminately, leading to the death of the miners. The youngest of the slain was just about 15 years old.

    With Nigeria’s vast landscape awash in mineral resources, the government has in recent times talked up mining and the resultant mineral resources as a way to diversify its economy and reduce the emphasis on oil. As a result, the government has recently started seemingly paying more attention to Nigeria’s minerals sector and what happens in the mines.

    For so long as Nigeria paid disproportionate and disastrous attention to oil as its chief source of revenue and major driver of its economy, other sectors of the Nigerian economy were largely neglected. These included the solid minerals sector, which has largely suffered neglect and exploitation.

    In most countries of the world awash with mineral resources, conflict is never far away, with the race to exploit the mineral resources often resulting in violent instability and insecurity for the immediate communities. Unfortunately, Africa has been a blood-soaked experiment in how mineral resources can spin countries into an unending and bloody cycle of bone-chilling violence.

    It Is no secret that the brutal civil wars fought in Liberia and neighbouring Sierra Leone were inextricably  linked to the mineral resources in those countries, specifically   the huge diamond reserves in those countries. The atrocities committed in the Democratic Republic of Congo remain well-documented, with the country remaining a heart-breaking example of what happens when the government fails to adequately regulate the mineral resources ecosystem within a country.

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    Similarly, the rush for Sudan’s gold has played a stirring role in the conflict that is reducing one of Africa’s most iconic countries to its knees, taking a particularly crushing toll on women and children.

    It is no coincidence that in Nigeria, the poorly regulated solid minerals sector has contributed to rising insecurity. Gold reserves in some states in the North have largely fuelled insecurity in those areas, with foreigners, bandits, locals, and government officials all locked in the race to make the most profits.

    For those who fuel Nigeria’s grave security crisis, it is no surprise that they find solid minerals an attractive proposition, as selling them on the black market would give them the financial resources they dearly need to keep their deadly activities going.

    Nigeria continues to lose humongous amounts of money in revenue because of the activities of illegal miners. Many of these illegal miners are just unemployed young people seeking to earn a living. But a good number of them include those fuelling insecurity in Nigeria. The toll their activities take on their immediate communities, the environment, and the country as a whole is huge.

    It is clear that Nigeria can by no means continue to tolerate their excesses. While it is crucial to protect Nigeria’s mineral resources to boost revenue, it is even more important that those who drench Nigeria’s mines in blood are made to face the full wrath of the law.

    • Ike Willie-Nwobu, Ikewilly9@gmail.com

  • Nigeria, Turkiye kick-start talks on security

    Nigeria, Turkiye kick-start talks on security

    • Tinubu arrives in Ankara

    Nigeria and Turkey yesterday began high-level talks on boosting their bilateral relations, especially in military affairs and the defence industry.

    Foreign Affairs Minister Yusuf Tuggar and his Turkish counterpart Hakan Fidan. represented both countries during the discussions that took place before President Bola Ahmed Tinubu arrived in Turkey on a state visit.    

    The talks, according to a statement by Tuggar’s media aide, Alkasim Abdulkadir, also focused on strengthening political, economic and multilateral relations between the two countries.

    Fidan, said Abdulkadir, commended Nigeria’s constructive role in promoting regional stability, peace, and prosperity in West Africa. He also noted  Nigeria’s leadership within regional and continental frameworks.

    Tuggar was said to have placed strong emphasis on expanding bilateral trade and increasing mutual investment, particularly in sectors of interest to Turkish companies. Such areas include construction, manufacturing, energy, and infrastructure.

     Both ministers acknowledged the steady growth in economic relations between the two countries and underlined the need for them to unlock further potential through structured public–private engagements.

    The statement  added that “the visit reflects the growing strategic character of Nigeria–Türkiye relations, anchored in shared positions on sovereignty, institutional cooperation, and pragmatic partnership, with both sides expressing confidence in the prospects for deeper engagement in the period ahead.”

    Special Adviser on Information and Strategy, Bayo Onanuga, said in a statement that the President arrived at the Ankara Esenboğa Airport at 9:03 p.m. local time yesterday.

    He was received by a Turkish government delegation led by the Minister of National Education, Yusuf Tekin.

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     Also present at the airport to welcome President Tinubu were the Chargé d’Affaires at the Nigerian Embassy in Türkiye, Ambassador Zayyad Abdulsalam, alongside other officials of the Nigerian mission.

    The President is scheduled to hold strategic political and diplomatic engagements with Turkish leaders, building on the long-standing relationship between the two countries. Turkish President Recep   Erdogan paid an official visit to Nigeria in October 2021.

    On the President ittinery are high-level meetings between officials of both nations, alongside the signing of memoranda of understanding in areas such as scientific research, energy, technical cooperation, media and communications, military collaboration, aviation and diplomatic protocol.

    A business forum will also be convened to bring together investors from Nigeria and Türkiye to explore mutual investment opportunities and deepen trade relations.

    Ministers on the presidential delegation are Lateef Fagbemi  (SAN), Christopher Musa(Defence), Imaan Suleiman-Ibrahim (Women Affairs and Social Development), Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo(Interior)  and  Hannatu Musawa (Culture and Creative Economy).   

    Also on the team are  National Security Adviser(NSA) Nuhu Ribadu; National Intelligence Agency(NIA) Director-General   Mohammed Mohammed,   Chairman, House Committee on Defence  Jimi Benson and Special Adviser to the President on Policy Communication, Daniel Bwala.

    ‘We’re facilitating access to Turkish defence firms’

    Chief Executive Officer, DICON-D7G  Osman Chennar said yesterday in Kaduna, that the firm has positioned itself as a strategic bridge between Nigeria and more than 10  leading Turkish defence firms.

    DICON-D7G is an indigenous defence manufacturing company operating within Nigeria’s expanding defence industrial ecosystem.

    Chennar said that  DICON-D7G is facilitating access to Turkish companies that meet strict international quality and compliance standards in the supply of defence and aerospace materials, components and spare parts.

    He listed the Turkish companies as  Aselsan, TAIS Shipyard, Turkish Aerospace, Kalandor Dış Ticaret ve Savunma Sanayi Limited, MKE, Roketsan, ZSR Patlayıcı Sanayi ve Anonim Şirketi, and Ateşçi Machinery.

    He added that the collaboration with the firms is expected to improve the operational readiness of Nigeria’s Armed Forces while boosting confidence in locally supported military systems.

  • ‘Nigeria has not recovered from military rule’

    ‘Nigeria has not recovered from military rule’

    By Ayo Opadokun

    Could there have been Nigeria without the discovery of the gun? Could there have been Military insurrections without the gun? Could there have been an imposition of Military dictatorship that arrested Nigerians’ manifest hopes and aspirations as well as stunted its growth and development without the gun?

    Was the “Nigerian Army” a creation of Nigeria or that of the Imperialist Great Britain to suppress, intimidate, hound, repress and humiliate Nigerian ethnic groups in order to force the over 350 different groups into co-habitation so as to achieve the so-called amalgamated Nigeria?

    Who were the Principal Promoters of the First and Revenge coups? Who were the Principal Advisers of Major General Aguiyi-Ironsi in 1966 after supplanting the democratically-elected government? Could there have been the Nigerian Civil War without the ego contest between Col. Ojukwu and Major General Gowon? What are the consequences of the Civil War on the Igbo ethnic group and Nigeria generally?

    Could there have been a reprisal Military insurrection on July 29,1966 without the gun Furthermore, When Major Kaduna Nzeogwu, bluntly declared publicly that the execution of the coup in the South was tribalistic and his view was corroborated by Captain Emmanuel Nwobosi,Leader of operations in the Western Region that the operation in Lagos were compromised by nepotism,why did Major General Johnson Aguiyi-Ironsi dither for about six months without convening the appropriate Military bodies to decide the fates of the coup plotters?

    Why did General Aguiyi-Ironsi insist on the promulgation of  Decree 34 of 24th May 1966 despite the critical advice and suggestions to him by Lt.Col.Usman Katsina and others ?

    The above posers have not been adequately responded to by various writers even though the general public is repeatedly asking questions as to:

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    When and how did Nigeria start getting it wrong?

    What are the impacts of the Military’s dictatorship on the country’s socio-economic, political, social services, infrastructure and public institutions, like the police and the Nigerian Army itself?

    Why has Nigeria lost her cherished national ethos, values, standards, rules of engagement? And  Why has Nigeria become a country of opposites whereby while a number of those countries with which we were relatively at par at our political Independence in 1960 have become “developed” countries and  we remain an “under-developing” country in spite of our quantitative and qualitative natural and human resources advantages?

    What are the levers of alternative powers who collaborated or acquiesced to sustain Military dictatorship in Nigeria for so long and the consequences of their actions?

    The Gun Hegemony tackles all these posers. As a historical, educative and informative book, it attempts to provide answers and responses to the above posers. The book also challenges other interested observers to write on the consequences of Military dictatorship on our body politics and its enduring negative legacies. Nigerians should be able to appreciate why Nigeria remains a country rather than developing into a nation after 65 post-independence years.

    Where would Nigeria be today if the military did not stage the insurrection of January 15,1966?

    •Opadokun is the Secretary of the National Democratic Coalition (NADECO)

  • Nigeria, Turkey deepen defence ties as DICON-D7G unlocks advanced Military manufacturing

    Nigeria, Turkey deepen defence ties as DICON-D7G unlocks advanced Military manufacturing

    Nigeria’s drive toward defence self-reliance has received a significant boost as DICON-D7G, an indigenous defence manufacturing company, positions itself as a strategic bridge between Nigeria and more than ten leading Turkish defence firms.

    Operating within Nigeria’s expanding defence industrial ecosystem, DICON-D7G facilitates access to Turkish companies that meet strict international quality and compliance standards for the supply of defence and aerospace materials, components, and spare parts.

    The Chief Executive Officer, DICON-D7G, Mr. Osman Chennar, said in a statement on Monday that the firms were globally recognised for their expertise in military hardware production, precision engineering, and advanced defence technologies.

    According to him, DICON-D7G drew on industry experts, including retired military generals and professionals from other Nigerian security agencies.

    He noted that the collaboration with Nigeria’s state-owned defence industry represents a major step toward strengthening local military equipment production, maintenance, and supply chains.

    By leveraging Turkish defence manufacturing capabilities, he said, DICON-D7G aimed to reduce Nigeria’s dependence on imports, lower long-term procurement costs, and ensure faster turnaround times for the maintenance and repair of military assets.

    He explained that the partnership, which has spanned from 2018 to date, was beyond the supply of finished components, with strong emphasis on technology transfer, skills development, and local assembly.

    This approach, he said, aligned with Nigeria’s national security objectives of indigenous capacity building and sustainable defence manufacturing.

    “The role of DICON-D7G as a bridge between Nigeria and trusted Turkish defence companies is a game-changer.

    “It creates a structured pathway for quality-assured materials and components while laying the foundation for local production and long-term self-sufficiency,” he stated.

    Read Also: DICON-D7G pledges stronger defence collaboration in 2026

    The Turkish companies involved include Aselsan, TAIS Shipyard, Turkish Aerospace, Kalandor Dış Ticaret ve Savunma Sanayi Limited, MKE, Roketsan, ZSR Patlayıcı Sanayi ve Anonim Şirketi, and Ateşçi Machinery.

    Chennar stressed that these firms operate under rigorous international standards, ensuring that all supplied materials and components meet the requirements of modern defence and aerospace applications.

    This, he further noted, was expected to improve the operational readiness of Nigeria’s armed forces while boosting confidence in locally supported military systems.

    “As security challenges continue to evolve across the region, the DICON-D7G initiative is seen as a timely intervention capable of repositioning Nigeria as a regional hub for defence manufacturing and maintenance.

    “Beyond national security benefits, the partnership is expected to generate employment, stimulate industrial growth, and deepen Nigeria’s participation in the global defence value chain,” he said.

    Chennar further disclosed that all Turkish government defence procurement exports involving DICON-D7G to Nigeria are conducted through D7G Savunma Sanayi İthalat İhracat Limited Şirketi, a Turkish-registered company.

  • JUST IN: Sunday Igboho returns to Nigeria today as supporters storm Ibadan residence  

    JUST IN: Sunday Igboho returns to Nigeria today as supporters storm Ibadan residence  

    Barring last-minute change, Chief Sunday Adeyemo, popularly known as Sunday Igboho is set to return to Nigeria today, January 26th, 2026 The Nation has learnt. 

    Recall The Nation has reported that Olayomi Koiki, spokesman for Igboho, said all arrangements have been concluded for his principal’s return to Nigeria after prominent monarchs persuaded President Bola Tinubu to remove Igboho’s name from the list of wanted persons.

    According to Koiki, the traditional rulers who intervened include the Olubadan of Ibadanland, Oba Rashidi Ladoja; the Ooni of Ife, Oba Adeyeye Ogunwusi; and the Olugbon of Orile Igbon, Oba Francis Alao, among others.

    Upon his arrival today, Igboho is expected to visit the palace of the Olubadan of Ibadanland, Oba Rashidi Adewolu Ladoja. 

    The Nation also learnt that there is security beefed up at his residence as detachments of policemen and other security agencies were spotted at strategic locations. 

    Read Also: JUST IN: Sunday Igboho set to fully return to Nigeria from self-exile

    Koiki, said, “As I’m speaking to you, Chief Sunday Adeyemo is on his way to Nigeria. 

    “He should be there any moment from now. You know he resides in Benin Republic and he is on his way to Ibadan to meet Olubadan today by special grace of God.”

    Koiki further disclosed that Igboho was no longer being sought by Nigerian authorities, attributing the development to sustained royal interventions, political goodwill and persistent advocacy by Yoruba leaders within and outside the country.

    Meanwhile, supporters of Igboho have stormed his Soka, Ibadan residence to also receive him. 

    Various Yoruba socio-cultural organisations, including the Oodua Peoples’ Congress (OPC), Agbekoya Vigilante group and Ifelodun Security Network, are also at his residence. 

    His return could be termed as another homecoming. In 2024, Igboho was in the country for his late mother’s burial ceremony. 

    Details shortly…

  • Nigeria’s 88% AI adoption ahead of global average of 62 per cent

    Nigeria’s 88% AI adoption ahead of global average of 62 per cent

    Nigerians have emerged as global frontrunners in Artificial Intelligence (AI) adoption, significantly outperforming the rest of the world in digital engagement.

    According to a new report by Google and Ipsos entitled: “Our Life with AI: Helpfulness in the hands of more people,” Nigerian adults are leveraging AI tools at a staggering rate to fuel education, work, and entrepreneurship.

    The study reveals that 88per cent of Nigerian adults have used an AI chatbot—an 18-point increase from 2024. This adoption rate places Nigeria 26 percentage points ahead of the global average of 62per cent, signaling a nation that is aggressively integrating technology into its daily life.

    The report highlights that Nigerians view AI as a sidekick for personal and professional advancement rather than just a novelty. A total of 93per cent of Nigerians use AI to understand complex topics, which far exceeds the global average of 74 per cent.

    Additionally, 91per cent of respondents utilize AI tools to assist with their work-related tasks. In a standout finding, 80 per cent of Nigerians use AI to explore new business ventures or career changes, a figure that is nearly double the global average of 42per cent.

     “It’s inspiring to see how Nigerians are creatively and purposefully using AI to unlock new opportunities. This report tells the story of a nation that is actively shaping its future with technology,” Communications & Public Affairs Manager for Google West Africa, Taiwo Kola-Ogunlade, said.

    Read Also: PwC Nigeria, CEOs, others brainstorm on economic outlook

    The sentiment toward AI in Nigeria is overwhelmingly positive, particularly in the academic sector. Roughly 91per cent of Nigerians believe AI is positively impacting how information is accessed and learned, compared to about 65per cent globally. Furthermore, 95per cent of respondents believe that university students and educators are the primary beneficiaries of this technological shift.

    While global sentiment remains divided on the risks of AI, Nigeria shows a distinct level of confidence as 80per cent of Nigerians are excited about the possibilities of AI, while only 20per cent express concern.

    In contrast, the global average is much more polarized, with 53per cent excited and 46per cent concerned.

    Among frequent AI users in Nigeria, this “excitement rating” climbs to 90 per cent.

    Through this rapid adoption and high optimism, Nigeria is positioning itself as a leader in the global digital economy, using AI as a catalyst to achieve national and personal ambitions.