Tag: tinubu

  • Enugu APC leaders endorse Tinubu, Mbah for re-election ahead of 2027

    Enugu APC leaders endorse Tinubu, Mbah for re-election ahead of 2027

    Prominent leaders of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Enugu State, including the party’s State Caretaker Committee Chairman, Dr Ben Nwoye; Senator Kelvin Chukwu of Enugu East Senatorial District; and the Deputy National Chairman (South), Chief Emma Enukwu, have declared support for the re-election of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu and Governor Peter Mbah ahead of the 2027 general elections.

    The APC stalwarts said President Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda, aimed at economic revitalisation, improved governance, and national stability, has begun to yield measurable and positive outcomes for Nigerians.

    Speaking with journalists at his Amurri political ward in Nkanu West Local Government Area after revalidating his APC membership electronically, Senator Chukwu, who recently defected from the Labour Party, said he had no regrets joining the ruling party.

    The lawmaker explained that his decision to align with the APC was influenced by President Tinubu’s people-oriented policies and programmes, as well as the performance of Governor Mbah, whom he described as one of the best-performing governors in Nigeria.

    He added that the most meaningful way for the people of Enugu State and Nigerians at large to acknowledge the achievements of both leaders is by supporting their re-election in 2027.

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    “For this to happen, our people must fully embrace the ongoing APC e-registration exercise. They must obtain their party membership cards and also ensure they have their Permanent Voter Cards ahead of the general elections,” Chukwu said.

    In his remarks, Dr. Nwoye, who also hails from the Amurri community, noted that the convergence of political heavyweights in the area under the APC umbrella had fundamentally altered the political landscape.

    “With all the leading political figures in this community now in APC, it will be extremely difficult for anybody outside the party to contest and win any election here in 2027. It will be an uphill task,” he stated.

    Nwoye added that Senator Chukwu’s revalidation had laid to rest lingering speculations about his defection from the Labour Party to the APC.

    He urged existing party members to revalidate their membership, while calling on new entrants to seize the opportunity of the ongoing exercise to become bona fide members of the APC.

    The APC chairman insisted that both President Tinubu and Governor Mbah deserve a second term to enable them consolidate on the achievements recorded during their first tenure in office.

    Meanwhile, Chief Enukwu, during his membership revalidation at Obinagu Ward in Udi Local Government Area of the state, emphasised the need for the electorate to equip themselves with valid APC membership cards and Permanent Voter Cards.

    He explained that the newly introduced electronic registration and revalidation process was designed to modernise the party and align it with global best practices.

    “Obinagu, this is the time for our people to register and obtain their membership cards so we can vote for President Bola Tinubu and Governor Peter Mbah in 2027,” Enukwu said.

    The Deputy National Chairman assured President Tinubu that Enugu State would deliver no fewer than two million votes for the APC in the 2027 elections, a sharp contrast to the about 4,000 votes recorded in the state during the 2023 presidential poll.

    Our correspondent reports that the Chief of Staff to Governor Peter Mbah, Barrister Victor Udeh, was also formally admitted into the APC on Saturday at his Umuabi community in Udi Local Government Area amid fanfare.

    President Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda focuses on critical sectors including economic reforms, security, infrastructure development, agriculture, and healthcare and youth empowerment.

    The programme, according to party leaders, has begun yielding promising results, with inflation reportedly dropping to 14.45 per cent in November from 24.23 per cent recorded in March, among other key economic indicators.

  • Akwa Ibom traditional rulers endorse Tinubu, Akpabio, Eno for 2027

    Akwa Ibom traditional rulers endorse Tinubu, Akpabio, Eno for 2027

    Traditional rulers in Akwa Ibom State have pledged their support for the re-election of President Bola Tinubu, the president of the Senate, Godswill Akpabio, and Governor Umo Eno in 2027.

    The traditional rulers comprising paramount rulers, clan, village, and family heads and their spouses drawn from Ikot Ekpene Senatorial District made the declaration at a special rally at Ikot Ekpene Township Stadium, Akwa Ibom State, on Saturday, citing the developmental strides of the trio as reasons for their collective endorsement.

    Setting the tone at the ceremony, Itai Afe Annang, the paramount traditional ruler and leader of Afe Annang, and Obong Blaise Awakama, who chaired the event, said for the first time in the history of Akwa Ibom State, traditional rulers gathered together to recognise the good deeds of their distinguished sons.

    A statement by the Special Assistant on Media/Communication to the President of the Senate, Anietie Ekong, quoted Obong Awakama to have said: “The traditional rulers are saying they have seen the good deeds of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, who, before he became the President, turned around Lagos State.

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    “They have seen the economic reforms of the President, which have made more money available to the states and local government areas to carry out developmental projects.

    “They have gathered together to say they have seen the uncommon deeds of our distinguished son, Senator Godswill Akpabio, right from the time he was Governor of Akwa Ibom State, he turned the State into the heaven that we see today.

    “They have recognised what he had done as a Senate Minority Leader and as the Minister of Niger Delta Affairs when he completed the present headquarters complex of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) and several other developmental projects across the region.

    “We also note what he has achieved as an uncommon Senate President through enactment of people-oriented legislation like the creation of the development commissions, students loan Act, and others too numerous to mention.

    “The traditional rulers are saying they have seen the God-sent Golden Boy of Akwa Ibom State, Pastor Umo Eno, who has brought peace to the State and has not concentrated development in the urban centres alone but has taken development to the nooks and crannies of Akwa Ibom State, and they say they cannot see all these things and keep quiet.”

    He said the traditional rulers, having seen acts of good governance of the trio, wanted to publicly register their support and endorse them to return in 2027 to continue with their good works.

    Speaking in the same vein, the Chairman of Akwa Ibom State Traditional Rulers Council and the Paramount Ruler of Abak, His Royal Majesty, Akuku Saviour Sylvester Udofia, said their endorsement of Tinubu, Akpabio, and Eno was in recognition of their proven leadership capacity, good governance, and sustained public service at both the Federal and State levels.

    After a unanimous voice vote to adopt the trio, Akuku Udofia said, “This endorsement represents the collective decision of the Traditional Rulers Council in support of their leadership and to promote peace, unity, good governance, and constructive engagements with the traditional rulers.”

    Receiving the memorandum of endorsement, the Governor of Akwa Ibom State, Pastor Umo Eno, said the endorsement by the traditional rulers was unprecedented and thanked them for their continuous support.

    On his part, Senator Akpabio, who accepted the endorsement for himself and on behalf of President Tinubu, said the gesture was uncommon and thanked the traditional institution for the recognition and assured that President Tinubu was working very hard to make life more meaningful for all Nigerians.

    According to Akpabio, Akwa Ibom North West Senatorial District would double its votes for President Tinubu, Governor Eno, and himself, and urged the traditional rulers to take the message home and sensitise their subjects to register and get their permanent voters’ card in readiness for the 2027 general elections.

  • Ndume lauds Tinubu, Zulum for resettlement of victims of terrorists attacks

    Ndume lauds Tinubu, Zulum for resettlement of victims of terrorists attacks

    Former Senate Leader, Senator Mohammed Ali Ndume, on Sunday, lauded President Bola Tinubu and the  Governor of Borno State, Professor Babagana Zulum over recent relocation and resettlement of victims of Boko Haram and Islamic State West African Province, (ISWAP) terrorists’ attacks  who were hitherto displaced and living in Cameroon.

    Investigation revealed that there exists a tripartite agreement between the Borno state government, the Federal government and its Cameroonian counterpart in conjunction with the United Nations Humanitarian High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) to facilitate voluntary repatriation of Nigerian refugees living in Cameroon, many of whom are from Borno State dated back to 2017.

    It was signed in Yaounde, the capital of Cameroun with the then Minister of Interior, Lt. Gen. (Rtd) Abdulrahman Bello Dambazau leading a high-level Nigerian delegation which included then the Governor of Borno State  and now Vice President, Kashim Shettima.

    The agreement ensured the safe, dignified, and voluntary return of Nigerian refugees who fled from terror attacks to Cameroon’s Minawao camp and other areas back to Nigeria.

    It was further learnt that Governor Zulum, had actively partnered with the Federal Government and the UNHCR to speed up the repatriation process, especially for the thousands of Borno citizens in Cameroon.

    Ndume who represents Borno South in a statement in Abuja commended President Tinubu’s administration and the Borno State Government for keeping faith with the programme which has enabled many citizens of Borno State to be relocated back to the Northeast state.

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    He said, “I want to commend the Federal Government because the tripartite agreement between it, the Borno State Government, the Government of Cameroon and the UNHCR has ensured the repatriation, resettlement and relocation of Nigerian refugees in Minawao in Cameroon, back to Gwoza Local Government.

    “I commend the FG for the initiative of resettling the people and the active participation of the Borno State Government for the resettlement after over 10 years in Cameroon.

    “I also want to commend the resettling of the people of Wala village in Gwoza Local Government.”

    The former Senate Chief Whip also thanked Governor Zulum for redeeming his promise to restore electricity to Gwoza local government which he noted had been in total blackout for over 10 years as a result of destruction of power facilities by the Boko Haram terror group.

    “The efforts of Governor Zulum in restoring electricity in Gwoza is commendable. We have been without light for over 10 years.

    “The Borno State Governor made a promise last year during the installation of the Emir of Bama and he has kept the promise.”

  • 2027: Forum of former lawmakers back Tinubu for second term

    2027: Forum of former lawmakers back Tinubu for second term

    • Tunji-Ojo, Barau, make case for president’s reelection

    The Forum of former lawmakers, and the Deputy President of the Senate, Senator Barau Jibrin, among other eminent Nigerians have backed President Bola Ahmed Tinubu for second term.

    They made the call yesterday at the 2026 National Summit of former legislators, themed, ‘National Unity and Nation Building: Beyond 2031,’ held in Abuja.

    The Minister of Interior, Dr Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo who graced the event, described President Tinubu as a statesman who took bold and difficult decisions to rescue Nigeria from economic collapse, urging Nigerians to protect the future of the country by ensuring continuity of the current administration beyond 2027.

    According to the minister, Nigeria’s economic realities before the inauguration of the Tinubu administration in 2023 demanded courageous leadership. He noted that the country spent an estimated $30 billion on fuel and foreign exchange subsidies in 2022 alone, while over 92 per cent of national revenue went into debt servicing.

    “What lies ahead of us in 2027 is the future of Nigeria, and it is important that we get that point right,” Tunji-Ojo said.

    He explained that Nigeria spent about $20 billion on fuel subsidy and over $10 billion on forex subsidy in 2022, describing the situation as unsustainable and dangerous for the nation’s long-term survival.

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    The minister noted that President Tinubu, upon assuming office, took the politically risky decision to remove the subsidies—an action previous administrations avoided even in their second terms.

    “This President came on board and took very difficult decisions—decisions that other presidents could not take even in their second term. He took them in his first term, without considering the fact that an election was ahead,” Tunji-Ojo stated.

    The defining moment for leaders is when they choose between short-term political gains and long-term national legacy.

    “The turning point of every nation is when leaders decide whether they will live for politics or live for posterity. He understood that leadership is not just about being president, but about being a statesman,” the minister said.

    Tunji-Ojo stressed that the reforms were taken not only for the present generation but for Nigerians yet unborn, urging citizens across the 36 states of the federation to appreciate the sacrifices and support the administration’s continuity.

    “That is the risk he has taken, and Nigerians must understand this as we look ahead to 2027 and repay that courage by ensuring continuity of the Bola Ahmed Tinubu-led administration,” he added.

    The summit was organised by the National Forum of Former Legislators, with the Chief of Staff to the President, Femi Gbajabiamila, serving as convener.

    Also speaking at the event, the Deputy President of the Senate, Senator Jibrin Barau, called on former lawmakers to support President Tinubu’s re-election in 2027 to allow him fully implement his reform agenda.

    Barau argued that the rotational principle adopted since the return to democracy in 1999 should be respected, noting that it has promoted fairness and political stability.

    “President Bola Ahmed Tinubu is in his first term. We should not reinvent the wheel. The rotational system is working, and he should be allowed to complete two full terms,” Barau said.

    His call amplified similar calls from the NFFL National Coordinator, Hon. Raphael Nnanna Igbokwe, former Senate Presidents, Speakers, and others, urging support for President Tinubu to complete two full terms in line with the rotation principle that has ensured sanity and equality since the commencement of the Fourth Republic.

    “I appeal that we should abide by the principle of rotation, which has brought sanity and equality since the beginning of the Fourth Republic.

    “Of course, now the president, His Excellency Bola Ahmed Tinubu, is in his first  term, and, as noted by other speakers, let’s not reinvent the wheel.

    “We’ve seen that the rotational system is working. We shall allow it to work. And so, as said by the Honourable Tunji Ojo, the president is doing well. He has said a few of the things the President is doing to bring prosperity to our nation. So, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu should be allowed to do two full terms,” Barau was quoted in a statement by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Ismail Mudashir.

    Responding to requests from the National Coordinator and a former Senate President, Barau pledged to forward the proposal for embedding the rotational system in the Constitution to the National Assembly. “I will certainly do that,” he affirmed.

    Highlighting the summit’s theme, the Deputy President of the Senate stressed the need for national unity, mentorship, and continuity in governance.

    He assured of the collaboration between the National Assembly and NFFL, noting that “The leadership of the National Assembly remains open to collaboration with NFFL and similar bodies. We recognise that governance does not end with tenure, and that patriotism is a lifelong duty.”

    He further commended the NFFL for the timely initiative, emphasising the enduring role of former legislators in Nigeria’s democracy.

     “Former legislators occupy a unique and respected place in our national life. You are men and women who have had the privilege and the burden of lawmaking. Your experience, institutional memory, and statesmanship remain invaluable national assets,” he stated.

    Senator Barau, who is also the First Deputy Speaker of the ECOWAS Parliament, urged the former members of parliament to generate ideas for a stronger Nigeria.

     “I congratulate NFFL for successfully convening this National Summit. I urge you to use this platform to generate ideas, forge partnerships, and reaffirm your commitment to a stronger, more united, and more prosperous Nigeria,” he said, adding that the summit underscores the vital contributions of former legislators to democratic consolidation and nation-building.

    In the communique read at the end of the summit, a vote of confidence was passed on President Tinubu. He was endorsed as the forum’s sole candidate for the 2027 presidential election.

    A former Senator, Yakubu Oseni (Kogi Central), moved the motion for the adoption of the communique, while  Senator Florence Ita Giwa (Cross River) seconded it.

  • How power, politics policy flow in Tinubu’s carefully sequenced presidency

    How power, politics policy flow in Tinubu’s carefully sequenced presidency

    Having returned to Abuja from Abu Dhabi late on the previous Saturday, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu wasted no time returning to his desk at the State House. There was no ceremonial pause, no indulgence in the fatigue that naturally follows a demanding international outing. Instead, the President slipped seamlessly back into the rhythms of governance, setting things straight and pressing ahead with what has increasingly become his defining pursuit: the steady, deliberate construction of a functional Nigerian state.

    From Sunday onward, the week unfolded as a study in motion and method. Day after day, sometimes stretching late into the night, the President worked through meetings, briefs, and decisions with a tempo that suggested not urgency, but clarity. What stood out was not merely the volume of activity, but the way events appeared to align; each one flowing naturally into another, connected by an internal logic that made the entire sequence feel intentional rather than accidental.

    To the casual observer, this symmetry might have seemed coincidental. To the more attentive watcher of power, it revealed something else entirely: a presidency running on planning, timing, and an instinctive understanding of political sequence. In a system often criticised for improvisation and reactive governance, the Tinubu Presidency appears increasingly choreographed, not in the theatrical sense, but in the disciplined manner of a long-distance runner who knows exactly when to conserve energy and when to surge.

    Two meetings during the week captured this rhythm perfectly.

    On Monday, the President received the Governor of Kano State, Abba Kabir Yusuf, in a closed-door session at the State House. By Thursday, a similar audience was granted to the Governor of Oyo State, Seyi Makinde. On the surface, these were routine engagements between the President and subnational leaders. In context, however, they carried layered political meaning.

    Both visitors are governors from opposition parties. Both arrived in Abuja amid intense political noise. In Yusuf’s case, weeks of speculation had trailed him; whispers of a possible defection from the New Nigeria People’s Party (NNPP) to the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), countered by denials from his political mentor and rival narratives from party loyalists. In Makinde’s case, the controversy was more direct: public remarks distancing himself from the President’s 2027 re-election ambition, rooted in his fallout with former ally and current FCT Minister, Nyesom Wike. Yet, when the President received them, none of that noise appeared to matter.

    READ ALSO: Gov Abba Yusuf’s convoluted defection

    What mattered was that Kano had security and infrastructure concerns to raise. What mattered was that Oyo’s governor wanted to discuss national and subnational governance. In both instances, Tinubu listened. No grandstanding. No visible irritation. No partisan gatekeeping. The optics that emerged; smiles, cordial exchanges, relaxed body language, told their own story.

    It was a subtle but powerful message: this President does not confuse politics with governance.

    Makinde would later articulate it plainly. “The President is the President of Nigeria, not the President of APC,” he said, stressing that issues such as insecurity, poverty alleviation and citizens’ welfare had no party colouration. Tinubu did not need to rebut or amplify that statement. His actions already had. By opening his doors to opposition governors, one flirting with defection, the other publicly ruling it out, he projected a leadership style anchored in confidence rather than insecurity.

    In a political environment often defined by grudges and zero-sum calculations, this posture matters. It portrays Tinubu as a leader comfortable in his mandate, secure enough to engage critics and rivals alike, and mature enough to understand that national cohesion is built not by exclusion, but by conversation.

    This magnanimity, however, does not dilute his focus. If anything, it sharpens it.

    While the political class dissected the symbolism of those meetings, the President was already moving on another front, one that cuts to the heart of Nigeria’s economic recovery. On Thursday, Tinubu received the global leadership of Shell Plc at the State House. The outcome was not symbolism, but substance.

    What emerged from that meeting was a clear signal to global capital: Nigeria is back in the race.

    By approving the gazetting of targeted, investment-linked incentives for Shell’s Bonga South West deep-offshore project, the President demonstrated the same strategic thinking that defined his engagements in Abu Dhabi. These were not blanket concessions or fiscal giveaways. As Tinubu himself stressed, they were “ring-fenced and investment-linked,” designed to unlock new capital, drive incremental production, deepen local content, and generate jobs, without eroding government revenues.

    The numbers tell their own story. Since the issuance of executive orders to liberalise the oil and gas sector, Shell alone has invested over $7 billion in Nigeria in just over a year. Now, buoyed by renewed policy clarity and regulatory certainty, the company is signalling fresh investments of up to $20 billion in the coming years. Projects like Bonga North, shallow-water gas developments, and the proposed Bonga South West field are not abstract concepts; they translate into fabrication yards coming back to life, thousands of direct and indirect jobs, long-term foreign exchange inflows, and decades of sustained government revenue.

    What makes this sequence remarkable is not just the scale of the investment, but the timing.

    Only days earlier, Tinubu had been in Abu Dhabi, advancing Nigeria’s economic and diplomatic interests through high-level engagements and agreements. Barely had the jet touched down in Abuja than another economic gain was being engineered at home. Different venues, same objective. Different partners, same philosophy. Whether in foreign capitals or the Presidential Villa, Abuja, the President’s focus remains constant: pushing Nigeria forward.

    This is where the threads of the week converge.

    The meetings with Yusuf and Makinde underscored a leadership open to dialogue, unthreatened by dissent, and attentive to the complexities of Nigeria’s plural politics. The engagement with Shell revealed a President equally relentless in economic statecraft, translating reforms into real investment flows. Together, they painted a picture of a presidency operating on multiple planes at once; political stability on one hand, economic expansion on the other, each reinforcing the other.

    It is easy to underestimate the discipline required to sustain this balance. Easier still to miss the planning beneath the surface. But when events line up with such regularity; opposition governors welcomed with goodwill, investors reassured with policy certainty, reforms yielding tangible dividends, it becomes harder to dismiss the pattern as coincidence.

    Tinubu’s Presidency, now firmly into its stride, is beginning to resemble a long-form strategy rather than a collection of episodic reactions. The reforms initiated early in his tenure are no longer abstract policy statements; they are bearing fruit, attracting capital, and reshaping perceptions. The political engagements are no longer defensive maneuvers; they are expressions of confidence.

    Beyond the headline-grabbing optics of bipartisan politics and boardroom economics, the President’s week was also stitched together by quieter, steadier acts that revealed the full texture of governance; ritual, empathy, symbolism, and institutional housekeeping.

    It began on Sunday with a pause for recognition. President Tinubu marked the 60th birthday of the Comptroller-General of Customs, Adewale Adeniyi, not as a ceremonial courtesy but as an affirmation of reform. In praising Adeniyi’s professionalism and the recalibration of the Customs Service under his watch, the President signalled once again his preference for results over rhetoric and institutions that work over institutions that merely exist.

    Monday bore a heavier emotional weight. Tinubu mourned the passing of Kano business patriarch, Alhaji Bature Abdulaziz, acknowledging the loss of a stabilising voice in Nigeria’s trading ecosystem. In the same breath, he condemned the chilling murder of a woman and her six children in Kano, directing swift investigation and prosecution, drawing a firm moral line between the sanctity of life and the brutality that threatens it. The day also carried a continental note, as he congratulated Solid Minerals Minister, Dele Alake, on his re-election as chairman of the Africa Minerals Strategic Group, reinforcing Nigeria’s renewed assertiveness in shaping Africa’s resource future. Condolences followed for the late Chief Imam of Ilorin, Sheikh Muhammad Bashir Saliu, a bridge-builder in faith and community.

    Tuesday sustained the rhythm of empathy and affirmation: mourning Christian patriarch Moses Adegbite, while celebrating Jumoke Okoya-Thomas, both for her birthday and her elevation within Lagos’ traditional hierarchy.

    By Thursday, the President returned to institutional focus, charging the new leadership of the Federal Character Commission to act as the nation’s conscience, even as he approved key ambassadorial postings to France, the United States, and the United Kingdom, quiet but consequential moves in diplomacy.

    Friday crowned the week with symbolism and validation: a chieftaincy honour for Rep. Kafilat Ogbara, and the Olubadan’s succinct verdict, if you know where Tinubu is coming from, you will understand where he is taking Nigeria.

    In the end, the week told a simple but powerful story. Nigeria’s President is not merely reacting to events; he is sequencing them. He is not choosing between politics and economics; he is managing both with a single-minded commitment to restoration. And perhaps most tellingly, he is doing so with a calm assurance that suggests he knows exactly where the country is headed, and how each step, however different it may appear, fits into the larger design.

    That sense of order, in a system long accustomed to drift, may yet prove to be one of the most consequential reforms of all.

  • From gun-blazing to partners: Appraising Tinubu’s diplomatic masterclass

    From gun-blazing to partners: Appraising Tinubu’s diplomatic masterclass

    By Dada Olusegun

    In the volatile theatre of international relations, where a single tweet or a misplaced word can trigger a diplomatic meltdown, the hallmark of authentic leadership is the ability to maintain composure under fire. Recently, Nigeria found itself at the centre of such a storm.

    Following intense pressure, United States President Donald Trump designated Nigeria as a Country of Particular Concern (CPC) in November 2025. This designation, rooted in allegations of “Christian persecution,” was accompanied by a characteristically blunt threat: to enter Nigeria “guns-a-blazing” to resolve the security crisis.

    For many, this was a moment for panic. And for President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, however, it was an opportunity for a diplomatic masterclass—a strategic pivot that transformed a threat of violation into a triumph of partnership.

    The Calm Amidst the Storm

    The timing of the US designation was particularly “bleep,” coming on the heels of the tragic Kwara church attack in mid-November 2025. During a live-streamed worship session at a Christ Apostolic Church branch in Eruku, terrorists abducted dozens of worshippers, providing fuel for a narrative that Nigeria was undergoing religious cleansing.

    While critics clamoured for a combative response to Washington’s accusations, President Tinubu chose the path of intellectual honesty and fact-based engagement. He recognised that while attacks in Christian-dominated areas like Yelwata and Jos are devastating, they are often the result of complex factors like resource competition, ethnic friction, and farmer-herder clashes rather than state-sanctioned religious cleansing. Crucially, the administration pointed to the equal, if not greater, suffering in Muslim-dominated enclaves in Zamfara, Borno, and Katsina, where terrorism knows no faith.

    The Ribadu Mission: Dismantling Misconceptions

    Instead of engaging in a public war of words, Tinubu deployed his National Security Adviser, Mallam Nuhu Ribadu, to Washington. This move was a calculated “chess move” in diplomacy.

    READ ALSO: Gov Abba Yusuf’s convoluted defection

    Ribadu’s mandate was clear: dismantle the misconceptions brick by brick. By meeting with the US Secretary of War and members of Congress, the Nigerian delegation presented the reality of the government’s efforts, including:

     * Record-Breaking Security Spending: N3.85 trillion in 2024 and an unprecedented N4.9 trillion in the 2025 budget.

     * Improved Coordination: The centralisation of intelligence under the Office of the National Security Adviser (ONSA).

     * Sovereign Transparency: Inviting US delegations for fact-finding missions to see the ground reality beyond the headlines.

    From Threats to Tactical Success

    The results of this “cool-headed” approach were swift and significant. The “guns-blazing” rhetoric was replaced by the first-ever joint intelligence-led operation between the US and Nigeria. In late December 2025, US-led intelligence and air support resulted in the successful bombing of terrorist enclaves in Sokoto state, neutralising hundreds of Lakurawa terrorists. This group had been terrorising the North West.

    This collaboration did not stop at kinetic operations. By Tuesday, January 13, 2026, the United States Africa Command (AFRICOM) confirmed the delivery of critical military supplies to Abuja.

    Furthermore, the US has moved to fast-track the sale of advanced military aircraft to Nigeria, a move that would have been unthinkable just months prior during the height of the CPC tensions.

    A Master Strategist at the Helm

    President Tinubu has demonstrated that he is a leader who knows when to be firm and when to be flexible. By refusing to be baited into a defensive crouch, he forced the “almighty” USA to move from a position of judgment to one of active participation.

    The transition from being a target of US threats to being a “critical security partner” is no accident;

    Dada is Special Assistant to President Tinubu on Digital Media

  • Karimi disburses N300m bursary to students in Kogi for Tinubu Support Group

    Karimi disburses N300m bursary to students in Kogi for Tinubu Support Group

    Disbursement of a N300 million bursary to students across Kogi State has commenced under the Sunday Steve Karimi Education Foundation (SSKEF), working with the Tinubu Support Group (TSG), marking the expansion of the scheme beyond Kogi West to cover all three senatorial districts.

    The programme, funded by Senator Sunday Karimi, who represents Kogi West, is the second edition of the bursary initiative.

    The maiden edition in 2024 covered students largely from Kogi West Senatorial District, with N100 million disbursed among 1,390 beneficiaries across the district’s seven local government areas.

    In June 2025, SSKEF announced that the bursary would be extended to Kogi Central and Kogi East. Applications were subsequently opened to students from the three senatorial districts, targeting 1,390 beneficiaries in Kogi West, 610 in Kogi Central and 1,000 in Kogi East, bringing the total number of beneficiaries statewide to 3,000.

    Karimi’s media team, in a statement, said the 2026 disbursement began on Tuesday, 20 January, with successful applicants receiving N100,000 each.

    “This year’s edition of the bursary awards is an improvement on the maiden edition in 2024 when 1,000 students benefitted, limited to students from Kogi West alone.

    Originally, the Kogi West yearly scheme was designed to last the four-year tenure of the lawmaker in the 10th Senate,” the statement said.

    According to the media team, the bursary application portal opened on 1 August 2025 and closed on 31 August 2025, with eligibility limited to undergraduates in public tertiary institutions, including universities, polytechnics, monotechnics and colleges of education.

    It said beneficiaries of the 2024 bursary were excluded, along with students of private institutions and final-year students.

    “Any student who failed to upload or complete all required information in the application forms was not considered. Any student who applied before 1st August was automatically disqualified. Only those who applied online through the link provided were considered,” the statement added.

    The foundation said all applicants were subjected to the same screening process.

     “However, those recommended by the local government subcommittee will all receive their payment. We have beneficiaries from the College of Education Technical, Mopa, who do not have JAMB numbers or registration,” it said.

    The statement also quoted Senator Karimi as saying the scheme reflects his commitment to education and transparency.

    “Senator Sunday Steve Karimi remains committed to empowering students through financial assistance, promoting academic excellence, and contributing to the overall development of Kogi State. The seamless disbursement of this year’s bursary fulfils Senator Karimi’s earlier promise of a transparent, fair, efficient, and equitable process for all applicants,” it said.

    During a parley with the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ) in Lokoja in June 2025, Karimi had disclosed plans to disburse N300 million as bursary across the state.

    “Last year (2024), I gave a bursary of N100m to Kogi West students, but today, with the 96 wards in Kogi East, I have concluded arrangements to give out N100m as bursary to them. In Kogi Central, where we have 57 wards, I will give N61m as bursary, while I will also give N139m to Kogi West students in the names of the Tinubu Support Group and Senator Sunday Steve Karimi Education Foundation. This amounts to a total of N300m. That is what we are going to do, and it has already started,” he said.

    Beneficiary students and parents poured out their appreciation to SSKEF and TSG for the gesture.

    Hassan Abdulbashir, from Ajaokuta LGA, Kogi Central Senatorial District, said the bursary support has made a significant impact on his life.

    Atakolo Onalo, a lecturer at the Nigerian Defence Academy, Kaduna, thanked the foundation for the bursary awarded to his daughter, a student of Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria.

    “This is the first major support from a political cycle in Kogi State, and my family and I do not take this for granted. Thank you, Distinguished Senator Sunday Karimi. We are grateful,” he said.

    Muhammad Munir, a student of Kogi State Polytechnic, Kotonkarfe, said the support eased immediate financial pressure.

    “To be honest, my landlord has been on my neck over rent, and I was already losing sleep, not knowing where the next solution would come from.

    This bursary lifted a heavy burden off my shoulders and gave me hope when things were overwhelming,” he said.

    Another beneficiary, James Jibrin Nelson, a student of Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, from Olamaboro Local Government Area, said the bursary would support his academic work.

    “My heart is full of gratitude to SSKEF for the generous financial support of N100,000 awarded to me. Thank you for having students at heart,” he said, adding that the funds would help him acquire a laptop for his research.

  • Badaru denies meeting Kwankwaso, reaffirms loyalty to APC, Tinubu

    Badaru denies meeting Kwankwaso, reaffirms loyalty to APC, Tinubu

    Former Minister of Defence, Mohammed Badaru Abubakar, has dismissed reports linking him to a purported recent meeting with New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP) chieftain, Senator Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso, describing the claims as false and misleading.

    In a statement by his Personal Assistant on Media and Publicity, Comrade Mati Ali, Badaru explained that the photograph circulating on social media, which allegedly suggested a recent meeting between him and the NNPP leader was an old image taken on February 18, 2023.

    Read Also: Badaru dismisses defection rumour, reaffirms loyalty to APC

    He said the photograph was when both leaders coincidentally met at the VIP Wing of an airport and not as a result of any arranged or political engagement.

    The statement explained the former Minister has been outside the country for over a month, making the alleged recent meeting impossible.

  • Senator Arise lauds Tinubu’s reforms, says tough policies laying strong economic foundation 

    Senator Arise lauds Tinubu’s reforms, says tough policies laying strong economic foundation 

    A chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Senator Ayodele Arise, has lauded President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s economic reforms saying he has surpassed those of previous administrations and are already laying a solid foundation for sustainable national growth.

    Arise, who represented Ekiti North Senatorial District in the Senate between 2007 and 2011, spoke with journalists in Abuja, insisted that the President’s bold initiatives have begun to yield measurable results despite criticism from opposition figures.

    He said the removal of fuel subsidy, though initially unpopular, has freed public funds previously captured by a privileged few and redirected them to critical sectors of the economy for the benefit of the wider population.

    “From my own position as a businessman, I can say that the decisions of Mr President have benefitted a lot of Nigerians and have moved our economic growth in a positive direction,” Arise said.

    He recalled how the fuel subsidy regime was abused through fraudulent importation claims, adding that ending the practice required uncommon political courage.

    “Stopping that racket took a lot of courage, and the President stood firmly by his policy,” he noted.

    He cited official statistics showing a moderation in inflation and increased fiscal capacity, which, he noted, made the establishment of the Nigerian Education Loan Fund (NELFUND) possible.

    According to him, NELFUND has expanded access to tertiary education for indigent but promising youths who might otherwise have been denied the opportunity to further their studies.

    “The President does not want any Nigerian to say he or she could not go to school because of fees. NELFUND has come to the rescue of many students who would not have been able to start or complete tertiary education,” he said.

    Arise also attributed the improved stability in the university academic calendar to the Tinubu administration’s engagement with staff unions, noting that prolonged disruptions previously contributed to brain drain.

    “Before now, students spent six or seven years on four-year courses. Since President Tinubu came in, attention has been given to the grievances of ASUU, NASU and others.

    “Students are now graduating on time, and this has helped to significantly arrest brain drain,” he added.

    On grassroots development, the former senator commended the President’s insistence on full financial autonomy for local governments, describing it as a major step towards rural transformation.

    Read Also: Senator Arise urges Tinubu to consider military option for Nigerian soldiers in Burkina Faso

    He said ensuring that local government funds go directly to councils would enhance accountability, stimulate job creation and accelerate development in rural communities where the majority of Nigerians reside.

    “The President has been very clear: let local governments have their money. With increased resources from subsidy removal, the funds have now become meaningful and can be used for roads, primary schools, healthcare and other services at the grassroots,” Arise said.

    Arise further said the administration is positioning the solid minerals sector as a new revenue frontier, with plans to establish refineries to support miners and boost exports.

    “There are many things this administration has done to expand revenue and deepen economic impact. If we are beginning to see improvements, people should speak up and acknowledge that things are getting better,” he said.

  • 2027: If not Tinubu, who?

    2027: If not Tinubu, who?

    Periodic elections are essential components of any constitutional government. It gives room for change and multiplicity of choices. After all, it is trite that no one is good enough to perpetually rule others without their consent or renewed approval. That is why in about thirteen months’ time, Nigerians of voting age will troop out to vote in a new president or renew the tenure of the incumbent president.

    In view of this, a year’s interval is not too far a time for a columnist to hazard a guess on what the leadership circle of his country portends. By February 2027, it is either that the country has a reelected president in Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu or a mint president-elect would doubtfully emerge on the horizon.

    As of today, even though the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, has yet to lift the lid on electioneering campaigns, what is indisputable is that presidential aspirants, including the incumbent president are already plotting various schemes/strategies on how to ensure victory at the polls, come 2027.

    The question to ask: Why is the polity of familiar faces of opposition so agitated about dethroning the current president? We have the roll of opposition presidential contestants: Atiku Abubakar, Peter Obi, Rabiu Kwankwaso, Ahmed Datti, Rotimi Amaechi amongst others are those pushing forward to slug it out against the president. Two or three of them are veteran presidential candidates, very few are contenders while others are mere loudmouths, out only to add the prefix of ‘ex-presidential aspirant’ to their political profiles. As these aspirants have the constitutional right to aspire to be president, it shouldn’t equally be lost that the incumbent president also has the legal/legitimate right, under the nation’s grundnorm to seek for a reelection.

    Ours being a politically plural society, such multiplicity of aspirants gives the people the latitude to make preferential decisions amongst the political parties’ teeming aspirants. The main issue that yours sincerely has with these hoards of familiar presidential aspirants is whether they have something different or better to offer from what we currently have in the country; or are they just seeking an opportunity to replace the incumbent for the sake of doing it or they are just embarking on a mere pursuit of longstanding personal ambition at the detriment of the general wellbeing of the country?

    To nurse an ambition is legal but such becomes a national burden when it gives little or no hope of changing the vilified existing status quo ante. Is there anything new on the horizon for Nigerians from these hordes of opposition presidential aspirants plotting day and night on how to wrest power from the current president?

    Of course, it is an integral part of democratic licence for anyone to state that President Tinubu is not the best leader to have been produced by this country. It is equally fair and just to point out as well that the president is just in the midterm of his first tenure thereby making it safe to infer that he is not the worst to have emerged as the leader of this country.

    From a dispassionate point of view, it could, when pushed further without disputations, be stated that amongst those serious contenders that are currently parading themselves in all the eighteen currently registered political parties in the country, he remains arguably above all, if not fairly better-with empirical proofs.

    Read Also: Tinubu felicitates Rep Ogbara on Lagos chieftaincy honour

    Atiku Abubakar is one of the leading contenders from the north trudging forward for the nation’s number one slot come 2027. He’s a perennial contestant for the position. Peter Obi who made an unexpected good showing in 2023 has also thrown his hat into the ring. Unlike what obtained in 2023 when the Labour Party platform was united behind him, the existing political equation looks cloudy for him in the worker’s party or in the party that he newly defected to.

    Rotimi Amaechi’s aspiration remains a boast with no realistic flesh to back it up. The trio are members of the opposition African Democratic Congress(ADC). Ahmed Datti has also chosen to labour for his presidential aspiration with the Labour Party. Rabiu Kwankwaso of the New Nigeria People’s Party(NNPP), is too confused at the moment to effectively decide whether to contest for the coveted seat or deputise for a stronger candidate from another political party. The Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, is so far bereft of any known serious presidential aspirant with the only known thing about it being that Nyesom Wike and Governor Seyi Makinde of Oyo state  are fervently in self-destructive contention to procure an undertaker for the once national domineering party.

    What new policy ideas are these opposition presidential aspirants bringing before Nigerians? If given the chance by Nigerians, is there any likelihood of them making any significant changes from what currently obtains under the incumbent leadership of the country? Or will it be the usual excuses of successive administrations blaming their predecessors for their governance shortcomings? Isn’t it better to allow the incumbent government continue so as to perfect the problems of the country that has now taken it almost three years to understudy?

    One thing is very clear: During the campaigns leading to the 2023 presidential election, two of the aforementioned aspirants actually espoused their support for Tinubu’s two main policies of ‘brutish’ subsidy removal and the stoppage of rent-seeking dual forex trading rates with its concomitant devaluation effect. These two policies have earned more revenues for the country as much as stabilized the nation’s exchange rate system. Notwithstanding, the former comes with its harsh consequences on the economy and the latter’s devaluation effect has very crushing effect on the populace. Undeniably too, all the contenders in 2023 agreed and still agree that the two purportedly harsh policies are inevitable. If they agreed then and still believe in these two hard knocking policies, it is pertinent to ask what new things they plan to do if given an opportunity to be president of the country by Nigerians?

    Atiku, a formidable northerner, is the most potent of all the upcoming 2027 presidential contenders but can he be entrusted with power? Yours sincerely, like every other discerning Nigerians, can easily relate with how Atiku’s former boss, ex-president Olusegun Obasanjo profiled his person in his (Obasanjo’s) book; My Watch, Volume 2, Page 31-32: “Obasanjo on Atiku: “What I did not know, which came out glaringly later, was his parental background which was somewhat shadowy, his propensity to corruption, his tendency to disloyalty, his inability to say and stick to the truth all the time, a propensity for poor judgment, his belief and reliance on marabouts, his lack of transparency, his trust in money to buy his way out on all issues and his readiness to sacrifice morality, integrity, propriety truth and national interest for self and selfish interest.”

    Again, same Atiku is in charge of Obasanjo’s privatization policy that he cleverly schewed to his advantage. Under Obasanjo/Atiku’s hypocritical leadership, Nigeria’s hard earned  $16billion was wasted on electricity production without a single result to show for such spending….and with no consequences on these two shameless leaders.

    Underscoring Nigeria’s significant loss from the Obasanjo/Atiku $16billion forex mismanagement is a 2023 World Bank Energy Progress Report berating Nigeria for having the largest electricity access deficit in the world in 2022. The report estimates that a staggering 86 million Nigerians were still living without a reliable power supply. Obasanjo/Atiku’s power money misappropriation is responsible for the inconsistent electricity supply that Nigerians and her productive sectors are facing today. How can such man(Obasanjo’s administration’s ally), expect our countrymen to take him serious in 2027?

    More importantly: Can such a man be trusted by Nigerians to lead them post 2027? Should Obasanjo, his boss, also be rated as a formidable political consultant to any sincere presidential aspirants/Tinubu traducers trooping to his Abeokuta Presidential Library residence for advice today? Your guess is as good as mine.

    Nigerians also need to be reminded that Atiku was an ungrateful temporary ally and beneficiary of Tinubu’s political large-heartedness  in this same country. As vice-president to former president Olusegun Obasanjo, Tinubu rescued him from the political decimation plan of his boss at a period he served as governor of Lagos state. Atiku was helpless and hopelessly standing at the mercy of Obasanjo at that point in history. Tinubu also gave Atiku the Action Congress Party platform to contest for the first time of his being a presidential candidate of any political party in the country.

    In the entire country at that time, it was only Tinubu that stood in opposition and survived Obasanjo’s undemocratic antics during that better forgotten democratic history of this country. When other governors including those of the then Alliance For Democracy fell for Obasanjo’s bait that later unexpectedly threw them out of power, it was only Tinubu that remained the last man standing, and still standing. It was also Tinubu that became the rallying point of not only the progressive governors that were thrown out of power but other political office holders in Obasanjo’s party who were one way or the other not treated fairly by the shenanigan democratic system thrown up at that period.

    Everything within and outside the book, including the deployment of unorthodox measures, were explored to get Tinubu out of power in 2003 and especially 2007 so that his preferred candidate will not succeed him as governor.

    In Lagos, the PDP candidate during Obasanjo’s presidency, Senator Musiliu Obanikoro, who spearheaded the dirtiest governorship contest against Tinubu’s hegemony in the centre of excellence is today rooting for the man. His son, Babajide Obanikoro hobnobs with the Tinubu political family and actually got elected to the House of Representatives even though he currently serves under Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu of Lagos state. Oluseye Ogunlewe, then minister of works who deployed his position with the special backing of the Obasanjo presidency to turn Lagos into the political hotbed of the country is also now with Tinubu today. Equally, one of his sons is presently running his second term as chairman of a local government in Lagos State. In far away Kano State, Rabiu Kwankwaso, former governor of that state and also a former ally of the incumbent is in a quandary because of the Tinubu political pull/attraction which precedes his becoming the president of this country. His Kano state governor,  assembly members, local government councils’ chairmen and House of Representatives’ members have all defected to the APC from NNPP as at Friday. The Tinubu-Pull is reverberating round the country as we  look forward to 2027.

    Laughably, an Obasanjo that empirical evidence has shown to be politically inferior to Tinubu in democratic tactics/strategy, is the person that adversarial politicians that are opposed to Tinubu becoming president/seeking for reelection, now run to for political refuge/ideas on how to remove the master strategist from power in 2027. Atiku that Obasanjo says is not fit to rule this country is, for conspiratorial reasons, now seeking the former president’s blessing.

    Peter Obi is also seeking Obasanjo’s support to become the president. Yet, an Obasanjo who in 1999, 2003, 2007 and possibly till date, could not win his polling unit and ward is now a political consultant to opposition presidential contestants. This is laughable, indeed.

    Hate or love Tinubu, the reality is that there’s hardly any notable political figures in the country today that has not directly or indirectly benefited from his fountain of political wisdom. Yet, most of those that are now in the opposition bloc are up in arms saying the man should not go for a second term-sadly without proffering any superior policy ideas to Nigerians. Some of them who served as governors of their respective states did not match Tinubu’s achievements as the directing mind of Lagos state.

    Whenever they are asked why Tinubu should not go for reelection and they are always quick to refer to insecurity and high poverty rate in the land; they enjoy saying that the hardship being witnessed in the country is a consequence of Tinubu’s audaciously harsh economic policies. Once again, let us ask: What is it that they plan to do differently? Judging from their antecedents, nothing but mere media enunciation…

    What Nigerians need is either fresh faces imbued with fresh air or a realistic continuation of current reforms by Tinubu who is expected with time to be able to correct his initiated harsh policies/initiatives and take blame or praises at the end of it all, God willing in 2031.

    Yours sincerely is not in any way or form contesting the fact that standard of living in the country is miserable or that there is no insecurity. The truth is however that there’re ongoing efforts to remedy this economic and insecurity maladies. And finally, the historical antecedents of opposition presidential aspirants on the political turfs at the moment have shown us that none, in good conscience, can be said to have the selflessness to salvage the situation. Nigerians should say no to blame-game and yes to continuation. My sincere and humble submission for this week.

    • Sanusi, former MD/CEO of Lagos State Signage & Advertisement Agency is currently managing partner at AMS Reliable Solicitors.(07011117777 – Text messages Only).