Tag: tinubu

  • Tinubu’s legacy road projects will transform economy, says lawmaker

    Tinubu’s legacy road projects will transform economy, says lawmaker

    The Chairman of the House of Representatives Committee on the Federal Road Maintenance Agency (FERMA), Dr. Aderemi Abbas Oseni, has lauded the quality and scope of road projects President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s administration is executing across the country.

    The lawmaker described them as “legacy works” that will stand the test of time.

    Oseni, who represents Ido/Ibarapa East Federal Constituency of Oyo State, noted that the Federal Government’s current road projects reflect a new standard in quality and delivery.

    He noted that the FERMA-supervised interventions, alongside flagship national highway projects, are transforming transportation across the country.

    Read Also: WHO reaffirms Nigeria’s Maturity Level 3 status in medicines, vaccines regulation

    “The road infrastructure today is commendable in terms of the quality of jobs being done nationwide. When you look at these legacy projects, they are things that every Nigerian will be proud of in the future. The impact is already visible and bringing joy to communities,” Oseni said.

    The lawmaker stressed that improved road networks would have a lasting economic effect, reduce travel time, enhance trade routes, and open up rural areas to investment.

    He referred to several ongoing federal projects in Oyo State and across the Southwest as evidence of President Tinubu’s commitment to nationwide connectivity.

    According to him, the President’s economic reforms, including currency stabilisation, debt restructuring, and new tax initiatives, complement the infrastructure drive, ensuring that projects are adequately funded and sustainably managed.

    “This is not just about roads; it’s about unlocking economic opportunities. President Tinubu has shown the courage to take the hard decisions that will benefit generations,” Oseni added.

  • Tinubu appoints board members for NCC, USPF

    Tinubu appoints board members for NCC, USPF

    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has approved the constitution of the boards of the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) and the Universal Service Provision Fund (USPF) under the Ministry of Communications, Innovation and Digital Economy.

    A statement by the Special Adviser to the President on Information and Strategy, Bayo Onanuga, on Tuesday named Idris Olorunnimbe as Chairman of the NCC while Dr Aminu Waida retains his position as Executive Vice Chairman/Chief Executive Officer. 

    Waida was first appointed in October 2023 and confirmed by the Senate the following month.

    Read Also: Nigeria must invest more in the young population – Speaker Abbas

    Olorunnimbe previously served on the board of the Lagos State Employment Trust Fund (LSETF), where he chaired the Stakeholder and Governance Committee and oversaw youth employment and entrepreneurship programmes.

    Other members of the NCC board are Abraham Oshidami (Executive Commissioner, Technical Services); Rimini Makama (Executive Commissioner, Stakeholder Management); Hajia Maryam Bayi (former Director, Human Capital & Administration); Col Abdulwahab Lawal (Rtd); Senator Lekan Mustafa; Chris Okorie; Princess Oforitsenere Emiko and the board secretary.

    For the USPF, President Tinubu named the Minister of Communications, Innovation and Digital Economy, Dr Bosun Tijani, as Chairman, with Olorunnimbe serving as Vice Chairman.

    Other members of the USPF board include Abraham Oshidami, Rimini Makama, Aliyu Edogi Aliyu (representative of the Federal Ministry of Communications, Innovation and Digital Economy), Joseph B. Faluyi (representative of the Federal Ministry of Finance), Auwal Mohammed (representative of the Federal Ministry of Budget and National Planning), Uzoma Dozie, Peter Bankole, Abayomi Anthony Okanlawon, Gafar Oluwasegun Quadri, and the USPF Secretary.

    The Federal Government established the USPF to drive universal access and service to information and communication technologies (ICTs) in rural, unserved, and underserved areas of Nigeria, in line with national policy goals.

  • Tinubu unveils Nigeria’s first national industrial manpower development policy

    Tinubu unveils Nigeria’s first national industrial manpower development policy

    pledges urgent action on skills, industry-academia alignment

    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu on Tuesday announced plans for Nigeria’s first-ever National Industrial Manpower Development Policy, declaring that the nation’s greatest asset lies in its people rather than its natural resources.

    Speaking at the opening of the 2025 National Industrial Manpower Summit (NIMS) at the State House Conference Centre, Abuja, the President, represented by Vice President Kashim Shettima, stressed the urgent need to bridge the gap between educational output and industry requirements to unlock Nigeria’s economic potential.

    In a statement issued by his Senior Special Assistant on Media and Communications, Office of the Vice President, Stanley Nkwocha, Tinubu said, “For a nation with a median age of about seventeen, Nigeria is an incredibly young country. This youthfulness is a gift, but it is also a responsibility. We must make our young people not just a demographic statistic but a central component of our policy-making process”.

    He described human capital, alongside infrastructure and sound policy, as “the bridge between development and setback in every nation,” warning that Nigeria could not afford to “divest from our people because the world will not pause to wait for us.”

    The President said the summit – themed “Manpower Development: The Bridge Between Potential and Productivity” – must produce actionable recommendations to form the basis of the new policy.

    “I assure you that this administration will review, adopt, and implement viable proposals with urgency,” he pledged.

    Tinubu said the mission is to align education and training with industry needs and reverse the mismatch between institutional output and economic requirements.

    He called for robust public-private sector collaboration, an industrial skills database, sector-specific manpower roadmaps, and an elevated status for vocational and industrial training, noting that welders, machinists, technicians, software engineers, and factory operators must be “treated with the dignity, respect, and opportunity they deserve.”

    He warned that disruptive technologies demanded a constantly evolving workforce and urged a rethinking of manpower, work, and the future of Nigeria’s industrial economy.

    Read Also: Tinubu makes key appointments to university governing councils

    Minister of State for Industry, Senator John Owan Enoh, described the summit as evidence of Tinubu’s “touching the right spots” in governance, noting the significance of appointing the first Senior Special Assistant on Industrial Training and Development.

    “There are moments in a nation’s journey when history itself seems to lean forward… today in this hall, we stand at such a moment,” he said.

    Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment, Dr Jumoke Oduwole, said manpower development is key to attracting and retaining domestic investment for industrialisation, stressing that the ministry’s mandate is firmly anchored in the President’s 8-point Renewed Hope Agenda for building a stronger, more competitive, and inclusive economy.

    Minister of Labour and Employment, Alhaji Mohammed Maigari Dingyadi, called for a shift from fragmented to collaborative efforts in skills development, certification, and manpower planning, “where every player knows his role, collaborates effectively and works towards one shared mandate.”

    Senior Special Assistant to the President on Industrial Training and Development, Mr Adamson Ayinde Oluwatoyin, described the summit as a turning point for shaping Nigeria’s workforce, warning that without skilled, adaptable, and innovative people, the nation’s industrial dream would remain unrealised.

    Director General of the Industrial Training Fund (ITF), Dr Afiz Ogun Oluwatoyin, said the gathering provides a platform for policy dialogue, setting national skills targets, and mobilising resources cohesively.

    He praised Tinubu’s foresight in placing “square pegs in square holes” in agencies with mandates on skills development.

  • I have no apologies for supporting Tinubu — Soludo

    I have no apologies for supporting Tinubu — Soludo

    …hails President’s bold reforms, outlines security successes

    Governor of Anambra State, Professor Charles Chukwuma Soludo, on Tuesday declared that he has “no apologies” for his alliance with President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, despite belonging to different political parties.

    Speaking to journalists at the State House, Abuja, after a meeting with the President, Soludo said his support for Tinubu was rooted in shared progressive ideals and a personal friendship spanning over two decades.

    “I don’t have any apologies about it. President Tinubu is my friend. Has been my friend for 22 years now and counting. You don’t deny your friend and begin to quiver about who he is.

    “I support him, and I’m impressed by the bold steps he has taken, particularly in the areas of the economy and the structural reforms. I have said so several times — we’re taking the right steps, we only need to stay the course,” Soludo stated.

    The former Central Bank governor said political parties professing progressivism should work together in a broad coalition to strengthen Nigeria’s democracy and drive economic and social development.

    He recalled that the “progressives working together” message had been his consistent position since Tinubu’s visit to Anambra, when billboards and campaign materials promoting cooperation were displayed across the state.

    Read Also: Soludo extols Obiano, Ngige as both mark birthdays

    On the state of insecurity in Anambra, Soludo said his administration was deploying a “holistic” strategy that combined kinetic force with non-kinetic interventions.

    He noted that the enactment of the Anambra State Homeland Security Law in January was a turning point in dismantling the foundations of criminality.

    “All the deadly native doctors are on the run from the state because these are the guys giving false hope, deceiving our young ones and luring them into criminality,” the governor said.

    According to him, job creation, youth empowerment, and targeted social programmes were central to the non-kinetic approach.

    He highlighted the training and empowerment of 5,000 youths in the past year, with another 8,700 set to receive financial support worth several billions of naira this month or next.

    “We’re creating several thousand youth millionaires right away within the first three years. This is cascading all over the state. The youths are very much involved, and we’re also dealing with the issue of hardship, beyond the massive infrastructural transformation, beyond fixing our schools and health facilities,” Soludo explained.

    He assured that while young people were being given opportunities, law enforcement would decisively deal with those who break the law, backed by intelligence gathering and strengthened security operations.

  • Tinubu makes key appointments to university governing councils

    Tinubu makes key appointments to university governing councils

    …names principal officers for Federal University of Health Sciences, Tsafe

    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has approved new appointments to the governing councils of two federal universities and named principal officers for the recently established Federal University of Health Sciences and Technology, Tsafe, Zamfara State.

    According to a statement issued by Special Adviser to the President on Information and Strategy Bayo Onanuga, Hon. Chisom D. Obih has been appointed to the Governing Council of Alex Ekwueme Federal University, Ndufu-Alike, Ebonyi State, to fill the vacancy created by the death of a council member.

    In a related development, the President named Professor Ralph Akinfeleye, a renowned communications scholar, to the Governing Council of Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile-Ife, Osun State.

    Prof. Akinfeleye, former Head of the Department of Mass Communication, University of Lagos, is also Chairman of the Centre of Excellence in Multimedia and Cinematography/Unilag Radio 103.1 FM and Television.

    Read Also: N/Delta youths back Otuaro’s call for Tinubu’s support in 2027

    He replaces Mr. Wahab Owokoniran, who was recently appointed Pro-Chancellor and Chairman of the Governing Council of the Federal University of Transport, Daura, Katsina State.

    Meanwhile, President Tinubu approved the appointment of Prof. Ibrahim Adamu Yakasai as Vice Chancellor of the Federal University of Health Sciences and Technology, Tsafe.

    Other principal officers named are Mr. Hamisu Yusuf Yelwa as Registrar, Usman Nakazalle Sanusi as Bursar, and Dr. Shehu Aminu Liman as Librarian.

    A retired Colonel in the Nigerian Army, Prof. Yakasai is currently Provost of the College of Health Sciences, Bayero University, Kano, and chairs the Committee of Provosts of Colleges of Medicine in Nigeria.

    He also serves on the governing council of the Federal University of Health Sciences, Otukpo, Benue State.

    Prof. Yakasai earned his MBBS from Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, before securing a European Economic Commission scholarship for postgraduate studies in the United Kingdom.

    He holds membership and fellowship of the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, a Master’s in Medical Education from the University of Winchester, and fellowships from the International College of Surgeons (USA) and the American College of Surgeons.

    His career includes a stint as Director-General of the Kano State Hospitals Management Board.

  • Tinubu appoints Omidiran as FCC Chairman

    Tinubu appoints Omidiran as FCC Chairman

    • President names Secretary, 34 commissioners for commission

    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has appointed Ayo Hulayat Omidiran as the new Executive Chairman of the Federal Character Commission (FCC).

    Omidiran, a former House of Representatives member, succeeds Dr. Muheeba Dankaka, whose tenure was dogged by controversy.

    In a statement last night by his Special Adviser on Information and Strategy, Mr. Bayo Onanuga, the President also appointed Mr. Mohammed Musa as the Secretary of the commission and retains Mr. Kayode Oladele from Ogun State as a commissioner.

    Oladele, a former member of the House of Representatives, was first appointed to the FCC in 2024 and served as Acting Chairman following the expiration of Dr. Dankaka’s first-term tenure.

    The President also renewed the appointments of Mr. Lawal Ya’u Roni of Jigawa State, Mr. Abubakar Atiku Bunu of Kebbi State, and Mr. Eludayo Eluyemi of Osun State for another term.

    Those newly appointed to the commission include Obina Oriaku from Abia State; Mrs. Bema Olvadi Madayi from Adamawa State; Obongawan Dora Ebong from Akwa Ibom State; Nnoli Nkechi Gloria from Anambra State; Mr. Babangida Adamu Gwana from Bauchi State; Sir Tonye Okio from Bayelsa State; Mr. Aligba Eugene Tarkende from Benue State; and Modu Mustapha from Borno State.

    Others are: Dr. Stella Odey Ekpo from Cross River State; Mr. Ederin Lovette Idisi from Delta State; Nwokpor Vincent Nduka from Ebonyi State; Chief Victor Sabor Edoror from Edo State; Sola Fokanle from Ekiti State; Mr. Peter Eze from Enugu State; Mr. Ibrahim Baba Mairiga from Gombe State; Jerry Alagbaoso from Imo State; Mrs. Ruth Jumai Ango from Kaduna State; Mr. Muhammad Awwal Nayya from Kano State; and Anas Isah from Katsina State.

    Also appointed are: Mr. Bello Idris Eneye from Kogi State; Dr. Ibrahim Abdullahi from Kwara State; Alhaji Isah Jibrin from Niger State; Ajimodu Bola from Ondo State; Prince Ayodeji Abas Aleshinloye from Oyo State; Pam Bolman from Plateau State; Mr. Aaron Chukwuemeka from Rivers State; Alhaji Aminu Tambar from Sokoto State; Bobboi Bala Kaigama from Taraba State; Jibir Maigari from Yobe State; Mr. Sani Garba from Zamfara State; and Mr. Solomon Ayuba Dagami from the Federal Capital Territory (FCT).

    Read Also: Tinubu, Rivers Administrator, RSIEC sued over planned Local Govt election

    Also, President Tinubu has appointed Ms. Rinsola Abiola as the Director-General of the Citizenship and Leadership Training Centre (CLTC).

    A statement yesterday in Abuja by Mr. Onanuga announcing Ms. Abiola’s appointment reads: “Ms. Abiola, an expert in strategic communication and government relations, previously served as Senior Special Assistant to the President.”

    The President also named Nasir Bala Aminu Ja’oji as a Senior Special Assistant on Citizenship and Leadership.

    “Mr. Ja’oji, who had served as Special Adviser on Mobilisation to the Governor of Kano State and a member of the Governing Council of Coordinated Arewa Youth Groups, is an advocate of women and youth empowerment and development,” the statement added.

  • Reps Deputy Speaker Kalu seeks Igbo support for Tinubu’s administration

    Reps Deputy Speaker Kalu seeks Igbo support for Tinubu’s administration

    House of Representatives Deputy Speaker Benjamin Okezie Kalu has appealed to the Igbo nation to support President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s administration ahead of the 2027 general election.

    Addressing Imo State stakeholders and leaders at a dinner in Abuja, Kalu hailed President Tinubu for his commitment to the economic transformation of the Southeast.

    The Deputy Speaker cited the speedy assent to the South East Development Commission (SEDC) Bill as a major milestone in addressing decades of infrastructural decay in the region.

    “As an Igbo man in the top hierarchy of the Federal Government, I have a duty to regularly engage Ndigbo at home and abroad to inform them of the government’s policies and to relay their feedback for the collective interest of our people,” he said.

    Read Also: Tinubu, Rivers Administrator, RSIEC sued over planned Local Govt election

    Kalu urged the Igbo nation to unite and participate in mainstream political activities.

    The Deputy Speaker cautioned against the fragmentation of Igbo votes across multiple political parties, stressing that aligning with the All Progressives Congress (APC) would position the region for greater benefits from federal programmes and projects.

    Stakeholders at the event, including a former Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) Chairman, Prof. Maurice Iwu, and former Minister of Transportation, Dr. Kema Chikwe, endorsed Kalu’s appeal.

    They described him as a servant leader championing the Southeast’s inclusion in national development.

  • Tinubu, Rivers Administrator, RSIEC sued over planned Local Govt election

    Tinubu, Rivers Administrator, RSIEC sued over planned Local Govt election

    Those opposed to the August 30 local government poll in Rivers State intensified their efforts to stop the scheduled election.

    They took a judicial step, instituting a suit against   President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, Rivers State Administrator Vice Admiral Ibok-Ete Ibas and the River State Independent Electoral Commission (RSIEC) before a Federal High Court (FHC) in Abuja.

    The plaintiffs, who identified themselves as indigenes of the state, are contending among others, that the current state of affairs in Rivers State is not conducive for the conduct of any local government election.

    The suit, marked: FHC/ABJ/CS/1144/2025 was filed for the plaintiffs by their lawyer, Sunday Ezema.

    Read Also: Tinubu appoints Rinsola Abiola as CLTC DG

    Listed as plaintiffs are Fredrick Ededeh, Benita Samuel, Jane Madubuike, Boma Aggo and Comfort Agbom.

    They want the court to, among others, determine whether the election could be lawfully conducted during the period of a state of emergency.

    The plaintiffs recalled that President Tinubu, while declaring the state of emergency, stated that there is “clear and present danger or imminent breakdown of public order and public safety” and “clear and present danger of the looming crises” which has affected “good governance, peace, security and order” in the state.

  • Tinubu’s cabinet, the North and accountability imperative

    Tinubu’s cabinet, the North and accountability imperative

    • By Ismail Auwal

    For two full days in Kaduna, Northern Nigeria rewrote the playbook on democratic accountability. There was no stage. No scripts. No political rallying. What unfolded instead was something rare in Nigeria’s political culture—a public, unscripted, and data-backed performance review of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s administration. Ministers and security chiefs did not merely attend ceremonial appearances. They stayed. They listened. They responded. They answered tough questions, many of them unfiltered. And they came armed not with rhetoric, but with evidence.

    The summit, put together by the Sir Ahmadu Bello Memorial Foundation, was, by all accounts, unprecedented. It yielded the big stage for criticism and commendation alike. Ministers had to earn their applause with substance, not slogans. For once, governance was not hiding behind podiums or siren-blaring convoys. It was face-to-face with the people.

    It would have been easy to mistake the gathering for another government jamboree. But you only needed to sit in the crowd, to listen to the raw questions from the led, to hear the hard numbers ministers were made to justify, to know this was different.

    President Tinubu himself, we were told, wanted to attend but chose to respect the regional character of the event. Instead, he reportedly followed the proceedings live, postponing other scheduled meetings just to stay glued to the conversations in Kaduna. In a political system where leaders often govern from a distance, this gesture of attention spoke volumes.

    And his cabinet did not disappoint.

    From the SGF to the National Security Adviser, from the Minister of Defence to the Minister of Livestock and the Budget Minister, the government team sat in the same hall with citizens and critics and gave an account. What emerged was a picture not of perfection, but of real progress.

    Perhaps the most emotional moment came from the security team. Nuhu Ribadu, the NSA, did not give a generic update. He presented photographic evidence, gruesome, perhaps, but necessary, showing the corpses of high-profile terrorists like Dogo Isah and Kachalla Shekau, neutralised in recent operations.

    Read Also: EFCC holds ex-Governor Tambuwal over suspicious N189b cash withdrawals

    He detailed the numbers: 12,100 hostages rescued. Over 30 high-level bandits and gunrunners now face prosecution. The Abuja–Kaduna expressway, once a corridor of fear, is now seeing traffic at night. No longer whispers of victory, now backed by names, places, photos, and prosecutions.

    And beyond the battlefield, logistics have changed. Through the Davon Bill, Nigeria has begun producing its own Armoured Personnel Carriers. No more years-long waits for foreign procurements. Nigeria is, at last, is arming itself with tools made by its own hands.

    Then came the Minister of State for Works, Barrister Bello M Goronyo. He was not vague. He stood before the summit and listed 135 road projects completed across the North—naming them, state by state. Journalists were invited to verify. The Kaduna–Kano rail project, once a frozen promise, is now visibly back on track.

    One project stood out: the Sokoto–Badagry Superhighway. Originally designed in the Second Republic, it never made it into any modern administration’s manifesto—until now. Tinubu revived it not for votes, but for its strategic value in linking the North to economic ports. That’s not politics. That’s planning.

    When Minister Atiku Bagudu took the microphone, he didn’t sugarcoat the reality. Tinubu, he reminded the audience, inherited an economy drained by debt, distorted by unsustainable fuel subsidies, and disoriented by multiple exchange rates. “It was like drawing water from a dry well,” he recalled the president telling ministers.

    Instead of patching the cracks, the administration restructured the economy from the root. Hard decisions were taken not to punish but to recalibrate.

    New ministries were created, not for bloated bureaucracy, but for clear mandates. Livestock Development to address the age-old pastoral economy. Blue Economy to harness Nigeria’s maritime potential. Creative Economy to formalise an already thriving industry. And perhaps most crucially, Regional Development, to ensure that every corner of the country is given the pencil to draw its own path to progress.

    The results? Debt dropped and revenue grew across all the sub-Nationals. The minister revealed how Jigawa State’s debt dropped from N40 billion in 2023 to just N1 billion by early 2025. That’s not a miracle. That’s what happens when revenue rises and wasteful spending shrinks.

    The most powerful image from Kaduna wasn’t in any official photograph. It was in the sight of federal ministers, men and women of high office, sitting quietly in the audience, taking notes, occasionally nodding to citizens’ complaints, and staying until the very end.

    It was the Minister of Work, Dave Umahi, explaining project timelines without evasion. It was the Minister of Housing, Ahmed Dangiwa, detailing unit-by-unit housing developments from Karsana to Katsina, backed by photographs, drone shots, and completion rates.

    For Northern Nigeria, this summit was not just about assessing the federal government. It was a statement of its own agency. Too often, regional identity has been hijacked by division or nostalgia. But in Kaduna, the North asked hard questions, not as opposition, but as stakeholders.

    Civil society groups grilled ministers on gaps. Traditional rulers called for more climate-resilient farming policies. Media personnel were not just invited—they were encouraged to ask unscripted questions. The tone was respectful, but firm. And the administration responded in kind.

    However, it was not all smooth sailing for the government; even then, the meeting in Kaduna demonstrated that this administration is a listening one and is doing its best to tackle the challenges. 

    Inflation is still high. Unemployment still bites. And food prices continue to challenge families. Insecurity still bites many communities. No one at the summit pretended these problems had vanished. What was clear, however, was that this is not a government claiming omnipotence.

    “We haven’t solved everything,” one minister admitted, “but we’re not sleeping either.” That line stuck with me. Because for once, it didn’t feel like lip service.

    I have attended dozens of government summits and policy talks. But Kaduna was different. It was, in every sense, a turning point, a demonstration of how democracy is meant to function when the governed are not just spoken to, but spoken with.

    A presidency willing to submit itself to a region not known for political loyalty. A cabinet that offers not slogans but data. And a population that, rather than shouting from the margins, entered the room and took the microphone.

    If we do this again, if other regions follow suit, Nigeria may yet turn the corner not just on governance, but on trust.

    The North asked questions. The government answered. And in that dialogue, democracy did not just survive. It showed signs of life.

    •Auwal, a public commentator, writes from Abuja.

  • ‘Consider KWAM1’s legacy’, MC Oluomo appeals to Tinubu, Keyamo to lift ban

    ‘Consider KWAM1’s legacy’, MC Oluomo appeals to Tinubu, Keyamo to lift ban

    National President of the National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW), MC Oluomo, has appealed to President Bola Tinubu to pardon Fuji music legend, Wasiu Ayinde Marshal, popularly known as Kwam 1, over alleged breaches of aviation regulations and disrupted airline operations.

    Kwam 1 was recently placed on a six-month no-fly list by the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA) and Minister of Aviation, Festus Keyamo, following an incident where he allegedly brought alcohol on board a ValueJet Airlines flight from Abuja to Lagos, sparking an altercation with a flight attendant.

    In his plea on Instagram, MC Oluomo likened Kwam 1’s situation to the biblical prodigal son, emphasising the musician’s apology and willingness to make amends.

    He urged President Tinubu to exercise mercy, considering Kwam 1’s legacy and dedication to the nation.

    MC Oluomo respectfully requested that the Director-General of the NCAA, Capt. Chris Najomo and Minister Festus Keyamo consider lifting the ban imposed on Kwam 1 and the pilot involved.

    He wrote, “A Plea for Mercy: An Appeal for Leniency on Behalf of Alhaji Wasiu Ayinde Marshal (K1)

    “To His Excellency, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, I, Alhaji Musiliu Ayinde Akinsanya, President of the National Union of Road Transport Workers of Nigeria (NURTW), humbly and fervently appeal to you to exercise mercy and forgiveness towards Alhaji Wasiu Ayinde Marshal (K1). Like a prodigal son, K1 has acknowledged his mistakes, is sincerely apologetic, and is willing to make amends.

    Read Also: MC Oluomo didn’t give me a car – Actress Aisha Lawal

    “I respectfully and earnestly request that the Director-General of the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA), Capt. Chris Najomo, and the Minister of Aviation and Aerospace Development, Barr. Festus Keyamo, SAN, considers tempering justice with mercy by lifting the ban imposed on K1 and the pilot, Oluranti Ogoyi, following the incident at Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport’s local wing in Abuja.

    “On behalf of K1, I extend unreserved and heartfelt apologies to the CEO of Value Jet, Mr. Kunle Soname, the staff, the pilot, and the general public. We acknowledge K1’s wrongdoing and deeply appreciate his 50-year contributions to Nigeria’s growth and the promotion of Yoruba culture worldwide.

    “I plead with the authorities to accept K1’s apology and show mercy, considering his legacy and dedication to the nation. May wisdom guide your decisions, and may we not throw away the baby with the bathwater. Mercy and forgiveness will not only bring solace to K1 but also uphold the values of compassion and humanity.

    “Thank you for considering this appeal. God bless you. God bless the Federal Republic of Nigeria”.