Tag: tinubu

  • Fed Govt kicks off agric renewal with 2000 tractors

    Fed Govt kicks off agric renewal with 2000 tractors

    • Scheme designed to attract youths into farming

    In a new approach to massive production of food and cash crops, the Federal Government yesterday made available 2,000 tractors, 2,000 disc ploughs and harrows, and 1,000 disc ridgers to farmers.

    The equipment imported from the Republic of Belarus in Eastern Europe was distributed yesterday after the inauguration by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu in Abuja.

    According to him, the distribution of the agricultural tools would mark a shift from subsistence farming to technology-driven and large-scale agriculture.

    Others are 1,200 tractor-trailers, 500 seed drills, 300 boom sprayers, 10 harvesters, 12 mobile workshop vehicles, and 9,022 sets of spare parts.

    President Tinubu said: “We made a promise and today (yesterday) we are delivering on that promise.

    “Our goal is not only to feed ourselves but to become a global player in agriculture.

    “Let this day go down in history as the beginning of Nigeria’s agricultural renewal.” 

    He explained that the launch is part of his government’s initiative aimed at wooing the youth into mechanised farming, ensuring food security and positioning the country as a global competitor.

    “We are making farming more sexy to youths. Agriculture is not just about hoes and cutlasses anymore.

    “It is about innovation, entrepreneurship, and nation-building. Our youths must be at the centre of this transformation,” he said.

    The President stressed his determination to present agriculture as a viable and profitable career path for the younger generation.

    The new agricultural programme, initiated through a bilateral agreement with the Republic of Belarus, will see 550,000 hectares of farmland being put into production, the generation of more than two million metric tons of food yearly and the creation of over 16,000 jobs. 

    Reaffirming his administration’s commitment to food self-sufficiency and global competitiveness, President Tinubu emphasised that increased agricultural productivity was vital to national stability and economic resilience.

    To support the rollout, a national training programme would be launched for farmers, operators and technicians, with emphasis on proper equipment use, servicing and maintenance.

    Additional features of the programme are GPS-enabled tracking systems, a structured repayment and repossession model, and funding partnerships with development finance institutions and non-interest banks.

    President Tinubu urged all stakeholders, state governments, service providers and cooperatives to ensure efficient and transparent deployment of the equipment.

    “To all stakeholders receiving this equipment, deploy it with maximum efficiency.

    “We will work with you; we will supervise you at various locations, and we will hold you accountable,’’ said the President.

    Agriculture and Food Security Minister Abubakar Kyari described the presentation of equipment as the fulfilment of the President’s July 13, 2023, emergency declaration on food security.

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    “We are shifting from hand hoe to horsepower; from manual effort to mechanised efficiency,” Kyari said.

    He acknowledged the key role of AFRA-DMCC, the Belarusian supplier and hailed Belarus’s commitment to technology transfer, local training and long-term support.

    The minister expressed hope that the initiative would reduce Nigeria’s dependence on food imports, enhance nutrition and empower a new generation of youth-led ‘agri-preneurs’ to drive innovation and growth in the agriculture sector.

    The Republic of Belarus was represented at the event by Deputy Prime Minister Viktor Karankevich and Foreign Minister Maxim Ryzhenkov.

    Stakeholders like All Farmers Association of Nigeria (AFAN), National Association of Young Farmers and former Permanent Secretary, Lagos State Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security, Yakub Olajide Bashorun, hailed the launch.

    They described the move as a significant step with the potential for substantial impact across the agricultural sector.

    ‘’It is a welcome development. It is the thing we have been expecting.

    “I believe it is going to improve total output and increase farmers’ performance.

    “There is no doubt about that,” said Femi Oke, chairman of AFAN (Southwest).

    Stakeholders laud Tinubu

    National Association of Young Farmers, Ekiti State branch Chairman, Ade Ajayi, welcomed the development but called for a holistic approach to ensure it yielded the expected results.

    Ajayi, who also heads Corporate Farmers International, proposed innovative strategies for deployment and impact measurement.

    He urged the Federal Government and farmers to collaborate in identifying comparative advantages to maximise the impact on Nigeria’s Gross Domestic Product(GDP).

    “The Federal Government and farmers should look at the comparative advantages of commodities to be produced,” Ajayi advised.

    Bashorun, who lauded the President’s commitment to farmers, advised the government to establish farm mechanisation hubs across the country.

    The hubs, according to him, should strategically be located near farm clusters to ensure proper maintenance of the tractors and other implements.

    “Our tractor-to-hectare ratio is very low in Nigeria, and that’s a big reason behind our low productivity.

    “With this, we expect that farmers will be smart and explore the machines to boost food production,” Bashorun said.

  • Abia community hails Tinubu, Kalu on federal varsity

    Abia community hails Tinubu, Kalu on federal varsity

    ITEM community in Bende Local Government of Abia State has lauded President Bola Tinubu for siting Federal University of Medical and Health Sciences in its domain.

    The President has signed the Bill for establishment of the varsity in Item.

    The community’s appreciation contained in a letter under Item Development Association (IDA), was signed by Sir Onwuka Orji (president-general); Bishop Sunday Onuoha (chairman, BoT) and Chief Akwari Ukpabi (grand patron).

    It praised the President for his visionary leadership and kind gesture.

    The letter reads: “This act, coming when Nigeria faces a pressing need for accessible and high-quality medical education, is transformative.

    “You have, through this noble gesture, not only planted a seed of educational excellence in our soil but also offered our children and generations unborn a beacon of hope and opportunity.”

    “Federal University of Medical and Health Sciences, Item, will be a notable institution in the Southeast and nation.

    “It will serve as a hub for academic excellence, research innovation and healthcare delivery. It will create employment, stimulate local economy and place our community on the national and global map of medical advancement.”

    On importance of the facility, the community said: “The university will touch every home, every heart and every hopeful eye in Item.

    “… Sons and daughters of Item, home and in diaspora, celebrate this news with emotion-filled hearts and thanksgiving. It is a dream come true.

    “For decades, we have yearned for such, and today, it has become reality, thanks to your magnanimity and people-centred governance.”

    Item people also commend House of Representatives Deputy Speaker, Benjamin Okezie Kalu, for his “efforts, legislative acumen and commitment to his constituency,” which led to successful sponsorship and passage of the bill.

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    It said Kalu has proved to be “a true son of the soil and a shining light of representation. His name shall be etched in the history of Item.”

    Item people enjoined Tinubu to ensure “early appropration for the varsity project and commencement of construction so that this noble project would be completed in your first tenure of office.”

    They promised full cooperation for actualisation of this project, pledging: “We are ready to cooperate with the authorities to indicate the exact site of the university in our community as well as any other thing that may be required.”

    The community promised to guard the project, nurture it and ensure that it blossoms into the great and life-changing institution.

     “We pledge our continued support as you work to build a better, stronger and more inclusive Nigeria,” the community leaders said

  • How Tinubu’s visit to Kaduna reflects ethos of transformational leadership

    How Tinubu’s visit to Kaduna reflects ethos of transformational leadership

    By Auwalu Jamilu

    On Thursday, 19th June, the ancient, yet forward-leaning, city of Kaduna bore witness to more than the customary grandeur of a presidential visit. It was a day when oratory met achievement, when symbolism danced with substance, and when the resonant ideals of governance found embodiment in bricks, steel, and the silent dignity of renewed trust. President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s journey to Kaduna was not merely a federal visitation to a constituent state; it was, in essence, a pilgrimage to a rising citadel of progress — a state undergoing not just development, but transformation. And at the heart of this metamorphosis stood Senator Uba Sani, the Governor of Kaduna State, whose stewardship has become a canvas for the artistry of good governance.

    In a nation too often starved of sustainable narratives, Kaduna has quietly emerged as a bastion of intentional leadership, where peace is not a platitude but policy, and where the echoes of resilience reverberate through newly constructed roads, reopened schools, and thriving farmlands once desolate with despair. The President’s visit was not only to inaugurate infrastructure but to consecrate progress — to stamp federal endorsement upon a model that blends the soul of empathy with the sinew of strategic reform.

    At Rigachikun in Igabi Local Government Area, the commissioning of the Institute of Vocational Training and Skills Development signified more than an architectural feat. It announced a generational covenant — a sacred promise that the youth of Kaduna shall no longer be bystanders in the economy of their future. With the Vocational Training and Skills Development Institute replicated across Rigachikun, Soba, and the historically vibrant Samarun Kataf, this initiative transcends the limitations of mere education. It seeks to re-engineer the human resource fabric of Kaduna State, equipping young minds with globally relevant skills under the Nigerian Skills Qualification Framework (NSQF), and certifications from Microsoft, Google, Cisco, and Huawei. It is a movement from dependence to dignity, from stagnation to skilled self-sufficiency.

    Yet, the story of Kaduna’s reawakening is not only found in steelwork and certificates. It is equally written in the hearts of its people, who have emerged from the shadows of insecurity into the dawn of communal harmony. As Governor Sani noted with an eloquence that sprang not from political choreography but from lived conviction, “When we assumed office in 2023, Kaduna was a state under siege.” His recollection was not apocalyptic but factual — an honest admission that lends greater glory to the progress now evident. Villages once reduced to silence by the specter of banditry now echo with laughter, markets have burst again into colourful commerce, and roads previously deserted are once more veins of vitality.

    The President, visibly moved, commended this resurgence with measured gravity. “Uba Sani is an agent of change, stability, love, unity, and progress,” he declared. His words were not ornamental but observant, born of a firsthand encounter with the human and infrastructural recalibration taking place. In Millennium City, the commissioning of a state-of-the-art 300-bed Specialist Hospital, now bearing the name Bola Ahmed Tinubu, was a poignant moment — not of self-congratulation, but of continuity. This hospital, conceived nearly two decades ago and mired in administrative limbo, has at last been resurrected under a government that sees the past not as a graveyard of failed promises, but as a quarry from which to mine future purpose.

     In the realm of transportation, Kaduna has emerged as a pacesetter, not merely following federal blueprints but innovating from within. With 100 Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) buses already introduced under the Kaduna Subsidized Transport Scheme (KSTS), Governor Sani’s government has taken a bold stride towards ecological stewardship and economic relief. While all residents will enjoy subsidized fares on the buses, workers, retirees, and students ride for free in the initial six-month phase, a gesture that is both socially responsive and strategically astute. Meanwhile, Governor Uba Sani has since done the groundbreaking for the Kaduna Bus Rapid Transit (KBRT) system and also the groundbreaking for the Southern Terminal — Northern Nigeria’s first and only BRT — speaks volumes of the state’s infrastructural foresight. It is not merely about reducing traffic congestion, but about engineering a new psychology of urban life: orderly, efficient, and humane.

    President Tinubu, who in his own tenure as Governor of Lagos State pioneered urban transit models, recognized this endeavor as a kindred flame. His commitment was immediate and tangible. Through the Federal Government’s 2025 budget, a monumental N100 billion was earmarked for the Kaduna Light Rail Transit, a testament to a federal-state synergy that prioritizes the movement, safety, and economic liberty of ordinary Nigerians.

    But beyond the asphalt and steel lay the true genius of Kaduna’s transformation under Governor Uba Sani — a peace forged not through the cold imposition of authority, but through the warm architecture of trust. The Kaduna Peace Model, as conceived and championed by Governor Sani, is perhaps the most enduring legacy of this administration. It is not enforced silence, but earned harmony. It rests upon a triadic framework: strategic coordination, community engagement, and socioeconomic revitalization.

    Like Governor Uba Sani’s speech at the historic event revealed, over fifty consultative meetings with traditional rulers, Fulani herders, farmers, youth, and religious leaders underscore the Governor’s belief that peace cannot be dictated from podiums, but must be negotiated in community halls and under village trees. The creation of Peace Councils in each senatorial zone — chaired by respected elders — reaffirms the value of indigenous wisdom in mediating conflict and restoring kinship. And when paired with targeted social investments — stipends, uniforms, radios, and mobility for local vigilantes — the model gains muscle and sustainability.

    The result? Farmlands once abandoned have now reclaimed over 500,000 hectares of productive soil. Schools previously shuttered due to insecurity — over 535 of them — have reopened. And perhaps most astonishingly, Birnin Gwari, once synonymous with terror, now dispatches no fewer than 28 trailers of livestock daily to Lagos. Such statistics, though seemingly dry, are wet with hope and fertilized by real human tears — tears of struggle, now transforming into tears of gratitude.

     If peace is the precondition of prosperity, Kaduna’s present moment is the dividend of patience, vision, and strategic alignment. Governor Uba Sani’s government has not treated security as a military challenge alone, but as a complex socio-political equation requiring both strength and empathy. That equation has begun yielding profound results. What began as a bold campaign against lawlessness has matured into a holistic social renaissance.

    President Tinubu’s presence at Murtala Square during the Grand Reception was, in every sense, an act of affirmation. His praises, generous yet grounded, underscored that Nigeria, though vast and variegated, can still converge at the altar of excellence. The federal government’s interventions — particularly in transportation, security architecture, and economic empowerment — have found fertile soil in Kaduna’s administrative resolve. And in return, Kaduna has become a mirror, reflecting back to Abuja what transformational leadership looks like when decentralized and democratically nourished.

    Yet governance in Kaduna has not rested upon the laurels of order alone. Rather, it has surged into the terrain of inclusive economic development. A perfect emblem of this is the revitalization of Panteka Market in Tudun Wada. Once a sprawling informal space of chaotic artisan trade, it has now been transformed into the largest informal skills acquisition hub in Africa, eclipsing even Kenya’s famed Jua Kali. With over 38,000 artisans trained in vocations ranging from carpentry to electrical work, this effort signals not just economic activity but a dignified return to the culture of handwork and craft as engines of self-reliance.

    To coordinate such ambitious human capital projects, Governor Sani inaugurated the Kaduna State Skills Development Council, which he personally chairs. This Council, operating with a scope rare in sub-national governance, oversees a comprehensive framework to confront youth unemployment with precision and foresight. Through strategic planning, partnerships, and a relentless will to restructure opportunity itself, Kaduna has positioned itself as a laboratory for what localized developmental economics can achieve.

    No less impressive is the state’s infrastructure renaissance. The Governor’s report of 79 roads spanning over 780 kilometers — of which 28 have already been completed — is not a catalogue of contracts, but a statement of connectivity. From Saminaka to Zangon Kataf, Giwa to Godogodo, the arteries of the state now throb with life, commerce, and kinship. Roads, in this context, are not just asphalt pathways, but reconnections — of families, of economies, of regions long rendered distant by disrepair.

    Education, too, has received the attention it so direly needed. In just two years, 62 new secondary schools have risen from the soil of commitment. Over 1,700 classrooms have either been constructed or rehabilitated. Tuition fees across all state-owned tertiary institutions have been slashed by 50%, resulting in exponential increases in enrollment — not as a matter of optics, but of real access for real families. It is policy speaking the language of the poor, and planning that dignifies the dreams of the marginalized.

     Healthcare has similarly undergone transformation, not just in form but in philosophy. Over 1,100 Primary Healthcare Centres (PHCs) now dot the landscape of Kaduna, with 255 of them upgraded to Level 2 — the highest in Nigeria. Every ward in the state now boasts a functioning PHC, placing life-saving services within reach of every citizen. Additionally, each of the state’s 23 Local Government Areas now hosts a Centre of Excellence hospital — part of a deliberate strategy to decentralize quality healthcare and stem the tide of medical tourism from the region.

    The capstone of this healthcare revolution is the 300-bed Bola Ahmed Tinubu Specialist Hospital. Commissioned by the President himself, this edifice stands as more than a tribute; it is an anchor for a new paradigm — a system that no longer sends its sick to the South or abroad in search of dignity, but which proclaims, with confidence: healing can happen here.

    Yet the heart of Governor Sani’s governance model beats not only in institutions, but in inclusion. He has governed Kaduna not through the lens of sectionalism but with the broad gaze of statesmanship. “When I took the oath of office,” he remarked, “I vowed to govern Kaduna as one — Muslim and Christian, Hausa, Kagoro, Fulani, Gwari, Katab, Kaje, Jaba, Kagoma and several others; APC, PDP, or no party at all.” This is not rhetorical flourish; it is the architecture of a moral pact with the people — a social contract elevated above partisanship, a politics sanctified by purpose.

     As a result, Kaduna has become not only a success story but a sanctuary of trust. Political defections into the ruling APC have not been the result of coercion or transactional politics but the migration of belief — citizens moving toward competence, accountability, and inclusivity. Governance here is no longer defined by ethnicity or faith but by results and reliability.

     President Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda finds perhaps its most luminous expression in Kaduna. His economic reforms — the painful but necessary removal of fuel subsidies, the unification of exchange rates, and the recalibration of institutional integrity — have found sympathetic application in Kaduna’s social architecture. The Kaduna State Financial Inclusion Strategy, bolstered by an Executive Order, has brought over 2.5 million formerly unbanked citizens into the formal economy. These are not mere account numbers but farmers, artisans, and traders newly armed with the tools of financial autonomy.

    Through this inclusion, the state has also built a credible register of its poor and vulnerable, a data resource that now empowers targeted interventions in sync with the federal government’s broader poverty alleviation agenda. What results is a choreography of compassion — where policies no longer grope in the dark, but move with data-driven precision.

    This cooperative federalism — marked not by dependence but dynamic partnership — is perhaps the crowning glory of President Tinubu’s visit. His national leadership, stern yet empathic, reformist yet consultative, has found in Kaduna a loyal executor of shared vision. And Governor Uba Sani, in his poised humility, continues to prove that politics is not a game of survival, but a theatre of service.

    In Kaduna, what we witness is not merely administrative efficiency, but the emergence of a new national ethos — one born of a harmonization between local dynamism and federal stewardship. President Tinubu’s visit was not a political courtesy call. It was a pilgrimage to a state reborn through grit, vision, and a refusal to be defined by its past traumas. His embrace of Governor Uba Sani’s model was itself a tacit call to the rest of Nigeria: this is what is possible when power is wielded with integrity, and authority tempered with empathy.

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     Governor Sani’s public expression of gratitude, particularly his affirmation of President Tinubu as a steadfast ally to Northern Nigeria, was not flattery cloaked in formality. It was an articulation of something deeper — recognition that in a polity where historical grievances often mutate into distrust, President Tinubu has chosen to govern as a national custodian, not a regional favourite. His policies do not favour zones; they empower citizens. His reforms do not pander to interests; they rebuild institutions.

    In this spirit, Kaduna now becomes more than a state; it becomes a case study. The Kaduna Peace Model has become a lodestar for community-led peacebuilding. Peace councils in each senatorial district, chaired by locally respected elders, function not just as advisory bodies but as living organs of reconciliation and mediation. This system did not emerge from a theoretical manual; it was hewn from the raw material of Kaduna’s own pain, and polished into policy by leadership that listens.

    And because the roots of violence often lie in neglect, the Uba Sani administration’s simultaneous investment in infrastructure, education, and health was not just smart—it was moral.

    Over 500,000 hectares of abandoned farmland have returned to cultivation. Agricultural commerce, once choked by insecurity, is thriving. As noted by Governor Sani, no fewer than 28 livestock-laden trailers now depart Birnin Gwari daily for Lagos—a statistic inconceivable just two years ago. The roads are busy not with fleeing families, but with traders, teachers, and students.

    This interdependence of peace and productivity is Kaduna’s unique contribution to Nigeria’s political lexicon. It teaches that security is not only the absence of violence, but the presence of opportunity. It insists that the fight against terrorism must also be a fight against poverty, illiteracy, and exclusion.

    And yet, with every accomplishment, the rhetoric remains humble. Governor Uba Sani’s tone throughout his speech — grateful, resolved, unifying — betrayed no triumphalism. It spoke instead to a philosophy of stewardship. When he recalled that Kaduna was “a land plagued by violence, banditry, and deep-seated mistrust,” it was not to bemoan the past, but to underline the magnitude of what has been overcome. When he declared that “governance in Kaduna has transcended partisanship,” he was not making a boast, but extending an invitation: Come, let us build together.

    This spirit of coalition-building — across ethnicities, faiths, and political lines — is the most radical thing happening in Kaduna today. It defies a cynical national narrative that too often suggests division is inevitable. It tells a different story: that when leadership is principled and proximity is honoured, peace is not a miracle; it is a consequence.

    It is this same logic that undergirds President Tinubu’s broader Renewed Hope Agenda. What some mistook for austerity — such as fuel subsidy removal — was in fact an audacious recalibration, long overdue. Under Governor Sani’s localized implementation, those national sacrifices have been softened with deliberate, targeted cushioning mechanisms: subsidized transport, education fee reductions, and health facility expansion. The pain is not denied, but neither is it wasted. It is converted into purpose.

    In return, Kaduna stands as both a beneficiary and a benefactor. It receives federal attention but also gives back a model—tested, adaptable, and inspiring. For other sub-national entities seeking to translate lofty aspirations into measurable outcomes, Kaduna’s trajectory offers a blueprint: one grounded in data, dialogue, delivery, and devotion to the people.

    Indeed, Kaduna today is a poem of paradoxes resolved: a once-besieged land now building the most expansive infrastructure in its history; a multi-ethnic melting pot that governs without ethnocentrism; a region once defined by its violence, now a pilot site for peace.

    And in this resurgence lies a political and moral message for the nation. In the words of Governor Sani: “Kaduna is more than a state; it is a microcosm of Nigeria’s diversity, challenges, and potential.” And if that be true, then let Kaduna’s renaissance be a rehearsal for Nigeria’s own.

    President Tinubu’s visit, framed in celebration but cloaked in symbolic gravitas, affirms this. His partnership with Governor Uba Sani is not a transaction of power, but a transmission of legacy — from a national leader forging paths at the federal level, to a state executive executing with granular brilliance.

    Together, their work invites a renewed political imagination — one in which governance is not the preservation of status quo, but the disruption of despair; not a rotation of failure, but a revolution of faith. And in Kaduna, that revolution has not only begun, it is flourishing.

    Dr. Auwalu Jamilu, a public policy expert & analyst, is also a freelance Journalist and resides in Kawo, Kaduna

  • Villains of democracy

    Villains of democracy

    Sycophancy, which sadly, has become part of our political DNA, as many will argue, is anyone’s game in a democracy. It is not many seasons ago that Tinubu’s fought a nasty battle for the Nigerian presidency. The battle was against children of anger, social media terrorists, failed politicians and journalists whose major tool of engagement was sycophancy. Today in power, if anything has changed, it is that for his party, the APC and other opposition parties, sycophancy remains a compelling weapon for subliminal battle for the minds of Nigerians.

    In recent times, the APC has assaulted the sensibilities of Nigerians by turning the president’s midterm review of his presidency, a period for sober reflection in view of punishing effects of the president’s unavoidable economic policies, to a jamboree. Favour seeking party members, defectors without ideological orientations who the president said must be welcomed to avoid ‘political malpractices’, ministers trying to cover up their inadequacies and even  hardworking and goal-setting ministers have found flattering the president to high heavens, an irresistible distraction.

    Nyesom Wike, who the president publicly described as an asset, you will think, does not need to flatter the president to high heavens. But not even the president’s expression of the nation’s deep appreciation while “thanking him for bringing Abuja to a level that compares favourably with great cities of the world”, could in a season of sycophancy, restrain him from re-naming his newly refurbished Abuja Conference Centre after the president.

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    I am sure the president cannot but feel scandalized by having to be hit on the face every day  by Bola Ahmed Tinubu International Conference Centre , And unfortunately, it is not of any relief that both his Yoruba culture or his Islamic faith frown at deification of living beings.

    The amateurish intervention of Senator Abdul-Aziz Yari, former governor of Zamfara State must have no doubt further irritated a president who hails from an area where people read meanings to ordinary greetings. Doing great damage to the president’s recent visit to grieving Benue where over 200 people had been mindlessly killed, Yari had clumsily said: “His decision to suspend everything he was doing is worthy of note”; adding as if he had ever been president that “If we understood the responsibilities associated with the office of the president, we would see the empathy in his decision to personally visit Benue. He could have delegated a high-powered team to visit and stand in for him but he decided to show leadership and identify with the people”.

    Yari should focus on his many EFCC and ICPC cases instead of adopting diversionary tactics including organizing prayers for the president. The truth however, is that sycophancy has always been the scourge of successive Nigerian’s administrations. As Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, the former governor of the Central Bank (CBN), put it during the 2013 public presentation of  Mallam Nasir el-Rufai’s controversial book, The Accidental Public Servant, “corruption is not the bane of Nigeria … but sycophancy.”

    Again, we can take a journey through memory.

    Ahmadu Bello, despite espousing high morality and intellectual virtues through his political career started to unconsciously arrogate to himself the status of a super-human being, fuelled by the usual loyalty of serfs to feudal lords. He started to regard his contemporaries – Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe, Chief Obafemi Awolowo and Prime Minster Tafawa Balewa as subordinates.

    With a gift of a horse to Zik and a copy of the Holy Quran to Balewa after independence, he gleefully declared that he had divided Nigeria between his two loyal lieutenants.  After Zik fell out with him following the 1964 constitutional crisis, Zik was effortlessly replaced with Chief S.L Akintola who received a gift of the sword. Awo, who he had sworn would pay for forcing him to campaign for votes among his subjects during the 1959 election, had been jailed for 10 years.

    He probably now saw himself as the new Uthman dan Fodio. In fact the story was told of how he was one evening walking with one of his trusted civil servants with some grazing cows retreating following their approach, he could not resist telling his subordinate that “even cows recognize my presence”.

    He had ignored Brigadier Ademulegun’s warning of the impending coup just as he did of Chief SL Akintola’s who chattered an aircraft on the January 14, 1966 to Kaduna warning the revered premier that “they might be coming to kill all of us tonight”.

    Prime Minister Tafawa Balewa seemed to have added to Ahmadu Bello’s air of invincibility when with dead bodies littering major streets of Western Region, he ignored University of Ibadan students plea that a state of emergency be declared. He chose to wait for the arrival of Ahmadu Bello from the hajj with the crisis eventually consuming both of them along with the best of our trained soldiers.

    Ironsi was also a victim of sycophants. Following the January 1966 coups, Ironsi was told by self-serving Igbo politicians that he alone could save Nigeria. He in turn told the rump of assembled ministers that “since he could not persuade Dr Nwafor Orizu, the acting president to make an appointment, he must assume supreme control of administration. He was later stampeded to turn Nigeria, a federal state, into a unitary state and centralization of regional bureaucracies.

    Realising the move as an attack on Ahmadu Bello controversial northernisation policies that saw to the exit of thousands of Igbo and British expatriates from northern bureaucracy by northerners, an ABU students’ led riot eventually ended Ironsi’s regime and life.

    The irony was that, sycophants who drove him to his untimely death following January 1966 Igbo pyric victory were behind Ojukwu’s Aburi demand for return of regionalism.  Gowon, speaking with Charles Aniagolu of Arise Television last week insisted the cause of the civil war was Ojukwu’s insistence not just on regionalism but regionalism of the military to be controlled by regional governors.

    General Gowon with his post-civil war mantra of “No victor no vanquished” and solemn undertaking to cede power to civilian administration was on track until sycophants within his cabinet led by the Pa Edwin Clark manipulated him to breach the promised hand-over date to civilian rule. That was all Murtala Muhammed needed to oust him out of power.

    Ibrahim Babangida took Nigeria through eight years of ‘transition without end” with the help of sycophants made up of politicians, Aso rock professors, journalists including Chidi Amuta who after writing IBB’s biography, Prince of the Niger declared that his “earlier plan to hand over power was a betrayal of the masses”. Others include traditional rulers from whom he acquired more traditional titles than any living or dead Nigerian leader.

    His greatest hour was the Fellowship of Nigerian Economic Society (NES), the most authoritative body of scholars on Nigerian economy. The award they said was for being “visionary in the management of the national economy”, just after Financial Times had accused him of frittering away $5b Gulf war oil windfall and IMF, World Bank and Paris Club had accused IBB of “fiscal indiscipline”.

    Sani Abacha was humoured to death by his decreed five parties dismissed as “five fingers of a leprous hand “by late Bola Ige; Daniel Kanu and his “Two-million youths earnestly ask for Abacha”, the loyalty medal- wearing generals including Jeremiah Useni, the Bamaiyi brothers, Aziza, Akhigbe, Abubakar etc. who for three years could not prevail on Abacha to call the meeting of Provisional Ruling Council.

    His other zealot worshippers who presented falsehood as unquestioning truth, include Ebenezer Babatope who told us “ Abacha regime was the best to happen to Nigeria”, Wole Oyelese, Dr Walter Ofonagoro and Emeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu, Abacha’s envoy to Europe to de-market President-elect MKO Abiola.

    Obasanjo was equally tamed by sycophants who made sure none of his legacy projects except the telephone revolution succeeded.  He swallowed the lie that Nigeria will cease to exist with his exit from power. Obasanjo, who assumed power in 1999 with goodwill of Nigerians, frittered away everything with his own hands following his third-term fiasco.

    President Buhari had within his government, sycophants who pretended to share his pan-Nigeria agenda while working for other tendencies including the promotion of Fulani agenda. There was Nasir El Rufai who would always kneel down to greet him while he allegedly encouraged a regime of ethnic cleansing in southern Zaria, Ababakar Malami who, while pretending to promote freedom, justice and equity for all Nigerians, was encouraging illegal occupation of government reserved forest in the West by armed Fulani criminals. Malami and his group succeeded in reducing Buhari, a leader with a pan-Nigeria outlook into a Fulani irredentist.

    But it is not all doom. Those close to President Tinubu insist that unlike our past leaders, he is clear-headed and cannot be distracted by sycophants falsely swearing by his name. And it is of little relief to flatterers that because of his tact and good breeding, he will not publicly or even privately shut flatterers down.

  • Tinubu pledges balanced infrastructural development

    Tinubu pledges balanced infrastructural development

    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has assured his administration will continue to prioritise infrastructural development in all parts of the country, stressing that such projects will be executed in a balanced and inclusive manner that uplifts communities, especially in rural areas.

    Speaking on Monday at the commissioning of the newly completed 15-kilometre A2–Pai Town Road in the Kwali Area Council of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Tinubu reaffirmed his commitment to equitable development and national integration.

    “This administration will continue to prioritize infrastructure in all zones. We will ensure that development is not lopsided, but balanced, inclusive, and targeted at lifting lives,” the President declare.

    The newly commissioned road, which connects the Abuja–Lokoja Expressway to Pai Town, is part of the 150 kilometres of roads completed or ongoing across the six Area Councils of the FCT since President Tinubu assumed office on May 29, 2023.

    The President noted that infrastructure only holds value when it directly benefits citizens, improves livelihoods, and creates opportunities. 

    “The road, the infrastructure development, means nothing if you don’t develop it to the benefit of our people. Indeed, this progress will continue to elevate our lives,” he said.

    Highlighting the strategic importance of the project, President Tinubu said the road creates a vital corridor for economic and social advancement. 

    “The commissioning of this newly constructed road… is both symbolic and strategic. It opens a new corridor for agriculture, commerce, education, and mobility—all necessary to strengthen our national economy from the grassroots up”, he said.

    He also acknowledged the longstanding neglect of many rural communities and said his government is determined to reverse that trend, saying “rural communities such as Pai make important contributions to Nigeria’s social and economic fabric, especially in food production and local enterprises, but their potential has been hindered by poor road access, isolation and neglect for far too long. Today, that narrative is changing.”

    While commending the FCT Minister for prioritising rural development, Tinubu urged residents to take ownership of the new infrastructure and protect it as a tool for community advancement.

    “You are doing commendable work in the underserved rural areas. Let this road serve as a pathway to growth and a bridge to a better life for farmers, traders, students, and youth”, he told the Minister.

    The President used the occasion to address the age-old challenge of tension between farmers and livestock herders, calling instead for collaboration and economic symbiosis. 

    “On my way, I observed the need for our great farmers and livestock owners to establish the opportunity for grazing and do what is necessary,” he said.

    He assured the Pai community that the Federal Government would support efforts to turn potential sources of conflict into platforms for prosperity, assuring “we will help you, we will work with you. We will convert what used to be a liability and a source of conflict into a means of prosperity.”

    The commissioning in Kwali followed President Tinubu’s earlier engagement in Sheda, where he flagged off a mechanised farming programme with the deployment of 2,000 tractors. 

    The road project, he noted, complements such efforts by improving access to markets and facilitating economic activity in previously hard-to-reach rural settlements.

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    In his speech, The FCT Minister, Wike, said some of the 150 roads so far constructed by the administration had already been commissioned.

    The FCT Minister reiterated the administration’s resolve to continue investing in infrastructure under the Renewed Hope Agenda, with the aim of transforming the FCT into a globally competitive capital city.

    He praised Tinubu for coming to PAI adding that; “Today, of all the commissions, this, for me, I consider very, very important. I recall that when I came to see you, I said, Mr. President, it would be very, very fine if you can make out time to visit one, at least, of the rural roads and see the people how joyous they will be. 

    “I’m sure if you look directly opposite you, you will see that the people are very, very, very happy. This also tells us that your emphasis is not just to improve infrastructure in the city, it is also to improve life and other infrastructure in the satellite town. I will state here for record purposes so that we will understand what you’ve done since you came on May 29, 2023. What you’ve done in the rural areas.

    “The number of roads you have constructed and the number of roads you are still constructing. I don’t want to talk about the issue of security and education. But let me tell you the history of this road. Through the Federal Council, we are awarded the contract for Pai, the boundary between Pai and Gomani. 

    “So, when we were coming for the fly-off, I was asking, where are we going to fly off this road? We are past 10-12 kilometers. So, when I got to the boundary between Pai and Gomani, from that to Gomani is 13 kilometers that is ongoing, before December, that will also be completed. So, I now ask, how do we get to that Pai, when this road is not constructed? It doesn’t make sense. All we would have done is, okay, let us do this, later we can go from Pai to Gomani. I thank God, today we are commissioning it. 

    “The contractor assured us that he will do everything. I said, can you include it in the celebration of Mr. President’s second year in office? And he said, yes, that he will use this to show his capacity and capability. I also want to thank them. Now, from Gomani to Yangoji is another 13 kilometers, which we have told the managing director of this company to make sure he starts work from Gomani to Yangoji. At the end of the day, At only this stretch you would have done about 45 kilometers of the roads in this area.

    “I want to inform you that all those roads have all been commissioned. All those six roads have all been commissioned. Today, I will read out what you have done so that everybody can hear, so that those who are doubting Thomas can go and check. These roads they are talking about, is it in existence or just mere propaganda? 

    “Your Excellency in 2024, you approved the construction of six emergency roads, and I will name them. One is the construction of Paikon Kore-Ibwa Road in Gwagwalada, nine kilometers. That road has been commissioned.

    “Your Excellency, today, we are in A2 to pai. Let me say, for this year’s commissioning, Your Excellency, we will be commissioning 10 kilometers of Aguma Palace-Radio-New Market Road in Gwagwalada. And then, Nyanya-Karshi dual Carriageway, 18 kilometers. We are doing the commission of 7.4 kilometers of Old Ushafa Road and rehabilitation of Lower Usuma Dam.

    “Your Excellency, we are very happy. So, we have done, if you calculate all, and the ongoing roads, and the ones completed, within the satellite towns, you’ve done not less than 150 kilometers of roads. You have been able to open most of the roads. If you came here before, you would have wondered, assuming there is crime, how will police enter here? How will security men enter here? It will not be possible.

    “But when you have given somebody an appointment, and you give him that support to actualize his job, there’s always happiness. And for us, we are very, very happy. The people too are happy. When the people are happy, you will be happy. But when the people are angry, you will not be happy. I’m sure, as you are leaving today, you will be very, very happy. Even when you get to the villa, you will be very, very happy”.

  • Tinubu’s administration boosts seabed mapping, blue economy drive

    Tinubu’s administration boosts seabed mapping, blue economy drive

    The federal government on Monday announced the establishment of the International Centre for Electronic Navigational Charts (ENC) West Africa Regional Office and Training Centre, a bold step towards deepening the country’s maritime capability and unlocking new economic frontiers.

    Minister of State for Defence Bello Matawalle made the announcement at the 2025 World Hydrography Day celebration and West African Hydrographic Summit held in Abuja.

    Matawalle, who represented President Bola Tinubu at the function, noted that with the centre’s establishment, Nigeria has joined a select group of nations like the United States of America, United Kingdom, Australia and Brazil, as hosts of regional ENC centres.

    He emphasised that the development has placed the country firmly on the global hydrographic map, adding that Nigeria was now positioned to tap into the $90million global market for Electronic Navigational Charts.

    “We expect to generate between $9 million and $12 million annually through chart validation, distribution and revenue management for international shipping clients,” Matawalle revealed.

    Themed “Seabed Mapping: Enabling Ocean Action”, the event attracted maritime experts, defence officials, students, and international stakeholders committed to strengthening hydrography in West Africa.

    Highlighting the importance of the seabed to national security and economic development, Matawalle described seabed mapping as a strategic imperative, stressing that the ocean floor holds the cables that power the digital world, the pipelines that fuel industry, and ecosystems critical to biodiversity.

    “Much of the seabed remains uncharted, unknown and therefore unprotected. What hydrographers do beneath the waterline enables safe navigation, coastal defence, climate science and blue economy development,” he added.

    Commending the National Hydrographic Agency (NHA) for its achievements since inception in 2021, Matawalle noted the body’s alignment with the goals of the International Hydrographic Organization (IHO) and its leadership in regional hydrographic innovation.

    According to him, the 2025 World Hydrography Day was all about shaping the future of the country’s oceans through tools, data and partnerships that allow for cleaner coastlines, safer navigation and sustainable exploitation of marine resources.

    He noted that seabed mapping was central to unlocking this potential of the country’s blue economy from identifying offshore wind energy zones to securing safe maritime trade routes and protecting sensitive marine habitats.

    Read Also: Labelling Tinubu’s administration ‘Yoruba government’ attempt to scuttle second term – Afenifere

    “Nigeria must leverage hydrography not only to secure our territorial waters but also to fuel economic transformation. Our coastal and riverine communities depend on how well we manage our marine environment,” said the Minister.

    He added that seabed mapping offers a gateway to resilience, growth, and intergenerational sustainability, aligning with the Tinubu administration’s broader agenda of economic diversification and national security.

    The Minister also praised the event’s inclusion of student essay competitions, industry exhibitions, and expert lectures, calling them vital to building a strong pipeline of local expertise in ocean science and maritime technology.

    “Let us keep investing in our youth-they are the future custodians of our waters. Let us ensure that no part of our waters remains uncharted, unsafe or unsustainable,” he said.

  • Hold governors accountable, not just Tinubu, APC chieftain tells Nigerians

    Hold governors accountable, not just Tinubu, APC chieftain tells Nigerians

    A chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Segun Ajibulu, has urged Nigerians to hold their governors accountable, not just President Bola Tinubu.

    Ajibulu said that there had been too much focus on the president with little or no attention on the governors who have been receiving huge allocations from the federal government.

    Speaking with newsmen in Ado-Ekiti on Monday, the APC chieftain said that it was time citizens scrutinised the activities of the state governments and demanded accountability in the management of funds allocated to them.

    Ajibulu said that while the President Tinubu-led administration has made efforts to keep the economy afloat, governors have a significant role to play in the welfare of their citizens.

    “A lot of money is coming to the states now, let’s hold our state governors accountable. Let them explain how they spend these humongous funds coming from the centre,” he said.

    The APC chieftain also urged Tinubu to ensure that the autonomy granted to local governments is enforceable, allowing people at the grassroots to feel the impact of governance.

     “I want Mr. President to ensure that the autonomy granted the Local Governments in Nigeria is enforceable. Many governors are still foot-dragging on the matter,” he said.

    He further suggested establishing a Price Control Agency to regulate prices and prevent exploitation by middlemen. “One thing I will suggest to Mr. President is to set up a Price Control Agency to check the exploitative activities of the middlemen,” he said.

    Read Also: UNAN urges Tinubu to rejig security architecture

    Ajibulu dismissed the notion that Nigeria is heading towards a one-party state, citing the example of former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s administration, where the PDP controlled about 30 states.

    “How can people be shouting about an attempt to turn Nigeria into a one-party state when that could not happen under President Obasanjo?” he asked.

    He urged opposition leaders to learn from Tinubu’s courage and leadership, rather than making unnecessary noise about their failure and inability to manage their ego and inordinate political ambitions.

     “I would advise that, rather than making unnecessary noise about their failure and inability to manage their ego and inordinate political ambitions, they should be humbled enough to learn from Tinubu on how he was able to stand and withstand Obasanjo’s political intimidation and harassment,” he said.

  • Okpebholo promises 2.5 million votes for Tinubu on 2027

    Okpebholo promises 2.5 million votes for Tinubu on 2027

    Edo State Governor Monday Okpebholo has promised to deliver 2.5million votes for the re-election of President Bola Tinubu in 2027.

    Governor Okpebholo said the votes would serve as a token of appreciation for the developmental strides witnessed across the state under his administration.

    Okpebholo spoke at Okaijesan Town Hall in Irrua, Esan Central Local Government Area, where he received thousands of defectors from the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC).

    The Edo Governor said the Edo APC remained an open and inclusive platform for all citizens committed to progress.

    He stated that the state’s development required collective input, adding that the party welcomed all new members eager to contribute to the advancement of Edo.

    Governor Okpebholo said the defectors joined the APC voluntarily after being moved by the visible impact of his administration’s developmental agenda.

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    “I want to commend the members of the PDP who have made the decision to join our great party, the APC,” he said. “This defection is a testament to the fact that the PDP has lost relevance in Esan Central, my own constituency. Today marks the political end of the PDP in this local government.

     “Their decision to align with our party is a clear endorsement of our direction and leadership.

    “In 2027, we will reward President Tinubu’s love for Edo with 2.5 million votes. The people have spoken through their actions. Edo is APC, and APC is the vehicle of our development under the Renewed Hope Agenda.

    “I will not fail you. I will continue to work diligently to ensure that Edo enjoys sustained development under my watch,” he concluded.

    Among key political figures that returned to the APC was a former Edo State APC Chairman, Anselm Ojezua, members of the Edo State House of Assembly, former local government chairmen, councillors, and former PDP leaders.

    Leader of the APC in Edo Central Senatorial District, Major General Cecil Esekhaigbe, assured the new members that the party does not discriminate, but offered a level playing field for all committed to the growth and unity of Edo State.

  • Tinubu launches distribution of 2,000 tractors to boost agric transformation

    Tinubu launches distribution of 2,000 tractors to boost agric transformation

    President Bola Tinubu on Monday flagged off the distribution of 2,000 modern tractors and over 9,000 agricultural implements to farmers across the country under the Renewed Hope Agricultural Mechanisation Programme.

    The official launch, held in Abuja, is part of a mechanisation initiative aimed at revolutionising agriculture, creating jobs, and driving rural economic development.

    The distributed assets include 2,000 tractors (varying in horsepower and configurations), 2,000 disc ploughs and harrows, and 1,000 disc ridgers.

    Others are 1,200 tractor trailers, 500 seed drills, 300 boom sprayers, 10 combine harvesters, 12 mobile workshop vehicles, and 9,022 sets of spare parts.

    The programme, initiated through a bilateral agreement with the Republic of Belarus, is set to bring over 550,000 hectares of farmland into production, generate more than two million metric tons of food annually, and create over 16,000 jobs across the country.

    Speaking, Tinubu stated that the distribution of farming tools is a strategic shift from subsistence farming to large-scale, technology-driven agriculture.

    “We made a promise, and today we are delivering on that promise.

    “Our goal is not only to feed ourselves but to become a global player in agriculture. Let this day go down in history as the beginning of Nigeria’s agricultural renewal,” he said.

    Reaffirming his administration’s commitment to food self-sufficiency and global competitiveness, Tinubu emphasised that increased agricultural productivity is vital to national stability and economic resilience.

    To support the rollout, a national training programme will be launched for farmers, operators, and technicians, with emphasis on proper equipment use, servicing, and maintenance.

    Additional features of the programme include GPS-enabled tracking systems, a structured repayment and repossession model, and funding partnerships with development finance institutions and non-interest banks.

    President Tinubu urged all stakeholders, state governments, service providers, and cooperatives to ensure the efficient and transparent deployment of the equipment.

    He said: “To all stakeholders receiving this equipment, deploy them with maximum efficiency. We will work with you, we will supervise you at various locations, and we will hold you accountable.

    Minister of Agriculture and Food Security, Abubakar Kyari, described the launch as the fulfilment of President Tinubu’s July 13, 2023, emergency declaration on food security.

    Read Also: UNAN urges Tinubu to rejig security architecture

    “We are shifting from hand hoe to horsepower, from manual effort to mechanised efficiency,” Kyari said.

    He acknowledged the key role of AFRA-DMCC, the Belarusian supplier, and hailed Belarus’s commitment to technology transfer, local training, and long-term support.

    He, however, expressed hope that the initiative will reduce Nigeria’s dependence on food imports, enhance nutrition, and empower a new generation of youth-led agripreneurs to drive innovation and growth in the agriculture sector.

    The Republic of Belarus was represented at the event by Deputy Prime Minister Viktor Karankevich and Foreign Minister Maxim Ryzhenkov, who led a high-level delegation in solidarity with Nigeria’s mechanisation drive.

    The distribution program is part of a five-year cooperation roadmap signed in June 2024 during Minister Kyari’s visit to Minsk.

  • Tinubu tasks media on national unity, ethical journalism as NUJ celebrates 70 years

    Tinubu tasks media on national unity, ethical journalism as NUJ celebrates 70 years

    …ex-Gov Osoba challenges impostors, demands digital adaptation in the newsroom

    …our stories should aim to heal and unite, not to divide or incite – NUJ President

    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has emphasised the pivotal role of the Nigerian media in fostering national unity, strengthening democracy, and shaping the country’s future, urging journalists to recommit to ethical journalism and nation-building.

    President Tinubu made the call at the 70th Anniversary Gala, Award Night, and Book Presentation of the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ), held at the Shehu Musa Yar’Adua Centre in Abuja.

    He was represented by the Minister of Information and National Orientation, Mohamned Idris.

    The Minister, who was the chief host of the event, hailed the enduring relationship between President Tinubu and the media, describing him as a staunch ally of press freedom.

    “President Bola Ahmed Tinubu is not just a friend of the media, but one whose democratic credentials were shaped in solidarity with Nigeria’s most courageous journalists. From the trenches of the June 12 struggle to the presidency, his affinity with the press remains unmatched,” Idris said.

    He urged media professionals to spotlight Nigeria’s democratic gains and progress stories to help consolidate the nation’s 26-year democratic journey and foster civic confidence in public institutions.

    “The media must take the lead in telling the story of Nigeria’s democratic achievements, in governance reforms, infrastructure growth, civic engagement, and socio-economic development,” Idris said.

    While reaffirming Tinubu’s unwavering commitment to press freedom, Idris highlighted the growing threats of fake news, disinformation, and the disruptive influence of artificial intelligence on journalism practice.

    “The rise of generative AI and deepfakes poses a direct challenge to credible journalism. In this era, ethical journalism is not just important, it is essential,” he warned.

    He disclosed that the Federal Government, in partnership with UNESCO, is establishing a world-first Category-2 Media and Information Literacy Institute in Abuja, a landmark initiative aimed at promoting media responsibility and literacy in the digital age.

    “When operational, this Institute will serve as a transformative hub for building ethical journalism and informed citizenship in Nigeria,” he announced.

    He also pledged the government’s willingness to partner with the NUJ on matters of journalists’ welfare, digitisation, gender inclusion, and institutional support.

    Also speaking at the landmark event, elder statesman and veteran journalist, Chief Olusegun Osoba, called on the Federal Government and NUJ leadership to urgently tackle the menace of fake journalism in Nigeria.

    “Mr. President, you have a challenge. Can you ensure we now have an updated, verifiable database of genuine members of the Nigeria Union of Journalists? We must identify and weed out those parading themselves falsely as journalists,” the former Ogun State governor charged.

    Osoba warned that the credibility and future of the profession are at risk if impostors continue to undermine professional standards, noting that NUJ remains the mother body, describing other affiliates of NUJ as “clubs”.

    He stressed the importance of professionalism and integrity, especially as the country navigates the challenges of digital media.

    Reflecting on his career, Osoba recounted his transition from analogue to digital journalism, urging practitioners to embrace innovation. “I was once an analogue journalist, but today I can proudly tell you that I am a digital reporter. Change is inevitable. Journalists must adapt to survive.”

    He encouraged the media to stand firm against misinformation, uphold truth and public accountability, and honour the legacy of fallen heroes of the press.

    “Our profession is under siege from partisan interference and the erosion of ethical values. But we must continue to stand firm on the side of fairness and public interest.”

    Also speaking, NUJ President Comrade Alhassan Yahaya hailed the Union’s 70-year journey as a testament to professionalism, patriotism, and the power of journalism to shape national development.

    He recalled how the Union, founded on March 15, 1955, began as a platform to advocate for journalists’ welfare but evolved into a powerful institution at the forefront of national discourse and democracy.

    Abdullahi described the NUJ’s Platinum Jubilee as a historic moment of celebration, reflection, and renewed commitment to defending the role of journalism in Nigeria’s democratic journey.

    “Our 70th anniversary is more than just a commemoration of our past,” he said. “It is a rallying cry for the future we envision, a future rooted in ethical journalism, responsible innovation, and unrelenting advocacy for press freedom.”

    He noted that the NUJ’s growth is reflected in its widespread presence across Nigeria’s 37 state councils, the formation of affiliate bodies like NAWOJ, NGE, and SWAN, and its historic role in chronicling Nigeria’s civil war, coups, democratic transitions, and current reforms.

    “We have stood with the nation in its darkest and brightest hours,” he said.

    Amid ongoing insecurity in parts of the country, Yahaya charged journalists to maintain ethical standards, particularly in conflict reporting.

    “Our stories should aim to heal and unite, not divide. We must report with empathy, accuracy, and responsibility,” he said, while reaffirming the Union’s commitment to press freedom and constitutional democracy.

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    In the same vein, the Chairman of the NUJ @ 70 Organising Committee, Dr Abimbola Oyetunde, described the celebration as a landmark moment in the union’s history.

    “I am deeply moved by the overwhelming success of this celebration. It reflects the enduring spirit of the NUJ and the vital role the media continues to play in Nigerian society,” she said.

    She extended heartfelt appreciation to media houses, government dignitaries, and past NUJ and NAWOJ leaders for their support.

    “We are especially grateful for the comprehensive live coverage by NTA, AIT, FRCN, VON, and other stations like TVC, Arise, as well as many online platforms, which ensured Nigerians everywhere could share in this milestone,” she added.

    The event, themed “Celebrating Seven Decades of Journalistic Excellence,” brought together government officials, media executives, veteran journalists, and union leaders in a colourful celebration of press freedom and national impact.

    Awards were conferred on selected state governors for their media-friendly policies and peace-building initiatives, while seasoned journalists received plaques of honour for their lifetime contributions.