Tag: tinubu

  • Group hails Tinubu for youth inclusion, Southeast development drive

    Group hails Tinubu for youth inclusion, Southeast development drive

    The Southeast Renewed Hope Agenda (SERHA) has commended President Bola Tinubu for what it described as deliberate and commendable inclusion of young people in his cabinet.

    The National Coordinator of SERHA, Belusomchukwu Enwere, made the commendation in Enugu at the weekend during the group’s Christmas food items and palliatives distribution exercise.

    Enwere noted that it was heart-warming to see youths under the age of 40 actively participating in the administration of President Tinubu, stressing that the era where young people were merely tagged “leaders of tomorrow” had given way to a new reality where they now occupy positions of responsibility.

    According to him, the president’s decision to entrust governance to young Nigerians reflects confidence in their capacity and signals a positive shift in national leadership.

    The SERHA national coordinator also applauded the president for initiatives targeted at the Southeast, particularly the establishment of the Southeast Development Commission, which he said demonstrated commitment to inclusive development.

    “We commend the president for engaging young people in his cabinet. Youths under 40 years are part of his administration, and it is a thing of joy that young people are now taking charge,” Enwere stated.

    He further praised the president for efforts that have led to a reduction in food prices, explaining that the palliative distribution was designed to complement the administration’s drive to ease the burden on Nigerians during the festive season.

    Enwere said SERHA decided to key into the president’s Renewed Hope initiative by distributing food items, wrappers and other essentials to bring relief and happiness to families at Christmas.

    “We are here to celebrate with our people because food is essential to every family. The president wants Nigerians to be happy, and what we are doing today is massive,” he added.

  • Re: Is Tinubu relocating Nigeria’s capital to Lagos, piece by piece?

    Re: Is Tinubu relocating Nigeria’s capital to Lagos, piece by piece?

    By Victor Okebunmi

    “When a man is cursed by the gods, they strip him of peace, deny him sleep, and turn him into a midnight town crier shouting at his own reflection.” – African Proverb.

    This proverb captures, in full, the strange and unfortunate spectacle Nigerians witnessed in the late hours of Christmas Day (11:34pm to be precise). At a season when the nation was largely at peace with itself, families travelling freely without fuel scarcity, markets bustling, parents shopping for their children, homes filled with laughter, food, prayers, goodwill, and the spirit of love, one former unfortunate governor, named Nasir El-Rufai @elrufai, chose to spend the season consumed by bitterness. Instead of joining millions of Nigerians in celebrating a rare festive period without panic buying or endless petrol queues, he sat awake in what can only be described as political discomfort, amplifying an opinion piece attacking President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, GCFR. The coward lacked the courage to write the piece himself, too timid to put his name to the bile. Instead, he outsourced his bitterness to a hired hand and then, in a fit of nocturnal anxiety, rushed to post it on social media at midnight on Christmas night, a timing that exposes restlessness, suppressed rage, and a profound inability to accept a political reality he no longer controls, one that has permanently confined him to the graveyard of irrelevance.

    This rejoinder is not written to trade insults, but to restore facts, logic, and perspective, and to do so in clear, simple language that most will understand. Context matters deeply here. The opinion article titled “Is Tinubu relocating Nigeria’s capital to Lagos, piece by piece?” was not written by disgruntled El-Rufai. He merely amplified it. Men with conviction write their arguments openly, attach their names to them, and defend them publicly. Men unsure of themselves hire others, hide behind borrowed words, and then distribute those words quietly in the dead of night. If El-Rufai truly believed in the substance of the claims, he would have written them himself, signed them boldly, and stood by them. Instead, he outsourced the task and chose the most symbolic night of goodwill and peace to push division. That choice alone speaks volumes about motive.

    The national atmosphere at the time makes this even more revealing. Nigerians are, for once, enjoying a festive season without the familiar stress of fuel scarcity. Petrol stations are open and orderly. Transportation is moving. Food prices are trending downward in many markets compared to previous months. Traders are smiling, buyers are bargaining, and families are travelling to villages and cities alike. Terrorists and bandits are being decisively neutralised, sent to their final reckoning under sustained and precise aerial bombardment. Children are home from school, parents are present, and people are sharing meals and laughter. Churches and mosques are preaching love, forgiveness, and hope. In sharp contrast, El-Rufai appears locked in a personal war with reality, obsessively fixated on President Tinubu’s success, unable to rest or celebrate, and seemingly determined to poison a season of peace with bitterness. The contrast is not accidental; it is instructive.

    At the heart of the opinion piece is the claim that President Bola Ahmed Tinubu is quietly relocating Nigeria’s capital from Abuja to Lagos. This claim is not just wrong; it is fundamentally dishonest. Nigeria’s capital remains Abuja in law, in practice, and in reality. The President lives and works in Abuja. The Presidency is in Abuja. The National Assembly conducts its business in Abuja. The Supreme Court sits in Abuja. All foreign embassies remain in Abuja. No bill has been proposed to change the capital. No constitutional amendment has been debated. No referendum has been contemplated. In simple, everyday terms, nothing about Nigeria’s capital has moved. The article deliberately confuses administrative efficiency with constitutional relocation, hoping readers will not notice the difference.

    READ ALSO; 10 things to know about late actress Allwell Ademola

    Lagos has always been Nigeria’s commercial and economic nerve centre. This is not a Tinubu-era development. It was so under military rule. It was so under Obasanjo. It was so under Yar’Adua. It was so under Jonathan. It was so under Buhari. Businesses, banks, ports, airlines, manufacturers, investors, and markets are heavily concentrated in Lagos and its surrounding corridors. That reality did not suddenly appear in 2023. Federal agencies operating actively from Lagos are responding to economic gravity, not political favouritism.

    Take FAAN, for instance. Lagos airports handle the overwhelming majority of Nigeria’s passenger and cargo traffic. This is a statistical fact that predates the Tinubu presidency by decades. Keeping operational decisions closer to where most flights, passengers, and revenue are generated is common sense. It reduces delays, improves coordination, and saves costs. Nobody described this as “relocating the capital” when similar operational dominance existed under previous administrations.

    The same applies to the Central Bank of Nigeria. Financial regulation, banking supervision, payments systems, and consumer protection naturally gravitate towards where financial institutions operate. Nigeria’s banking industry is concentrated in Lagos. This is how global finance works. New York is home to Wall Street, yet Washington remains the capital of the United States. No serious analyst claims those countries secretly relocated their capitals. To suggest otherwise in Nigeria’s case is either ignorance of global norms or deliberate misrepresentation.

    The Bank of Industry exists to support industrial growth, manufacturing, and private sector development. Industries, factories, investors, and supply chains are clustered heavily around Lagos and the South-West industrial corridor. Locating operational headquarters closer to industry is a governance decision rooted in practicality. It does not strip Abuja of its status, nor does it transform Lagos into a capital city. These agencies remain federal in mandate, funding, and reach. The idea of “institutional drift” is a narrative invention, not a factual development.

    The most glaring intellectual failure in the opinion piece is the attack on the Lagos–Calabar Coastal Highway. One must ask plainly and without apology: was El-Rufai expecting a coastal road in the North? The project is called a coastal road because it follows Nigeria’s coastline. Coastal literally means along the coast of a sea or ocean. The North, by geography, does not have a coastline. Geography is not discrimination. Nature is not biased. You cannot accuse a shoreline project of regional favouritism simply because the shoreline exists in one part of the country. That argument collapses the moment it is spoken.

    The coastal highway is designed to protect Nigeria’s fragile shoreline from erosion, connect coastal states, unlock tourism potential, facilitate maritime trade, and open up new investment corridors across the South-South and South-West. It serves national economic interests, not regional sentiment. At the same time, substantial infrastructure investments are ongoing in the North, including roads, rail expansion, agriculture, power projects, and massive security spending concentrated in northern theatres due to ongoing insecurity. These realities are ignored because they do not serve the narrative of grievance. Bitterness has a way of narrowing vision.

    The misuse of budget figures in the article is another example of deliberate distortion. Comparing the cost of a multi-year, multi-state federal infrastructure project to the annual budgets of individual states is dishonest, if not criminal. Federal projects are designed to last decades, serve millions of people across state boundaries, and are financed through layered funding mechanisms. State budgets, on the other hand, primarily fund salaries, pensions, healthcare, education, and basic services. They are not meant to deliver national-scale infrastructure. By the logic of the article, no country should ever build highways, bridges, railways, or dams, because such projects always cost more than provincial budgets can afford. That is not economic reasoning; it is propaganda aimed at stirring resentment.

    The article also expresses sudden concern about poverty, insecurity, displacement, and low literacy rates in the North. These problems did not emerge overnight, and they certainly did not begin under President Tinubu. The obvious and uncomfortable question is: who governed Nigeria over the last forty years or more, who shaped national security policy, and who sat at the centre of power during that time? Rapscallion El-Rufai was not an outsider either. He was a key participant in recent history, hobnobbing and sneaking from one bedroom to another, backstabbing his fellow executives, according to former President Olusegun Obasanjo, alongside his catastrophic, inglorious, poverty-generating tenure in Kaduna. To speak as if he has just discovered northern suffering is political amnesia. You cannot preside over decline, contribute to policy failure, and then rebrand yourself as a shocked commentator when the consequences become undeniable.

    The most dangerous aspect of the opinion piece is not its poor logic, but its intention. It seeks to reduce governance to ethnic arithmetic and development to regional rivalry. It attempts to pit North against South, Lagos against the rest of Nigeria, and geography against national unity. This is not statesmanship; it is mischief. It is the politics of division deployed by those who can no longer shape outcomes constructively.

    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu is governing pragmatically. He is placing institutions where they function best, investing based on geography and economic logic, stabilising the economy, and confronting inherited challenges with realism. That approach is producing visible results, including relative fuel stability, improved market confidence, enhanced security, and renewed economic activity. That success is the nightmare that leaves our Man Friday frozen in envy, suffering acute erectile dysfunction, and the vertically, intellectually, and politically stunted El-Rufai completely unhinged.

    Nigeria’s capital is not being relocated. Nigeria is being rebuilt. And that, more than anything else, explains the anger. El-Rufai is not fighting for federalism. He is fighting irrelevance. When a man loses power, he fights geography. When he loses arguments, he hires writers. When he loses peace, he posts at midnight on Christmas Day. Meanwhile, Nigerians are moving forward, shopping, travelling, celebrating, reconnecting with family, spreading love, and finding Renewed Hope. And that reality is the loudest rebuttal of all.

    • Okebunmi is Senior Special Assistant (Publicity), Renewed Hope Global.

  • We supported Tinubu when it was difficult – Wike

    We supported Tinubu when it was difficult – Wike

    …says we will keep supporting him now that is easy

    Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Nyesom Wike on Saturday reaffirmed his support for President Bola Tinubu.

    Wike recalled that during his tenure as Governor of Rivers State, he and his supporters openly and boldly supported Tinubu to win the Presidential election in 2023 when it was difficult in Rivers State.

    He vowed to keep supporting the President now that things are easy.

    The minister spoke in Ochigba, in Ahoada East Local Government Area (LGA) of Rivers State, during a meeting with People Democratic Party (PDP), stakeholders, when he attended the end of the year thanksgiving service, organized by former Deputy Speaker of the House of Representatives, Rt. Hon. Chibudom Nwuche in his hometown.

    He assured the stakeholders that their struggle will never be in vain, urging them to continue to support Tinubu despite intimidation in the state.

    Wike said those who supported Tinubu before the 2023 presidential election, which later led to his victory are recognized, compared to those who are presently shouting ‘on your mandate we shall stand’.

    The minister said, “I want to say thank you for being there for us all through these years. We know those who are ungrateful. Thank you for standing with us. Remember in 2023, When it was tough. Nobody knows what will happen in that election. So many people were saying that it will be difficult for the President Bola Tinubu to win then. So many people were not able to come out openly and boldly to vote for Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

    “But we all met to say in politics you must take a stand, you must take a decision whether it will be good or bad, but we know at the end of the day it will be good. And now it is good. We did it when it was difficult to say on your mandate we stand. And to the glory of God, we stood today. You are the ones who made the President strong as far as Rivers State is concerned.

    “So, all these people now that you are seeing singing on your mandate we shall stand, that time when they were needed most, they couldn’t sing that and could not come out to say vote for Tinubu. Now that we stood and voted for him and River State won, I tell you all your struggle will not go in vain. We have come to let you know that we are still strong. Nigerians know us, when we take a decision, we have taken the decision.

    “We don’t make decisions based on what people have seen, we make decisions that we are convinced and we believe that this will happen. From January next year, let me inform you that we will start politics. You know me, I believe in ‘agreement is agreement’. Anything you know you cannot do, don’t say it. Nobody can use us. Whatever you have agreed in the morning, you must agree in the night.

    “So don’t worry yourself about those who are shouting on your mandate we shall stand. We have shouted when it matters most. If we did not shout then for him to have won, would they have shouted now? I have never hidden my position, Nigerians know and you can attest to it. After President Bola Tinubu, the next most abused politician is me. Why are they abusing me because they know that ‘agreement is agreement’. When we have agreed on something let us implement it. If we cannot implement it, then don’t let us talk about it.

    “For us we have said that we will continue to support Ahmed Bola Tinubu. That is the position you took and that is the position you are going to still take. I came to reassure you that no problem.”

  • Why I’m most abused politician after Tinubu by Wike 

    Why I’m most abused politician after Tinubu by Wike 

    …minister faults Fubara’s inaugurated projects 

    The Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Abuja, Chief Nyesom Wike, has described himself as the most abused politician in the country today after President Bola Ahmed Tinubu. 

    The Minister also declared on Saturday that from January 2026 politics will start in Rivers State. 

    Wike spoke during a special thanksgiving service organised by the Chairman, South-South Development Commission (SSDC) and former Deputy Speaker, House of Representatives, Prince Chibudom Nwuche at his Ochiba country home in Ahoada East Local Government Area of Rivers State on Saturday. 

    The former Rivers state governor declared his unwavering stance in support for President Tinubu, insisting that he never reneged on any agreement he entered into.

    Wike used the opportunity of the thanksgiving to commend the people of Ahoada East and Ahoada West councils  for backing  him to support the President. 

    He said,  “This is the first local government we are coming to say thank you for being there for us all through these years

    “You know, like the pastor said today, God detaste those who are ungrateful. And so for what you’ve done for us, for standing with us, we say thank you. Thank you, and thank you.

    “You remember, in 2023, when it was tough, nobody knows what will happen in that election. Somebody was saying that it will be difficult for Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu to win that election.

    “So many people were not able to come and vote for Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu. But we all met, as leaders here, and you, to say in politics, we must take a stand and defend. That we must take a decision, whether it is good or bad.

    “But we know at the end of the day it will be  good. But we did it. When it was tough, for people to say, on your mandate we stand. We stood firm and said on your mandate we stand and to the glory of God, we stood.

    “And today he is the President and Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.”

    He thanked the people for standing firm, saying, “So you are the ones who made the mandate to be strong as far as Rivers State is concerned.”

    Wike condemned persons, who could not stand on Tinubu’s mandate when it was tough to do so but suddenly defected to his party at rosy period to declare support for the president.

    He said, “So all these people you are now seeing singing on your mandate we stand, that time, when they were needed most, they couldn’t sing that. They couldn’t come out to say, vote for Ahmed Bola Tinubu 

    “Now that you stood and voted for him, and even said, woman, I tell you, all your struggle will not go in vain. So we have come to tell you to remain strong.

    “Nigerians know us. When we take a decision, we have taken a decision. We don’t take decision based on what people have seen.

    “We take a decision based on what we are convinced. We believe that this will happen. You stood firm even when you were not in power. You stood firm even when you were not in council.

    “You were harassed. You said, no, no despite the harassment, I will still stand where I am. So for us, it will be unfair that we cannot come and tell you, thank you.

    “You know me, I believe in agreement. Anything you know you cannot do, don’t say it, don’t even enter into it. From January next year politics will start. 

    “Nobody can use us. So let me say yes and agree later. No, I can’t do that.Whatever you have agreed in the morning, it was agreed in the night. So, don’t be worried yourself about who was shouting or your mandate will start. We have shouted when it mattered most.

    “If we did not shout it then would they shout now? Would they have shouted now? I have never hidden my position. Nigerians know. And you can attest to it.

    “We have never wavered in support of Asiwaju Bola Tinubu. If you want to know after Bola Tinubu, the next most abused politician is me. Why are they abusing me? Because they know agreement is what? 

    “When we have agreed on something, let’s implement it. If you cannot implement it, don’t even come to reach it. So for us, we have decided before now, long ago, that we must make sure we continue to support Ahmed Bola Tinubu. 

    “That is the position you took. And that is the position we are going to continue to take. So on behalf of our team we want to thank you, our foot soldiers who have stood firm in spite of all provocations.”

    Wike said some politicians in the home front, who went to get something from the governor, resorted to abusing and casting aspersions at him. 

     He also said most of the projects inaugurated recently by his successor had reached advanced stage and handed over to him in the spirit of continuity

    He said, “At the appropriate time, we will talk. This project you commissioned who handed it over to you? We did it because we believe are a team. 

    “If we know that we will not be a team, we would not have done it. But we did it, and we have no regrets. I have no regrets

    “One thing you should know about Nigerian politics. You know, there is a universal state every time. How you can make money now for a universal state is like that. You go and say, this enough is enough for Wike.

    “Who deal with Wike, they drop (dish out money)  If you don’t say you will deal with Wike, you won’t get him. I hear we have about  N600billion somewhere. 

    “So just say we will deal with Wike

     The moment you pronounce that word, something will come down, ” the FCT said in a mocking tone. 

    Earlier,  Nwuche explained that the people of Ekpeye Kingdom would continue to support Wike, for  the numerous projects he attracted to the area while he was Governor.

    He said, “For the first time, Ekpeye had seven first-class stools. Before now, we only had one. Governors came and left. None of them agreed to elevate our stools. Only him (Wike) did that for us.

    “So, I’ve seen people who have used power wrongly. They forget that there’s karma. And that’s why I say Nigerians should be careful in choosing leadership. We know our leaders very well. Ask us about them. 

    “There are many of them who came into leadership by accident. They have no business being there because they have no human feelings.”

    He said people, who found themselves in power should use it to elevate the people and better their lots and “not to oppress them, to break their homes and go. “

    He said, “Nobody who follows Wike can say that he hasn’t been impacted on positively. Nobody. That’s why you see, no matter where he goes, we shall go there. “

  • Akwa Ibom backs Tinubu’s directive on direct funding for local governments

    Akwa Ibom backs Tinubu’s directive on direct funding for local governments

    The Akwa Ibom state government has said it is fully aligned with President Bola Tinubu’s directive that funds should be paid directly to local governments.

    The Commissioner for Information, Mr Aniekan Umanah, stated this on Friday, noting that Governor Umo Eno has consistently supported financial autonomy for local government councils.

    Umanah said that even before the Supreme Court judgment which affirmed direct allocation to councils, Governor Eno had never interfered with local government funds.

    He maintained that the governor is a strong advocate of grassroots development, a commitment he said has enabled local governments in the state to thrive.

    “Governor Umo Eno is a lover of grassroots development, and that is why he fully supports the President’s directive for funds to be sent directly to local governments,” Umanah said.

    “Local governments in the state are executing projects, awarding contracts and carrying out empowerment programmes at the grassroots because the state government does not tamper with their funds.

    “To the governor, President Tinubu’s renewed directive is not just an instruction, but a moral duty for all governors across the country to allow the third tier of government to be financially independent.

    “Visit any of the 31 local government areas of the state and you will confirm that this administration aligns with the President’s mandate to uplift local communities,” he added.

  • 2027: Why Tinubu deserves southeast, Nigerians’ votes – Group

    2027: Why Tinubu deserves southeast, Nigerians’ votes – Group

    The South East Renewed Hope Agenda (SERHA) has reaffirmed its total support for President Bola Tinubu ahead of the 2027 general elections.

    The group cited Tinubu’s administration’s inclusive governance, developmental strides, and people-oriented policies as reasons Nigerians, particularly those in the Southeast, should renew his mandate.

    The group’s position was made known during the distribution of Christmas food items to residents of Ebonyi State, an event organized by SERHA to spread goodwill during the festive season.

    Speaking at the event, the National Coordinator of the South East Renewed Hope Agenda, Belusochukwu Enwere, described the exercise as a practical demonstration of compassion and the true spirit of Christmas. 

    He said the initiative aligned with President Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda, which is focused on inclusiveness, welfare, and restoring hope to Nigerians at the grassroots.

    According to Enwere, Ebonyi State and the entire Southeast have benefited significantly from the Tinubu administration.

    He stressed that the President has consistently shown concern for the wellbeing of the people through empowerment programmes, infrastructure development, and social interventions.

    “Last Christmas, we had a similar distribution. Six months ago, there was empowerment for our people, and today again, we are here to ensure that families have something to eat this festive period,” he said.

    He noted that the President remains committed to seeing Nigerians flourish.

    Also speaking, the Deputy National Coordinator of SERHA, Chukwudi Anyanwu Ocha, said the Renewed Hope Agenda has repositioned the Southeast from the margins to the center of national development. 

    He pointed to the establishment of the Southeast Development Commission and its investment-driven company, describing it as a landmark achievement.

    Ocha further highlighted ongoing and revived infrastructure projects such as the Eastern Rail Line, key federal appointments held by Southeast indigenes, and the student loan scheme, which he said has given thousands of young Nigerians access to education without financial stress.

    “As ambassadors of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, it is our responsibility to take these achievements to the grassroots,” he said, urging members to actively campaign and mobilize support for the President ahead of 2027.

    He emphasised that the only way to reciprocate the President’s goodwill and developmental efforts is to work tirelessly to ensure his return for a second term.

    The event ended with goodwill messages, as SERHA leaders wished Nigerians a Merry Christmas and a prosperous New Year, while reaffirming their commitment to a stronger Southeast and a more prosperous Nigeria under President Tinubu’s leadership.

  • Tinubu’s aide feeds 10,000 Oyo residents for Christmas

    Tinubu’s aide feeds 10,000 Oyo residents for Christmas

    An aide to President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, Dr. Abisoye Fagade, through his Oyo Si Maa Dun Network (OSMD Network) has aligned with the Renewed Hope Agenda of President Tinubu to feed over 10,000 families across Oyo State.

    People from Ibadan, Ibarapa, Oyo town, Saki, Iseyin, and Ogbomoso, benefitted from Fagade’s expression of people-centred leadership.

    Fagade, who is the Director-General, National Institute for Hospitality and Tourism (NIHOTOUR), stated that OSMD Network brought Asiwaju Cares directly to people of the state.

    According to him, the initiative was a national vision which translated into local impact and reinforcing the Renewed Hope promise that governance must be felt in homes, streets, and communities.

    He said as part of the Christmas Day intervention, OSMD distributed hot meals to thousands of people on the streets, provided dry food items to households, gave cash gifts to support dignity, relief, and small-scale needs during the festive season.

    He noted that the outreach reflected core values of the Renewed Hope Agenda, social inclusion, shared prosperity, compassion, and a firm commitment towards leaving no Nigerian behind.

    According to him: “The Renewed Hope Agenda is not just a policy framework; it is a moral obligation to care for the people. Asiwaju Cares means leadership that shows empathy and delivers practical support where it matters most.”

    Beyond Christmas, the OSMD Network remains committed to initiatives that strengthen livelihoods, empower youth, and promote shared growth fully aligned with the Renewed Hope vision of building a more caring, productive, and united Nigeria.

  • U.S. precision air strike in Sokoto approved by Tinubu – Information Minister

    U.S. precision air strike in Sokoto approved by Tinubu – Information Minister

    The Minister of Information and National Orientation, Alhaji Mohammed Idris, said the successfully conducted precision strike operations against two major Islamic State (ISIS) terrorist enclaves was approved by President Bola Tinubu.

    Idris said the operation that targeted terrorist within the Bauni forest axis of Tangaza Local Government Area, Sokoto State was in close coordination with the Government of the United States of America,

    This is contained in a statement issued by Idris in Abuja on Friday.

    “Intelligence confirmed that these locations were being used as assembly and staging grounds by foreign ISIS elements infiltrating Nigeria from the Sahel region, in collaboration with local affiliates, to plan and execute large-scale terrorist attacks within Nigerian territory.

    “The precision strike operations were executed between 00:12 hours and 01:30 hours on Friday, December 26, 2025, following explicit approval by the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, Bola Tinubu,

    “The operation was carried out under established command and control structures, with the full involvement of the Armed Forces of Nigeria and under the supervision of Ministers of Defence and Foreign Affairs, as well as the Chief of Defence Staff.

    “The strikes were launched from maritime platforms domiciled in the Gulf of Guinea, after extensive intelligence gathering, operational planning, and reconnaissance.

    “A total of 16 GPS-guided precision munitions were deployed using MQ-9 Reaper unmanned aerial platforms, successfully neutralising the targeted ISIS elements attempting to penetrate Nigeria from the Sahel corridor,” Idris said.

    According to him, in the course of the operation, debris from expended munitions fell in Jabo, Tambuwal Local Government Area of Sokoto State, and in Offa, Kwara State, near the premises of a hotel.

    He added that no civilian casualties were recorded in both locations, and relevant authorities promptly secured the affected areas.

    “The Federal Government of Nigeria reiterates its unwavering resolve to confront, degrade, and eliminate terrorist threats, particularly those posed by transnational extremist networks seeking to undermine Nigeria’s sovereignty and security.

    “Nigeria remains fully aligned with its strategic partners and Friends of Nigeria in executing coordinated actions aimed at ensuring lasting peace, border security, and regional stability.

    “The Federal Government assures all Nigerians that it remains firmly in control of the national security architecture and is fully committed to the protection of lives and property.

    “Citizens are urged to remain calm and vigilant as decisive actions continue against all terrorist groups threatening the nation,” Idris added.

    (NAN)

  • Why Southwest Muslims back Tinubu— Siyanbade

    Why Southwest Muslims back Tinubu— Siyanbade

    Alhaji Murisiku Abidemi Siyanbade chaired the committee that organised the 2025 General Assembly of the Muslim Ummah of South West Nigeria (MUSWEN) recently in Gbongan, Osun State. In this interview, he reflects on the event and comments on some pressing national issues.

    How would you describe the recent MUSWEN General Assembly? Did it meet your expectations?

    Alhamdulillah, it was a very successful programme. Most of our invited guests were in attendance, and the highlight was the presidential presence of His Excellency, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, ably represented by the Minister of Marine and Blue Economy, Alhaji Isiaka Gboyega Oyetola. He delivered the President’s message, appealing for Nigerians’ support for ongoing efforts to revamp the economy and steer the country toward the promised land. We deeply appreciate Mr President, and we use this opportunity to reaffirm that, as our brother from Yorubaland, he enjoys the unwavering support of MUSWEN, the umbrella body of all Muslim leaders and faithful across the South West states of Ekiti, Lagos, Ogun, Ondo, Osun and Oyo.

    Mr President will recall that even during his campaign, on Sunday, December 11, 2022, we hosted him at a town hall meeting at the Jogor Centre in Ibadan, where South West Muslim leaders expressed their support for his presidential bid. After his victory, we issued several statements thanking Almighty Allah for his emergence as President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. He also received us in audience in October 2023. Though we have been unable to meet again due to his tight schedule, we still look forward to another engagement with him soon.

    We see his genuine efforts to restore buoyancy to the economy and industrialise Nigeria. The current security challenges, in our view, are temporary. We stand by him in the difficult policy decisions necessary to steer the country out of its current difficulties. By the grace of Allah, he will succeed, and Nigeria will enjoy peace, bi idhnillah ta’ala. We were particularly pleased to learn of the joint security initiative between Nigeria and the United States. Insha Allah, it will yield positive results and help accelerate peace and development. We pray for the President and reassure him that he can always count on the support of South West Muslim leaders.

    I must also express gratitude to his representative, Minister Oyetola. We urge him to convey our appeal to Mr President for support in raising N2 billion for MUSWEN’s economic empowerment projects, scholarships, and training in emerging fields such as artificial intelligence and robotics. These initiatives will uplift our people across the six South West states, significantly reducing poverty. We rely on him to deliver this message to our amiable President.

    Our keynote speaker, the governor of Nasarawa State, Alhaji Abdullahi Audu Sule, also deserves commendation. He travelled all the way from Nasarawa to deliver a thought-provoking address on ‘Nigeria’s Economy: Any Hope for the Masses?’ His message was inspiring and renewed our collective optimism. As a friend of the President and a loyal party man, he reaffirmed his commitment to President Tinubu’s vision for Nigeria and supported our initiative with a generous donation. We deeply appreciate him.

    We owe special appreciation to His Eminence, Alhaji Dr Muhammad Sa’ad Abubakar, the Sultan of Sokoto, Amirul-Muminin and President-General of the Nigerian Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs (NSCIA). He fixed the date for the General Assembly last year, remained committed to it, and honoured us with his full presence. He has already fixed next year’s edition for Ibadan. His Eminence is a father to us all, a bridge-builder across the Niger, a promoter of unity among Muslims and Nigerians in general, and a beacon of peace. May Allah grant him continued sound health and a long, fruitful reign.

    Our host, Dr Abdur-Rauf ’Wale Babalakin, deserves immense gratitude. He supported us financially and provided the magnificent hall, arguably the largest in Nigeria, which we partitioned to accommodate our less-than-1,000 delegates. He also made available a 44-room facility for delegates who stayed overnight, complete with dinner and breakfast, and sponsored lunch for 1,000 people during the programme. Everything he did was of exceptional quality. We are proud to have him as chairman of our Board of Trustees.

    We also appreciate our father, the Asiwaju Musulumi of Yorubaland, Alhaji Dr Khamis Tunde Badmus, who hosted us warmly before the event, provided generous financial support, and offered his blessings. Although he could not attend due to a brief illness, he sent his goodwill. May Allah grant him enduring good health. Our father, the Aare Musulumi of Yorubaland, Alhaji Dawud Makanjuola Akinola, also sent a strong delegation led by the President of the Muslim Association of Nigeria, Prof. Dhikrullah Yagboyaju. We are grateful.

    We extend our gratitude to our host governor, Senator Nurudeen Ademola Adeleke. Before the event, he received us warmly, provided accommodation in Osogbo, and arranged shuttle buses. Though he could not attend due to a tight schedule, he delegated three commissioners, a gesture the keynote speaker noted as rare. We appreciate him and pray for God’s guidance as he continues his work in Osun State. We also thank Governor Mohammed Umar Bago of Niger State, who sent three representatives and has consistently shown remarkable generosity.

    Our pioneer Executive Secretary, Prof. Dawud Noibi, attended the event at the age of 93 and stayed throughout. His dedication is inspiring. The Iya Adinni of Yorubaland, Mama Sekinat Adekola, also honoured us with her presence despite her age. We are grateful.

    On behalf of the organising committee, I thank the MUSWEN President and Deputy President-General (South), NSCIA, Alhaji Rasaki Oladejo, whose support made our work easier. His trust and freedom granted to the committee contributed significantly to what many have described as the most successful MUSWEN General Assembly to date. He is wonderfully uncommon. During the planning stage, he led all our courtesy visits and accompanied us to every nook and cranny we needed to go, often cancelling his prior engagements. At 80 years old, he provided total support and a positively enabling environment that made the occasion a huge success. We deeply appreciate President Oladejo. We thank Deputy President I, Alhaji Rafiu Adisa Ebiti; Deputy President II, Alhaji Thabit Wale Sonaike; and the immediate past Executive Secretary, Prof. Muslih Tayo Yahya.

    We also appreciate the members of our Board of Trustees, including Professor Yusuf Olaolu Ali, the Kuliyan Geri of Ilorin Emirate. Their presence added colour to the event. Our royal fathers, the Timi of Ede, Oba Munirudeen Lawal Laminisa I; the Olowu of Owu Kingdom, Oba Prof. Saka Adelola Matemilola; and Honourable Justice Moshood Adeigbe representing the Ataoja of Osogbo, honoured us richly. Delegates from across Ekiti, Lagos, Ogun, Ondo, Osun and Oyo states were also fully present.

    It was truly an occasion for gratitude. We thank Almighty Allah for the resounding success of the programme.

    How close did MUSWEN come to realising its N2 billion target at the General Assembly?

    We received a significant number of pledges. I have also conveyed a message through the Minister of Marine and Blue Economy to the President, and we are still expecting the contributions of Mr President and the Minister. Once these pledges are redeemed, we should be able to meet our target.

    Our bank details remain available on various social media platforms for those who still wish to contribute. We are hopeful that our invited dignitaries will respond positively, because our aim is to support indigent youths in the South West. We want our impact to be felt so that government can recognise our efforts and open access to opportunities, locally and internationally, that will benefit our people. We also expect increased patronage at next year’s programme in Ibadan, insha Allah.

    What can members expect from MUSWEN after the General Assembly?

    One of our immediate plans is to relocate our secretariat from Iwo Road to GRA, Agodi. We have a parcel of land in GRA, Agodi, measuring over 5,000 square metres, and we intend to build our secretariat there. We hope to begin the project as soon as possible. The current building at Iwo Road will then be put to commercial use to generate rental income.

    You commended the President for his efforts in addressing the security situation in the country, but recent incidents, especially kidnappings, suggest that challenges remain. What advice would MUSWEN offer the President?

    The Yoruba say, “The witch cried yesterday and the child died today. Who does not know the link between the two?” That proverb captures the gravity of what we face. We must bridge the gap between Christian and Muslim leaders—leaders, not ordinary Christians and Muslims—because they are the ones whose actions have triggered many of the issues we are witnessing.

    Secondly, Asiwaju Tinubu is highly popular beyond the South West. He is well accepted in the North, and many people believe there is light at the end of the tunnel. Those losing politically from this reality are inciting the public and creating problems. Some even use their international connections to paint an unnecessarily bleak picture of Nigeria.

    Security had significantly improved, but shortly after the Trump “gun-ablazing” comment, we suddenly saw incidents that had not happened for months—abductions in Kebbi and Niger States occurring within days of each other. Some politicians and religious figures are behind these developments. Still, I am confident that our President is diplomatic and endowed with wisdom. I believe God is guiding him.

    Despite national challenges, the South West has remained relatively peaceful and harmonious in terms of religious relations. What should be done to sustain this?

    That stability largely remains, except for some unfortunate instances where people in government misuse their power to oppress others, especially Muslims. Today in the six South West states, all the governors, Biodun Oyebanji (Ekiti), Lucky Aiyedatiwa (Ondo), Babajide Sanwo-Olu (Lagos), Dapo Abiodun (Ogun), Seyi Makinde (Oyo), and Ademola Adeleke (Osun), are Christians, even though Adeleke joins Muslims at prayer ceremonially. Muslims in the region remain calm and tolerant. Even where we face challenges, such as the hijab issue for schoolgirls, we handle them peacefully. We may still have our grievances, but they will not lead to crisis, insha Allah.

    Are Muslims in the South West upset that all the governors in the region are Christians?

    If we were disturbed, then we would not be true Muslims. Nothing happens by accident. Allah, the Creator of all worlds, seen and unseen, controls all affairs. He tells us in the Qur’an that He alone grants power to whom He wills. We cannot dictate to God whom He should choose. This understanding made it easy for us to invite all six governors to our General Assembly. They are not Muslims, but we know Allah makes no mistakes. If He has given them power, we hope they will not oppress us. If they do, we turn to God and also engage them to demand our rights. So, we are not disturbed, and we will not allow politics to sway us.

    Would you prefer to see a different scenario, one where Muslims emerge as governors?

    Of course, we are happiest when Muslims are governors. But we have had Muslim governors who denied us our rights, just as we have had Christian governors who upheld them. This is why I say God makes no mistakes. While we desire Muslim leadership, we submit ultimately to Allah’s will.

    What is MUSWEN doing to encourage Muslims to perform their civic duties, such as voting, and to take a meaningful interest in governance?

    MUSWEN has several standing committees, including the Political and Good Governance Committee led by Prof. Rashid Aderinoye. The committee sensitises our people to obtain their PVCs promptly and discourages them from accepting money from politicians before voting. Instead, they are urged to vote according to their conscience. The committee also provides political education.

    So yes, we are active in this area, but always within the bounds of civility and without engaging in partisan politics.

  • Tinubu assures Nigerians of security gains, backs state policing

    Tinubu assures Nigerians of security gains, backs state policing

    President Bola Tinubu has assured Nigerians that the ongoing recalibration of the nation’s security architecture would soon yield results capable of restoring public confidence.

    The President gave the assurance on Friday during a meeting with a delegation of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), led by its President, Archbishop Daniel Okoh, at his Lagos residence.

    This is contained in a statement issued by Presidential Spokesperson, Mr Bayo Onanuga.

    Tinubu said his administration remained committed to security sector reforms, including the establishment of state and community policing to address emerging threats across the country.

    “The mood of the nation is peaceful, although our ungoverned spaces are so large. The challenge is real, but we will surmount it,” the president said.

    He called on religious leaders to support government efforts through cooperation, vigilance and prayers, noting that some security measures required time to mature.

    “We are very religious. We are prayer warriors. We need your focus, vigilance and cooperation,”

    The president said state and community police would become a reality once the National Assembly completed the required legislative processes.

    “Community and State Police will be a reality once the National Assembly completes the required legislative inputs,” he said.

    Tinubu explained that delays in acquiring military hardware were affecting public perception, noting that such equipment was expensive and not readily available.

    “Military hardware is difficult to replace. It is expensive and not available off the shelf,”

    He disclosed that Nigeria had ordered four attack helicopters from the United States, while also engaging Turkey for additional support.

    “Our orders for four attack helicopters from the United States of America will take some time to arrive. We have approached Turkey for assistance,”

    The president said the government remained resolute despite the guerrilla tactics of bandits and insurgents, stressing that restoring peace remained a top priority.

    On the recent abduction and release of school children in Niger and Kebbi States, Tinubu urged vigilance, saying the safety of the victims was paramount.

    “The rhetoric on how the children were released or what happened to the kidnappers is secondary; the end justifies the means,” he said.

    Responding, CAN President, Okoh, assured Tinubu of the Christian community’s support for his administration.

    “You are our President. The Church has no choice but to support you and your administration,” Okoh said.

    He commended the administration’s efforts at improving security, noting that the 2025 Christmas season was notably peaceful.

    “This Christmas happened to be the first in many years that we were not woken up by midnight calls reporting attacks on churches,” he said.

    Okoh also praised Tinubu’s engagement with religious bodies, saying it had strengthened trust between the government and the Church.

    “Your commitment has closed the gap between the government and the Church. This has never happened before,” he said.

    The CAN President appealed for sustained engagement through CAN’s structures at the 774 local government areas and requested the release of funds to the Christian Pilgrims’ Board.

    Other members of the delegation included Vice President of CAN, Rev. Dr Stephen Panya Baba; President, Pentecostal Fellowship of Nigeria, Bishop Francis Wale Oke; and representatives of the Catholic, Methodist and African Instituted Churches.

    (NAN)