Tag: tinubu

  • North Central APC backs Tinubu on Amupitan’s appointment

    North Central APC backs Tinubu on Amupitan’s appointment

    •Rallies support for new INEC chief

    The North-Central All Progressives Congress (NC APC) Forum has thrown its weight behind President Bola Tinubu’s appointment of Prof. Joash Amupitan, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), as Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), describing him as the right choice to deliver credible and transparent elections.

    In a statement on Saturday by its Chairman, Saleh Zazzaga, a member of the APC Presidential Campaign Council in the 2023 elections, the Forum also commended the National Council of State for approving Amupitan’s appointment.

    “The North-Central APC Forum welcomed with a sense of pride, the appointment of one of the region’s illustrious sons, Professor Joash Ojo Amupitan, SAN, as Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC.

    “This development is further attestation of the calibre of human resources in the North-Central, which are readily available to be deployed in various critical and sensitive roles for the development of the nation.

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    “We commend President Bola Tinubu for appointing Professor Amupitan as Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission, and also thank the National Council of State for approving the appointment,” the Forum stated.

    Zazzaga noted that Amupitan’s track record as an accomplished legal scholar and practitioner, university administrator and illustrious academia shows that he has the capacity for the job, especially as he is coming on board at a time Nigerians are getting set for crucial elections.

    “Having followed Professor Amupitan’s career over the years and taking special note of his distinguished role at the University of Jos, where, as a Professor of Law, he has lectured and mentored generations of lawyers and academics for over three decades, we can assure President Tinubu and Nigerians that Professor Amupitan will deliver credible, free and fair elections all through his tenure as INEC chairman.

    “We are certain that Professor Amupitan is the right choice, a round peg in a round hole and we call on all Nigerians, particularly stakeholders in the electoral system, to give him all the necessary support to succeed in this crucial national assignment.”

  • Presidency releases comprehensive list of 175 beneficiaries of Tinubu’s clemency, pardon

    Presidency releases comprehensive list of 175 beneficiaries of Tinubu’s clemency, pardon

    The Presidency on Saturday released a comprehensive list of the beneficiaries of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s presidential pardon, clemency and commutation of sentences to 175 convicts and former convicts, which was released on Thursday after the National Council of State meeting.

    A statement by Special Adviser to the President on Information and Strategy, Bayo Onanuga, gave an exhaustive breakdown of the categories of the President’s prerogatives, comprising full pardons, posthumous pardons, clemency, sentence reductions and commutations from death to life imprisonment.

    The exercise of mercy for the 175 convicts and former convicts, including military officers, public officials, remorseful drug offenders, illegal miners, and foreigners, followed the recommendation of the Presidential Advisory Committee on the Prerogative of Mercy chaired by the Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Prince Lateef Olasunkanmi Fagbemi.

    The committee’s report, as presented by Fagbemi, recommended various forms of reprieve: pardon for 17 persons (including 11 posthumously), clemency for 82 inmates, commutation of sentences for 65, and conversion of death sentences to life imprisonment for seven others.

    According to the statement, President Tinubu granted mercy to many of the convicts for reasons including remorse, good conduct, old age, and enrolment in reform programmes such as the National Open University of Nigeria (NOUN). 

    Those granted full presidential pardon are Nweke Francis Chibueze, Dr. Nwogu Peters, Mrs. Anastasia Daniel Nwaoba, Barrister Hussaini Alhaji Umar, Ayinla Saadu Alanamu and Hon. Farouk M. Lawan.

    President Tinubu also issued posthumous pardons to nationalist Sir Herbert Macaulay, whose 1913 colonial conviction has now been set aside; Major-General Mamman Jiya Vatsa, executed in 1986 over an alleged coup plot; and to the Ogoni Nine—Ken Saro-Wiwa, Saturday Dobee, Nordu Eawa, Daniel Gbooko, Paul Levera, Felix Nuate, Baribor Bera, Barinem Kiobel and John Kpuine—who were executed in 1995. 

    The Presidency separately honoured the victims in the Ogoni case—Chief Albert Badey, Chief Edward Kobaru, Chief Samuel Orage and Chief Theophilus Orage—while making clear they are not beneficiaries of the clemency or pardon.

    Eighty-two inmates received presidential clemency after demonstrating remorse, reform or other qualifying circumstances, among whom was and Maryam Sanda, who was convicted and sentenced to death by hanging by Justice Yusuf Halilu at the Federal Capital Territory High Court in Abuja for the murder of her husband, Bilyaminu Bello, in November 2017. 

    Sanda’s sentence was later upheld by the Court of Appeal on December 4, 2020.

    Others who received presidential clemency included Aluagwu Lawrence; Ben Friday; Oroke Michael Chibueze; Kelvin Christopher Smith; Azubuike Jeremiah Emeka; Akinrinnade Akinwande Adebiyi; Ahmed Adeyemo; Adeniyi Jimoh; Seun Omirinde; Adesanya Olufemi Paul; Ife Yusuf; Daniel Bodunwa; Fidelis Michael; Suru Akande; Safiyanu Umar; Dahiru Abdullahi; Hamza Abubakar; Rabiu Alhassan Dawaki; Mujibu Muhammad; Emmanuel Eze; Bala Azika Yahaya; Lina Kusum Wilson; and Buhari Sani. 

    Read Also: Tinubu hails Dabiri-Erewa on birthday, commends service to nation

    Others are Mohammed Musa; Muharazu Abubakar; Ibrahim Yusuf; Saad Ahmed Madaki; Ex-Corporal Michael Bawa; Richard Ayuba; Adam Abubakar; Emmanuel Yusuf; Edwin Nnazor; Chinedu Stanley; Joseph Nwanoka; Johnny Ntheru; John Omotiye; Nsikat Edet Harry; Jonathan Asuquo; Prince Samuel Peters; Babangida Saliu; Adamu Sanni; Abdulkarem Salisu; Abdulaziz Lawal; Abdulrahman Babangida; Maharazu Alidu; Zaharadeen Baliue; Babangida Usman; Zayyanu Abdullahi; Bashir Garuba; Imam Suleman; Abbeh Amisu; Lawani Lurwanu; Yusuf Alhassan; Abdulahi Isah; and Zayanu Bello.

    Habeeb Suleman; Jubrin Sahabi; Shefiu Umar; Seidu Abubakar; Haruna Abubakar; Rabiu Seidu; Macha Kuru; Zahradeen Aminu; Nazipi Musa; Abdullahi Musa; Habibu Safiu; Husseni Sani; Musa Lawali; Suleiman Lawal; Yusuf Iliyasu; Sebiyu Aliyu; Halliru Sani; Shittu Aliyu; Sanusi Aminu; Isiaka Adamu; Mamman Ibrahim; Shuaibu Abdullahi; Sanusi Adamu; Sadi Musa; Haruna Isah; and Abiodun Elemero also received presidential clemency.

    The Presidency disclosed that Senator Ikra Aliyu Bilbis signed an undertaking to be responsible for the rehabilitation and empowerment of all the convicted illegal miners who were granted clemency.

    In addition, sixty-five inmates had their terms of imprisonment reduced for reasons such as remorse, good conduct, educational attainment, age or ill-health. 

    Those whose sentences were reduced are Yusuf Owolabi; Ifeanyi Eze; Malam Ibrahim Sulaiman; Shettima Maaji Arfo; Ajasper Benzeger; Ifenna Kennechukwu; Mgbeike Matthew; Patrick Mensah; Obi Edwin Chukwu; Tunde Balogun; Lima Pereira Erick Diego; Uchegbu Emeka Michael; Salawu Adebayo Samsudeen; Napolo Osariemen; Patricia Echoe Igninovia; Odeyemi Omolaram; Vera Daniel Ifork; and Gabriel Juliet Chidimma.

    Others are Dias Santos Marcia Christiana; Alhaji Ibrahim Hameed; Alhaji Nasiru Ogara Adinoyi; Chief Emeka Agbodike; Isaac Justina; Aishat Kehinde; Helen Solomon; Okoye Tochukwu; Ugwueze Paul; Mutsapha Ahmed; Abubakar Mamman; Muhammed Bello Musa; Nnamdi Anene; Alhaji Abubakar Tanko; Chisom Francis Wisdom; Innocent Brown Idiong; Iniobong Imaeyen Ntukidem; Ada Audu; Bukar Adamu; Kelvin Oniarah Ezigbe; Frank Azuekor; and Chukwukelu Sunday Calisthus.

    Also affected are Professor Magaji Garba; Markus Yusuf; Samson Ajayi; Iyabo Binyoyo; Oladele Felix; Rakiya Beida; Nriagu Augustine Ifeanyi; Chukwudi Destiny; Felix Rotimi Esemokhai; Major S. A. Akubo; John Ibiam; Omoka Aja; Chief Jonathan Alatoru; Umanah Ekaette Umanah; Utom Obong Thomson Udoaka; Jude Saka Ebaragha; Frank Insort Abaka; Shina Alolo; Joshua Iwiki; David Akinseye; Ahmed Toyin; Shobajo Saheed; Adamole Philip; Mathew Masi; and Bright Agbedeyi.

    Seven inmates on death row had their sentences commuted to life imprisonment on account of good conduct and remorse. They are Emmanuel Baba; Emmanuel Gladstone; Moses Ayodele Olorunfemi; Abubakar Usman; Khalifa Umar; Benjamin Ekeze; and Mohammed Umar.

    The Presidency explained that the exercise covers a wide range of offences and circumstances—from narcotics and economic crimes to unlawful mining and homicide—and is intended to balance justice with compassion while acknowledging genuine efforts at reform. 

    It added that, beyond correcting individual cases, the exercise also addresses historic grievances such as the colonial conviction of Sir Herbert Macaulay and the 1995 executions in Ogoniland, even as the victims in that episode were formally honoured without being listed among the pardon or clemency beneficiaries.

  • Energy scholar Danladi lauds Tinubu’s administration reforms in oil and gas upstream

    Energy scholar Danladi lauds Tinubu’s administration reforms in oil and gas upstream

    …says Nigerians are satisfied with NUPRC’s performance

    A university don and energy governance scholar, Prof. Josiah Danladi, has commended President Bola Tinubu for what he described as a “bold and transformative recalibration” of Nigeria’s oil and gas upstream sector.

    Speaking at the Citizens Connect Conference in Lagos, Prof. Danladi said the President’s leadership has revived public confidence in the sector through reforms anchored on transparency, accountability, and data-driven governance.

    “For decades, the oil and gas sector symbolised both our promise and our pain. We have heard stories of corruption, inefficiency, and missed opportunities. Yet today, there is a new story unfolding — a story of reform, renewal, and restoration,” he said.

    “Under the administration of President Bola Tinubu, and through the diligent leadership of the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) led by Engr. Gbenga Komolafe, the sector has been reborn on the firm foundation of the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA). What Nigerians are witnessing today is not luck; it is leadership — structured, deliberate, and data-driven.”

    Prof. Danladi noted that the reforms are beginning to yield tangible results across the value chain. 

    According to him, “in just two years, NUPRC has demonstrated what happens when political will meets professional excellence. The Commission has generated over ₦12.25 trillion in revenue for the federation within this short span — an unprecedented achievement reflecting the efficiency of new monitoring systems and enforcement mechanisms.”

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    The university don highlighted the far-reaching impact of fuel subsidy removal, which he said has freed up resources now being channelled into developmental priorities.

    “The policy has led to 200 per cent increase in allocations to states and local governments, road projects, hospital projects, power sector development, student loan scheme and increment in NYSC allowances,” he said. 

    Expanding on the broader economic benefits, Prof. Danladi added that Nigeria is witnessing a gradual transition from being a net importer to a potential net exporter of refined petroleum products.

    “Dormant oil blocks are returning to productivity, production reporting is now electronic, and field development plans are strictly monitored for compliance. The era of discretionary approvals and rent-seeking is fading away, replaced by process, predictability, and performance,” he said.

    “Equally important is the focus on gas—the transition fuel for Nigeria’s economic future. Under the Gas Flare Commercialisation Programme, investors are now turning environmental liability into economic opportunity. We are reducing waste, protecting our planet, and creating jobs.

    “These are not abstract policy shifts. They are the building blocks of a more transparent and sustainable energy future—and they are happening under President Tinubu’s watch.”

    According to Prof. Danladi, reforms in the oil and gas industry are only meaningful if they translate into better living conditions for citizens. 

    He said the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) has reshaped not only the governance framework but also the relationship between government, corporations, and host communities.

    “The Petroleum Industry Act did not only restructure institutions; it redefined relationships—between government, industry, and the communities that bear the weight of extraction. Under Komolafe’s leadership, the Host Community Development Trusts (HCDTs) have become the bridge between promise and delivery,” he said.

    “More than ₦358 billion has so far been remitted to these trusts, funding over 500 community projects in education, healthcare, road construction, and youth empowerment across oil-producing regions. For the first time, host communities are not treated as afterthoughts—they are partners. The principle is simple: those who live with the consequences of resource extraction must share in its benefits.

    “This is what President Tinubu envisioned when he speaks about Renewed Hope. Hope that is not poetic but practical; hope that builds hospitals, powers schools, and brings opportunity to communities long forgotten.”

    Prof. Danladi said the renewed emphasis on transparency and accountability has restored investor confidence in Nigeria’s oil sector.

    “Transparency has also become a defining feature of the new order. NUPRC’s electronic reporting platforms allow real-time production tracking and cargo declaration—cutting out leakages that once drained our national purse. The days of guessing how much crude Nigeria produces are gone. The data now speaks for itself,” he said.

    “The Commission has also introduced robust systems for measuring flare gas, tracking royalty payments, and enforcing environmental standards. This is governance at work—silent, methodical, transformative.

    “International rating agencies and investors now describe Nigeria’s oil regulatory framework as more predictable and investor-friendly than at any time in the past decade. The reforms have positioned our country as an emerging energy investment hub on the continent.”

    Prof. Danladi stressed that the gains of the past two years must be protected through continuity and focus. 

    “These achievements did not emerge in a vacuum. They are the product of a reform-minded administration that prioritised competence over complacency. But every reform is a journey, not an event—and journeys can be interrupted,” he stressed.

    “The truth is that what we have gained in the last two years can easily be lost if the focus shifts from reform to rhetoric. Nigeria cannot afford to go backwards. We must protect this momentum by ensuring that the same political will that birthed these achievements is renewed in 2027.”

    He said Nigerians are increasingly satisfied with the performance of the NUPRC, describing it as one of the most effective and forward-looking regulatory institutions under the Tinubu administration.

  • Tinubu congratulates interface Africa on £1.5m NextGen Innovation Challenge win

    Tinubu congratulates interface Africa on £1.5m NextGen Innovation Challenge win

    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has congratulated Al’amin Muhammed Idris, Chief Executive Officer of Interface Africa, on the company’s victory at the NextGen Innovation Challenge, where it emerged winner with a £1.5 million cash award.

     Interface Africa, representing Kaduna State, clinched the top prize at the grand finale of the competition held on Thursday at the Hilton London Paddington.

    The company was recognised for its innovative solar financing solutions aimed at providing affordable clean energy access to small businesses across Africa.

    Read Also: Alleged N33.8b fraud: Court admits ex-power minister Mamman’s confessional statement

    In a statement issued on Friday by his Special Adviser on Information and Strategy, Mr. Bayo Onanuga, President Tinubu commended the firm’s commitment to advancing sustainable development and economic inclusion through renewable energy.

     The President described the feat as a testament to the boundless creativity and ingenuity of Nigerian youths, reaffirming his administration’s resolve to harness their innovative potential through deliberate policies and programmes under the Renewed Hope Agenda.

     “The innovative potential of Nigerian youths is limitless, and we will continue to create opportunities to harness and catalyse this vital resource,” the President stated.

     The NextGen Innovation Challenge, organised by the National Board for Technology Incubation (NBTI) in partnership with UKALD London, is a national initiative inspired by President Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda.

    It aims to nurture homegrown innovation and support young entrepreneurs in developing scalable solutions to local and global challenges.

    President Tinubu also commended the other 104 participants in the competition, urging them to remain steadfast in their drive to innovate, improve lives, and shape the future of humanity.

  • Tinubu hails Namadi Sambo on turbaning as Sardaunan Zazzau

    Tinubu hails Namadi Sambo on turbaning as Sardaunan Zazzau

    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has congratulated former Vice President Namadi Sambo on his turbaning as the Sardaunan Zazzau by the Emir of Zazzau, His Royal Highness, Alhaji Ahmed Nuhu Bamalli.

    The investiture, which took place on Saturday, October 11, marks the conferment of one of the most prestigious traditional titles in Northern Nigeria, symbolizing trust, honour, and service to humanity.

    In a statement issued by his Special Adviser on Information and Strategy, Bayo Onanuga, President Tinubu described the title as a testament to the Emirate’s confidence in Sambo’s “wisdom, integrity, and commitment to society’s progress.”

    The President lauded the former Vice President’s record of humility, statesmanship, and dedication to national development, noting that the title of Sardaunan Zazzau underscores his deep-rooted service to both his community and the nation at large.

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    “The President describes the honour as a recognition of Sambo’s exemplary leadership and contributions to national development.

    “The President acknowledges Sambo’s record of humility, statesmanship and dedication to humanity, noting that his well-deserved investiture as Sardaunan Zazzau further underscores his deep-rooted service to his community and the nation”, the statement said.

    President Tinubu also commended the Emir of Zazzau for upholding the noble tradition of honouring citizens whose character and leadership reflect the values of unity, service, and integrity.

    He urged the former Vice President to continue to inspire younger generations and to work with traditional and community leaders toward advancing peace, stability, and development across the country.

  • Southwest group lauds Tinubu’s transformative reforms in oil, gas sector

    Southwest group lauds Tinubu’s transformative reforms in oil, gas sector

    Reform-driven citizens under the banner of the Citizens Connect Conference have lauded President Bola Ahmed Tinubu for his transformative achievements in Nigeria’s oil and gas sector.

    Speaking at the maiden edition of the conference held in Lagos, the Convener, Charles Abakpa Onoja, said the President’s reforms have restored national confidence in the sector, setting it on a path of renewal and transparency.

    In his opening remarks, Onoja stated, “Let us begin where much of Nigeria’s story has always been written — our oil and gas sector. For decades, this sector symbolized both our promise and our pain. We have heard stories of corruption, inefficiency, and missed opportunities. Yet today, there is a new story unfolding — a story of reform, renewal, and restoration.”

    He commended the administration’s commitment to implementing the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA), noting that under President Tinubu and the leadership of the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) led by Engr. Gbenga Komolafe, the sector has been revitalized through structured and data-driven governance.

    READ ALSO: Amupitan: From academia to umpire

    Onoja highlighted that in just two years, the NUPRC generated over ₦12.25 trillion in revenue for the federation — an unprecedented milestone that demonstrates the impact of improved monitoring and enforcement systems.

    The conference, which drew participants from the six Southwestern states, provided a platform to examine the ongoing reforms and their effects on national development.

    Guest speaker Prof. Yemi Oke (SAN) and other experts commended the government’s implementation of the PIA and described President Tinubu’s approach as decisive and reform-oriented.

    Prof. Oke outlined the benefits of fuel subsidy removal, noting a 200 percent increase in allocations to states and local governments, as well as expanded funding for road construction, hospital upgrades, power projects, the student loan scheme, and higher NYSC allowances.

    He also cited the broader economic ripple effects of the reforms — including Nigeria’s transition toward becoming a net exporter of refined petroleum products, increased private refinery investments, accelerated gas and LPG/CNG projects, foreign exchange savings, currency stability, and enhanced fertilizer production.

    He said, “Dormant oil blocks are returning to productivity, production reporting is now electronic, and field development plans are strictly monitored for compliance. The era of discretionary approvals and rent-seeking is fading away, replaced by process, predictability, and performance.

    “Equally important is the focus on gas—the transition fuel for Nigeria’s economic future. Under the Gas Flare Commercialisation Programme, investors are now turning environmental liability into economic opportunity. We are reducing waste, protecting our planet, and creating jobs.

    “These are not abstract policy shifts. They are the building blocks of a more transparent and sustainable energy future—and they are happening under President Tinubu’s watch.”

    According to Oke, a reform is only meaningful when it touches lives. He said the Petroleum Industry Act not only restructured institutions; it redefined relationships between government, industry, and the communities that bear the weight of extraction. He said under Komolafe’s leadership, the Host Community Development Trusts (HCDTs) have become the bridge between promise and delivery.

    “More than ₦358 billion has so far been remitted to these trusts, funding over 500 community projects in education, healthcare, road construction, and youth empowerment across oil-producing regions. For the first time, host communities are not treated as afterthoughts—they are partners. The principle is simple: those who live with the consequences of resource extraction must share in its benefits.

    “This is what President Tinubu envisioned when he spoke about Renewed Hope. Hope that is not poetic but practical; hope that builds hospitals, powers schools, and brings opportunity to communities long forgotten.

    “Transparency has also become a defining feature of the new order. NUPRC’s electronic reporting platforms allow real-time production tracking and cargo declaration—cutting out leakages that once drained our national purse. The days of guessing how much crude Nigeria produces are gone. The data now speaks for itself.

    “The Commission has also introduced robust systems for measuring flare gas, tracking royalty payments, and enforcing environmental standards. This is governance at work—silent, methodical, transformative.

    “The world has noticed. International rating agencies and investors now describe Nigeria’s oil regulatory framework as more predictable and investor-friendly than at any time in the past decade. The reforms have positioned our country as an emerging energy investment hub on the continent.

    “These achievements did not emerge in a vacuum. They are the product of a reform-minded administration that prioritised competence over complacency. But every reform is a journey, not an event—and journeys can be interrupted.

    “The truth is that what we have gained in the last two years can easily be lost if the focus shifts from reform to rhetoric. Nigeria cannot afford to go backwards. We must protect this momentum by ensuring that the same political will that birthed these achievements is renewed in 2027.”

  • NDYM commends Tinubu, Akpabio, Wike for restoring democratic governance in Rivers

    NDYM commends Tinubu, Akpabio, Wike for restoring democratic governance in Rivers

    The Niger Delta Youth Movement (NDYM) has applauded President Bola Tinubu, Senate President Godswill Akpabio, and the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Nyesom Wike, for their roles in restoring democratic governance in Rivers State.

    In a statement signed by its national president, Comrade Ekene Frank, and issued in Uyo on Friday, the group also cautioned youths, elders, and stakeholders in Rivers State against inflammatory statements or actions capable of plunging the state back into political crisis.

    According to NDYM, Rivers State — being the central point of the Niger Delta — must remain peaceful for stability and progress to resonate across the region.

    “The Niger Delta Youth Movement, as the umbrella youth organization in the region, is delighted that full democratic governance has resumed in Rivers state,” the statement read.

    The group commended President Tinubu for his leadership in restoring peace, the Akpabio-led National Assembly for its support, and FCT Minister Nyesom Wike, Governor Siminalayi Fubara, and other stakeholders for their sacrifices toward reconciliation and harmony in the state.

    READ ALSO: Amupitan: From academia to umpire

    It further noted that normalcy has returned, with the local government system functioning again, Governor Fubara and his deputy, Professor Ngozi Odu, back in office, and the Rivers State House of Assembly under Speaker Martins Amaewhule resuming legislative duties.

    NDYM urged both Wike and Fubara to refrain from actions or utterances that could reignite tension, while calling on their supporters and Rivers youths to maintain peace and view themselves as future leaders.

  • Vatsa’s family hails Tinubu for granting posthumous state pardon

    Vatsa’s family hails Tinubu for granting posthumous state pardon

    The family of the late General Mamman Jiya Vatsa has commended President Bola Ahmed Tinubu for granting a state pardon to the former Federal Capital Territory (FCT) minister, describing the gesture as a long-awaited vindication of his innocence.

    The Council of State, on Thursday, approved the presidential prerogative of mercy for 175 persons across various categories, including the late General Vatsa.

    The approval followed a presentation by the Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Lateef Fagbemi (SAN), who conveyed President Tinubu’s recommendations based on the report of the Advisory Committee on the Prerogative of Mercy.

    General Vatsa was executed in 1986, alongside nine other military officers, for an alleged coup plot against the regime of General Ibrahim Babangida.

    READ ALSO: Amupitan: From academia to umpire

    In a statement issued in Minna on Friday, the family’s spokesperson, Jonathan Vatsa — a former Niger State Commissioner for Information, Culture and Tourism, and a chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC) — said the presidential pardon has brought immense relief and joy to the family after 39 years of sorrow.

    He described the decision as an act of statesmanship that has “wiped away the tears of the family” and restored hope to the Gulu-Vatsa community in Lapai Local Government Area and the entire Niger State.

    “Today is the happiest moment in the life of our family after 39 years of grief following the killing of our father, brother, and uncle. Though nothing can bring him back, we are consoled by President Tinubu’s compassion. He has written his name in gold, and history will forever remember him,” Vatsa stated.

    He maintained that the alleged coup was a setup, claiming that the trial was “stage-managed” to eliminate General Vatsa out of envy and rivalry. He recalled that the late General Domkat Bali once admitted in an interview that the evidence against Vatsa was weak and that his execution was unjustified.

    “The family still maintains that the late Vatsa was innocent of the coup. Justice can be delayed but not denied, and truth never expires,” he said.

    While expressing gratitude to President Tinubu, Vatsa lamented that the late General’s wife and some of his children did not live to witness the vindication, but thanked God that some of his children and grandchildren are alive to see this long-awaited moment.

  • Tinubu congratulates interface Africa on £1.5m NextGen Innovation Challenge win

    Tinubu congratulates interface Africa on £1.5m NextGen Innovation Challenge win

    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has congratulated Al’amin Muhammed Idris, Chief Executive Officer of Interface Africa, on the company’s victory at the NextGen Innovation Challenge, where it emerged winner with a £1.5 million cash award.

    Interface Africa, representing Kaduna State, clinched the top prize at the grand finale of the competition held on Thursday at the Hilton London Paddington. 

    The company was recognised for its innovative solar financing solutions aimed at providing affordable clean energy access to small businesses across Africa.

    In a statement on Friday by his Special Adviser on Information and Strategy, Mr. Bayo Onanuga, Tinubu commended the firm’s commitment to advancing sustainable development and economic inclusion through renewable energy.

    READ ALSO: Amupitan: From academia to umpire

    The President described the feat as a testament to the boundless creativity and ingenuity of Nigerian youths, reaffirming his administration’s resolve to harness their innovative potential through deliberate policies and programmes under the Renewed Hope Agenda.

    “The innovative potential of Nigerian youths is limitless, and we will continue to create opportunities to harness and catalyse this vital resource,” the President stated.

    The NextGen Innovation Challenge, organised by the National Board for Technology Incubation (NBTI) in partnership with UKALD London, is a national initiative inspired by President Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda. 

    It aims to nurture homegrown innovation and support young entrepreneurs in developing scalable solutions to local and global challenges.

    Tinubu also commended the other 104 participants in the competition, urging them to remain steadfast in their drive to innovate, improve lives, and shape the future of humanity.

  • How Tinubu is enhancing governance through reforms

    How Tinubu is enhancing governance through reforms

    • By Rabiu Isiyaku Rabiu

    During the public presentation of the book “Ten Years of Impactful Progressive Governance in Nigeria,” authored by the Chairman of the Progressive Governors’ Forum and Executive Governor of Imo State, His Excellency Governor Hope Uzodinma, I reflected on Nigeria’s decade-long journey under successive progressive administrations as Chief Presenter. Though time did not allow me to deliver my written remarks in full, the message remains vital to our national conversation on leadership, governance, and reform.

    There are moments for politics and moments for governance. Once elections are over, governance must take precedence. Our duty as citizens is to move beyond division and measure progress not by sentiment but by delivery, performance, and impact.

    Over the past ten years, Nigeria’s story has been one of courage and continuity, of institutions learning discipline, and of leaders willing to face hard truths about our economy. President Muhammadu Buhari laid the foundation of fiscal prudence, agricultural revival, and infrastructure renewal. President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has advanced that legacy through decisive structural reforms such as removing the fuel subsidy, unifying exchange rates, modernising tax policy, and restoring credibility to public finance. These choices were not easy, but they were necessary. They broke habits that had become too costly to sustain and redirected public wealth toward productivity.

    Since May 2023, government non-oil revenue has grown by more than 400 percent. This is not coincidence. It is the outcome of intentional policy and technological transparency. The Presidential Fiscal Policy and Tax Reform Committee has simplified compliance, eliminated duplication, and placed technology at the centre of revenue collection. Revenue agencies that once competed now cooperate. Multiple taxation is being dismantled. Incentives for businesses are transparent and available online without intermediaries or privileged access. Every entrepreneur, large or small, can now apply for fiscal waivers or export credits within minutes. Fairness by design and technology is replacing favour by connection.

    Energy stability has returned as proof that reform, though painful, delivers results. The queues that once defined our petrol stations are gone. Deregulation has reopened the downstream market and restored investor confidence in oil and gas, bringing new capital into deep-water, midstream, and modular-refinery projects. Parallel reforms in the Presidential CNG Initiative are changing urban mobility by replacing petrol fleets with cleaner and cheaper gas vehicles. At the same time, a nationwide solar-power rollout is providing electricity to schools, clinics, and small industries. Together, these initiatives reflect a balanced energy future built on efficiency, competition, and sustainability.

    Security remains the foundation of every reform. In 2024, N3.85 trillion, about 13 percent of the national budget, was allocated to defence and internal security. For 2025, that figure rose to N6.57 trillion, with significant investment in equipment, intelligence, and personnel welfare. The Nigerian Air Force is modernising with 24 M-346 attack jets and 10 AW-109 helicopters. The Navy has commissioned new patrol ships and maritime helicopters to strengthen coastal and energy-asset protection. Across all theatres, joint operations by the Nigerian Armed Forces and intelligence agencies have neutralised tens of thousands of terrorists, insurgents and criminal elements, arrested many more, and rescued well over one hundred thousand hostages and displaced persons. The tempo has changed. Our armed forces now take the initiative rather than wait for it.

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    Infrastructure remains the bridge between ambition and opportunity. Across the country, more than 260 major projects in roads, bridges, ports, and pipelines are under construction or near completion. The Lagos to Calabar Coastal Highway and the Sokoto to Badagry Super Highway are redefining commerce and mobility. The national Bridge Fibre Project is expanding digital connectivity across cities and rural areas, strengthening the country’s broadband backbone and opening new corridors for education, innovation, and enterprise.

    Digital governance reform is also deepening national capacity. The ongoing overhaul of the National Identity Management Commission has expanded NIN registration to tens of millions of citizens, creating a reliable digital backbone for planning, financial inclusion, and social protection. For the first time, national data is being harmonised across agencies, improving service delivery, strengthening security coordination, and helping the country plan development with precision.

    Work along the River Niger corridor from Lokoja to Baro Port is progressing to enable future inland-waterway operations that can reduce transport costs and improve market access across regions. These projects reflect a deliberate effort to balance regional growth, from the Niger Delta cleanup and gas expansion in the South to new exploration in the North and industrial corridors across the Middle Belt.

    Reform without human investment is reform without soul. The $2.2 billion Health Sector Renewal Programme is upgrading 17,000 primary health centres and training 120,000 health workers, while free caesarean care and subsidised dialysis are easing the burden on families. In education, student-loan schemes, digital-skills initiatives, and new STEM and AI curricula are preparing our young people for a digital economy. Through the Student Loan Fund, access to higher education is becoming a right, not a privilege. Its synergy with new financing institutions such as CREDICORP and the Nigeria Credit Guarantee Company ensures that young Nigerians can pursue knowledge with the same confidence that entrepreneurs pursue capital. Free technical and vocational training at the tertiary level will supply the technicians and artisans required for industrial growth.

    Agriculture and food security have become the centre of national resilience. Beyond grains, the Federal Ministry of Livestock Development is unlocking a trillion-naira value chain in meat, dairy, and leather. Expanded fertiliser blending, mechanisation, irrigation, and storage are supporting millions of smallholders. With increased investment in rice, cassava, and cash-crop processing, Nigeria is moving toward genuine food sovereignty. Food security is not an aspiration but a necessity for economic stability.

    The government’s economic renewal is also anchored on access to finance, enterprise, and inclusion. The establishment of CREDICORP, the Nigeria Credit Guarantee Company, and the Student Loan Fund has strengthened the foundation for a credit-based economy as well as human capital and domestic productivity. Together, these institutions expand access to credit for small businesses, farmers, civil servants, individuals, and students while derisking lending and empowering citizens to build their future without political connections. In promoting local production over import dependence, the Nigeria First Policy is not only conserving foreign exchange but also creating pathways for skilled youth employment and industrial apprenticeship across states.

    I say this not out of any search for appointment or reward, but from a place of patriotism and perspective. From where I stand, and for every Nigerian, the true beauty of the Nigeria First Policy is that it invites us all to become participants in our country’s renewal. We can each now go into productive enterprise and live the Nigerian dream, so long as we care enough to believe in this nation and invest in our people, resources, and future.

    In the midst of reform, President Tinubu’s words have been both compass and caution: “As we continue to reform the economy, I shall always listen to the people and will never turn my back on you.” That statement captures the essence of progressive governance which I define as courage guided by compassion. Under this directive, Nigeria’s social-protection system has been rebuilt on transparency and technology. The Conditional Cash Transfer programme now reaches more than 15 million households on a verified digital register, each linked to a NIN-validated wallet or bank account for direct payment. No intermediaries and no leakages. In addition, N344 billion has been disbursed in three tranches to the 36 states and the FCT to support local welfare and enterprise programmes. The Renewed Hope Ward Development Programme, which will operate across 8,809 wards, will economically engage over 10 million Nigerians and ensure that national policy translates into local opportunity.

    The humanitarian principle of progressivism is simple. Reform must lift, not leave behind. Fiscal discipline restores credibility. Social investment restores trust. When citizens see roads being built, hospitals working, and social payments arriving on time, faith in reform deepens and the social contract is strengthened. Special attention is also being given to women, rural communities, and persons with disabilities through targeted enterprise and skills-support initiatives under the Renewed Hope framework.

    The numbers also tell their own story of impact and renewed hope in Nigeria. Non-oil revenues continue to rise. Exports are diversifying. Nigeria has recorded its first trade and balance-of-payments surplus in years, a sign of growing production and renewed confidence in the naira. Oil output is improving, new investments are flowing into the upstream and midstream segments, and our current account is gaining strength as reforms take hold. President Bola Tinubu and his government recognise that inflation and living costs remain a strain on households, but the fiscal discipline now taking root is designed to restore purchasing power in a sustainable way. President Tinubu has also acknowledged that meaningful reform takes time. While citizens are beginning to see the first trickles of progress, the greater task is to ensure that these trickles flow downward to communities, markets, classrooms, and farms where growth becomes tangible and human.

    The task ahead is to sustain this momentum but it won’t be easy. Every child must be in school. NIWA must be further strengthened to expand partnerships for safer and cleaner waterways. NDLEA must receive greater support to combat the rising threat of drug trafficking and addiction, and NAFDAC must be empowered with stronger laboratories and technology to protect the public from counterfeit medicines and unsafe food. These are not peripheral agencies. They are frontline guardians of national wellbeing, and their effectiveness determines the credibility of our progress.

    Communities themselves must also understand that with all the support given to our security agencies and the military, their partnership is vital. Cooperation between citizens, traditional institutions, and security operatives will solidify these gains, strengthen intelligence at the grassroots, and prevent a return to disorder. National security is not the burden of the state alone. It is the shared duty of all Nigerians determined to protect their future.

    The state governors of Nigeria, under this Renewed Hope and progressive compact, also have a historic role to play. We have faith that with President Tinubu’s commitment, they can write their names in gold, but that gold must first be mined in proper service of the people.

    The progress of any nation is not measured only by its wealth, but by the collective will of its people to do right, even when it is hard. That is the essence of progressive governance and the covenant that must bind us for the next decade.

    I imagine a Nigeria where every child learns, every farmer prospers, every hospital has power, and every young person earns a dignified living. That is the spirit of renewal behind this progressive decade. It is the belief that courage and compassion are not opposites but partners in building a fair and prosperous country. Tomorrow’s Nigeria is not waiting to be discovered. It is waiting to be delivered with courage, competence, and care. I am Rabiu Isyaku Rabiu and I endorse the publication of this message.

    God bless our President.

    God bless the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

    • Rabiu Isiyaku Rabiu is the Chairman of IRS.