Year: 2026

  • Shock, grief as Gumel, Olympic family mourn Chamberlain Acquatic Federation president

    Shock, grief as Gumel, Olympic family mourn Chamberlain Acquatic Federation president

     

    By Tony Nezianya

    ”It is with a heart shattered by grief that I on behalf of the board and the Olympic Movement in Nigeria, I bid farewell to Dr Chamberlaon Nnamdi Dunkwu,” declared NOC President, Gumel.

    Chamberlain as as he was widely known died in the early hours of Saturday.

    To the world, he was the President of the Nigeria Aquatic Sports Federation; to the Olympic movement in the country, he was a visionary leader.

    But to me, Chamberlain was quite simply a ‘son’.

    ​Watching him lead with such infectious energy and clarity of vision brought me a pride that words can barely capture.

    At 54, he was in the absolute prime of his life—just beginning to realise the bold transformation he imagined for Nigerian aquatic sports.

    ​Chamberlain Nnamdi Dunkwu didn’t just manage a federation; he breathed life into it.

    ”His loyalty as a protégé and his passion for our athletes were unmatched.

    ”This is more than a professional void; it is a profound personal tragedy that leaves the entire Olympic family in shock.”

    The circumstances that has added to the grief was that he died on a day his colleagues at the Olympic Movement, friends and political associates were awaiting his arrival at the Swimming Pool of at the Moshood Abiola Stadium, Abuja for the formal launch of ‘Swim to future’ he planned to personally sponsor.

    ”Chamberlain my son, go in peace. Your gestures life and dreams will not be forgotten,’’ noted Gumel.

    (Contact:  Tony Nezianya,  NOC PRO

    08033034910

    tonynezianya@gmail.com)

  • Nigerian Muslim for Equity and Good Governance Condemns US-Israel Attack on Iran

    Nigerian Muslim for Equity and Good Governance Condemns US-Israel Attack on Iran

     

    By Flowerbudnews
    Nigeria Muslims for Equity and Good Governance condemns the needless US and Israel’s aggression against Iran during Ramadan, targeting Muslims worldwide.

    Their actions did not only violate the sanctity of the Holy Month, massacring innocent Muslims, disrupting worship and devotion across the region and hampering the observance of lesser Hajj in Saudi Arabia, showing total disregard for Islam and its adherents across the world.

    The US claims to seek Middle East peace but instead creates conflict. We demand the immediate halt to the aggression and the display of Islamophobia. Promotion of global peace and unity is what we seek

    Dialogue, not war, brings peace. The US-Israel war on Iran seems self-serving, ignoring the UN and the concerns of other countries of the world.

    We thank nations that have supported global peace by denying their airspace for attacks on innocent nation of Iran. Muslim countries must unite, following the teaching of global Islamic Brotherhood as mandated by the Qur’an.

    We urge the Arab Gulf and the Muslim nations across the globe to prioritize Allah’s love over worldly gains, stop the war and focus on Allah’s commandments.

    May Allah bless those adhere to the teaching and understanding of Islamic Brotherhood as ordained by the Qur’an and Hadith.

    NIMEGG
    SOUTHWEST

  • Iran – A Poser; Has Trump and Netanyahu Fell into a Trap

    Iran – A Poser; Has Trump and Netanyahu Fell into a Trap

     

     

    Donald Trump and Netanyahu fell into a trap set by Iranian and Russian strategists. America & Israel launched an attack with at least 400 aircraft out of the 800 that were ready to obliterate Iran.

    The surprise was that Iran was waiting for them, its skies rigged with air defenses and digital bombs, forcing the American aircraft to launch indiscriminate attacks from outside Iranian airspace.

    An hour after repelling the airstrike, Iran launched a counterattack unlike anything the United States had ever witnessed: a massive, simultaneous, and wide-ranging series of airstrikes on its military bases abroad, like the one Iran launched today.

    An American official told the Wall Street Journal that the US military was shocked by Iran’s capabilities, which targeted all its bases in the region. So far, the Iranians have attacked American bases in Jordan, Iraq, Qatar, UAE, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, & Kuwait.

    But what is Iran’s most important military objective in bombing American bases in the Gulf states?

    The primary objective was the destruction of American radars in the Gulf and northern Israel, & this objective was indeed achieved. Among the destroyed targets was the largest American radar in the region, an FP-132 radar with a range of 5,000 kilometers, located in Qatar. It was equipped with unique equipment used to track ballistic missiles & was completely destroyed.

    The radar cost $1.1 billion & was used by Israel to intercept missiles targeting Israel during the June war. After the radars were destroyed, American aircraft carriers and ships were exposed & in a state of utter confusion. Iran seized the initiative & launched its missiles towards Israel as a starting signal, & this was not the main strike missile package.

    Despite this, at least 18 THAAD & Patriot air defense systems failed to intercept the Iranian missile strikes on Israel, whose air defenses were rendered ineffective by Iranian electronic warfare.

    The Iranian Revolutionary Guard continued its missile strikes against Israeli cities, ports, government buildings, & intelligence facilities. Again, these are not the main missiles.

    The most accurate and dangerous missiles are liquid-fueled, highly precise, heavy-payload systems, designed for launch at the appropriate time.

    Trump is now in shock. The pride of the American military has been shattered, and its stealth aircraft, equipped with digital radar, became easy targets for Iranian missiles.

    At a time like this, wars are not measured by the number of aircraft or the size of missiles, but by who controls the pace. What happened was not merely a military clash, but a revolution in the equation of deterrence. It has left the White House silent, searching for a counterattack to restore some of its prestige.

    Today, not only was a radar system worth billions of dollars destroyed, but the geopolitical map has also changed. China, by monitoring the movements of American military assets & transmitting this information to Iran, has become a party to the war at a time when intelligence is more valuable than missiles.

    China understands that Iran is merely a pretext, and the primary American objective is to encircle Beijing and sever the land route through which China aims to reach West Asia via Iran and Afghanistan. At the same time, concepts are being redrawn. The UAE, for example, has officially lost its appeal as a safe haven for capital.

    What billionaire would want to live in Dubai or Abu Dhabi after Iranian missiles have shattered their glass cities?

    Property prices will plummet for at least five years. Good luck to the ruler of the Emirates, the patron of the Abrahamic faiths & the architect of the Cyrus Treaty.

    On the Russian front: Ukraine will now face large-scale attacks from Tsar Putin. Even Taiwan has become an open stage for China at a time when America is struggling to avoid being swallowed by the Strait of Hormuz.

    #israel #iran #russia #viral #tiktok

  • Progressivism: The Place of Ideology in Tinubu’s Management of Nigeria’s Economy

    Progressivism: The Place of Ideology in Tinubu’s Management of Nigeria’s Economy

    By Omoniyi M. Akinsiju, (PhD)

    Introduction:

    Progressivism in government encompasses the two critical aspects of governance that idealise economic and political development in a jurisdiction. It is, therefore, at once, a political philosophy and social reform movement that focuses on advancing the public good through government actions and improving the human condition through government regulation, social protection and the maintenance of public good.

    In the United States of America (USA), the progressive movement began in earnest after the Civil War, but gained serious momentum starting in the early 20th century out of the perceived injustices brought about by the “Gilded Age.” The Gilded Age (approx. 1870–1900) was a period of rapid industrialisation, urbanisation, and unprecedented wealth inequality in the United States, famously termed by Mark Twain to describe a time of glittering technological progress.

    The period, however, masked underlying corruption and poverty. It saw the rise of monopolistic “robber barons,” massive immigration, and significant westward expansion.

    The then US President Theodore Roosevelt, perhaps, the first true progressive politician in the annals of America’s politics, responded to the rot and decimation of public values coming on the heels of the Gilded Age with his “Square Deal”.

    The Square Deal reflected his three major goals for addressing the degenerate state of the American system. It includes; conservation of natural resources, corporate law, and consumer protection. These three demands are often referred to as the “three C’s” of Roosevelt’s Square Deal. Thus, it aimed at helping middle-class citizens and involved attacking plutocracy and bad trust while at the same time protecting businesses from the most extreme demands of organised labour.

    Like the USA, Nigeria has had periods of decadent public value and normalisation of profligacy in high offices. Before the economic reforms initiated by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu in May 2023, the Nigerian economy was characterised by a deeply entrenched oligarchy, where a small group of political elites, military officers, and business moguls controlled state resources.

    This structure was sustained by a patronage system, particularly in the oil sector, which benefited a select few while the majority of the population faced poverty, with 63 per cent (about 133 million people) living in multidimensional poverty by 2022.

    The Pre-Tinubu Economic Oligarchy

    The “pre-reform” economic landscape was defined by several key oligarchic and structural features: A significant portion of the oligarchy benefited from the fuel subsidy system, which was described as being rife with corruption and used as a “feeding bottle” for a select few. The existence of multiple exchange rate windows allowed “FX subsidy merchants” to exploit the gap between official and parallel market rates, effectively draining government finances. Economic power was heavily concentrated in the petroleum industry, with access to oil revenues controlled by those in power and their close associates.

    By the time Tinubu took office, Nigeria was spending approximately 97 percent of its total revenue on debt servicing, a situation described as “disastrous”.

    Beyond the oligarchy’s capture of the Nigerian state, we note the obvious decimation of the nation’s fiscal substance before the coming of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) to the federal administration in 2015. Data show that Nigeria’s export profile changed significantly after 2014, resetting to a lower range that has persisted despite periodic recoveries. Nigeria reached a peak crude oil and gas export value of $93.89 billion in 2011, the highest in the dataset.

    Between 2008 and 2014, the country recorded an average annual export value of about $81billion, reflecting the strength of the early 2010s oil cycle. However, from 2015 to 2024, the average annual export value fell to approximately $45 billion, representing a 44 percent decline compared to the earlier period. As of 2014, the export value stood at $76.51 billion before dropping to $32.03 billion in 2016, a decline of about 58.14 percent in two years.

    From the 2011 peak of $93.89 billion to the 2020 low of $31.40 billion, export value fell by 66.56 percent. This has huge implications for federally shared revenue and the general economic well-being of the country and its people in the three-tier federal system.
    At this time, however, we can submit with much assertion that the federal administration has, indeed, taken Nigeria out of the woods, evidenced by a turnaround economy that shows an indication of stability while unlocking the stranglehold of the oligarchs on the nation’s economy.

    To support our assertion of an ideology-based economic turnaround, we itemise some of the key tools of progressivism that the President Bola Ahmed Tinubu-led federal administration has deployed to accomplish the present feat.

    These include fiscal policy and taxation, redistributive spending, estate and wealth taxes, labour and wealth protection, monetary and financial reforms, infrastructural development, and public investment and ownership.

    Surge in Federation Allocations

    A major indicator of Nigeria’s revamped economy is the surge in federally shared revenue. Allocations from the Federation Account Allocation Committee (FAAC) in 2025 experienced a significant surge, with the three tiers of government sharing over ₦33.27 trillion in the first eleven months, a 30 per cent increase over the same period in 2024.
    This growth, driven by subsidy removal and exchange rate reforms, included record monthly distributions, such as ₦3.64 trillion in September 2025, significantly boosting subnational revenue.

    Macroeconomic Stability

    Inflation, while still in double digits, has dropped by over half from a peak of 34.6 percent in November 2024 to 15.10 percent in January 2026, reflecting over nine months of consistent disinflation. This has largely restored real purchasing power for households and businesses, with Nigerians now reaping the benefits of the exchange rate unification. We continue to observe a huge contraction in the gap between the official and parallel market rates which has shrunk from 60 to 2 percent with the naira as of Tuesday, February 24, 2026, trading at approximately ₦1,349.24 to the US Dollar in the official market and between ₦1,355 and ₦1,420 in the parallel (black) market.

    The naira is rated the world’s second-best performing currency this year with a more than 7 percent gain against the dollar.

    Nigeria’s Changing Hydrocarbon Export Mix

    Recent data suggest that while crude oil remains the dominant export product, Nigeria’s hydrocarbon export mix may be gradually evolving. Crude oil exports for January to September 2025 totalled $24.7 billion, while gas exports stood at $8.27 billion over the same period, and petroleum product exports reached $4.15 billion. Though total hydrocarbon exports for the period amounted to $37.1billion, gas and petroleum product exports accounted for a more meaningful share of exports than in earlier years.

    Overall, Nigeria’s crude oil export story since 2014 has continued to reflect a structural adjustment rather than a temporary downturn.

    Nigeria Stock Market Star Performance

    Nigerian stocks have delivered the world’s second-best dollar returns this year, climbing 31 percent in 2026 and recovering $21 billion in market value lost following a sharp naira devaluation in 2024. The rally far outpaces the 11 percent gain in the broader emerging-market index and the 6.4 percent advance in a gauge of frontier-market stocks.
    Total market capitalisation on the Lagos Exchange now stands at about $84 billion, roughly 58 percent higher than before the naira’s collapse.

    Foreign participation has surged alongside the rally. Data from the Nigerian Exchange Group show that non-Nigerian trading in local equities reached a 19-year high in 2025, with transactions tripling to 2.65 trillion naira ($1.97 billion) from 852 billion naira the previous year.

    Record Export Figures

    Nigeria’s 2025 export figures underscore the strengthening of the naira. Nigeria’s total exports in the first nine months of 2025 outpaced the corresponding period of 2024 by $3.76bn. The figures feed into the improving local currency value. Data from the Central Bank of Nigeria Quarterly Statistics (December 2025) showed that the country’s total exports in the first nine months of 2025 rose to $44.06bn, an improvement over the $40.29bn recorded in the corresponding period of 2024. The increased exports figure is indicative of positive momentum for the economy.

    Nigeria’s food inflation drops to its lowest in over 14 years

    Nigeria’s food inflation rate eased to 8.89 per cent year-on-year in January 2026, marking its first single-digit reading in 128 months and the lowest level in 174 months. The January 2026 CPI report shows food inflation declined from 29.63 percent recorded in January 2025 to 8.89 per cent in January 2026, a sharp 20.73 percentage point year-on-year drop.
    The 8.89 percent reading is the first time food inflation has fallen below 10 percent since May 2015, when it stood at 9.78 percent. January 2026, therefore, ends a stretch of more than 10 years of persistent double-digit food inflation. More significantly, the January figure is the lowest since August 2011, when food inflation was 8.66 percent
    FX for business travels soar by 366 percent to $672m. More Nigerians are gaining access to foreign exchange. business travels increased by 366 percent to $672.27m in the first nine months of 2025, up from $144.19m recorded in the corresponding period of 2024. Business travel refers to expenditures made by Nigerian residents when they travel abroad for business purposes, such as attending meetings, conferences, training sessions, or other work-related activities.
    Data from the CBN indicate that travelers had more access to FX for business trips in the period under review. In turn, this reflected stronger international business engagements. The development signaled renewed business confidence and improved foreign exchange stability.

    Taxation as a Tool for Redistribution of Wealth

    Land, buildings, and rent are now fully exempted from Value Added Tax (VAT) under the Nigeria Tax Act 2025. The new law, which has already commenced, was designed to reduce the cost of housing, encourage investment in real estate, and provide relief for tenants and small businesses across the country. Individuals buying land or completed buildings will no longer pay VAT on such transactions. The exemption also applies to rent, making both residential and commercial rent completely free from VAT. Removal of VAT on land, building, and rent is expected to lower the overall cost of property transactions and ease the financial burden on Nigerians seeking accommodation.
    The law provides direct rent relief which will increase individual’s disposable income. In this regard, individuals can claim rent relief of up to N500,000, capped at 20 per cent of their annual rent and helping low-income earners have more money to spend, and ease the pressure of rising accommodation costs.
    In addition, lease agreements with an annual value below N10 million, or ten times the annual minimum wage, are exempt from stamp duty which will reduce the cost of formal tenancy agreements, particularly for small businesses and ordinary Nigerians.
    Again, individuals will no longer pay Capital Gains Tax (CGT) when they dispose of a dwelling house or have an interest in one. This exemption will encourage more investment in residential property. This is besides the fact that small companies will benefit from zero per cent Companies Income Tax (CIT). Such companies will also be exempt from charging VAT and will not have Withholding Tax (WHT) deducted from their invoices and payments. This will give small contractors and suppliers more room to grow.
    Interest income earned from Federal Government of Nigeria bonds, Sukuk, and state government bonds are exempted from income tax and withholding tax. Capital gains arising from the disposal of these securities are also exempt following the repeal of the stand-alone Capital Gains Tax Act.

    The transfer or sale of government bonds remains exempt from VAT, while pension fund investments in government securities continue to enjoy statutory protection.

    The Historic ASUU/FG Rapprochement

    The Federal Government has asked universities to commence the payment of the tax-free Consolidated Academic Tools Allowance across the country. This was in fulfillment of the agreement reached between the Federal Government and university lecturers recently.
    The allowance, which ranges from a little over N1million annually for graduate assistants and assistant lecturers to over N3million for professors, is expected to bump up the take-home pay of university teachers. All federal universities were to begin the payment of the Consolidated Academic Tools Allowance (CATA) to academic staff, even as the 2026 budget approval process continues. The tax-free allowance was part of the executed FGN-ASUU 2025 Agreement.

    The Consolidated Academic Tolls Allowance (CATA) is a specific financial component of the salary structure for University Academic Staff in Nigeria. It was done by the Tinubu administration as a job-specific, tax-exempt allowance that supports the core research, teaching, and intellectual activities of university academics.
    With the new FG agreement with university teachers, CATA is part of a dual salary structure. Now, university academic staff salaries are split into two main parts, the CONUASS (Consolidated University Academic Staff Salary): The base salary, which is subject to standard tax rules and CATA (Consolidated Academic Tools Allowance): A separate, additional allowance intended for work-related tools and activities.

    Nigeria’s Stable Economy Now Benefits from Multiplier and Cyclical Effects

    The multiplier effect describes how an initial injection of spending (e.g., government investment) triggers a chain reaction of consumption, leading to a total increase in GDP larger than the initial amount. This process drives the cyclical nature of the economy, as successive rounds of spending and income generation amplify boom. This mechanism interprets to one person’s spending becoming another’s income, which is then re-spent in subsequent rounds. These aggregate in prosperity scenarios enabled by positive injections that are reflected in increased exports and investments which create a multiplier effect that propels the economy into a boom.
    The multiplier is a crucial concept for understanding how fiscal policies such as government stimulus and tax exemptions can be used to boost the overall economy.

    Conclusion

    We hereby submit that the now turnaround Nigerian economy is benefitting from targeted fiscal policies to drive economic expansion and individual prosperity. This, essentially, captures the essence of economic progressivism as an ideological template for economic reformation to address inequality as the basis for sovereign economic growth, improved citizens’ socio-economic standing and impactful development.

    We further posit that President Tinubu has accomplished an impressive turnaround as a first step to exponentially grow the national economy which will reflect in the critical Gross Domestic Product (GDP) per capita data of Nigerians.

    (Omoniyi M. Akinsiju, PhD is the
    Chairman, Independent Media and Policy Initiative (IMPI)

     

  • Outlawing multiple tax and levies on highways underline FG’s pro-people agenda- TMSG

    Outlawing multiple tax and levies on highways underline FG’s pro-people agenda- TMSG

     

    By Danladi Ahmed

    The Tinubu Media Support Group (TMSG) has described the ban on collection of taxes and levies on highways nationwide as a major fulfillment of a promise to end people’s burden of misery caused by nuisance taxes.

    The group also said it was a further proof that the new tax laws were not targeted at poor people.

    In a statement signed by its Chairman Emeka Nwankpa and Secretary Dapo Okubanjo, TMSG maintained that the ban reflects the mindset of a government bent on easing the burden of unnecessary taxes and levies on Nigerians.

    It said, “We acknowledge that collection of taxes and levies on the nation’s highways has been a major issue for different categories of people over the years.

    “It falls into the category of nuisance taxes that the President Bola Tinubu administration said would have to go in the aftermath of the new tax law that is now operational.

    “We recall that the Presidential Committee on Fiscal Policy and Tax Reforms had indicated two years ago that Nigerians should expect a tax reform that would eliminate as many as 50 nuisance taxes including those collected at highway road blocks across the country.

    “So the recent announcement by the Joint Tax Board (JTB) of a formal ban on the mounting of roadblocks for tax and levy collections nationwide, was strictly in line with provisions of the tax reforms of the President Tinubu administration.

    “The ban is captured under the newly signed Presumptive Tax Framework (PTF) which is meant to simplify tax payment by small business owners, artisans, traders and other micro enterprises but most importantly, it prohibits tax officials at road blocks.

    “We see this as a good move especially that since the new tax laws went into operation more than two months ago, local government personnel have continued to mount road blocks in many parts of the country collecting all sorts of taxes and levies.

    “Like the Finance Minister and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Mr. Wale Edun said, the framework will protect small business owners who are regularly subjected to multiple taxes while also expanding the nation’s tax base.

    “We understand that even long before the new tax reforms were passed into law, there had been series of engagements among representatives of all tiers of government which culminated in the signing of the PTF which is a part of the tax reform programme.

    “We dare say that local government authorities will be able to generate more revenue from the new arrangement without having to pile multiple taxes as unnecessary pressure on people in their respective domains.

    “There is therefore real reason for Nigerians to look forward to the JTB, which coordinates tax administration among the tiers of government, doing a good job of ensuring that local authorities derive the necessary benefits from the new tax laws without sending people to block highways to collect taxes and levies.”

    TMSG urged the authorities to move swiftly to enforce the ban on tax collection on highways nationwide.

     

    End

  • CCIDESOR decries economic hardship, insecurity, violence, political exclusion of women in Nigeria 

    CCIDESOR decries economic hardship, insecurity, violence, political exclusion of women in Nigeria 

    CCIDESOR decries economic hardship, insecurity, violence, political exclusion of women in Nigeria

    The Citizens Centre for Integrated Development and Social Rights (CCIDESOR) has decried the level of economic hardship, insecurity, community and domestic violence; and political exclusion faced by women in Nigeria.

    The acting Director of CCIDESOR, Nnenna Onyenoha, disclosed this in a special congratulatory message issued to newsmen in Enugu to celebrate 2026 International Women’s Day (IWD).

    Onyenoha said that CCIDESOR celebrates women in Nigeria and classify them as the “Nigeria Gender of the Year because of what you have endured while contributing to societal development.”

    According to her, the group calls on the Nigerian government, politicians, industrialists, leaders at the state and local government levels and all citizens to reflect deeply on the realities faced by Nigerian women.

    She urged all to take deliberate steps toward addressing them before 2027; so that the 2027 International Women’s Day celebration would be more meaningful.

    “In this periods of economic recession and limited opportunities, Nigerian women – many of whom already face structural barriers to economic empowerment – become even more vulnerable to poverty, impoverishment and exclusion.

    “In Nigeria’s worsening security situation, women and girls remain among the most affected.

    “From violent attacks on communities to the tragic abductions of schoolgirls and community women, Nigerian women continue to face disproportionate risks and threats to their safety and dignity.

    “Across communities and homes, the painful realities of gender-based and domestic violence, rape and other forms of sexual violence, even against highly placed elected female politicians and businesswomen persist in many parts of our country,” she said.

    The acting director said that in Nigeria’s political space, women are still treated largely as outsiders; adding that political violence, the monetisation of our politics, and exclusionary practices continue to limit women’s participation.

    “A clear example is the very low representation of women in the National Assembly. Out of 109 Senate seats, fewer than five are currently held by women, reflecting the deep structural barriers to women’s political inclusion.

    “Nigeria’s male dominated National Assembly is almost deeming the hope of millions of Nigeria women in passing the NASS special seat bill for women.

    “We use this day to urge them to act faster and pass the bill,” she said.

    Onyenoha commended the tireless efforts of women’s rights defenders, activists, and advocates who continue to work under extremely difficult conditions to protect the rights and dignity of women and girls across Nigeria.

    “Nigeria must take concrete steps to: Strengthen laws and policies that protect women’s rights and promote meaningful political representation for women.

    “Expand economic opportunities for women as well as improve security and justice systems that protect women and girls.

    “Only through these actions can Nigeria restore and guarantee the full economic, social, political, and legal rights of women,” she added.

     

  • Why Governor Ademola Adeleke Deserves a Second Term.

    Why Governor Ademola Adeleke Deserves a Second Term.

     

    –  Concept by Hon. Alhaji Olakunle Olamilekan Halfaday

     

    Governor Ademola Adeleke has demonstrated that leadership is measured by results, integrity, and service to the people. His administration has transformed governance in Osun State through practical, people-centered policies.

     

    *Key Points of the Concept

    Proven Track Record
    Adeleke’s government has delivered tangible projects in infrastructure, health, and education. Roads have been rehabilitated, schools upgraded, and healthcare access improved, showing commitment beyond mere promises.Empowerment and Welfare of Citizens
    The administration prioritizes the welfare of workers, youths, and women, ensuring economic empowerment and dignity for all.

    Backlogs in salaries were cleared, and social programs implemented to benefit the grassroots.

    Inclusive Leadership
    Governance under Adeleke is participatory and transparent.

    Decisions are made with stakeholder engagement, ensuring that citizens have a voice in development and that policies reflect their needs.

    Stability and Continuity
    Osun State has regained political and administrative stability.

    A second term guarantees continuity of reforms, completion of ongoing projects, and sustained growth for the state.

    Vision for Long-Term Development

    Adeleke’s administration has set a clear development trajectory, emphasizing sustainable growth, transparency, and prudent management of resources. Continuing this path ensures Osun progresses without disruption.

    Hon. Alhaji Olakunle Olamilekan Halfaday emphasizes that *continuity is the reward for performance.* A second term for Governor Ademola Adeleke is essential for Osun State to consolidate gains, deepen reforms, and achieve long-term prosperity for its people.

    Adeleke perform beyond human expectations.

  • Residents narrate harrowing kidnapping experience in Abuja suburbs

    Residents narrate harrowing kidnapping experience in Abuja suburbs

     

    Residents of Peze and Kungabokun communities at Byazhin-Across area of Kubwa, a satellite town in Bwari Area Council of the Federal Capital Teritory (FCT), on Sunday, narrated the ordeal experienced as the rate of kidnapping surges in the evironment.

    Suspected armed terrorits, in their numbers, had continued to attack the area, bordered by hills and bushes, kidnapping residents, including women and children, and moving from house to house.

    The incidents had increased concerns over the growing cases of kidnapping and insecurity in parts of the FCT.

    (The Palace of Village Head, Peze Community, Chief Saidu Ibrahim, at Byazhin-Across Area of Kubwa in Abuja)

     

    Some of the residents, who spoke to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), said the repeated attacks have heightened their fear, calling on the Federal Government to take immediate and decisive action on the deteriorating security sitution in the area.

    A resident, Philip Ikechukwu, said that no fewer than 20 people had been kidnapped within two weeks in the area.

    “We have been living in fear here. These people (terrorists) have been coming to raid us shooting guns and abducting men, women and even children, going from house to house.

    “The kidnapping started two weeks ago and not less than 20 people have been kidnapped, although some escaped while a man and a woman that were kidnapped at one time paid N500, 000 ransom before their release.

    (Pastor Tony Anotu’s residence at Peze Community, Byazhin-Across area, Kubwa, Bwari Area Council in Abuja, FCT, where four children were kidnapped)

     

    “Also, I heard that a pastor’s four children and others who were kidnapped on Tuesday had been rescued by the security personnel,” he said.

    Ikechukwu said a joint security patrol of soldiers, police and civil defence officers had been on ground in the area to checkmate further attack.

    He, however, said since the Byazhin Divisional Police Station is far from the community, there is a need to have a police station in the area.

    Chief Kalu Uma, who lives at Ijayapi, a community next to Peze, said kidnapping has become rampant recently in the area.

    “I am 29 years in this community. It is of recent we begin to experience this menace.

    (The Palace of Village Head of Kogabonku community, Chief Jagaba Ishaya, at Byazhin-Across Area of Kubwa in Abuja)

     

    “Today, it is here; tomorrow, it is there and we are worried about the development,” he said.

    When asked the number of kidnapped cases that had occurred in the area, Uma said; “From information reaching me through rumour, some would say about 15 had so far been kidnapped, some would say about 20, although I am not very sure. ”

    Uma, who said the environment is becoming more porous, urged the Federal Government to strengthen security in the area.

    Pastor Tony Anotu of the Revival Family Church, whose four children were kidnapped on Tuesday, March 3, and rescued on Saturday, said the experience was an harrowing one.

    According to him, the kidnappers left my baby of about three and a half years.

    He said throughout the period of his children’s hostage, he couldn’t sleep.

    “Each time I want to sleep, I will just see their pictures and woke up. I would be thinking what would be their feelings inside the forest.

    “It was not an easy experience,” he said pensively.

    Anotu, who confirmed that his four children within the age range of 6 to 16 years were rescued by the security personnel, said he did not pay any ransom.

    He equally confirmed that his children were rescued alongside a vigilante’s wife and her sister who were abducted in the area on the same day.

    “They had kidnapoed the wife of the vigilante head who was exchanging guns with them. The gunmen left her two months’ old baby but went with her sister that came to help her,” he said. said.

    He called on President Bola Tinubu, Senate President Godswill Akpabio, Speaker Tajudeen Abbas and FCT Minister, Nyesom Wike, to come to their rescue.

    For Chief Saidu Ibrahim, the Village Head of Peze Community, the continued attack was devastating.

    “Since last week, there are people (gunmen) who have been coming here to kidnap our people.

    “So last week Thursday, they (the gunmen) entered and abducted two people; one woman and one Hausa man.

    “Then, they released them on Sunday (last Sunday) after paying almost N500, 000 (as ransom).

    “We discovered that there is informant in this community because if there is no informant, strangers cannot just enter the community and begin such operations.

    “So on Tuesday this week around evening, they entered the community again and began to release the bullets and they took about seven people and escaped with them.” he said.

    He said in Kugabonku community which is next to his, a vigilante officer was killed by the terrorists and a number of persons kidnapped same Tuesday, March 3.

    He said Peze and Kugabonku are under the same ward in Byazhin Community.

    He said at least 16 people had been kidnapped within the period.

    Chief Ibrahim, who said a letter had been written to the Department of State Services (DSS) and the police area command on the need to have security base in the area, said the community is no longer safe.

    “We need a checkpoint by the military here and we need a police station.

    “If there is a police station or military checkpoint here, it will help the community,” he said.

    Also speaking, Chief Jagaba Ishaya, the Village Head of Kugabonku communuty, described the recent kidnapping in his environment as “worrisome.”

    He said about three people were kidnapped at a former naval officer’s residence, while four others abducted at a poultery farm on Tuesday.

    “The gunmen abducted oga Navy and his two daughters. Then at the barrister’s farm where he has a poultery, a vigilante officer was killed and four people were kidnapped, ” he said.

    Chief Ishaya, who spoke through an interpreter, Prince Timothy, his son, said the area needs a police station.

    He also urged the government to support members of the vigilante group in the area to function effectively.

    “You cannot go and face a person who is coming with AK-47 with inferior weapon. This has been our challenge. Therefore, they need to be empowered, ” he said.

    Mathew Samuel, a member of the Vigilante group at Kugabonku, narrated his experience with the gunmen.

    He called on the government to support their effort in combating the menace.

    NAN observes the deployment of military, police and civil defence officers at the area.

    The Byazhin DPO, Christopher Owujie, when contacted refused to comment on the incident.

    Rather, he referred NAN to the FCT Police Command PRO, Josephine Adeh.

    However, an officer at Byazhin station, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said police officers had intensified security surveillance at the affected areas.

    “There have been kidnap cases at area and For the past one week, the police have not rested.

    “Our men have been working day and night,” he said.

    In a telephone chat with the command PRO, SP Adeh, she said classified information about what the security agencies are doing cannot be revealed to members of the public.

    Adeh, who said the kidnap victims had been rescued through the joint effort of the police, the military and DSS, said some of the terrorits were neutralised, while some escaped with bullet wounds and two were arrested during a gun battle.

    She said a press statement had been released to the effect.

    In the statement, Adeh said: “Police personnel from the Anti-Kidnapping Unit of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Police Command, in collaboration with personnel of the Nigerian Army Guards Brigade, the Department of State Services (DSS), and local vigilantes, between the 6th and 7th of March 2026, commenced a coordinated search and rescue operation following credible intelligence that kidnapping suspects fleeing from ongoing security operations in Gauraka Forest, Niger State, had crossed into Gidan Dogo and Kweri Forests in Kaduna State with kidnapped victims.

    “Acting on the intelligence, the Officer in Charge of the Anti-Kidnapping Unit led the combined tactical team into the forest in pursuit of the suspected criminals.

    “Upon approaching their hideout, the suspects opened fire on the operatives, resulting in an intense gun duel that lasted over one hour and thirty minutes.

    “Through superior tactics and firepower, the operatives successfully subdued the kidnappers.

    “Suspects were neutralised during the exchange, while two others identified as Nura Sani and Abdul Bello were arrested.

    “Other members of the gang escaped with gunshot wounds into the surrounding forest and hills.

    “The operation led to the successful rescue of twenty (20) kidnapped victims comprising ten (10) males and ten (10) females who were earlier abducted from Byazhin District of the FCT, as well as Gauraka and Tafa areas of Niger State.”

  • OAU Pro-Chancellor: Great Ife Alumni hails Hon. Adejare Bello ‘s appointment

    OAU Pro-Chancellor: Great Ife Alumni hails Hon. Adejare Bello ‘s appointment

     

     

    By Biola Lawal
    The Great Ife Alumni Association has applauded the appointment of Amb. Adejare Bello as the new Pro – Chancellor and Chairman, Governing Council, Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, Osun State.

    A statement on Sunday by the Global President Dr. Leye Bunmi Falode, Ph.D law (Notary Public) and Global Publicity Secretary, Abdur-Rahman Balogun stated that His Excellency, Rt. Hon. Adejare Bello, brings to the position a rich blend of legislative experience, diplomatic exposure, and deep-rooted commitment to educational advancement.

    ” His pedigree as an accomplished Lawyer, legislator, diplomat and a politician of note must have informed his appointment as the Chairman of the University Pro-Chancellor and Chairman of the Council ” the Alumni said.

    It is our hope and expectations that the appointment of Hon. Bello to head this prestigious University as Pro-Chancellor will bring to bear his wealth of experience and exposure as an excellent administrator to better the lots of the University.

    Also, as an alumnus of Obafemi Awolowo University, who earned his degree in Law in the faculty of Law, it is expected that he will bring his academic background and enduring connection to the University which will position him to understand its heritage and aspirations.

    The Global Great Ife Alumni Association expresses our profound confidence in his capacity to provide visionary leadership and to work harmoniously with other Council members, Management, staff, Unions, students, alumni, and other stakeholders in advancing the mission and global standing of the University.

    While congratulating Hon. Adejare Bello on this well-deserved appointment, the Alumni body looks forward to a new era of stability, progress, and excellence under his chairmanship.

    It will be recalled that Prof. Siyan Oyeweso, the immediate past Pro-Chancellor and Chairman of the Council, also from Ede, passed on in December 2025 after a brief illness at the age of 64.