Category: General News

  • Judicial Conspiracy Suffocating Nigerian People

    Judicial Conspiracy Suffocating Nigerian People

    By Chidi Anselm Odinkalu

    Three different decisions of the highest court in the country over the past two decades illustrate how the judicial conspiracy against popular sovereignty in Nigeria has prospered.

    In 2008, the Supreme Court ruled that elections in Nigeria are not governed by any foundational or legal principles. In other words, Nigeria has no legal standard for a free, fair or credible election. The same court has ruled that in organizing elections, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) is not bound by its own administrative regulations and guidelines. So, INEC can behave with impunity as a lawless institution, and citizens and political parties have no right to have any expectations of the commission. The court has equally held that in Nigeria’s version of elective government, judges have the power to declare the majority votes in an election entirely “wasted,” and to install manifest losers as winners.

    These decisions have combined to denude elections in Nigeria of meaning as expressions of the will of the people. In these judgments and until now, the focus was on elections. The effect on citizenship, as the basis of the right to vote and to constitute a government, was arguably indirect.

    In a decision on 23 July (this past week), Oluseyi Owoeye, a judge of the Federal High Court in Lagos, goes dangerously further in this project of judicial liquidation of the constitutional foundations of elective government. According to the judge: “any question bordering on the action or omission of any person (to) guarantees (sic) the participation by the people in their government is not justiciable before any Court of law in Nigeria.” As far as wilful and cynical jurisprudence goes, this takes the prize.

    Given the significance of this judgment for civic rights in Nigeria, it is essential to provide some context so that those who are interested may follow the issues fully.

    Chapter IV of Nigeria’s 1999 Constitution guarantees a set of Fundamental Rights which it requires the courts to enforce through an expedited process inscribed in the Fundamental Rights (Enforcement Procedure) (FREP) Rules made by the Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN). For reasons that are not entirely clear, however, the rights guaranteed in Chapter IV do not include the right to vote or to participate in government.

    Instead, Chapter II of the same Constitution contains two important provisions of relevance to this. First, section 14(2)(a) exhorts that “sovereignty belongs to the people of Nigeria from whom government through this Constitution derives all its powers and authority.” As a complement, section 14(2)(c) follows this up with the promise that “the participation by the people in their government shall be ensured in accordance with the provisions of this Constitution.” However, in an earlier stipulation in section 6(6)(c), the same Constitution precludes courts from exercising their powers to enforce these provisions of chapter II.

    There are at least two exceptions to this constraint. First, under item 60(a) in the Exclusive Legislative List, the National Assembly may make laws “to promote and enforce the observance of the Fundamental Objectives and Directive Principles contained in this Constitution”, and the courts will be bound to enforce such laws. Second, under section 12(1) of the same constitution, the courts are bound to enforce the provisions of a treaty which has been enacted into law by the National Assembly, even if such a treaty covers issues contained in Chapter II of the Constitution.

    In Nigeria, the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights straddles both exceptions. Article 13(1) of the Charter makes up for the omission of a right to vote in the constitution by guaranteeing the right of citizens to participate in their government. In this sense, the Charter implements the provisions of Section 14 in Chapter II of the Constitution. Nigeria’s National Assembly enacted it into domestic law through the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights (Ratification and Enforcement) Act and the Supreme Court has recognized that the African Charter “is now part of the laws of Nigeria and like all other laws the Courts must uphold it.” The FREP Rules are explicitly available for the enforcement of the rights contained in the African Charter.

    This context is essential to explain why the decision this past week by Oluseyi Owoeye of the Federal High Court in Lagos is both cynical and dangerous. In reaching the decision, the judge claimed that he could not enforce the guarantee of the right to participation in the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights because participation is only contained in Chapter II of Nigeria’s Constitution, a provision to the enforcement of which he cannot lend his judicial powers.

    That is manifestly disingenuous. It is also plainly misguided as a matter of law. If a judge cannot protect the right of citizens to participate in their government, why is he a judge? Will he prefer to protect stolen elections, instead?

    The facts are also relevant here. On 20 July 2023, a class of Nigerian citizens instituted this case. The defendants were the INEC, the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) and the Attorney-General of the Federation. Against INEC, they alleged multiple violations including exclusion from the register of voters, deliberate mismanagement of election logistics, wilful destruction of voters cards, and complicity in election-related violence.

    Both the INEC and the NHRC entered appearance. The case took two years to come to judgment but, despite repeated reminders and orders by the Court, the Attorney-General of the Federation, a named defendant in a matter of such high civic and constitutional significance, could not be bothered to file any defence or instruct any of the numerous lawyers in his office to appear on his behalf. It is well possible that the judge took a cue from the attitude of the Attorney-General and decided to find a way to play good and avoid entering into the substance of the case. If that is so, then he settled for the worst possible escape route.

    The logic of precluding courts from lending their powers to enforce the right to participate in government under an elective system essentially hollows out any idea of effective citizenship. Courts cannot decline the protection of the right to participation on the one hand and, on the other, agree to protect the integrity of elections or the obligations of those required by law to ensure that the ballot is credible. Effectively, if upheld on appeal, this judgment will license judicial burglary of Nigeria’s civics.

    It is surprising that a case of this scope in its implications could have flown so beneath the radar of public attention to judgment. This case will naturally go next to the Court of Appeal. Hopefully, it will merit the attentions of a full panel of the Court of Appeal. At that point, civic groups will hopefully apply to join as interested parties in the appeal and there will also be similar applications by other groups to join as friends of the court (amici curiae).

    This judgment by Oluseyi Owoeye of the Federal High Court is the latest in an increasingly fevered judicial effort to decapitate citizenship as the basis for government in the country. It is egregiously perverse and should not stand.

    It is worth recalling that among the truly unsung heroes of the resistance to military rule in Nigeria in the last three decades of the 20th century were judges in various courts around the country who opposed or constrained the excesses of military rule through their judgments. If the country’s current experiment in civil rule fails, it will be because some judges have replaced soldiers as those most enthusiastic about suffocating elective and accountable government founded – as the constitution mandates – on the will of the people.

    A lawyer and a teacher, Odinkalu can be reached at chidi.odinkalu@tufts.edu

  • NGX Chairman hails FG’s appointment of CIS members to key economic roles

    NGX Chairman hails FG’s appointment of CIS members to key economic roles

    By Taiye Olayemi

    The Chairman of NGX Group, Dr Umaru Kwairanga, has commended the Federal Government for appointing seasoned members of the Chartered Institute of Stockbrokers (CIS) into critical economic positions to help steer Nigeria’s economic reforms.

    Kwairanga gave the commendation at the 2025 National Workshop of the Chartered Institute of Stockbrokers held at the Presidential Villa State House Conference Hall, in Abuja.

    He described the appointment of professionals such as Mr Wale Edun, Mr Olayemi Cardoso and Alhaji Shamsudeen Ogunjimi as a clear demonstration of the government’s confidence in the expertise and integrity of the Institute’s members.

    According to him, the contributions of these appointees, alongside the bold economic vision of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu have been instrumental in stabilising the economy and restoring investor confidence.

    “The remarkable turnaround we are seeing today is the result of President Tinubu’s foresight and courage, supported by a team of trusted professionals who are products of this Institute.

    “We are proud that our members are part of the driving force behind the nation’s economic recovery,” he said.

    Kwairanga noted that the workshop, with the theme ‘Capital Formation in Nigeria: Strengthening Industry, Institutions and Markets to Bolster a $1 Trillion Economy’, underscores the urgent need to build strong industries, deepen markets and empower institutions to attract the capital needed for sustainable growth.

    He assured that the Chartered Institute of Stockbrokers and the Nigerian Exchange Group would continue to partner with the government to mobilise investments, unlock value in key sectors and position Nigeria as Africa’s leading investment destination.

    He also recognised the efforts of the Ministry of Finance Incorporated (MOFI) in managing government assets.

    He urged the agency to maintain transparent and efficient processes to maximise returns for the country.

    He appreciated President Tinubu for his continued support to the private sector and appreciated Vice President Kashim Shettima, for gracing the occasion and strengthening ties with the financial community.

    He congratulated the leadership of the Chartered Institute of Stockbrokers for organising a successful workshop and reaffirmed the Institute’s commitment to supporting policies that drive inclusive growth and prosperity.

  • ‎ADC erred, successive APC administrations never spent $18bn on refineries – IMPI

    ‎ADC erred, successive APC administrations never spent $18bn on refineries – IMPI

    ‎Flowerbud News/ The Independent Media and Policy Initiative (IMPI) has said that none of the two All Progressives Congress APC-led administrations spent $18bn either on the Turn Around Maintenance (TAM) or the rehabilitation of the nation’s four refineries.

    ‎This it noted is contrary to the position of the African Democratic Congress (ADC) which recently accused  successive APC governments of wasteful expenditure and demanded a forensic audit of APC-era spending on the refineries.

    ‎In a policy statement  signed by its Chairman, Dr Omoniyi Akinsiju, the think tank detailed the history of Turn Around Maintenances of the refineries and made a case for the forensic audit of expenditure incurred on the refineries from 2000 to 2023.

    ‎IMPI said: “We find it incredulous that the African Democratic Congress (ADC) will condition the sale of Nigeria’s sovereign-owned refineries on a forensic audit of the $18 billion allegedly spent on the four refineries.

    ‎”We do not have any misgivings about this otherwise innocuous demand. However, we readily perceive that the ADC was merely playing to the gallery by limiting the scope of the demanded forensic audit to the years since the All Progressive Congress (APC) emerged as the nation’s ruling party.

    ‎”We consider this a cheap and unserious effort at making an issue out of the protracted economic nuisance the government-owned and managed refineries had long turned into.

    ‎”We believe politicians, especially those supposed to provide the country with alternatives, should canvass issues based on credible, logical, evidence-based propositions.

    ‎”In this particular instance, we find it rather awkward that anyone claiming to be a true champion of probity and transparency in government affairs will insist that only successive administrations under the APC have collectively spent over $18 billion on the refineries, even as it added that the current federal administration has reportedly committed an additional $2.8 billion for such.”

    ‎To set the record straight, the think tank delved into history of several turn around maintenances since the 1990s and how billions of dollars were spent without results.

    ‎”In 1993, it became apparent that TAM had become desirable and compelling. However, rather than being attended to with the transparency it deserved, it became a source of slush funds and a side hustle for government and NNPC officials. For instance, a little-known Indigenous oil service company, Anchoff Strongholds, was contracted to conduct a TAM on the 125,000 barrels per day Warri Refinery and Petrochemical Company.

    ‎”Several media reports indicated that the TAM had little impact and, therefore, no consequence on the refinery’s technical standing. To address the issue, a probe panel chaired by the late Mr Aret Adams, one-time GMD of the NNPC, was instituted to investigate the WRPC TAM. The panel report recommended dismissing the WRPC managing director for his role in the scandal.

    ‎”The report also recommended the blacklisting of Anchoff Strongholds and their promoters and a ban on them from ever doing business with the NNPC. Despite the sanctions, the harm had already been done; the output and production capacity of the Warri Refinery tumbled from 60 per cent to 30 per cent.

    ‎”Curiously, in the same 1994, the primary promoter of the banned Anchoff Strongholds resurrected with Chrome Oil Services Limited and, in an inexplicable circumstance, secured the TAM of the second Port Harcourt 150,000bpd refinery. Again, the TAM was received with a lot of public dissatisfaction after it was reported that, rather than boost output, it declined to less than 40 per cent.

    ‎”Overall, the TAM gobbled $216 million. Translated, in fiscal terms, $216 million went down the drain. Mr Chamberlain Oyibo was GMD of the NNPC at this time (1993 – 1995)

    ‎”NNPC, under the leadership of Mallam Dalhatu Bayero (1995-1999), spent $92 million on the same Port Harcourt Refinery TAM in 1998,” the group said.

    ‎IMPI added that things got worse under civilian rule, beginning from the administration of former President Olusegun Obasanjo.

    ‎”However, the whole narrative relating to unexplained monies expended on TAM took another shape from 2000 during the Olusegun Obasanjo/Atiku Abubakar Presidency.

    ‎”Mr Gaius Obaseki, NNPC’s GMD between 1999 and 2003, provided the background to this scenario in an interview in November 2000, in which he gave details of the state of the country’s four refineries.

    ‎”Noting that he was satisfied with the state of things, he explained that the 150,000 bpd capacity Port Harcourt Refinery was running at 75 per cent, though it could run at 100 per cent. But he noted that professionally, he will be doing himself damage because the cracker—the fluid catalytic cracking units—will not be in place until the middle of 2001.

    ‎”By Obaseki’s estimation, the 150,000 bpd Port Harcourt refinery would be running at 100 per cent by mid-2001, subject to the availability of crude oil. He also said the Kaduna refinery was running at 60 per cent after a lot of maintenance work. This performance, he promised, would be tremendously increased, such that by 2001, the Kaduna refinery would operate at the same level as PH Refinery.

    ‎”However, there was a caveat: These growth projections will be realised “if we are left to do our work.”

    ‎”Under the Obaseki leadership of NNPC, the administration spent $1.67 billion on the refineries within four years, 1999 to 2003, and a further $39.7 million under Mr Funsho Kupolokun’s leadership between 2003 and 2007. However, by the middle of 2003, all the refineries were in different states of dysfunction.

    ‎”To show the level of disrepair of the refineries despite the $1.6 billion expended on them between 2001 and 2003, the Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE) lamented that all the refineries needed a complete overhaul due to bad management and poor maintenance culture, which considerably reduced refining output.

    ‎”A more serious consequence is that the country was forced to import petroleum products, resulting in a massive waste of scarce foreign exchange. Following the operational failure of the refineries, the then federal government resorted to wholesale fuel importation, which had serious consequences for the economy.

    ‎”We note the outcome of the Nigeria Extractive Industry Transparency Initiative’s audit of the refineries between 1999 and 2004, which affirmed that: “The importation process, including the tendering, contracting and procurement practices, falls short of current good practice standards, and it is questionable whether they fully protect interests in many areas of the process. There was a lack of written procedures.”.

    ‎‎
    ‎The think tank also pointed out that inspite of all the incurred expenditure, a 2015 in-house NNPC report was emphatic that no proper maintenance was done on the refineries after 2001

    ‎”Between 2000 and 2015, three different administrations of the People’s Democratic Party spent $4.66 billion on the nation’s four refineries. This does not include operational and other associated costs.

    ‎”Yet by mid-2015, an NNPC report provided a summary of the state of the refineries: “The refineries recorded heavy losses in their operations in 2015 due to low refining capacity, prolonged maintenance issues and pipeline vandalism. The last time there was a routine intervention on the facility was in 2000. The components of the refineries have reached the point where they have to be replaced, as opposed to what we call turnaround maintenance, which is servicing.

    ‎”It is such an old plant, and we are having difficulties getting some components. We can’t find some of the old manufacturing companies again. Whenever the refineries managed to resume production after lengthy repair work, they hardly worked for up to 90 days before they were shut down, and the purported maintenance cycle continued.”

    ‎”This narration should be sobering to any forward-looking Nigerian. We were bewildered because the ADC statement called for an investigation of TAM expenditures under the APC administrations,” IMPI said.

    ‎”On the involvement of APC administrations in the refineries, it pointed out that it was limited to the different approach adopted by the late President Muhammadu Buhari.

    ‎”We know no new TAM exercise has been commissioned under the current federal administration. As it were, President Bola Tinubu’s predecessor, former President Muhammadu Buhari, now late, inherited the state of the four national refineries as described above.

    ‎”Expectedly, no frugal-minded and nominally committed Nigerian will be compelled to redress the untoward state of those national assets with the record of wasted expenditures. However, the late President may have fallen into the benign trap of sunk cost syndrome.

    ‎”In this regard, former President Buhari has our sympathy. In addition to the funds sunk into the refineries, his administration was also burdened with the fiscal load of subsidy payments on the nation’s imported fuel consumption, eroding foreign exchange savings.

    ‎”Of course, the powerful labour unions in the NNPC were insistent on the possibility of resuscitating the refineries to justify continued salary payments and the sustenance of the refineries’ workers, and the NNPC management was also very forceful in this regard.

    ‎”It was, apparently, easy for the late President to capitulate. Beginning in 2021, the Federal Government awarded an Italian company, Tecnimont SPA, a $1.5 billion contract to rehabilitate the Port Harcourt refineries, while about $1.484 billion contracts were awarded to Saipem SPA and Saipem Contracting Limited to rehab the Kaduna and Warri refineries, respectively.

    ‎”While one of the Port Harcourt facilities momentarily resumed crude processing in late 2023, it shut down again in May 2025 for maintenance. The Warri and Kaduna refineries, aged 46 and 44 years respectively, remain under rehabilitation.

    ‎”Meanwhile, we must clarify the scope and scale of work done from the spending on refineries under the Buhari administration. This is well captured in the words of the immediate past GCEO of the NNPC, Mr Mele Kyari, who commented, “We are not doing turnaround maintenance; we are doing rehabilitation of the refineries, and this is very different. It means that we are replacing certain major components. In rehabilitation, we normally don’t shut down the plant completely. We repair a segment of it, and then it starts working, and then you move to the next segment. You continue to scale up, which is why, within the four years, the contractor would have completely left your premises.”

    ‎”We do not object to conducting a forensic audit on all four refineries, but we believe it should cover the period 2000 to 2023. This will capture the active disbursement period and help the nation understand what happened in those years, which will inform policy positions in the midstream sector of the oil and gas industry going forward,” it said.

  • Alleged Wasteful Turn Around Maintenance (TAM) of Refineries: Setting the records straight

    Alleged Wasteful Turn Around Maintenance (TAM) of Refineries: Setting the records straight

    POLICY STATEMENT O28 BY THE INDEPENDENT MEDIA AND POLICY INITIATIVE (IMPI)

     

    Alleged Wasteful Turn Around Maintenance (TAM) of Refineries: Setting the records straight

    We find it incredulous that the African Democratic Congress (ADC) will condition the sale of Nigeria’s sovereign-owned refineries on a forensic audit of the $18 billion allegedly spent on the four refineries.

    We do not have any misgivings about this otherwise innocuous demand. However, we readily perceive that the ADC was merely playing to the gallery by limiting the scope of the demanded forensic audit to the years since the All Progressive Congress (APC) emerged as the nation’s ruling party.

    We consider this a cheap and unserious effort at making an issue out of the protracted economic nuisance the government-owned and managed refineries had long turned into.

    We believe politicians, especially those supposed to provide the country with alternatives, should canvass issues based on credible, logical, evidence-based propositions.

    In this particular instance, we find it rather awkward that anyone claiming to be a true champion of probity and transparency in government affairs will insist that only successive administrations under the APC have collectively spent over $18 billion on the refineries, even as it added that the current federal administration has reportedly committed an additional $2.8 billion for such.

    The party further raised alarm over potential favouritism in the mooted privatisation, cautioning that national assets might be undervalued and handed over to political allies. ADC further asserted, “If the intention was to privatise the refineries, then the years of huge public spending are at best a waste, and at worst a scam.”

    We find all these cacophonous and a deliberate attempt to confuse ordinary Nigerians. This is why we believe this issue is deserving of our intervention. In doing this, we foreground this intervention with the declaration by the recently appointed Group Chief Executive Officer of the Nigeria National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL), Bashir Ojulari indicating that the company is conducting a “deep dive, life-cycle review” of the projects (refineries) which are expected to be completed by the end of the year. This is not only to make sure that the company utilises whatever is helpful in the structures, but also to be free to bring in additional elements that can make things work, adding that the NNPCL must review the projects without falling victim to “sunk cost syndrome.”

    We find it strange that despite underscoring his submission with the NNPCL’s commitment not to fall victim to “sunk cost syndrome,” it appears most commentators simply refused to imbibe the literal imputations of the syndrome as the guidepost for whatever will be the eventual fate of the refineries.

    To avoid doubt, we think we should put this into perspective. The sunk cost syndrome, also known as the sunk cost fallacy, is a cognitive bias that leads individuals to continue investing in a decision based on prior investments (money, time, or effort) rather than on future benefits.

    This fallacy often results in poor decision-making, as it prioritises past investments over better future options. It can affect various areas of life, including relationships, investments, and career paths, leading to suboptimal outcomes. Understanding this bias can help individuals or businesses make more rational decisions by focusing on current and future costs rather than past expenditures.

    By adopting this philosophical outlook, we are confident that the NNPCL is well equipped to reach a beneficial conclusion regarding the fate of the refineries. Nonetheless, we also think it is appropriate to lay out the intricate tapestry of mismanagement, corruption, and acts of official sabotage that gutted the refineries long before the APC came to power.

    The second Port Harcourt refinery, with a 150,000 bpd capacity, was built in 1985 for $850 million. The 125,000 bpd Warri refinery was built in 1978 for $478 million, and the 110,000 bpd Kaduna refinery was built in 1976 for $525 million. The refineries, including the 60,000-barrel-per-day Port Harcourt refinery, were collectively built to refine 445,000 barrels of crude daily. Over the years, they have suffered total disrepair and comprehensive paralysis.

    However, it had not always been a sad tale of disrepair concerning the refineries. In the early 1990s, the refineries produced enough petroleum products to satisfy national demand and export. But after that period, a lot of things went wrong. The refineries under the management of the then Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation soon veered off the path of refinery management and production best practices.

    Best practice is that a refinery is designed and built to produce defined quantities and product specifications, operating continuously without interruption for 24–36 months based on proper maintenance culture, before it is systematically shut down for a period to carry out Turn-Around Maintenance (TAM).

    When TAM is unduly delayed, the performance of the refinery declines. Besides, machines and other service facilities are subject to deterioration due to their use and exposure to process and environmental conditions.

    This deterioration must be duly taken care of by various maintenance interventions and techniques at certain pre-determined intervals so that the required use of facilities can be continued and service life extended until maintenance costs become prohibitive and replacement action becomes inevitable.

    The American Petroleum Institute (API) defines Turnaround as a periodic shutdown (total or partial) of a refinery process unit or plant to perform maintenance, overhaul, and repair operations and inspect, test, and replace process materials and equipment.

    As things turned out, the critical periodic TAM, which was supposed to be undertaken every two to three years at most, was not done between 1986 and 1993.

    Because no TAM was conducted on any of the refineries in those six years, the output efficiency template of the refineries fell from 90 per cent to 60 per cent.

    In 1993, it became apparent that TAM had become desirable and compelling. However, rather than being attended to with the transparency it deserved, it became a source of slush funds and a side hustle for government and NNPC officials. For instance, a little-known Indigenous oil service company, Anchoff Strongholds, was contracted to conduct a TAM on the 125,000 barrels per day Warri Refinery and Petrochemical Company.

    Several media reports indicated that the TAM had little impact and, therefore, no consequence on the refinery’s technical standing. To address the issue, a probe panel chaired by the late Mr Aret Adams, one-time GMD of the NNPC, was instituted to investigate the WRPC TAM. The panel report recommended dismissing the WRPC managing director for his role in the scandal.

    The report also recommended the blacklisting of Anchoff Strongholds and their promoters and a ban on them from ever doing business with the NNPC. Despite the sanctions, the harm had already been done; the output and production capacity of the Warri Refinery tumbled from 60 per cent to 30 per cent.

    Curiously, in the same 1994, the primary promoter of the banned Anchoff Strongholds resurrected with Chrome Oil Services Limited and, in an inexplicable circumstance, secured the TAM of the second Port Harcourt 150,000bpd refinery. Again, the TAM was received with a lot of public dissatisfaction after it was reported that, rather than boost output, it declined to less than 40 per cent.

    Overall, the TAM gobbled $216 million. Translated, in fiscal terms, $216 million went down the drain. Mr Chamberlain Oyibo was GMD of the NNPC at this time (1993 – 1995)

    NNPC, under the leadership of Mallam Dalhatu Bayero (1995-1999), spent $92 million on the same Port Harcourt Refinery TAM in 1998.

    However, the whole narrative relating to unexplained monies expended on TAM took another shape from 2000 during the Olusegun Obasanjo/Atiku Abubakar Presidency.

    Mr Gaius Obaseki, NNPC’s GMD between 1999 and 2003, provided the background to this scenario in an interview in November 2000, in which he gave details of the state of the country’s four refineries.

    Noting that he was satisfied with the state of things, he explained that the 150,000 bpd capacity Port Harcourt Refinery was running at 75 per cent, though it could run at 100 per cent. But he noted that professionally, he will be doing himself damage because the cracker—the fluid catalytic cracking units—will not be in place until the middle of 2001.

    By Obaseki’s estimation, the 150,000 bpd Port Harcourt refinery would be running at 100 per cent by mid-2001, subject to the availability of crude oil. He also said the Kaduna refinery was running at 60 per cent after a lot of maintenance work. This performance, he promised, would be tremendously increased, such that by 2001, the Kaduna refinery would operate at the same level as PH Refinery.

    However, there was a caveat: These growth projections will be realised “if we are left to do our work.”

    Under the Obaseki leadership of NNPC, the administration spent $1.67 billion on the refineries within four years, 1999 to 2003, and a further $39.7 million under Mr Funsho Kupolokun’s leadership between 2003 and 2007. However, by the middle of 2003, all the refineries were in different states of dysfunction.

    To show the level of disrepair of the refineries despite the $1.6 billion expended on them between 2001 and 2003, the Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE) lamented that all the refineries needed a complete overhaul due to bad management and poor maintenance culture, which considerably reduced refining output.

    A more serious consequence is that the country was forced to import petroleum products, resulting in a massive waste of scarce foreign exchange. Following the operational failure of the refineries, the then federal government resorted to wholesale fuel importation, which had serious consequences for the economy.

    We note the outcome of the Nigeria Extractive Industry Transparency Initiative’s audit of the refineries between 1999 and 2004, which affirmed that: “The importation process, including the tendering, contracting and procurement practices, falls short of current good practice standards, and it is questionable whether they fully protect interests in many areas of the process. There was a lack of written procedures.”

    When he returned for a second term in May 2003, President Obasanjo signed off on privatising the four refineries. The process was to be carried out under the auspices of the National Council on Privatisation (NCP). However, it became a reference narrative for process compromises and official manipulation.

    The transaction formally commenced in October 2003. By December 2 of the same year, four firms, Essa Infrastructure of India, Oando Plc, Refinee Petrobus, and Transcorp Plc, had submitted their technical and financial bids after obtaining and submitting their respective Expression of Interest (EoI) documents. However, BPE disqualified all four bidders because they did not meet the minimum qualification benchmark after evaluation.

    There was suspicion over the mass disqualification because the BPE did not give specific reasons for the failure of the bid test. The bidders were asked to resubmit their respective bids by 24 April 2006. Again, the bids were disqualified because a technical partner was a member of more than one consortium.

    The President, acting on this excuse, ordered the process to be halted and the transaction to be reopened to other bidders. Without formal public explanation, the President directed the refineries to be returned to NNPC. With no improvement, he again ordered another bid round. Four firms, Mittal Investments Limited, Indorama International Finance Ltd, Global Oil and Energy, and Link Global International Ltd, joined the earlier four to submit bids.

    Then coming from the flanks, it was announced that Oando Plc, Refinee Petroplus and Bluestar Consortium (incorporating Transcorp Plc) had submitted their technical and financial proposals for the Port Harcourt Refinery. Though all three were prequalified, the Blue Consortium emerged as the winner with a bid of $561 million for a 52 per cent stake in the plant.

    The same Blue Star Oil Service Consortium won the bid for the Kaduna Refinery, outbidding China National Petroleum Corporation’s $102 million bid with its $160 million offer.

    However, questions were raised concerning how the Blue Star Consortium suddenly appeared on the scene without committing to the initial bid process by submitting an expression of interest form required by law and complying with initial processes.

    When asked about the scrap value at which the winners of the bids secured the purchase of both the Port Harcourt and Kaduna Refineries, Mrs Irene Chigbue, Director-General of the BPE famously declared that the Bureau’s mandate had never been to sell government’s enterprises to generate money for government: “Our greater mandate is to allow the private sector drive the nation’s economy. It is not how much we get from these sales that matters, but the overriding desire to see our refineries meet the local need for fuel, thereby saving the country from huge foreign reserves arising from fuel importation.”

    We consider this curious averment the orchestration of the private aspiration of the President at that time. And an outright romanticisation of irresponsible profligacy. We do not want to imagine an accountable government which had expended a princely sum of $1.6bn on two refineries that were functional within two years, would, thereafter, sell them off at a scrap value of less than 40 per cent of the TAM expenditure.

    The succeeding presidency of Umar Musa Yar’Adua cancelled the sale of the refineries by Obasanjo. Soon after the stoppage of the sale in 2007, the NNPC reportedly announced that it had awarded a contract to a Nigerian firm to carry out a comprehensive turnaround maintenance on all the refineries. The contract sum was said to be $57m.

    In 2009, the then Group Managing Director (GMD) of the NNPC, Alhaji Mohammed Sanusi Barkindo, also announced that the corporation spent $200m on maintaining the Kaduna refinery. It soon became apparent that the trend, starting from Obasanjo, was to evolve into a saga of wastefulness of funds meant for TAM by the successor to Yar’Adua, President Goodluck Jonathan.

    President Jonathan made TAM a state policy. As part of his four-year term agenda towards growing the economy through the oil sector, he directed the NNPC to, as a matter of national priority, carry out a comprehensive rehabilitation of the four refineries within the next 24 months.

    The project was scheduled to commence in August 2011 and was expected to be completed by the first quarter of 2012. Between 2010 and 2012, with Mr Austen Oniwon as GMD of the NNPC, the sum of $900 million was expended on the TAM.

    However, in an about-face, President Jonathan, despite the $900 million expenditure, approved the privatisation of the four refineries in December 2013. A steering committee, headed by then-Minister of Petroleum Diezani Alison-Madueke, was formed to oversee the process and make recommendations to the National Council on Privatisation.

    Yet as a tug-of-war raged between the President Jonathan administration and labour unions in the country that had traditionally resisted privatisation of the refineries, the government approved $1.92 billion in TAM spending between 2012 and 2014. Mr Andrew Yakubu was GMD of the NNPC during this period.

    In January 2014, in response to the union’s threats, the President announced that the government had no plans to privatise the refineries.

    Between 2013 and 2015, $396.33 million was said to have been used to finance turnaround maintenance for the refineries.

    This expenditure has a unique story. At that time, it was reported that the government contacted the Original Equipment Manufacturer (OEM) and Original Refinery Builder (ORB) of the Port Harcourt refinery (Nigeria’s largest), Japan Gas Company (JGC), which declined but instead gave the design materials to Tecnimont of Italy, which designed the Warri Refinery.

    The company revealed that the original TAM proposal for Port Harcourt was initially submitted to NNPC in 2013 for $297 million by Tecnimont. Still, some of its (NNPC) officials opted to inflate the cost to almost $600 million.  Meanwhile, the NNPC had at this time continued to decline payment of the $2.5 million balance owed to Tecnimont for a study it conducted on the Port Harcourt Refinery.

    Meanwhile, domestic engineers working with the NNPC volunteered to salvage the situation by offering their skills and knowledge of the refineries to carry out the TAM of all four refineries at a far cheaper rate than the approved sum of $1.6 billion for 2015. This domestic intervention reduced TAM for the four refineries to about $22 million, saving taxpayers $1.57 billion from the $1.6 billion earlier voted for the projects.

    A document from the NNPC showed that $10 million, about 48 per cent of the total expenditure, was spent on the two refineries in Port Harcourt. The $22 million expenditure was a 982 per cent reduction from the $216 million the General Sani Abacha regime spent for the same purpose.

    According to the document, the Managing Director of the PHRC, Dr. Bafred Audu Enjugu, authenticated the $10 million investment in the facility. “The ongoing phased rehabilitation of the company cost a little less than $10 million. Indigenous engineers holistically carried out the job without foreign support,” Enjugu said.

    Between 2000 and 2015, three different administrations of the People’s Democratic Party spent $4.66 billion on the nation’s four refineries. This does not include operational and other associated costs.

    Yet by mid-2015, an NNPC report provided a summary of the state of the refineries: “The refineries recorded heavy losses in their operations in 2015 due to low refining capacity, prolonged maintenance issues and pipeline vandalism. The last time there was a routine intervention on the facility was in 2000. The components of the refineries have reached the point where they have to be replaced, as opposed to what we call turnaround maintenance, which is servicing.

    “It is such an old plant, and we are having difficulties getting some components. We can’t find some of the old manufacturing companies again. Whenever the refineries managed to resume production after lengthy repair work, they hardly worked for up to 90 days before they were shut down, and the purported maintenance cycle continued.”

    This narration should be sobering to any forward-looking Nigerian. We were bewildered because the ADC statement called for an investigation of TAM expenditures under the APC administrations.

    We consider the call offensive, mischievous and fraudulent. We know no new TAM exercise has been commissioned under the current federal administration. As it were, President Bola Tinubu’s predecessor, former President Muhammadu Buhari, now late, inherited the state of the four national refineries as described above.

    Expectedly, no frugal-minded and nominally committed Nigerian will be compelled to redress the untoward state of those national assets with the record of wasted expenditures. However, the late President may have fallen into the benign trap of sunk cost syndrome.

    In this regard, former President Buhari has our sympathy. In addition to the funds sunk into the refineries, his administration was also burdened with the fiscal load of subsidy payments on the nation’s imported fuel consumption, eroding foreign exchange savings.

    Of course, the powerful labour unions in the NNPC were insistent on the possibility of resuscitating the refineries to justify continued salary payments and the sustenance of the refineries’ workers, and the NNPC management was also very forceful in this regard.

    It was, apparently, easy for the late President to capitulate. Beginning in 2021, the Federal Government awarded an Italian company, Tecnimont SPA, a $1.5 billion contract to rehabilitate the Port Harcourt refineries, while about $1.484 billion contracts were awarded to Saipem SPA and Saipem Contracting Limited to rehab the Kaduna and Warri refineries, respectively.

    While one of the Port Harcourt facilities momentarily resumed crude processing in late 2023, it shut down again in May 2025 for maintenance. The Warri and Kaduna refineries, aged 46 and 44 years respectively, remain under rehabilitation.

    Meanwhile, we must clarify the scope and scale of work done from the spending on refineries under the Buhari administration. This is well captured in the words of the immediate past GCEO of the NNPC, Mr Mele Kyari, who commented, “We are not doing turnaround maintenance; we are doing rehabilitation of the refineries, and this is very different. It means that we are replacing certain major components. In rehabilitation, we normally don’t shut down the plant completely. We repair a segment of it, and then it starts working, and then you move to the next segment. You continue to scale up, which is why, within the four years, the contractor would have completely left your premises.”

    We do not object to conducting a forensic audit on all four refineries, but we believe it should cover the period 2000 to 2023. This will capture the active disbursement period and help the nation understand what happened in those years, which will inform policy positions in the midstream sector of the oil and gas industry going forward.

     

    Omoniyi M Akinsiju, PhD

    Chairman,

    Independent Media and Policy Initiative (IMPI)

    *July 24, 2025*

  • Agricultural Industrialisation Key to African Development – Dr. Debo Akande.

    Agricultural Industrialisation Key to African Development – Dr. Debo Akande.

        

    Agricultural Industrialisation Key to African Development – Dr. Debo Akande.

    ‎By Adewale Owoade.

    ‎The Director General of Oyo State Agricultural Development Agency (OYSADA), Dr. Debo Akande, has emphasised the importance of tech-driven agriculture and industrialisation in driving economic growth and development in Africa.

    ‎He made this assertion at the 18th annual lecture of Splash FM, held in commemoration of the station’s anniversary and the 86th birthday of its founder, Oba Dr. Murtala Adebayo Akande.

    ‎Dr. Akande highlighted the paradox of economic growth and poverty reduction in Nigeria, noting that despite periods of economic growth, poverty levels have remained high.

    ‎He emphasised the need for Africa to industrialise its agricultural sector to drive economic growth and development. He noted that Oyo State, under the leadership of Governor Seyi Makinde, has made significant progress in developing its agribusiness strategy.

    ‎ “Economic development broadly implies improvement in the overall well-being of a population, the standard of living, quality of life, and progressive changes in the country’s socio-economic structure.

    ‎“Our narrative as a nation has been that of one that has struggled with a systematic and consistent economic growth strategy and inability to translate any economic growth that has occurred in history into economic development.

    ‎” Poverty reduction, which is one of the primary goals and measurements of economic development, is a major paradox to economic growth in Nigeria.

    ‎“The poverty and economic growth paradox in Nigeria is not new. During most of the periods that Nigeria’s economy was growing, the poverty level was also high.

    ‎” Between the late 1970s and 1990, Nigeria’s poverty level, which was already 27%, subsequently jumped to 46% in 1996, and it currently stands at 40.1%.

    ‎“From Independence, the focus of Nigeria’s government policy shifted from the extraction policy of the colonial era to export-led growth and import-substitution policy for industrialisation.

    ‎ “Today, Oyo is on the verge of industrializing its agricultural sector. You may say I am biased, but I am speaking the facts, and they say data is sacred. In the last six years, Oyo State has ticked most of the boxes above.

    ‎”Oyo State, under the visionary leadership of Engr. Seyi Makinde, developed its own agribusiness strategy as far back as 2019,” he said.

    ‎In his remarks, the Chairman of the occasion Prof. Jide Owoeye stated that the gathering is not just a calendar coincidence but a convergence of excellence.

    ‎Prof. Owoeye who also doubles as the Chairman, Governing Council, Lead City University, Ibadan described the event as a two celebrations, one legacy.

    ‎“Today, I stand here as Chairman of the Governing Council of Lead City University, chairing this occasion, but I also stand as a grateful citizen of this city because when you tell the story of Ibadan’s modern evolution, you cannot ignore the voice of Splash FM.

    ‎“Today, we gather not only to honour a station but to celebrate a symbol, an 86th birthday celebration for Oba Dr. Murtala Adebayo Akande, a monarch, a media visionary, and a beacon of Ibadan’s legacy,” Owoeye stated.

    ‎The founder of Splash FM, Oba Dr. Murtala Adebayo Akande, celebrated his 86th birthday during the event.

    ‎ In his welcome address, that was read by the CEO West Midlands communications, owner of SplashFM & Lagelu FM – Chief Mrs Atinuke Adetunji, expressed gratitude to his family, friends, and colleagues for their support and love.

    ‎“It is not every time a man gets to celebrate 86 meaningful years of life, nor is it every day that one sees a dream like Splash FM grow, thrive, and redefine a city’s media culture for 18 vibrant years.

    ‎“But what is life, without the people who walk its journey with you? Today, I’m not just celebrating my birthday, I am celebrating you, my dear friends, family, colleagues, and loyal partners.

    ‎“I am overwhelmed by the love that surrounds me, by the laughter in this hall, by the kind words that have been spoken, and by the faces that have travelled near and far just to honor me.

    ‎”To my friends, Your unwavering support, your constant check-ins, your belief in my person and vision… these are treasures money cannot buy. To my dear family — your love is my compass.

    ‎“To the entire team at WestMidlands Communications, past and present, thank you for giving meaning to a vision I once whispered to myself. You’ve turned a single frequency into a household name. You’ve taken radio beyond the studio, you’ve taken it into lives.

    ‎“I often say that Splash FM is not just a radio station, it is a voice of values, a companion, a teacher, an entertainer, and most importantly, a torchbearer.

    ‎”The fact that it stands today as the first private radio station in Ibadan, and also the first to stream live on Facebook in the city, is not just a testament to innovation — it is proof that dreams, when backed by sincerity and commitment, can rewrite history.

    ‎” And today, as I look at all of you, I am reminded again that legacy is not only built in structures — it is built in values.

    ‎“I stand before you today not just as a Royal Majesty or a broadcaster, but as a grateful man.Thank you, thank you, thank you, for the honor, the love, the friendship. May Almighty God bless and reward you all abundantly.l,” Oba Akande said

    ‎The General Manager of the Splash FM radio station, Mr Tunde Olawuwo said that the annual lecture has  established itself as a melting pot of ideas, by spotlighting critical issues, it continues to drive meaningful impact, going beyond our core mission to educate, inform, and entertain.

    ‎The annual lecture, themed “Industrialisation of Agriculture for Economic Development,” featured discussions on the importance of agricultural industrialisation in driving economic growth and development.

    ‎The event was attended by notable figures. (NAN)

  • PTS Chairman Reveals 5.8 Million Passengers Benefited from Transport Subsidy Since January 2025. ‎

    PTS Chairman Reveals 5.8 Million Passengers Benefited from Transport Subsidy Since January 2025. ‎

    PTS Chairman Reveals 5.8 Million Passengers Benefited from Transport Subsidy Since January 2025.

    By Adewale Owoade

    The  Chairman/Sole Administrator of Pacesetter Transport Services (PTS), Dr. Ibraheem Salami (Dikko), has revealed that the Oyo State Government has subsidized transport fares for 5,880,000 passengers under the Sustainable Action for Economic Recovery (SAfER) initiative between January and July 2025.

    Dr Salami who stated this while briefing newsmen at the Governor’s Office Briefing Room, Secretariat Ibadan.

    ‎The SAfER Transport initiative, introduced by Governor Seyi Makinde, aims to mitigate economic hardship facing residents, students, pensioners, the aged, and people living with disabilities. Under this initiative, residents enjoy subsidized transportation on state-owned Pacesetter Buses on various intra-city and inter-city routes.

    Salami said the  PTS commuted 9,950,000 passengers in 2024 and 5,880,000 passengers from January to July 2025, and that  the state government invested N541 million in 2023, N924 million in 2024, and N686 million in 2025 to subsidize transport fares.

    ‎He said: “Since August 5th, 2023, when Governor ‘Seyi Makinde announced SAfER, till date, the state government has spent N2,151,000,000 to subsidise transportation for the people.

    ‎”Between August 5th and December 2023, the governor invested N541 million in subsidising transport fare by 50 per cent for residents of the state. We commuted between 26,000 and 30,000 people on a daily basis in 2023.

    ‎”In 2024, the governor invested N924 million and we commuted over 9,950,000 people in 2024.

    “This year, as we speak, the governor has invested N686 million and so far, from January to date, we have commuted about 5,880,000 passengers.

    “The public needs to know what the governor has been doing to put all those buses back on the road and to ensure that life is easier for residents of the state.”

    Speaking further, he said that the PTS  currently operates 39 intra-city routes with 55 buses and five inter-city routes with 10 buses.

    The introduction of a digital payment system increased revenue from N200,000 to over N1.5 million in a day, and that PTS has recorded a steady rise in subscribers, with 262,000 subscribers to date.

    The  introduction of logistics services,is  allowing customers to send goods to Ibadan, Lagos, or Abuja.

    ‎Salami  attributed controversies surrounding PTS to “corruption fighting back” after the company’s reforms blocked loopholes for stealing.

    ‎He cited investigations that cleared PTS of wrongdoing, stating, “All money made in PTS is electronically made, and you cannot remove anything.”

    While speaking about the future Plans of the company, Salami said that PTS has received 30 CNG buses from the Federal Government and plans to launch operations on Lagos to Abuja and Ibadan to Kwara routes soon.

    And also the the state is set to launch a CNG conversion centre and Taxi Transport Services for easy movement of travelers.

    The PTS chairman hailed Governor Makinde for transforming and reforming the transport company, which had become moribund prior to his assumption of office in 2019, noting that the PTS has experienced growth since he was appointed as the Chairman/Sole Administrator of the Company in July 2023.

    According to him, apart from recording an increase in the number of functioning vehicles and routes, paying pensions/gratuities and also restructuring of the workforce for better service delivery to the masses.

  • X-raying the ever-soaring national profile of Sen. Aliyu Magatakarda Wamakko

    X-raying the ever-soaring national profile of Sen. Aliyu Magatakarda Wamakko

    By Bashir Rabe Mani

    By way of introduction, democracy is the government of the people, for the people and by the people. Indeed this is the commonest and the the widely avoided and globally accepted meaning of democracy.

    Similarly, democracy s a system of government where power is held by the people. Under it, the citizens participate through voting in elections and the leaders are elected to represent people and make decisions.

    The crux of the above is that in democracy, the major preoccupation is service to the people. In another way, put succinctly, under democracy, the people and or the electorate hold sway as they own the mandate they only lend it to their trusted representatives via the modus operandi of the ballot boxes.

    In Nigeria, from 1999 to date
    Nigeria had successfully transitioned from military rule to democracy on May 29, 1999, with Olusegun Obasanjo becoming the democratically elected President. Since then, Nigeria has held several elections, with changes in ruling parties.

    In Sokoto State, just like across the other parts of the country, democracy has been trudging on from 1999 to date, with elected representatives at all levels, from Councillors to Governor. Indeed, this darling of all climes, democracy has thrived to greater heights.

    In fact, to further drive the indispensable point home, democracy was at its best in Sokoto State when the incumbent Senator representing Sokoto North Senatorial District, Distinguished Sen. Aliyu Magatakarda Wamakko held away.

    His was a two-term tenure that hugely transformed Sokoto State into the envy of its contemporaries not only in Nigeria but beyond the shores of this country.

    From 2007 to 2015, the trajectory in Sokoto State was that of development and development and nothing short of that. He had successfully,loyally, patriotically and piously discharged his God-given mandates as a Governor, to the admiration of even his worst critics.

    His administration was really epochal and he left indelible and lasting legacies that are only now being emulated by the incumbent Governor of the State, His Excellency, Dr Ahmed Aliyu SoKoto, FCNA, the political god-son of Wamakko, under his noble tutelage and guidance.

    The above laconic outline is just to introduce the man of the people and Senator-without-borders, Sen. Aliyu Magatakarda Wamakko, the Sarkin Yamman SoKoto. He is a man who never tires in attending to the daily needs of his immediate constituents, people of Sokoto and indeed other Nigerians.

    This workaholic man of a Senator in fact knows nothing except tireless and invaluable service to the people of the state and humanity in general.

    Although he is man who needs no introduction as his footprints about across the state, Nigeria, Africa and the world. Yet, Sen. Aliyu Magatakarda Wamakko is a seasoned Nigerian politician with a long history of public service.

    This blue-blooded, astute and Iconic administrator par excellence was born great, born into greatness and he has remained great from cradle to now. This is nothing short of the inevitable timetable of divinity which no mere fallible mortal can alter.

    Born on March 1, 1953, in Wamakko, Sokoto State, he earned a Teachers’ Certificate from Sokoto Teachers’ College (1968-1972). He also obtained a Bachelor of Science degree from the University of Pittsburgh, USA (1980). From the, he has continued to pursue both Western and Islamic education to date.

    Also, from a middle-level civil servant, he steadily rose to the enviable rank of a Permanent Secretary, with an unblemished record of public service, from a Local Government Chairman to a Governor and now a Senator, with an ever-soaring personality. He has remained pious, charismatic and honest and only sleeps when no one who comes to him goes to sleep hungry.

    Again, as the Governor of Sokoto State, he served from 2007 to 2015, implementing development initiatives and projects that changed the political topography of the state, laced with a myriad of a retinue of giant developmental strides. His administration was truly second to none in the history of the legendary Seat of the Caliphate, Sokoto State.

    As a Senator, he currently represents Sokoto North Senatorial District in the Nigerian Senate, on the platform of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC). He is focusing on legislation and constituency development and his decades long service to humanity.

    As a Deputy Governor, he diligently served under Gov. Attahiru Bafarawa from 1999 to 2006, contributing to state development and governance. He was also a dependable pillar of that administration.

    As a Governor, he successfully implemented various infrastructure projects, including roads, bridges, and buildings.He also implemented various programmes and policies aimed at reducing poverty and improving livelihoods in Sokoto State.

    On youths’ empowerment, he launched initiatives to empower young people with skills, education, and economic opportunities. He also, among others, tried his best to promote the religion of Islam and Islamic education in general.

    The Sarkin Yakin Sokoto and member, Muslim World League, he has clinched several awards that inspired The Sun Lifetime Achievement Award received in 2024 for his contributions to public service and development. He also boasts of several Honourary Doctorate Degrees from various Nigerian Universities.

    As a prominent figure in Nigerian politics, Sen. Wamakko has made significant contributions to the development of Sokoto State and the country at large. His experience and leadership have earned him recognition and respect from his peers and constituents.

    It was in recognition of his extant national standing that President Bola Ahmed Tinubu recently included him in his high-powered delegation that visited Brazil where the President attended the 17th BRICS Summit in Rio de Janeiro from July 5 to 7, 2025.

    This trip was part of a two-nation tour that also included a state visit to Saint Lucia, aimed to strengthen Nigeria’s engagement with Caribbean nations and reinforce South-South cooperation.
    During his visit to Brazil, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu met with President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.The two leaders discussed global economic cooperation and development.

    Before heading to Brazil, Tinubu spent six days in Saint Lucia, where he also met with Governor-General Cyril Charles and Prime Minister Philip Pierre. Their discussions focused on establishing resident diplomatic missions and reviving a maritime corridor between Nigeria and the Caribbean.

    The Nigerian leader also addressed a joint session of the Saint Lucian Parliament: Tinubu referenced Nobel Laureate Derek Walcott’s “lost tribal memory” and suggested that Africa and the Caribbean could reclaim that memory through commercial partnerships.

    As a major fallout of this positive international foray, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu announced scholarships for Saint Lucian students: Nigeria will fund full scholarships for students from the Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States to attend federal universities in Nigeria.

    Tinubu, Sen. Aliyu Magatakarda Wamakko and other members of the high-profile entourage triumphantly returned to Abuja on July 12, 2025, after completing his visits to Saint Lucia and Brazil.

    What could be more of an honour and reward for service to humanity, work and nothing but work in the various causes of the people. Kudos to this untiring father-figure to the people of Sokoto State and beyond.

    To commemorate this feat achieved by Sen. Aliyu Magatakarda Wamakko, a forum recently described him as “The Northern Political Engineer and Coalition B2 Bomber”. It is being anchored by Hon. Sani Alhaji Yakubu, Member, House of Representatives, Gudu/Tangaza Federal Constituency (APC).

    He averred, “It is now clearer than ever that President Bola Ahmed Tinubu knows and acknowledges the true political owner and master strategist of the northern region of Nigeria: Senator Aliyu Magatakarda Wamakko, the Northern Political Engineer.”

    According to the lawmaker, the recent invitation extended by President Tinubu to Sen. Wamakko to travel alongside him on an important foreign mission speaks volumes. He enthused, “It is more than a mere gesture of camaraderie—it is a signal that the political permutations shaping the future of Nigeria cannot be complete without Senator Wamakko’s astute input and towering influence.

    “Sen. Aliyu Wamakko stands tall as a veteran political engineer who played a decisive role in the historic formation of the All Progressives Congress (APC). It was under his courageous leadership that five formidable Governors defected from the then ruling party, tilting the political balance and paving the way for the birth of the APC.”

    Hon. Sani Alhaji Yakubu added that Wamakko’s vision and strategic acumen were instrumental in building the coalition that would go on to change the course of Nigeria’s political history.

    “Now, after spending two weeks abroad with the President, political observers and opposition coalitions have been thrown into disarray.
    Rumblings of fear echo through their camps, as they anticipate what they term a “massive destruction” of their carefully laid plans. Indeed, Sen. Wamakko’s return is expected to bring fresh momentum and new strategies that could decisively shape the emerging political narrative.

    “Sen. Wamakko’s dedication to national unity, progress, and the empowerment of the people—especially in the North—is unparalleled. His political wisdom, deep grassroots connection, and enduring loyalty to progressive causes have made him an indispensable ally to President Tinubu and a towering figure in Nigeria’s political architecture.

    “May Allah, the Almighty, guide and protect you, Baba, and grant you safe return home. We remain solidly behind you, praying for God Almighty to bless you with good health, strength, and continued wisdom as you serve our great nation.”

    In another happy development, penultimate week, the Institute of Administration, Ahmadu Bello University (ABU), Zaria, exactly on the 7th of July, 2025 honoured His Excellency, Sen
    Aliyu Magatakarda Wamakko, CON, PhD, with a Certificate of Honour in recognition of his enduring legacy of national service, visionary leadership, and outstanding contributions to the development of the Institute.

    Sen. Wamakko, former Governor of Sokoto State and current Senator representing Sokoto North Senatorial District, was represented at the prestigious occasion by the Honourable Minister of State for Works, Rt. Hon. Bello Muhammad Goronyo, Esq., who received the award on his behalf.

    In a goodwill message conveyed through the Minister, Sen. Wamakko expressed profound gratitude to the management and leadership of Ahmadu Bello University for bestowing such a significant honour upon him.

    He reaffirmed his unwavering commitment to supporting the university’s mission of professionalism, academic excellence, and integrity, pledging continued collaboration with the institution to foster national development through education and public service.

    The key highlight of the historic ceremony was the presentation of Certificates of Honour to selected distinguished Nigerians, whose contributions have left indelible marks on the nation’s growth. Among this illustrious group, Senator Wamakko’s recognition stands as a testament to his lifelong dedication to leadership, service, and the advancement of education in Nigeria.

    The Institute of Administration, ABU Zaria, remains one of Nigeria’s foremost institutions dedicated to producing leaders in public administration, governance, and policy. The conferment of this award reflects the university’s appreciation for public figures who have demonstrated exemplary service to the Nigerian people.

    In the same vein, Sen. Aliyu Magatakarda Wamakko had since received an Honourary Doctorate Degree in Political Science from the Federal University Dutsin-ma in Katsina State. This prestigious award recognizes his outstanding contributions and achievements in the field of politics and public service.

    Honourary Doctorate degrees are awarded to individuals who have made significant impacts in their respective fields, demonstrating exceptional leadership, innovation or public service.

    These degrees are usually conferred by universities or institutions to acknowledge and honor remarkable achievements.

    It is therefore now glaringly and indisputably clear that Sen. Aliyu Magatakarda Wamakko, Sarkin Yamman Sokoto is fast solidifying his acumen as a national leader whose pedigree is beyond Sokoto State or the North.

    Mani, a journalist, is based in Kaduna-Nigeria.

  • NUJ Urges South-South Governors to revive BRACED Commission

    By Dianabasi Effiong

    Members of the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ), Zone F, have appealed to the South-South Governors to revive the BRACED Commission, re-dedicate themselves to regional development, and prioritise infrastructure projects, including building bridges to connect riverine communities within the geopolitical zone.

    They made this known in a communiqué issued at their Zonal Meeting on Saturday at the NUJ Press Centre in Uyo.

    The BRACED Commission comprises Bayelsa, Rivers, Akwa Ibom, Cross River, Edo, and Delta states.

    They also raised concerns about the poor condition of road infrastructure in the South-South Zone, adding that they were not satisfied with the development.

    They, therefore, called on the Federal Government “to bridge the gap between rhetoric and reality by completing all the Trunk A roads in the South-South States to reduce the cost of transportation of the people, goods, and services.

    The Zone noted with delight the increase in the monthly allocation to Local Government Councils and urged the council chairmen to go beyond the grading of community roads to the construction of Trunk C roads.

    The Zone also congratulated the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) on its 25th anniversary.

    It acknowledged the modest achievements of the Dr Samuel Ogbuku-led management through “the impactful Operation Light Up the Niger Delta initiative, which has brought significant benefits to rural communities.”

    It challenged the Commission to do more to justify the enormous resources meant to turn around the socio-economic condition of the people of the region.

    The Zone also charged the NDDC to foster collaborative efforts with the State Governors and expand its scope to include providing critical infrastructure projects, such as building bridges to connect communities across the region.

    The Zone called on the Federal Government to publish the report of the forensic audit of the NDDC, and stop what it called ‘the incessant sacking of the Board of the Commission’.

    To the people of the South-South, the Zone urged them to take ownership of the government’s facilities by protecting them against vandalism.

    The Zone passed a Vote of Confidence on the leadership of Vice President, Comrade Opaka Dokubo, and Zonal Secretary, Comrade Angese John, for their effective stewardship and for conducting peaceful and hitch-free elections in the State Councils in the Zone.

    The Zone also charged members of the Union in State Councils with pending elections to sustain the prevailing peace by adopting issue-based campaigns.

    The Zone also commended Tantita Security Services for building a befitting secretariat for the Warri Correspondents’ Chapel in the Delta State Council of the NUJ.

    It commended the Governors of the South-South for their numerous supports to their respective State Councils, and particularly thanked Gov. Umo Eno of Akwa Ibom for supporting the hosting of the Zonal meeting, completion of the Auditorium Project, and donation of vehicles to the 11 members of the State Council of the union.

    The Zone commended the NUJ, Akwa Ibom State Council Chairman, Comrade Amos Etuk, and the Secretary, Comrade Dominic Akpan, for their impactful leadership and support to all the activities of Zone F.

    “Accordingly, the Zone passed a Vote of Confidence on them and nominated Comrade Etuk for appointment as a Trustee of Zone F, the communiqué added.

    The communiqué was signed by Comrade Opaka Dokubo
    VP, Zone F, Comrade Dominic Akpan Chairman, Communique Drafting Committee, and Comrade Michael Abang, Secretary, Communique Drafting Committee.
    ============

  • Ex-Minister Congratulates Chief Onisuru Salami on 70th Birthday.

    Ex-Minister Congratulates Chief Onisuru Salami on 70th Birthday.

    ‎Ex-Minister Congratulates Chief Onisuru Salami on 70th Birthday.

    ‎By Adewale Owoade

    ‎Former Minister of Sports and Special Duties, Professor Taoheed Adedoja, has congratulated Chief Onisuru Salami, the Ohworode of Oruarivie Abraka Kingdom in Delta State and a chieftain of the APC, on his 70th birthday.

    ‎Professor Adedoja described Chief Salami as “a blessing to humanity,” praising his leadership traits and human compassion, which he exhibited even during their student days at the College of Education in Abraka.

    ‎The former minister commended Chief Salami for making non-indigenes feel at home in Abraka, highlighting his contributions to Nigerian unity and educational development.

    ‎Professor Adedoja wished Chief Salami more prosperous years and good health, further describing him as a successful, honest, and reliable businessman.