Tag: 2027

  • Why Jonathan won’t contest, whatever the courts say – By Azu Ishiekwene

    Why Jonathan won’t contest, whatever the courts say – By Azu Ishiekwene

    After the main opposition People’s Democratic Party (PDP) announced last week that it would zone the presidency to the South in 2027, some names have been widely mentioned as possible frontrunners. 

    Former President Goodluck Jonathan and the Labour Party’s presidential flagbearer in the last election, Peter Obi, are perhaps the two most serious contenders. 

    With Obi confused and trapped by his volatile “Obidient” base, Jonathan has been framed as the more viable option, but. The “but,” widely considered to be potentially Jonathan’s biggest obstacle, is a legal risk that the courts might overturn his candidature because of a constitutional amendment (after he left office in 2015), which bars him – or anyone twice sworn in – from retaking the oath of office. 

    Keyamo’s free advice

    The PDP and a relative of the former president, suspected of speaking for him, have told the Aviation Minister, Festus Keyamo, SAN, and rights activist, Chidi Odinkalu, who are among the most recent to flag this risk, to mind their business. While it would seem foolish for political parties to intentionally walk into a legal landmine (though the PDP could because common sense is not one of its virtues), the legal risk to Jonathan may not be the most dangerous. The real danger is not far-fetched: our short memory. 

    This is why Jonathan looks like a viable option and is now beginning to think of himself as one. Our short memory is why politicians take us for a ride. Jonathan must be pinching himself, surprised that his name is coming up at all. 

    Not that he cannot throw his hat in the ring, damning any legal consequences. Or because 10 years after he left office, life seems better retrospectively than it was.  Whatever anyone might say, when Jonathan looks in the mirror, his incompetent five-year record looks back and responds with the question, Can this be true? The former president cannot believe his good luck.

    Chased out

    He was chased out of office. The immediate trigger was insecurity. At the height of the Boko Haram insurgency under Jonathan, terrorists invaded schools, kidnapped students and bombed markets, motor parks, places of worship, and military installations. They even attacked the UN building in Abuja, forcing the Presidency to barricade itself and many public offices behind huge boulders, turning Abuja into a concrete jungle. 

    At some point, it was reported that swathes of Northeastern Nigeria, roughly the size of Belgium, were under the firm control of Boko Haram. Jonathan’s response, especially after the kidnapping of the Chibok girls, was both confused and genuinely pathetic. He was out of favour with the West, especially the US, which suspended the supply of military hardware on allegations of corruption and human rights abuse by the army’s top brass. 

    Enemies within

    But his biggest headache was inside. Out of frustration, he once said that he believed elements in his government were working for the insurgents. Or perhaps they were working for themselves and the insurgents, as an investigation of monies released through the office of the National Security Adviser at the time would later show that $2.4 billion was unaccounted for. 

    Whether Jonathan was right or wrong on that, his enemies in plain sight were members of his own house – the party chairman, Adamu Mu’azu and other stalwarts, especially from the North, who felt betrayed that, contrary to an “understanding” that he would have one term after Yar’Adua’s death, Jonathan was preparing to run for office again.

    Since all political affiliations are opportunistic, the people who betrayed him want him to run again. Perhaps the former president has found the talisman to avenge himself. Whatever has renewed his confidence, his biggest bet is that a) we would accept the excuse that he was not responsible for his disastrous tenure, and b) with the indulgence of hindsight, we are worse off today than we were under him.

    A chastening legacy

    He is wrong on both. The legacy of tackling terror and its various franchises – from kidnapping to banditry – by appeasement or indulgence was a pastime of the Jonathan administration. His government turned a blind eye to militants in the Niger Delta, whose criminality the government treated as a counterbalance to violent extremism in the North. Consequently, while lives were being lost upcountry, Nigeria lost billions of dollars in revenue down south. A NEITI report said Nigeria lost about 268 million barrels of crude oil between 2009 and 2015 due to oil theft and pipeline vandalism. The cost in 2013 alone was $8 billion. 

    Remember that crude oil production under Jonathan was relatively high, reaching about 2.29 million bpd, despite theft and sabotage, while, despite volatility, the price also remained high. At one time, oil sold at $120 per barrel. 

    What happened to the money? There were frequent and prolonged strikes by lecturers over poor funding, while hospitals were starved of medicines and basic equipment. States struggled to pay wages and owed for months, and pensioners, as always, were among the worst hit.

    But that’s not what we’d like to remember. Instead, we’d like to remember that the naira exchanged for 197/$, and after rebasing, Nigeria’s economy was the largest in Africa, even though the foreign reserves that stood at $40 billion in May 2010 when he became president soon dropped to $29.6 billion when he left office. 

    Cost of a presidency

    At what cost? For five years under Jonathan, an estimated N3.9 trillion was spent on fuel subsidies, a great deal of which disappeared (some in dollars) under the long caps of national assembly members, the fancy wardrobes of a minister of petroleum resources, or the debauchery of a new bowler-hat-wearing middle class permanently camped at Transcorp Hilton, where elite vanity was on stilts.

    Attempts to reform the power sector under Jonathan were mainly scams. Fake investors paid for government assets with hollow promissory notes or whatever the currency of cronyism could afford them. The deals were even sweetened by a government disbursement of N213 billion to buyers to complete the scandalous transactions. We are still paying the price today with insolvent power distribution companies claiming that the government owes them about N4 trillion!

    Romanticising the past

    In hard, difficult times, every straw looks like a lifesaver. The sudden removal of petrol subsidy, followed almost immediately by the merger of the exchange rate by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s government, has taken a toll on households, evoking memories of a romantic past in many circles, often measured by the price of rice.

    But we are where we are mainly due to decades of kicking the can down the road. Sadly, politicians who have been kicking us – with the can – down the road are not only complaining the loudest, they are determined to exploit our misery and short memory for their benefit. Jonathan is their tribe. And whatever the courts say, we shouldn’t forget that.

     

  • 2027: Those people pushing Jonathan played him in 2015 – Wike

    2027: Those people pushing Jonathan played him in 2015 – Wike

    Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, FCT, Nyesom Wike, has warned former President Goodluck Jonathan from being pushed to run for president in 2027

    Addressing journalists in Abuja yesterday, he charged the former president not to allow himself to be used again by politicians who deceived him in the past.

    “I know Jonathan very well. He has international respect and should maintain that. These same people weighing Jonathan down are the ones who played him in 2015.

    “They are only trying to cause confusion in the party.

    “People pushing Jonathan, what strength do they have? Were they not the same people who worked against him in 2015?

    “Those calling for a Jonathan candidacy are the same political actors who ‘played him’ during the 2015 elections.”

    Wike also distanced himself from contesting for the presidency in 2027.

    He explained that he won’t run for president because he works for President Bola Tinubu and has integrity to protect.

    Wike said: “I have integrity, I have character. The person who appointed me is there. We are saying he should run.

    “Then I will turn around to say I want to run? What kind of thing is that? How will my children even look at me? I will not run for president.”

  • 2027: PDP vows to sanction members endorsing APC

    2027: PDP vows to sanction members endorsing APC

    The National Working Committee (NWC) of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has vowed to sanction its members endorsing the ruling party for re-election in 2027.

    The party, in a statement issued by the National Publicity Secretary, Debo Ologunagba, on Friday in Abuja, warned those involved to retrace their steps or face stiffer sanctions as provided in the PDP Constitution.

    Ologunagba said that the NWC of the PDP had reviewed the anti-party activities of certain members of the party particularly those endorsing President Bola Tinubu for re-election in 2027.

    He said that of serious concern was the persistent public media outbursts against PDP by some prominent members.

    Ologunagba noted that such members’ actions and utterances, including their public declaration to work for the victory of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the 2027 Presidential election, violated the provisions of the PDP Constitution.

    He added that the behaviour also constituted a serious threat to the stability and sustenance of the party.

    “Specifically, Section 10 (6) of the PDP Constitution provides that “NO MEMBER of the Party SHALL align with other Parties or groups to undermine the Party or any of its elected government.

    “Such anti-party activities have continued to impact negatively on the PDP leading to division, disaffection and heavy haemorrhaging of members with the capacity to diminish our party’s electoral fortune if not immediately checked.

    “In the light of the foregoing and the instance of protecting and preserving the existence of our party and its electoral fortune;

    “The NWC, pursuant to the provisions of Section 59 (1) of the PDP Constitution hereby issues a strong reprimand against such anti-party activities and cautions those involved to retrace their steps or face stiffer sanctions as provided in the PDP Constitution,’’ he said.

    Ologunagba urged all PDP members to remain loyal, focused and continue to work assiduously towards the successful conduct of the PDP National Convention scheduled to hold on Nov. 15 and Nov. 16 in Ibadan.

  • A coalition and its many tendencies – By Abraham Ogbodo

    A coalition and its many tendencies – By Abraham Ogbodo

    It is too early to worry about the coalition to fight Tinubu in 2027. Even if the lion is ensnarled, you do not approach it with bare hands. You give all the benefits of doubt and go very prepared for any eventuality. When the coalition was announced some weeks ago, there was some breathe of relief across the land. This was, however, not in the air-tight assurance that the days of Bola Ahmed Tinubu as President could now be counted. It was more in the feeling that a ferocious tiger was being released into the jungle to place limits on the recklessness of the lion. With the coalition, as hyped, the event billed for 2027 could rise to its billing of a true presidential election instead of a mere coronation anniversary of a reigning king.

    The picture presented on July 2, 2025 was that of combat readiness. The coalition announcer, Raph Nwosu, sounded very urgent. He said Nigeria is right now in a place called ICU and that seasoned healers are being assembled under an interventionist platform called African Democratic Alliance (ADC) to intervene. ICU is a special ward in a general hospital. It means Intensive Care Unit. As the name implies, persons admitted in it are intensively cared for or else they die. To put it bluntly, ICU is a sweet name or an euphemism to describe the death chamber of a health facility. Persons admitted there are actually waiting to die. Short and simple! In other words, Mr. Raph Nwosu was telling Nigerians on that special day that Nigeria has been admitted to die in Aso Rock Villa, Abuja and that, healers from the nooks and crannies of the country are needed to save it from dying.

    This is also saying that the ADC is on a self-appointed mission to save Nigeria. It is just that the venture is resonating because people are truly seeking any form of adventure to lessen the boredom of the moment. Before now, the ADC had appeared the most unlikely entity for the task it has assigned itself. It was among the many other empty political vessels that create the impression of a multi-party democracy in Nigeria. They are usually heard during elections, after which, they would slip into hibernation and wait for the next electoral season to make so much noise again. Their owners only manage to maintain them in anticipation of some kind of fortune either through a merger or an acquisition deal.

    What has happened with the African Democratic Congress is not different from this. In a way therefore, some of these marginal and non-legacy political parties should be assisted to survive. They come handy in times of national emergency when efforts need to be concerted to take down a formidable public enemy.

    Ralph Nwosu can easily pass for a faithful and consistent political entrepreneur. In real enterprise, he would rank among the Dangotes. His resilience and faithfulness had kept the ADC alive and attractive for acquisition by disparate portfolio political investors with heavy eyes on the 2027 high stakes bidding. The deal came at a time that passing the head of a full-grown camel through the eye of a needle was easier than getting INEC to register a new political party for contest in 2027. In fact, the investors that finally berthed in the ADC had tried to float their own party but INEC neither agreed nor disagreed. It only placed studs that made the acquisition of ADC a much easier option. It became a situation of when what was desirable was not available. The team simply reclined and made what was available, desirable. It didn’t make good sense marking endless time with a most hesitant umpire that entertains no qualms in breaching its own rules and creating new ones in the middle of the game to reach specific ends.

    The attendance at the acquisition ceremony was robust. For the records, the investors are politicians from across platforms of which the PDP is the most notable. Faces at the ceremony include Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, David Mark, Peter Obi, Bukola Saraki, Rabiu Kwakwanso, Rotimi Amaechi, Nasir El-Rufai, Rauf Aregbesola, among others. These are very tall names. Abubakar is a former Vice President who has been working tirelessly, including switching political parties like caftans, since 1993, to become president. He has not retired. David Mark and Bukola Saraki headed the National Assembly at different times as Presidents of the Senate. Introducing Peter Obi is superfluous. He does not need it. Kwakwanso, Amaechi, El-Rufai and Ogbeni Aregbesola were state governors at different times and have remained recurring in all major political calculations since 1999.

    These loud names in their combined decibels are enough to affect good hearing and create anxiety in the Lion’s den. And they have truly. Hence what to do to dissipate the gathering storm called ADC has remained a major issue, outside mis-governance, in Aso Rock Villa since the Coalition was announced about a month ago.

    The speeches at the takeover ceremony were even more reassuring. First, the original owners of the ADC, represented by its chairman, Ralph Nwosu, spoke to underline the significance of the day. That is, while the name would remain, ADC would however change content and character to reflect the new ownership structure. The man is very passionate about discharging the country from the ICU. He came close to placing a curse on anyone within the old ADC structure who works to impede the stated mission. Such a person ‘’does not love Nigeria’’ he said.

    Nwosu allegedly turned down an offer of a ministerial appointment by the Tinubu administration thrice just to remain focused on the mission. He willingly yielded complete control to the ADC’s new chairman, Senator David Mark, who entered proclaiming a determination to accomplish the mission at all costs. Peter Obi pleaded for focus because the harvest appears larger than the workforce. He asked all key gladiators, including himself, to subsume their ambition to become president under the singular mission to discharge Nigeria from the ICU.

    Everything had looked good. It was like after God was done with creation. The Almighty was reported in the Book of Genesis to have taken a panoramic view of the outlay and affirmed His own perfection. What He created was good. This was, however, before the devil started his own creation to cast spanner in God’s good work. And things have never looked good again since then. This is also where we are with the mission to take out Nigeria from the ICU. The coalition is getting anaemic too early in the day and it is looking as if, it, itself, would be admitted as a second patient to join Nigeria at the ICU.

    The PDP that is cast to drive the mission is ironically the one causing the coalition to lose blood and vital fluids. The party is asking for the same thing that the coalition is seeking. It is itching to touch off a mock mission. This is not normal. Everything is pointing to the fact that the lion is not sleeping. He is afield hunting prey.

    Two weeks ago, I sounded a warning on this page. The Jagaban is like a drunken king cobra. Outside intoxication, the king cobra portends enough danger. And in a drunken state, its lethal capabilities are better add safer imagined than experienced. It will take more than conventional tactics to contain a drunken king cobra. At the risk of sounding trite, I am saying it here again, that Bola Ahmed Tinubu is not a Goodluck Jonathan. He is a man of immense capabilities and capacity. He had taken down fortresses without added advantages. Now, with all the ace cards up his sleeves, dispatching him is possible but same cannot rely entirely on commonplace logic, morality and imagination. Real action and affirmation must be added to redistribute the advantages that President Tinubu exclusively wields in the unfolding power game.

    In the months ahead, BAT shall glide in all directions to poach workers of iniquity for his purpose. To make the mission impossible for the coalition. Only yesterday, it was reported that Nafiu Bala who contested the Gombe State governorship election in 2023 under the ADC, and until the acquisition deal, the party’s national deputy chairman, has walked back on the deal and declared himself national chairman of ADC to supplant Senator David Mark. There shall be more of this kind of stories as the countdown to 2027 narrows. It will only require a hefty budget to recruit high, middle and low levels manpower to roam and sow seeds of discord across the political terrain.

    Still, the PDP is getting more intriguing by the day. It does not want to live and it does not want to die too. It is like the dying Urhobo strongman who has his life wrapped up in a charm ( uhuvwu oyovwi ) at the rooftop. Until, the roof crashes to base to bring the charm in contact with earth, his spirit will not depart.

    The sudden resurgence in the PDP is not ordinary. It has something to with PBAT. It is designed to cause a pull in all directions. Right now, it is not only Nyesom Wike that is precipitating a centrifugal force to dismember the PDP. Other people have joined him. Even Ali Modu Sheriff has regained confidence, after his failed crusades to kill the PDP for the APC, to mount the podium to pontificate on values. Ayo Fayose is talking too. Bukola Saraki, Prof. Jerry Gana, Governor Seyi Makinde of Oyo State and host of others are reasserting their PDPness as if that fact had been in doubt. These are not lightweight men. They are mighty men of valour in politics. They are known for transactions that cut the nose to spite the face. Other political parties are undergoing the same degree of implosions in a coordinated preemptive strikes by the king cobra.

    Needless to say that the Jagaban has all his instincts intact. And the coalition should be worried. Very worried, that is. Even if the sentiments lie outside him as he wanes in overall rating, the advantages are comprehensively within the control of BAT. Above all, to win against a champion, he must not only be beaten but seen to have been beaten. This was exactly what Mohammed Ali told Ken Norton after their keenly contested heavy weight bout on September 28, 1976 in New York City. Norton who felt he fought better and therefore more deserving of a win instead of Ali was told that champions are not defeated by luck.

    Apparently, the coalition has got real work to do. Victory against the Jagaban cannot be gratuitous. To sway the jury and all the other invisible factors in the decision making, the challenger must be seen to have defeated the champion hands down. In fact, the coalition should aim for a knockout. I will not say more than this. A word, they say, is enough for the wise.

  • 2027 reconfiguration: Gana says Obi under PDP platform will defeat any candidate in the north

    2027 reconfiguration: Gana says Obi under PDP platform will defeat any candidate in the north

    Jerry Gana, a founding member of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, has boasted that if Peter Obi returns to the party, he will defeat any candidate he runs against in the North.

    Gana stated this while answering questions on a national tv program

    His comments come amid speculations that Obi could return to the PDP, despite attending several meetings with the African Democratic Congress, ADC.

    Obi ran for presidency under the umbrella of the Labour Party, LP, in the 2023 polls.

    According to Gana, Obi’s best bet of becoming president is to run under the PDP in the next general elections.

    He said: “I’m a researcher, and I research opinions.

    “In the northern states, Peter Obi under the PDP will defeat any candidate, because our people are very fair-minded.

    “In 2031, it will be the turn of the North.

    “Our people are very fair and we are building a nation.”

  • 2027: Mass defection hits PDP as Yashikira District joins ADC

    2027: Mass defection hits PDP as Yashikira District joins ADC

    In a significant political realignment, the people of Yashikira District comprising Gure/Gwassoro and Yashikira wards have officially decamped from the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to the African Democratic Congress (ADC).

    The well attended meeting, held in Gure, featured delegates from all village areas across the district, reaffirming their unified resolve to align with the ADC in pursuit of a more promising political future.

    It would be recalled that all PDP officials in both wards including the Local Government Woman Leader and several other key executives had earlier renounced their membership and declared allegiance to the ADC in Baruten Local Government Kwara state.

    Addressing the gathering, Alhaji Hussein Mayan, Chairman of Yashikira Ward, and Mallam Issa Barka, Chairman of Gure/Gwassoro Ward, called for unity, cooperation, and dedication within the ranks of the new party. They described the ADC as a “self-marketing” political platform one that thrives on integrity, grassroots engagement, and collective progress.

    This sweeping defection deals a significant blow to the PDP in the Baruten axis and underscores the rising profile and momentum of the ADC across Kwara North, especially in the lead-up to future political contests.

  • 2027: Gang-up against Tinubu will amount to nothing – APC Chieftain

    2027: Gang-up against Tinubu will amount to nothing – APC Chieftain

    A Chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Osun, Dotun Babayemi, says any gang-up against the re-election of President Bola Tinubu in 2027 will amount to nothing.

    Babayemi, one of the APC aspirants for the Aug. 8 governorship election in Osun, said this during his ward-to-ward consultation in Ayedire Local Government Area of the state on Sunday.

    According to him, Tinubu’s second term is a done deal and his eight years as the president cannot be compromised.

    “The president is breaking grounds with positive impacts and the results will tangibly manifest in the course of his second term in office.

    “Tinubu’s re-election in 2027 will stabilise the country and the economy for the good of the populace.

    “APC members in Osun are already working assiduously to ensure that the party emerges victorious in the 2026 governorship election in the state and the re-election of the president in 2027.

    “Tinubu’s re-election should be paramount to Nigerians, especially the party members.

    “Since Tinubu’s assumption of office, he has rolled out reforms and programs under the Renewed Hope Agenda which are already bearing positive fruits,” he said.

    The chieftain said that the re-election of the president would put the country on a firm footing.

    Babayemi, however, urged party members to mobilise for the voters’ registration to be carried out in due course by Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

  • Tinubu needs little from North in 2027 – Fayose

    Tinubu needs little from North in 2027 – Fayose

    Ekiti State Governor, Ayodele Fayose, has said that President Bola Ahmed Tinubu needs little votes from the North to win the 2027 election.

    Fayose disclosed this during an interview on Channels TV’s Politics Today, on Friday.

    Fayose said, “Tinubu outside the government consummated the APC, took that APC up and defeated the PDP in 2015. Without the opposition in 2023, the same Tinubu defeated everybody. So you think the man does not have a brain even if he does not talk? It’s only if I don’t have what it takes like him, I would have been a strategist.

    “The man has taken all over the south; he only needs little to turn it in the the north. Peter Obi will still have a good show. You can’t deny that. I always tell the truth. Obi will have a better show than the PDP. The PDP will come fourth and the ADC will come third. The APC will come first. Obi will come second. Write it down. You don’t have to be fooling people.

    “On whether I’m trusted or not, I don’t have to be trusted. That’s their problem. You know the situation of our party today. And it’s in my prayer that the PDP does not come fourth in the coming election.

    “You know, when I came here, I said the party was already going into a carcass. And if you recall very well, the majority of people that have defected after my coming here are huge enough and have left the PDP in a carcass. The situation in PDP, pretenders can pretend but you know that the PDP had messed up. Managing the party has become an issue.”

  • 2027 experiment : Ex-presidential aspirant retraces his roots to PDP

    2027 experiment : Ex-presidential aspirant retraces his roots to PDP

    Experimental approach as ex- presidential aspirant and energy executive, Dr. Gbenga Olawepo-Hashim, has officially rejoined the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), setting the stage for his active return to mainstream politics ahead of the 2027 general elections. His return, long speculated in political circles, became public on Wednesday when he visited the PDP National Secretariat, Wadata Plaza, in Abuja, where he met with members of the party’s National Working Committee (NWC).

    Speaking during the visit, Olawepo-Hashim reaffirmed his belief in the PDP’s national outlook and its enduring relevance despite recent internal challenges.

    “The PDP was built as a national platform. Since 1998, it has maintained a presence in almost every polling unit across Nigeria.

    That national spread is still intact,” he said. Dismissing concerns about the party’s dwindling influence due to defections and internal disagreements, the former presidential candidate emphasized that the PDP’s strength lies in the support of the people rather than the presence of political elites.

    “The real power of any political party lies in its people, not elites. The people are still with the PDP,” he declared confidently.

    Hashim commended the efforts of the PDP’s Acting National Chairman, Ambassador Umaru Damagum, for holding the party together through turbulent times. “The wisdom and calm Damagum has shown to keep the party intact is truly commendable,” he noted.

    Looking ahead to the 2027 elections, Olawepo-Hashim urged the party to focus on presenting a disciplined and visionary presidential candidate capable of restoring security, reviving the economy, and ensuring justice for all Nigerians. “The PDP must give Nigerians a new kind of leadership — one committed to security, economy, and justice,” he said.

     

    Earlier the same day, he also participated in a closed-door meeting of PDP founding members at the NAF Conference Centre in Abuja, signaling his deeper re-engagement with party structures.

  • TInubu recalls with nostalgia how Awujale predicted 2027 victory for him

    TInubu recalls with nostalgia how Awujale predicted 2027 victory for him

    President Bola Tinubu has recalled with nostalgia how Awujale of Ijebuland, Oba Sikiru Adetona, who joined his ancestors on July 13, predicted his victory in the 2023 election and added that he would win re-election in 2027.

    The president spoke in Ijebu-Ode, Ogun State, on the life and times of the departed traditional ruler during his eighth day fidau held at Dipo Dina Stadium, where dignitaries bade him final farewell.

    At the monarch’s final resting place, the president laid wreaths before holding a private meeting with the bereaved family during the condolence visit.

    Describing Oba Adetona as a leader of “conscience and dignity, the President said he was committed to the pursuit of truth and justice.

    President Tinubu said: “Today marks a very great day in the history of our nation and particularly the history of our race, the Yoruba race. You can find any further definition of our culture. If you go further from Awujale, you will learn a lot.

    For me standing before you today, I thank God Almighty that I stand before you as the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. Our wish would not have been completed carefully and richly if I failed in the last election. I was successful because of your support and the blessing of the Awujale.

    “I went to him and he said, ‘you are winning that election and you will win second term. Go ahead.’ God has blessed us. If you listened to the richness of his wisdom, I’m extremely proud of him.”

    President Tinubu also recalled Oba Adetona’s quiet but impactful role in the country’s democratic journey, describing him as a steadfast supporter of the June 12 struggle.

    The president said: “He was always there in times of need for all of us. I could recount the June 12 episode; our protests and its balance and for real, our resistance. Our determination to reverse the annulment of the June 12, 1993 Presidential election. Baba was steadfast, he was resolute and very encouraging.