Tag: Tinubu

  • President Tinubu’s visit to Anambra – By Paul Nwosu

    President Tinubu’s visit to Anambra – By Paul Nwosu

    As President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, GCFR, visits Anambra State on Thursday, May 8, 2025, his presence marks a milestone in federal-state cooperation and signals a significant boost to infrastructural and economic development in Nigeria’s Southeast. The visit, centered on commissioning key projects executed by Governor Charles Chukwuma Soludo, CFR, underscores the spirit of collaboration between both tiers of government and reflects a shared commitment to the region’s progress.

    Governor Soludo’s administration, in less than three years, has delivered remarkable projects. From road infrastructure and urban renewal to human capital development, his government has built upon the foundation laid by his predecessor to ensure sustainable development in Anambra State. President Tinubu’s commissioning of these projects not only affirms federal endorsement of Soludo’s vision but also sends a clear message to investors and development partners that Anambra is open for business.

    The President’s physical presence on Anambra soil also provides Governor Soludo a rare opportunity to bring to his attention some of the state’s pressing needs. As an Anambra proverb wisely puts it: “He who gets the rare chance to climb the iroko tree must gather all the firewood he can, for such opportunities are not everyday affairs.”

    While the state’s joint security task force and the newly constituted Agunechemba are confronting security challenges, federal support remains vital. Given Anambra’s strategic location as the gateway to Nigeria’s eastern heartland, increased federal investment in surveillance and intelligence gathering would greatly enhance precision in security operations.

    It would also be fitting for Governor Soludo to remind the President of the need to fast-track the release of Nnamdi Kanu and to pursue the extradition of the Finland-based Nigerian accused of inciting violence in the Southeast. These actions would help separate freedom fighters from outright criminals, allowing law enforcement to better identify and deal with genuine threats.

    Governor Soludo should waste no time in bringing the dangerous threat of Erosion to the attention of President Tinubu. Anambra State, despite being one of the smallest in land mass, bears the tragic burden of being the erosion capital of Nigeria, a crisis far beyond the financial capacity of the state government to manage alone. The scale and severity of the gully erosion ravaging communities across Anambra demand urgent federal intervention. It is not just an environmental concern but a national emergency threatening lives, livelihoods, and infrastructure. The Federal Government should, as a matter of urgent necessity, rise to the occasion and provide the necessary support and resources to tackle this escalating menace.

    President Tinubu’s visit is a timely opportunity to advocate for the designation of Anambra as a Special Economic Zone (SEZ). With projects like the pharmaceutical manufacturing hub in Ogboji and the ongoing development of industrial parks, an SEZ status would provide critical tax incentives, stimulate manufacturing, and attract foreign direct investment.

    The Federal Government should also collaborate with the state to establish a tech-focused federal institution in Anambra to harness the potential of its vibrant youth population. Governor Soludo’s Solution Innovation District (SID) is already laying the groundwork for an “Anambra Silicon Valley,” having trained tens of thousands of youths in digital skills. The One Youth, Two Skills program has also empowered many with vocational and entrepreneurial skills. A federal institution would complement these efforts and further position the state as a hub for innovation and the digital economy.

    Another crucial area deserving the President’s urgent attention is the full activation of the Onitsha River Port. Despite intermittent discussions and partial revitalization, the port remains grossly underutilized. With enhanced dredging of the River Niger, establishment of regular cargo barge operations, and a strengthened customs presence, Onitsha Port can evolve into a logistics powerhouse, rivaling Lagos and Port Harcourt. This would ease the burden on land transport, reduce logistics costs, and improve business competitiveness in Onitsha, Nnewi, and beyond.

    Similarly, the Federal Government should support the expansion of cargo handling and customs clearance facilities at the Chinua Achebe International Airport. Enhancing this airport’s capacity will promote its role as an export hub for both agricultural produce and manufactured goods.

    In a commendable development, the Federal Executive Council on May 5 approved the establishment of the Nigerian Cocoa Board to regulate and revitalize one of the nation’s key non-oil export commodities. This initiative is a positive step toward economic diversification and rural development.

    However, this momentum should be extended to the palm oil sector. Governor Soludo’s energetic revival of palm cultivation, in the tradition of Dr. Michael Okpara, the visionary Premier of the former Eastern Region, is already bearing fruit across Anambra communities. The creation of a Nigerian Palm Produce Board would incentivize farmers, structure the palm oil value chain, boost exports, and generate employment.

    President Tinubu’s visit to Anambra State is more than ceremonial. It is a powerful endorsement of good governance at the subnational level. It presents a timely opportunity to strengthen the bond between Abuja and Awka and to prioritize infrastructure, industry, and innovation as pillars for Southeast development. With bold leadership from both ends, the aspirations of the Anambra people for progress, prosperity, and partnership can be fully realized.

  • Tinubu in closed door meeting with Oborevwori amid defection drama

    Tinubu in closed door meeting with Oborevwori amid defection drama

    President Bola Tinubu is currently holding a closed-door meeting with Delta State Governor Sheriff Oborevwori, at the State House, Abuja.

    Accorfding to The Nation, Governor Oborevwori arrived at the State House at approximately 3:45 p.m. on Tuesday.

    The meeting marks his first official engagement with the President since his high-profile defection to the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) recently.

    The Delta governor, who until recently was a key figure in the opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), made headlines on April 23 when he led a dramatic political shift in the state.

    Alongside his predecessor, former PDP vice presidential candidate, Dr. Ifeanyi Okowa, and Deputy Governor Monday Onyeme, Oborevwori formally joined the APC after a strategic meeting held in Asaba.

    Also defecting with the governor were members of his cabinet, local government chairmen, and influential grassroots figures, making him the first sitting Delta governor to exit the PDP since the return to democracy in 1999.

    After the governor’s defection, the Speaker of the Delta State House of Assembly, Hon Emomotimi Guwor, has also crossed over to the APC along with 21 members of the House.

    Today’s meeting is seen as a signal of the APC’s growing consolidation in the South-South region, where it has been making steady gains.

    Sources within the APC suggest that additional defections are on the horizon, with Governors Umo Eno of Akwa Ibom, Peter Mbah of Enugu, Abba Yusuf of Kano, and the embattled Rivers Governor, Siminalayi Fubara, reportedly being courted by the ruling party.

    The wave of defections is deepening internal crises within the PDP, Labour Party, and NNPP, as all three opposition parties struggle to maintain cohesion amid growing pressure from the APC’s expanding political influence.

  • Tinubu’s tsunami and its consequences for Nigerian democracy – By Godwin Etakibuebu

    Tinubu’s tsunami and its consequences for Nigerian democracy – By Godwin Etakibuebu

    On April 24th, 2025, the Governor of Delta State, Sheriff Oborevwori, in total agreement – so we were told, with the State ruling political Party’ leadership, collapsed the structure of the People Democratic Party [PDP] in the State, and defected into the Nigerian ruling political Party, the All Progressive Congress [APC]. 

    It was not too appropriate to call what happened that day in Delta State a defection. Collapsing the totality of a political party’s structure – which included the Governor, his Deputy, his predecessor in office [Senator Author Ifeanyi Okowa], every elected member of the State House of Assembly, all the Local Government Chairmen and their  elected Councillors, all appointees of the State Government and whatever human factors left in the State, can be referred to as “an uncommon movement”.

    This writer recognised the fact of that movement hence he called it Tsunami, in his last week’s presentation. 

    There was variant of names given to the event of that day in Delta State. Some called it earthquake, others say it was a tornado, while some say it was a hurricane.

    The President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria called it Tsunami, just in the same manner l referred to it. 

    Let us listen to the president when he received all the defectors in Asaba, Delta State capital, with unlimited ecstasy. Speaking through the Vice President – Kashim Shettima, who represented him, Tinubu lauded Governor Oborevwori and Senator Okowa for the cordial relationship between them and for leading members of the PDP to the APC.

    He said: “What can be greater than the promise of this day. This is a political tsunami of unimaginable proportion that has never happened in the history of the South-South region and barely in the history of this country”.

    A political tsunami of this proportion has never happened where all the members of the upper chamber of the National Assembly are in the APC. The Speaker and all the members of the House of Assembly. So many members of the House of Representatives, the Governor and his entire cabinet and 500 councillors across the 25 local government areas of this great state. What testimony do you have greater than this?

    We need to know a little more about that thing called Tsunami before navigating into the joyful interpretation of the President.

    A tsunami is defined as a series of waves in a water body caused by the displacement of a large volume of water, generally in an ocean or a large lake. Earthquakes, volcanic eruptions and underwater explosions above or below water  – all  have the potential to generate a tsunami. Tsunamis are giant waves caused by earthquakes or volcanic eruptions under the sea. They speed along as fast as jet planes

    One of the deadliest Tsunami movements in recorded history would remain the December 26, 2004, Indian Ocean Tsunami, triggered by a massive undersea earthquake, off the coast of Sumatra, Indonesia. It caused widespread devastation and loss of life across coastal regions of the Indian Ocean and beyond. It went round Sumatra, Sri Lanka, Banda Aceh, Khao Lak, Tamil Nadu, and casualty figure was put at 227, 898 people. 

    It is an established fact of history that Tsunami destroys efficiently and does so mercilessly. And at any rate, the human knowledge, or even, the technology, of knowing the limit point of Tsunami’s devastative outreach – once it takes off, is not currently available to human’s endeavours

    This serious warning, specially emphasised on above paragraph, ought to be a cardinal point to all of us – both leaders and the followers, and it should be taken with absolute sanctity. 

    Permit me to advise our leaders – mostly President Bola Tinubu and his Executive, the Nigerian National Assembly leadership and the Nigerian Judiciary leadership, to be more knowledgeable in application of wisdom when celebrating the gains of Tsunamic movement, or crossover, because my rigorously intensive research has brought one revelation about that entity called Tsunami

    The Demon called Tsunami is totally a blind personality in its operation

    What that throws on us is that once this Demonic Entity takes off for operational duty, and because of its blindness in nature, it could destroy across frontiers of humanly demarcated boundaries. Even those who invited it can never oversee setting the limits and boundaries of its operation. And more often than anticipated, as precedents have shown, this Octopus do consume those that invited it – most times.  

    Since it is the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria that I intend speaking to directly this time around, I shall, out of my understanding that President Tinubu, though a vast reader, might not be having likeliness for long writeup at this time because of different overwhelming challenges. 

    Ipso facto, I need to drop my sailing anchor here, with the promise of returning with part 2 – of this message, next week. Except to add that next week’s navigational sailing shall be taking us deeper into the Sea of voyage of discovery, where we should be giving out some home hidden facts. For sure, this will interest my President.

    Observation

    What is the problem of Nigerians that we are not always willing to give our Presidents any resting time? Haba – is this not becoming too much?

    Or how on earth that some Nigerians, within jiffy of a time, which is less than 12 months, ensured that only 28 billion Naira out of the 100 billion Naira disbursed under the eagle eyes of the Nigerian Education Loan Fund [NELFUND] gets to Nigerian students? Isn’t this a wicked plan against President Bola Tinubu?

    The Guru begs as many Nigerians as he can lay his hands upon to help in resolving this challenge – because it is one dent on the person of Mr President, which he doesn’t deserve, please.

  • Tinubu to meet GenCos leadership over 4trn debt

    Tinubu to meet GenCos leadership over 4trn debt

    The Minister of Power, Mr Adebayo Adelabu on Sunday said that a meeting has been scheduled between President Bola  Tinubu and the leadership of the  Power Generation Companies(GenCos) over a N4-trillion debt.

    Mr Bolaji Tunji, Special Adviser, Strategic Communications and Media Relations  to the minister of power said this in a statement  in Abuja on Sunday.

    According to Adelabu, the planned meeting with President Tinubu aims to chart a viable course for resolving the debt

    Adelabu assured that the Federal Government would immediately pay a significant portion of the debt, while the balance would be settled using financial instruments such as promissory notes within six months.

    “We recognise the urgency of this matter. The government is committed to resolving this debt to stabilise the sector and prevent further crisis,” Adelabu said.

    Acknowledging the government’s own role in the sector’s challenges, Adelabu pledged not only to clear the debt backlog but also to implement structural reforms that would remove operational bottlenecks.

    He emphasised the need for full liberalisation of the power sector and called for the adoption of cost-reflective tariffs.

    “Citizens must pay the appropriate price for the energy consumed.

    “The Federal Government will continue to provide targeted subsidies for economically disadvantaged Nigerians, but we must realise that our economy cannot sustain blanket subsidies indefinitely,” he said.

    The minister also unveiled plans to review existing regulations to lower levies and enhance market stability.

    He urged GenCos to partner with the government in raising public awareness on efficient electricity use and tariff realities.

    The GenCos were led by Col. Sani Bello(Rtd), Chairman of Mainstream Energy Solutions, and who is also the Chairman of Association of Power Generating Companies.

    Bello warned that persistent liquidity challenges had left GenCos unable to service loans or maintain critical infrastructure.

    “Without urgent intervention, the entire power ecosystem could collapse,” he said.

    Mr Kola Adesina, Chairman of Egbin Power and First Independent Power Limited, described the situation as a national emergency.

    He said that reliable power supply was fundamental to the survival of industries, homes, and health facilities.

    Mrs Joy Ogaji, Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Association of Power Generation Companies,  listed the systemic challenges undermining GenCos, including chronic payment defaults, erratic gas supply, and forex instability.

    She lamented the steep depreciation of the naira—from ₦157/$1 in 2013 to ₦1,600/$1 in 2024. saying it had devastated GenCos’ ability to meet maintenance obligations and repay loans.

    “GenCos have borne unsustainable risks from grid failures to unproductive taxes while remaining patriotic,” she said.

  • Let your performance speak for you, Tinubu tells Governors

    Let your performance speak for you, Tinubu tells Governors

    President Bola Tinubu has advised the 36 Governors to allow their performance speak for them in their developmental strides.

    He advised the governors to focus on delivering tangible results to their people, asserting that performance, not popularity, is the true test of leadership.

    Speaking during a two-day working visit to Katsina State, the President charged Governors to “let the people be at the heart of your programmes,” while dismissing distractions from what he termed “armchair critics.”

    “Your hard work and concrete achievements will answer any criticism. Ignore distractions — your results will speak for you,” Tinubu stated at the commissioning of major infrastructure projects.

    Among the projects unveiled during the visit was the 24-kilometre Eastern Bypass Road, which stretches from Dutsin-ma Road through Kano and Daura Roads to Yandaki in Kaita Local Government Area. The project was completed in just 18 months under the administration of Governor Dikko Radda.

    Tinubu also inaugurated the Katsina Agricultural Mechanised Centre, a key initiative aimed at boosting farming productivity and transforming agriculture in the state.

    Commending Governor Radda’s performance across sectors such as agriculture, healthcare, education, and infrastructure, Tinubu said, “Significant progress has been made in less than two years.”

    The President acknowledged the insecurity challenges facing the region but praised the Katsina governor’s courage and resilience. “We have decided for peace and stability. I know you face terrorism and banditry attacks in the state, but you have shown determination and courage to move Katsina State forward. You will not walk alone. The Federal Government will be with you,” he assured.

    Tinubu emphasised that hunger and poverty remain the most urgent threats to national stability, underscoring his administration’s commitment to agricultural development. “The economy is sailing in the right trajectory. We are witnessing an effort to banish hunger. Small and large-scale farming will be encouraged. Once we liberate ourselves from hunger, we will appreciate peace and harmony,” he said.

    Highlighting the importance of adopting modern methods, the President stated: “The old style of agriculture is gone. We must invest in mechanisation and water management. Agriculture is the one of our progress and must be for all.”

    He also revealed plans to revive the Bank of Agriculture to provide accessible financing for farmers across Nigeria. “The Bank of Agriculture is being revitalised. When resuscitated, the bank will make funds available for large, medium and small-scale farming,” he said.

    Calling on other States to follow Katsina’s lead, Tinubu noted: “You have introduced a great, day ahead progressive movement in Katsina State by just tilling the land and putting it to use. Farming will be our source of prosperity and growth. We must remove ourselves from reliance on oil and commit to agriculture.”

    He concluded his visit by thanking former governors Ibrahim Shema and Aminu Bello Masari, along with other political leaders in the state, for their warm reception and continued contributions.

    “Thank you for the great honour you have given me. Your coming to the airport to receive me made me feel so welcome. I am your son, and I am one of you. This is homecoming, and Katsina is home — home to progress, development, and freedom for good,” Tinubu said.

  • Implement Confab report to honour Clark, Adebanjo – Bode George to Tinubu

    Implement Confab report to honour Clark, Adebanjo – Bode George to Tinubu

    Chief Bode George, a former PDP Deputy National Chairman has appealed to President Bola Tinubu to implement the recommendations of the 2014 Constitutional Conference to honour  Chief Ayo Adebanjo and Chief Edwin Clark.

    George, a retired Naval Commodore and former military governor of Ondo, made this appeal at a media briefing  on Friday in Lagos.

    Recall reports that Adebanjo, the late leader of the Pan-Yoruba Socio-Cultural Orgasation, Afenifere,  died on Feb. 14 at 96.

    Also, Clark, the late Niger Delta Leader, died  on Feb. 17 at 97.

    Both deceased  nationalists  inspired the 2014 Constitutional Conference convened by former President Goodluck Jonathan,and participated in it .

    Speaking on how to immortalise the duo, George said that the best way to honour them was to release and implement the confab  resolutions, into which they put all their lives’ experiences,in the interest of the nation.

    George said that he got closer to Adebanjo and Clark during the Confab, working in the same sub-committee with them on what type of system that  should be adopted  constitutionally .

    “Mr President, I am appealing to you, today May 2, release the report of the 2014 Confab for the benefit of the people of this country, in the memories of the two old men to immortalise their names.

    “These people (Adebanjo, Clark and other elder statemen) are crying to Tinubu to release and implement that report.

    “The report was unanimously agreed at the plenary session by the delegates, that(implentation) is when we can be at peace.

    “When I saw all the work — the contributions of these two elders—and look at it, they died three days apart, I am not afraid to say we are going to take over from where they started,” George said.

    According to him, it has become imperative for the nation to look at the report right now” that the ship of the state seems to be drifting in terms of economy, politics, security and others”.

    He said that the current system and constitution had become incapable of fulfilling the yearnings and aspirations of the people of Nigeria.

    “It’s not working. It has never worked and it will never work.

    “I am challenging Mr President, release that report in the memories of these two old men because they contributed the best that God has given them.

    “The constitution we are running is defective. It is so military in its is set up. Everything ends with only one man at the Aso Villa as the President,” he added.

    According to him, the most worrisome part  of the constitution is that that  concerns local government administration.

    He added: “What has the local government got to do with the President of Nigeria?

    “Lagos, the most populated state has only 20 LGs and Ogun that is not even up to half of Lagos also has 20; Kano has 44, Jigawa created out of Kano ,has 27, these are inadequacies.

    “Now, every local government at the end of every month collects allocation from the federation account.

    “These were things that were discussed openly at that conference.

    “And these two patriots fought for a new constitution capable of fulfilling the yearnings and aspirations of ordinary Nigerians.

    “We can have the United States of Nigeria, reduce the power at the centre. We need devolution of power which the duo advocated before their  passing”

    He said that implementing the Confab would  help resolve numerous challenges facing the country ,including corruption, nepotism, sectionalism and  poverty.

    On security and economic challenges, George urged the President not to relent on  efforts to tackle hardships and security threats.

    According to him, there is also an urgent need to reform the electoral process so  that elections would reflect the will of the people.

    Speaking of recent defections of  some PDP’s bigwigs to  the ruling APC, the PDP chieftain noted that he was yet to fathom what genuinely attracted the defectors to APC.

    George,however,said there was an urgent need to  resolve all internal crises in PDP to build confidence in the party.

    Urging PDP leaders to shelve personal ambition and work for the national interest of the party, George said, “PDP is not finished.”.

  • Atiku, not Tinubu, is the wrecking ball – By  Azu Ishiekwene

    Atiku, not Tinubu, is the wrecking ball – By Azu Ishiekwene

    There’s a concern that Nigeria could soon become a one-party state, not by law, like in China, but through subterfuge – or in legal terms, de facto – similar to Cameroon, Uganda, Equatorial Guinea, or even Rwanda, where the ruling parties are inflicting a slow, painful death on the opposition.

    Those who express this concern have given many reasons. The clearest and most troubling, it seems, is the wave of defections to the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) that has depleted the main opposition People’s Democratic Party (PDP).

    Wave after wave

    Apart from Federal lawmakers from Osun to Kaduna and Niger States who have defected, as of April 25, Governor Sheriff Oborevwori of Delta State and his predecessor, Ifeanyi Okowa and the entire Delta PDP structure defected to the APC, with more defections still anticipated nationwide. It’s likely that soon, five of the six South-South states, which have been the bastion of the PDP since 1999, may fall.

    Concerned persons, mainly those in the PDP and civil society, have said these are not defections. Instead, they argue that they are negotiated exits by politicians to evade trial by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) or for the personal political gain of the governors and other defectors. They have blamed the government of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu for instigating the defections out of a desperation to win the 2027 presidential election because his record in office cannot save him.

    Chasing shadows

    I think it’s nonsense. And though he did not use these words, former Vice President Atiku Abubakar, out of self-interest, put it more elegantly when he said he believed that defections are a fact of Nigerian politics and defectors are merely exercising their freedom of association under the law.

    A serial defector himself, and sixth-time contender for the presidency, it would have been a surprise if he said anything else. The problem, according to Atiku, is not the defections but the two-year record of performance that, all things being equal, cannot return the president to office.

    However, if the worst fear of Atiku and the opposition comes through, as is likely, and President Tinubu returns to office in 2027, as is probable, it would not be because of the defections; it would be because Atiku paved the way for the destruction of the PDP. He has proved to be the party’s undertaker-in-chief, something not often said, because it is convenient to blame Tinubu.

    Best chance lost

    For example, Sule Lamido, a leading member of the PDP, reportedly said on Tuesday that “the President should be fair” and save the opposition from being crushed. I’m unsure how much Lamido will pay Tinubu for self-sabotage. It’s surprising that one of the PDP’s founders does not know that a few of the founders ruined the PDP, and no one but its remnant can save it.

    The party’s best chance since it lost power 10 years ago was in 2023 when the APC was at its most vulnerable. The government of President Muhammadu Buhari would have viewed a hostile takeover by the opposition PDP as mercy killing, if not as an act of charity. Lamido knows, more than anyone else, that Atiku stood in the way.

    Rolling stone, no moss

    After contesting and losing the APC primaries to Buhari in 2014, Atiku defected again to PDP in 2017 and contested the PDP primaries in 2019. At that time, the PDP was recovering from the catastrophic defeat of 2015, during which it lost nine of its 22 states and 93 seats in the National Assembly. In the winner-takes-all creed of the presidential system, the PDP faced a long harmattan of recriminations and decay while Atiku was away.

    However, the party was gradually rebuilt, primarily through the efforts of Nyesom Wike, the Rivers State Governor at the time. When Atiku returned, the party was not what it was in its heyday. Still, it was not the ramshackle he had abandoned.

    The calamitous record of the APC under President Buhari, the party’s division leading up to the 2023 election, and the overall mood in the country at that time indicated that Nigeria was vulnerable to a hostile takeover. The country was fed up with the APC.

    Marabout’s prophecy

    But Atiku, being Atiku, felt obliged to live up to the marabout’s prediction in 1998 that he would one day be Nigeria’s president. It was this pursuit of prophecy that got him into trouble with President Olusegun Obasanjo in 2003; it was the blind pursuit of it that drove him from the PDP to the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), and later to the APC. The obsession with this prophecy finally brought him back to the PDP. He just had to run.

    But it shouldn’t have happened in 2023. While the odds favoured another party to succeed the exhausted APC, it certainly did not favour a northerner to run. Not after eight years of Buhari, a Northerner, not after Tinubu had wrested the flag of the APC, and certainly not when the convention in the PDP favoured rotation.

    Atiku cast aside the odds, defied the restraints of common sense, ignored the party’s convention and a last-minute understanding after a key London meeting, and subverted the primaries to carry the flag. Things, quite naturally, fell apart.

    Looking for a scapegoat

    The rest is history. The PDP lost. The party that boasted that it was Africa’s largest party, destined to rule for 60 years, lost its way, leaving its members desperately searching for shelter and rehabilitation, and looking for rest wherever it may be found.

    How can that be Tinubu’s problem when Atiku, the wrecking ball, still sits pretty? I understand the hysteria in the opposition, but it does not have to waste its current misery looking for scapegoats outside. Two years is still a reasonably long time to rebuild. The rise of Peter Obi nine months to the last general election and the impact the Labour Party made show that voters will reward a viable alternative platform.

    The word here is viable. Not a party led by opportunists who have made a life career of running with the hare and hunting with the hounds. Say what you like about Tinubu, he has stood with his progressive brand of politics for nearly 30 years, even standing alone against all odds and at significant personal and reputational costs.

    Go, Atiku, go

    If the PDP is serious about a future, and Atiku cares about it, he must immediately drop his ambition to run again. This ambition is at the heart of the current turmoil in the party; it was why the PDP broke into three factions on the eve of the last election; it was why he has been unable to rebuild the ruins two years later. And it is why he is arguably the first Nigerian presidential aspirant to lose two running mates to defections.

    There’s no point blaming Tinubu for the wreckage, or getting angry with Okowa for sexifying his incredible opportunism as the beginning of a movement. PDP will get a fresh start on life when Atiku, the main obstacle, steps down. Everything else is a waste of time.

  • Tinubu approves redeployment of 4 Federal Permanent Secretaries

    Tinubu approves redeployment of 4 Federal Permanent Secretaries

    President Bola Tinubu has approved the redeployment of four Federal Permanent Secretaries.

    NAN reports that this is part of ongoing efforts to reposition the Federal Civil Service for improved performance and service delivery.

    Mrs Esther Walson-Jack, Head of the Civil Service of the Federation (HCSF), announced the redeployments in a statement by Mrs Eno Olotu, Director Information and Public Relations in her office in Abuja on Tuesday.

    Walson-Jack said that the exercise was aimed at enhancing operational efficiency, fostering innovation, and aligning the service with the Renewed Hope Agenda of the present administration.

    She listed the affected Permanent Secretaries and their new postings as follows: Dr Mary Ogbe – Redeployed from the Ministry of Solid Minerals Development to the Ministry of Regional Development.

    Also, Faruk Yabo, who moved from the Ministry of Communications, Innovation and Digital Economy to the Ministry of Solid Minerals Development.

    Dr Emeka Obi is transferred from the Ministry of Budget and Economic Development to the Ministry of Petroleum Resources, while Mr Ogbodo Nnam is posted from the Special Duties Office in the Office of the HCSF to the Ministry of Information and National Orientation.

    The Head of Service described the redeployment as a routine administrative procedure meant to reinvigorate the civil service by deploying top officials to strategic areas of need.

    She charged the Permanent Secretaries to bring their experience to bear in their new assignments and ensure effective and seamless service delivery.

    According to her, all handover and takeover processes are to be concluded on or before May 2.

    Walson-Jack reaffirmed the Federal Government’s commitment to building a world-class civil service that upholds professionalism and drives national development.

  • I never had a chance to sit, talk with Tinubu – Former aide, Baba Ahmed

    I never had a chance to sit, talk with Tinubu – Former aide, Baba Ahmed

    A former aide to President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, Dr. Hakeem Baba Ahmed has revealed that he never had to chance to see the President, only seen him three times at the Mosque.

    Baba Ahmed, who served in the Office of the Vice President made the revelation on ARISE TV that he joined the government with high hopes and expectations, but ultimately found the experience disappointing.

    He said: “I only saw President Tinubu three times in the mosque in the presidential villa. But I had never had a chance to sit down and talk with President Tinubu. I think part of the problem is that Tinubu never had time for people like us. I don’t think he had time for a lot of people working for him,” he added.

    Baba Ahmed described the president as “really and genuinely isolated,” whether by choice or circumstance, and stressed that this isolation poses a challenge for the country.

    “The bottom line is, he ought to be available for the people he trusted and worked for him. And that’s the problem for the country, not for him.”

  • It will be ‘tragic’ if Tinubu is not re-elected in 2027 – Keyamo

    It will be ‘tragic’ if Tinubu is not re-elected in 2027 – Keyamo

    The Minister of Aviation and Aerospace Development, Festus Keyamo has stated that it will be a tragic situation if President Bola Ahmed Tinubu is not re-elected in 2027, stressing that the President needs a second term to complete his economic reforms.

    Speaking on Monday as a guest on Politics Today, Keyamo, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria, warned that it would be “tragic” for another administration to halt the fiscal and economic policies currently being implemented by the Tinubu-led government.

    “The most profound thing I will say here today is that every single APC member in this country today should be concentrating on the re-election of President Bola Tinubu, irrespective of whether it affects your personal interest or not,” he said.

    “Because he does need a second term to fully finish up all these reforms.”

    Keyamo further explained, “It will be tragic for any government to come in 2027 and stop these reforms. This is what has happened in the past where you have all kinds of inchoate policies being implemented.