Thursday, March 12, 2026

State Police: Tinubu Is Pushing Nigeria Towards A Disaster

 By Olu Fasan

Recently, President Bola Tinubu unceremoniously sacked Kayode Egbetokun as Nigeria’s 22nd Inspector-General of Police, IGP, reportedly for expressing strong reservations about the creation of state police. Tinubu swiftly named Tunji Disu as the new IGP.

Disu immediately declared that “state police has come to stay” and set up a panel to develop a framework for establishing it. So, one senior police officer lost his job as the nation’s top cop because of his principled opposition to state police; another clinched the prestigious job by enthusiastically embracing the idea and showing willingness to give the president what he wants.

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Middle East: Is Nigeria Ready For Another Oil Windfall?

 By Marcel Okeke

While the entire world remains on edge following the United States of America-Israel military strike on Iran last weekend, one of the upshots of the incident has been a remarkable surge in the prices of crude oil. As the conflict is yet unfolding and spreading across the entire Middle East, crude oil production, logistics and distribution are getting encumbered or crippled.

As a ripple effect of the crisis, prices of oil have spiked, busting expectations and projections by stakeholders and analysts. For Nigeria which has built its 2026 budget of N58.4…. trillion on oil price assumption of $64.85 per barrel, the surge to over $90 per barrel (at a point) looks, in all respects, like another windfall in terms of the resultant huge foreign exchange (FX) revenue inflow.

In Nigeria, A Judge Is Not Above Or Beyond Investigation

 By Chidi Anselm Odinkalu

Judge not, that you be not judged. For with what judgment you judge, you will be judged…. Bible, Matthew 7:1-2 (NKJV)

In the first six months of 1986, Nigeria’s Supreme Court delivered two judgments with far reaching consequences for the lives and careers of two senior judges of the High Court. If the facts were to recur today, 40 years later, neither of these cases would come to trial. This fact says a lot about how the standards of judicial conduct and ethics as well as accountability for both have evolved – for worse – over the intervening period.

*Odinkalu

Donald Ikomi was a judge and Chairman of the Armed Robbery and Firearms Tribunal of Bendel State when – together with his cook, Reuben Udoh, and one Martins Ekezoka – he was arraigned in December 1985 on a charge of murder.

After 30 Months, Nigeria Returns With Ambassadors, Fumbling

 By Owei Lakemfa

Thirty months after recalling all Nigerian ambassadors, and 15 months before the end of its four-year tenure, the Tinubu administration on March 6, 2026, unveiled ambassadors for Nigeria.

*Tinubu

In the first place, the recall of the ambassadors in September 2023 was myopic. It resulted in the country having no ambassadors at a time the world was on the boil, and our West African region was falling apart.

It was also embarrassing that for over two years, government was unable or incapable of appointing new ambassadors.

But as the administration rolled out the names of the new ambassadors and their supposed countries of posting, I sensed the absence of professionalism in the process.

Sunday, March 8, 2026

Nigeria: These Voodoo Electricity Bills

By Emmanuel Onwubiko

Power(electricity)is one of the subsectors of the national economy that the President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s government has failed to revive from its hitherto moribund status.

Nigeria has had energy poverty as one of the severest challenges undermining the prosperity of millions of Nigerians for decades. Electricity poverty is one of the causes of underdevelopment in Nigeria.

The Daniel Bwala Al-Jazeera Interview With Mehdi Hassan

 By Kingsley Moghalu 

The Daniel Bwala interview with Mehdi Hasan on AlJazeera ‘s Head to Head program was a disaster of gargantuan proportions for Nigeria as a country, for President Tinubu’s administration, and for Bwala himself. Of these three, the last is the least important, because Bwala’s track record speaks for itself. 

*Bwala and Hassan 

The interview made a spectacle of Nigeria, not just because of the reach of the program globally, but also the format in which there was a global audience in the room itself. What will EACH of those people think about Nigeria after such a fact-based shredding of the country’s leadership and its performance? It was a sad commentary on Nigeria’s political culture in which there are no beliefs, no policies, no ideology, just crass opportunism and the battle for political power.  Turn-coatism is “it”. 

Wednesday, March 4, 2026

Peter Obi On ‘Politics of Zero Humanity’!

 

It is profoundly disturbing that while we, the politicians, continue to obsess over the 2027 elections—spending our energy scheming about how to capture, grab, and run the next election—the first two months of 2026 have reportedly seen the killing of over 1,000 Nigerians and the abduction of several thousand others.

This is the painful reality confronting our nation. From Zamfara State to Kwara, Ondo, Kebbi, Edo, Benue, Adamawa, Plateau, and many other states, families have buried loved ones, and communities have been emptied by gunshots and fear.

Rangers International Won The War For The Vanquished

 By Uzor Maxim Uzoatu

Football is the greatest instrument that unites Nigeria. Whenever the national team, the Super Eagles, is on song all Nigerians become united in an astonishing togetherness. 

There was the Nigeria-Biafra war of 1967-70 that could have divided the country forever. At the end of the war in 1970, then Head of State General Yakubu Gowon made the famous announcement of “No Victor, No Vanquished”.  

Of course the vanquished ones knew themselves as they sauntered back into Nigeria, hungry and broken, after the end of the Biafra struggle. 

The eminent Nigerian football administrators of that time, notably the iconic Oyo Orok Oyo, at the end of the war stressed that a team from the erstwhile rebel section must be involved for a true national champion to emerge. 

Monday, March 2, 2026

Security Risks Posed By Okada Riders Govts Are Blind To

 By Adekunle Adekoya

That our nation is challenged on many fronts may be a trite observation; from economic challenges in the form of a cost of living crisis and the growing inability of many Nigerians to afford things they once took for granted to existential threats posed by kidnapping, banditry, insurgency and terrorism, it is obvious that these are not the best of times for Nigeria and Nigerians. Even the rich are also crying.

People say once a problem is known, it is already half-solved. Threats already identified in the economic and security spheres are being dealt with, or ignored as the managers of our affairs see fit, leaving one to wonder why the Nigerian state cannot eradicate the scourge of terrorism from our lands the way a surgeon excises a disturbing growth from the body of a patient.

Friday, February 27, 2026

A Tale of Two Movements: City Boys and Village Boys

 By Promise Adiele

This essay is not intended to elaborate on Nigeria’s socio-political and economic regression or to emphasize the potential of a new socio-political beginning. It does not attempt to achieve a consensus about the more suitable quintessential habitation between City and Village.

Rather, it presents a realistic interpretation of City and Village to underscore their precise fittingness or otherwise towards the 2027 elections. This exercise has become necessary given the sudden incursion of City and Village into Nigeria’s socio-political lexicon.

5 Things You Should Know Before Installing Solar Panel Batteries In Your Home

 


Switching to solar technology to power your home can be a rocky transition. Unfortunately, it's not as easy as flipping a switch. Powering your home with solar technology requires preparation, planning, and realism. Before going all the way to converting to a greener lifestyle, consider a few things, like whether your home can be sustained by it, and the reasons why you should commit. 

Nuhu Ribadu Vs. El-Rufai: Battle Of The Last Hegemons

 By Steve Osuji 

Tinubu in do-or-die 2nd term bid: First, it is perverse for an incumbent to seek to shutdown an entire system; the very same that ensconced him onto power. It's like sequestering yourself in a house with doors and windows tightly shut! The very open system which brought a man to power, he now seeks to shut it down in order to eliminate any form of contest or opposition. 

*El-Rufai and Ribadu 

This scenario is what President Bola Tinubu has fully pre-occupied himself with since he came to power in May, 2023. Shutdown the space! Pull down their bastions and hack their stanchions! This seems to be the silent battle cry of Tinubu and his ruling All Progressives Congress (APC). 

2027 Election: That Nigeria May Not Collapse

 By Promise Adiele

The subliminal expression, “let Nigeria collapse, let us all go our separate ways”, is a dominant mindset for many people across the country. It resonates with tenacious assurance in the mental process of those who subscribe to such an idea. Surely, no one would blame them for believing that Nigeria has expired.  Its twin expression is “the Nigerian project is not working. To your tents, O Israel.”

Those who accommodate the second submission borrow a leaf from the Biblical book of 1 Kings 12:16, where the general discontent of the ten northern tribes of Israel towards King Rehoboam is captured.  But the shrewd and circumspect have argued that the disintegration of the country may not be the best option.

Nigeria: Should The 2027 Elections Still Hold?

 By Promise Adiele

Time is an important factor in human engagements. That is why “time wasting” is repudiated by serious-minded, result-oriented, and committed persons. I remember a popular slogan by one of my school teachers. It says “time wasted is irretrievable”. In simple terms, time lost cannot be recovered. 

Contemporary events have punctured that submission. Of course, time wasted can be recovered at least from a spiritual point of view, especially if we consider God’s declaration in Joel 2:25. In that portion of the Bible, God made a promise to restore the wasted years, the years of the locust and cankerworm. It means that God can restore wasted time. Although God can restore wasted time, we must not slaughter time on the altar of irresponsible indulgences.

If Criminals Can Stream Their Crimes, Why Can’t Nigeria Transmit Election Results?

 By Jude Obuseh

In today’s Nigeria, the contradiction is stark and unsettling. Armed groups in remote forests upload videos in real time. Kidnappers broadcast proof-of-life clips within minutes. Terrorists circulate propaganda across multiple platforms with ease. Yet, when it comes to elections—the very foundation of democratic legitimacy—citizens are repeatedly told that electronic transmission of results is “not always feasible.” 

The question therefore forces itself into the national conscience: if bandits can transmit their crimes live, why can’t the Nigerian state transmit election results electronically? This is not a debate about abstract technology. Nigeria has over 120 million internet subscribers, according to data from the Nigerian Communications Commission, and mobile network coverage extends to over 85 percent of the population. Banks process millions of electronic transactions daily.

Wednesday, February 25, 2026

Benin Assassination Attempt: Peter Obi Thanks Nigerians For Their Support

Thank You, Nigerians!

I am profoundly grateful to Nigerians from around the world for your prayers, calls, and solidarity following the incident at the ADC office in Benin yesterday.

*Peter Obi and other ADC chieftains after the attack...

I especially appreciate your support during this difficult time for the family of the distinguished elder and former Governor of Edo State, Chief John Oyegun, who has served Nigeria honourably in various capacities, as well as for another former Governor, Professor Oserheimen Osunbor. Your support has strengthened my faith in our shared humanity and our collective hope for a better Nigeria. My deep gratitude is reflected in my renewed commitment to serve and build our nation.

Ayo Oyoze Baje: The Media Icon @73

By Halima Abdulazeez

The story of journalism in Nigeria cannot be told without mentioning a patriot like Sir Ayo Oyoze Baje, whose 73rd birthday recently marked another milestone in a life dedicated to intellectual rigor, creative innovation, and selfless service.

*Baje

As President of the Guild of Public Affairs Analysts of Nigeria (GPAAN) and Chairman/CEO of Oyoze Creative Concept, Sir Oyoze continues to exemplify how sharp analysis and boundless creativity can transform public discourse and nation-building.

Monday, February 23, 2026

Nigeria 2027: Preventing The Return Of Violence

 By Tonnie Iredia

Many analysts who felt they could explain away the poor conduct of the 2019 elections ended up making two irritating statements; first that the nation’s electoral body did not have a server and second that even if there was one, it was not put into use. Considering that it was public knowledge that INEC was funded to get a server, the narrative could have sent the nation ablaze, but it did not.

In 2023, INEC’s claim that a glitch adversely affected only one out of 3 elections that were simultaneously conducted should have led to massive violent reactions as it used to be in Nigeria, but again it did not. It is however naïve to imagine that Nigerians have suddenly become dumb or that the unusual post-election calm has now established the emergence of a new political culture.

Thursday, February 19, 2026

Electronic Transmission: Let The Wishes Of The People Prevail

 By Bassey Ewa Henshaw

“Once to every man and nation

 Comes the moment to decide

In the strife of truth with falsehood

For the good or evil side

Some great cause, some great decision

Each offering the bloom or blight

And the choice goes by forever

Twixt that darkness and that light.”

—James Russell Lowell

*Akpabio and Tinubu

And indeed, the INEC Amendment Bill presents such a moment. A moment of  great decision. It is the moment when we all must choose between transparency, credibility and trust or manipulation, doubt and suspicion. It is a moment when silence is not golden and we must all speak up and side with the truth.

Real-Time e-Transmission: ‘Technical Glitch’ In 2027 Will Unsettle Nigeria

 By Olu Fasan

The vexed debate over the Senate’s refusal to guarantee “mandatory” and “real-time” electronic transmission of results in the electoral law ignores two fundamental problems. The first is Nigeria’s utterly weak state capacity; the second is the total lack of institutional independence.

*Tinubu signs Electoral Act (Amendment) Bill 2026 into law

Even if the electoral act provides for mandatory and real-time transmission of election results, “mandatory” will not be mandatory and “real-time” won’t be real-time. Furthermore, INEC and the courts can’t be trusted to be above board in discharging their duties. Both problems discredited previous presidential elections in Nigeria and look likely to undermine the 2027 poll.