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Tinubu’s Baffling Northern Exclusion Strategy- Farooq Kperogi - Politics - Nairaland

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Tinubu’s Baffling Northern Exclusion Strategy- Farooq Kperogi by ogododo(op): 10:03am On May 16
The late Muhammadu Buhari wrested power from Goodluck Jonathan in a never-before-seen political upset of an incumbent in Nigeria precisely because of the northern establishment’s strategic coalition with the Southwest political establishment led by Bola Ahmed Tinubu. And Tinubu is president today because of the North’s requital, sort of, for Tinubu’s gesture.

I qualify the requital with “sort of” because Muhammadu Buhari, the chief beneficiary of the coalition, along with a significant number of the cabal that puppeteered him, didn’t want Tinubu to be president. That was the spark for Tinubu’s famously impassioned “Emi lo kan” speech in Abeokuta.

However, northern governors’ collective, full-throated, unambiguous support for Tinubu and denunciation of Buhari and his cabal with the slogan “The North remembers” compensated for Buhari’s treachery. Plus, 63.6 percent of Tinubu’s 8,805,420 votes came from the North.

That is now beside the point. Since becoming president, Tinubu has governed as if only the Southwest voted him into power, or as if the 25.9 percent of the votes he got from there is more significant than the 63.6 percent he got from the North.

I have pointed out in several past columns that Tinubu hasn’t been able to transcend his Lagos-centric and Yoruba provincialism. That’s why he still rules as if he were the governor of Lagos and not the president of Nigeria.

Tinubu is, in many ways, worse than Muhammadu Buhari, who held the record as the most narrow-minded and provincial president Nigeria ever had. In spite of Buhari’s manifest preference for northern Muslims across different ethnic groups, which I characterized in past columns as “undisguised Arewacentricity,” he ceded some power to Vice President Yemi Osinbajo and left control of the economy to the Southwest.

Buhari formally transferred presidential powers to Osinbajo at least five times in his first term, if we count every Section 145 handover in which Osinbajo was to perform presidential functions or serve in an acting capacity while Buhari was outside Nigeria.

I am aware that some people count only three because they focus on the longer or more politically consequential acting-presidency periods, especially June 2016, January-March 2017 and May-August 2017, but the wider point is that Buhari trusted a Yoruba man enough to transfer power to him on many occasions.

By contrast, Vice President Kashim Shettima appears to have been marginalized in Tinubu’s presidency. Despite Tinubu’s frequent health-related trips to France, he has never transferred power to Shettima, even for a day. Instead, he seems to time his returns to Nigeria just early enough to avoid the constitutional requirement to hand over power, only to leave for France again a few days later.

Major economic and financial levers of government were held by southern figures, including Southwesterners. Osinbajo coordinated the economic team, Godwin Emefiele controlled monetary policy, Kemi Adeosun headed Finance until she resigned over the NYSC certificate forgery scandal, Babatunde Fowler ran FIRS, Udo Udoma led Budget and National Planning, Okechukwu Enelamah ran Trade and Investment and Ben Akabueze ran the Budget Office.

By contrast, under Tinubu, even the constitutionally recognized economic role of the vice president appears to have been hollowed out. Kashim Shettima may chair the National Economic Council on paper, but the commanding heights of economic policy are firmly in the hands of Tinubu’s Southwestern circle, leading to the increasingly plausible joke that Nigeria’s economic fate can now be decided entirely in Yoruba.

It used to be said that the only truly powerful and influential northerner in Tinubu’s administration was National Security Adviser Nuhu Ribadu. He appeared to enjoy Tinubu’s confidence to a degree that went beyond the normal.

But with the duplicative appointment of retired Major General Adeyinka Famadewa, from Osun State, as Special Adviser to the President on Home Security, there is a widespread feeling in the North that Tinubu has finally purged the last vestige of northern influence in his government.

There are many reasons for this perception. First, home security is a subset of national security, and no past government has ever seen the need to establish a separate office for a Special Adviser on Home Security.

In any case, the National Security Adviser is a constitutionally recognized office in the presidency and is part of the National Security Council, which advises the president on public security and agencies created for the security of the federation. It is responsible for the “leadership, management and capacity development” of Nigeria’s security architecture.

It’s hard to justify the creation of the office of SA on Home Security to focus on terrorism inside Nigeria, banditry, border vulnerabilities, intelligence coordination, critical infrastructure protection and inter-agency response when Nigeria already has the NSA, the Ministry of Interior, the DSS, the police, the military, the NSCDC, the Immigration Service and the National Counter-Terrorism Centre under ONSA.

The Ministry of Interior’s own mandate includes internal security and related services, while the NCTC is already housed in ONSA to coordinate counterterrorism efforts.

Second, Famadewa worked as the principal general staff officer to the NSA during the Buhari administration from 2015 to 2021, where he established the Intelligence Fusion Centre. The skills, experience and associational capital he is bringing to his new job as SA on Home Security are all derived from ONSA.

In other words, without being clearly subordinate to, or carefully coordinated with, the NSA and limited to domestic-security implementation, he is merely a Yoruba NSA. At least that’s what it comes across as.

Third, Famadewa is said to be a Hausa-speaking Yoruba man, and this fact is being read as a signal that Tinubu wants a Yoruba ear in the defense sector headed by northerners, which demonstrates a deep distrust of the people from the region he put there.

These speculations may have no basis in fact. For one, Ribadu is still the international face of the Tinubu administration. You don’t send someone you distrust to negotiate on your behalf with a government as crucial as the United States government.

Vice President Shettima also seems to get along just fine with Tinubu in spite of what seems to us outsiders like the diminished influence of the office of the vice president, especially in comparison with the outsized influence of Osinbajo in Buhari’s first term.

It is also possible that what comes across as Tinubu’s inexplicable animosity toward a region that gave him more than 60 percent of his electoral mandate actually comes not from him but from his ethnocentric kitchen cabinet that people have called his greedy, ignorant, shortsighted “Lagos boys.”

But it doesn’t matter. The buck stops at his desk. His studied representational exclusion of the Southeast is already well established. Apart from Nyesom Wike, there is no other notable southern minority in a key position in his government. Yes, he has made noteworthy symbolic overtures to northern Christians, particularly through his wife, Remi.

Nonetheless, for a president seeking a second term, he has an awfully perplexing electoral tactic. To dispense with a region that gave you more than 60 percent of your vote, you need several emblematic motions. First, don’t be seen to be undermining, relegating or ignoring your vice president from the region. It may not be true, but perception is the currency of reality in politics.

Second, don’t be seen to be calculatedly surveilling the second most important appointment given to the region, that is, the office of the NSA, by appointing a kinsman from your natal state, no less, to reduplicate his position.

If you have decided to initiate a political divorce with the region, which is perfectly legitimate even if it is treacherous, at least have a sensible alternative regional coalitional strategy.Politics

As I have repeatedly pointed out in my columns, the Muslim North isn’t politically invincible. Olusegun Obasanjo and Goodluck Jonathan have shown that convincingly. But to defeat it, you need to galvanize the entire South, the Christian North and a sprinkling of the margins of the Muslim North.

Tinubu is incapable of executing this strategy. Most of the Southeast won’t warm up to him in 2027 both because of his systematic exclusion of the region and because of the region’s enthusiastic embrace of its son, Peter Obi, who will most likely run again in 2027. Given Obi’s popularity among southern minorities, the best scenario for Tinubu would be that he would divide southern minority votes with Obi.

Votes from the Southwest, northern Christians, many of whom seem to have thawed their initial ice-cold hostility toward him on account of his choice of a Muslim as his running mate, and a plurality of southern minorities will never be sufficient to compensate for his active, self-created loss of northern Muslim votes.

And that causes me to wonder what Tinubu’s 2027 electoral game plan is. Whatever it is, it can’t be a legitimate electoral victory. But my biggest worry, more than electoral calculations, is the extreme, unexampled, in-your-face ethnocentric capture of the country by Tinubu, which sets an even worse precedent for his successor than Buhari set for him.

Nigeria needs a Nigerian president, not a sectional overlord who is Nigerian only in name.
https://www.farooqkperogi.com/2026/05/tinubus-baffling-northern-exclusion.html

Re: Tinubu’s Baffling Northern Exclusion Strategy- Farooq Kperogi by SadiqBabaSani: 10:48am On May 16
Aptly written by Prof, Tinubu' plan for electoral victory is only but rigging
Re: Tinubu’s Baffling Northern Exclusion Strategy- Farooq Kperogi by Hedonisco: 11:48am On May 16
And that causes me to wonder what Tinubu’s 2027 electoral game plan is. Whatever it is, it can’t be a legitimate electoral victory
Everyone with a functional brain knows this.

But we are waiting for him to perform his magic. He and all his amala dogs and baboons will be soaked in sticky red oil. That's a promise that will be fulfilled with uncompromising finality.
Re: Tinubu’s Baffling Northern Exclusion Strategy- Farooq Kperogi by WhizdomXX(m): 11:55am On May 16
Everyone should go get their voters card.
cvr.inecnigeria.org
Re: Tinubu’s Baffling Northern Exclusion Strategy- Farooq Kperogi by Tflex01: 12:04pm On May 16
Hedonisco:
Everyone with a functional brain knows this.

But we are waiting for him to perform his magic. He and all his amala dogs and baboons will be soaked in sticky red oil. That's a promise that will be fulfilled with uncompromising finality.
Lol you do anyhow you see anyhow brother mi 😂

You better don’t let your hate for Tinubu and his ethnicity put you in a lifetime of regret.
Re: Tinubu’s Baffling Northern Exclusion Strategy- Farooq Kperogi by IGBOSON1: 12:30pm On May 16
Is Tinubu acting like someone that gives a hoot what other regions think of his crass tribalism, greed and exclusion? There's a reason he wanted as many governors as possible in his APC! He's not hedging his bets on a majority of the electorate voting for him on election day....he has other plans which don't include getting the highest number of validly cast votes! Make of that what you may! wink
Re: Tinubu’s Baffling Northern Exclusion Strategy- Farooq Kperogi by Parachoko: 12:33pm On May 16
ogododo:
The late Muhammadu Buhari wrested power from Goodluck Jonathan in a never-before-seen political upset of an incumbent in Nigeria precisely because of the northern establishment’s strategic coalition with the Southwest political establishment led by Bola Ahmed Tinubu. And Tinubu is president today because of the North’s requital, sort of, for Tinubu’s gesture.


I qualify the requital with “sort of” because Muhammadu Buhari, the chief beneficiary of the coalition, along with a significant number of the cabal that puppeteered him, didn’t want Tinubu to be president. That was the spark for Tinubu’s famously impassioned “Emi lo kan” speech in Abeokuta.

However, northern governors’ collective, full-throated, unambiguous support for Tinubu and denunciation of Buhari and his cabal with the slogan “The North remembers” compensated for Buhari’s treachery. Plus, 63.6 percent of Tinubu’s 8,805,420 votes came from the North.


That is now beside the point. Since becoming president, Tinubu has governed as if only the Southwest voted him into power, or as if the 25.9 percent of the votes he got from there is more significant than the 63.6 percent he got from the North.

I have pointed out in several past columns that Tinubu hasn’t been able to transcend his Lagos-centric and Yoruba provincialism. That’s why he still rules as if he were the governor of Lagos and not the president of Nigeria.

Tinubu is, in many ways, worse than Muhammadu Buhari, who held the record as the most narrow-minded and provincial president Nigeria ever had. In spite of Buhari’s manifest preference for northern Muslims across different ethnic groups, which I characterized in past columns as “undisguised Arewacentricity,” he ceded some power to Vice President Yemi Osinbajo and left control of the economy to the Southwest.

Buhari formally transferred presidential powers to Osinbajo at least five times in his first term, if we count every Section 145 handover in which Osinbajo was to perform presidential functions or serve in an acting capacity while Buhari was outside Nigeria.

I am aware that some people count only three because they focus on the longer or more politically consequential acting-presidency periods, especially June 2016, January-March 2017 and May-August 2017, but the wider point is that Buhari trusted a Yoruba man enough to transfer power to him on many occasions.

By contrast, Vice President Kashim Shettima appears to have been marginalized in Tinubu’s presidency. Despite Tinubu’s frequent health-related trips to France, he has never transferred power to Shettima, even for a day. Instead, he seems to time his returns to Nigeria just early enough to avoid the constitutional requirement to hand over power, only to leave for France again a few days later.

Major economic and financial levers of government were held by southern figures, including Southwesterners. Osinbajo coordinated the economic team, Godwin Emefiele controlled monetary policy, Kemi Adeosun headed Finance until she resigned over the NYSC certificate forgery scandal, Babatunde Fowler ran FIRS, Udo Udoma led Budget and National Planning, Okechukwu Enelamah ran Trade and Investment and Ben Akabueze ran the Budget Office.

By contrast, under Tinubu, even the constitutionally recognized economic role of the vice president appears to have been hollowed out. Kashim Shettima may chair the National Economic Council on paper, but the commanding heights of economic policy are firmly in the hands of Tinubu’s Southwestern circle, leading to the increasingly plausible joke that Nigeria’s economic fate can now be decided entirely in Yoruba.

It used to be said that the only truly powerful and influential northerner in Tinubu’s administration was National Security Adviser Nuhu Ribadu. He appeared to enjoy Tinubu’s confidence to a degree that went beyond the normal.

But with the duplicative appointment of retired Major General Adeyinka Famadewa, from Osun State, as Special Adviser to the President on Home Security, there is a widespread feeling in the North that Tinubu has finally purged the last vestige of northern influence in his government.

There are many reasons for this perception. First, home security is a subset of national security, and no past government has ever seen the need to establish a separate office for a Special Adviser on Home Security.

In any case, the National Security Adviser is a constitutionally recognized office in the presidency and is part of the National Security Council, which advises the president on public security and agencies created for the security of the federation. It is responsible for the “leadership, management and capacity development” of Nigeria’s security architecture.

It’s hard to justify the creation of the office of SA on Home Security to focus on terrorism inside Nigeria, banditry, border vulnerabilities, intelligence coordination, critical infrastructure protection and inter-agency response when Nigeria already has the NSA, the Ministry of Interior, the DSS, the police, the military, the NSCDC, the Immigration Service and the National Counter-Terrorism Centre under ONSA.

The Ministry of Interior’s own mandate includes internal security and related services, while the NCTC is already housed in ONSA to coordinate counterterrorism efforts.


Second, Famadewa worked as the principal general staff officer to the NSA during the Buhari administration from 2015 to 2021, where he established the Intelligence Fusion Centre. The skills, experience and associational capital he is bringing to his new job as SA on Home Security are all derived from ONSA.

In other words, without being clearly subordinate to, or carefully coordinated with, the NSA and limited to domestic-security implementation, he is merely a Yoruba NSA. At least that’s what it comes across as.

Third, Famadewa is said to be a Hausa-speaking Yoruba man, and this fact is being read as a signal that Tinubu wants a Yoruba ear in the defense sector headed by northerners, which demonstrates a deep distrust of the people from the region he put there.

These speculations may have no basis in fact. For one, Ribadu is still the international face of the Tinubu administration. You don’t send someone you distrust to negotiate on your behalf with a government as crucial as the United States government.

Vice President Shettima also seems to get along just fine with Tinubu in spite of what seems to us outsiders like the diminished influence of the office of the vice president, especially in comparison with the outsized influence of Osinbajo in Buhari’s first term.

It is also possible that what comes across as Tinubu’s inexplicable animosity toward a region that gave him more than 60 percent of his electoral mandate actually comes not from him but from his ethnocentric kitchen cabinet that people have called his greedy, ignorant, shortsighted “Lagos boys.”

But it doesn’t matter. The buck stops at his desk. His studied representational exclusion of the Southeast is already well established. Apart from Nyesom Wike, there is no other notable southern minority in a key position in his government. Yes, he has made noteworthy symbolic overtures to northern Christians, particularly through his wife, Remi.

Nonetheless, for a president seeking a second term, he has an awfully perplexing electoral tactic. To dispense with a region that gave you more than 60 percent of your vote, you need several emblematic motions. First, don’t be seen to be undermining, relegating or ignoring your vice president from the region. It may not be true, but perception is the currency of reality in politics.

Second, don’t be seen to be calculatedly surveilling the second most important appointment given to the region, that is, the office of the NSA, by appointing a kinsman from your natal state, no less, to reduplicate his position.

If you have decided to initiate a political divorce with the region, which is perfectly legitimate even if it is treacherous, at least have a sensible alternative regional coalitional strategy.Politics

As I have repeatedly pointed out in my columns, the Muslim North isn’t politically invincible. Olusegun Obasanjo and Goodluck Jonathan have shown that convincingly. But to defeat it, you need to galvanize the entire South, the Christian North and a sprinkling of the margins of the Muslim North.

Tinubu is incapable of executing this strategy. Most of the Southeast won’t warm up to him in 2027 both because of his systematic exclusion of the region and because of the region’s enthusiastic embrace of its son, Peter Obi, who will most likely run again in 2027. Given Obi’s popularity among southern minorities, the best scenario for Tinubu would be that he would divide southern minority votes with Obi.

Votes from the Southwest, northern Christians, many of whom seem to have thawed their initial ice-cold hostility toward him on account of his choice of a Muslim as his running mate, and a plurality of southern minorities will never be sufficient to compensate for his active, self-created loss of northern Muslim votes.

And that causes me to wonder what Tinubu’s 2027 electoral game plan is. Whatever it is, it can’t be a legitimate electoral victory. But my biggest worry, more than electoral calculations, is the extreme, unexampled, in-your-face ethnocentric capture of the country by Tinubu, which sets an even worse precedent for his successor than Buhari set for him.

Nigeria needs a Nigerian president, not a sectional overlord who is Nigerian only in name.

https://www.farooqkperogi.com/2026/05/tinubus-baffling-northern-exclusion.html
Long trash
Re: Tinubu’s Baffling Northern Exclusion Strategy- Farooq Kperogi by Bluntguy: 12:36pm On May 16
IGBOSON1:
Is Tinubu acting like someone that gives a hoot what other regions think of his crass tribalism, greed and exclusion? There's a reason he wanted as many governors as possible in his APC! He's not hedging his bets on a majority of the electorate voting for him on election day....he has other plans which don't include getting the highest number of validly cast votes! Make of that what you may! wink
Long sense
Re: Tinubu’s Baffling Northern Exclusion Strategy- Farooq Kperogi by lawani(m): 12:46pm On May 16
Ribadu should be on trial for sending unknown gunmen as vigilantes to communities under the attack of unknown gunmen.

The right system for any country is a government of national unity all the time with positions shared among political parties according to how they fared at the polls and the national assembly should consist of elders that receive all the briefs of the President and that can overrule the President on anything and be able to sack him without notice
Re: Tinubu’s Baffling Northern Exclusion Strategy- Farooq Kperogi by helinues: 1:43pm On May 16
North West in particular too overrate themselves in Nigeria politics

They will be taught some bitter lessons in 2027.
Re: Tinubu’s Baffling Northern Exclusion Strategy- Farooq Kperogi by ogododo(op): 2:07pm On May 16
Nawa Nlfpmod.
Re: Tinubu’s Baffling Northern Exclusion Strategy- Farooq Kperogi by LordIsaac(m): 2:11pm On May 16
Nigeria is what it is today courtesy Northern politicians. I counsel facrook to shut up!
Re: Tinubu’s Baffling Northern Exclusion Strategy- Farooq Kperogi by m4una(m): 3:23pm On May 16
The only thing that matters is that Tinubu will not be returned in 2027
Re: Tinubu’s Baffling Northern Exclusion Strategy- Farooq Kperogi by SlavaUkraini: 5:28pm On May 16
This time around, the North should remember how badly Jagaban treated El Rufai and other Northerners that supported him in 2023..
Re: Tinubu’s Baffling Northern Exclusion Strategy- Farooq Kperogi by d142475: 5:30pm On May 16
ogododo:
https://www.farooqkperogi.com/2026/05/tinubus-baffling-northern-exclusion.html
I just glanced through this article. But I saw the part of Ribadu. In case Kperogi doesn’t know, NSA Ribadu was caught on tape saying in Hausa language that the bandits and terrorists are his brothers. He is clearly a terrorist sympathizer, who will work to protect his Fulani terrorist brothers. He cannot be trusted to deal with domestic terrorism in Nigeria
Re: Tinubu’s Baffling Northern Exclusion Strategy- Farooq Kperogi by Adonispco: 5:33pm On May 16
70% of Nigeria problem is caused be Northern Nigeria so shut up Farouk.
Re: Tinubu’s Baffling Northern Exclusion Strategy- Farooq Kperogi by Gotocourt: 5:34pm On May 16
Since becoming president, Tinubu has governed as if only the Southwest voted him into power, or as if the 25.9 percent of the votes he got from there is more significant than the 63.6 percent he got from the North.

Tinubu go rig undecided
Re: Tinubu’s Baffling Northern Exclusion Strategy- Farooq Kperogi by Seeplusplus: 5:34pm On May 16
I don't like Tinubu, but anything to cripple the northern oligarchy is welcomed by me.

They've destroyed this country far too much


But as for me and my family, it's Omoyele Sowore 2027
Re: Tinubu’s Baffling Northern Exclusion Strategy- Farooq Kperogi by Gotocourt: 5:35pm On May 16
Nigeria needs a Nigerian president, not a sectional overlord who is Nigerian only in name.
Re: Tinubu’s Baffling Northern Exclusion Strategy- Farooq Kperogi by Tjra: 5:37pm On May 16
Kperogi the Fulani apologist should shut his herdsman mouth up.
Re: Tinubu’s Baffling Northern Exclusion Strategy- Farooq Kperogi by Proudlyomonna: 5:38pm On May 16
Tflex01:
Lol you do anyhow you see anyhow brother mi 😂

You better don’t let your hate for Tinubu and his ethnicity put you in a lifetime of regret.
Hahaha what is the hopeless Deadheaded zombie saying cheesy grin Are You more brother to Tpain the FAILURE above all FAILURE 70x worse than Bubu than His Village People in Iragbiji and Osun State that will choose DEATH 50x than to vote for such an unimaginable FAILURE? grin.

Any Inec that tries shishi for the FAILURE above all FAILURE called Tpain might not leave the polling unit with His head grin grin. You can come and try that Your zombie deadhead too grin grin.

ALL the Tribes in Nigeria including Tpains Tribe have all agreed that tpain has sent Nija to coma bleeding uncontrolably,any single chance wey that GOAT FAILURE get na to send Nija to the grave o grin grin

Re: Tinubu’s Baffling Northern Exclusion Strategy- Farooq Kperogi by Kog45(m): 5:38pm On May 16
Hedonisco:
Everyone with a functional brain knows this.

But we are waiting for him to perform his magic. He and all his amala dogs and baboons will be soaked in sticky red oil. That's a promise that will be fulfilled with uncompromising finality.
Una go sit down for one corner they blow like educated tout...who you wan soaked in sticky red oil?human being like you on top election as if Obi,Atiku and others are different from Tinubu....better get your PVC which i doubt you have and vote wisely than lamenting here everyday
Re: Tinubu’s Baffling Northern Exclusion Strategy- Farooq Kperogi by gabbytabby: 5:40pm On May 16
If they ran amok on Buhari did you think they will do better for PBAT.

Nigeria needed fresh hands if things were to improve from Buhari era (on a path to bankruptcy). The North and South divide is equitable and PBAT chose people who were willing to carry his vision through and want to work with and for him.

Buhari was a hands off kind of President different from PBAT who required feedback and performance assessment.

I thank God for PBAT everyday who is getting things done despite the humming of the Assasinators. Giving Ceaser some of what Ceaser wants.


ogododo:
https://www.farooqkperogi.com/2026/05/tinubus-baffling-northern-exclusion.html
Re: Tinubu’s Baffling Northern Exclusion Strategy- Farooq Kperogi by Kog45(m): 5:41pm On May 16
Kperogi should get out...his Kwara north is boiling everyday but he is more concern on Atiku project,sitting down in corner of his room in United States writing trash
Re: Tinubu’s Baffling Northern Exclusion Strategy- Farooq Kperogi by AcadaWriter0: 5:43pm On May 16
Politician Northern Strategy - a subtle but effective plan.
Re: Tinubu’s Baffling Northern Exclusion Strategy- Farooq Kperogi by ElevationD:
I do not see the reason for the complain by Mr. Farouk Kperoogi.

We were all witnesses to the uncontrolled channeling of major projects to the north during Buhari’s regime. That government, perhaps with nothing to do with public funds, routed a rail line to Maradi in Niger, passing through Buhari’s town. He ensured that very crucial projects were cited in his town, using public resources. While railway lines do not traverse Rivers state, Rotimi Amaechi, the then transport minister, ensured that the standard gauge passed through Daura, not caring about Rivers state. He did nothing about ports in Rivers state, as the minister.

The ratio of projects between the north and the south was unashamedly biased in favour of the north during Buhari’s government.

GEJ was hounded out of office by the combination of Tinubu, Atiku, Kwakwanso, El Rufai, Soyinka, etc. GEJ as a Southern President largely focused more projects in the north. His own community in Bayelsa was left undone by him, making him unpopular in his area.

How do you want to blame BAT, who knows that there is an unwritten agreement that allows political office holders to develop their zones when they are in power. That’s the principal reason behind rotation of power. When power is within your zone, use it to develop your zone, as the next man will fix his own zone. By this way, no area is left undeveloped. That’s what you find with Governors and members of the Federal and state assemblies. Corruption hinders many of them from fixing their areas. When they are out of power they lament.

However, while they face their areas, they must also carry out projects in other zones in an agreed ratio or percentage. Governors use the opportunity to fix their senatorial zones while a certain percentage of total projects is allocated to other senatorial zones, to create an impression of balance.

The south cannot continue to be fooled by the antics of certain northern leaders, who claim that they are marginalized. If GEJ focused a little on the South, he probably would have enjoyed his second term.

I do not in anyway blame BAT. It is the opportunity of the south and he is from the South west. He must make use of it. When it gets to the north again, they should fix theirs. Next time when power gets to the south, particularly the SE, no one should complain if the leader focuses on the region more.

Unfortunately for the northern leadership, corruption is the challenge. Rather than fix education, they support the Almajiri system and keep their people in poverty.
Re: Tinubu’s Baffling Northern Exclusion Strategy- Farooq Kperogi by Tflex01: 5:44pm On May 16
Gotocourt:
Since becoming president, Tinubu has governed as if only the Southwest voted him into power, or as if the 25.9 percent of the votes he got from there is more significant than the 63.6 percent he got from the North.

Tinubu go rig undecided
So you guys knew Tinubu got little votes in SW??

So it is safe to say that all your insults against the Yorubas is from the place of jealousy and envy? 😂

😂😂😂
Re: Tinubu’s Baffling Northern Exclusion Strategy- Farooq Kperogi by dederocs(m):
The north has nothing to offer, can't even deal with its almajiris and jihadists indoctrination problem. It should be about merit, this mediocre national character is weak, and makes no sense, it takes us backwards. We can't keep doing the same thing everytime and expect different results.

True federalism, state police, state indigenous laws, full resources control, then any people that constitute nuisance elsewhere can be removed back to where they come from, as states will get full autonomy.
Re: Tinubu’s Baffling Northern Exclusion Strategy- Farooq Kperogi by Airlord2030: 5:46pm On May 16
No better option among the contestants than tinubu..

So tinubu till 2031.. maybe by then, better candidates will emerge..
Re: Tinubu’s Baffling Northern Exclusion Strategy- Farooq Kperogi by immaculatesense(m): 5:54pm On May 16
ogododo:
https://www.farooqkperogi.com/2026/05/tinubus-baffling-northern-exclusion.html
Tell us Mr Kperogi what he got from North East vs South West or North West vs South West or North Central vs South West. Not all these "NORTH". Who is North? Saying North is Hypocritical and nonsensical.

Answer us, who is NORTH?

No Be Juju Be Dat?
Re: Tinubu’s Baffling Northern Exclusion Strategy- Farooq Kperogi by CodeTemplar:
Ribadu came out to say terrorists are peace loving people. Nothing was heard from the northern attack dog.
Fulanis were discovered with automatic rifles and ID cards issued by office of the NSA yet these people kept quiet.
The governors are suddenly getting huge allocations but instead of performing. All their attention goes to a hugely indebted centre. I wonder what that is for? These creatures couldnt pay salary without borrowing under Buhari but are suddenly getting bumper allocation. Why the fixation with a centre you just finished pillaging for eight years?
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