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EndBadGovernance Protest: Committee confirms 10 dead, ₦11bn in property losses in Kano By Bashir Bello KANO — The Committee of Inquiry on the End Bad Governance Protest, established by Kano State Governor Abba Yusuf, has confirmed that 10 people were killed and ₦11 billion worth of properties destroyed during the demonstration. The findings were presented during the 25th Kano State Executive Council meeting at Government House, where the committee’s chairman, Justice Lawan Wada (rtd.), submitted the official report. 0:00 / 0:00 Receiving the report, Governor Yusuf announced plans to issue a white paper to identify those responsible for sponsoring and executing the violent protest. In a statement by his spokesperson, Sanusi Bature, the governor vowed to fully implement the committee’s recommendations regarding the August 1, 2024 protest. “According to the report, 10 people lost their lives, while seven others sustained critical injuries,” the statement read. “Additionally, public and private properties worth over ₦11 billion were destroyed during the protest.” Governor Yusuf emphasized that his administration allowed the committee’s six-month investigation to proceed independently without interference. “I trust the integrity and professionalism of the committee members. They were selected on merit, and I am confident they conducted their work without bias,” he stated. He assured that appropriate action would be taken on the report’s findings to deter future violence and destruction. The governor also commended the committee for their thorough work and encouraged them to remain available for future assignments if needed. While presenting the report, Justice Wada revealed that the committee visited all affected areas and engaged with stakeholders to compile a comprehensive account of the protest’s impact. https://www.vanguardngr.com/2025/02/endbadgovernance-protest-committee-confirms-10-dead-%e2%82%a611bn-in-property-losses-in-kano/ |
The US government is set to investigate how past aid allocated to Nigeria and other countries has been utilised.https://dailytrust.com/us-probes-donations-to-nigeria-amid-claim-of-boko-haram-sponsorship/
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Nigeria’s headline inflation has dropped to 24.48 per cent year on year in January 2025.https://www.channelstv.com/2025/02/18/just-in-nigerias-inflation-rate-drops-to-24-48-per-cent/
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A team of police officers attached to the Area F of the Lagos State Police Command have been detained for allegedly extorting a Chinese expatriate along the Sheraton-Opebi link Road area of the state.https://punchng.com/three-policemen-arrested-for-extorting-n100000-from-expatriate-in-lagos/
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The Lagos State Government has issued a 24-hour quit notice to illegal traders and occupants under the Idumota, Ebute Ero Police Police overhead, and environs in Lagos Island to vacate due to violations of environmental laws and degradation.https://www.vanguardngr.com/2025/02/lagos-serves-48hr-quit-notice-to-illegal-traders-at-idumota-ebute-ero/
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The Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN) says no system collapse has been recorded this year, but line tripping. The company said this in a statement on its X handle in Abuja on Saturday. ‘It said, ”TCN management would like to reiterate that there has been no system collapse this year. Our electric bike will crash price of goods and fight climate change - Adekunle Ajasin Varsity....0:00 / 0:00 “On Feb. 12, when the Omotosho-Ikeja West 330 Kilo Volt (kV) transmission line tripped, the Benin-Egbin 330 kV line was on a scheduled outage for mechanical line tracing. ”The tripping resulted in a cascaded outage, causing loss of supply within the Abuja, Lagos, and Osogbo axes.” According to TCN, other parts of the country are fully intact. Meanwhile, full restoration of bulk power supply to affected areas has since been completed. The company said that it was pertinent to note that the Nigerian Electricity Supply Industry (NESI) was being regulated by the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) and governed by industry documents. ”The documents reserve for the National Control Centre System Operator or her designated back-up, the National Supplementary Control Centre (SNCC), the exclusive right to provide information to the public about events and status of the grid,” it said. The company urged members of the public and reporters to shun malicious and unfounded information about the National Grid that does not emanate from the Public Affairs Department of TCN. (NAN) https://www.vanguardngr.com/2025/02/no-system-collapse-has-occurred-in-2025-tcn/ |
Boko Haram Terrorists Attack Nigerian Army Base, Kill Three Soldiers, Steal Gun Trucks In Bornohttps://saharareporters.com/2025/02/15/breaking-boko-haram-terrorists-attack-nigerian-army-base-kill-three-soldiers-steal-gun
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The Minister of Education, Dr Tunji Alausa, on Friday, said President Bola Tinubu has approved the conversion of the Yaba College of Technology, YABATECH, to a university.https://www.vanguardngr.com/2025/02/tinubu-approves-conversion-of-yabatech-to-university/
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Manchester City vs Newcastle 15-02-2025 4pm |
Nlfpmod, things dont come down in Nigeria! |
The Lagos Metropolitan Area Transport Authority, LAMATA, has announced an 18 percent increase in fares for its Bus Reform Initiative, BRI, scheme. The upward review will take effect from February 17.https://www.vanguardngr.com/2025/02/lagos-brt-fares-increase-by-18-from-february-17/
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Amotekun Operatives Clash With Policemen Guarding Illegal Miners In Osun, Leaving Officers Injuredhttps://saharareporters.com/2025/02/13/amotekun-operatives-clash-policemen-guarding-illegal-miners-osun-leaving-officers
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An Islamic human rights organisation, the Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC), has cautioned the federal government against intimidating former governor of Kaduna State, Mallam Nasir El-Rufai.https://dailytrust.com/stop-intimidating-el-rufai-muric-cautions-state-actors/
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Real Madrid Vs Manchester City 19-02-2025 9pm |
ManchesterCity lost again 2-3 to Madrid! |
The monarch and five others were kidnapped on Sunday, February 3, 2025, by gunmen along a remote path in Igueben Local Government Area. A lawmaker in Edo State has exposed alleged falsehood by security agencies, while revealing that the police and the Edo State Security Corps (ESSC) did not rescue the abducted traditional ruler of Udo-Eguare kingdom, HRH Friday Ehizojie, but that a ransom was paid for his release. Hon. Inegbeboh Eugene, representing Igueben Constituency in the Edo State House of Assembly, made this revelation on Monday while addressing lawmakers. He debunked statements made by both the Edo State Police Command and the ESSC, who had taken credit for rescuing the monarch after his abduction. The monarch and five others were kidnapped on Sunday, February 3, 2025, by gunmen along a remote path in Igueben Local Government Area. However, four days later, the Edo State Police Command announced that its operatives had successfully rescued the traditional ruler unhurt, while thanking local vigilantes and hunters for their support. Meanwhile, two days after the police’s announcement, the Commander of the Edo State Security Corps, retired Commissioner of Police, Friday Ibadin, also claimed that his officers had combed the forest and secured the king’s release before handing him over to the police for further debriefing. However, Hon. Eugene refuted these claims, stating that the community had to raise money to pay ransom to the kidnappers. Speaking on the floor of the State House of Assembly, Eugene criticised the security agencies for their alleged inaction during the crisis. "Mr. Speaker, it is interesting to know that during the trying period, I personally informed the security agencies about the abduction of our traditional ruler. But at the end of the day, they were only pretending to act, while doing nothing." "None of them knew how the monarch came back home, yet they are now claiming credit, posing for pictures, and making social media posts about a so-called rescue. If they actually rescued him, where are the kidnappers?" Eugene boldly stated that despite the authorities' refusal to acknowledge it, the traditional ruler's freedom was secured only after the community raised the ransom demanded by the kidnappers. While expressing gratitude to Governor Monday Okpebholo for his swift intervention and logistical support to security agencies, Eugene urged the Speaker of the House to summon the ESSC Commander, Friday Ibadin, to clarify the security outfit’s efforts in combating crime in Edo State. https://saharareporters.com/2025/02/11/edo-lawmaker-tackles-police-confirms-paying-ransom-kidnappers-release-monarch |
Hala Madrid! |
The Inspector General of Police, Kayode Egbetokun, has issued a stern warning to officers of the Nigeria Police Force against carrying rifles while dressed in civilian attire (mufti) and engaging in human rights violations.https://punchng.com/ig-warns-officers-against-carrying-guns-in-mufti-violating-human-rights/
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The Nigeria Police Force has dismissed circulating rumors about the return of the disbanded Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) under a reformed set of rules.https://www.vanguardngr.com/2025/02/nigeria-police-force-denies-return-of-sars/
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Nlfpmod, police are our enemies! |
The victims narrated how the police officers in the Sango Area Command allegedly detained, tortured, and extorted them under the guise of an official operation. The Nigeria Police Force has labelled Ikechukwu Joseph, Solomon Adeniyi, and Alhaja Asisat, all residents of Ogun State, as suspected criminals. Prior to this, the residents, through their lawyer from the Initiative for the Downtrodden, had written to the Inspector-General of Police (IGP), Kayode Egbetokun, accusing certain police officers of brutality and extortion. The officers; SP Rotimi Ogunmuyiwa, ASP Paul Ataga, IPO Jude Ikhe (Chinedu), and others in Ogun State were accused of brutality, extortion, and criminal abduction. The victims narrated how the police officers in the Sango Area Command allegedly detained, tortured, and extorted them under the guise of an official operation. In a telephone conversation with SaharaReporters, SP Rotimi Ogunmuyiwa characterised the residents as liars attempting to use propaganda to cover up their misdeeds. The police detailed how Ikechukwu Joseph and others were linked to the frequent theft of containers in Lagos. Ogunmuyiwa said the police received a complaint about the theft of a container which was filled with sesame seeds in December. The police said: “We started our investigation and all available evidence is linked to this guy, Ikechuckwu Joseph. And when we invited him, he also confessed in the presence of his lawyer.” The police continued: “We also told the human rights activists about this. The claim of extortion is also a lie. It is even illogical. The subject stolen is worth over N100 million so how come we would collect N5 million from him?” “No money was collected from him, even for bail,” the police added. In a video provided to SaharaReporters, a businessman who submitted a complaint to the police, which resulted in the arrest of Ikechukwu Joseph and his associates, corroborated SP Rotimi's statements. The man who identified himself as Mr Lawrence, a freight forwarder in Nigerian Port, said he has been working for a company called Osun Agro Commodity, situated at Ago Pace way. He said, “I have been with them for a very long time, working for them. “In March 2023, a container was stolen that contained cashew seeds. They came again on December 8, 2024; the same guys for a container loaded with sesame seeds. And since that time, we have been looking for them. Even the police in Abuja and many stations in Lagos State helped us. “But just recently, the police told me they arrested somebody by the name Ikechuckwu Joseph. He confessed about my container, how they kept it at Mile 2 area. The police went to all the warehouses in Mile 2, they could not see it. “But now, he is saying that all what he said when he was questioned by the police were said because we tortured him. But if you see him, you will know if the police tortured him or not. “I as a person need justice because some people rose up and called themselves human rights activists and they are fighting against the police. This is not supposed to be. You should know these people you are trying to support are criminals. “The total cost of these two containers they stole is N110 million. The buyers of these containers are at large. The police are still looking for them. I mean, the people they should sell the containers to. Please, I need justice.” However, in the petition sent to the police IG, Egbetokun, signed by Ayo Ogundeji Esq, and Anaja Michael Marijata for the National President, the petitioners alleged that the officers illegally abducted Joseph from his residence in Peace Estate, Ipaja, Lagos, on November 14, 2024. "He was unlawfully detained, physically tortured; the victim’s two legs and hands were chained together with a metal rod placed in between his bounded hands and legs and was hung on a constructed pillar/pole at the IRT office, and was brutalised to the extent of inflicting him with bodily injuries," the petition stated. The petition also alleged that the officers stormed Joseph’s residence without a warrant, labelling him an armed robber and kidnapper. "They openly labelled the 1st victim as a hardened criminal, by telling the neighborhood that the 1st victim is an armed robber and a kidnapper, who according to them kidnapped a little child and that they came from Abuja on the Inspector-General of Police’s order." They accused the officers of looting Joseph’s home, claiming they took his furniture, air conditioners, a deep freezer, and two generators. "They even threw away the victim’s pregnant wife’s food from the freezer and took the freezer away," the petition added. https://saharareporters.com/2025/02/09/police-accuse-ogun-residents-lying-petition-igp-egbetokun-allege-petitioners-stole |
The victims narrated how the police officers in the Sango Area Command allegedly detained, tortured, and extorted them under the guise of an official operation. The Nigeria Police Force has labelled Ikechukwu Joseph, Solomon Adeniyi, and Alhaja Asisat, all residents of Ogun State, as suspected criminals. Prior to this, the residents, through their lawyer from the Initiative for the Downtrodden, had written to the Inspector-General of Police (IGP), Kayode Egbetokun, accusing certain police officers of brutality and extortion. The officers; SP Rotimi Ogunmuyiwa, ASP Paul Ataga, IPO Jude Ikhe (Chinedu), and others in Ogun State were accused of brutality, extortion, and criminal abduction. The victims narrated how the police officers in the Sango Area Command allegedly detained, tortured, and extorted them under the guise of an official operation. In a telephone conversation with SaharaReporters, SP Rotimi Ogunmuyiwa characterised the residents as liars attempting to use propaganda to cover up their misdeeds. The police detailed how Ikechukwu Joseph and others were linked to the frequent theft of containers in Lagos. Ogunmuyiwa said the police received a complaint about the theft of a container which was filled with sesame seeds in December. The police said: “We started our investigation and all available evidence is linked to this guy, Ikechuckwu Joseph. And when we invited him, he also confessed in the presence of his lawyer.” The police continued: “We also told the human rights activists about this. The claim of extortion is also a lie. It is even illogical. The subject stolen is worth over N100 million so how come we would collect N5 million from him?” “No money was collected from him, even for bail,” the police added. In a video provided to SaharaReporters, a businessman who submitted a complaint to the police, which resulted in the arrest of Ikechukwu Joseph and his associates, corroborated SP Rotimi's statements. The man who identified himself as Mr Lawrence, a freight forwarder in Nigerian Port, said he has been working for a company called Osun Agro Commodity, situated at Ago Pace way. He said, “I have been with them for a very long time, working for them. “In March 2023, a container was stolen that contained cashew seeds. They came again on December 8, 2024; the same guys for a container loaded with sesame seeds. And since that time, we have been looking for them. Even the police in Abuja and many stations in Lagos State helped us. “But just recently, the police told me they arrested somebody by the name Ikechuckwu Joseph. He confessed about my container, how they kept it at Mile 2 area. The police went to all the warehouses in Mile 2, they could not see it. “But now, he is saying that all what he said when he was questioned by the police were said because we tortured him. But if you see him, you will know if the police tortured him or not. “I as a person need justice because some people rose up and called themselves human rights activists and they are fighting against the police. This is not supposed to be. You should know these people you are trying to support are criminals. “The total cost of these two containers they stole is N110 million. The buyers of these containers are at large. The police are still looking for them. I mean, the people they should sell the containers to. Please, I need justice.” However, in the petition sent to the police IG, Egbetokun, signed by Ayo Ogundeji Esq, and Anaja Michael Marijata for the National President, the petitioners alleged that the officers illegally abducted Joseph from his residence in Peace Estate, Ipaja, Lagos, on November 14, 2024. "He was unlawfully detained, physically tortured; the victim’s two legs and hands were chained together with a metal rod placed in between his bounded hands and legs and was hung on a constructed pillar/pole at the IRT office, and was brutalised to the extent of inflicting him with bodily injuries," the petition stated. The petition also alleged that the officers stormed Joseph’s residence without a warrant, labelling him an armed robber and kidnapper. "They openly labelled the 1st victim as a hardened criminal, by telling the neighborhood that the 1st victim is an armed robber and a kidnapper, who according to them kidnapped a little child and that they came from Abuja on the Inspector-General of Police’s order." They accused the officers of looting Joseph’s home, claiming they took his furniture, air conditioners, a deep freezer, and two generators. "They even threw away the victim’s pregnant wife’s food from the freezer and took the freezer away," the petition added. https://saharareporters.com/2025/02/09/police-accuse-ogun-residents-lying-petition-igp-egbetokun-allege-petitioners-stole |
According to the wireless message, the deceased’s father, Mr. Usman Bawa, a resident of Rigasa area in Kontagora, reported the incident to the police authorities. Apolice officer identified as ASP Shafi'u Usman Bawa with AP/No 337979 on Saturday committed suicide in Kontagora town, Niger State. This was confirmed in a signal shared by the Nigerian police which SaharaReporters obtained. It stated that Bawa took his own life by hanging himself from the ceiling. According to the wireless message, the deceased’s father, Mr. Usman Bawa, a resident of Rigasa area in Kontagora, reported the incident to the police authorities. It was stated further that the lifeless body was subsequently taken to the General Hospital Kontagora, where a medical doctor confirmed the officer's death. The corpse was released to the family for burial in accordance with Islamic rites. The incident is currently under investigation, and further developments will be communicated in due course, according to the police. The wireless message reads: “GOOD AFTERNOON SIR X SITREP X SUICIDE X TODAY BEING SATURDAY X 08/02/25 AT ABOUT 1410HRS X ONE MR USMAN BAWA "M" X OF RIGASA AREA IN KONTAGORA MINE X CAME TO THE SQUADRON BASE AND REPORTED X THAT HIS SON AP/NO 337979 ASP SHAFI'U USMAN BAWA COMMITTED SUICIDE X BY HANGING HIMSELF ON THE CEILING. “THE LIFELESS BODY WAS REMOVE TO THE GENERAL HOSPITAL, KONTAGORA, WHERE MEDICAL DOCTOR CONFIRMED HIM DEAD. THE CORPSE WAS RELEASED TO THE FAMILY FOR BURIAL ACCORDING TO THE ISLAMIC RITES. ABOVE FOR YOUR INFORMATION; FURTHER DEVELOPMENT WILL BE COMMUNICATED YOURS PLS. CO 61 PMF KONTAGORA.” https://saharareporters.com/2025/02/08/assistant-superintendent-police-bawa-commits-suicide-niger-state |
Nlfpmod! |
•Say it will stoke inflation, hurt economy •Advocate entrepreneurship devpt., investment in vocational skills By Nkiruka Nnorom; Gabriel Ewepu & Emmanuel Elebeke On the backdrop of the inflationary pressure ravaging the economy, experts in the financial sector have said that the plan by the federal government to disburse cash palliatives to vulnerable families across the country is ill-informed and capable of stoking further inflation. They also observed that the employment of the strategy by the previous administration failed to achieve the desired result, arguing that repetition of a failed strategy would not augur well for the economy. Amidst the economic hardship in the country, fuelled by skyrocketing inflation and Naira devaluation, the federal government had revealed plans to distribute N75,000 cash transfer to an estimated 70 million “poorest of the poor” this year. The measures, according to the Minister of Humanitarian Affairs and Poverty Reduction, Prof. Nentawe Yilwatda, was as part of President Bola Tinubu’s directive to address extreme poverty and create a more social safety net. The ministry, according to Yilwatda, aimed to deploy the programme across all 36 states of the federation by the end of January 2025, targeting the registration of up to 18.1 million Nigerian households through the National Identity Number (NIN) system. “We want to deploy by the end of January across 36 states to ensure we start harvesting the NIN number of up to 18.1 million Nigerian households that we need to capture as fast as possible so that we can make payment for them. “The target of the president is that we should target 15 million households. And an average household is about 4 to 5. We are discussing here roughly about 70 million households with about N75,000 per person this year,” the minister noted. But speaking with Saturday Vanguard, the experts opined that poverty was still rife in the country despite the deployment of cash sharing measures in the past. They said that the resulting inflation from the cash sharing initiative would hurt the economy It will fuel inflation, foster dependency —Victor Chiazor, FSL Securities Victor Chiazor, Head, Research, FSL Securities, argued that though the initiative would offer immediate financial relief, albeit minimally, it would foster the culture of dependency. He stated that a more sustainable approach would be to create access to cheap credit facilities and foster entrepreneurship to create jobs that stimulate local economies. “The plan to disburse cash palliatives to the poorest as a means of poverty alleviation is a commendable initiative, as it offers immediate financial relief. Related News Hardship: Garri for breakfast, water for lunch, eba for dinner FG seeks 18-month extension of $800m W’Bank palliative scheme Nigeria must battle food insecurity as priority — IMF Economically, it has the potential to stimulate aggregate demand and ease the immediate financial burden on vulnerable populations. However, concerns remain regarding its effectiveness, as it could contribute to inflation and foster dependency rather than sustainable economic empowerment,” he said. He stated that the initiative also has significant flaws, as the majority of the extreme poor remain unbanked, limiting the reach and effectiveness of the programme. He remarked that the initiative could also serve as an opportunity to misappropriate funds by some of the political class. “Furthermore, a similar approach was implemented by the previous administration, yet poverty levels remained largely unchanged, highlighting the need for a more impactful strategy. A more effective approach to poverty alleviation would be investing in human capital development like education and skill acquisition, enhancing access to quality healthcare, access to cheap credit facilities and fostering entrepreneurship to create jobs that stimulate local economies. These measures, if effectively implemented, would provide long-term economic benefits, ensuring self-sufficiency rather than short-term financial relief “ Chiazor added. It will increase consumption amidst supply gap —David Adonri, Highcap Securities Speaking in the same vein, David Adonri, Vice Chairman, Highland Securities, said: “Cash palliative and trader money presumably distributed to alleviate poverty and empower petty traders by the failed administration of President Muhammadu Buhari was a conduit pipe used by persons in that administration to loot the national treasury. What President Tinubu is now planning will consume N525 billion which will further damage the financial health of the federal government, which is currently in an excruciating debt trap. Nigeria is a poor country without the financial wherewithal to undertake such an exercise without hurting the economy. The initiative is worthless as the amount proposed cannot feed a poor recipient for more than two days. It is wasteful and capable of increasing consumption amidst a huge supply gap which may fuel inflation. Whoever thought of this idea does not have the interest of the economy at heart. It is a politically motivated policy which has no benefit to the economy. The only way to alleviate poverty is to invest in jobs that offer gainful employment. If the N525 billion about to be needlessly lavished and probably embezzled by the Federal Government is used to support production, it will have multiplier effect on the economy in terms of closing the supply gap that is fueling inflation, creating wealth and generating massive productive employment for poor and rich people.” To address the issue of mass poverty in Nigeria, Adonri emphasised the need for the government to mobilize all the domestic factors of production to build a self-reliant, self-regenerating, and an import independent producing economy that would generate mass employment and maximize domestic wealth creation. He noted that without a secured and enabling environment, production is not feasible. It is weaponization —RenaissanceAfrica In his own submission, Ejike Nwuba, CEO, The RenaissanceAfrica, said that giving out paltry “handouts” to indigent people “has never and can never ameliorate poverty. It is a total sham and it is a total waste of resources,” he said. According to him, “The implication is that our political actors are, inadvertently, weaponizing poverty to keep the people in their stranglehold. If we are sincere about alleviating poverty, we must teach our people how to fish instead of giving them fish to survive on. The government should invest in quality education, capacity building, vocational skill acquisition, power, infrastructural development, incentives for small and medium scale businesses, and implementing policies to improve ease of doing business in Nigeria if they are serious about ameliorating poverty”. It’s not sustainable — Eze Onyekpere The Director of Centre for Social Justice, Eze Onyekpere contended that there was nothing wrong in distributing palliatives but the manner in which the government is going about it is wrong. He said, “The first challenge is to understand the concept of the proposal by the Federal Government in the name of poverty alleviation which is called a palliative. The dictionary meaning of a palliative is ‘of a medicine or form of medical care relieving symptoms without dealing with the cause of the condition’. Thus, we are not discussing attacking the root causes of poverty but merely attacking its symptoms. “The second challenge is the lack of credible, transparent and verifiable register of poor Nigerians. What we have is an opaque manipulated register only known to those in the corridors of power and serving their interests which incidentally do not coincide with the interests of the poorest of the poor. A credible register should be open to the public for scrutiny but the current register is not open. There is not one iota of guarantee that the money will reach the poor. The third challenge is that you do not use borrowed money for palliatives and distribution to the poor. Such an exercise is done from the proceeds of savings and income earned from retained revenue. It is not sustainable to borrow for such exercise and this raises the poser; how will the nation pay back these borrowed funds? To confirm the lack of transparency in this exercise and similar exercises in the past, there is a clear lack of impact from previous rounds of cash distribution. There is no empirical basis to determine impact. This is a clear waste of resources which could have been channeled to growing and developing sustainable means of livelihood in agriculture, skills and other value adding interventions.” Palliative should reduce cost of living — Aigbe Senior Program Officer at the Centre for Development of Democracy, CDD, Aigbe Austin, said, “If you ask the Nigerian government today where the poorest of the poor are located, they’ll tell you, in rural areas. But we don’t even know where our poor people are located, we don’t have them synchronized in a database that we can say there are 10 people with disabilities in this area or there are 10 people who earn less than a dollar a day that we want to reach. We’ve seen the corruption in the so-called cash transfer in the previous administration. Even at the commencement of Tinubu’s administration, his own minister was involved in the same charade of corruption. I think what should be palliative is to reduce the cost of living. It is wrong to just hand over money to people without earning it, even if it means digging the ground and refilling it and paying them for it. Any money handed over freely does not really produce any results. Poverty not about lack of cash, but lack of opportunity — Global Rights The Executive Director, Global Rights Nigeria, Abiosun Bayeiwu, asserted that, “The promise of N75,000 cash transfers to 70 million Nigerians may sound ambitious, but experience has shown that one-time or short-term financial interventions rarely create lasting economic change. Poverty is not just about a lack of cash, it is about a lack of opportunity. To put things in perspective, in 2019, the TraderMoni and MarketMoni schemes were launched, offering small cash loans to petty traders. The hope was that these funds would stimulate micro-businesses and lift people out of poverty. However, without long-term economic reforms, the impact faded quickly. Today, the situation is even more dire. Inflation is above 28 per cent, the Naira is unstable, and fuel subsidy removal has worsened hardship. You need to understand that more than 60 per cent of the population are multidimensionally poor. The core problem lies in the structural issues that make poverty hydra-headed and self-replicating. How far can N75,000 go when a 50kg bag of rice now costs about N60,000? Even if every naira reaches its intended recipient, the relief will be short-lived. Without policies that drive industrialization, job creation, and access to affordable healthcare, education, and security to ensure their stability, these types of intervention will, at best, provide momentary relief that may last at best – a week, but will continue to leave millions in the same cycle of hardship”. On how the cash palliatives will really get to the targeted poorest of the poor Nigerians, considering the pervasive corruption, she said, “History gives us little reason for optimism. In 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic, the government announced cash transfers to the most vulnerable. But there is no evidence that its intended recipients, those in rural areas and urban slums–the real “poorest of the poor”—ever received a kobo. Instead, cases of ghost beneficiaries, political favouritism, and outright embezzlement marred the process. Similarly, in 2022, the National Social Investment Program (NSIP), meant to provide financial aid to the needy, was riddled with scandals. Even the Humanitarian Minister at the time, Sadiya Umar Farouq, admitted that funds had been mismanaged, yet no real accountability followed. “If this new N75,000 transfer programme lacks a foolproof distribution mechanism, it risks becoming another opportunity for elite capture, where politically connected individuals siphon funds while the intended beneficiaries remain neglected. Who is verifying the beneficiaries? Who is monitoring the disbursement? If these questions remain unanswered, we may simply be watching another cycle of economic injustice unfold. However, she recommended that, “The government must stop looking for cheap scores and instead address multidimensional poverty by investing in and strengthening structures for human capital development; give communities quality schools, ensuring housing security, access to quality healthcare. “Ramp up infrastructure for businesses to thrive – electricity, access to fuel, transportation network; Create jobs and ensure access to credit. Build capacity and support for small businesses. Nigerians are not lazy, they want to work and earn a honest living; Curb insecurity which is at the heart of Nigeria’s hunger crisis; Ensure transparency through biometric registration and real-time public tracking of disbursed funds. Decentralize fund distribution to prevent bureaucratic bottlenecks and ensure money gets to the grassroots; Implement independent monitoring by civil society organizations, not just government agencies. Otherwise, this will be another expensive political gesture that fades into history, leaving poverty untouched.” It can’t significantly reduce poverty — ActionAid The Country Director, ActionAid Nigeria, AAN, Andrew Mamedu, expressed concern that the Federal Government’s ¦ 75,000 conditional cash transfer scheme can not significantly reduce poverty across the country. Mamedu said: “Past social protection programs in Nigeria have failed to yield significant reductions in poverty. Given the lack of structural economic reforms and the continuous rise in poverty, there is skepticism about the transformative impact of this scheme. The ¦ 75,000 conditional cash transfer scheme, while commendable in its intent, offers limited potential to significantly reduce poverty in Nigeria. With households receiving ¦ 25,000 monthly, this amount is grossly inadequate to cover even basic needs given the current inflation rate of 34.8% and high living costs. Most Nigerian households require much more to meet essential expenses such as food, healthcare, and education. The cash transfer serves as a temporary measure rather than a sustainable solution to poverty. While it may provide some immediate relief, the lack of integration with long-term empowerment programs (e.g., skills acquisition or livelihood initiatives) reduces its potential to uplift households permanently. Despite previous social protection programs, poverty remains widespread and continues to rise. “The question remains: If these programs have not yielded significant improvements, what impact will this cash transfer scheme have? Without clear, tangible results, it’s difficult to determine whether such initiatives are effectively addressing poverty or merely offering temporary relief. To truly address poverty, the program must evolve into a comprehensive social safety net that includes livelihood empowerment, job creation, and efforts to curb inflation. “Corruption remains a major concern that could undermine the effectiveness of the cash transfer scheme. Despite the well-intentioned goals of the cash transfer program, pervasive corruption in Nigeria raises concerns about whether the funds will reach the intended beneficiaries. Previous initiatives have faced challenges related to mismanagement and fraud, leading to skepticism about the current program’s integrity. Recently, there have been allegations that certain state governments and politicians in Nigeria have been clamouring to be given the opportunity to generate the beneficiary list and have been submitting fraudulent beneficiary lists for the Conditional Cash Transfer (CCT) program. These claims suggest that individuals who are not genuinely impoverished are being included, while the truly needy are excluded. Such actions, if verified, exacerbate corruption within the system by diverting funds away from the intended recipients, thereby undermining the program’s credibility and effectiveness. “The National Social Register (NSR), which is supposed to serve as the basis for identifying beneficiaries, has faced credibility issues, including concerns about data accuracy and potential political manipulation. These issues can result in the exclusion of genuinely poor households or the inclusion of ineligible ones. But we hope the current Minister of Humanitarian Affairs and Poverty Reduction Minister, Nentawe Yilwatda will uphold his words when he said they won’t allow politicians to compromise the cash transfer register. So, to ensure that the palliatives reach the intended beneficiaries, the government needs to engage local communities, civil society organizations, and credible NGOs in program implementation and monitoring to ensure fairness and equitable distribution”. https://www.vanguardngr.com/2025/02/economic-hardship-experts-pick-holes-in-fgns-planned-cash-palliatives-disbursement/ |
Former Aide-de-Camp (ADC) to ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo, Major General Christopher Jemitola on Thursday slumped at the IBB Golf Course in Abuja and died.https://www.vanguardngr.com/2025/02/obasanjos-adc-major-general-jemitola-slumps-dies-at-ibb-golf-club/
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Nlfpmod, that fine young lady sacked by BAT! |
President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has sacked Aisha Maikudi, Vice Chancellor of the University of Abuja, now known as Yakubu Gowon University. Maikudi’s sack was announced hours after she presided over a matriculation ceremony in the school. Her appointment has been fraught with controversy, with some lecturers saying she occupied the position illegally. Conquering the clouds on a journey to Ta Xua with the team - Road Trip Vietnam Team - Nếm TV In her position, Tinubu appointed Professor Lar Patricia Manko as Acting Vice Chancellor for a six-month term, empasising that she would not be eligible to apply for the substantive Vice Chancellor position when it becomes available. Details later… https://dailytrust.com/breaking-tinubu-sacks-uniabuja-vc-makes-key-changes-across-federal-varsities/ |
In a recent interview, ex-Osun Governor, Chief Bisi Akande, alleged that the #EndSARS movement that roiled Nigeria in 2020 was a conspiracy against his friend, Bola Tinubu. By narrating how a set of circumstances that did not begin with Tinubu became wrapped around him and his ambitions, Akande tried to increase the moral value of his electoral victory. The interesting part for me was that he claimed that those who ambushed Tinubu through EndSARS were “the Obi-dients”, a well-organised army who “came from America (the USA) with a lot of money”. I am willing to bet that Akande has no evidence whatsoever to substantiate his allegations and would demur if asked to name those Obi-dients. But stories like that do not need to be true; they only need to be believed. But why “America”? Why did the conspiring Obi-dients that Akande conjectured come from the USA and not anywhere else? There is a significant Nigerian diaspora in the UK and Canada, could they also not have funded such a campaign? Given the outsized role regularly ascribed to the USA in our political and economic predicaments, no other country would have sufficed. The imagination that produced that allegation must be substantive to some degree to sound somewhat credible. Ask a Nigerian or an African why our countries are so poor, and it will not be long before they gravitate towards detecting Western-based institutions like the International Monetary Fund and World Bank as why we fail at self-management. Those USA-based organisations are the physical manifestations of the transcendent forces we blame for our woes. Since there are several documented instances of their unpalatable institutional interference in economically challenged countries like Nigeria, there is a mix of truth that justifies how they have come to embody the trope of the evil that keeps Africa from attaining its destiny. That is why one of our Daddys in the Lord could pray that “Either the IMF likes it or not, I decree the naira will rise again.” The USA is also routinely fingered in the restlessness that bedevils our society. Some people are convinced that terrorism in Nigeria is funded by the USA. I have met a few of those folks before; their attributed reasons for the USA’s supposed malevolence can be internally contradictory, but the conspiracy imagination needs not to be coherent before it rings true to those who believe them. Then there are Nigerians who also believe that the only reason that Muhammadu Buhari won the election in 2015 was because the USA sponsored him. Some of those folks, if they are reading this article, are ready to defend that assertion by pointing to one or two examples they hold as indelible proof. They need not worry. I have read all those arguments; I know where those folks are coming from. So This Happened (253) reviews Ojude Oba festival, Nigeria, Ghana facing brain drain, others The trouble with such speculation is that we become so invested in tracing the outlines of an alternative reality where “the spiritual determines the physical” that we lose sight of ourselves as human agents who determine our destiny. To the folks who believe that the USA masterminded the 2015 election loss by the PDP, it matters less that it was Nigerians who used their hand to vote for Muhammadu Buhari. They override the agency of fellow Nigerians, some of whom sought genuine reforms and many of whom were also motivated by religious/tribal identities, to blame a supernational force. One would think it was America that created “Febuhari” or “March for Buhari” and helped Yemi Osinbajo distribute the N10,000 pittance they used to bid for votes. The 2015 election loss was so humiliating for the religious and tribal blocs that Goodluck Jonathan represents, that the only way they can justify the turn of events is to attribute it to a higher power. Even Jonathan himself believes that he lost to the USA, not his countrypeople who got tired of his crass ineptitude. Our society is so invested in the supernatural that if we are not leaving our human responsibility to God, we are blaming the devil for our failings. The same attitude extends to our political and economic behaviours where we always look for otherworldly forces to blame for our self-induced problems. What gets lost in the narrative is the temporal context. Occupy Nigeria, the anti-subsidies removal protests of 2012 that activated disaffection against Jonathan, and which his supporters (like Akande too) insist was a funded campaign by clandestine agents, also happened in different parts of the world at that time. That of Nigeria occurred in the light of the legislative probe that revealed the huge scam that the subsidy had become. In the era of Arab Spring and the #OccupyUSA movement, was it unthinkable that the young Nigerians embedded within a global media ecosystem would react to oppressive corruption like their counterparts elsewhere? Yes, certain characters like Muhammadu Buhari profited from the anti-Jonathan sentiment that the protest generated, but the emotions that drove it were not baseless. The funny thing is that I know people who supported Buhari and campaigned for him from door to door. Imagine how amused I was when I saw some of them—against the backdrop of Donald Trump and Elon Musk’s campaign against USAID, the cultural arm of the US government—on Twitter (now called X) also crowing about how the USA imposed Buhari on Nigeria in 2015! Buhari was such a huge failure that his once devoted supporters are erasing their own participation in making him president! To distance themselves from the monumental disgrace he became, they delete their complicity. In the same way that the anti-Buhari people have outsourced their agency in that protest to the USA, Akande too weaponises the EndSARS to blame some shadowy agents for confronting Tinubu. In doing so, he similarly erases the agency of the Nigerians who were genuinely driven to the streets because they were frustrated with the failings of a judicial institution under Buhari’s watch. The EndSARS was about Nigerian youths who had been driven to the wall by the excesses of the police, and just like OccupyNigeria in 2012, they took energies from similar protests abroad. Akande’s historical revisionism had nothing to say about the genuine issues that precipitated those protests. Notice also that even though Tinubu contested against two opponents, only Peter Obi haunts Akande’s imagination. Yes, Obi profited from the anti-establishment sentiment of EndSARS the same way OccupyNigeria helped Buhari. So immense was his popularity among Nigeria’s Gen Z that he sent the conservative political class into a tailspin. If today, Tinubu struggles with a crisis of legitimacy even as the sitting President, it is also because he lost something irrecoverable to Obi in that election. The Obi who was said to lack “structure” and his supporters who were ridiculed as “people without PVCs” stunned everyone with what they achieved. That is why Akande thinks American money and strategy had to have been involved. If Obi had been declared the winner of that election, Akande’s narrative would have held up to justify how a combination of Yoruba and Northerners, the majority of whom also happen to be Muslims, could lose to a Christian southerner whose supporters were not even taken seriously. Here is the thing: the fact that Akande’s story is laughable today does not mean it will always be. The APC will not rule forever. Many of their top brass are older men who will eventually lose their vice-like grip over the existing political structure. Nature will do its thing, and they will eventually be defeated in a hostile takeover. Those who will replace them are the current anti-establishment figures who are tweeting while waiting in the wings. From the fringes where they are sensationalising the USA as the God/Satan whose invisible hands move our history to mobilise their army of the disaffected, they will become the dominant ones. The ones in power today will look back at moments like 2020 EndSARS, pick up the narrative of “money, strategy, and America” including the one Akande put out and they too will start running with it. https://punchng.com/how-america-became-god-and-satan-in-nigeria/ |
Nlfpmod, Fuga said we have money! |
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